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- From: pburch@roc.mbcr.bcm.tmc.edu (Paula Burch)
- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Subject: Re: Things you do to save time
- Date: 28 Jan 1993 15:37:53 GMT
- Organization: Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Tx
- Lines: 57
- Distribution: usa
- Message-ID: <1k8ukhINN409@gazette.bcm.tmc.edu>
- References: <cindy.226@berkp.uadv.uci.edu> <1993Jan26.154146.18264@schbbs.mot.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: roc.mbcr.bcm.tmc.edu
- Originator: pburch@roc.mbcr.bcm.tmc.edu
-
-
- I'm surprised to realize that a lot of people waste time on chores that are
- entirely unnecessary. So, here's my entry into ways to save time at home:
-
- Don't sort laundry. Keep each individual's clothes together, empty the
- pockets, and wash in cold water. (Obviously baby whites and diapers
- get hot water and must be kept separate, so they have a separate
- hamper.) Purples and reds cannot be trusted in warm water, and must be
- washed only with darks at first, so sometimes sorting into two loads, a
- dark and a light, is worth the trouble, but my mother's complex system
- of sorting everything into eight different piles is unnecessary.
- (You can pretend that you're washing in cold water for environmental
- reasons.:-)
-
- Never iron anything. If you hang it up right out of the dryer, it
- won't need ironing, even if it's cotton or silk, unless it's a
- defective garment, in which case it gets removed from circulation.
- (Note that a dryer that's too hot may wrinkle clothes, and so will
- leaving clothes in the dryer without turning. If the dryer stops and
- you can't deal with the clothes for a while, turn it on to the "air"
- setting.)
-
- Never fold clothes. Hanging on hangers takes less skill and less time,
- and results in fewer wrinkles. Socks, underwear, and sweatpants don't
- need to be folded, anyway, if you have drawers to hide them in instead
- of shelves to display them on.
-
- Breastfeed your baby instead of using formula so that there are no
- stains to worry about--especially useful if your child spits up all
- the time, as mine did up to about 8 months of age. (Not a very useful
- hint, I know, as the decision to breastfeed or not is based on other
- factors, but it is a time-saver nonetheless.)
-
- Never dryclean silks or rayons. Throw them in the washer and the dryer
- on permanent press. They come out fine, and don't need ironing this
- way. When buying, avoid garments that don't look like they'll stand up
- to this--but most clothes labeled "dry clean only" will stand up to
- this just fine. If not, well, I wasn't destined to wear that garment,
- anyway. (Suit jackets must be drycleaned, but they need it much less
- frequently than blouses and dresses do.) Dry cleaning is
- environmentally unsound, anyway, and effectively doubles the cost of a
- garment. The money you save will more than make up for the occasional
- failure. (Warning: apartment complex dryers are vicious and ruin
- clothes, unlike the home sort of dryer.)
-
- All dirty dishes go right into the sink and have water run into them
- immediately. Basic rule of homebrewed beer: As soon as a beer bottle
- is emptied, before a sip is taken from the glass, the bottle must be
- filled with water so nothing can ever dry on the inside, making
- clean-up a chore.
-
- And then of course, most shopping undertaken for reasons other than
- baby-amusement (how did I ever get a child who loves to shop?) can
- be done by catalog.
-
- Paula Burch
- pburch@bcm.tmc.edu
-