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You are here: Home / Archives for cleaning

Cleaning for the Holidays

November 26, 2012 by Tracy

Cleaning for the holidays
Cleaning for the holidays

Photograph Credit: Microsoft Images

With Thanksgiving and Black Friday complete and Cyper Monday here, I am focusing on cleaning our house with an eye on a few items.

We are not in a hurry to purchase. If the price drops within our cost range, then we will snag it. If not, then we will wait. Last year, we bypassed a television that was $50 more than we desired on both Black Friday and Cyber Monday.

The week before Christmas, our flat panel was the Amazon deal of the day, and we snagged it for the price we wanted to pay. Research, establish a price, and wait. The deal will come if you are looking. 🙂

In gathering our gifts and deals, I desire a clean, organized space for these items. Over the weekend, I cleaned our living room from top to bottom and rearranged. We now have an empty space for when we set up the Christmas tree.

Though I am planning to clean every room of my house in the coming weeks, you might not have much time. Because I understand your time constraints, I present the Little Time, Some Time, and More Time Methods to cleaning for the holidays.

Little Time Method

If you can only squeeze in a little time throughout the week to clean your home, then try this Little Time Method.

Little Time Method

Monday – General pickup of every room in the house. Allow children to help by playing a game.

Tuesday – Dust every room of your home. Spend no more than 10 minutes per room.

Wednesday – Use disinfecting wipes to clean your bathrooms.

Thursday – Sweep your floors with broom, Swiffer, and/or vacuum cleaner.

Friday – Spot clean any marks on pictures, mirrors, furniture, and floors.

Some Time Method

If you can devote some time to cleaning, then try this Some Time Method.

Some Time Method

Monday – Picking up every item out of place in your home and returning the items to their designated spaces. Children can help run items to their “homes.”

Tuesday – Dust each room of your house making sure to remove all dust from the tops of tables, dressers, and counters.

Wednesday – Clean your bathtubs and showers and then use disinfecting wipes for sinks and toilets.

Thursday – Sweep and mop and/or vacuum your floors.

Friday – Clean all pictures and mirrors, and then spot clean marks on furniture and floors.

More Time Method

If you can spend time cleaning your home, and then try this More Time Method.

More Time Method

Monday – Work through each space of your home putting items away, reorganizing items, and allowing children to help.

Tuesday – Dust each room of your house including the ceiling fans. Use furniture polish to keep the dust bunnies away.

Wednesday – Clean your bathrooms wiping the outsides of the bathtub, shower, and toilet.

Thursday – Sweep and vacuum your floors. Then wash your hard floors by hand and steam clean your carpets.

Friday – Clean all pictures, mirrors, baseboards, and windows. If any marks remain on furniture or floors, then spot clean.

In using time wisely, I prefer the More Time Method about four times a year, and then the Little Time and Some Time Method between the deep cleans. As you examine your time frame, you might only get to squeeze in the Little Time Method. However you prepare, focus on your priorities. Spot clean as needed until your schedule slows down.

Find a system that works for you and your family. With a plan in place, you can focus your attention on executing your cleaning schedule. Happy cleaning!

Question: How often do you clean your home? 

Filed Under: Cleaning, Household, Scheduling Tagged With: cleaning, scheduling

How to Make Cleaning Fun for Children – Part 3 of 3

November 19, 2012 by Tracy

Make cleaning fun for children
Make cleaning fun for children

Photograph Credit: iClipart

In training our children to help around the house, this series continues to encourage me to make cleaning fun.

I get caught up in just doing it myself because I can do it faster and better than waiting for my kids to figure it out. However, as I teach them and mentor them, there are six more hands working. In the long run, we can accomplish more together while having fun.

Thus far in this series, we have seen how creating a game for laundry and pickup and providing a tool make cleaning fun for children.

If you have older children who are not interested in these games or using the cleaning tool, then maybe a non-monetary reward will spur them on to motivational cleaning.

Part 3: Give Non-monetary Rewards

Most children – no matter their age – want to know how much they can earn for doing chores. Some families instill an allowance system or a reward chart for completing designated tasks. You may or may not choose one of the options, but children of all ages need encouragement.

My children are young, and rewards are a big deal to them. Wanting to reward them, Paul and I have an allowance system in place, but we also reward along the way with non-monetary awards. Some of our choices include the following rewards:

Family Walk

My kids move so quickly to finish picking up when they know the reward is a family walk through our neighborhood. Loving to go outside, my children desire to ride their bikes, push a baby stroller, or take a stroll as a family. Again, this reward may or may not work with older children. I’m not quite there yet as my children are ages 7, 5, and 2.

Movie Night

All curled up in Daddy and Mommy’s bed under the covers with a bowl of popcorn and a fun movie motivates my kiddos to complete the task requested.

One-on-One Time

Getting the privilege of going grocery shopping, getting nails painted, baking, cooking, or playing a game alone with Daddy or Mommy is a special privilege in our house. Though we try to spend one-on-one time with each of our children each day, Paul and I give extra time as a reward which gets chosen more than the other rewards offered. 🙂

Planned Outing

With numerous outing opportunities, we sometimes choose a reward as a family. Keeping our home looking nice is a group activity. So, when we finish the tasks, we enjoy celebrating our accomplishments together. From a museum visit to a bounce house session to entertaining friends, we find a group reward just as beneficial as an individual award.

As you encourage and teach your children how to clean as part of the family, those sessions don’t need to exude boring and dreaded tasks. Learning along with you, I am trying to make cleaning fun for children and adults.

Life is too short to hate what you are doing. By making a game, providing a tool, and giving non-monetary rewards keeps my children interested and my house maintained.

In using time wisely, keep trying ways to include your children. As they feel part of the family and contribute towards its workings, they will enjoy the rewards, and hopefully, find the process fun. Happy playing!

Question: What rewards do you offer in your home?

Filed Under: Cleaning, Household Tagged With: cleaning

How to Make Cleaning Fun for Children – Part 2 of 3

November 12, 2012 by Tracy

Make cleaning fun for children
Make cleaning fun for children

Photograph Credit: Fotolia

During busy seasons, just giving my house a once-over is good enough to keep the dust bunnies away. When I know that I cannot get to the deep cleaning, I relax.

No need to worry and stress over a spic-and-span house since it just isn’t going to happen right now. However, I can enlist helpers to assist in a quick cleaning.

In part 1 of this 3-part series, I shared how to make cleaning fun for children by creating a game. Games are fun, but if the older child is winning every time, then the younger ones get discouraged.

To add variety to our household, we give our children a cleaning tool.

Part 2: Provide a Tool

To assist in cleaning our home, I keep a broom, mop, Scrubbing Bubbles, sponges, steam cleaner, buckets, disinfecting wipes, and numerous other items. These tools increase my efficiency which helps in using time wisely.

To make cleaning fun for children, I empower them with a cleaning tool and a responsibility. Armed with their tool, they own their job and enjoy getting our home looking nice. Three of the tools my children use are duster, magic eraser, and vacuum cleaner.

Duster

I keep 3 Swiffer dusters in my cleaning closet. Usually if one of my three children wants to dust, so do the others. To eliminate the “I asked Mom first,” I just keep three. When all three are dusting, I either assign them to a room or to a task.

If assigned by room, then they are not to invade each other’s space. If assigned by task, then they need to work together. My toddler loves to dust the baseboards. She can reach all of them and enjoys getting behind the furniture and under the tables.

Giving my toddler a task and my older two a room, the job gets done quicker. However, my toddler does not always hang in there as long as the other two. By combining the options, I have more flexibility. My choice one day will differ from another day depending on how my children are working together.

In keeping the cleaning fun, Paul jumps in to dust the ceiling fans as he reaches just fine. I, on the other hand, would need a chair. 🙂 I usually manage the cleaning routine and help as needed during the entire process.

Magic Eraser

My favorite cleaning tool ever is the Mr. Clean magic eraser! When I get that broom scuff on the wall or the crayon scribble on the table, the magic eraser restores the wall and table back to normal.

Though a bit tough to scrub, I allow my children to clean up the messes that require the magic eraser. My girls do a great job using this sponge to eliminate the crayon from their desks and craft table.

Vacuum Cleaner

Where my toddler runs from the “loud” vacuum cleaner, my older children love to vacuum the floors. With an upstairs vacuum and a downstairs vacuum, I can accommodate both of them. Of course, there is no quiet for my 2-year-old, but she survives. 😉

With a special tool like a duster, magic eraser, or vacuum cleaner, children want to help clean. For them, the use of a special tool is cool.

Now, my children are young, so these tools are big deals. If you have older children, then maybe a pressure washer, steam cleaner, or Swiffer mop might encourage them to do their chores while having fun (though they probably won’t admit it :-)).

As you work smarter rather than harder, make cleaning fun for your children, and they will ask for more ways to help. In using time wisely, a little planning for fun really pays off. Enjoy these times with your family while maintaining your home. Happy playing!

Question: What cleaning tools do your children want to use?

Filed Under: Cleaning, Household Tagged With: cleaning

How to Make Cleaning Fun for Children – Part 1a of 3

October 29, 2012 by Tracy

How to Make cleaning fun for Children
How to Make cleaning fun for Children

Photograph Credit: Microsoft Images

I am not great at delegating. Whew . . . I said it. When it comes to working with children, I am learning how to teach my children while delegating responsibilities to them.

Sometimes allowing them to help is more work than just doing it myself, but I need to teach them to contribute.

In my family, the key is to make cleaning fun. From my many experiments, I will share in this series some strategies that work in my household.

Please share in the comments what you have found to work in yours as I’m learning and love the extra help.

How to Make Cleaning Fun for Children

  • Create a Game – Part 1a and 1b
  • Provide a Tool – Part 2
  • Give Non-monetary Rewards – Part 3

Part 1: Create a Game

My children love to play games. From matching to Candy Land to Sorry!, my children thrive on the goal of reaching the finish line. Moving this natural desire for accomplishment from a board to our house not only shows them how to apply their knowledge in one area to another, but also how to confidently take on new tasks.

Though any task can convert to a game, we play the following games while keeping our house organized and cleaned up:

Who Makes the Most Points?

With our top-loading washing machine, I love the extra help adding clothes to the washer. With the open washer acting as a basketball goal and backboard, my son and older daughter see how many items they can accurately “shoot” into the washing machine.

Though the tasks takes a bit longer than if I just loaded the clothes, those moments are filled with laughter, giggling, and “scores.”

A benefit for me is letting my children exert their energy while I monitor the process. They have a blast and enjoy helping. As they discover that household tasks are fun, they want to help more. 🙂

For a variation, allow children to pickup their dirty clothes and another clothes or towels around the house and “shoot” them into the laundry hamper or basket.

Where’s the Match?

My older daughter loves patterns, games, and puzzles. She sees patterns in everyday life, and I enjoy finding ways to encourage her and strengthen her desire to learn. A game she loves to play is matching the socks. When the basket of clean laundry arrives via Dad, brother, or Mom, she runs to find the socks.

At the beginning, I had her put them all in a pile. I then checked that all the socks were inside-out, then she began matching them. As she has grown, she is beginning to correct the socks before matching. This game has become her own in our house because “how dare anyone take her socks.” 🙂

In using time wisely, games like Who makes the most points? and Where’s the match? help to make cleaning fun for children. Empowered with the rules and the goal, they can seize the task and accomplish it while having fun.

In next week’s installment, I will share two additional games my children enjoy which helps me save energy and time. Happy playing while accomplishing!

Question: What tasks do your children find fun?

Filed Under: Cleaning, Household Tagged With: cleaning

Where You Shouldn’t Use Scrubbing Bubbles . . .

August 20, 2012 by Tracy

Where not to use Scrubbing Bubbles . . .
Where not to use Scrubbing Bubbles . . .

Photograph Credit: Microsoft Images

One of my favorite cleaning products is Scrubbing Bubbles. This family of products has kept my bathrooms clean for years.

With porcelain sinks, I read a number of reviews prior to cleaning that recommended using Scrubbing Bubbles, which I did.

Finding the Corrosion

On this last round of cleaning at our home, I noticed that the chrome around our bathroom faucets was peeling away.

At first, I thought my children had left toothpaste on the knobs causing the flaking and corrosion down to the metal.

To clean it, I took off the hot and cold knobs and did a thorough cleaning. Whatever happened, the peeling chrome was beyond repair.

Realizing that our over 7-year-old house might need a new faucet or two, I purchased a similar model and Paul, my “Mr. Fix It” husband, replaced the faucet. In reading the directions, Paul asked how I cleaned the sinks. Well, of course, I use Scrubbing Bubbles.

Locating the Source

Well, guess what? The directions on the faucet state that the use of products by Lysol and Scrubbing Bubbles has been known to damage the chrome. Wow! No wonder 3 of our 4 sinks had chrome-peeling issues.

Since I just learned that my constant cleaning (at times) with Scrubbing Bubbles caused damage to our home, I will refrain from using Scrubbing Bubbles on all our chrome fixtures. I will still use it on my toilets, counters, and possibly the porcelain basins.  We now have 1 faucet replaced, another that was not affected, and 2 more with minor chrome damage.

If you also use Scrubbing Bubbles on your chrome faucets, take notice. In cleaning your home and using time wisely, use Scrubbing Bubbles on your toilets, showers, and tubs. The product is great for cleaning, but the chrome fixtures is one place where you shouldn’t use Scrubbing Bubbles. Learn from my mistake, and happy cleaning!

Question: In my quest for another cleaner that will protect the porcelain basins without damaging our chrome faucets, what do you recommend?

Filed Under: Cleaning, Household Tagged With: cleaning, Scrubbing Bubbles

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