(Image: Undine Almani/YouTube)

Cleaning expert shares simple 'pile method' that will help you declutter in minutes

It's perfect for those who hate tidying up

by · BristolLive

Decluttering your bedroom can often seem a daunting chore, especially when procrastination has let everything pile up. But one cleaning guru has revealed her tip for a speedy tidy-up, and it might take you as little as 10 minutes.

Lifestyle influencer Undine Almani has made waves online by demonstrating easy hacks to breeze through mundane cleaning tasks instead of getting bogged down in detailed scrubbing. Her preferred method is what she dubs the "pile method."

In a YouTube tutorial that's already chalked up over 700 views, Undine shows her own room before the clean-up - a familiar scene of disarray due to scattered clothes. Her advice is straightforward: start by sorting items into piles.

She separates clothes into two categories; those that need laundering and those ready to store away.

Undine doesn't stop at just clothes - she recommends sectioning all wardrobe components into piles, whether that be socks, shirts or trousers. "You'll feel accomplished immediately," Undine asserts, reports Devon Live.

For those who dread folding, she introduces the "lazy version" which she claims is still effective. Embracing the mantra "Done is better than perfect," she advocates for progress rather than striving for faultlessness.

By video's end, not only is her bedding pristine but the overall impression of her room is significantly neater. Undine advises her audience that sometimes it's okay to choose a 'speed clean' approach or, as she puts it, "fake it till you make it", over an exhaustive deep clean.

The response in the comment section was overwhelmingly positive, with many viewers resonating with her practicality. One commenter expressed their gratitude, writing: "Appreciate your realness."

Meanwhile, one person remarked: "I'm definitely going to rewatch this while I declutter the house."

While another chimed in: "Folding clothes and putting them into piles should be considered an art form."