So, if this
goes according to plan I will then be able to focus my energies on writing for
an hour or two when the children are in bed, rather than catching up on
housework (and I might also be able to get to bed at a decent hour). The author
J.K. Rowling had a similar strategy, though apparently hers involved not doing any housework at all.
I would love to cull all the housework chores. But there are
time-consuming things that just need to be done (laundry, washing up, food
shopping). I have already sacked off all the non-essential jobs (ironing,
dusting, etc) and I have saved myself heaps of time:
1. I
order a weekly Asda home delivery
2. We
buy easy-to-cook food (ready-chopped onions/tins of chopped fruit etc), have
lots of quick meals (eg biscuits and cheese; sandwiches) and cook in bulk so
that meals can be heated in the microwave the next day. We make up ready-made
bags of frozen veg (using microwave steam bags) which is much easier and healthier
than boiling.
3. I
give the house a good spring clean once/twice a year (!) rather than every week
4. We
have tons of washing. It comes from having two kiddoes in cloth nappies. Each
night I put the nappies on a long wash cycle so that the washing machine is
free during the day for shorter cycles of washing
5. We
have a tumble dryer which I use for clothes, sheets and towels. I have four (!)
airers for the cloth nappies. I would like to stop using the dryer altogether
but I’m not sure where/how I’d dry the mountain of clothes
sun in September! |
The downside to concentrating all my time on finishing housework during the day, of course, is that I suffer from guilty mummy syndrome.
When I’m
focussing my energies on cooking or laundry, there is no time to properly play with
toddler or spend quality time bonding with squish. After the housework and all
the other jobs of the day (15x nappy changes; 8x milk feeds; 4x changes of
clothes; 3x meals; 2x baths; 1x park run and lots of cuddles), there isn’t much
time for sitting down and concentrating on playing.