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Monday, November 12, 2012

Household Management for the ENFP mom

I love to plan. I love it when I finish what I start, and succeed. As a "p" (perceiving - according to myers briggs, it means being a starter rather than a finisher) most of my plans do not succeed. Most of my plans do not last longer than the planning stage.

Don't get me wrong; I actually finish lots of projects, but this is almost certainly due to the fact that I start many, many, many more. The ratio of finished to unfinished projects is insanely unbalanced. The sad fact is, my natural tendency is to see the potential in everything, which can be so distracting that I either forget or become bored with my previous plans.

In a nutshell: routine is the enemy. The second something starts to seem like it might become routine is the second I start to plan a new approach.

It can be a great blessing. I think that being so flexible to change actually helps me a lot in my parenting; it is easy for me to just go with the flow and take my cues from the kids as to what the next thing will be. Everyone is getting restless - let's go to the park! Everyone is cranky? Let's feed 'em and put 'em in bed STAT.

I am a decidedly top-down learner. This is probably why I enjoy and excel at learning languages. My intuition goes into overdrive and I rely a lot on context (tone of voice, gestures, what I think someone in their situation might say). I have an unfair advantage; I just dive in, fearless. It's fun. It's interesting. After all, conversing with another person is about as routine-less as you can get. Even if it is small talk, it's still new, fresh, and exciting if you are doing it in a different language. It's also a game of acting and imitation.

This also helps me a lot in the realm of family history research. I don't get knocked over by the fact that I can't find what I want by going to the way that I want; instead I try a different way. I can use my intuition to guide me to where to look next. There is nothing mundane about genealogy research; basically every time you answer one question, another ten come up. I thrive on this kind of discovery. It's very exciting and fun.

However, when it comes to household chores, this love of change and flexibility is, to understate, not good.

I can't seem to implement any of my household maintenance plans. Let's face it. At the stage of life where I am, I do most almost all of the running-the-house work around here. This is not a complaint! Budget, laundry, cleaning, childcare, more laundry, cooking, butt wiping, and even more laundry....Since I am motivated mainly by excitement, fun, and novelty, that means the laundry won't get done unless I make a conscious effort to do it.

My conscious efforts in the past have always failed after two weeks because they become boring. Routine. Ugh. That would be a good name for a mommy blog; rage against the routine.

It's interesting to me that watching my kids isn't like this at all. I suspect it is because for me, childcare (of preschoolers) is more of fuzzy routine than a set schedule with times. Literally, every day we do things in the same order. You probably would get bored if I shared that order (I mean, I would get bored writing it!), so I won't. But the thing is, there is a ton of variety. For example, my kids never, ever nap at the same time. It's always at the same place in the schedule, just not at a certain o'clock.

It's not possible for me to make a schedule for myself for chores, but I am resigned to the fact that if I want anything to get done, I will have to stick to some routines.

Ugh.

Either I am doomed to have to come up with a plan every two weeks (except, these plans only work if while I make them, I envision that they truly will last the whole year long - or at least months and months! And the end result of this failure is, well, exactly that: the miserable feeling of failing. Which sucks) - OR...I can exercise the smidgen of "j" realism (judging: for all you non myers-briggs savvy people, this basically is the attribute of the finisher. Getting things done, knowing what you can realistically accomplish, and then doing it) - and create and implement a plan that will work.

After years (literally) of trying to do this, I am attempting once again this latter option. Maybe it's naive of me to cling so tightly to the belief that there has got to be a system out there that works for me. But I definitely believe this is true.

This time, my attempt involves a much freer "template." After hours of searching and searching online for a system that somebody else has created that will work for me for my style of household management, I discovered the sad truth.

I will have to make something myself.

Ugh again.

So, I have set out on a quest to design the perfect household management system for myself. I will work this year on perfecting the system, and next year I will work on making it extremely beautiful with lots of awesome graphics, printed charts, etc. I'm actually extremely excited about it - that is - planning it, and then having it. Doing it? Still working on that.

For the past year, I've done a great job at meal planning. I always write down the plans for our dinner. But I never stick to what day I planned them for. This allows me to feel "free." It's the perfect compromise. I had been writing these out on index cards, and it worked great.

Except that I always lose the stupid index cards.

So after a year of the index card system, I threw up my hands and bought a really cute small notebook with three sections. The first section is for meal planning. I figure that I am a lot less likely to lose a notebook than a small piece of card stock.

When I plan my meals, it looks like this:

Dinners for the week of _____
Fri
Sat
Sun
Mon
Tues
Wed
Thurs

SNACKS
1.
2.
3.

LUNCH/MISC.
1.
2.
3.

Notes, things I intend to make ahead, etc:

The cooking week starts on Friday because that is payday. I'm always a lot more excited about cooking when I go grocery shopping. And it's always a lot more exciting to go grocery shopping when there is money. Makes sense.

I have found that if I plan for every single meal, it is not only way too much food, but it also drives me insane. I can't handle it. Usually lunches are quesadillas or pbj sandwiches for the kids, and a gigantic salad for me (and the leftovers of whatever the kids don't eat, so basically two halves of a pbj sandwich.) I have to plan lunches a little bit, or there isn't enough. Three has worked very well. Same with snacks.

Note that there is a big space for random notes etc. I think this is good for me. With this area for freedom, there is a chance the system will work. I like to make some things ahead - like granola bars or whatever - and it takes time. If I plan it, life is much better.

On the back of the page is the place for my thoughts on what went well, or what I need to change. Basically it is a space where I can plan the planning. I'm very good at this, it is interesting, and it's fun. If I build in space for it in my system, maybe I won't abandon the system when I'm craving change. I hope.

The next section in this small notebook is for CHORES.

The way this looks is:
Chores for the week of ______________
Friday ❑
-
-
Saturday ❑
-
-
Sunday ❑
Monday ❑
-
-
Tuesday ❑
-
-
Wednesday ❑
-
-
Thursday ❑
-
-

Honey-do List
1.
2.
3.

Other/Misc./Infrequent Chores/Weird things I have to do sometimes:
-
-
-

Notes/etc.

*TIP FROM A FRIEND:

Next to each day, except for Sunday (day of rest - sort of. When you have three toddlers, the reality is there is no such thing) I have a place for TWO chores. Instead of creating impossibly long, optimistic, unrealistic to-do lists, I have limited myself to two chores (outside the daily seven) - one in the morning, theoretically, and one in the evening. I should be able to handle that, right? Right?

The little check box ❑ represents the "Daily Seven."  I found this lady's blog to be very helpful. In her opinion, there are seven things you have to do every single day to keep your house running:
1. Make all the beds. Easy.
2. Take out the trash: She says to take out all of the trash, I just gather the places where it is full. Or gross.
3. One full load of laundry: to me, this means do all the steps, but not necessarily to the same exact load. Like it is okay if I wash and dry a load, but fold and put away a different load.
4. Keep the kitchen sink clean: I should be more like my mom on this one. But mainly the goal is to have it clean by the end of the day. I'm not so picky about there being dishes in there during the day.
5. Clean up after yourself: this is the hardest one for me - because I am a slob. Basically, if I ever think, "Oh I'll pick that up later," I will know, "NO I'm supposed to do it RIGHT NOW."
6. Bathrooms: basically, do a quick wipe-down of all the bathrooms. I struggle with this. But it is much more sanitary.
7. 10 minute declutter before bed: this is a cinch if I get somebody else on the phone. Then it's done really quickly without me even realizing I was working!

Next, I have a honey do list. There are some chores I just really don't do. Like changing light bulbs. Or...yardwork...bahaha. Danny likes me to have these written down.

Again, the same section for notes/observations etc. I think building it into the system is a good idea for me. I really like meta-planning. I think this proves my craziness, but whatever.

Then there is a TIP FROM A FRIEND. What I am hoping is to gather tips, insights, and positive, encouraging thoughts from friends to splatter throughout this notebook. Encouragement and positive peer pressure are highly motivating to me.

On the back of each page is more room for meta-planning, journaling about the experience, what I should do differently, etc.

The final section in this notebook is for my personal scripture study. For the past little while, I have been doing it in a totally different way than just reading through from beginning to end. Instead, I write down a question, and then I open the scriptures (or general conference talks, or whatever) to a random place, and I try to find the answer in what I am reading. This has been a fun, interesting, motivating way to stay diligent at reading the scriptures. It's almost certainly not going to work for most other people. But I think other ENFPs (or other intuitives - like Danny and I love to read scriptures this way! It starts some of the most fascinating discussions!) will like it. Anyway, I have several places where I do this - in my bed in a notebook, on my phone wherever I happen to be at, in the kitchen in this household management notebook - on a random post it note...I wanted a central locus for the questions. At the end of the year, I want to index the questions in some kind of order. Then I can look back and add to the answers that I get, and make myself (and my progeny) some kind of really awesome, spiritually uplifting book that means something to me. That's the idea. (see how good I am at coming up with great, inspiring, involved ideas?  We'll see if it comes to fruition)

The rest of my household management system involves a three ring binder with lots of plastic folders. The sections are:
Important Info - in case of an emergency, babysitter contact info, etc.
Calendars - preschool schedule, library schedule (theirs, not mine - we never go to the library on anything like a schedule. It's always, "Hey, I feel like going to the library! Let's go!" It's nice to know if it will be open or not though), etc.
Chores - Interconnected Menu Plan templates, recipes for homemade cleaners (dude. They work so much better than the crap you waste your money on at the store, and they are so much cheaper - this should be a separate blog post), etc.
Exercise - thus far, blank
Preschool - and also blank

Oh yeah, there's also a little pouch thing for a tiny little notebook for where I write my grocery list and keep pens, so that there is always one. Also candy, because that is good to have around sometimes. There's also my motto for this next year of my life, that I wrote on an index card. I should write about that in a separate blog post though.

The final thing in this whole gigantic home management extravaganza is a separate notebook that is solely for writing down the cute things that my kids do/say. Otherwise it just falls through my brain like sand in a sieve and is lost forever. It's so nice to have these little things written down. Keeping this notebook open on my kitchen counter ensures that I will remember it. Actually, all of these binders are just open, or laying around, on my kitchen counter.

Don't worry, my kitchen counter is already cluttered. A little more clutter won't matter, and the fact that it can help remind me of all the stuff I need to do makes it more than worth it.

This was a long brain dump. Sorry for so much info. I have been using this system slightly longer than a week and it's worked so far. I will let you know how it continues to develop. I have been thinking really hard about what motivates me, what works, and what always bombs. I feel confident that this could work. It's likely to work for a little while, at least, if only because I actually spent some money on myself by picking the pricier, cuter notebooks/binder. Ha!

So, what do you think? What do you use to manage your household responsibilities? Do you have a binder, and if so, what is in it? What are your tips for getting the chores done in spite of the toddlers?

Thursday, November 8, 2012

I end a 3+ month facebook/NPR fast

Everything Old Is New Again.

Apparently 6 years ago I wrote this and never published it. And even back then, I was into blogging and sometimes taking a facebook fast. I bet the prophet will ask us to do that again this year.

But apparently this was before I decided that 90% of the content on the Mormon Channel (bwahhahahaha now it's changed to The Latter-day Saints Channel, as of like two weeks ago) was either overtly or subtly irritating and not really serving me to listen to it. It was also before I found BYU Quarterly, which is a scholarly source for interesting church history information - too bad none of it in audio format :-(

So here's to the Old Kate, looking forward to future.

***

When I was 15, I told myself that I would not get married until I was 27. I think the reason I thought this was in part because there were so many things I wanted to do, and I was afraid of ending up a naive housewife. For the record, even at that point in my life, I didn't view housewivery as automatically naive. I just could sense that I wanted to have some adventures.

Wayne, "Yeah - like go run around Europe and tour Jerusalem or something."
Me, "Actually, I did both of those things."
Wayne, "No, really?"
Danny and I just laughed. Yes. Really. I did.

Three days ago, I turned 26. I have almost been married for five years, and I have three kids ages three and under. Ha!

It turned out that being a housewife is actually much more fun of an adventure than I could have ever understood at the time. It is not really fair to compare my current self to my immature 15 year old self; I can say that I am much happier now than I could have ever dreamed possible to be. And that is the real goal, anyway - to be happy.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Yesterday I ended a "facebook fast." From July 31 to Nov 6, I avoided facebook. It was the thick of election season. I have friends and family in both political camps. It was becoming extremely negative. I felt really crummy. It was sucking up my already extremely limited free time.

It was not only a facebook fast, but an NPR fast. They were both so depressingly negative.

Honestly, it was difficult at first, but I was surprised at how easy it became. I learned many things, such as:

  • I was in closer contact with all of my family. This was a shocker because I thought I used facebook to stay in contact with them. But I think the truth is, I used to pretend to interact with them, when I was really mainly linking people to interesting things on the internet.
  • I didn't miss it as often as I thought I would.
  • Important news always got to me (Hurricane Sandy, for example)
  • My foot in mouth disease had far fewer flare-ups!
  • To fill the void that these activities (especially NPR) created in my life, I started listening to things like Disney Radio on Pandora, and the Mormon Channel. They were both much more uplifting to my spirit. 
  • The atmosphere of my home distinctly changed for the better. 
  • I don't want to go back to the way things used to be. I much prefer getting a constant stream of interesting gospel-related topics than news. I prefer singing and dancing in the kitchen with my whole family to songs we all know (I can't tell you how hilarious it is to hear a two year old boy sing "hakuna matata!"). I want to keep this.
  • I loved how I felt when I typed "f" in the search bar and the first thing to pop up was "familysearch.org" instead of "facebook.com." This made me feel like a super awesome person.
I don't think avoiding facebook completely forever is the answer. And I also think it is important to stay abreast of the local and national news, and even to listen to some analysis of it. But, returning to the world of politics and people, I think I will do things differently.

First, my purpose in my life right now is to be a good wife and mother. Facebook can kind of be a black hole, sucking me away from my kids' childhoods. I want to be present in their lives, not just the babysitter on the computer chair that makes sure the house doesn't burn down. 

To be a good wife and mother requires me to wisely choose where I invest my time. This mean I need to set specific limits to my facebook and NPR time. I don't really think they should be so much quantitative limits as qualitative ones that are flexible to change. Here are my current ideas:

  • How is this feed making me feel? The most negative experience for me during my pre-fb fast stage was reading the posts of my friends, and friends of friends etc. There was so much negativity, from all sides and spectrums. So much meanness. So much bullying. I really didn't miss it. As I've started re-reading feeds, I've noticed it hasn't really gone away. It would be really fabulous to make a perfect newsfeed, with just the people I love and agree with. But I don't think that's the answer, really. I think it has more to do with choosing what to look at. I don't have to read every person's status update. I used to fill my I'm-really-bored-and-need-to-read-something-for-two-minutes blocks of time with reading fb feeds. I think I prefer playing words with friends during that time though!
  • Would my parents do this? My in-laws and parents are really good at being socially aware. They don't want other people to feel awkward. My philosophy in college was, "If something is awkward, it will alleviate the awkwardness by talking about how awkward it is, because then the talking about it will be MORE awkward, and make it less awkward in comparison." No no, Kate. That is too complicated. It is much better to just avoid the, "I wonder what will happen if I post _____ online..." 
  • Why am I listening to this? If I just need something to listen to while I do dishes, or so I get some adult brain stimulation, the void is best filled with uplifting, inspiring, and interesting topics. AKA: the Mormon Channel. If I want to listen to a specific show, or I specifically want to hear the news, then it would be great to hear the news!
  • What notifications do I really need? My smartphone is awesome. But in the past day since I have logged on to facebook, it has been having a heart attack, vibrating every few minutes with status updates and stuff. I think it would be better if I ignored my notifications (except maybe messages?) and allocated specific time (or times?) in the day when I allow myself to sit down and look at them. Like during breakfast. Maybe I should eat breakfast with my children, but...I think it's okay to leave them to chow down on their cereal for five minutes. I sit, eat, and "converse" with them for two other meals every single day; and breakfast is literally the only time in the morning when I can have a moment to myself. Maybe during the beginning of nap time? Maybe after Danny gets home, so I can have a break? Maybe when Danny is putting the kids to bed (his idea - he prefers to do this - after all, he doesn't really see them most of the day!)? I will have to experiment.
  • Is this an evil person? The thing that stinks about being an ENFP is how to handle severing ties to caustic people. First, to recognize that the person is caustic, or evil, or mean, or whatever - is extraordinarily difficult. I'm more prone to smother than to actively avoid someone. But the truth is, there are people who I interact with (amongst my thousand something friends - yeah - I don't really remember who everybody is...hmmmm) who I need to just unfriend. I think that is something I should probably sit down and do. Or turn off their notifications. Or whatever.
The other thing that I was surprised to feel is a strong (very, very strong - when I get feelings like this, it usually is some kind of divine directive pointing me down a path I need to take) desire to blog. I'm not sure why, or what this blog will become. But I do know that I want to avoid negativity. I want my blog to be about truth and happiness. I don't want to kvetch. I don't want to nag. And I don't want to advertise my craftiness. I want a good, interesting, well thought out, spiritually uplifting venue where I can unravel my mental tangles.Writing appeals to the extrovert in me; it is a place where I can just think out loud. 

I would like to write more about where I got the title for this blog, but I need to go take care of a diaper. I hope this was interesting to you.