A couple of months ago we decided it was time our children
had some regular chores. Up to that point, we’d forced them to help out
sporadically, usually with the same result: they’d grudgingly do what we asked
badly, and we’d have to do it after them. This time we decided to insist that
they contribute to their own maintenance. Normally I’d muck out their rooms
once a year, when my husband took them on a Boy Scout family camping trip over
Memorial Day weekend. I’d drag everything out from under their beds, and
everything they’d jammed in their closets in the last 364 days, and get rid of
the garbage and the cheap ass fucking carnival stuffed animals. You know the
ones—shit like a stuffed banana made out of crappy polyester that, had they
seen it in the garbage, they would declare their
favorite stuffed animal ever and oh my god how could I be so cruel as to throw
it out?!?!? You know, the one they didn’t even miss when I actually did throw it out
over Memorial Day weekend last year? Yeah, that one.
That used to take me all three days of the long weekend, and
it was painful. So now they were instructed that they were going to have to
muck out their own rooms weekly, and I would get to spend Memorial Day weekend
drinking Mai Tais and having my nails done or, you know, cleaning the rest of
the house. I made up a checklist and printed out copies. Each one has the same
thing on it: remove the sheet from your bed, take it and all dirty clothes to
the laundry room, put a new sheet on the bed, pick up all stuffed animals, pick
up and vacuum one room (living room, dining room, mudroom/kitchen or hall), and
a couple of lines for ad hoc write-in stuff. Each item has a check box so they
can keep track of what they’ve done. Chore time is around 9 a.m. on either
Saturday or Sunday (sometimes their sporting events interfere with the Saturday
window).
The first two or three weeks went pretty well. It was a new
thing, and they felt a sense of accomplishment when they were done. Then the
novelty wore off, and that sense of accomplishment wasn’t sufficient to counter
the drudgery of actually doing the chores. Congratulations, kids: you’re
now prepared for life. These days they go to their rooms, ostensibly to do
their chores, but they whine and fight and do everything but pick up their
rooms. I think they may actually drag stuff out and make a bigger mess. So we
have to ride their asses and make sure they’re making progress. I say “we,” but
I think we all know who “we” is. Because interestingly, there always seem to be
several “outdoor” tasks that become super ultra high priority and require my
husband’s immediate attention as soon as the kids are sent off to do their
weekly jobs. But, you know, I get it—those cardboard boxes aren’t going to
break themselves down, y’all.
And of course, I hear how mean I am. This weekend my
insistence that they pick up and vacuum a single room on the main level was
labeled “child abuse,” and “forced slave labor.” I was declared to be the
meanest, worst mom ever. (Two
superlatives at once; you can imagine my pride.) I pointed out that I do every
other fucking thing—the laundry, the cooking, the bathrooms. I suggested that
if they were so unhappy about vacuuming the living room, they were more than
welcome to clean the toilets. This was met with eye rolls, of course. It’s
their most highly developed skill.
I’ve tried a reward system, but it kind of backfired. One
week I was planning to run some errands (interesting errands, not just the
grocery store, so they all wanted to go) and I said I would take two kids
along. Whoever finished first would get to come with me. Problem number one is
that of course we only have one vacuum cleaner, so whoever got the vacuum first
was going to finish first. Problem number two was that my daughter stopped
working entirely, crawled under a blanket on the floor of her bedroom, and
started crying. When I finally pried out of her why she was crying, it turned
out that she really, really wanted to come with me, just to spend some time
with Mommy. This is a radical change from even a couple of months ago, when I
would be leaving the house in the morning and would say, “Do you want a hug and
a kiss?” and she’d think about it for a second and go, “Nah.” So the fact that
she wanted to come with me was odd
(although not unwelcome), and she was afraid she wouldn’t be able to finish in
time to get her choice. Result: tears. So that kinda sucked (she got to go with
me, even though she wasn’t the first one done).
These are tasks for which they do not get paid. I’ve had
this debate with other parents, asking opinions on if they should get an
allowance for maintenance work. I’m on the fence—I think about the “real world”
that they’ll have to live in one day, and no one is going to give them a medal
when they empty the fucking dishwasher and change their sheets. On the other
hand, when you go to work you do get paid for your contribution to the overall
success of the organization, and contributing to the success of the
organization is what I’m asking them to do in this case. So for now they don’t
get paid for making their beds and picking up their clothes, but they do for
cleaning windows and dusting baseboards (I hate dusting baseboards, and they’re
closer to the ground. They can do it, and I’ll give them a buck for it).
There is a downside to having them pull their own weight,
and that is that I can’t get rid of the crap as easily. When I was doing it
over Memorial Day weekends, I’d just dig everything out and make a big pile in
the middle of the room. Then I’d pluck out the things that were just garbage,
like all the stupid plastic slinkies from birthday party goody bags (have you
read Kristin’s
rant about goody bags? You should. Go ahead. I’ll wait), the aforementioned
crap stuffed animals, random bits of unidentifiable toy (I don’t understand—I
have some awareness of every toy that enters our house, one way or another, and
yet I’m constantly finding little pieces of shit that I don’t think I’ve ever
seen before; how is this possible? And what the hell are they?), and other
precious gems that they would clutch to their bosom and shriek in outrage if
they thought I was even suggesting
that we get rid of it. I’ll just have to go into stealth mode to get rid of
whatever replaces the stuffed banana.
4 comments:
This is my dream too: "to spend Memorial Day weekend drinking Mai Tais and having my nails done or, you know, cleaning the rest of the house." Except not the last part.
Exactly! Except actually, my Memorial Day weekend was disappointingly Mai Tai free, and there were no nails done either. But neither did I clean the house, so I'll call it a win.
Love it. True: "I say “we,” but I think we all know who “we” is. Because interestingly, there always seem to be several “outdoor” tasks that become super ultra high priority and require my husband’s immediate attention as soon as the kids are sent off to do their weekly jobs."
My kids do chores, too. Of course they don't do them well, but they do them every week ao I figure eventually things will get cleaned.
Right? Argh. And yeah, chores are definitely a "practice makes perfect" situation. Plus if I let them off for doing them badly, then I'm stuck doing it again myself. We're not going back there!
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