hex this mess 3~ create your own container
Hex this mess isn’t a productivity contest.
It’s a nervous-system-friendly container for real life.
So we’re doing this with softness and common sense.
Not to perform productivity.
We’re there to create momentum together.
It’s like a book club, except instead of pretending we read chapter seven, we actually get sh*t done.
when it helps
Sometimes the most magical thing you can do is fold your laundry with friends.
Your circle doesn’t need to be big.
Pick a time.
Pick a time limit.
Pick a container.
Keep a simple format!
1) meet
2) name one task
3) do a sprint
4) celebrate what moved
That’s the spell.
start your own body-doubling circle
If this idea lit something up in you, here are two of many truly free or low-cost ways to start your own circle:
Google Meet (free with a Google account)
Microsoft Teams Free
Both can up to 100 people for up to 60-minutes.
Because life is hard.
And sometimes the most magical thing you can do is fold your laundry with friends.
how i do it
tiny starts count
You do not have to “finish the whole thing” to be a successful human. If all you can do today is start the dishwasher, fold ten items, clear one surface, one basket, or one category. Not the whole house. Just one small, doable win.
protect the vibe from shame
Camera is optional. Talking is optional. You can point your camera at a wall, stay muted, and still be fully here. This space is not for judging anyone’s home, pace, body, or capacity. We’re here to support, not perform.
time limits are kindness
The timer ending is a stopping point, not a failure point. If you’re not done, you get to be okay with it. Stopping is part of building trust with yourself, so your brain learns that starting doesn’t mean getting trapped.
gentle landing
The after-sprint cliff is real. Before we hop off, we take a breath, drink a little water, and name the next tiny step we’ll do later so we don’t spiral into overworking or collapse into a scroll-hole
different nervous systems belong here
Some people move fast. Some go slow. Some need breaks. Some quietly observe while they sort. All of that belongs. The only goal is that life feels lighter when we’re done.

