The ten things that help me find the magic in motherhood. Being a mother is not an easy job, but it is the most rewarding job I have ever had. When I do these things, I find more peace in our home, and more time to just BE with our children.
1. I try not to go to bed with a dirty house. Well, let me rephrase that. I try to go to bed with a straightened house.
I love waking up to a house where things are put away. In order to do
this, I enlist the kids to make sure the house is all put together
before we lay our heads down on our pillows.
2. How do I enlist the kids? my best tidying up secret; stations.
Each one of our kids is responsible for a station in our house. They
are responsible to make sure their rooms are clean, and their station is
clean. Stations consist of; den, playroom, dining room, and family
room. Each child has a room, and I pair the older kids up with a
younger child to make sure they know what to do.
Their
station needs to look like we would want it to look if a visitor was
coming over. That means every pillow needs to be put back on the couch
and toys picked up. We do stations just before bed time, and while they
work on theirs, I work on mine. I tidy the kitchen, wipe off the table
and chairs, and clorox wipe the bathrooms. It takes us between 10 to 15
minutes, and then we go to bed with a clean house.
3. Bedtime routine, and two thumbs up.
Every night, rain or shine we join together as a family. This is the
most important time in our family’s day. We start our time together by
talking about what is happening in our family. We discuss anything that
might be important to remember or something we have going on. This is
also an opportunity for the kids to tell us important points about their
day.
Then
we do one of my favorite things as a family. Jonathan or I pick
someone to receive “two thumbs up.” Two thumbs up is a way to reward
someone in our house for doing something awesome.
For example, “Isaac you get two thumbs up for being reverent in church,
or Tess ate all of her dinner tonight.” It is the perfect opportunity
to point out the kind of behavior that we like to see.
I
remember a friend telling me that her daughters self esteem grew when
she started riding horses and receiving awards. She had never gotten an
award before. I believe that kids grow when we acknowledge their
successes. In our family one of our kids gets an award every night.
Someone is always a winner. When him or her receive two thumbs up, we
give them an actual two thumbs up, we clap for them, and they receive 3
extra tokens(I will share this secret in a minute.) After our two
thumbs up ritual we end the night with family prayer. I believe this
routine to be one of the greatest things we do as a family.
4. Ok, tokens. We
have been doing this in our family for a couple of years now. We are
still doing it, because it works and our kids respond to it. I did a
post on this a few years back. Go here, if you want to read more about it.
sidenote:
I am a little more relaxed with the tokens and what we give and take
away for, then I was in the beginning. If you choose to do this, find
what works for your family.
Tokens
are our way of rewarding our children for chores, good behavior, and
good choices. We also take them away for the opposite. Tokens can be
redeemed for money, or used to spend on computer, tv, or other special
rewards. We love the token system. Our kids cash them in every Monday
night.
5. Plan out your week. I have a beautiful calendar. Which I absolutely love. I bought it here. I sit down with it every Sunday.
I
use it to plan out my week, and make sure we are all on the same page
around here. I write everything down that I want to accomplish in the
week as well. Once I have done that, I fill in the days with my kids
stuff, hubby’s stuff, and my stuff. That way I make sure I accomplish
things that are important to me as well. A mom that does for herself, is
a happy mom.
Included
in my list, I have clean the house, laundry, and exercise. I figure
out which day that week those will squeeze in the best and plan
accordingly. I also plan when and what I will exercise for the week.
If I want to do it, I have to have a plan.
6. Lay out their clothes.
I lay out my kids clothes every night before bed. It is so helpful,
and saves so much time. When clothes, sock, and shoes are already out,
then there is no rushing around looking for them in the morning. I even
lay out the bows that I will have the girls wear in their hair. Saves
me so much time, and brain power. My brain doesn’t think so well in the
morning when I have just crawled out of bed. I have to say this is one
of my greatest mommy secrets.
7. Enlist your kids to help. I have heard my friends say that they don’t have their kids do chores. My kids do chores every day.
In
the morning, they are responsible to : make their bed, put away pj’s,
brush teeth, say prayers, eat breakfast, get dressed, comb hair(with
mom’s help), and clear breakfast dishes. At bed time: put their pj’s
on, put away clothes for the day, brush teeth, say prayers, and do their
stations.
I
also enlist my kids to help me when I need it. They help clean
bathrooms, load and unload the dishwasher, and wash windows. Even Tess
has chores that she can do. It is so important that kids learn to be
helpful. My kids have always helped, and they rarely complain because they just know that is what we do.
My
favorite times are when we are working on it together. We turn up the
music, and crank out a clean and tidy house in about 30 minutes. 5 or 6
people working together is so much easier than 1 person doing it alone.
8. If something isn’t working, fix it. If there are little problems in your house, work together to find a solution.
For
example, after school at our house was making me crazy. We just
recently came up with a solution so my brain didn’t explode from over
stimulation. The kids all wanted to talk at once, or have me sign this,
or read this. With 3 school age kids coming at me, I found myself
wanting to crawl in a hole and hide. So… this is what we came up with:
Once
they get home, they pick a snack from the snack basket and take it
outside to eat. This gives me five minutes to tie up any loose ends
from what I have been working on, and also allows them five minutes to
decompress. After snack, they work on their homework, and when they are
ready they call for an FM. FM stands for five minutes. Each child
gets their own five minutes where no one can interrupt them. We discuss
what went on that day, we talk about what might be coming up, and I
look over homework and any papers that came home and might need to be
signed. I love this because this allows me to talk to the kids one on
one. I also find out important bits of information that they might not
have shared with me when everyone else is around. This is a solution we
came up with together. If something isn’t working, come together to
find a solution.
9. Calm equals power.
I have recently figured this out, and I am still working on it
every.single.day. Staying clam does give you so much power. Try it.
Instead of freaking out. Just try staying calm. You will be amazed at
how much better the situation turns out. Now, if I could just remember
to do this every time.
10. Be assertive, not passive. Mothers who are passive, rarely accomplish what it is that they want with their family.
It
is so important to be assertive with your family. Set the limits, and
enforce them. Set the tone, and try to live by it. Find time to assert
some fun. Be assertive with love and understanding. Be assertive with
rules.
When we let too many things go, we never accomplish what it is we want to do, or who we want to become.
Limit your passive moments to only things that really don’t matter,
like a battle over shoes. Be assertive in moments that matter like,
respect of others, or others property. Even if it is your property, you
don’t want them to think that it is ok to do that to others things.
When we are assertive, we show are children that we love them.
I know I said 10, but number 11 is my most important secret.
11. Laugh.
Take the time to have fun. STOP!! what you are doing and be with your
children. Laughter changes your mood. These moments will pass, and if
you don’t have any fun while you are in them; you will regret it.
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