simplify family life

Simplify Your Marriage by Giving 100%

source: foshie

This week we’re talking about simplifying family life. Tune in all week for strategies and tips for every area of life!

Marriage is anything but simple.

There is one thing you can do to simplify marriage, though — a magic bullet, if you will.

We often think about marriage as a 50/50 split, where we have to meet in the middle and compromise.

But what would happen if we each gave 100% instead? What if we gave up our rights and expectations and focused on serving one another instead?

Think about it. How different were things before you got married, when you were first dating? If you were anything like us, you spent a lot of time trying to please each other. And then you get married and settle into real life, and suddenly making the other person happy isn’t quite as important.

Sometimes, we don’t even treat our spouses with the same common courtesy that we show to strangers on the street.

Giving 100% will look different for every marriage, but here are some ideas to get started:

1. Don’t expect your spouse to live by your standards.

A question I often get asked is what someone should do if their spouse is not on board with decluttering and organizing. My response might surprise you.

Although my husband and I do share chores and responsibilities, I don’t try to hold him to my standards. He’s perfectly content to stuff things in closets and call the house clean, but cluttered closets make me even more crazy than a cluttered house does. However, this is really not a right or wrong issue, in my opinion, so if I want the closets to be neat and tidy, I take responsibility for keeping them that way. Likewise, I can’t expect him to make the bed every day just because that’s one of my pressure points. I either relax my standards or agree to be the one to do the extra work.

2. Try to live up to his standards.

That said, giving 100% means that I do look for ways to live up to his standards. Even though it doesn’t bother me to leave my hair straightener on the side of the sink when it’s not in use, it bugs Sean, so I try to remember to wrap it up when I’m done. It also drives him nuts when I peel a fruit or veggie into the sink (since we don’t have a garbage disposal, and he usually does the dishes), so I try to remember to use a plate or container to catch them instead. And when I know that he liked my hair done a certain way, I wear it that way because I like to make him happy.

I know that doesn’t sound “fair”, but giving 100% isn’t really about fairness. I can eliminate a lot of fights by relaxing my standards and trying to live up to his, and — as an added bonus — he’s a lot more likely to try harder when he sees me trying as well!

3. Look for little ways to say I love you.

Life gets busy and we spend all day trying to keep up with demands and responsibilities, which leaves little time to really show each other we care. Instead of waiting for a holiday or special occasion, look for little everyday ways to show him you love and appreciate him. A little bit goes a long way, and this isn’t about investing a ton of time or money.

Not sure where to start? Try this list of 72 simple things you can do to brighten your spouse’s day from Engaged Marriage or this list of ways to say I love you that I posted around Valentine’s Day!

Giving 100%, especially when your spouse isn’t doing the same, might not feel all that good in the beginning. But if you’re doing it for the right reasons — because you want to invest in your marriage and make the other person happy and not because you’re trying to manipulate their behavior — it really does simplify things in the long run!

Do I do this perfectly? No, of course not. But I do try!

How do you give 100%?

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Simplify Your Life as a Mother by Trusting Your Gut

source: Koshyk

This week we’re talking about simplifying family life. Tune in all week for strategies and tips for every area of life, and if you’re looking for more in-depth resources, be sure to check out the Huge Simplify Family Life eBook Sale!

Amazon.com currently has more than 33,706 books on parenting. 33,706!

Is it any wonder that we agonize over the simplest parenting decision with advice coming at us from all angles?

The “experts” all know exactly how you should parent — and yet none of them agree on what the best methods are. Family, friends, neighbors & strangers all have opinions too. And somehow, we need to wade through all of the information that we read and hear — in real life, in books and on the internet — to make decisions for our own families.

It’s hard, and all we really want is to figure out what’s best for our kids.
We have a picture of how we’d like our kids to turn out, and we make decisions to try to reach that point.

I don’t know about you, but I often wish that someone would tell me exactly what to do to deal with non-sleeping babies and tantruming toddlers. I’m sure the same is true when you’re dealing with moody preteens and independent teens too! But no one — not even the so-called experts — can guarantee much of anything.

I’m not against learning from other people. I read parenting blogs and books, ask questions and learn from the things other people are doing. But at some point we have we trust our own gut, taking bits and pieces of everything we’ve heard or read to make our own decisions.

The Experts Aren’t Always Right

Anyone can pretty much call themselves an expert, but even the people who are actually entitled to that title aren’t always right. Think about it. How many accepted practices from 10 or 15 years ago are now considered archaic or just plain wrong. Today’s experts make a living disproving the experts that came before them.

Add to that the fact that no two children are exactly the same, and that each family has its own parenting style, community and family culture, and there are really too many variables to predict. Rather than looking at experts as omniscient beings who have all the answers, keep their fallibility in mind as you read, so that it will be easier to sort through their recommendations.

Take What You Can, Forget the Rest

I love to read and hear about a variety of parenting philosophies and approaches, and even in cases where I disagree with 75% of what someone is saying, I can learn from the other 25%. Incorporating things you’ve heard from a variety of sources truly allows you to make your own decisions without being tied down by any single one. You know your kids best, and that makes you the best decisionmaker, not the experts, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t learn from other people.

Be Confident in Your Decisions

Once you make a decision, be confident in it and fully embrace it. All too often, we shoot ourselves in the foot by making a decision half-heartedly. Our kids know it and we know it, and it usually ends up backfiring. We’re all going to make mistakes and wish we’d done something differently, but that’s okay.

Learn from others, trust your gut and be ready to admit when something isn’t working, and motherhood will be just a tiny bit simpler!

Have you ever experienced advice paralysis or expert overload when trying to make a decision? Do you trust your gut?

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Why I Hate the Idea of Balance

March 22, 2011

This week we’re talking about simplifying family life. Tune in all week for strategies and tips for every area of life, and if you’re looking for more in-depth resources, be sure to check out the Huge Simplify Family Life eBook Sale! A lot of people talk about finding balance as if it’s the key to [...]

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