No solutions here but just here to say I feel the same way. And I don’t even have kids! Every night I feel depleted and weekends are for catching up on sleep and resting. |
another +1 although I want to add it doesn't matter whether we go skiing or stay home on weekend the amount of housework remains the same! I could be motivated and do laundry in 2 hours or spend the entire day doing it.. I can always find things to organize and clean. Important to prioritize what needs to be done and what you can let go |
Oh, Farm poster here -- one thing that helps is to prioritize. If I have to pick between vacuuming the carpet and riding a horse, I always pick the horse -- vacuuming isn't going to increase the value of anything, but regular training will raise the horses' value significantly. feeding and medical care come first, then basic sanitation (cleaning the barn, everyone has clean clothes and beds), then development (horses and kids' homework!), then on and on until you get to cleaning bridles and wiping baseboards. Sure, I may have dust bunnies in the corners sometimes, but such is life. Plenty of studies show kids are healthier if they grow up around dirt, so you can even pretend it is healthy for them! |
1. Get off social media. It is toxic to always only see the polished up versions of people’s lives.
2. Do those friends live near the mountains so it makes sense to have a season pass and just be “what we do” all winter long? 3. Most likely they prioritize cleaning and decluttering lower. What do I do to keep sane: 1. Just clean less. Monthly house cleaner. Kids do sinks and their rooms and help with house pick up each week as their chores. But the floors are cleaned maybe twice a month and sheets prolly once a month. 2. meals are all ones that take roughly half hour or less to make. Kids lunches are about the same main meal all the time with just veg/fruit carried 3. Before and after care sitters allow us to avoid the drop off and pick up craziness and mean they can start the oven or put water on to boil when needed. (Nanny shared when kids were little and believe that is a HUGE simplifier for the crazy little kid years.) 4. Divide and conquer a LOT. Let’s us get more done with kids going in opposite directions plus a bit more relax time. 5. Ignore most weekends the Honey-Do list of constant small fix it and fix up projects that suck time. |
OP here. Yes, this is me. I like to look at them and sometimes have to prioritize them. I saw lots of comments about de-cluttering. We are experts at it. We do not have much stuff and everything has a place, maybe this is just life. Our house is not that clean, I am obsessive about it at all - but things do have to get cleaned! Maybe this is life. I don’t think my standards are that high, it is just so hard to remember and get done all these little tasks! I feel like everyone must never sleep! We have gone for weekends away leaving the house a mess too. Sigh, try and relax. |
We go skiing twice a week. I also have stuff on my to-do list from 2016.
Not everything on my list has been incomplete for 4 years, but there are definitely both big and little tasks that don’t need to be done all the time that slip in priority. The weekly stuff (mopping, laundry, etc) gets done, but things like painting a dinged baseboard in a certain room or printing a photo album? Ask me in four years. |
Try a few life hacks here and there. It cumulatively adds up. Things like using the crock pot for easy dinners to forcing yourself to pick up 2 items before leaving the room to cleaning the bathroom during kids' bath time.
I've actually cleaned the baseboards while I was hiding during a family game of indoor hide n seek. You get the idea. But I wouldn't get so hung up on cleaning and errands if it compromises precious (and fleeting) family time like skiing/snow tubing and other fun outings. It shouldn't be all or nothing. And set up auto pay for those bills! |
Yeah this is us too. We do lots of fun things on the weekends (not skiing but lots of local trips, hiking and stuff). And my house is also perpetually cluttered and there's a mountain of clean-but-not-folded laundry in the basement. We do have house cleaners once a month, and that does help. |
Our house is a hot ass mess, that's how. We have a preschooler and a 9 month old. I've pretty much given up for the time being. |
It is helpful to recognize that some people get it all done by paying people to do it all. Helpful to calibrate the expectations for how waking hours are spent. |
This is all solid advice. Handling everything as it comes in (backpacks, mail, packages), not buying or keeping excess stuff, and having a place to put everything are key. |
I have 4 kids (from baby through upper ES) and DH and I both WOTH FT. We have a nanny which helps a lot and a house cleaner every other week. Bills are on autopay though we do check the statements as they come in, mostly in the evenings. I get some things done during lunchtime at work.
I feel overwhelmed occasionally, although I’m always busy. Weekends are filled with kid activities, so we don’t have time to go skiing for the weekend or anything like that. It doesn’t bother me because I think I have adjusted my expectations. To me, a great weekend is spending an afternoon outside going to the park or taking a long walk around the neighborhood. Or the kids playing together or having a movie afternoon on a cold/rainy day. I still grocery shop and do other errands on the other day, but we try to make it fun. Our weekends are generally not exciting or post-worthy, but I don’t post on social media anyway. This is just where we are at this point in our life, and I could either be okay with it or be constantly frustrated, so I chose the former. In 2-3 years when the youngest is big enough, we’ll start doing more, but we’re never going to be the family with a ski condo that goes every weekend. It’s too much for us. We much prefer to spend a weekend day at a museum, or taking a hike, bike ride, etc. |
If you have to choose among your monthly bills, how is it even an option for you to go skiing? You can do auto bill pay and then just look at them to make sure things are on the right track. They usually send you an email, or you can just look in your bank app. Unless you are talking about medical bills, most of the bills should be routine and always the same, right? Or it's water/electricity etc., but what are you going to do.... call the electricity company and dispute your bill....? |
This is me, too. I could NEVER just leave the beds unmade and the house a mess and go skiing. I wouldn't be able to enjoy the trip at all, knowing what I'd come home to. There's nothing that makes me calmer than a clean, uncluttered house at the end of the day, and I seriously stress if I come home after being out for a while and the kids have made everything a mess. I wish I were not like this--but I am, and I have to own it. We don't have a cleaner or other help (aside from daycare). We both work. My husband and I each do specific chores on specific days (hey, tonight is clean bathrooms!) and a system for the daily stuff like cooking/dishes/packing lunches etc. It's just life. |
We have house cleaners twice a month. Hardly exercise. Partner does bills and repairs, I’m mainly on child-related admin and vacations. We’ve decided to go to the same place every summer while the children are young. Keeps it relatively simple and helps them make memories. What we do prioritize: family dinners every night, time outside, holidays and traditions, cooking together, letting the kids do a lot of activities (if they want). It does feel like you can’t get ahead. But it’s just the nature of this phase. |