Learn to clear clutter and improve home organizing to free up time for your priorities. Breast cancer and melanoma survivor also offers coping help to cancer survivors and their family and friends.
Breast cancer survivor and clutter clearing author learns to walk her talk
Clutter clearing cancer coping author and motivational speaker We can learn to live our priorities fully (and not just surviving or getting by on a day to day basis) by clearing out the distractions and focusing on what is important to each of us, our families, and our lives. Cancer Survivorship Coping Tools: We'll get you through this by Barbara Tako, two-time cancer survivor and published author and motivational speaker on the topic of clutter clearing. For updates on this new book, click here.
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
A Simple & Unique Gift Idea: Shari's Berries
Whether it is a holiday, birthday, or other occasion to give a gift, we all struggle at times for a simple solution. I recently received a gift card to review Shari's Berries and agreed to disclose this. That said, I was very happy with my purchase. The dipped strawberries were attractively packaged and very delicious.
If you are tired of sending flowers or candy, this is a nice choice. Shari's Berries has many choices in a variety of prices and flavor selections. In terms of quantity to order, I would keep in mind that strawberries are only at their best for a few days, so ordering, say, two dozen, for one person, wouldn't make sense unless you know they will use them for entertaining.
Frugality always makes sense, and you can click this link for coupons . Enjoy!
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Interview with an expert organizer
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If I know I am
going to do laundry on Thursdays, I don’t have to think about it the other six
days of the week. If I mark down a couple weeks twice a year on my calendar for
the big projects, I can quit fretting about them the rest of the year. Maybe I
can simplify my own housekeeping by following my mother-in-law’s lead of
sticking to a few reasonable household cleaning habits. Ultimately, we each
have different lives and circumstances, so we each get to find what works best.
This is one approach.
June Cleaver, from the
television series Leave It to Beaver, doesn’t
live here anymore, but many years ago I married a man whose mother could sure
have given June a run for her money. In fact, back in the sixties, my
mother-in-law, who raised three boys, was nominated for Suburban Homemaker of
the Year of St. Paul, Minnesota. Her home was described as “a model of neatness
and comfort.” No kidding. For years this has been scary, motivating, and
intriguing to me. I wondered: How can I ever keep as nice a home? Gosh, I had better get my act together.
And, most important, how did she do it? I finally got the courage to ask her
and this is what I learned.
Laundry practices were
first on my list of questions because my husband still speaks longingly of his
childhood underwear drawer, always magically tidy and full. Did she do laundry
all the time? Many people who
attend my clutter control classes say they are constantly doing laundry. My
mother-in-law said no. She did laundry on Mondays and Thursdays. She used
bleach alternate times on her whites, so whites would stay white without
getting holes in them. She put a fabric sheet in every dryer load so things
wouldn’t have static and stick together.
How often were sheets and
towels changed? (Do you ever wonder how often other people really do this?) My
mother-in-law washed towels every time she did laundry, and sheets got changed
once per week and washed on a laundry day. How about the rest of the bedding?
The beds got stripped down, and everything on the beds got washed, and the
mattresses were turned in the spring and in the fall. She demonstrated how to
neatly fold a fitted sheet by tucking the corners into each other, smoothing
the sheet flat, and then folding it neatly. Cool.
With three boys and a
dog, she must have dusted and vacuumed constantly? No. She said she dusted and
vacuumed once per week unless there was a specific mess that needed to be
cleaned up. Did she move the furniture every time? No, she only moved it once
in a while. Did she clean the baseboards and curtains every time? No. She did a
thorough room-by-room cleaning once each spring and fall. What about
windows? They got cleaned every
six months, including the storms and the screens.
Did she empty closets out
all the time? No. She would just cull out extra stuff in closets when she was
in them. She didn’t empty out the closets at all. Most toys were kept in a
central spot downstairs. I am guessing this helped keep the bedrooms tidier and
easier to straighten.
Maybe the kitchen and
bathroom were getting cleaned all the time? Did she spend all her time mopping?
No. These rooms got scrubbed down once a week. As a little preventative
maintenance, she did quickly swish out the tub each time. The toilet, tub, and
the rest of the bathroom got cleaned weekly.
Did she have special
cleaning products that did a better job than anyone else’s? No. She used a
solution of one-part vinegar to three-parts water for cleaning glass mirrors
and windows. She used an over-the-counter product in the kitchen, a spray
product for soap scum, and a clinging product for the toilet bowls. She liked
non-sudsing ammonia in water for general cleaning. After wiping down fixtures,
this same water would be used to mop the bathroom and kitchen floors. It was a
simple effective system, and it didn’t waste cleaning water either.
What was I learning?
There were no astounding discoveries here, but I began to see a pattern. My
mother-in-law had very thorough organizational habits. Also, almost every time
I asked a cleaning question, her answer included “unless there was something
more important going on that day.” Keeping a clean house was important, but it
was clear that people and activities came first. She wasn’t one to waste time
lingering over partially completed tasks. When I asked about laundry, she said,
“If I’m getting tied down doing laundry, I might as well get it done and over
with.”
Her secrets to nice
housekeeping didn’t include fanatically frequent cleaning schedules or special
mystery cleaning products. She had developed regular routines, including a
twice-per-year system for those nagging big projects. I often waste time
pondering and worrying about some of the big cleaning jobs instead of just
doing them. I think it would be very freeing to establish a better weekly
schedule and to practice a twice-per-year spring and fall deep cleaning
schedule.
If I know I am
going to do laundry on Thursdays, I don’t have to think about it the other six
days of the week. If I mark down a couple weeks twice a year on my calendar for
the big projects, I can quit fretting about them the rest of the year. Maybe I
can simplify my own housekeeping by following my mother-in-law’s lead of
sticking to a few reasonable household cleaning habits. Ultimately, we each
have different lives and circumstances, so we each get to find what works best.
This is one approach.
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