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The Best Thing You Can Do
For Your Child |
I have a reader who asked me a
very serious question the other day. She has a grown daughter
who at 24 years old lives in a messy, disorganized, smelly home.
She has 2 young sons who are following in her footsteps. My
reader wanted to know what I thought she could do about getting
through to her daughter about the importance of keeping an
organized home.
She also told me, as an intro to the above question, that when
her daughter was a child and teenager living at home that my
reader would go into her room while her daughter was at school
and she would spend several hours in there cleaning it all out
for her.
Well there’s the problem. One of the best things you can do for
your child is to teach and train them to be organized and tidy
themselves. It is not a basic instinct to clean up after
oneself. It is a learned behavior.
You may think that you’re being mean by making your child clean
up after themselves all the time. Perhaps you resented your own
parents forcing you to clean out your closet or under your bed
when you were perfectly happy with it the way it was. No matter
what the reason is that you don’t make your child clean up after
themselves I’m here to tell you that it is just a bad idea all
the way around.
From the time your child is 2 years old you need to be making
them clean up after themselves. Yes…2 years old. I used to sit
on the floor in my boys messy rooms, or on the couch in the
front room and I would point at just one item at a time and tell
my kids to put it in the toy box, or on the lower shelf . One at
a time each and every little toy got put away properly…and by my
children.
I even did this with my 2 year old niece when she and her mother
came to live with us for 6 months. My sister-in-law was shocked
by the fact I could get her daughter to clean up after herself
so quickly and completely.
As your child grows you need to continue to have them clean up
after themselves. Always. You might feel as if it is so much
easier for everyone involved if you just pick up after them
yourself. But in the long run…is it really what’s best for your
child?
Teach your child that they must not only clean up after
themselves every day but that they can’t get a new project out
to play with until they have put the old project and the related
items or toys belonging to it away properly.
Also, you need to be sure that from about 7 or 8 years old on,
once a month you come into their room with them, sit on the bed
or floor and supervise a good deep down cleaning. By sitting
there and having them clean out every little corner of their
room, including their drawers, closet and under the bed, you are
training them to know HOW to always do this when needed.
By having them do this once a month you are training them that
this is normal behavior. Sure, when your child first moves out
they may not do this. But after a year or two on their own, and
when their home is dirty, dusty and a wreck, they know exactly
how to tackle each room, systematically, and are able to clean
up and organize in no time.
That’s where my reader went wrong. She never made her daughter
clean up after herself. She never sat there and supervised her
daughter doing a good deep cleaning out of her room. She just
did the work for her. She admitted that she thought it was
pretty self explanatory and that her daughter was busy enough.
Now she is perplexed as to why her daughter is a slob and why
she is teaching her 2 sons to be slobs too. Probably because my
reader taught her how to be that way by doing the work for her.
So, please remember that you are doing your child a great
service by teaching and training them how to clean up after
themselves. You are teaching them valuable and necessary skills
to take into adulthood with them. How else will your child be
expected to know how to clean out a room and how to keep it tidy
and organized if you don’t teach them to do it as a child?
So, what was my advice to my reader? Honestly, I didn’t have a
lot of good advice. In my eyes the damage is done. I told her I
thought the best thing was to take her daughter out to lunch and
tell her she felt she had done her a disservice by cleaning up
after her all the time. I told her to point out to her daughter
how messy her house is and that she feels like it is her fault.
I told her to hand her a small stack of books on organization
and books on quickly cleaning your home.
Will that work? I don’t know. But I do know that if my reader
had taught and trained her daughter to clean out her own room
after school then this woman would more than likely be a lot
tidier and she would know that she needed to teach her own boys
to be the same.
The author Kerry Flinders is the
owner of Personal Organizing Solutions located in Southern
California. Kerry and her company are dedicated to helping
others organize their clutter and their lives, eliminating
unnecessary stress and helping the client to find more time in
their day for the things they love. Kerry is the author of the
book “Organizing With NO Budget”. >
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