“You can’t compete with someone who is having fun.” – unknown
Up until last week I had cobwebs in my kitchen. They were higher than I could reach without a ladder or tool. I’d notice them but always on my way to getting something else done so they persisted.
It was the same with rehanging the hooks in the hallway that pulled away from the wall, the fascia board in my bathroom that came off when the kids climbed on the counter one too many times, peeling off the stickers Mr D applied to the cabinets when he was three-years-old, replacing two of the six light bulbs in the bathroom that used non-standard light bulbs, and on and on.
Because we rented out our house as an AirBnB, we’ve been chipping away at this list of little projects that I constantly noticed but never got done. Our first booking is in mid-June.
The whole project started because we have friends that have lived in France for three years. We wanted to visit them before they move in August. But every time I went to book the airfare this spring, the price jumped because of oil prices and I couldn’t afford them.
I’d been entertaining the idea of listing my house on AirBnB during the World Cup games here in Seattle but it seemed like so much work. But then I read The Fun Habit by Mike Rucker, PhD and his concept of activity bundling brought it all together for me. By combining the adventure of getting to see our friends in Europe with the work of getting the house ready, we could make the whole thing fun. [If you haven’t yet listened to the podcast with Mike, I found our conversation to be as inspiring as his book.]
I figured it was worth a try. Even if we didn’t get any bookings, at least we’d get a fixed-up house.
But then we did get bookings. Now I’ve booked our tickets because we have to be gone and we are madly finishing all these little projects. Michelle from the BoomerEcoCrusader blog is 100% right – decluttering feels great. Mr. D wants to know why we go to the donation center every week with a car loads of clothes, toys and books. Because we’ve had all that stuff pile up too much over the years.
Every night I fall into bed exhausted. But I also feel lighter. Like all those little projects were weighing me down in a way that I didn’t even realize. We’re earning this adventure one step at a time – with the bonus of coming home to a house that has all (or most) of the little things done.
(featured photo is one of our bedrooms after an extensive decluttering!)
Quote is from EnlightenedMind622
You can find me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wynneleon/ and Instagram @wynneleon
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The kids earned their vacation! Love this!
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Wow. Sounds like where our family is at. We have lived in this house for 30+ years and have a basement (and almost every other room) to prove it. Every summer I start with hopes that I’ll get all the little stuff done so we can tackle the big stuff. But, I start, then stumble, then stop. Maybe this will be the summer! Keep going, you are building memories and habits. Peace.
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The bedroom is inviting. A job well done, Wynne!
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I am one of those rarities. When I have anxiety, questions or need a good plot for my next novel, I clean as the organization helps me plan!
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i absolutley love this approach! making it happen by making it happen. so much winning here! tomorrow my post is about an old word that has to do with cleaning for company, so this is that, but to the extreme and with an amazing outcome. the more you do, the closer you are to your adventure, and the busy work of the house is the case of killing two birds!
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Kudos on your progress and clever idea to bundle the tasks with a fun reward. Now, your trip will be all the sweeter.
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