How to Keep House While Drowning - by Kc Davis (Hardcover)
Highly rated
$14.11Save $7.89 (36% off)
In Stock
Eligible for registries and wish lists
About this item
Additional product information and recommendations
Frequently bought together
Guests also viewed
Related Categories
4.1 out of 5 stars with 9 reviews
66% would recommend
3 recommendations
1 out of 5 stars
Thumbs down graphic, would not recommend
16 December, 2025Verified purchase
Wish I Hadn't Bought
I was hoping to get a lot out of it based on the preview section I read. The concepts of care tasks are morally neutral and make your home work for you instead of you working for your home are great. She’s right that you are not a bad person if your house isn’t immaculate all the time. BUT there was a lot of weird and almost enabling advice instead of actually helping to get better. Like if you struggle with your dishes maybe just throw them away. I thought there would be more helpful tips for cleaning or organizing. Instead you get a ton of excuses as to why it's fine to be filthy. Also got political at times… and a self help book is no place for judgment while you’re simultaneously preaching non-judgment. It is also really short. Maybe check out from the library instead and save yourself the clutter.
5 out of 5 stars
Thumbs up graphic, would recommend
19 March, 2025
A REALISTIC approach to life and living!
This book provides a helpful and realistic approach to dealing with life. If you don't have ADHD or trouble with executive functioning, it may not be the book for you. If you do, it could be a lifesaver! The book provides possible solutions for real problems. Most importantly, it validates so many of the feelings I feel every day. Thank you for this book!
5 out of 5 stars
Thumbs up graphic, would recommend
29 April, 2022Verified purchase
Great for those with mental health struggles/neurodiversity
-straight to the point, easy to read, metaphors have literal interpretations included for neurodivergent folks which is nice. -she points out: we are trained to use shame as a motivator, but that doesn’t work long term. She has great advice for flipping the script on why and how we can make our spaces healthier and happier. This is better than many other self help books that try to cheerlead readers into adopting their “one size fits all” program perfectly forever. -she is honest, I see myself reflected in the author despite my flaws. She is not ashamed of being an imperfect human and I want to follow her lead. -she offers a whole bunch of different and ACTIONABLE steps people can choose from based on their individual situation and background. -good advice for an easier “on ramp” to things like exercise