From the category archives:

Doom Avoidance

Clean Kitchen Sink

Daily Housekeeping Routine

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by Nick on June 3, 2011

You all know that I keep up with FlyLady and that I’ve talked about her before on this blog. I have even changed my opinion on some of her philosophies of housekeeping. I am not a “FlyBaby” as her supporters call themselves. I think that is a bit cultish, and, although Marla the FlyLady seems like a lovely human being, I don’t do personality cults. I think that’s probably because I’m jealous of the cultee.

The other reason I can’t be called a “FlyBaby” is that keeping house, like any other day-in-day-out activity (think of exercise, eating right, being a good person, keeping up with your finances) doesn’t have any magic secrets. Faire le ménage, c’est apprendre à mourir, to paraphrase Montaigne. You can get tips from somebody, but ultimately it’s up to you to figure out how you tick.

I do think she’s on to something with her “routines,” though. She says that a person who struggles to keep up their house needs a routine to keep them on track. A routine is something that you should do every day, or on a regular basis. The sine qua non of FlyLady is to clean your kitchen sink every day. This is a point of order in an otherwise chaotic household. It allows you to always do your dishes at any moment. Although I don’t necessarily do this rule, I think the point is well taken.

Anyway, anyway.

I would like to share with you my daily routine I’ve figured out. These help me avoid doom. I have actually found that I don’t have to do each one every day, however, checking my list at least keeps me thinking about it and not putting it off too long.

1. Make beds. I actually slack on this a lot. However, in theory, I like to make the beds because, like a shiny sink, these are a point of order in the bedroom part of the house. Otherwise, the whole area can look like the garbage tip. This also kind of assumes picking up in the bedrooms: get stuff (e.g. laundry) off the floors, take any dishes to the kitchen, etc. I put it under the rubric of making beds in my mind to simplify my list.

2. Pick up in the living room. I try to pick up in the living room each day. Especially dishes, but we still have lots of toys, paper, etc., because we are not terribly strict on what we let the daughter have in there.

3. Pick up in the family room. I’d rather have a house with one big room than two separate rooms to keep tidy, but I try to do this every day too. Actually, since my daughter doesn’t always come down into the family room, it’s easier to keep up with.

4. Clean out cat box. I have two enormous cats. I used to have one tiny cat who was hardly any trouble but these guys eat a lot and make a lot of stink. Therefore, every day.

5. Kitchen. My kitchen routine is do the dishes and sweep the floor. Having the kitchen clean is a big deal because that lets you make meals, handle kids’ food requests and so forth. It’s a pain but there is a return on the investment.

6. Bathrooms tidy. Flylady refers to this as “swish and swipe.” Just pick up and put away the toothpaste, brushes, makeup, etc. and wipe things down with some window cleaner.

7. Laundry. The fly says “a load a day keeps chaos away.” I think that’s pretty much right, but let me say that for a family of three I average slightly over that, but we’re not skimpy with towel washing. I think that if your family was bigger than mine, you’d definitely be averaging 1.5-2 loads of laundry a day. I try to think about laundry every day but usually I have laundry sprints where I’ll wait a day or two and do three loads or so. I kind of put it on an assembly line where at the end of the day I fold the laundry and put it away. That part is very important too.

8. Quicken. This is not housekeeping per se, but I definitely need to think about the finances each day. Otherwise there are too many transactions to remember. I’ve found that prioritizing the finances on a daily basis is a definite doom-avoidance measure.

That’s it for the daily list. I’ve found these lists are highly personal, and suited to your family and the particular house you live in. But the daily housekeeping list helps me a lot.

I also have processes that I run on MWF, Weekly and Fortnightly. I’ll cover these in different posts.

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Hiya, How’s Your Laundry?

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by Nick on July 7, 2010

Just a quick note to say howdy and to check in. I’m having a few technical difficulties with WP, so I can’t post pics which limits my shtick to some extent. But let me just pose that age-old question, so that we can avoid doom, you and I, together.

  1. Are you tracking your laundry? If not, grab trash bags (hopefully clear–just don’t let them get tossed) and put everything in them. Then take them in proximity to your washer and dryer and start a load. If there is a rotting load in there right now, put more detergent in and start it. Do not let the cycle of rotting begin anew.
  2. How are you for dirty dishes? If the kitchen is a wreck, start a load of dishes in the dishwasher. If it’s full but dirty, turn it on.
  3. Anything that stinks must go out. Put things in the trash and get it out. Now. Do not allow the stink to persist unimpeded.

This is good enough for avoiding doom right now. Just do it. Or something.

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Grocery Shopping: Sam’s Club

May 12, 2010
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I haven’t talked extensively about my approach to keeping the house stocked. It’s an important part of managing the household and also in avoiding doom. I mean, there are just some things that you don’t want to run out of. E.g. toilet paper. Having sat on the throne and found out there is no TP [...]

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The Family Organizational Style

May 4, 2010
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Hi everyone. I’ve been silent for several days due to some technical difficulties, which resolved by themselves. Do not ask me about the mysteries of the interwebs. (Well you might ask me but the answer will be iffy.)
My sister did a home-ly post on her blog the other day and talks about what organization means [...]

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Six Steps to Paperwork Victory!

April 28, 2010

I read a definition of porn that went like this: “things that are not going to happen to me.” I had a feeling I was looking at some of that in Penelope Loves Lists today.  Here is the star, Twyla Flowery Folders:

Now, let’s just clear up the fact that I’m not into flowery folders. I [...]

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Is it Doom? Another Case Study

April 26, 2010
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I’m thinking doom should be a regular Monday thing. Then, when I’m far from doom, we can start having other people share their doom or near-doom experiences.
Today, I’m working in my “home office.” That term sounds so put-together. It’s “let’s organize the home office,” spoken in plummy tones. It’s not shrieking “let’s pick up the [...]

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Financial Management: Lessons Learned

April 21, 2010
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My good friend and loyal commenter Rob sent me this article the other day on “How to be a savvy cheapskate,” from financial writer Jeff Yeager. Finances are something I take seriously, and, as Rob pointed out they are really on the top of the kinds of Doom we encounter in our daily life. My [...]

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Doom: A Case Study

April 19, 2010

Monday morning. The time when all the world heads for Hades in a luxurious handbasket. Seriously, after all the craziness of the weekend–the weird projects that get dragged out, the rush to get to work and school, it ’s a mess. Even my mother, the Patron Saint of the OCD Housekeepers, had a messy house [...]

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Jump Start a Car

April 14, 2010
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I know there are like infinity of these tutorials on the web but I had to do one because I needed to finally commit the process to memory. Seriously. I have to jump my car more than anyone possibly should. Why? Because (and I love my Toyota , it hasn’t driven me into any ditches [...]

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Avoiding Doom

April 2, 2010
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We’ve had a good ol’ chat about doom now, haven’t we? I do want to make it clear that the concept of doom as it pertains to your temporal welfare is more than a brief series can cover, but I’ll work on this over time and develop the idea more. Some angles I haven’t explored [...]

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