Category - Home Sweet Home

Is It Fall Yet?

I love Fall, I really do.  The crisp, cool air is such a welcome change from the hot, heavy air summer.   The drop in temperature energizes me and I almost look forward to being outside.  Spending the morning at the soccer field makes for a great time, even if Boo’s team did suffer one of the most spectacular losses ever.  Well, maybe not ever, ever, but certainly in his short almost 9 years.  He bore it well, though.

So it’s been a bit hard on me to be watching the leaves change while the temperature hovers around 80 degrees.  What’s up with that?  I’ll tell you.  It’s me, again.  Last week, right after the temps dropped into the 60’s, I made a pumpkin spice cake.  It was everything Fall: spicy and sweet and topped with powdered sugar.  You wanted to get out a blanket and turn on the heater just smelling it.  Well, me baking that cake promptly sent the temperatures soaring.  Sorry.

I don’t know what it is about Fall, really.  I grew up in Santa Barbara, where the seasons are Warm and Not As Warm As Before.  The trees are always green and it never rains in the summer.  Somehow, though, I remember shuffling through the leaves in October and November.  It makes me smile to think about it.

Some things just go with Fall.  Pumpkins, mums and leaves, of course.  I’ve got plenty of those.  Pumpkin bread, soups and apple cider are must-haves, too.  But if the temperature is too hot, well, they just sort of loose their appeal.  Maybe if I crank up the air conditioner a little more…

pumpkintureen-1.jpgIn an effort to enjoy the slightly lower temperature today -it’s only going to be 73!- I’m making soup and cornbread for dinner.   In theory, since we’ll be coming home from church as the sun is setting, it should be cooler and coming in to a soup dinner should be comforting.  Especially when the soup is served in my new pumpkin tureen.  In theory.

If the temperatures goes back up to the 80s, you can thank me and my soup.

Dang Squirrels

This morning I had this charming fall display:
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Our home has come under its annual pumpkin infestation and I was getting ready to blog about it and how Bip walks around saying, “Mama!  Puhhn-kin!  Two Puhhn-Kin!  Ghost!  Wooooo-ooo!”   But then…

Today when we returned from dance class and found this:
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What happened to the other pumpkin? I asked my neighbor, who happened to be outside, if she had any “extra” pumpkins on her porch. Not that her kids had stolen our pumpkin or anything.  Like me, she has a 2 year old and you know how they get.  But nope, no extra pumpkins on her porch. She suggested that maybe squirrels  had gotten to it, because they’d been eating the pumpkins and gourds she had on her porch and outdoor table.  I guess it’s possible, but could a squirrel carry off a pumpkin?

Then we walked closer to our door and saw this:
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Argh!  Dang squirrels!  They not only moved the pumpkin, they ate it!  Here’s the whole scene of the crime, to give you an idea how far the pumpkin was moved:
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You can see the rest of the pumpkins to the far left, then the purloined  pumpkin snack on the far right.  I would have loved to see the varmint in question trying to move it!  And isn’t that a lovely rusty pole right in the middle of the walkway!

I guess the heat is making the squirrels crazy.  We’re just trying to have a little fall festivity and it’s like 92 degrees out and the squirrels are eating the decorations.  It’s the end of the world, people.  You heard it here first.

The Loveliness of Clearing the Clutter

livesoflovelinesslogo200612_2_2.jpgClutter. Most of us have it. We all hate it. Clutter is a thief that robs of us our peace of mind, our self respect, time with our family and friends, and the enjoyment of our homes. Clutter is just bad.

So what happens when we clear the clutter?

Well to start with, Amy at Between Daydreams shows us some of her newly cleared out spaces and gives us a list of the benefits of decluttering, including having space for more children!

Elizabeth at Frabjous Days is also decluttering in preparation for a new baby. She recently discovered an amazing gift while sorting through old photos.

Divina at The Bean Sprout takes her inspiration from one of my favorite shows, Clean Sweep, and takes a crowded office space and turns it into her favorite room of the house, complete with a reading nook!

Cheryl at My Thoughtful Spot prepares for a new school year by reclaiming her school room closet. Wait until you see the great space she’s created! She’s got some good advice on handling the clutter, too.

Suzanne at Gladdest Hours has been doing some major purging and organizing all over her house this summer. During the process her children made a very insightful observation. I think it’s great that she had involved her children in decluttering and they’ve really gotten into the spirit of it all.

Over at ChezOuiz, cleaning up the kitchen and around the house sent two 30-gallon trashbags full of stuff to the curb and has led to a greater sense of peace and calm! Way to go Ouiz! And check out the way she uses little Rubbermaid containers for her spices – very nice.

Matilda, at Waltzing Matilda (of course), gets rid of the guilt and the clutter by cleaning up what remains of completed projects and turning her bedroom back into a sanctuary for her and her husband to enjoy.

Michelle at Living Waters reflects on how easily things can turn from blessings into clutter. She’s working on making room for a toddler’s fire truck bed.

Maggie of Crafty in Coffeeland has experienced a very stressful year. But she’s ready to Get Back in the Saddle and start getting her house back in order. Her post is a reminder for all of us struggling with clutter that you can eat an elephant, but you’ve got to do it one bite at a time.

And finally, Dawn at By Sun and Candlelight, is just getting started clearing the clutter in what she hopes to be the first of many posts. This time she tackles the front of her refrigerator and that perpetual pile of paper we all know as coupons!

Goodbye clutter! Goodbye guilt! Goodbye stress and embarrassment and discontent! Hello to the calm, functional spaces that our homes are meant to be. Hello to lost treasures found and more time enjoying our families. Hello to lives that are filled with loveliness. Amazing work, ladies!

A New Resolution

Michelle at Rosetta Stone has a cool idea about resolutions. She makes a new resolution every month, something small and manageable that she can work on for 30 days. I like that idea. I can do anything for a short amount of time. And depending on what you’re working on, it could easily become a habit.

That’s how I started making my bed everyday. In my whole life, I’ve never made my bed. Just didn’t feel the need, I guess. But last year I was faithfully following Flylady and her new habit for the month was to make your bed. So I did. Amazing how much better the bedroom looks and feels.

So I’ve been reading Michelle’s blog for a couple of months now and it struck me that in my never-ending battle against my house, I could make monthly resolutions that would help me to develop better habits. For the record, I went to “no email” on the Flylady list when we left for vacation. Seeing as how we returned to near disaster, moved into a new house on Thanksgiving Day, went right into the holidays and never quite recovered, I haven’t gone back to getting her emails. I’m having great success cleaning up the corners of my house right now, so I’ll stick with that plan. I’ll be ready to restart Flying again soon.

So anyway, with the start of a new month already, I have decided to join Michelle in a monthly resolution. For June, I am going to keep our dining room table cleared off! This is a Major Issue here. The dining room is the closest room to the front door and the table becomes the landing zone for whatever we have in our hands at the moment. We also do all our seatwork at the table and of course, eat three meals a day there. All sorts of stuff ends up there and never wants to leave. I’m tired of shifting it around from one place to another and back. I think it’s a task that is small enough to conquer in a month, but it will make a huge difference in our lives.

It’s time we learned to do better.

A Little Excitement

We had a little excitement here yesterday. It started off when I lit a very nice scented candle from my mom.

I want you all to know that I practice safe candling. I trim my wicks. I keep the lit candle on the safe, heat proof stove top. I light them with one of those red, clicking lighter things, which I carefully leave on the counter so that the hot tip won’t damage anything in the drawer. And I never leave a lit candle unattended. No siree, I sit there and watch the thing burn. Ok, maybe not that last one. But in general, I’m very careful with my candles. After all, we’ve already had to move once because we flooded our house, I can’t imagine the housing office being too pleased with us if we burn down this one.

Anyway, my candle is burning safely in the kitchen, wafting lovely smells of cookie dough through out the house. Boo and Pumpkin Girl had been playing upstairs, then came down to tell me what they wanted for lunch. Mac and cheese, of course. So I set some water to boil and walked away. A few minutes later, Boo said, “Ew! What’s that awful smell?” Now, we don’t call him Melodramatic Boy for nothing. He’s also very particular about smells and Pumpkin Girl and I couldn’t burn our favorite Christmastime scented candle because it would cause Boo to writhe around on the floor in mock agony. So I’m sceptical about this “awful smell.” I don’t smell anything, besides the candle, but I go check it out.

surestart_utility_rdhr.jpgDo you remember how I very carefully set the red lighter thingy on the counter to cool? Right next to the stove? Well, it’s handle was thisclose to touching the boiling pot of water and was melting and smoking and sending the most obnoxious smell into the house.

You know those things are filled with lighter fluid, right? Flammable lighter fluid.

Now I happen to be extraordinarily calm in the face of disaster. Except for one incident when I was 8 and ran into a building during an earthquake. But that was 20-odd years ago and I’ve learned a bit since then.

So I very calmly turned off the stove. I used a wooden spoon to move the hot, melting lighter thingy away from the pot. I got a clean, metal pot, filled it with water. I licked my finger to touch the lighter, which wasn’t too hot, so I stuck it’s melting end, which happened to be the part with the fluid, into the water. Szzzzz.

I shooed the children outside, turned on the fan and opened all the doors.

I don’t have a picture of the melted lighter thingy to share with you, mostly because I’m kind of embarrassed.

You’d think that would be enough for one day. Sadly, no.

Later in the evening, one of our hermit crabs decided to trill_symbiont.jpgbecome a nudist. This is very, very bad for crabs. While they are hard and crustacean-y on the parts you can see, they are soft and weird looking inside their shell. Kind of like those symbiont Trill things from Star Trek Deep Space Nine. Not that I ever watch that show. My husband is the Star Trek Geek around here, thank you very much. And I most certainly was not upset that Counselor Troi and Worf never got together and he ended up marrying that Trill-host girl. Not that I know who Counselor Troi or Worf or Dax the Trill-host girl are.

Anyway, so I found one of our hermit crabs sitting naked on top of the rock structure that the children gave the crabs for Christmas. Being the picture of calm in the face of disaster, I calmly told my husband that one of the crabs was out of his shell and I needed his help. Calm is one thing, but no way was I touching the weird looking naked crab.

I quickly went to the Hermit Crab Association message boards and found out what we needed to do. The folks on this message board are great, by the way, even if they are crazy in love with their hermit crabs like some people are with dogs and cats.

As soon as we opened the crabitat, the crab stuffed itself into one of the crevices of the rock structure. I found it’s abandoned shell, which I put into a small pyrex measuring cup. Philip tried gently prying the crab out of the rocks with a chop stick, but in the end we just picked up the rock structure and shook the crab into the cup. We added a couple of more shells for him to choose from and left him alone.

He picked a different shell for awhile, then moved back into his original one. We set up a little isolation chamber for him in the tank, just in case he’s sick. We used empty CD cases as walls because they are slick and too high for the crabs to climb.

When crabs go naked, they very often die, but so far ours is ok. The thing is, crabs don’t go naked unless they are bothered by something. I suspect the noxious fumes from the melted lighter.

Corners of My Home

I have been so inspired by my success during the 30 Organizational Challenge! However, I look around my home and I am discouraged by the chaos in the other rooms. I’m wasn’t Born Organized like my mother, and having to make an emergency move right after a vacation and right before the holidays, in the middle of the school year and scouts and…well my house is way too cluttered, even for me.

I could give you a list of all the reasons why I can’t seem to get a handle on my house. But really, are they reasons or excuses? I’m not inherently lazy, though I could list a million other things I’d rather be doing than cleaning. Like blogging. I can’t just abandon it in lieu of decluttering my house! All 20 of my faithful readers would miss me too much! Not to mention that back when my internet access was gone for eleven painful days, I wasn’t exactly doing housework with all the extra time.

No, you know what the problem is? (Ok, all of you who just said “too much stuff” may stop reading this post and go watch Dr. Phil) It’s overwhelming! I look around me and I’m just at a loss. Where to start? What to do? How am I ever going to get it done?

The 30 Day Challenge wasn’t just for rooms. There was a separate challenge for small spaces. It dawned on me that I wasn’t surrounded by one gi-normous cluttered house, but just a whole lot of little cluttered corners.

Which got me thinking about some of the blogs I read and how when I first started reading them, they were posting pictures of all the wonderfully cozy corners of their home. For the life of me, I can’t remember which blogs those were (speak up if it was you!), but in trying to find them, I found SouleMama’s blog, specifically her “in my home” category.

Cozy corners…cluttered corners…

Hey, I may be a math turkey, but I can put 2 and 2 together and get 22.

So I thought that I’d start sharing the corners of my home, in all their cluttered glory. I’ll take a picture of one small space in my home which desperately needs work. I’ll set a deadline for myself to have it organized, then post the results. Sounds fun, doesn’t it?

I’m a little hesitant about it. I mean, do I really want the whole internet world to see how I live? I’ve even got some friends who think I’m so organized and together (Hi Carol! Hi Jen! Hi Heidis! Hi Cheryl!). Boy, are they going to be disappointed. Hopefully, though, this will give me some accountability, and give all ya’ll some laughs and maybe even some encouragement.

Now, which corner of my home to start with?

In My Garden

In my garden you will find…

Lots of pink
impatiens

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petunia


Some inspiration

BVMary


A touch of whimsy

stone face

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Evidence of world travels

kimchee pots
(kimchee pots from South Korea)
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(pottery sun from Mexico)

Stone friends

stone cat

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stone rabbits

and real friends
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Memories of the past

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Hope for the future

tomatoes

and of course,

little boys
truck

Playroom Completed

The 30 Organizational Challenge is over. So what do I have to show for it?

Our playroom is now organized. I wish it was “finished” though. We didn’t have time to paint it before we moved in and Philip assures me that it’s not going to happen. The walls are a lovely shade of baby formula blah(look, Sandy, I’m blogging about my walls!) and they need some sort of decoration. I’ve got nicely framed posters from White House Easter Egg Rolls…somewhere amid the moving boxes. We also plan on installing some high, deep shelves for some of the larger stuffed animals. I even have curtains for the room. I think I saw them the other day. But the room is organized, and that is all that matters for now. Focus, focus!

Do you remember the room in it’s original state? You can also read about the work in progress in Working on the Playroom and Purging the Toys. But here are the Before and After pictures:

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Before: Standing right at the doorway. A heap of junk. You can see the attempts at organization with the bins, drawers and containers.

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After: The same exact part of the room. You can see the toy bins are lined up and neatly labeled. To the right of them is a 3-drawer unit for playmobile toys. Alas, there are still 2 moving boxes in the corner. It can’t be helped right now.

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After: This 3 drawer set holds our Playmobile sets. The tackle box on top holds the knights.

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After: The toy bins all neat and tidy and purged. I made new labels for them, too. More on that, later.

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Before: Just moving the camera to the left a bit. More chaos.

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After: There are toys in the middle of the room because Bip (sitting on the couch) was playing in the room while I was trying to take pictures. We moved the small bookshelf seen in the 2nd “before” picture (behind the cradle), added a larger bookshelf and removed the cradle.

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Before: Bookshelf #1. The top 2 shelves are my books, the bottom 3 are a mess of the kid’s books. A Little People farm and house are next to it.

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After: Bookshelf #1. The Little People toys are in the closet now, and in their place is a
hamper with fun noodles, swords, light sabers and a hobby horse. The top 2 shelves are still mine, I just straightened them up and used the space better. The middle shelf is for the children’s taller books and there are 2 magazine holders for their magazines. The next shelf down is the rest of their books. The bottom shelf are games and puzzle books. On the middle shelf you can see a little kitty litter pan:

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It holds their thin little books that tend to get lost or smashed with the regular size books.

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Before: Bookshelf #3, cradle and dress up clothes. The dress up clothes are to the left of the little bookshelf, in a white box.

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After: Bookshelf #2 (new) and Bookshelf #3. The very top of bookshelf #2 (the tall one) and the first shelf are for mementos. These things have sentimental value but are not played with. The next shelf is for paper storage. Boo and Pumpkin Girl each have their own “Becca Box” full of drawings they made of their sister. They also each have a white paper storage box, labeled with their name, for storing whatever paper treasures they may have. Cards, drawings, whatever, as long as it is paper, gets put here. When they are full, we will purge them together. These boxes are new and the children both really like them.

The cradle is gone and bookshelf #3 was moved into its place.

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After: Bookshelf #3, holding some larger toys that don’t fit anywhere else.

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After: The dress up box. I got a bigger box and with the children’s help, purged the dress up clothes that no longer fit them. I got baggies for some of the smaller pieces that were likely to fall to the bottom. The lid for this box is hiding behind the door because we don’t need it on a daily basis. The clothes will all fit inside, if they are folded nicely. I don’t expect that to happen, except when we move again.

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Before: Well. Um, this was supposed to be the crafting area.

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After: A real Crafting Zone! Table and chairs are readily available. The white bins hold crafting supplies. The blue bin is the new dress up box.

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After: The craft storage cart. Top drawer is crayons and pencils, drawer 2 is stickers, drawer 3 is paper, drawer 4 is coloring and activity books.

One thing I had done a few years ago was to make labels for our toy bins. I used clip art and a big happy font. Last year, I decided we had outgrown those and made word-only labels. Well, they didn’t work so well. Even though my children can read, clean up is faster and easier when they can see in second, from across the room, what a bin holds. So I took the time to replace the picture labels and even added some to other containers. Go back and look at the “after” pictures again and see if you can spot all the nicely labeled containers. When I told my children that I had made them new labels, they were pretty happy. The labels not only help with clean-up, but also to remind them of the toys they have, that when properly put away are out of sight-out of mind.

Here are close-ups of 2 of the labels:
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(Pumpkin Girl calls this set “pretty land”)

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And now, to make a long post even longer, let me answer the questions posed as part of the 30 Day Organizational Challenge.

1. What was the hardest part of the challenge for you and were you able to overcome it?

The hardest part was getting overwhelmed. Just looking at the mess, being angry with the kids for not maintaining the room, being angry with myself for not setting it up for them correctly in the first place, being angry at having so much stuff. Lots of anger. It got in the way of seeing rationally and being able to realize that it wasn’t so much one huge project, but lots of little ones.

What was helpful was having this 30-day deadline, being accountable to the challenge. We just worked one area at a time, step by step.

Another challenge was finding toy storage that is accessible to small children. Even though the room has a ton of vertical storage, the children can’t reach it! Some things just had to be stacked. We kept that to a minimum, and just accepted that some toys would need to be stored on the floor.

2. Tell us what kind of changes/habits you have put into place in order for your area/room to maintain its new order?

As I mentioned, I put new picture labels on the toy bins and storage containers. The new labels will quickly show what goes where. We also added boxes for important papers, which will keep them from getting stuck any ol’ where.

Another change was that we tried to group like items with like items. All the Polly Pocket/Princesses are on one shelf. The doll clothes suitcases are on one shelf (one suitcase for each different size doll). The building toys are on different shelves, but on the same bookshelves. Books and magazines are on the same bookshelf. All the Playmobile toys are in one cart.

We will continue to clean up this room on a daily basis, as part of afternoon chore time. More diligent monitoring on my part will help, too.

3. What did you do with the “stuff” you were able to purge out of your newly organized space?

Some of it we gave away, some was thrown away. Toys in good shape, that were used and liked at the time but are now outgrown were boxed up and put in storage to wait for our toddler to grow in to.

4. What was the biggest lesson you learned from this experience?

First of all, it’s not enough for the room to be cleaned up daily. Even though they do a good job of it, the children still miss things that are out of place. Mom or Dad need to go in to the room at least once a week and point out the things that need putting away. We need to go through the toys at least once a year, perhaps right before all the birthdays and holidays get started, and take out the toys and books that are no longer played with.

And less is more!

5. Now that you have completed the PROCESS, do you think having and keeping your space organized will make a difference in your life?

After taking the “after” pictures, I sat in the newly organized playroom and felt a sense of peace. I looked around and thought, “I like this room!” I have noticed that the children are playing with toys that have been neglected for a while. I think that is because now they can see most of their toys or at least the storage boxes. With a more organized space, I can nag less and they children can take a greater responsibility for their things. Did someone say “shalom in the home?”

In the long term, I hope that we can teach the children to have a place for everything and keep everything in it’s place. The old cliche is still valid. I hope this lesson stays with them for a lifetime. I also hope that they learn that organizing a space is not the end. You have to work to maintain it. A few minutes a day will keep an organized space from becoming a swirling vortex of junk. I hope the playroom never gets that bad again! Now this is the most organized room in our house. I hope to be inspired by it to organize the rest of the house.

Purging the Toys

Alright, here I go,  I’m Purging the Toys!.  Anything that is clearly trash or broken and unfixable is going.  I’m working section by section, a little every day. To aid my efforts, I set up a big bin to toss all the toys that were not put away when I found them.  This way I didn’t have to stop and put them away myself, but while I work they are out of the way. 

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The first area to get purged was the books.  My children love books and people love to give books to them.  I can hardly object because I love books, too and have many, many shelves of them.  But they’ve outgrown many of the books on their shelves and Bip the Baby is too young for them still.  Those well-loved-but-outgrown books are going to get packed up for a few years.  Already the shelves look better.  The top three shelves in the playroom were actually my books.  I straightened them up and was able to shift things around a bit and confine myself to the top two shelves.

Next I hit the puzzles and games.  Most of the puzzles have been outgrown.  That was easy.  Again, the good ones (Lauri puzzles) will get packed away, the others will be given away.

Then the toy bins.  These were mostly OK, with only a few items out of place.  The toys here are probably their most used things.  I just straightened them up a bit.  I did have to take some time to go through Pumpkin Girl’s personal bin.  She had a lot of stuff just thrown in there that really belonged somewhere else.

I also went through the dress up clothes.  Again, lots of little things at the bottom of the box that don’t even belong in there.  I moved the clothes into a larger, sturdier Rubbermaid box and I will have to have the children help me sort out what fits and what is too small before I am finished.  I think I will get little bags for all of Pumpkin’s tiaras, another for her bead necklaces. That should help her find them easier.

The craft bins were next.  They have one craft tote that holds pencils, crayons, rubber stamps and stamp pads.  This is one item that actually works for them!  They know how to use it, like using it and so I had nothing to fix.  But we also have a small 4-drawer rolling cart that holds coloring books, paper, notepads, stickers and a stationery set.  This needed a lot of purging!  Most of the contents of the drawers were co-mingled.  Part of the problem here is that the drawers are not labeled.  I got everything all sorted out and purged. I even left them one drawer for any artwork they feel like keeping.  It’s one of the smaller drawers, so by necessity we’ll have to empty it on a regular basis. Another drawer is for coloring books. We have a lot of coloring books.  I kept all of them because I want the children’s help to purge them. Pumpkin Girl has a subscription to Hidden Puzzles and I found several books in there, completely untouched.  I have canceled her subscription and will see if she notices.  When and if she finishes up the puzzle books she already has, we can talk about starting the subscription back up. 

Which brings me to another problem area: magazines.  We have 5 years worth of Ladybug magazines and 2 years of Spider magazines!!! We all love these magazines and past issues are read over and over again.  Throwing these away would be like throwing away favorite books.  I thought and thought about this situation.  What would be the worst thing that would happen if we threw these out?  I think we’d all regret it very much.  However, I have been noticing that lately Pumpkin Girl likes to read Boo’s Spider magazines.  I checked the age range of Spider, and sure enough, she’s right there at the lower age.  I checked the age for the level up after Spider, which is Cricket.  Boo is 6 months shy of that age, but a very strong reader.  It occurred to me to bump both children up one level, essentially canceling Ladybug, keeping Spider and adding Cricket.  I don’t mind these magazines coming in the house one bit.  I enjoy reading them to the children, even past issues.  We will take our beloved Ladybug issues, repair them with packaging tape and save them for Bip.  When he is ready for them, I think Pumpkin and Boo will be just as excited to share them with him as I will be.  It’ll be like finding old friends!  I discussed this with both children already, and Pumpkin’s only request was that she be allowed to pick out her favorite Ladybug issues and keep them.  I thought was reasonable and agreed.  They are both looking forward to being bumped up to the next level magazine.

The biggest culprit of toys not put away is Pumpkin Girl.  I found a pile of toys that were stashed near her bed on the Day I Closed the Playroom.  I told her to return them to the playroom, then put them away.  Her idea of this was to stash them behind the baby cradle.  This is a recurring problem for her, which is why her job is to clean their bedroom while Boo takes care of the playroom.  She does understand how to put things away and is physically capable of doing it, so this is a character issue for her.  We’ll be working on that, too.

Bookshelf2after
This second bookshelf was hiding behind the cradle.  It’s hard to see in the before pictures, but it was a prime area of dumped toys.  It was overflowing with books, games and other junk.  Keep in mind, this room is still a work in progress.  My next challenge is to evaluate what this room needs to make it work.  I hope to involve the children in this part as much as possible.  They need the room to organized in a way that works for them.  Which isn’t necessarily the way it would work for me.  We’ll just see how it goes…

 

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