To Do and Done

So in efforts to communicate trust, encourage autonomy AND teach isolation of tasks as well as responsibility to clean up after the isolate tasks, I stumbled across this idea and of course modified it to fit our needs.

With a three year old and a two year old (plus the reality of one on the way soon), I was trying to find a way to offer them choices (within my ability and personal reigns) of activities throughout the day.

So I came up with this idea spurred off of the other ideas I saw on pinterest that were modified chore chart ideas.

I got three small metal pizza-baking sheets from Walmart for $0.92 a piece. I made sure that a magnet would stick to these trays before purchasing them. 😉

Then I bought a roll of magnetic stick-on tape for $2.99 from Joann Fabrics.

Then I got a roll of painters tape because we didn’t have any for $2.00.

After finding colorful clipart pictures of all the 31 activities I can currently offer our children to do in our household or in our yard, I pasted those activities into a word document. Since we have non-readers, I used bright, colorful pictures and put the words underneath the image to describe the tasks. I decided to print off two copies of the four pages of pictures (one for each child) since some activities I wanted to offer both the girls to do at once. I also added in age-appropriate helper tasks into the mix as well (ex. washing the table, helping with laundry, making their bed – I don’t mind what it looks like-, helping with dishes, setting the table, etc.).

After printing those off onto a cardstock heavy paper, I cut them out in small squares. Then I laminated them (I used clear packing tape because I had it around the house and didn’t have any laminating sheets. This required a significant amount of more work, by the way. But I didn’t mind since I was in no rush to get the project finished). After laminating them, I put a small piece of magnet on the back of each task.

The play activities available.
The chore/helper activities available.
We store all these pieces in a hefty bag. 
I put the chores in a separate bag in the hefty bag so I can easily find them.

I wrote  “To Do” on one side of two of the trays and “Done” on the other side of the same two trays, dividing the areas with a line of tape. Then the third tray poses as an options list for the girls to pick from.

With a little bit of sticky tack, all three trays were easily mounted to the wall at “kid height.”

Each morning I pick out the tasks that I am offering the children to do for that day, allowing me to rotate through some of the tasks they forget about because they are not actively in front of them. I also put up on their “to do” lists two responsibilities per day. The girls then get to pick from the 6 or so items on the options list and move them onto their “to do” part of their lists.

 Rachael’s list (arranged by Rachael)

Abi’s list (arranged by Abi)
The “choices” tray that the girls pick from.
We store the choices in a hefty bag with a magnet 
attached to the back so it hangs onto the microwave. 😉

We keep the lists by the kitchen table. 

When the girls finish one task, they get to decide what they want to do next. After one task is completed and cleaned up completely, they get to move the magnetic picture to the “done” side of the list.

The results of this project?

  • The girls are THRILLED to pick from the tasks and have control in the planning of their day.
  • Things get cleaned up right then and there, not accumulating for a long and exhausting clean-up time at the end of play. 
  • The girls are THRILLED to help out around the house and often pick to do those tasks first. 
  • Creativity and Imagination is fueled by playing with isolated groups of toys (ex. the toolbox saw was used to give “haircuts”) that the girls would have otherwise walked by on the way to their “normal few” toys. 
  • There is more cooperative play due to the variety and newness of toys/activities. 
Completing the Helper Chores on the List: 
 Rachael making her bed
 Abi living up making her bed. hehe, look at her smile.

 Not too bad finished product. 
(I seriously couldn’t care less what it looks like).
Washing the table – oh what fun!
And the chairs too?! Yes please!!!

I have chosen not to limit the play to the “to do list” activities alone (sometimes dolls just have to be a part of the lego play because I have two little “Mommies”), but I have found that the things I thought the girls “needed to play with” each day has grown in variety and their creativity is really blossoming.

I also enjoy about this new way of doing things that I can always adapt the “to do list” options as they grow older. It’s simple to print off a few new choices, laminate them, put a magnetic strip on the back of them and add them to our rotation of activities offered. I like the flexibility, as well, of offering tasks based on the day’s weather, my level of pregnancy restrictions, and the level of mess involved. For example, I coupled painting with washing the table one day. It was nice to have helpers cleaning up in more ways than one. =)

Hopefully this idea is helpful to you too. It has added much joy in accomplishment and independence to our household while allowing Mommy some free time (which will soon all belong to Hannah. hehe) to get some “Mommy only” housecleaning done. 

Total Cost:

$7.75 (excluding cost in ink/paper to print colored pages – since I already had this- and excluding laminating costs – since I just used the tape we had) and about 5 hours from researching the clipart pictures, printing them off, cutting and applying lamination (my method would take longer than laminating them through a machine), putting the tape on the trays and then mounting them to the wall.

Total Items Needed:

  1. 3 flat pizza or cookie trays
  2. Painting tape 
  3. 4-8 cardstock pages for clipart signs
  4. Colored Ink/Printer
  5. Lamination (packing tape or actual laminating sheets)
  6. Roll of tape-backed magnets
  7. Scissors 
  8. Sticky Tack
  9. Ziplock/Hefty or sandwich bag
  10. Time and patience. 😉

I also used the lamination time to pray for my little girls and ask God for help in encouraging their individual likes/dislikes and blooming character more in our daily lives.  This provided a nice opportunity to thank God for the blessing of serving my little girls as well. =)

– Enjoy!

The Joy of Financial Responsibility’s Accomplishment

I sent this email to my sister this morning and I just wanted to share it with you all over here too because it really makes me happy.

God has blessed us with our financial situation and the ability to stay afloat through good budgeting (even with some mistakes) so that I can stay at home to raise our two (almost three) girls. Along with choosing the budget and for me to stay home, comes gradual financial decisions and less of the “eggs all in one basket” whims. While the later method sounds foolish, there are some cases (like purchasing a vehicle) where “eggs all in one basket” is really the only choice.

One way to “cut back” and be more financially responsible in our spending has been to cloth diaper over disposable diapers. One helper of that decision has been Abi’s skin sensitivity, but another has been the obvious money saver.

I must confess, I have been slightly jealous of those with duel income or at least a greater nest egg that have been able to make the cloth diaper switch all at once, purchasing their whole stash in one big chunk of a withdrawal.

But the reality has been for us that the slower building of our stash and adjusting our stash method has been the piece by piece and most responsible approach for us.

This may not sound like too much of a sacrifice until you see the behind the scenes of that picture. Adding 1-4 diapers per month to get to a 3 day washing schedule for Abi and build our stash for a newborn has involved hours of research, trial/error, craigslist hopefuls and failures, waiting on 3 week difference international postage, and much strategy of mine and the girls’ allowance money over an eight month period.

That being said, I give you my email to my sis this morning and share with you my domestic joy:

“So I’m dorkily excited because my last shipment of cloth diapers came in today. I got 6 more. I have been slowly picking at adding cloth diapers to our stash for the last, seriously, EIGHT months and we finally have a full stash from birth to potty training. I’m SO EXCITED to no longer be looking at, sewing, altering, and fussing with cloth diapers to build up our stash. As it is our newbie baby stash has me washing every 2 days, for the 3month to 18 month phase I’ll be washing every 2-2.5 days and for the 18month plus phase I’ll be washing every 3 days. YAY! This just gives me a REALITY washing experience (cause washing daily is not on my agenda along with managing 3 kids/nursing/house work/wifehood/outside of our house ministry oh yeah and eating, breathing and sleeping).

So as I wash the “fresh from the factory” 6 diapers, adjust our diaper bins to fit our new diapers in, and settle into the new washing machine routine just know that this domestic-happy me is smiling…. big time.

And after next month’s allowance money spend on 3 wetbags (one for Hannah’s diaper bag [since Sundays/Wednesdays Abi and Hannah will be separate and I’d like a “catch the dirty diaper and lock out the smell” bag for each], one for the living room changing table [new baby = CONSTANT changes] and one for the nursery changing table), I will happily put the cloth diaper thoughts aside and just coast through diapering 2 kiddos. [Sure some of these things are not needed, but there also is a “convenience” factor of diapering two kids 2 years apart that plays into my success on minimal hours of sleep. – Just being real.]

On our registry there are still 3 covers/prefold sets for the 3m-18m phase that could be quite helpful to add to our stash as night diapers (prefolds/covers are the only thing we’ve found that can hold a HUGE amount of pee and not leak all over the bed while the child does aerobics in the night), but nothing we couldn’t live without. So it’s possible that in the future I may purchase 2-3 more diapers, but it’s just nice to sort of close the door on the “building our stash to actually work for our lifestyle” phase and move on. =D

If we were Mr. and Mrs. Moneybanks, we would have dropped the money all at once (up to $300 – and that’s on the cheap side!), but that’s not the case with us, so purchasing primarily 1-2 cloth diapers from overseas and waiting out the 3 week difference between purchase and receiving we have done… for eight months. And now…. YAY! We’re done! YAY!

The washer never sounded so good.

=)

– delighting in domesticity. ;)”

Our financial situation is really good due to my husband’s hard work and great budgeting. So please do not think for one minute that I am complaining or in any way feeling oppressed. We are blessed beyond belief to be able to sponsor two (soon to be three) World Vision kids as well as serve the Lord in many ways with our finances. I’m just happy to see the fruit of our budgeting coming to a close in the world of cloth diapering. =D

– Thanks for sharing in my joy. =)

Sew Easy

Been working on a few projects here and there. One of which I made in a total of 40 minutes.

Every Sunday and Wednesday and on various babysitting occasions, we find ourselves taping a name tag to Rachael and Abi’s sippy cups before dropping them off. I use masking tape since it comes off of the cup easier than the nursery stickers provided. But each Sunday morning there is the “Oh right, we forgot, let’s find the tape, a permanent marker or pen and get the names on there.” Sure we could write the names on Saturday night if we were overly thoughtful parents, but we aren’t. LOL.

So I came up with a crafty solution that will eliminate confusion and can translate to more than just sippy cups.

After viewing a diaper strap tutorial, I modified it to work for us and to work with what I had in fabric.

I started out by measuring the middle of our sippy cups and kid water bottles. After measuring, I took the variance of 2 inches between all the cups middles to measure out the length of my soft-side of the Velcro (will explain more later). Then I knew from the 7inch to 8.5inch width of my sippy cups that I needed to make the strip of fabric at least 9 inches to accommodate the cups. I chose to make my base fabric 10 inches just to be safe.

I grabbed out a few scrap pieces of receiving blankets used for other projects, measured my soft-sided Velcro and cut it. I decided to place my soft-sided Velcro on the inside of my strap so the sticky part of the Velcro would only adhere to the strap and the soft-side would not adhere to clothing/etc if exposed by a fatter cup than the smallest setting.

I measured the sticky side of my Velcro to be 1.5 inches to make sure it’d stick really well, defying toddler curiosity, and the soft-side of my Velcro to be 3 inches to allow for further cup variance in size should we get other cups in the future. (Sticky side of Velcro is located on other side of fabric behind the button).

Then it was to work sewing the fabric, flipping the fabric inside out, folding in the edges and sewing them shut, sewing on the Velcro, and then the hardest part; stitching the names.

I free-handed with a pencil on the fabric the girls’ names (excluding the one pictures above. I just free-handed that on the sewing machine) and then sewed accordingly. I wasn’t worried about perfection, just readability and functionality with a little cuteness of course.

I added on a reused button from my button tin just for a little flare.

And voila! Our cup name tags (on three different sized cups):

 Front and back.
 Front and back.
 Front and back (see a trend?)

I made 2 for Abi since she’s the sticky-fingered/less neat child. That way one can be in the wash while the other is in use. Also, we’re carrying around cups less frequently for Rachael so I wasn’t as worried about making her two. If I find we need two for Rachael, I’ll make her a second one in 15 minutes (her name is long).

Abi also discovered while playing with one off of her cup that they can be used as bracelets. =) They can also be used as bag tags, luggage tags, and pretty much anything you need to label for kiddo that has a loop. Be creative. =D

Functional, cute, effective and fun.

Cost: No financial cost, total of 40 minutes of free-time during the girls’ nap time.

YAY!

Avoiding Wastefulness

In thinking about the girls’ bathing routine there was one piece that annoyed me. Since bath time is viewed by two small children as a time to play, and clearly not a functional washing period, we often struggled some in washing hair. So we decided to just not do it anymore. Kidding!

See, once you get past the whole “I promise I’ll try not to dump a whole bucket of water in your eyes so please stop shrieking” part, there’s the “why won’t this soap EVER come out of your hair” annoyance.

In looking into the problem deeper, it was blatantly obvious that the large amount of shampoo that poured out of the bottle was the culprit in annoyance and wastefulness. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but attempting to get a small amount of shampoo from the bottle while trying to assure child’s lack of drowning and tip the bottle just right to keep from palming a mountain of shampoo was challenging.

So after running across this idea in frugality, I thought it would work well for our shampooing needs as well.

So we converted our shampoo into foaming shampoo, which our children now call “whipped creme on your head” followed by hysterical laughter. Way to go Ms. Creativity. 😉

We worked together on this project: me filling an inch of shampoo in the bottom of a foam dispenser and adding water to about an inch from the top. (shown on our sensitive soap)

 Inch of soap in dispenser.              Water added to 1 inch from top.

After the lid was screwed on, Rachael and Abi began their participation. (It took us five minutes so we did it during lunch – hence the bibs). 😉

Shake, shake, shake…

And voila! Foaming shampoo that’s portioned out well. (shown below: soap, not shampoo)

2 Squirts for Abi. 3-4 Squirts for Rachael. And then we rub in the whipped creme. 😉

It comes out of their hair much better, since it’s not in abundance, and it saves us money in avoiding wastefulness.

Win, win!

We also used a really cute dispenser, “Hello Kitty”, which is a THRILL to our children in getting to use the “kitty shampoo.” – Gotta enjoy life where you can. 😉

We also tried this for their sensitive skin body wash (pictured above). Now, since the bodywash is lotion-based it squirts out of the foam dispenser unevenly, causing much hysterical laughter as the bathtub wall sometimes receives a spraying. But, it works well enough to prolong out the life of the soap and “portion control” the “liquid gold” soap for our little sensitive skinned kiddos.

Plus, slapping a label on it helps too. 😉

We tried this method for our handsoap dispensers too, using liquid handsoap (which always comes out of the pump squirters in WAY too large an amount for little hands). Now the foaming soap is fun, well portioned, AND my counter/elbows don’t catch the extra soap waste every time we wash hands. YAY! More Wins!

– maybe this could help you too. =)

A Trick of the Trade.. or Two

I have found reusing your old baby bumper on the twin bed keeps stuffed animal friends and lovey blankets from fall in the crack between the bed and the wall.

 Seahorse makes his blog modeling debut.

I also just learned that freezing a toy beanbag animal makes a nice and comforting ice pack for those little one ouchies that need much love. Plus your little friend is washable.

Now who wouldn’t want one of these friends on their boo-boo?

– Suddenly a Congo line breaks out! –

– Hope these are helpful to you. =)

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