LadyWriter.ca Home Page
Recent Posts
Live long enough to embarrass somebody
It hurt so much, I deserve a present
It’s fantastic, but…don’t mess with formula
God bless us, everyone
I love it when I’m right
Would it help if I cried?
Categories

Christian Living
Fiction
Life
Social Commentary
Stay-at-home mom
Today's Notebook
Uncategorized

Archives

February 2012 (1)
January 2012 (2)
December 2011 (3)
November 2011 (4)
October 2011 (5)
September 2011 (4)
July 2011 (1)
May 2011 (3)
April 2011 (1)
March 2011 (1)
January 2011 (2)
December 2010 (1)
November 2010 (1)
October 2010 (1)
September 2010 (1)
August 2010 (2)
July 2010 (1)
June 2010 (2)
May 2010 (2)
April 2010 (2)
March 2010 (2)
February 2010 (2)
January 2010 (1)
December 2009 (2)
November 2009 (7)
October 2009 (9)
September 2009 (5)
August 2009 (1)
July 2009 (2)
June 2009 (1)
April 2009 (1)
September 2008 (1)
June 2007 (2)
April 2007 (2)
March 2007 (3)
February 2007 (1)
October 2006 (1)
May 2006 (1)
March 2006 (1)


LadyWriter.ca Services

I am Queen of the World!

So I’ve come to the end of my running odyssey, and I find it ironic that at the end of this program, I find myself running 10K alone—on my treadmill—just the way I started.


Hurts so good

I read once in a beginning runner’s handbook that one shouldn’t try to increase distance and speed at the same time, but I appear to have broken that rule.


Nitty gritty time

At running club last night, I christened week seven with another 8 kilometre run. Note to self: pee before you go, dummy.



Rachel's Manifesto

Follow LadyWriter.ca on Twitter

Home  |  Services  |  Special Projects  |  About Us  |  Contact Us


The giant fork and spoon live

We did it…we purged our closets. We separated clothing into a blue plastic bag–what someone might want–and a green plastic bag–what nobody would ever want. Technically, we’re performing Steps 3 and 4 simultaneously: The Sort and The Purge.

I’m also going to try a tip from The Organizing Connection for tracking my clothing usage: hang all clothing backwards, they suggest, (with the hook pointing out)  and after wearing, re-hang them with the hook pointing in. Then you can identify the clothing you wear most, and the clothing you haven’t touched within a month or so.

When we moved in five years ago, I noticed the color on the inside of the closets…1975 mint green, with various scuffs, one long wooden rod, and one high, deep shelf.  (I’m not a fan of deep shelves.  They become black holes. Your favorite green argyle sweater gets accidentally pushed to the back and disappears. Who knows what else is back there? A gravity well full of everyone else’s clothing?)

At the time, I couldn’t care less what color the closet was, or bother to custom-fit a new closet system, because we had been waiting for nine desperate weeks to move into our new place as our sale agreement stipulated. Our family of five camped with relatives all summer. By the time moving day arrived, we all just wanted to have our own place.

Today, I felt no different when I yanked everything out to purge, even though I saw it again—the faded mint green color still blaring a noisy tune.

In the Organizing Connection’s General Tips for Closet Organization, I read, “It always gets really messy before it gets neat. You will need to empty the closet completely so you have a clean palette to work from. This is a good time to either give the walls a good washing or it may be time for a fresh coat of paint. You will also want to get out your measuring tape and size up the area for a new closet organization system.”

Both closets measure 41 inches (3 feet five inches) wide by 37 inches (just over 3 feet) deep. Sketching out a design and shopping for an economical closet system will be our weekend chore. Maybe after we do that, I’d be willing to splash on a lick of paint. For right now, the purged contents are going back in.

What about the stuff I got rid of? I need to find another place for:

-          Several sets of king-sized sheets

-          A giant basket filled with loose photographs

-          My big, clunky film camera in its case, a Canon EOS. It’s a great camera, and only about eight years old: too bad it didn’t have time to wear out before it became redundant.

-          A three-drawer plastic container on wheels, filled with acrylic paints and other craft supplies

Folks, I feel like a fraud.  I’m not really organizing, I’m just shifting stuff around. We ditched a few books and threw out some old, ugly clothes, but other than that we’re just putting the other stuff  somewhere else. Perhaps this is why I put off organizing our bedroom for so long. The work here creates work in other places in the house, namely, the basement. I fear almost everything on the list is bound to end up there.

I’m scared of the basement.  Igor lives in the basement.

By the way, as you’ve gathered from the spoiler headline, the fork and spoon didn’t make it out of my husband’s closet. For that to happen, I think I may have to agree to display them somewhere, at least until he gets a man room.

Such is the price of peace.  The Middle East could learn a thing or two from me.

One Response to “The giant fork and spoon live”

  1. [...] Christmas, from our closet to yours The giant fork and spoon live The best laid plans Do files and frilly underwear go together? Just lucky, I guess Who’s [...]

Leave a Reply