Friday, March 18, 2011

Spring Cleaning

The amazing Lisa Clark from Almost Famous posted the following on her blog a couple days ago. While we here in the Allred home are still remodeling and can't quite do our spring cleaning yet, I am going to save this advice and use it as soon as we are able. Thanks Lisa for the inspiration! You and your entire family are incredibly awesome and I would love to meet you someday. And I've ordered a copy of A Room of One's Own and can't wait to read it!

Here's Lisa's advice on cleaning and keeping an orderly home:

CONSIDER THE COST: Think about the ENERGY—mental, time, etc—it takes to keep this item. You have to see it, store it, move it, clean it, hold onto it, think about it, stumble across it. . . Is it worth the time and energy?

WHAT IS YOUR IDEAL?
Keeping an item you “might need” prevents something NEW and BEAUTIFUL and MEANINGFUL from taking its place. This less important item has weight in your life. Is it worth it? Do you want a home full of things you might need someday, or a few things you are crazy about and love?!

MAKE IT ABOUT YOU:
Start by organizing and cleaning a place just for YOU. Pick up a copy of Virginia Woolfe’s A Room of One’s Own or Simple Abundance. Make this area in the home special and meaningful to you. Your favorite place.

ENGAGE THE 5 SENSES:
Smell: Choose a cleaning product you love light a candle, essential oil, something invigorating or relaxing. Sound: Put on your favorite music while you clean. Touch: Use cleaning materials that feel good on your skin, or protect yourself when you have to use the heavy-duty stuff. Taste: Reward yourself with a treat while you clean (gum, chocolate, soda). Sight: Declutter—make it look like you really cleaned! Create a space YOU LOVE.

SENTIMENTAL ITEMS:
These items should be a few, treasured items stored in a proper place. Pre-set a limit and stick to it. Or take a photo of it (or scan it) and store it on your computer. For example, one box of school projects per year=12+ boxes of “school work” for each child. When they leave home, what are they going to do with 12+boxes of pictures and papers? (I have one plastic tub for grade school and middle school, and then a second for high school).

TOUCH IT ONCE rule:
For example, if you’re cooking and you take out the vanilla, you put it in the mix, then put it back in the cupboard. Immediately. Don’t set it down to put away later, don’t movie it to the side. Don’t put it down. Touch it once.

5-MINUTE TASKS:
Break down your weekly cleaning chores into short, daily, 5 minute tasks. Do one or two a day. Do it during a commercial break or while you’re talking on the phone.

HOME MAINTENANCE:
Does everything have ONE convenient place? Make cleaning and organization simple enough for a 5 year-old to do by making sure everything has a regular place. One place for shoes, one place for pens, one place for important papers, one place for bills.

THROW IT AWAY:
The less junk you have, the less you have to clean. When it doubt, throw it away! If you’re reluctant to do this, keep a box in the garage and throw stuff out there, and every 2 weeks, throw what’s in there out.

HELP:
Fill out notecards for every cleaning task you want done. For example: “Clean the downstairs Bathroom” has a list of items like: *Spray cleaner on sink/around faucet and base and scrub clean *Spray cleaner around top, seat, and base of toilet—wipe down *Put toilet clean in bowl/scrub around sides *Spray shower with cleaner/wipe down all faucets, walls *Wipe down floor *Windex mirror with paper towel *Take out garbage/replace liner Give these cards TO OTHER PEOPLE. Then, they know when they’re “done.”

FLYLADY
Check out www.flylady.net: “I want you to let go of your perfectionism because that is what has been stopping you dead in your tracks and just get up and do something.” –flylady

GET STARTED
Start with a place for everything. Make a specific list of everything you need to clean out (laundry room, boys’ closet, kitchen cabinet under sink, etc.) Then do the “Clean Sweep Plan:” Get three boxes or bags: 1. throw away 2. keep 3. give away or sell As you go from room to room, put everything in one of three piles. Make it easy on yourself and, when in doubt: Throw It Away!

TOO MUCH STUFF?
Throw away 20 things a day.

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"Housekeeping ain't no joke." —Louisa May Alcott

"I got the blues thinking of the future, so I left off and made some marmalade. It's amazing how it cheers one up to shred oranges and scrub the floor." —D.H. Lawrence