So, I've been reading this amazing book called
Large Family Logistics. A good friend recommended it to me, and I've been poring over it for the past couple of weeks. It's fantastic!! It may even have the capacity to change how I do (or
don't do) laundry...which would be miraculous, indeed!
The amazing author,
Kim Brenneman is a homeschool mom of nine kids, who keeps a super organized, clean house, cooks from scratch, cloth diapers her babies, hangs her laundry to dry on a line by 8am, and is a good, Christian person. She seems to be the most amazing woman to ever walk the earth!! It has been awesome to read the details of how she manages her home and family. Because really, it's all about the details and systems we put into place in our homes that make them run smoothly.
So many days seem to just pass me by, without my really having accomplished anything around the house. Most days sneak by without a single load of laundry done or a bathroom cleaned. I often go to bed with a sink full of pots and pans, and clean laundry piled up around me, instead of nestled in drawers where it belongs. My kids do their daily chores, so the house stays picked up and relatively swept and vacuumed (meaning
relative to an adult version of clean...kids' standards of cleanliness are quite different than
adult standards, you know?), but I'm so busy trying to do way too many other (good) things with my time, that my home sometimes falls apart (um...knitting a sweater is good, right? But that laundry won't wash itself, will it...darn!).
Kim Brenneman teaches that if we have simple, effective systems and plans in place, and train our children to be a part of them, we can keep order and peace in our homes and in our lives. My favorite part of her book is how she assigns a weekday to each area of her domestic life, as the mothers of the past did for generations.
Here's how she lays out her week:
Monday is laundry day (catch up on all laundry, but still do at least a load every day...she does
4 loads a day!).
Tuesday is kitchen day (make yogurt and broths, soak beans, clean kitchen, clean out fridge, etc.).
Wednesday is office day (finances, phone calls, menu plans, errand plans, declutter office, calendar, file papers, plan lessons, etc.)
Thursday is town day (errands, appointments, etc.).
Friday is cleaning day (deep cleaning, wash sheets, dust, mop, vacuum, etc.).
Saturday is gardening day (mow, weed, water plants, sweep/shovel porch and walkways, straighten garage, clean cars).
Sunday is the Lord's day (attend church, worship, rest).
Isn't it great? I want to adopt this in my home. I want to start working earlier in the morning, and work with a plan to really try to accomplish more in my home each day. I think Kim's way of organizing her life seems super effective...kind of a way to fit everything in, you know?
If you haven't read this book, I highly recommend you do! It is super inspiring. So many great tips and such sound advice on motherhood, whether you have a big family or not. Kim even included two appendixes: "Coping While Exhausted and Overwhelmed" and "Moving Beyond Survival Mode." Even though she seems so close to perfection herself, I think she really understands the hearts of mothers.
Have any of you read it? What do you think?