Tombstone sayings
Mar. 28th, 2008 10:14 pmThere's a saying that goes, "No one ever puts on their tombstone 'I wish I'd spent more time at work.'" implying that people who work too much while their kids grow up should come home more often.
I'm pondering the concept of "No one ever put on their tombstone, 'I wish I'd spent more time folding laundry.'"
Our laundry is unfolded. All of it. There's some clothes in the drawers from back before we had kids[1], but for the most part we live out of unfolded laundry baskets. While I did manage to put a few bags of clothes that were too small for Peter away, most of them are still in circulation. Meaning that I dig past them every time I need to find clothes to put on the kid. Sometimes I put them straight on Amber without ever having put them in the closet.
Peter is just now completely outgrowing 18M clothing, while Amber is nearly beginning to fit into it. Amber is outgrowing some things before we ever managed to get them out of the closet from the first round. Luckily she seems to have slowed down on the growth curve and maintained the 9-12 and 12-18M size for a few months.
I however am going to stop feeling guilty for never folding the laundry. I'm sure my mother is horrified. I love my children. My children love me. We don't have a maid. We wear clothes in public. I answer (most of) my e-mail and maintain relationships with my friends. I think we're doing ok.
--Beth
[1] Jon will point out that I'm exaggerating here. He is the person who washes the laundry, and if it ever gets put away, he does it. He makes valiant attempts several times a month. But the work is never done, and I've decided to just live with it that way.
I'm pondering the concept of "No one ever put on their tombstone, 'I wish I'd spent more time folding laundry.'"
Our laundry is unfolded. All of it. There's some clothes in the drawers from back before we had kids[1], but for the most part we live out of unfolded laundry baskets. While I did manage to put a few bags of clothes that were too small for Peter away, most of them are still in circulation. Meaning that I dig past them every time I need to find clothes to put on the kid. Sometimes I put them straight on Amber without ever having put them in the closet.
Peter is just now completely outgrowing 18M clothing, while Amber is nearly beginning to fit into it. Amber is outgrowing some things before we ever managed to get them out of the closet from the first round. Luckily she seems to have slowed down on the growth curve and maintained the 9-12 and 12-18M size for a few months.
I however am going to stop feeling guilty for never folding the laundry. I'm sure my mother is horrified. I love my children. My children love me. We don't have a maid. We wear clothes in public. I answer (most of) my e-mail and maintain relationships with my friends. I think we're doing ok.
--Beth
[1] Jon will point out that I'm exaggerating here. He is the person who washes the laundry, and if it ever gets put away, he does it. He makes valiant attempts several times a month. But the work is never done, and I've decided to just live with it that way.
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Date: 2008-03-31 02:15 pm (UTC)Maybe it'd be helpful to have a basket in the corner that you can throw outgrown clothing into, so you're not digging past them every time? Laundry's far from an all-or-nothing thing. By all means, don't feel guilty for not doing things that aren't beneficial for your family -- but a little bit of organization might actually give you more time for the things you care about. (Having a profusion of laundry baskets is very helpful with this, as it lets you sort things quickly and easily, and they can stack up to take up less space when not needed. I've had good luck with small laundry baskets from the dollar store for this purpose.)
Newt