Showing posts with label Organizing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Organizing. Show all posts

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Organizing with Jars

"When I cannot bear outer pressures anymore, I begin to put order in my belongings...As if unable to organize and control my life, I seek to exert this on the world of objects." Anais Nin
From housetohome.co.uk

From http://toriejayne.blogspot.com

From Loved Despite Great Faults

http://www.goodgravydesigns.com/GoodGravyDesigns_SaveGiveSpend.pdf


 For each trip (above) and for each year (below)


Thursday, February 2, 2012

Cleaning Schedule

"We often think about family duties in term of family prayer, home evening, and scripture reading, but we should also remember that activities like feeding and clothing ourselves help us practice love, service, obedience, and cooperation. These simple, everyday routines have great power in our lives."
Cleaning Schedule (additional attempts to take staying at home seriously and make it work without being painful)
Monday: Laundry
Tuesday: Kitchen
Wednesday: Floors
Thursday: Bathrooms
Friday: Organize/Tidy

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Dinner Themes


I read an article about each evening of cooking getting a theme and then when it comes down to planning the meal one extra step of decision making is taken out. It sounds like something that might work for us and my commitment to be a more purposeful contributor to the home.
Monday dinner: Italian
Tuesday dinner: Crockpot
Wednesday dinner: Mexican
Thursday dinner: Tapas (Small bites)
Friday dinner: Breakfast
Saturday dinner: Leftovers or eating out
Sunday dinner: Soup and sandwich

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Organize Information

"The difference between good and poor learners is not the sheer quantity of what the good learner learns, but rather the good learner's ability to organize and use information." Frank Smith



Photographs by Ursus Wehrll (Author of Tidying Up Art)

Friday, September 30, 2011

Saving Memory Items


Keep one box of items per year per kid. Idea from Ali Edwards. Boxes from Paper Coterie

71 Toes

Iheartorganizing.blogspot.com

Monday, April 18, 2011

Office Walls

I love love an organized space.







Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Organizing Garage




I am slowly tackling our garage and quickly learning you need hooks to hang stuff on the walls to make it work. Images via

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Tidy Outdoor for Kids

  1. Give little items - like wipes, sunscreen, and goggles - a home in a vinyl over-the-door shoe organizer. Poke holes in the bottom of each pocket for drainage and hang from your deck or fence.
  2. Turn a lidded garbage can into a custom container for unruly sports equipment and playground balls.
  3. Use strips of hot-colored duct tape to mark off parking spots on the pavement for bikes and trikes
  4. Position a freestanding coat rack outside so wet towels and bathing suits have a designated place to drip-dry
From Parent Magazine

Saturday, April 10, 2010

And it’s not just about abundance; it’s also about order. I think that is why we get so excited by Martha Stewart and her laundry rooms — it certainly isn’t about doing the washing and ironing! It’s about the comfort that order gives us: shelves stacked with fluffy white towels; large glass jars of laundry powder with metal scoops; smaller jam jars of buttons; and so on. Order — and the ability to reach for things as you need them, rather than constantly running out — is a good thing.

http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/06/inside-out-more-is-more/

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Good Ideas from Real Simple and Parenting

  • use a tissue box as a plastic bag dispenser
  • use dry shampoo instead of unneeded showers
  • clean kitchen sponge by heating in microwave for 1 minute
  • store sheet sets in their pillowcase for easy access
  • wrap super size rubber bands around outgrown wall art and use it to display kids drawings, card, or info
  • Stash bill, stamps, and pads in the slots of a reclaimed wood shutter
  • give each family member a personalized clipboard to round up important paperwork, reminders, and invites. hang on wall.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Tidy FIles = Tidy FInances


Suze Orman suggests the following files:
  • Monthly bills, bank statements, and pay stubs
  • Investment statements
  • Tax returns and supporting docs
  • Policy documents and deeds (insurance policies, car title)
  • Warranties and user manuals
  • Forever docs (marriage license, will, birth certificate)

Ten Habits of HIghly Organized People


1. Walk away from bargains
2. Make peace with imperfection: "trying to do every task perfectly is the easiest way to get bogged down
3. Never label anything 'miscellaneous'
4. Schedule regular decluttering sessions
5. Stick with what works: don't wastes time and money obsessively seeking out the best thing
6. Create a dump zone
7. Ask for help
8. Separate emotions from possessions
9. Foresee (and avoid) problems: rearranging the cupboard now is easier than chasing after wayward lids as they scatter underneath the fridge
10. Know where to donate
from Oprah

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Organizing


Notes from these three blogs on organizing

Clear off kitchen counters
Papers that are confined or kept for the long-term should be in files. Papers that you use frequently should be in binders.
- Create a household binder with a tab for each family member. Store schedules and the like behind each person's tab. Have a numbers tab where you keep important phone numbers, account numbers, etc. Copy everything in your wallet and file it here for use in case of theft.
- Journal binders. Create a binder for each family member with tabs for each year of his/her life. It's just as easy to file them in a binder as in a file, and it will be complete when a child leaves home. Children will be much less likely to organize their papers later on, so this is a gift to them. File important papers and a sampling of the best school papers from each year. Be selective about what you save and file.
- Create an identity binder with copies of important documents. Keep one in a safety deposit box. Include detailed physical descriptions, photographs, fingerprints, copies of social security numbers, driver's licenses, birth certificates, deeds, insurance info.
What are we avoiding or postponing? Address those things.
- Think of your life as a wagon wheel. You are the hub. Take care of yourself first, then your spouse, then your children and any of the other spokes coming out from you. Then turn your attention and energy (if any remains) outward to the world. So many of us have this reversed.
- Figure out what your prime time is every day. When are you most alert, have the most energy? Do important tasks then. Take advantage of your natural energy highs and lows.
- Take advantage of your most alone time every day. True alone time means that no one is asking you a question, you don't have to answer the phone, and there is no media interrupting your spirit. Use your most alone time to: plan, prepare, think, and ponder. We all have more peace and calm when we have at least some alone time every day.
- A child who is loved well becomes a mighty force for good. Whatever stage of life you are in, saturate yourself with its joys.
- Only when we give up what doesn't matter are we empowered to do what is really important.
- Never wait uselessly. Have a plan of what you will do during wait time: read, write a note, find an opportunity to teach something to your children.
- Don't mistake activity for accomplishment. Do things less often, but better, and double your capacity. A different approach can make you much more efficient.
- Give yourself permission to play. The person who never plays is not fun to be around. Allow yourself, your spouse, and your children to see the fun side of you.
- Alternate what you are doing to give yourself energy to go on. Vary active tasks with sedentary ones, boring tasks with stimulating ones, activities we enjoy with those we don't. Stop before you are tired whenever possible.
- When planning your day, divide it into 6 sections: already in cement, things I would like to do, odds & ends, dinner, sit-down activities, and inspiration. Also, make your life easier by figuring out what you'll serve for dinner before noon.
Don't let inspiration go unwritten down!
--Get rid of tools and pans that don't work or aren't being used.
--If the tools you need are always in the dishwasher then it's time to get another one
Try to turn shelves into drawers by having trays and bins that slide out.
-Take up the pattern of the Law of Firsts (i.e., Do the most important things first and you'll always find time to do the rest)
--Put date night, temple visits, home and visiting teaching on the calendar at the beginning of the month.
--Prepare lessons ahead of time.
--Pay tithing as soon as you get paid.
--Read the scriptures first thing in the morning.
--Make sure to have family prayer, scripture study and Family Home Evening regularly.
--Find jobs you've been avoiding and do them.
--Act on promptings immediately.
--Take care of yourself first, then your spouse, then the kids and then you can work on saving the world...not the other way around!
--Find your prime time (most productive hours) in each day and do your most important things during that time.
--"A child who is loved well becomes a mighty force for good."
--Give up what doesn't matter to do what does matter well.
--No matter what season of life you're in, savor it.
--Don't answer the phone 20 minutes before leaving to go somewhere or you'll be late.
--The time to talk about change is NOT right in the middle of a fight.
--Heavenly Father doesn't care how much we get done in a day, He cares how we do it.
--When I have to wait somewhere, what is the best use of my time?
--Have a list of things you can do if you have 20 minutes (i.e., mini projects).
--While standing in line at a store with your kids teach them something they don't know.
--Don't ever be waiting uselessly.
--Every time we say "yes" to something, we are also saying "no" to something else (and vice versa).
--Make every decision with wisdom.
--Turn activities into accomplishments (i.e., make a roast for dinner that can also be used for lunch the next day and in a dinner recipe later in the week).
--Do things less often better.
--Give yourself permission to have fun.
--The woman who does not play is no fun to be around.
--Alternate what you're doing so you have energy to go back to it. (Mix up standing activities with sitting activities so you don't burn out).
--True alone time is when no one is asking you a question and there is no media to see or hear.
--Eliminate the interruptions to your spirit, we all need time to figure things out.
--Each day has solidified obligations, write those down and then plan what you're going to do with the rest of the time.
--Don't let inspiration go unwritten down!
--May this week be different!
--Take control and live the Law of Firsts.
--There is no woman who doesn't need YOU to come visit her. (This was in the context of visiting teaching.)