Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t imagine doing laundry for my kids over the age of 10. They are completely capable and should be doing their own. If you’re doing it for them consistently then you are babying them.
Honestly, I have to fight my teen and tween boys on hygiene (including showering daily, brushing teeth before school, combing hair, etc.). I’m pretty sure that if I just left it to them, they would wear dirty clothes to school.
Sometimes I make them do their laundry, and I have them help me fold it and hang it up if they are home. But I don’t put them in charge of it.
My daughter does her own laundry. Which feels sexist and I hate it, but she’s a different kid, and I know she will keep her clothes, body, and room clean without intervention from me.
And the cycle continues...
Exactly. Her DD will be on DCUM complaining about her DH, who is just like her brothers.
So I shouldn’t let her do her laundry? Or I should let my boys go to school in dirty clothes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t imagine doing laundry for my kids over the age of 10. They are completely capable and should be doing their own. If you’re doing it for them consistently then you are babying them.
Honestly, I have to fight my teen and tween boys on hygiene (including showering daily, brushing teeth before school, combing hair, etc.). I’m pretty sure that if I just left it to them, they would wear dirty clothes to school.
Sometimes I make them do their laundry, and I have them help me fold it and hang it up if they are home. But I don’t put them in charge of it.
My daughter does her own laundry. Which feels sexist and I hate it, but she’s a different kid, and I know she will keep her clothes, body, and room clean without intervention from me.
And the cycle continues...
Exactly. Her DD will be on DCUM complaining about her DH, who is just like her brothers.
Anonymous wrote:I’m assuming you don’t have kids?
We go through one load a day. Moving it from washer to dryer, then folding it, sorting it, putting it away. Not Terrible, it’s like 20-30min a day total time spent. But let’s say you go on a 3 day mini vacation. Or you get the flu and so 3 days. Suddenly you are 90 minutes in the hole. Now imagine that happens every other week- for some reason, ever 14 days, you have to skip a few days. That means you are not infrequently staying home on a Saturday so you can obsessively switch over laundry loads, fold, sort, put away, then repeat an hour later all afternoon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t imagine doing laundry for my kids over the age of 10. They are completely capable and should be doing their own. If you’re doing it for them consistently then you are babying them.
Honestly, I have to fight my teen and tween boys on hygiene (including showering daily, brushing teeth before school, combing hair, etc.). I’m pretty sure that if I just left it to them, they would wear dirty clothes to school.
Sometimes I make them do their laundry, and I have them help me fold it and hang it up if they are home. But I don’t put them in charge of it.
My daughter does her own laundry. Which feels sexist and I hate it, but she’s a different kid, and I know she will keep her clothes, body, and room clean without intervention from me.
And the cycle continues...
Exactly. Her DD will be on DCUM complaining about her DH, who is just like her brothers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t imagine doing laundry for my kids over the age of 10. They are completely capable and should be doing their own. If you’re doing it for them consistently then you are babying them.
That's a real lack of imagination. Imagine...other households running differently than yours!
Here's one of MANY examples. My teen Ds gets home from high school basketball practice at 9:45. His practice uniform needs to be washed and dried and in his backpack by 7:15 am. Should he stay up late doing laundry? Not the best use of his time. He needs to eat, shower and go to bed.
Simple. Tell Ds to get a second practice uniform.
You know nothing. The practice uniforms are issued by the public HS. Each kid gets one jersey and one pair of shorts, and they must be washed every night, worn to every practice and brought to every game. You don't "just go get" another one.
Anonymous wrote:People also have lost the ability to cook, do their own grocery shopping, and pick up their own takeout. We are the laziest society ever
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t imagine doing laundry for my kids over the age of 10. They are completely capable and should be doing their own. If you’re doing it for them consistently then you are babying them.
Honestly, I have to fight my teen and tween boys on hygiene (including showering daily, brushing teeth before school, combing hair, etc.). I’m pretty sure that if I just left it to them, they would wear dirty clothes to school.
Sometimes I make them do their laundry, and I have them help me fold it and hang it up if they are home. But I don’t put them in charge of it.
My daughter does her own laundry. Which feels sexist and I hate it, but she’s a different kid, and I know she will keep her clothes, body, and room clean without intervention from me.
And the cycle continues...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People also have lost the ability to cook, do their own grocery shopping, and pick up their own takeout. We are the laziest society ever
You can't take it with you and time is precious.
Well this attitude is your problem right there.
If you view your time as something that should only be "spent" on things you find enjoyable or rewarding in narrowly defined ways, you are going to be a dissatisfied, impatient, unhappy person.
Being a human being in a living, mortal body requires a certain amount of caretaking. Even if in the modern world and with enough money you can outsource some of that caretaking, some of it you will NEVER be able to outsource. You can't pay someone to go poop for you, or take your showers. I guess you could outsource brushing and flossing your teeth but... why would you do this.
Learning to efficiently but diligently perform basic caretaking and hygienic functions, including laundry, is just part of being a person. Laundry truly does not take that much time unless your clothes are very hard to clean (which is a choice, especially in this day and age when most jobs allow people to wear machine washable clothes that don't need to be ironed). If you cannot dedicate the 30-40 minutes a week to laundry, then what else are you considering to be unbearable drudgery? This is such a basic activity.
This is why some religions and philosophies advise learning to engage in a form of mindful diligence, particularly while doing these daily chores. If you can find pleasure in the act of folding laundry, flossing your teeth, trimming your toddler's nails, packing a lunch, you can find true and rewarding joy in life. And when you find this, you stop having this attitude of "my time is running out, I can't waste it on these pointless chores!" Instead, you realize that true happiness comes not in clearing your schedule of all drudgery so that you can spend it laughing uproariously while sky diving and inventing an app. True happiness comes in the ability to enjoy the something as simply as the physical act of folding a t-shirt and placing it in a drawer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People also have lost the ability to cook, do their own grocery shopping, and pick up their own takeout. We are the laziest society ever
You can't take it with you and time is precious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people get so obsessed and overwhelmed by laundry?
It’s not like you a washing it by a river-you put it in the machine and it’s done.
Really? No one switches it to the dryer or folds it or puts it away? The machine does it? Where can I buy one???
It’s a timing thing. Turns 20min of work into a task that takes all day, for like one load.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People also have lost the ability to cook, do their own grocery shopping, and pick up their own takeout. We are the laziest society ever
You can't take it with you and time is precious.
Anonymous wrote:People also have lost the ability to cook, do their own grocery shopping, and pick up their own takeout. We are the laziest society ever
Anonymous wrote:Why do people get so obsessed and overwhelmed by laundry?
It’s not like you a washing it by a river-you put it in the machine and it’s done.