How To Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind
How To Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind
How To Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind
Reality: Im a slob.
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I created the blog A Slob Comes Clean eight years after I arrived at the
place in life where cleaning was supposed to be easy. I started on what I now
call my deslobification journey in that moment of desperation in 2009. I did
not want to use the s-word. Id often told myself and others that no matter
how bad it was, I was not a slob.
But that was the word that came to me. The word that worked.
A Slob Comes Clean is a catchy title and rather self-explanatory. I was
ready to be honest with myself, and I was ready to get my house under control.
Still, its an insult. The dictionary defini
tion is clear. You dont call someone a slob if
I was ready to
you want to be her friend.
be honest with
And thats why it worked. Once I called
myself, and I
myself a slob, I couldnt sugarcoat my issues
was ready to
anymore. I stopped making excuses.
Theres another reason Im glad I used that
get my house
awful word. It helped me find my people. As
under control.
women started reading my blog, they werent
horrified. Instead, they thanked me. These
women were relieved to find someone who thought and struggled the way
they did, and they were glad to know they werent alone.
As I learned more about these women who shared my struggles, I saw
they were amazing, creative, intelligent people. They were artists and poets
and teachers and musicians.
I liked them.
Over time, by connecting with women who told me the thoughts I
expressed were their thoughts, too, I identified a relationship between the
slob part of my brain (the part I despised) and the creative part of my brain
(the part I loved). Knowing the direct relationship between these two sides
helped me accept that being a slob is part of who I am. Its how my brain
works. This realization did not mean I should give up, but it did give me
permission to stop feeling like a failure when traditional organizing advice
(written by people whose brains are very different from mine) didnt work
for me. I just needed to find ways that worked for me, with my unique brain
and in my unique home.
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2
The Worst Thing About
the Best Way
Fantasy: If something is worth doing, its worth doing
right.
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step-by-step lists that told me exactly what to do. I also had lists for every
other job I was assigned. Mopping the kitchen? Dusting the chapel? No
swish or scrape was left off these lists.
My idealist self was happy. I was learning the very best way to clean,
and I was going to rock being a homemaker one day. I would do everything
right. All the time! I mean, I was cleaning those showers perfectly at the
camp in the two hours each day when I had nothing else to do but clean
bathrooms, so of course Id do it all perfectly when I had one little ol bath
room of my own (maybe two) to clean.
At the same camp, I worked in the kitchen, washing dishes and serv
ing food. We learned in one of our health trainings that its actually more
hygienic to let dishes air-dry than to dry them with a dish towel. At least
thats the part I remember.
Im pretty sure the point was to be vigilant about using superclean,
totally dry cloths to dry dishes. Yknow, since it would be impractical to let
everything air-dry.
I didnt pay attention to the part about it being impractical. Impracti
cality? Thats for wimps! Wusses! Why would I ever do anything other than
what was best?
Years later, now that Im living smack-dab in the middle of reality, Ive
realized my desire for the very best way contributes to my slob problem.
Huh? Well, this:
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Whats that? Oh, just a bunch of baking sheets, slow-cooker parts, soup
pots, movie theater refillable cups (and more)... air-drying.
Air-drying for days weeks months at a time.
Heres what happens: I let them air-dry because air-drying is the very
best way. I learned that from the professionals.
Plus, air-drying means I dont have to find a dish towel, I dont have
to dry each one individually, and I dont have to put them away right now.
I cant put them away right now. Theyre air-drying. Duh.
The very best way is also the easiest way? What could possibly be better
than that?
Except that if air-drying is going to be the very best way, it has to
include putting the dishes away. But air-drying takes time. It doesnt hap
pen immediately. And no one (especially no one who considers herself
superefficient) can be expected to watch dishes dry.
But by the time the dishes are dry, theyve blended into the landscape
of my kitchen counters. Theyve been there long enough they dont register
to my brain as being out of place.
The next time I need a baking sheet, I grab it. I use it, wash it, and put
it back in the pile to air-dry, because air-drying is the very best way.
It seems normal and not at all lazy until one day I feel inexplicable
despair. I stand in my kitchen, wondering why I feel so bad, and suddenly
realize Im irritated by its overall messy appearance.
I shake my head to clear my Slob Vision and realize theres a huge pile
of stuff behind my sink.
An eyesore I didnt see with my eyes but felt with my heart.
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I have no choice but to use scarier stuff than the cleaning products I was
scared to use in the first place.
Its a cycle. A bad one.
While I tell myself Im going to look up the best way to recycle in my
area, my recycling container overflows and turns into a recycling area.
The plastic bottles and newspapers eventually mix with other junk thats
not recyclable.
Now its a project. A frustrating, overwhelming project I put off even
longer, so it grows.
And becomes more overwhelming.
Things should be done a certain way. Why do something at all if theres
a better way it could be done? But even if I knew a better way, would I have
the supplies or the time to do it that way?
Three words in that last paragraph are ones I now recognize as signal
words: would, could, and should. Signals that its never going to happen.
When those words are in my inner monologue, I have to ask myself, But
what will I do?
All the wouldas, couldas, and shouldas
All the wouldas,
in the world dont get my bathroom clean.
couldas, and
Know what gets it clean? Cleaning it.
shouldas in the
(Seriously, the profundity in this book
world dont get my
is amazing.) When I called myself a slob,
I had no choice but to face reality. My
bathroom clean.
ensuing passion for reality has been a big
Know what gets it
factor in my own deslobification process.
clean? Cleaning it.
I accepted that whatever I had been doing
in my home wasnt working. Ideas werent
making a difference. The only thing that made a difference was actually
doing something. Cleaning with whatever I had on hand, whether it was
the perfect thing or not.
Over time, and with much angst, I can now more easily differenti
ate Really Great Ideas from Things That Might Actually Happen in My
House. With success and progress, Im willing to act on realistic ideas and
not bother with the ones that will never happen.
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While there are a ba-jillion good habits we cant seem to create, were amaz
ing at putting empty toilet paper rolls straight into the trash can without
ever thinking about Moms great idea.
Or maybe it plays out like this:
We get excited about paying for next summers vacation with money
earned from selling used toilet paper rolls to strangers on the Internet. The
whole family gets in on the action, and we fill up those boxes until they
overflow.
And tumble out of the cabinet when someone opens the door.
We collect more. And more. And even more. The time has finally arrived
to sell them.
But I need a camera and a box that will fit all of them without smush
ing them (since weve overfilled the original box).
And I cant remember my eBay password.
I can solve all those problems, but Ill have to wait until a better time.
A time when I have the mental energy to deal with all of that. A time when
I simply... have more time.
Meanwhile, we gather more and more empty rolls, and I get more over
whelmed, and it becomes less realistic that Ill ever get around to actually
doing this.
And we cant use that cabinet because its overflowing with empty toilet
paper rolls.
These scenarios may seem extreme, but theyre exactly how it could go
down in my house. I know.
Because I know, I choose reality.
Reality is accepting that while some people do things like this and earn
decent chump change, selling my trash would be more trouble than its
worth to me. And it would make my house even harder to maintain.
I cant, as a slob, do anything that will make my home harder to
maintain.
Instead, Ill view the information like this: Wow, that is so cool! People
really sell used toilet paper rolls on eBay? Next time the school/church asks
for them, Ill buy some! Yay for having no reason to keep boxes full of used
toilet paper rolls. Ever!
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