"None of you girls, I hope, will ever think yourselves too fine, or too cultivated, to attend to your domestic duties, or even, if need be, to turn up your sleeves and pin on an apron, and toss off some dainty little dish which may stimulate the appetite of the weary or the sick: for even in such humble services as these you may be pleasing and serving the Lord as truly and devoutly as in any act of public worship. But I also hope that you will not forget that there are still higher duties than these; that in ministering to the spirit you do more and better than in ministering to the body. For if there is one creature more pitiable than the fine lady who cannot condescend to the cares of the table or the house, it is the woman who degrades herself into a mere kitchen drudge, and whose soul seems never to get out of the pepper-box and the salt-cellar." ~~"The Best Dish," in The bird's nest, and other sermons for children of all ages, by Samuel Cox, 1886
Showing posts with label housework. Show all posts
Showing posts with label housework. Show all posts
Monday, February 18, 2013
Quote for the day: Stuck in a pepper-box?
Thursday, August 02, 2012
Book Review: Toss, Keep, Sell!
Toss, Keep, Sell!: The Suddenly Frugal Guide to Cleaning Out the Clutter and Cashing In, by Leah Ingram. About $US10 on Amazon.com, in either paperback or Kindle format. (I borrowed a copy from the library.)
Over the last two or three decades, I have read a lotta, lotta, lotta clutter and organizing books. Some inspired me to get busy and do something; some were interesting, some were boring. Some had good ideas, and a lot were the same old stuff. Recently I've downloaded several free Kindle books about organizing, home management, and clutter, and most of them are the same old stuff. One of them might grab you at the right moment and become your friend, but really there isn't much new to say about "toss what you don't need, organize the rest."
So I know I've found a keeper when a) I enjoy reading it and b) I actually get a couple of new ideas that c) work. Someone named Books and Chocolate already reviewed Toss, Keep, Sell! on Amazon.com, and that's pretty much what they said, too. There are a few ideas I couldn't exactly relate to, like making money reselling Tiffany and Prada stuff that you might have gathering dust (??), but overall I liked her ideas, particularly about re-purposing unused items in other rooms. Of course we've done that lots of times, but reading the book sparked a couple of new ideas I hadn't thought of before. Yesterday I did some cleaning out in our dining room--not where we eat all our meals, this is more of a space where we have holiday dinners and sew and do homework in between, so it gets messy. I cleaned out the buffet, got rid of a couple of old tablecloths and a bunch of polyester napkins that we never use, and realized that I could use the built-in cutlery tray in the top drawer for our good cutlery.
Why I never thought of that, after living here for almost fifteen years, I don't know, but I had always kept the "good" set of cutlery (wedding gift) in a wooden box (wedding gift) on top of the china cabinet. But the knife holder had broken loose inside the box, and half of the good cutlery had migrated into the everyday drawer in the kitchen anyway because we were short on spoons. So...short end of the story...the good cutlery, what we don't need for every day, now lives in the buffet. Which gave me a nice empty wooden box...which was twice the size of the small jewelery box I'd been stuffing my beads and earrings into for years. So now I have a bigger jewelery box, and Dollygirl has my old box since she didn't have one at all. Everybody wins, and the top of the china cabinet is suddenly clear too.
The format of the book is room-by-room, which is pretty typical. But I think what it sets it above the norm are the personal examples and the sum-it-up charts, as well as the up-to-date suggestions such as using Craigslist and E-bay.
So...this is a new addition to my short list of favourite clutter/organization books. (Others are It's Here...Somewhere, by Alice Fulton, and Don Aslett's For Packrats Only.)
Over the last two or three decades, I have read a lotta, lotta, lotta clutter and organizing books. Some inspired me to get busy and do something; some were interesting, some were boring. Some had good ideas, and a lot were the same old stuff. Recently I've downloaded several free Kindle books about organizing, home management, and clutter, and most of them are the same old stuff. One of them might grab you at the right moment and become your friend, but really there isn't much new to say about "toss what you don't need, organize the rest."
So I know I've found a keeper when a) I enjoy reading it and b) I actually get a couple of new ideas that c) work. Someone named Books and Chocolate already reviewed Toss, Keep, Sell! on Amazon.com, and that's pretty much what they said, too. There are a few ideas I couldn't exactly relate to, like making money reselling Tiffany and Prada stuff that you might have gathering dust (??), but overall I liked her ideas, particularly about re-purposing unused items in other rooms. Of course we've done that lots of times, but reading the book sparked a couple of new ideas I hadn't thought of before. Yesterday I did some cleaning out in our dining room--not where we eat all our meals, this is more of a space where we have holiday dinners and sew and do homework in between, so it gets messy. I cleaned out the buffet, got rid of a couple of old tablecloths and a bunch of polyester napkins that we never use, and realized that I could use the built-in cutlery tray in the top drawer for our good cutlery.
Why I never thought of that, after living here for almost fifteen years, I don't know, but I had always kept the "good" set of cutlery (wedding gift) in a wooden box (wedding gift) on top of the china cabinet. But the knife holder had broken loose inside the box, and half of the good cutlery had migrated into the everyday drawer in the kitchen anyway because we were short on spoons. So...short end of the story...the good cutlery, what we don't need for every day, now lives in the buffet. Which gave me a nice empty wooden box...which was twice the size of the small jewelery box I'd been stuffing my beads and earrings into for years. So now I have a bigger jewelery box, and Dollygirl has my old box since she didn't have one at all. Everybody wins, and the top of the china cabinet is suddenly clear too.
The format of the book is room-by-room, which is pretty typical. But I think what it sets it above the norm are the personal examples and the sum-it-up charts, as well as the up-to-date suggestions such as using Craigslist and E-bay.
So...this is a new addition to my short list of favourite clutter/organization books. (Others are It's Here...Somewhere, by Alice Fulton, and Don Aslett's For Packrats Only.)
Monday, October 26, 2009
How about creative dishwashing?
We don't read For Better Or For Worse as much as we used to...but I've been sort of following Elly's enrolling in creative writing classes.
I liked this one--sorry I can't copy it here, you'll just have to go look.
I liked this one--sorry I can't copy it here, you'll just have to go look.
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