FROM THE VIDEO

Key moments from Untangling the Mess: Strategies for the Chronically Disorganized with Dr. Erica Warren and Darius Namdaran:

  • Why an undone task is not laziness, and the hard-to-easy shift that gets it done. Watch at 13:47
  • The big-pile method for a child’s room: one heap, biggest item first, no decisions. Watch at 39:45
  • The six-month box that lets a child let go of sentimental clutter without a fight. Watch at 47:54

Common questions from parents

Is my child disorganized because they are lazy?

No. Disorganization usually reflects executive function, the brain skills for planning, starting, and keeping track, that are still developing. Treating it as a character flaw tends to leave a child more discouraged, not more organized. Reducing the friction around a task works better than asking for more effort.

What is the fastest way to get my child to tidy their room?

Try the big-pile method. Push everything into one central pile, then pick up the biggest item first and find its home, working big to small. Removing the “where do I start” decision is what unsticks a child, and half the room is often clear in ten minutes.

How do I handle a child who will not throw anything away?

Skip the standoff. Box the items they are attached to, label a revisit date about six months out, and store it out of the room. Nothing is thrown away. At the revisit most children have detached and keep only a few, choosing for themselves.

Should I have my child evaluated for an attention or executive-function problem?

A parent screener or checklist is a useful starting point to see where the gaps are, not a diagnosis. If your child might need formal accommodations such as an IEP or 504 plan, or you suspect a vision, hearing, or medical cause, a professional evaluation is the route to those supports. You are able to start reducing friction and building routines at home today regardless.