Minimal

  • Why are Millennials turning to modern homemaking?

    So why are millennials turning back to modern homemaking?

    Women can do anything, we really can. 

    That is the message we have been receiving for decades, that we can do anything, be anything, work at anything and that we should want to excel at our career ahead of everything else. None of this is wrong, but the power isn’t in that we can do as much as men, succeed in careers as much as men, or be as powerful as men in this world (that last point I actually don’t believe to be true – there is still work to be done). The power is in the choice, the choice whether a career (equivalent in the success and pay as men are afforded) or staying at home is what they choose, and each are afforded the same level of respect across society as a whole.

    I decided to turn my attention to modern homemaking and why millennials are turning their hands back to homemaking, a skill that used to be embraced but is now one of those lost arts for many. 

    So why are Millennials turning back to modern homemaking?

    Homemaking isn’t new, but is it making a comeback? We live in such a polarised world and slowing down and simplifying seems almost like a radical idea when really it’s just a normal part of what we want to do as humans. All of our choices are valid, whether you want to stay home or whether you choose to work outside the home, all our choices are valid and important.

    When I had my first child I didn’t really know how I felt about what the ‘end’ of maternity leave might look like. I worked for myself so I could essentially decide how long I wanted to take off. I was able to take the normal amount of time off and actually decided to take a bit of extended leave, at around the 15-month mark.

    I didn’t really know whether or not I wanted to return to work, but I thought I might dip my toe in the water and see how I felt. Incidentally I “returned” to work (for myself, and very much on my own schedule) in March 2020, just as the rest of the world was closing down. I worked, on a part-time and ad hoc basis until the birth of my second child in May 2021.

    We had always said that I would be home full time with our children and it was something that we had set up our life to accommodate from long before we had children. 

    When my maternity leave finished after the birth of my second child I never felt any pull to go back to work. I just carried on with life as normal. 

    Returning to work?

    I don’t need to return to work – a very privileged statement I know – but thinking back I had had this huge mindset shift and embraced a slow, simple, and more minimalist life. It just felt normal to embrace homemaking.

    I didn’t know that I wanted to be a homemaker if I am honest, and it’s not like I am designated with all the tasks around the house and my husband gets to kick back and be waited on hand and foot, in fact the opposite is true. My husband has a very active role in our entire household, sometimes more than me in fact. I would say we very much have an equal share of what takes place inside our home. There are no designated tasks, we just pick up the slack and do the tasks that need to be done. If he has a particularly hard week of work I might pick up more of the slack, and if I am having a more difficult week then he will pick up the slack.

    mother and daughter playing together
    Photo by Werner Pfennig on Pexels.com

    The question is always money

    Financially our money is obviously for our family and that was a hard adjustment for me at first and I would always refer to it as his money. It’s not an easy adjustment to make when you have always been someone who is earning. 

    When we made these decisions to have me at home, we did it with the intention of it being a long term decision. Our ultimate choice is to home educate them, and so this really is a long term decision for our family. 

    So what is my role, and what does life look life for us going forward?

    It’s taken me a really long time to embrace that nametag and really to embrace homemaking as a whole. I guess some of that is this preconditioned idea that the work we do inside our home isn’t as valuable as working for an employer or working for money. The work we do in our homes, within our families, in raising our children, is the most important work. Society doesn’t value this work and it shows. We are always judged by “what we do” in terms of our job. Society doesn’t value the work I do within the home. Capitalism wants us to keep those cogs turning. It wants us, as parents, to get back in the workplace, but there is a slow rumbling movement of people who are saying “no, absolutely not, I’m not subscribing to that”. We cannot keep functioning in this fast paced, always on, hustle culture.

    Now I am not suggesting we all need to rush back into the home if that is not our desire. We can, of course, be whatever we want to be as women, but also we still have a way to go. That gender pay gap is very real. 

    We still have a long way to go

    But being a homemaker is undervalued. Being a parent is still undervalued in our society. Our work in our homes and as parents of the next generation isn’t appreciated. There is still so much to be done, and maybe that is the whole point. We have the power now to make that decision for ourselves, and we don’t have to be defined by a job or what we do. I had to sit quite uncomfortably with this title of homemaker for quite a while, because of all the negative connotations that surround it, but I am embracing it more and more, and as I do I feel more like I am stepping into my most authentic self.

    My work is valuable. Your work is valuable. The work we do within our homes is really important. We need to keep this conversation going.

    For me the most important work takes place inside my home, raising the next generation and instilling the values that they will take out into the world. I truly believe that it is such important work. Our children are going to change the world. What we do inside our homes can be monumental and the biggest contribution I get to make is in the little people I get to raise. 

  • The benefits of toy rotation + download my FREE minimal toy rotation guide

    Toy rotation, minimal toys, not having much our and available for play at any one time…it’s something that makes many people look at us a bit funny but I’m telling you straight off the bat, it’s completely changed our daughters play and the feeling and flow of our play space.

    Play is the most important thing in our children’s world and a focal point in their early years education. When we had our first child, our daughter, we very quickly found toys taking over every inch of living room space. It inspired us to look further into ways in which play and toys can work for all of us within our home. Toy rotation isn’t a new idea and certainly isn’t something that we created ourselves, but is an idea based on science and child development. All we do is take these ideas and apply it to our home and what works for us. We have been able to find out what works, what doesn’t and how we can make not only a wonderful learning and growing space for our children, but also do what we can to do to support them.

    Play is the most important thing our children do in their day. You only have to take a moment out of your day to observe them at play to realise just how important it is to them. It’s no coincidence the Maria Montessori described play as the work of the child. While we don’t subscribe to a full Montessori practice in our home (opting more for an eclectic mix in our life and home education) we are passionate about supporting play and putting at utmost importance in our children’s life.

    What is toy rotation?

    Have you ever read that offering fewer toys to our children creates a better depth of play? It means having less choice around for them and encourages them to play with what is around, rather than dealing with the overwhelm of having every toy at their disposal. This simple change encourages them to play better without having too much around, and really shows in all areas of their play, especially within their imaginative play. It enables them to be more imaginative, more creative and can even be attributed to deeper cognitive development too as studied in “The influence of the number of toys on the environment on toddlers’ play” published in the journal of Infant Behaviour and Development.

    When children have a high number of toys it inevitably creates more mess which then goes on to stifle their play and imaginations. I have seen it happen in our home before we decided to drastically the amount of toys we have around. With more toys available my daughter would either play sporadically or just bypass the option to play entirely. When we significantly reduced the number of toys available she noticably began to play more deeply and creatively. At the moment we rotate our toys monthly and we notice such an incredible difference between the beginning of our rotation cycle, when everything is fresh and new, and by the end when things are starting to get a little stale.

    Why is toy rotation important?

    Aside from the obvious science and anecdotal evidence that shows that children do indeed play more deeply with far less. We see it every day in our home in the way our daughter plays, creates, imagines, and interacts with her toys. Less is more and is a great in so many ways for her. It encourages her to be more creative with her own toys too, in the mind of a child anything can be anything they want it to be, we don’t need to provide every toy “just in case”. When toys are messy and overbearing creativity is stifled and play is so much more limited.

    Should I be aiming for minimal toys?

    We spent a great deal of time throughout 2020 and 2021 decluttering, minimising and streamlining much around our home. I wouldn’t say we live as strict minimalists but we do live a more minimal lifestyle.

    The question and observation I get the most when I talk about minimal toys or toy rotation is that people for some reason think that our children go without. I would say that the opposite is true and instead we are gifting them a childhood and a chance at play which will enrich not only the play experience itself but their early years and beyond. It really is such a great gift to be able to gift them with something so simple.

    Download my 5 easy steps to minimal toy rotation

    We’ve been doing and loving toy rotation for almost 2 years and have seen the positive impact and benefits it has provided our daughter. We have seen how her depth of play has increased, her creativity grown and her imagination limitless, and these changes are never more evident than when we refresh her toys at the beginning of a new rotation.

    I would love to share with you our simple steps to minimal toy rotation, helping you beat the overwhelm, how to divide up your toys and how to simply manage your toy rotation with ease. Pop your email in below and I’ll send you my simple guide straight to your inbox.

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    I know what you’re thinking, that you already own too much and wouldn’t know where to start, but let me share this with you – it doesn’t all need to be out and available at the same time. We have a fair few toys that we have accumulated through preloved toys, things being handed down and gifts and I know we want it all to be used.

    If you are interested in toy rotation and minimal toys I want to urge you to think of it this way: the toys will be used far more intently and more often if you offer them in smaller batches through toy rotation, and if they aren’t then maybe they aren’t the right toy for your child. What we have seen is when all the toys are available things don’t always get played with in any depth. When offered with a smaller batch of toys then they seem to be played with and used at a much deeper level.

  • The art of living more minimally

    Living more minimally has been a work in progress, one that is still very much a work in progress and probably will be for a while yet. To me, minimalism is different to each person, and while I won’t ever be a one pair of jeans and one t-shirt kind of girl I know that we all have our own brand on minimalism and that’s the most important thing.

    Are we where we want to be yet? No.

    Are we doing better than we were a year ago? Definitely.

    How did we start?

    Being home for the last year has actually been incredibly productive when it came to evaluating our home. We found better ways to live in and also a few renovations that we really wanted to do too. Some have been done and some are next on the list.

    We spent the last year taking a look at what we have, both around our home and things inside it and how we can live more minimally within it. We live in a small home and we absolutely love it, although since I got pregnant with our second child the most common question is “will you move house now?” as if people could not comprehend wanting to live in a small home by choice. We love our home and I find that most people’s issues in outgrowing their home are that their stuff grows out of it. Instead of that, we live in a way where we fit inside our home.

    Now I do recognise that at some point we are going to have to move, but not yet. It has nothing to do with the size or space for our family but more that we have a daughter and are expecting a son. While sharing space will work for a while ultimately we will want to be providing them with their own individual bedrooms. However, that is something for the future.

    Living with less

    Once we decided that we had no intention of moving home and we’re more than happy where we were we decided that instead of trying to fit all out belongings into our small home a better idea was that we actually stop living with so much stuff and try to live more minimally instead. Most of it was just stored and there was so much that we could get rid of. So we did.

    We don’t need more space for more stuff and more clutter and instead we fit into the space that we have and we fit comfortably (although, like I said, we’re still very much a work in progress) and it really does feel great to live more minimally.

    Top tips for decluttering, living small and/or living with less:

    1. If you haven’t used it in 6 months (and it’s not seasonal or sentimental) consider selling or donating if you can. ⁣

    2. Think more about fitting into space and less about adding yet more storage to make too much stuff fit into too little space. ⁣

    3. Try multifunctional storage or furniture solutions. If you have a small or awkward space think of how you can be creative with what you have. Tiny homes are popular and with that comes a whole host of smart ways to live with less and in a smaller space.⁣

    4. If you’re having a hard time letting stuff go and you have a place to temporarily store it (ie, a garage or loft) pack it up. If you’ve not thought of it or reached for it in six months it can be sold or donated. ⁣

    5. Turn your waste into cash or to help those who need it. If things don’t need to go to landfill then find ways to pass them on. Plenty of people are in need and if you are happy to give away freely you’ll be sending it to a good home. Alternatively, if you have the time use places like ebay, Facebook market place etc to sell your stuff. Imagine how good it feels when you sell enough to pay a bill, treat yourself to takeaway or just add to your savings.⁣

    What’s your best decluttering and/or living small tips?

  • Minimal Toys & Toy Rotation

    Something we’ve really been working on since toys became a major feature in our world is reducing how many toys there are in our world. Sounds counterproductive I know but stay with me.

    Throughout 2020 we spent a lot of time reorganising, decluttering, and minimalising the things we own and we have been so successful with that, and toys have been one of those things. We have been creating a calm and soothing play environment using minimal toys and using toy rotation to keep play fresh, engaging, and interactive.

    Why minimal toys?

    Did you know fewer toys creates a better depth of play? Literally having less choice and only have a small number of toys enables children to use their imaginations more, become more creative in their play and it can even be attributed to deeper cognitive development too (“The influence of the number of toys on the environment on toddlers’ play” published in the journal of Infant Behaviour and Development). The higher the number of toys, the more mess that creates around them can stifle their play and their imaginations. I have seen it myself before we opted to follow this route. With more toys my daughter would either play sporadically or just bypass it entirely at times. As soon as we significantly reduced the number of toys around her she began to play more deeply and creatively. We rotate our toys monthly at the moment (more about toy rotation in a minute) and we notice an incredible difference between the beginning of our rotation cycle (when everything is fresh and new) and at the end (when things are starting to get a little boring).

    So, does it work?

    Aside from the science to back it up we have really noticed a difference in the way our daughter plays, creates, imagines, and interacts with her toys since making the change. Less definitely is more and is a great motivator for her to be more creative with her own toys too. When toys are messy and overbearing creativity is stifled and play is much more limited.

    Toy Rotation

    I know what you’re thinking “But we already own too much” but let me share this with you – it doesn’t all need to be out and available at the same time. We’ve already accumulated a lot of things through preloved toys being handed down and gifts, and I also understand the feeling that you want all of it to be used. So what if I told you this: it’s more likely that all your toys will be used far more intently and more often if you offered them in smaller batches. What we have seen is when all the toys are available things don’t always get played with in any depth. When offered with a smaller batch of toys then they seem to be played with and used at a much deeper level.

    We separate our toys into 3 rotations; 1 in use and 2 stored, and we rotate monthly to keep the toys fresh. We still keep some key pieces available throughout, such as her kitchen, but at the end of the rotation we swap everything round. She is always delighted with her toys and it’s always so fun to see her rediscover them, as if they are brand new, after a short time away.

    I plan to jump into how I organise her toys and what our minimal toys and rotations look like, so stay tuned here and over on my Instagram page.