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Thanks and Enjoy,
Josette LeBlanc

Friday, December 30, 2011

Clutter Free - Even with Kids

As part of my New Year Resolution, I am going to try to get my house to be a clutter-free zone.  That is a tall order to fill, but even taller when you have kids.  After doing bunches of research on some of my favorite organization sites and blogs, I have discovered a common element in all the clutter-free tips.  The element is three-fold. 
First, you must purge - this step probably takes the longest.  You must take each room, part-by-part, and make sure that the things in the room are actually used.  A good rule of thumb, if you haven't touched it in a month then you probably don't need it.  This is easy in some rooms, like kitchens and bathrooms, and harder in other rooms like kids' rooms.  Kids seem to want every toy they have ever played with even from birth and there is no reasoning with them.  My seven year old has a valid reason to keep everything, but we don't have the room or the time to keep all of this organized.  So a couple times a year, I make sure  to have her purge her toys and I have to be firm.  She must get rid of at least half of what she has - especially toys that I have never seen her play with in months.  This takes a good deal of coaxing and sometimes even just outright "No you cannot keep that" commands, but eventually we get it done.  To keep this step from becoming the end of your inspiration, keep it manageable.  I have set up a calendar to do a room a day for cleaning and purging. This keeps me from feeling overwhelmed and keeps my family from feeling like I am getting rid of everything they own.  (*Psst...they don't even realize it....because they think I am just cleaning)
The second element of having a clutter-free home is to organize - this is my favorite step.  I just love rearranging items into pretty, neat, little containers and new areas of organizations.  This is easiest done for kids' rooms by having multiple bin storage.  I label my 7 year old's bins because she can read, however I have to include pictures on my 3 year old's bins so that he can begin learning to pick up as well.  Using containers is one of the easiest ways to combine the purging and organizing elements.  When the container gets full it is time to get rid of the older stuff and make room for new stuff.  Plus, containers can easily be labeled and easy for kids to manage.  Mason jars are awesome containers for kitchen, office, and bathroom items.
The third element is to set routine clean-up.  There are several ways to accomplish this step.  I have a cleaning schedule set-up where I clean one room a day from top to bottom and in this clean-up process I use the following "clutter-free" suggestions. 
                    1.  Use the "don't leave the room with empty hands rules"  - this allows you to pick up items that are accumulating and return them into their proper place.  
                    2.  Another way is to use the basket technique, as you are doing your daily chores keep a basket with you to toss in stray items and when the basket is filled empty it by returning items to their proper place.  
                    3.  The final way to continue to keep clutter at bay is to have a donate box always available.  I keep this in my laundry room, and when I see items that I don't want or the kids don't need - I toss it into this box.  When the box gets full, I make a run to my local donation store and drop off the contents.  It keep clutter down and keeps myself mindful of buying items that I will actually used and not objects that catch my eye.

DIY - Donation Box


Step 1: Get a cardboard box. I use a box from an online order from Bath and Body Works.  It already came cute with inside pattern.  If yours does not come with a premade patterned inside, you can always cover with patterned contact paper.





Step 2: Pin the flaps down.  I used gold brads and poked a hole in the corners with an ice pick.

















Step 3: Put on a pretty label and add decorative border to bottom.  This is the step where you can make it your own. 


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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Ready Recipe Roundups

I am always looking for sensible meals that can be made from pantry items.  I don't like most recipes I find on the internet, because they are just too complicated.  There are some out there that are reasonable and I will definitely be linking those.  I don't have the time or energy to put together 20 different ingredients and roll out dough or any of the other "chef" duties like that. I am far from being a culinary chef, nor do I want to be.  However, I do like to provide good meals that my husband and children will eat.  So I am calling on all my followers to help me with this post.  I want you to please comment any good recipes you have tried lately with your family and if you could link the recipe to this post.  I will be adding some new ones that I try with my family as well.  Hopefully together we can build an awesome collection of "REAL" recipes that any common mother or wife can make for their family.  

 Easy Taco Bake

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

How Not to Fail at a New Year's Resolution

Now that Christmas is sadly over with, it is time to turn our efforts to the New Year.  Everyone is talking about their New Year Resolution.  I truly hate this time of year, because you say your going to do something and inevitably it will fail because it is set up to fail from the beginning.  Let me explain.  First, you are supposed to set some lofty goal for the entirety of the upcoming year.  Tell me how this is supposed to succeed.  A goal for an entire year are you kidding me!  Second, you are supposed to stick with this goal all year and hopefully  (I do mean HOPEFULLY) reach it by the end of the year.  There is no system here.  There is no baby steps to success.  I have always been an advocate of system and procedure.  So here is my go at a procedure to help you and ME reach our lofty New Year's Resolutions.  

Step 1: Set your Resolution - For me I am sticking to the tried and true lose weight and exercise more resolution.  
Step 2: Break your Resolution into manageable steps according to months - For example, I would say want to lose 10 pounds in the first month by eating correctly.
Step 3: Break your Monthly steps into manageable daily steps - For example, I might create a meal plan that will help me keep on track.
Step 4: Keep record of your progress - For example, I could record my weight and food intake in a daily food journal
Step 5: Reward, Reward, Reward - every time you reach your monthly goal - reward yourself.  - For example, I might buy myself a new outfit at the end of the month if I lose my 10 pounds I had set out to do.

Now that you have taken the time to strategically plan out your New Year's Resolution, and detail out your carry out plan, you will be more likely to stay on track and gain at least a portion of your New Year's Goals.
I hope this has helped you!  To further help you I have created an easy to use New Year's Resolution Planning Guide that outlines these five steps.  Just click on the link below.

New Year's Resolution Planning Guide




Saturday, December 24, 2011

The Season for Family

So for the next few days of the holiday season, I will be focused on only one thing - FAMILY.  You know keeping a beautiful house and staying organized can bring peace to your life, but without family to enjoy all your peace with then what good is it really?  As Christmas Day soon approaches, I am reminded that family is the most important gift you can receive during the season.  As I was reading, The Cajun Night Before Christmas to my 7 year old, it dawned on me that sometimes I tend to be obsessed with the wrong things in life.  I obsess about making things perfect and I sometimes forget how perfect my life already is.  So here's to a few days off to remember the true meaning of Christmas.  Don't worry I won't be gone long - just enough time to refuel and relax.  Have a wonderful and safe holiday season!

Friday, December 23, 2011

Socks Meet Your Match

I believe everyone knows the feeling that the dreaded "laundry day" induces.  Sitting around mindlessly folding and storing, folding and storing, folding and storing laundry.  You think that would be enough to make laundry day bad.  It gets worse.  My worst enemy, socks.  Only four people live in my household, but somehow there is a mountain of socks to match up.  You know what I am about to tell you next right, THEY NEVER ALL HAVE THEIR PAIR.  Can I tell you how irritated this makes an obsessive compulsive person like me!  Well, I am not going to battle this out any longer.  I will safety pin those little buggers together with their pair before I put them in the wash.  I keep a baby food jar of safety pins in my laundry room and I just safety pin as I am sorting the loads of laundry.  I take this same baby food jar and put the safety pins back in after I have folded the pairs together.  Some people like to leave the socks safety pinned together in their drawers, but I have a three year old with nimble hands and I don't want him poking himself with a "safety" pin.  Anyway, this makes for a great little system and never am I to play mix and match with the sock monster again.




By the way to my personal friends out there, if you have empty baby food jars that you are dying to get rid of, send them my way, I have some ideas I would like to try on them.  Thanks. 

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Cleaning for Less

Okay so I just had to repost this little tidbit from Organized Home.  A great way to save money and keep cleaning tasks to a minimal - create your own cleaning wipes.  This was easy to do and took very little time.  The total price I paid to make mine were $3.00, and I got a whole lot more wipes than what comes in those on-the-shelf wipe containers.

Click on the link to take you to their website.  Thanks Organizedhome.com - I just love your site!!!
Organized Home Cleaning Wipes

Menu Planning for the Teacher in You

My first post: MENU PLANNING FOR THE TEACHER IN YOU


I struggle coming up with new menu ideas for everyday of the week and every week of every month of every year.  I find myself cooking spaghetti about 3 times a month, (it is what we are having tonight, ughhh).  Now I love spaghetti as much as any carb-craving female, but I heard my husband silently moan two weeks ago and I could tell he doesn't always share my enthusiasm.  This is when I realized something had to be done. I don't have a lot of time to browse recipe collections or even concoct my own. But what I do have access to is tons of SCHOOL MENUS.  Now I know what you are thinking, OMG she is cooking school lunches for her family, what kind of mom is she?  School lunches have come a long way in 30 years.  They are now healthy, nutritious, and variety packed.  I take the best of these menus and make my own for each month.  What is great is they are seasonal as well!  I occasionally throw in the newest recipe from the internet to spice things up as well.  I plan out my menus a month at a time and grocery shop based off of these menus.  By planning your meals you save yourself the trouble of coming home to starving children and not having anything defrosted because you don't know what to cook.  You also save tons of money while shopping.  I can't express the peace that just meal planning alone has brought to my life.  I hope it will bring peace and serenity to yours as well. Use the free monthly meal planner to help you get started.

Simple Order Monthly Menu Planner