This ended up being 6, because apparently I can’t count before coffee.
Enjoy!
Encouraging you to professionalize and simplify your home life.
This ended up being 6, because apparently I can’t count before coffee.
Enjoy!
Is there such a thing as an adult who does not enjoy vacation?
I went on a little New Years’ getaway with my husband and our best friends, and I’ve been thinking a lot about what makes vacation so wonderful, and how to incorporate some of that into my daily life. I’ve come upon a few different concepts.
From our recent vacation – relaxing in the middle of nowhere. |
Relaxing, minimalist environment
Think about what made the vacation so relaxing. Was it that your space was clean? That you were living with just a suitcase of possessions and no clutter? Odds are good you were even living in a significantly smaller space than usual, possibly even with extra people, yet the hotel room/cabin/condo was relaxing.
This is great to replicate at home! Living with fewer possessions naturally helps your space stay cleaner. I will forever be indebted to the Kon Mari method of decluttering for making my home more peaceful and easier to keep picked up. Consider a capsule wardrobe to replicate the limited options of a suitcase (and the ease of dressing that comes with it!)
Fresh linens
That may seem super small, but really. When’s the last time you changed your sheets and washed your throw blankets and bleached your towels? (I keep white towels for this reason.) Try it, and really pay attention to the sensation of sinking into fresh linens – savor it! (By extension, all your nicely folded laundry in your suitcase? Ey?) If you find this as valuable as I do, plan it into your housekeeping!
Pre-planned activities
Now, this is probably personal preference, but I usually have some pre-planned activities on vacation. On this recent vacation, we brought along decks of cards to play our favorite game, one board game the husbands specifically like, and books and facemasks for the wives. Nothing fancy, nothing that involved leaving the couch. The aspect of this that makes the day so enjoyable is that there was no sitting around saying, “What should we do? I dunno. What do you want to do? I dunno.”
Consider planning your leisure once you’re back home – would you like to read a book in the evenings? Journal in the mornings? Have a family movie night? I have actually taken to pre-planning my leisure activities for my miracle mornings and for my evenings after the kids go to bed, and it’s great.
Personal growth time
Like I said, this recent vacation included intentional book-reading. For me, leisure reading is a part of self care and personal growth, because I truly love reading (like in the depths of my soul, love, reading. #nerd)
Odds are good that during a vacation, you take more time for these kinds of activities. Perhaps hiking is your personal growth. Maybe meditating. Some people probably experience personal growth by touring important landmarks or museums. Whatever it is that feeds your spirit, you’ve probably made up your mind and planned to do it during your official vacation.
You should really do that kind of stuff during your regular days. Seriously.
Moments of complete stillness
There are moments in vacation where absolutely nothing is going on. Nothing is calling your attention. Nothing needs to be cleaned or cooked or put away. Those moments may be in an art gallery, in your hotel room in the wee hours, sitting on a beach kid-free, or doing a face mask on a couch while your husbands play a board game.
See if you can recreate those moments in your daily home life. For me, those moments exist at 6:00 am (after my husband has left for work, my kids are still soundly asleep, and I’m alone in my office with a cup of coffee) but you can jam them anywhere. On a commute using public transport, on a walk, etc.
Pick one thing to try – make your daily life more like a vacation. Maybe commit to it for 2 weeks. Write it down. Plan it out.
Share what you’re going to try or what you already do!
P.S. – we used Air BnB to book our vacation, and it worked like a charm! I even got email copies of text messages sent by our host. Recommend!
(Not sponsered. I wish!)
I don’t know about you, but I have gone looking for lists of Christmas Countdown / Advent activities for the past couple of years, and have come up short.
Somehow, other people’s ideas of “toddler-appropriate” activities are much more involved than I am willing to get. It would be lovely to go on Christmas outings every night, or make elaborate treats with the kids, or sleep under the Christmas tree, but I’m a realist (pessimist?) My kids would get way overstimulated, we don’t have that kind of time on school nights, they’d make a huge mess and eat way too many cookies, and there’s no flippin’ WAY any of us would get any sleep in the living room on the floor surrounded by tempting ornaments and each other.
So after much researching and brainstorming, this is the list I have come up with of truly simple activities appropriate for small children. A list compiled by an aspiring minimalist, whose kids operate best with a firm schedule and short activites.
1. Watch Charlie Brown Christmas
2. Put the angel (or other topper) on the Christmas tree
3. Set up the nativity scene
4. Put up __a decoration___ in your (kid’s) room
5. Trip to Dairy Queen
6. Bake a treat (we made brownies from a mix. Really.)
7. Make a paper chain
8. Papercraft: Construction paper Christmas tree with red dots (dot marker)
9. Wrap a gift (or several, depending on your patience. I mean, your kids’ patience?
10. Cocoa party
11. Read __insert favorite classic Christmas picture book here___
12. Go on a car ride to look at Christmas lights
13. Cinnamon dough Christmas ornaments
14. Decorate Christmas cookies (pre-made? Mix? Break and place dough?)
15. Christmas milkshakes (a milkshake with something mint in it)
That’s it. The other 9 days in my advent drawers are filled with candy.
We can’t do an activity every single night! Especially nights when we have church services or some other crazy busy situation going on. Those nights the kids have a piece of candy and we go on our way.
How do you fill your Advent calendar or Christmas countdown? Any truly easy traditions you keep with your littles?
This is going to get blunt. It might not agree with you. It might seem rude.
Such is my life. Here we go, anyway.
I am getting very weary of motherhood masochism.
Complaining.
Whining.
Desperation.
Wine jokes.
Self-induced stress.
Lack of sleep.
Broadcasting troubles.
Negativity.
Pessimism.
Seriously. Very tired of all of that.
I used to think it irritated me because I was on the outside of that world; I was a working mom. Of course I was burning out and feeling awful, because I was in charge of 25+ children that were not my own for 10 hours a day, then coming home to my own. What on earth were stay-at-home mothers complaining about?
But now I’ve been there.
I am in the middle of the trenches. In year 2 of staying home full time, with two children (boys, no less) under the age of 3.
And it is even more annoying to me, now.
Motherhood masochism seems to be very prevalent across social media. Women bemoaning their daily lives, their choices, their children. To be completely honest, that’s what it is – fishing for sympathy using negativity and cynicism about their children.
You chose to have these children. You chose to be home with them. You choose to spend each day the way you spend it. Stop whining.
If that seems a little strong, consider how you would speak about your job if your children were listening.
If your kids are poorly behaved all day every day, it’s up to you to teach them differently.
If your house is a mess, it’s up to you to figure out a better chore schedule, cut down on possessions/clutter, or enlist help.
If you’re tired, it’s up to you to create routines that allow you to sleep enough at night.
If you haven’t been out of the house in months, it’s up to you to plan activities for your family where you get out and about. Or to send a letter. Or make a phone call.
If you feel unfulfilled/unchallenged, it is up to you to treat motherhood professionally and pour your gifts into it.
If you are not satisfied with your spouse’s contributions, your physical appearance, your pet’s training, your debt… it is up to you to discover new ways of doing things that improve your family’s relationships, health, and comfort.
That is your job.
Your job is not to be a babysitter. You are not just a warm body to be present in the house and hope emergencies don’t arise. You don’t just churn out a few meals a day and occasionally scrub a toilet and try to keep children/creatures barely alive. That is simply not enough.
My goal is not mom-shaming.
I believe in lots and lots of grace, many mistakes, plenty of flexibility.
Different approaches work for different families.
There is certainly a place for discussing your challenges with other moms, receiving emotional support, fresh ideas, and love.
My goal is that you realize that there is no place for martyrdom in this wonderful, intense, messy profession. Anything that is dissatisfying is yours to fix. You are the master of your domain, the mistress of your house, your own boss. That means you can change anything! You can recreate whatever you need to! You can innovate and experiment and research to your heart’s content.
Perhaps the actual problem is that you have way too much on your plate. God does not call us to stand on the edge of sanity. Simplify your life. Cut down activities, possessions, and schedules until you can do your job well. Until you can serve your family wholeheartedly (most of the time) and proficiently (most of the time.)
Enjoy your glass of wine after the kids go to bed. Just stop broadcasting on Facebook that you need it to survive your children.
Ooh, fall clothes!
Fall/Winter clothes, really.
My favorite season. Honestly, I’m pretty inspired by a stack of scarves and a pair of riding boots.
But! This will eventually accompany a video about my wardrobe, so here we go.
Let’s be realistic- this sums up what I would wear on a daily basis. Black skinny pants, chambray shirt, brown riding boots, scarf, sweater, simple earrings, chunky watch.
Where I found this! And this!
Since I bought some rain boots for myself, and I have a poncho-esque garment, this will probably make an appearance. I don’t carry a handbag, and that’s definitely not a practical way to use an umbrella, but it’s just an inspiration photo, right? The second photo is less of a stretch, essentially just substituting my rain boots for riding boots in my normal outfits.
I wear a lot more pants in the fall and winter. As in, in summer I keep out two pair of pants in my capsule and I occasionally wear one of them. In winter, I have more like 5 pair of pants that I wear almost every day. (I don’t believe in leggings AS pants, but I love me a tunic and leggings.)
If I do wear a dress, it’s probably like this, plus leggings. I have never figured out in what climate it is appropriate to wear riding boots and a scarf with bare legs. But I recently got a chambray dress (at Goodwill, for $1.99!) so this is going to be in heavy rotation.
So there we go! Three major “lobes” to my fall/winter meal planning. All designed for a mom who wear real clothes (no gym clothes here!) but are easily washable, appropriate for a Midwest fall/winter, and transitional from nursing to not. (What? Crewneck shirts? Where have you been for the last year of my life?)
Stay tuned for an accompanying video of my fall/winter capsule wardrobe!
Let’s be honest – “morning routines” were one of those things I thought were total hogwash.
A mystical creation of work-at-home moms who wanted to seem awesome on social media.
A farse.
Nobody really does this. Nobody actually does the exact same things every morning that include cleaning. Nobody schedules their day like this.
Well…
I was wrong.
I don’t think you must have a morning routine in order to be a professional mother. (And I do believe that being a stay-at-home mom is, in fact, a profession and should be treated as such.) But I do think they can form naturally and be super helpful.
Before moving to our new home, I had neither a night nor morning routine. I was basically flying by the seat of my mom pants, and I didn’t know I had a problem. Our new house is larger and requires more “housekeeping” to stay up to my standards, and my current baby is getting big and needing more specific schedules and attention, and my husband has gone back to full-time teaching at a permanent position, so my day has gotten fuller. In a wonderful way, but fuller.
In order to fit everything in and still sleep a relatively healthy amount (I am not about motherhood masochism) I decided to do a few tasks before bed and in the morning before the kids get up, largely tasks I never did daily before. And thus, a routine was born!
Some nights/mornings they don’t get done. I’m trying not to beat myself up about it when that happens, when sometimes I choose extra sleep or hanging out with my hubby or helping do some school work instead of tidying up my house. It depends on the day’s demands. But it’s nice to have slots to fit these activities into instead of constantly regretting that they’re falling through the cracks. It’s good to know that these cleaning activities will get done almost daily, that my house most mornings will be clean and quiet, that if people drop by my home will be clean and inviting. That I will be able to find everything I need if I need to rush out the door in the morning.
Stay tuned for full posts about my morning routine and night time routine!
I cannot figure out how to meal plan traditionally
I have read/watched lots of mom-bloggers and vloggers and many seem to plan out a week or more of meals, then hit up Costco or Sam’s Club and buy all the things needed to have said meals. Some do a wonderful job of stocking up on meat or staples on sale, and keeping multiple pantries or freezers full of things to use in future weeks.
Here is my struggle:
First off, I don’t belong to any warehouse clubs. I have never been able to justify the membership fees, or the drive to the nearest one (20 miles), nor do I have multiple pantries or a deep freezer.
Second, I have a rather poor selection of grocery stores near me (no Aldi or Trader Joe’s or discount groceries!)
Third, I refuse to coupon. I don’t have the attention span/patience for that, and I don’t subscribe to a physical newspaper.
So I spend an arm and a leg on groceries?
Nope.
I quite literally don’t buy any food items that aren’t on sale.
Essentially, I meal plan in reverse.
I get my weekly grocery store ads on Wednesday. During nap time, I sit down and make a grocery list by seeking out the food we eat that is on sale or store coupon. I am looking mostly for meat, produce, and dairy, as we don’t really eat processed food. (Personal preference, we actually don’t like the taste of most processed food. We are not food snobs. We eat a lot of Cinnamon Toast Crunch and M&Ms, okay?)
Neither store I have available requires me to actually cut out coupons, so I just take my ad to the store with me and they scan whatever coupons apply. I do not clip coupons from anywhere. If the store has a hanger-coupon-thingy by an item, great, I’ll pull it off and take it with me to the checkout.
I make my list for each store, then I get out my list of dinners. I compare the dinners list to the fresh foods on my shopping list, and decide 5 meals I can make to use the produce or meat that is on sale this week.
Then I plug them into my weekly planner based on amount of prep time, my husband’s after-school schedule, and events going on.
That’s it.
We shop on Saturdays, together as a family (free activity!) and my husband makes Saturday dinner (so I don’t plan it.) On Sunday, we tend to make a large meal like roast or a whole chicken, which we use as leftovers if we need more food for lunches or if we will be very busy one afternoon. I usually have the freezer space to freeze half a roast if necessary.
Speaking of, we have leftovers for lunch. Everybody, every day.
And we eat cold cereal, toast, or oatmeal for breakfast.
Done.
It’s not fancy. Sometimes it gets repetitious because of seasonal vegetables or dry spells in meat sales. Some weeks we have precious little meat, or the same meat every night.
But that’s okay! We eat mostly whole foods, mostly healthy, and it gets done on a budget. Goals accomplished.
Keep a lookout for my list of dinners! I’ll link it here when it’s finished.
Also something about my planner. Which might be my second-best friend in the world.
A dual-post from both of us!
About halfway through learning to set the table |
Stirring. Or licking. Same thing, right? |
Yes, many of these chores are “done” quite messily. And not the way I would have done them. And take a long time to complete. But building life skills is so important! And it’s pretty cool to watch the look of determination and learning on a toddler’s face as he tries to place dishes at the table, or measure something, or choose matching socks from a basket.