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How to Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind: Dealing with Your House's Dirty Little Secrets
How to Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind: Dealing with Your House's Dirty Little Secrets
How to Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind: Dealing with Your House's Dirty Little Secrets
Ebook276 pages4 hours

How to Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind: Dealing with Your House's Dirty Little Secrets

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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About this ebook

Bring your home out of the mess it’s in—and learn how to keep it under control! Housekeeping expert Dana K. White shares reality-based cleaning and organizing techniques that will help you learn what really works.

Do you experience heart palpitations at the sound of an unexpected doorbell? Do you stare in bewilderment at your messy home, wondering how in the world it got this way again? You’re not alone. But there is hope for you and your home.

Managing your home isn’t an all-or-nothing approach, and Dana has broken down the most critical things that you'll need to do to keep up with the housework. With understanding, honesty, and her trademark humor, Dana shares her field-tested strategies including:

  • Exactly where to start to tame the chaos
  • Which habits deserve your focus and will make the most impact
  • How to gain traction in your quest for a manageable home
  • Practical tips you can implement and immediately to declutter huge amount of stuff with minimal emotional drama

Cleaning your house is not a one-time project—it’s a series of ongoing and daily decisions. Start learning Dana’s reality-based cleaning and organizing techniques—and see how they really work!

Praise from Readers:

“This book lays out the hard truths of a clean house but in a way that doesn’t make me feel silly for not having embraced them before.”

“Dana leads you step-by-step with the heart of a woman who has been there and struggled with the same issues you are currently struggling with. Really, this is a must read for anyone who wants to learn the secrets that all those organized types seem to know.”

“I felt like a failure already. Did I really need to read yet another book full of tips and tricks that would leave me feeling worse? From the first page, I was put at ease.”

Get ready to say goodbye to the stacks of dirty dishes crowding your kitchen counters, conquer the never-ending piles of laundry, and stop tripping over clutter on your living room floor as Dana helps you discover what works for you, for your unique personality, and in your unique home.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherThomas Nelson
Release dateNov 8, 2016
ISBN9780718083236
Author

Dana K. White

Dana K. White is the creator of the No Mess Decluttering Method and (much to her own surprise) a Decluttering Expert. Dana shares realistic home management strategies and a message of hope for the hopelessly messy in her books: Organizing for the Rest of Us, Decluttering at the Speed of Life (a Wall Street Journal bestseller), and How to Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind. Dana teaches her strategies through her blog, podcast, and videos at ASlobComesClean.com and trains coaches in her unique decluttering process at DeclutteringCoaches.com.    

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Reviews for How to Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind

Rating: 4.2204300215053765 out of 5 stars
4/5

93 ratings9 reviews

What our readers think

Readers find this title to be a practical and useful guide for decluttering and organizing their homes. The author's concepts of 'clutter threshold' and 'container theory' are game changers for many readers. However, some find the book repetitive and not well written. It is recommended for those who struggle with cleaning routines and need foundational habits, but not for those who already have effective cleaning systems in place.

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was a reread for me, in part inspired by the struggle of a younger relative who just lost her mother, and will soon have to move from her home. It's funny, rueful, instructive, understanding, and simple. I could use some of that.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    An easy read, which I appreciate with two toddlers running around (haha)! These are simple tips, but I have found these to be incredibly practical and useful in my own home and day-to-day life.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Some good tips that can lead to lasting change in your household.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    She is seriously amazing at helping you understand not just decluttering but why the things other people do just doesn't work for me. "Clutter threshold" and "container theory" were total game changers for me and my home. This book and her systems are what I recommend to everyone.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Dana White's anecdotes of her personal trials, failures, and tribulations will resonate with any reader who just-can't-cope. It's non-judgmental and uber-messy people will feel seen. The not-so-messy folks will have a sympathetic understanding of what may underlie their friend's or family member's inability to keep semi-tidied up and able to discard the clutter. The author really is accomplished in writing amusing anecdotes to explain how to approach overwhelming messes.

    However, I'm partly on the same page as "Octal" (check out his post down below at Jan 1, 2021). This 2016 book is indeed terribly repetitive and maybe reflects the author's learning curve on writing style. Where was the insightful editor? Reiterating previously-made advice undermines the impact of her philosophy. Her Decluttering at the Speed of Life effectively made similar points on decluttering, and was a very constructive narrative in managing clutter in a busy life.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Wow, it's like she read my brain. This is exactly how I think about cleaning, that it's a project. And the kitchen and the dishes are my nemesis. It was kind of a "duh" moment when I read this book but sometimes I'm to close to a situation with no time or space to step back and see the obvious. Sigh... This book may have convinced me that I really do have to wash the dishes every day.

    3 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Someone needs The Angry Book. Anna, you don't have to demean or punish others others with your anger. Who/what are you really angry at/about? This would be a good time to find out.

    2 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Very repetitive and not well written. To be fair, she starts the book off by saying that it is only for total "slobs," yet still there's nothing you can pull out of this book. Essentially it is
    1. do your dishes daily
    2. sweep the kitchen
    3. check the bathroom for clutter
    4. do a 5 minute pick up (involve your children)
    You'll do this over a 28 day period. I guess the premise is to build some very foundational habits. She also suggests to have a designated laundry day instead of trying to do laundry daily.
    I don't want to be judgemental, there might be women that need this book but if you have ANY sort of cleaning routine or are able to see dirt and take care of it on the fly (the author claims she doesn't see dirt) DO NOT BUY THIS BOOK!

    5 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book is for all of us who struggle to maintain a neat and clean home. White knows what she's talking about, as she struggled with clutter and mess for years. I liked how she broke down the method for changing your habits into very do-able steps. I've begun implementing them, and they really do make a difference! White's writing style is fun and breezy. Highly recommended.

    5 people found this helpful

Book preview

How to Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind - Dana K. White

Who Needs This Book?

Dear Person Who Picked Up This Book (and is flipping through the first few pages, deciding if you should buy it),

Let me help you decide. Not everyone needs this book. Rule yourself out as my target audience if you buy home management books because you get a kick out of cleaning and organizing gives you a thrill. If your home is ready for unexpected guests more often than not, you probably don’t need this book.

If you truly can’t understand how someone could sleep while dirty dishes are in her sink, close it up right now and move on to something else.

Okay. Now that it’s just us, I’ll talk to those who do need this book.

If you sleep like a baby, unaware your kitchen counters are piled high with dirty dishes, but want to cry when you walk into a disastrous kitchen the next morning, keep reading.

If you’ve ever wished you could donate dirty clothes because you’re so behind on laundry, you need this book.

If you’re continually overwhelmed in your home, and you’ve failed to change your housekeeping ways so many times you just don’t know if you have the energy to try again, this book is for you.

This is the book I never dreamed I’d write. If you’d told me six years ago I would one day write a book about cleaning and organizing, I would have laughed in your face.

Loudly.

And for a really long time.

After I caught my breath, I would have launched into a lengthy (and rather preachy) explanation of why I’d never do this. Using vague words like struggle and personal challenges, I’d be clear that due to my own passion for authenticity, I would never write about this particular subject.

Because this particular subject made me feel like a failure. A complete failure.

Why would anyone write a book about the thing she struggles with most?

As a theatre teacher turned stay-at-home mom, I craved a creative outlet. I discovered blogging. When I realized moms were writing and other moms were reading what they were writing, I knew I had to have a blog. Actually, I was obsessed with the idea of starting a blog.

Obsession is my style.

But for a year and a half, I didn’t. My house was a disaster. A continual disaster that magically reappeared no matter how hard I worked.

I’m not saying someone can’t have a blog while her house is a wreck, but I couldn’t. I knew myself and my history of messiness enough to know I couldn’t let one more thing distract me from my house.

And I didn’t want to be a fraud. I feared if I wrote rosy and wonderful things about motherhood and my passion for family, I’d be labeled a fraud if someone found out what my house looked like. I knew there was a disconnect, and I despised it.

Even with my new I want to start a blog! motivation for getting my house under control, I kept failing. In a moment of inspired desperation, I started a blog called A Slob Comes Clean. It was my completely anonymous practice blog, my way to justify blogging. I planned to use it as a place to learn about this fun thing I wanted to do, while keeping my focus on my house so I could finally get it under control.

I figured this experiment would take me three or four months. Tops.

I’m now pushing a decade of what I’ve termed Slob Blogging. Sharing the ins and outs of my deepest, darkest, most embarrassing secret with the world has been a long and often painful process, but I’m thankful. Focusing on my home and analyzing my whys and why-nots has worked. I understand now.

I know what it takes to manage my home without losing my mind.

If you’re still reading and you haven’t made up your mind yet about whether this book is for you, I’ll spell it out:

If you want to learn from the best, I’m not the best. If you want to clean your house from top to bottom and never have to clean it again, I’m not your woman. If you’re looking for tips that will help you tweak your already almost-perfect organizing strategies, move right along.

But if you want to finally understand what it takes to bring (and keep) your own home out of Disaster Status, this is the book for you. If you’ve cried real tears of pain and isolation because you just don’t get it, you’ve found your people.

I get it.

Here’s the dirty little secret about most organizing advice: It’s written by organized people. Their brains don’t work like mine.

I know what it takes to change. I know because I’ve done it. Every strategy I’m going to share with you has been tested and proven in my own Slob Lab. No hypotheses, just real life. These ways work, even when life happens. There’s no perfection here, no fairy tales. Just clear explanation of what you need to do to get your real-life home under control.

Oh. And I’m funny.

Part 1

Reality Check

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1

My First Step: Giving Up on the Fantasy

Fantasy: I struggle to keep my home under control. I’m chronically disorganized or organizationally challenged.

Reality: I’m a slob.

In almost every fairy tale, someone cleans. Most of the princesses do housework during the story, but that’s before they are (or know they are) princesses. They make cleaning look fun. They sing and dance, and the dust never sends them into sneezing fits or makes their eyes swell shut. But once the prince arrives, cleaning’s over. Life is all about fancy dinners and sitting on thrones and smiling at peasants out of carriage windows and such.

Basically, they clean before they arrive at their destinies. Once they’re there, cleaning is irrelevant. Nobody talks about cleaning or worries about cleaning or even notices cleaning is happening. But everything stays clean.

Even though I would have told you I knew life wasn’t a fairy tale, when it came to cleaning, I embraced this delusion. I was confident that one day cleaning would be easy. My house would stay clean without me even realizing I was cleaning it.

So what awakened me from this delusionary dream?

My messy house.

My grown-up, married-woman, I’m-the-mama house.

I’d been messy since birth. I had a messy room as a child, a messy desk in elementary school, a messy locker in high school, and a messy dorm room in college.

I had apartments with roommates and by myself. All of them were messy.

In case you aren’t convinced, I’m talking about more than folded laundry not being put away in a timely manner. Let me paint the (messy) picture.

My living spaces were shockingly messy. People who assured me they wouldn’t be shocked were so shocked they couldn’t hide it. And all my college friends were actors.

I’m talking about the kind of messy where you forget the color of the carpet. The kind of messy where you finally give up and eat off paper plates and drink from disposable cups.

And still the sink is full of dirty dishes 99.9 percent of the time.

This kind of messy makes you pretend you enjoy talking outside in freezing weather when someone stops by unexpectedly.

This kind of messy lets I tripped over a pile be an acceptable explanation for a broken toe.

But as I waded through the mess, I felt confident the day would come when I would no longer be messy. I didn’t worry that that day hadn’t yet arrived. It would happen when it mattered. Once I achieved my life goal of being a stay-at-home mom, everything would be easy. My house would be clean.

Reality hit once I was at that point, living in my grown-up house with nothing to do but be a wife and a mom, and my house wasn’t clean.

I was baffled.

I tried. I cleaned like a madwoman until I dropped in exhaustion, but as soon as I congratulated myself on my permanently changed ways, I looked up to see the mess was back.

I could get my home under control for a week, sometimes two, occasionally three weeks at a time. Life would happen, and the house went back to being a disaster.

I created the blog A Slob Comes Clean eight years after I arrived at the place in life where cleaning was supposed to be easy. I started on what I now call my deslobification journey in that moment of desperation in 2009. I did not want to use the s-word. I’d often told myself and others that no matter how bad it was, I was not a slob.

But that was the word that came to me. The word that worked.

A Slob Comes Clean is a catchy title and rather self-explanatory. I was ready to be honest with myself, and I was ready to get my house under control.

Still, it’s an insult. The dictionary definition is clear. You don’t call someone a slob if you want to be her friend.

I was ready to be honest with myself, and I was ready to get my house under control.

And that’s why it worked. Once I called myself a slob, I couldn’t sugarcoat my issues anymore. I stopped making excuses.

There’s another reason I’m glad I used that awful word. It helped me find my people. As women started reading my blog, they weren’t horrified. Instead, they thanked me. These women were relieved to find someone who thought and struggled the way they did, and they were glad to know they weren’t alone.

As I learned more about these women who shared my struggles, I saw they were amazing, creative, intelligent people. They were artists and poets and teachers and musicians.

I liked them.

Over time, by connecting with women who told me the thoughts I expressed were their thoughts, too, I identified a relationship between the slob part of my brain (the part I despised) and the creative part of my brain (the part I loved). Knowing the direct relationship between these two sides helped me accept that being a slob is part of who I am. It’s how my brain works. This realization did not mean I should give up, but it did give me permission to stop feeling like a failure when traditional organizing advice (written by people whose brains are very different from mine) didn’t work for me. I just needed to find ways that worked for me, with my unique brain and in my unique home.

2

The Worst Thing About the Best Way

Fantasy: If something is worth doing, it’s worth doing right.

Reality: While I’m busy searching for the best way to do something, I’m not getting anything done. Meanwhile, the problem gets worse and is much harder to solve when I finally get around to solving it.

Not all idealists are slobs, but most slobs are idealists.

I’m one. An idealist. (And, of course, a slob.)

I love a good idea. Give me a problem to solve, and I’ll start brainstorming solutions. Efficiency and practicality and all that? They speak to the depths of my soul.

Before I actually had a home of my own, I couldn’t imagine a reason to not do things (all things, every last little thing) the very best way.

When I was sixteen, I worked at a summer camp. This camp was my favorite place on earth. I loved it so much I even smiled as I cleaned toilets.

I knew how to clean those bathrooms thoroughly, and I cleaned them every single day of the weeks I was assigned bathroom duty. I followed step-by-step lists that told me exactly what to do. I also had lists for every other job I was assigned. Mopping the kitchen? Dusting the chapel? No swish or scrape was left off these lists.

My idealist self was happy. I was learning the very best way to clean, and I was going to rock being a homemaker one day. I would do everything right. All the time! I mean, I was cleaning those showers perfectly at the camp in the two hours each day when I had nothing else to do but clean bathrooms, so of course I’d do it all perfectly when I had one little ol’ bathroom of my own (maybe two) to clean.

At the same camp, I worked in the kitchen, washing dishes and serving food. We learned in one of our health trainings that it’s actually more hygienic to let dishes air-dry than to dry them with a dish towel. At least that’s the part I remember.

I’m pretty sure the point was to be vigilant about using superclean, totally dry cloths to dry dishes. Y’know, since it would be impractical to let everything air-dry.

I didn’t pay attention to the part about it being impractical. Impracticality? That’s for wimps! Wusses! Why would I ever do anything other than what was best?

Years later, now that I’m living smack-dab in the middle of reality, I’ve realized my desire for the very best way contributes to my slob problem.

Huh? Well, this:

images/himg-24-1.jpg

What’s that? Oh, just a bunch of baking sheets, slow-cooker parts, soup pots, movie theater refillable cups (and more) . . . air-drying.

Air-drying for days weeks months at a time.

Here’s what happens: I let them air-dry because air-drying is the very best way. I learned that from the professionals.

Plus, air-drying means I don’t have to find a dish towel, I don’t have to dry each one individually, and I don’t have to put them away right now.

I can’t put them away right now. They’re air-drying. Duh.

The very best way is also the easiest way? What could possibly be better than that?

Except that if air-drying is going to be the very best way, it has to include putting the dishes away. But air-drying takes time. It doesn’t happen immediately. And no one (especially no one who considers herself superefficient) can be expected to watch dishes dry.

But by the time the dishes are dry, they’ve blended into the landscape of my kitchen counters. They’ve been there long enough they don’t register to my brain as being out of place.

The next time I need a baking sheet, I grab it. I use it, wash it, and put it back in the pile to air-dry, because air-drying is the very best way.

It seems normal and not at all lazy until one day I feel inexplicable despair. I stand in my kitchen, wondering why I feel so bad, and suddenly realize I’m irritated by its overall messy appearance.

I shake my head to clear my Slob Vision and realize there’s a huge pile of stuff behind my sink.

An eyesore I didn’t see with my eyes but felt with my heart.

Sometimes, Worrying About the Very Best Way Keeps Me from Doing Anything

I stress and fret over the very best way to clean my toilet, worrying I’ll ruin my health or the environment or my children’s lives. While I’m worrying, the toilet gets ickier. And harder to clean. So, eventually, when I have to clean that toilet because it’s just so gross (and Grandma’s on her way over), I have no choice but to use scarier stuff than the cleaning products I was scared to use in the first place.

It’s a cycle. A bad one.

While I tell myself I’m going to look up the best way to recycle in my area, my recycling container overflows and turns into a recycling area. The plastic bottles and newspapers eventually mix with other junk that’s not recyclable.

Now it’s a project. A frustrating, overwhelming project I put off even longer, so it grows.

And becomes more overwhelming.

Things should be done a certain way. Why do something at all if there’s a better way it could be done? But even if I knew a better way, would I have the supplies or the time to do it that way?

Three words in that last paragraph are ones I now recognize as signal words: would, could, and should. Signals that it’s never going to happen. When those words are in my inner monologue, I have to ask myself, "But what will I do?"

All the wouldas, couldas, and shouldas in the world don’t get my bathroom clean. Know what gets it clean? Cleaning it.

All the wouldas, couldas, and shouldas in the world don’t get my bathroom clean. Know what gets it clean? Cleaning it. (Seriously, the profundity in this book is amazing.) When I called myself a slob, I had no choice but to face reality. My ensuing passion for reality has been a big factor in my own deslobification process. I accepted that whatever I had been doing in my home wasn’t working. Ideas weren’t making a difference. The only thing that made a difference was actually doing something. Cleaning with whatever I had on hand, whether it was the perfect thing or not.

Over time, and with much angst, I can now more easily differentiate Really Great Ideas from Things That Might Actually Happen in My House. With success and progress, I’m willing to act on realistic ideas and not bother with the ones that will never happen.

Need an Example of Things That Will Never Happen?

I saw a fascinating tip from my friend Lauren, who writes about living frugally at iamthatlady.com. She shared that people sell empty toilet paper rolls on eBay.

I’m not kidding. I checked, and it’s for real. The auctions I found finished with a buyer paying between five and fifteen dollars for fifty to one hundred empty, clean toilet paper rolls.

For someone who uses toilet paper, like, every single day of her life (and hopes everyone else does too), that would be free money! I could save those things, box ’em up, and ship ’em off to the highest bidder! Yee-haw—I should totally do this!

(Signal words alert: would, could, and should—all in the same paragraph.)

In the interest of putting energy and time into only Things That Will Actually Happen, let’s play this one out in my slob reality:

I place a handy-dandy box in the bathroom cabinet. I’ll put this in here. That way, whenever we finish a roll of toilet paper, we can drop it in this box!

I smile to myself, thinking of all the money some sucker’s going to pay for my trash.

Three weeks later, I open the cabinet for a completely-unrelated-to-selling-used-toilet-paper-rolls reason.

I think to myself (in a strident tone), Who put that box in here? I reach to remove the box and then remember my plan for ultimate high-profit recycling. Oh, yeah. I forgot.

I call the rest of the family into the bathroom. Okay, everyone, every time you finish a roll of toilet paper, put the empty roll in this box. We are going to sell them!

Blank stares.

Hubby, wide-eyed, backs me up, You heard Mom. Don’t throw empty toilet paper rolls away. Once the kids are gone, he asks for an explanation. I give one, and he leaves the bathroom, shaking

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