ATTENTION: Oye. I am a little embarrassed about the lack of blog posts I?ve churned out over the past couple of weeks. I wish I had a more legit excuse for being MIA, but the truth is I?ve just been a bit exhausted by my 9 to 5 and haven?t been able to muster up the strength to do much home improvement during my downtime?much less the strength to blog about it. Fortunately though, I feel like I have enough ammunition to fire off a blog post about my most recent discoveries in nesting. So please forgive my foolish absence.
After a year of inhabiting our current place, I thought I had pretty much tackled all of the little touch-up projects that would make the house feel like home: painting the walls, switching out light fixtures, installing shelves. You know, the small-ish projects that make a big impact. Foolishly, I thought the only things left to address to make my home ?magazine worthy? were the big remodeling projects like putting in new counter tops in the kitchen, building a fence in the backyard, and laying down wood floors in the living room. With a trip to India just around the corner, I resigned myself to the fact that it would be a good long while before any of those projects would be checked off our to-do list.? Nothing to do but sit and wait, right? Wrong. A recent trip to mum?s house for Thanksgiving reminded me of the impact homing in on the small stuff can make on your GDH (gross domestic happiness). So I?m pretty jazzed about some of the micro-projects I?m going to take on this week that will help me get my head, house and heart in a good place.
Project One: lining the kitchen cabinets with vinyl tile
When Heath refinished the cabinets last Christmas, he did a swell job of giving the musty exterior some much-needed sheen. The interiors, however, were left untouched.? The bottom cabinets especially feel like a 50-year old dingy crawl space, which, let?s face it, they essentially are. Good old mom had the genius idea of lining the bottom of the cabinets with white vinyl tile. It?s easy to clean, easy to install and gives some brightness to an other wise dark and dirty nook of the kitchen. Wouldn?t have thought to do it, but I?m glad mom did.? I?m planning to use the peel-and-stick tiles for mine, but I found some cool projects on the interwebs that have other suggestions for bringing character to forgotten spaces. Check out this tutorial from Apartment Therapy, or?this one from Pink Shirts and Car Wrecks. And for a whole post dedicated exclusively to making dreamy drawers, check out this one from I Heart Organizing.
Project Two: fridge focus
Since we?ve taken to harboring Bro in the house, it means sharing areas of real estate that I once had complete control over. Sadly, one of the areas over which I relinquished rule was the fridge. Once upon a time I kept it relatively organized, with specific spaces designated for particular foods. A cheese drawer, a produce container, etc. But when we started sharing the space with Bro?s foreign food stuffs, I kind of let keeping tabs on the fridge fall by the wayside. This is foolishness. I?ve got to rethink the way I manage the fridge. Rather than just throwing our groceries in there willy-nilly, I?ve got to reestablish a system of order. It has become a new priority for two reasons. First, we?ve got a pretty bad case of fridge blindness, which is the term I?m making up to describe what happens when you only eat the foods you see in the very front. The leftovers in the back get pushed further and further backward until they?ve spoiled. (Embarrassing fact: we recently discovered a gallon of milk in the depths of the fridge with a September expiration date. So you can see this is a serious problem). Putting everything (our food and Bro?s) in order will help us save money by not wasting food. Secondly, I think having a spruced up fridge will encourage better eating habits. I?m thinking of it like a department store.? I always get lured in by the fancy displays of intricately folded blouses and color-coded dresses and inevitably spend money on something I didn?t need because it just looked so damn fine in the store. Maybe I can mimic that effect in my fridge. I?ll want to eat more lettuce, fruits and produce if I display the healthy foods properly in the fridge.? It?s not the worst idea I?ve ever had. Just ask Real Simple, which has an entire article on the subject.
Project Three: a clean coffee tableI think maybe a dirty coffee table is the unmade bed of the living room.? Think about it, whenever you want to give the appearance of a clean house, the first thing you do is make the bed, right? Every morning when I get up to let the dogs out through the back window (like all classy people do), I inevitably wind up doing the face palm dance over how grotesque I left the coffee table from the night before.? There are always at least two of the following splayed across our already decrepit cedar chest coffee table: finger nail clippers, half empty glasses of OJ, remote controls, coasters, pencils and bobby pins/hair ties (obviously, those belong to Heath). Of all the things in my house not worthy of a magazine photo shoot, I think our coffee table situation might take the cake. I?m starting my new year?s resolution early and committing to finding a way to organize the items that are meant to live on the coffee table (coffee table books for instance, plus the coasters and remotes), and I?m committing to ridding it of the dishes, hair ties, and other nastiness that doesn?t belong there before I retreat to the bedroom at night. It?s a small change in behavior that will increase my GDH tenfold. I hate leaving for work with the house a wreck, and this measure is bound to help address that.
There you have it!? My commitment to improving the home on a $0 budget before the we leave for India.? Hold me to it, readers!
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