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304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

My grandmother has followed the same spring cleaning routine every year since the 1960s. She believed that a house could be deep cleaned in three days if the work followed a strict plan. No responsibilities scattered over multiple weekends. No endless to-do lists that never end.


I tried her method in my own home to see if the system still worked.
The routine is simple: three days, each with a clear goal.
The method begins with a rule: write a list before cleaning anything. The list should include tasks that people put off for months, not the usual daily chores.
Typical tasks include:
Once the list is complete, the three-day schedule begins.


The first day focuses on removing dust from every surface.
This includes:
Dust collects in places that often go unnoticed, especially on top shelves, cabinet edges and frames.
After the full dusting was complete, the house now looked cleaner because many surfaces hadn’t been wiped in weeks.


The second day targets the two areas where the dirt accumulates the fastest.
Kitchen tasks:
Tasks in the bathroom:
Once completed, both rooms looked noticeably refreshed.


The final day focuses on areas left untouched by regular cleaning.
The main tasks include:
Clearing out the closet made the biggest change because unused items had been sitting there for years.
A few things stood out during the process.
By the end of the third day, every room felt reset.


yes The system works because it limits the cleaning period. Instead of spreading a deep clean over several weekends, the house gets a complete reset over three focused days.
My grandmother repeated the routine every spring for decades, and after I tried it myself, the reason is clear: a structured plan makes deep cleaning faster and much more manageable.