Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What in the world are you cooking that requires sweeping and mopping every single night?
Right? Sweeping, maybe, but my floor gets mopped every other Thursday when the cleaning ladies come.
You must be a shoes on house…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to cut back on the chores you do at night. No one needs to mop the kitchen every night.
OP doesn’t work 4 days out of the week. She can easily workout those days which is enough.
She has tons of options. 30 minutes of focused strength training every morning or evening plus walking during her kids’ activities would get her results. It’s THIRTY minutes. She just wants to be told it’s impossible or to believe if anyone else does it we don’t actually do anything for our kids.
Take your kindergartener to a track with his bike. He bikes, you run. Forget the dishes and do a strength workout in your garage. Fo to bed at 10, wake at 5 am 3x a week and do a 30 minute workout. It’s not impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to cut back on the chores you do at night. No one needs to mop the kitchen every night.
OP doesn’t work 4 days out of the week. She can easily workout those days which is enough.
Anonymous wrote:You need to cut back on the chores you do at night. No one needs to mop the kitchen every night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What in the world are you cooking that requires sweeping and mopping every single night?
Typical night:
Fresh salad (washing and cutting lettuce, onions, tomatoes, cukes, homemade dressing)
Seasoned and marinated meat (chicken fish steak) pan seared or broiled
Vegetables like cauliflower or broccoli or fresh spinach, roasted or steamed.
Mac and cheese made from real cheese (flour butter into béchamel and then melt cheese, so no craft)
Fresh cut fruit like orange slices and berries
Other nights we might make sushi, tacos, or pizza. We have a variety of ages and palates, and a couple vegetarians. And I’ll be honest my younger kids are messy eaters (despite constant nagging and punishment).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t prioritize exercise and it is what it is. If you did, you’d make it work. You have kid(s) in high school, make them make dinner and do laundry sometimes.
High schooler does their own laundry and empties the dishwasher -- they can't cook because they get to home for the rest of the family to eat.
I want to prioritize exercise, but the only time I can carve out is in the morning, but trying to figure out how people do it, but clearly its going to bed way earlier than we can manage. Maybe once the kinder is less hands on we can get a handle on things; they usually occupy one parent entirely even without having an activity -- the older kids don't need much when it is their night at home.
We prioritize our kids health and development, hence the constraints on our school commute and activities. Sure we could leave them in SACC till 6pm while I hit the gym, or tell them they can't play any sports they can't walk to, but that isn't why we had kids, to just ignore them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What in the world are you cooking that requires sweeping and mopping every single night?
Typical night:
Fresh salad (washing and cutting lettuce, onions, tomatoes, cukes, homemade dressing)
Seasoned and marinated meat (chicken fish steak) pan seared or broiled
Vegetables like cauliflower or broccoli or fresh spinach, roasted or steamed.
Mac and cheese made from real cheese (flour butter into béchamel and then melt cheese, so no craft)
Fresh cut fruit like orange slices and berries
Other nights we might make sushi, tacos, or pizza. We have a variety of ages and palates, and a couple vegetarians. And I’ll be honest my younger kids are messy eaters (despite constant nagging and punishment).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What in the world are you cooking that requires sweeping and mopping every single night?
Right? Sweeping, maybe, but my floor gets mopped every other Thursday when the cleaning ladies come.
You must be a shoes on house…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What in the world are you cooking that requires sweeping and mopping every single night?
Right? Sweeping, maybe, but my floor gets mopped every other Thursday when the cleaning ladies come.
Anonymous wrote:What in the world are you cooking that requires sweeping and mopping every single night?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Working parent here, two full time jobs only 2x week WFH, 3 kids from elem to high school.
Afternoons are impossible because we pick up kids, have dinner; then run to activities and sports until around 9pm at night. I’ve tried to get workout during activities but usually logistics prevent anything more than a walk.
What I need to do is get up at 5am so can gym 530-630, then be ready to take kids to school by 7am, then off to work.
But getting home at 9, by time kitchen is tidy, and house is put back together it’s like 11pm, and then I get to bed. Going to bed 11pm/12am makes a 5am workout really hard.
Anyone BTDT? I wish we had a housekeeper or driving nanny, but not enough $$$ to make happen.
Turn the walk into a run.