When you hear the words “spring cleaning”, what do you think of? Is it a quaint notion that conjures up an image of some June Cleaver like woman with a wasp thin waist and kitten heels beating a rug and somehow managing not to get a single speck of dirt on her pristine dress? Or do you go the other direction and visualize your laundry room as you wipe grime off your forehead with one hand and tackle a lint bunny the size of King Kong with the other?

Spring Cleaning is a fascinating concept really. I don’t know about anyone else, but it stresses me out. This idea that we’re supposed to take a single weekend or week or even two weeks and do what? Clear out all of the junk that’s piled up in the house over the past 365 days while scrubbing and mopping and dusting until we’ve managed to eradicate any germs or dirt?

Little House on the Prairie

First of all. The concept of spring cleaning is an old one. Like 1800’s old. Probably older than that. There are certain scholars that like to say it originated with some religious customs that involve spring. Whether you’re celebrating Easter, Passover, or Lent, there are ancient religious customs regarding the cleaning of altars, churches, or even getting rid of any sort of leavened bread that might be considered disrespectful to the spirit of the season.

A Little Dirt Don’t Hurt

Other customs surrounding spring cleaning are practical. According to a Washington Post article on the subject:

“Because homes used to be lit with whale oil or kerosene and heated with wood or coal, the winter months left a layer of soot and grime in every room. With the arrival of spring, women would throw open windows and doors, and take rugs and bedding outside and beat dust out of them and start scrubbing floors and windows until sparkling.”

Um, ICK! Can you imagine what it was like before things like natural gas furnaces, hot water heaters, and electricity? If you have a wood or pellet stove or a fireplace, you know what kind of mess that involves. Now imagine that grime covering every single surface in your home.

Logically, you weren’t going to be able to air things out and clean that grime or soot until the weather warmed up. Ergo, Spring Cleaning. Further historical evidence suggests that the men in the household were turned out for a week in order to allow the womenfolk the space and time to get the job done right.

Yeah. I’m not going to agree with that notion at all. Not unless Dads want to be responsible for keeping the kiddos out of the house so Mom can clean. At some point this tradition of opening up the home, airing things out, and achieving that sense of renewal is more biology than anything else. Spring is a time of renewal and regrowth. The beginning of the growing season. So, embrace it!

Reality Check

Here in Los Alamos, spring can also be a time of unsettled and often wild temperature and weather swings. How many of you remember getting snow in May a few years ago? It happens. Here in the Rockies we can’t always count on spring to start in March or April. So, why not get started with your “renewal” in mid to late February?

Here’s an idea. Make this a numbers game and begin with the first part of ANY cleaning project. Decluttering.

Numbers. As in date. Choose a room in your home that needs some TLC. Or start in your bedroom. Even more specific. Your CLOSETS. Depending on what day you start, remove that many items from your closets. If today is the 20th of the month, then remove twenty items from your cluttered closets. These don’t have to be big items. The point is just to go through and get rid of things you don’t need or want.

Anything counts in this numbers game. I don’t care if its a stray candy wrapper or spare change. Count it! Let your kids get into this idea and choose 20 toys they don’t play with anymore. Have too many Legos or Barbie accessories? This can be a great way to pare down the sheer volume of these items over time.

And tomorrow on the 21st? Come back and do the same thing. Do it every single day for 20 days. And then move onto the drawers. Eliminating a specific number of things each days takes some of the stress out of the task. When you say “clean out a closet” or “clear out my drawers” the sheer volume of items involved can be daunting. Putting a specific parameter on this takes the sting out.

Choose three different targets in your home and three sets of 20 day clean out campaigns. You can even do ROOMS if that feels more productive to you. Work on the living room for 20 days, then the bedrooms, then the kitchen (or whatever works for you). Then, when the weather is really nice enough to open the windows, air it out, and really get that spring clean feel, you won’t have to wade through your shelter-at-home-clutter-fest to get the job done.

Do you have a spring cleaning tradition of your own? Drop me a line in the comments and share it! And as always, when you’re looking for your Los Alamos Local Real Estate Expert, give me a call. I LOVE to talk homes whether you want to discuss cleaning, buying, or selling!