Glo Bible

Ideas for Keeping Clutter to a Minimum for Moms

by Sprittibee on April 23, 2009

Being a homeschool mom, my house is very full of STUFF. Not only do I have the regular toys, games, books, and kid messes that come with having children… but I also have the supplies, science projects, paper trails, eraser droppings and other school messes that usually are created and dealt with while the kids are AWAY from home. Living in a small apartment out of state for two years helped me to let go of a lot of clutter that I might have previously tolerated. While I lived there, I gave about a third of my wardrobe away because we just couldn’t fit our things in these tiny closets. Let’s face it… The more STUFF you get rid of, the more time you will have for your meaningful life’s purposes and the less distraction there will be around you. I truly believe that clutter shortens your lifespan by creating unnecessary stress!

Another homeschool mom asked me recently:

“WHAT do you do with all your paperwork, supplies, toys, and THINGS to keep your sanity if you are home so much?”

Below is a list of ideas you can use to help keep clutter at bay and maintain order in your homeschool or your kid-friendly home:

1. Put a lot of things in a storage bag in the attic and recycle them. Simplifying the toys and books can make things seem newer longer if you have time to exchange books and toys every 3-6 months. We also keep BOXES in the attic (all those Lego boxes that Daddy and the boy swear will be worth something someday). No sense wasting good closet square footage on empty toy boxes.

2. Keep things in kid-reachable spaces and teach the kids to help put things away. You can’t do it all! Use a large toy box for smaller toys to keep them off the floor and provide a place where the kids can easily HELP put them away. Add another rack in the closet that is down-to-size. Keep the snacks in the pantry on a lower rack. If the kids are able to help, mom can delegate chores and cuts down her workload.

3. Hang a hammock type net from the corners of your child’s bedroom for stuffed animals (if you do it in an area where they can climb on the bed, they can put the toys away up there themselves).

4. Put up “around the top of the room” wall shelves for stuffed animals if you don’t already have built in shelving in your closet. We did this when my son was little and kept all the stuffed animals in a row around the top of the room. They could keep 10 of them on the bed and had to “exchange” one if they wanted a new one down. Now we have a book case in my daughter’s closet for her completely insane amount of stuffed animals. I have to limit the amount the kids can keep on their bed or it gets way out of hand (and takes much longer at chore time to make them).

5. Give toys away to charity. Have the kids do a “27 Fling Boogie” Fly-Lady style and pick 27 items to give away (once a week).

6. Do an “around the middle of the room” wall border that is big enough to be a background color for your children’s artwork. Hang their art on the wall (either framed, stuck on with wall putty, or hung on a string that you can use small clips with). Cycle the old ones off and the new ones on as new creations are made. This will make them feel special and give them a place to show their creativity off. Also, you can keep a Tupperware box for the older stuff or keep in a file cabinet by year.

7. Keep a small bookcase in a closet for art supplies. Recycle coffee cans and jars to hold pens, pencils, paintbrushes. Buy plastic boxes for crayons, paint sets, sponges, beads, etc. Or you can set up a “art studio” in the garage if you have room and hang a clothes line to clip their wet artwork to. This is particularly nice if you have an outside washer and dryer. The kids can paint while you fold and hang.

8. Get a file cabinet for your paperwork. Set up folders with labels. Keep your bank statements and receipts in a monthly folder system.

9. Buy the book “Order from Chaos: A 6 Step Plan for Organizing Yourself, Your Office, and Your Life” by Liz Davenport. Use her system for filing paperwork and keeping your desk orderly. One idea she shares (as well as most organizing shows on HGTV) is to ONLY HANDLE MAIL & PAPERWORK ONCE. Keep a trash can by your desk/doorway and USE IT! She also suggests that you keep everything you need to use in a reachable area on your desk so you save time (keeps you from getting up and wasting your time to find things). As a homeschool mom – I think that’s a GREAT idea. You can prevent so much wasted time if you set up school areas that are chocked full of all the things you need to get your work done. It’s amazing how much time can be wasted looking for books, papers, and pencils.

10. If you homeschool, read and use the ideas in the book “The Organized Home Schooler” – by Vicki Caruana.

11. Get rid of anything that doesn’t make you smile, that you don’t use, that isn’t something you can’t live without, or that you haven’t worn (clothing) in the past year.

12. Join a freecycle list and give away the items you don’t need. Seeing things go to families that can’t afford to buy certain items or that are trying to help keep things from going to the land-fill is rewarding.

13. Thin out your drawers. Do you really need 50 pair of underwear? 25 night gowns? 70 white t-shirts? 10 skillets? 65 spoons? 35 boxes of dental floss? 30 used toothbrushes? Keep only what you need. Think of all the people you could bless (or at least all the space you would re-claim)!

14. Use a silent-butler box. If mom finds things lying around, they are claimed and must remain in the silent-butler box for a week. At the end of that week, they must be PURCHASED back with allowance money or they will be given away, sold or thrown away. It is amazing how things will suddenly stop getting left out!

15. Put together a chore chart system and make sure everyone in the family knows what is expected of them. Even dad and mom need a reminder now and then. A friend of mine calls her kitchen duty “KP” and has each of her kids rotate weekly. If they do a good job,  you could reward them with a chance to pick what you eat for dinner. Make sure to add rewards to your system and give incentives for everyone to work towards. Dad can do his chores for a month to earn a video game. Mom can earn a MAID SERVICE or pedicure. The kids can earn a pizza and movie night or a sleep-over. Everyone works better when they have a goal and a prize in mind.

16. Organize your bookshelves and keep children’s books within reach of children. Hold them responsible for putting books away. We have our books separated by topic. All our Science books are on one shelf, our history and geography books are on another shelf, our school books are on the next shelf, and the children have a bookcase in their room with kid books that are not school related. They are required to keep the books in order from tallest to smallest.

17. Sell some things on Craig’s List or Ebay (Ebay charges a fee and Craig’s List doesn’t). Who knows, maybe you’ll get addicted and start making the extra cash you need to purchase things that your family really needs. Go online see what prices things are going for. Who knows, maybe that brand new shirt your daughter never wore that she has now outgrown might earn you a fast five dollars. Sell a few items and you might be able to afford something YOU have been wanting.

18. Clean out the garage. I know it is easier said than done. I’ll tell you one thing, though… it is an AMAZING relief once you get this done. Enlist a few friends and make it a weekend project. Hang some shelves or buy some free-standing ones. Get rid of junk you either don’t use, or don’t even know HOW to use. Paint the walls, hang your tools on a rack, roll out some cheap carpet or astro-turf. Hang a string with a soft ball on the end to tell you how far to roll your tires in while you are pulling the car in (when the ball hits the windshield, you can put it in park). I have even know some people to turn their garage into a chic parlor with pink paint, faux fur sofas and beaded lamps… and many men make them into “football” caves so their buddies can come over to enjoy the game. Either way you decorate it – claim the space in your garage and don’t let clutter keep you ashamed every time the garage door rolls up.

The less STUFF in your life, the less STRESS in your life. The more you allow others to help, the less work you yourself will have to do. Get creative and tackle that clutter. You’ll breathe a sigh of relief when your job is done.

Love in Him,

Sprittibee

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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

gina April 23, 2009 at 11:00 am

#2 is my sanity savor!

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Erna April 24, 2009 at 8:33 am

There are some great tips in here, I was just thinking about how to prevent our homeschool stuff from taking over our home. We’re in our second year of homeschooling and it’s not too bad but I need our basement structured to hold some of the stuff already. :0)

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Penny Rogers April 24, 2009 at 10:22 am

I love the silent butler idea!!! I think I will implement it immediately! Our housework would be so much simpler if everyone picked up after themselves, mom and dad included. Thanks!

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HomeGrown Mommy April 29, 2009 at 1:59 pm

Fabulous tips in this post! I really like the silent-butler! When everyone stays at home, the chores really need to be a family affair or it is way too overwhelming for one Mom! I’ve learned that the hard way and now my kids have a chore list for each day – what an extra blessing! Thanks for the great post!

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