Monday, September 2, 2013

Cleaning the Heart of Your Home, Part 1


Tonight, I spent some time looking for articles about the heart of the home.  I wanted to know what room the majority considered the central home of a family.  I finally stopped, because as most of you know, you could spend many tiring and wasteful hours searching the internet for information.

However, this is what I gleaned after thinking that I would probably find most articles mentioned the kitchen as the heart of the home.  And for some homes, this is a correct assumption.  Depending on the where the kitchen is and the size of it, it may very well be the heart of some  homes.  The family gathers there to eat, surf the net, play games, do homework, talk, and of course, cook. However, some  people see the heart of the home as the master bedroom, because it defines the start of the day and the end of the day.  This is where the leaders of the home (parents, grandparents, single moms, single dads) set the pace for their day.  The main point is that the heart of the home involves the people who live there.  A house is just a house without its people.  There is no heart without the living that goes on there.

Maybe, you are wondering what started me on this search.  For those of you that know my age, you know I have been a grandma for a while now.  I have 2 daughters and 10 grandchildren.  Before I went back to college and after I graduated, I have always considered my primary job to be a homemaker.  Surely, after forty-two years of marriage this woman knows what the heart of the home is.  However, I now believe there are several answers.  And, much of this depends on your circumstances;  which can include everything from your religion, the stage of your life (young married, child rearing, empty nest), the arrangement of the rooms in your house, and even your personal preferences at this particular time.

What started this quest?  My kitchen counters and my rolling cart in the kitchen were looking unkempt.  I didn't want to cook until I cleaned the kitchen.  Also, I have been thinking about reorganization;  however, there is no point in crossing that bridge until  the kitchen is clean.  So even though the whole family cannot gather in my kitchen comfortably, I feel that if my kitchen is clean and organized, it will increase the probability the rest of my house will follow.  Therefore, my focus this week will be on the kitchen.  I actually think it will not take me long to wrap up  this job, and it will boost my enthusiasm to work on other areas.

If you would like to follow along I will be posting jobs to do in the kitchen on my facebook page "Chronic Fatigue and Creative Decluttering."  

Food for Thought:
  1. Have you ever thought about what or where the heart of your home is?
  2. Is there a room in your house that seems to affect your moods more if it is messy?
  3. Think about a time your home has been fairly uncluttered.  Which room seems to set the   tone for how you feel when you enter the house.
  4. Is there a room in your house that irritates you more than any other if it is cluttered or dirty?
  5. Spend 5 to 15 minutes in that room today:  1) throw away trash and 2) put objects where they belong.  Do not try to clean the room in one day.  You need to take time to rest and continue keeping the areas clean you have already been working on. 
 Remember, you can accomplish much with baby steps.  

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Cleaning Calendar


Copyright 2013 by Deborah Bolton
I can do all things through Christ which [strengthens] me.
                                                          Philippians 4:13 (KJV
DAILY
Morning/Afternoon
Make bed
Take meds and supplements
Wipe counters/sinks               
Empty dishwasher                  
One load of laundry
Work on zone (for 15 minutes or less)
Chore of the day
Night
Load dishwasher
Wipe kitchen counters
Pickup using baskets
   Adapted from  M. Cilley's
                Weekly 
                                       MONDAY:  Vacuum Centers and dust
                                       TUESDAY:  Clean Toilets
                                       WEDNESDAY:  Mid-week planning,
                                                             Anti-procrastination Day 
                                       THURSDAY:  Mop floors
                                        FRIDAY:  Catch-up Day
                                        SATURDAY:  Family Day



Copyright 2013 by Deborah Bolton


















It is my pleasure to share this with you, my readers and fellow travelers in the chronic illness zone  and for those who are reasonably healthy, but find this approach to cleaning an easier one.  I am going to print this out and frame it to see if it works for me.

Experimenting again,
Deborah Bolton
                            

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Here I Go Again! My Nest Needs Some Work.



Hello Everyone!  I hope you have been having a good weekend.  Mine has been a quiet one, because last week I got pretty worn out, which I should have figured would be the case.  However, I was overtired and rebelling against the fact that is usually what happens to me when I am out of my little nest.  I went through that blaming it on other things, when the fact I was not handling things well, because of the fatigue.  So I have rested.  

But now, I have to deal with the fact I let things go this week and still haven't unpacked.  What is my plan?  Baby steps are the way to go.  I plan to work on one room at a time, and I will rest when needed.  Each day, I am going to post what I plan to do for the next day.  You are welcome to follow along.  However, I realize your home may need to be worked on in different areas, or maybe you have another agenda this week.  

Moreover, realistically, I may not get everything done this week.  That is the way it is with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Fibromyalgia, and other chronic illnesses.  The point is:  I am not ready to throw in the towel and give up.  One, two, three -- I will work on the principle of threes, and I know the house is going to look better by the end of the week.  Who knows?  I may even take pictures.  

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Poll #1 -- Did getting sick affect your weight?

After I got sick, I  gained weight.  Although, there may be different things that affect weight, such as medication, hypo-thyroid, change in diet, or amount one is able to exercise, I thought some of you might be curious if others had similar changes.  This is not  a scientific poll.  It is purely for your interest.  The poll is located on the right sidebar, until it is closed on September 27, 2013.