Now here is his room all neat and clean, with all 152 dust bunnies eradicated:I just love that boy's room. The kids each picked their paint color, but I combined his turquoise walls with all the blues in the bedding, curtains, etc. He is a kid who likes and needs blues. He's a phlegmatic and somewhat melancholic child, if you're familiar with the four temperaments (we learned through Waldorf education and anthroposophy and just dabble in caring about it). See the kitty picture on the wall, and the "stuffies" on the bed? Hee hee! And shhh, don't tell him I showed you. He is eleven after all.
Okay, and warning: below is Rose's room. Can you tell she's the polar opposite of her brother in oh, so many ways? Sanguine and choleric. She chose bright, bright yellow for her walls. And this is what her room has been looking like for the last month or so:
Aaaccckkk! There are things on the dresser, things on the floor (poor upside down dolly), things hanging on the walls and from the walls and probably things crawling around in there too. It makes me want to scream, and I don't know how she lives like this but she actually seems to prefer it. I had a lot of stuff as a kid, too, but I generally kept it in "neat" piles, at least by her age. I don't like a lot of stuff around now, but apparently she does.
Elijah's room is restful to me, and his bed so warm and cozy. Rose's room, on the other hand, even without all the stuff in there it makes me nervous. The bright, bright yellow. The pink flowers on the wallpaper border. It's so her. She makes me jumpy too. But boy, do I love that girl. I love both of them so much. And I really don't mind helping them clean up their spaces once in a while.
We're slowly working on Rose's room. It already looks better than this, but is still in progress. I'll post the "after" shots when we get to the final stage. This one takes a while, because I have to take a lot of breaks, sometimes for a week or so...
To be continued.
Comments
I was brought up that our rooms were our responsibility. If it was left on the floor for more than 2 days it was assumed we didn't need it any longer. Afterall, I would take care of it if it was worthwhile.
After I lost a favourite LP I never did it again. I did have it returned after a few weeks. I thought it was gone forever. My parents were strict with some things. This expectation taught me to look after my environment and to value the things for which my parents worked hard.
tag: over here :)
Isn't it funny how kids are different. I've got two neat-freaks, but one is a cluttered and the other is a minimalist. We'll see what happens with the third. :)
I agree though, that just doing a little all the time works best. I clean up and cook and putter at household work WELL over 50% of the day, probably. But keeps me moving and busy and the house clean! I like having the house cleaned up and organized when my husband comes home - he gets frazzled easily and if the house is calm, quiet, smells good, the boys AND my husband are happier, and he spends more time with the boys.
My boys will help out a little with whatever they play with (they don't like getting more than one thing out a time yet), but they are little. I still do the rooms...but they don't really play in their rooms. Just sleep there!
He says he likes it that way and we have a deal that his space is his space. As long as it's not trickling out into the hallway, I don't mind. Every so often he'll let me go in and clean, sometimes with his help and sometimes just me when I really really want to do it. I don't mind doing it on occasion; after all it is me that is bothered by it. lol
My mom said my room was exactly the same way. She never made me clean, even when my things were getting lost or broken. She said it was my space and my perogative to do as I please with my room. Then one day - around age 13 or 14 maybe - I cleaned it top to bottom and since that day haven't been able to stand my space messy.
So maybe there is hope for our messy kiddos. Until then I like to keep the bedroom door closed. lol