Category: Housekeeping

Post-feminist housekeeping

As I mentioned in the intro to this new phase of my blog, I’m staking out Poetry, Art, Graphic Novels, Housekeeping and Basic Science here. Housekeeping may seem like an odd addition, but I’m in the process of learning how to keep house. I never learned, and I think it has something to do with being raised by a generation of women that were rebelling against that role for women in our society. I ended up not want to clean, because I thought it was bad for women. I have found that all these strong, successful women already knew all about these mysteries, so that’s why they were able to keep such lovely homes. Needless to say, I am deficient in this area. And I have come to a place in my life where I am nesting. I want to have a comfortable home. I have long had a theory (I have been more than willing to theorize about housekeeping, just not to master it) about places the “chi” gets stuck in the house: overflowing laundry bins or trash cans, piles of anything on the bed, stacks of dishes in the sink, litter boxes, past-due leftovers in the refrigerator, etc. I just never pursued the idea of developing an effective system to keep the chi running smoothly.

I’m realizing I want very much to have these skills…to learn these mysteries about bleach and baking soda and vinegar. To figure out how to sustain a home. Like any good librarian, I began with research. I subscribed to blogs and found books and articles about housekeeping. In applying my research I have learned several things so far about keeping my house (and I do believe there are no absolutes–each home will have to be unique in its needs):

I have to sweep my house twice a day to stay on top of the dog and cat hair, as well as the dirt that gets into my house somehow. It’s only about 900 sq ft, but the floors can get impressively dirty rather quickly. I don’t really cook, but my roommate does (thank goodness), and dishes have to be washed daily in the evenings (I have no dishwasher–or rather, I am the dishwasher). Living areas have to be straightened in the mornings. Floors have to be mopped on the weekends. Window sills and baseboards have to be wiped twice a month. I got scoopable cat litter that can be cleaned out daily…I’m still working on dusting–I haven’t got a rhythm for that yet. The entire business seems to be about building rhythms…rituals. And I love rituals.

Here is the new one I’m working on this weekend:

Sinks and Faucets:
Barkeepers Friend seems to be the winner in the collective wisdom category on cleaning sinks and faucets. A slight twist offered is a vinegar-based approach that involves a toothbrush. In order to make the sinks and faucets gleam, drops of olive or baby oil spread around make them shiny and resist spotting. I think I’m okay with just drying them with a dishcloth after I use the sink. That keeps the spots off nicely. I can only imagine how an oiled up sink would call to any stray dog/cat hairs floating around.

I’ve already started using this practice: from Home Comforts: to keep your drains clean (all of them), periodically pour 1/2 cup of baking soda in and then chase it with 1/2 cup vinegar. Fun foaming action keeps your drains in good shape without the harsh commercial drain cleaning products. I think this one will be a monthly thing for me. Plus it’s like a cool science experiment.

I am going to buy Barkeepers Friend scrubbing powder and a new toothbrush (I needed a new one anyway) today–buying cleaning products is now a favorite past-time. I’ve love to go down that aisle in the grocery store. It turns out there is a world of tubs and tubes and bottles I’d never noticed before.

Poetry, art, graphic novels, housekeeping and basic science

So I haven’t blogged since June. It’s now October. I’ve been studiously ignoring this blog. I just found a wonderful comment that I missed from said studious ignorance (thank you Ellen). I am so immersed in MSU Libraries and our emerging technology efforts, Facebook, Twitter, and Virtual Reference. Honestly, I’m tired of it. Maybe even burnt out. We aren’t going to be able to do the MS Library 2.0 Summit this year because of the current economic climate–even though there has been passionate interest in doing it again. Maybe it’s because I didn’t make a more compelling argument?

Lately all I seem to be interested in is poetry and art. Fourth Fridays. The cre8tive warehouse. Launching a new graphic novels bookclub in Starkville. Housekeeping. I’ve even started writing poetry again when I get exhausted from writing academic papers on Virtual Reference.

I just found myself sitting at my desk, trying to figure out how I could push the information I’m gathering about these topics. I thought about Facebook, but I needed an RSS feed. I thought about Twitter, but I needed more than 140 characters. Then I remembered this long neglected blog. Could I really do it? Aren’t I supposed to be a professional/librarian online? Am I allowed to have a personal-ish blog? More struggling with Online Identity. Is it better to have a dead blog if I can’t think of anything to say anymore about 2.0 and Libraries? Should I just kill it altogether and make this site a CV?

But then I remembered that my goal is to experiment always. My job is to find new ways of using technology–sometimes they have applications for libraries and sometimes they don’t. I was reminded about Carol Greider, who had been conducting “irrelevent” basic science research–quietly studying an enzyme with no application in mind. An enzyme which eventually became critical in understanding cancer and aging.

So maybe everything I do doesn’t have to have an application. Maybe it’s okay to just do something to do it and let the cards fall.

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