A 7-Step Spring Cleaning Routine for Better Mental Health

Spring cleaning usually involves decluttering cupboards and scrubbing floors. But the most impactful tidying you can do may not require cleaning supplies. Mental spring cleaning involves discarding psychological clutter and lightening your emotional load — all in service of a happier, healthier life.
“There is something powerful about aligning inner work with seasonal changes,” says Iman Hypolite, MD, a holistic psychiatrist and the owner of Aspira Health and Wellness in Atlanta. “When the world around you is visibly shedding and renewing, it creates a natural opening to do the same.”
Refreshing your mental state doesn’t require a complete overhaul. Here are seven simple steps to dust off mental cobwebs and rejuvenate your well-being.
1. Ditch a Negative Thought Pattern
Automatic negative thoughts (ANTs) are involuntary, spontaneous thought patterns that cause people to view situations in ways that tend to be overly critical, pessimistic, or distorted, says Supatra Tovar, PsyD, RD, a clinical psychologist in private practice in Pasadena, California, who practices holistic health psychotherapy.
How to do it: First, notice when you’re engaging in negative thinking, says Brianna Paruolo, a licensed clinical mental health counselor in private practice in New York City. Then, pause and consider different possibilities. For example, if you notice that you’re fearful of being fired when your boss asks to meet, consider that your boss may intend to discuss a new project, not let you go. “I encourage keeping a thought record, where you write down the situation, the thought that follows, and then write an alternative rational thought,” Paruolo says.
2. Set a Healthy Work-Life Boundary
How to do it: To set and maintain a healthy boundary between work and your personal life, first identify something about your job that negatively affects you outside the office. Then, look for small, realistic steps you can take to address it. Often, challenges with work-life balance stem from time constraints or from feeling pressured to respond immediately to texts and emails at all hours, Tovar says.
One way to protect your free time and prevent overwhelm is to pause before agreeing to something, whether that’s taking on an extra task or covering a colleague’s shift. “Instead of automatically saying ‘yes,’ you might say, ‘Let me check my schedule and get back to you,’” Tovar explains. “That short pause creates space to decide whether the request truly fits within your time and energy.” Other examples include checking emails only during business hours and not working through your lunch break.
Once you have a boundary in mind, communicate it to others — for instance, by notifying your colleagues of your office hours — and stick to it.
3. Make Mindfulness Part of Your Morning Routine
Many of us wake up and immediately hand our brains over to our phones, to-do lists, and daily stressors, says Michelle Drapkin, PhD, a clinical psychologist in private practice in Highland Park, New Jersey. That’s why she recommends practicing mindfulness in the morning — to fully “arrive” before facing the day.
Mindfulness trains your brain to be fully aware of your present thoughts and feelings and to accept them without judgment. “Over time, that creates a little pause between stimulus and response — and a lot of suffering happens in that gap,” Dr. Drapkin says.
How to do it: When you first wake up, sit comfortably and take 10 slow breaths, Tovar suggests. Notice the air filling your lungs on the inhale and your body relaxing on the exhale. If your mind wanders, gently return your attention to the breath. “Even two minutes of this practice can help anchor the mind and create a calmer start to the day,” Tovar says.
4. Let Go of a Grudge
"Grudges are cognitively expensive," Drapkin says, explaining that these low-grade stressors can hamper your well-being. "You're not punishing the other person — you're punishing yourself," she adds.
Letting go doesn't excuse wrongdoing, Drapkin clarifies. It also doesn't mean your feelings aren't valid, that what happened didn't matter, or that the other person was right. Rather, it means you stop letting that person — or the event — live rent-free in your head, she says.
How to do it: Write down what happened, how it affected you, and what you wish had been different, Drapkin suggests. Then, ask what the grudge is costing you. This can help you realize that it isn’t worth carrying any longer, she says.
5. Audit Your Information Diet
Even unsubscribing from select news sources or taking temporary digital detoxes can help, Hypolite says.
How to do it: A simple starting point is scheduling weekly screen-free blocks of time, Hypolite suggests.
Another option is to do a monthly audit: Assess what sources leave you tired or inspired, Paruolo suggests. “Anything or anyone who is disturbing your peace, both online and in real life, doesn't deserve your follow,” she says.
6. Tidy Up Your Home
A tidy space doesn’t have to be sterile or Instagram-worthy, she notes — it just needs to feel intentional. That might look like a clear kitchen table, a drawer that opens without a fight, or a living room that feels inviting and peaceful.
How to do it: When deciding what to get rid of, Drapkin suggests asking, “Does keeping this cost me more energy than it gives me?” If looking at it makes you feel guilty, overwhelmed, or bad about yourself, it's probably not earning its place. “Start with one surface — not the whole house,” she adds. “One counter, one drawer, one corner. The momentum usually handles the rest.”
7. Strengthen Your Support Network
Friends and family can offer empathy and understanding, reinforce healthy habits, alleviate loneliness and stress, and provide practical support — all of which helps lighten your emotional load, says Ashwini Nadkarni, MD, a psychiatrist at Mass General Brigham and an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School in Boston
How to do it: Strengthening your support network can be as easy as expressing appreciation for a loved one or having a meaningful conversation, Dr. Nadkarni says. Consistent, small acts can have a big impact. To meet new people, consider volunteering or joining a special-interest group — such as a community sports team, cooking class, or book club. Consult a healthcare professional for support with depression, trauma, grief, anxiety, or chronic stress.
The Takeaway
- Traditional spring cleaning can benefit your overall health and well-being, but taking additional steps can further reduce mental clutter.
- Try techniques such as mindfulness, reframing negative thought patterns, connecting with loved ones, and auditing your information diet to improve clarity, focus, and emotional well-being.
- Speak with a healthcare professional like a doctor, counselor, or therapist if your mental health is interfering with your day-to-day life, or you suffer from depression, grief, anxiety, or trauma.
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Seth Gillihan, PhD
Medical Reviewer
