When I wrote this a year ago, I was writing it for myself too. Personally, I was unsure of my attitude towards motherhood. Every day felt like drowning in a sea of mundane, repetitive responsibilities. The diapers, dishes, laundry, and random messes felt like they ran my whole day. I was more maid than wife or mother.
I did a little reading and journaling on the vocation of motherhood. Here’s the attitude-adjustment that followed.
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In this free 10 page eBook, I walk you through the professional system to clean your home:
thoroughly
efficiently
quickly
and easily.
Underlying Principles
Why are you “cleaning” all day without reaching an end point?
My 1 Big Tip to avoid clutter in the first place
Order = Outcome
Product Recommendations
Reduce waste with strategic reusable tools
Discover time-saving devices
Learn which products actually kill norovirus and other nasty household germs!
The Method
There are actually only two rooms in your house!
Step-by-step lists for cleaning
Make cleaning easier for the next time
I wrote this to give you all a blueprint of how to clean methodically. Your efficiency can rival that of a professional maid. You can spend less time cleaning, and enjoy more thorough results. Get your time back, with a free, proven cleaning system.
Get this free eBook, and access the rest of my downloadable content, in the resource library! You can also get it via email by signing up below.
http://www.booksfaithlife.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Cleaning-Schedules-682×1024.jpg alt=”Cleaning schedules don’t work! For an easy and manageable way to keep your home tidy and clean…”
Confession: I am a cleaning schedule dropout.
It’s true. An utter failure. I’ve tried them all. FlyLady, with her millions of email. CleanMama, paid and unpaid. Around one hundred printable “easy and comprehensive” checklists from Pinterest.
I rush in with such determination and naive hope, that this time will be different! I have a well-appointed cleaning caddy, all the tools and cleaners. I know the mechanics of how to clean and I’m betting you do too.
What is the (so obvious) problem inherent in every cleaning schedule?