My big blue IKEA bag

[This is yet another post that I'm leaving up, but my older and wiser self does cringe more than a little bit at it. The past I cringe at is the line in the sand about giving the contents away. Getting rid of someone else's stuff is just not connected and does not promote a sense of safety and well-being. In actuality, this part of the project never actually happened as I was careful to make sure children were able to collect their belongings. But it's all a part of my journey, so here it is, warts and all... even if it makes me cringe. -EC (2023)]

We spent a good portion of Saturday going through the house and picking up. Every single surface in the house had become piled to Mt. Everest proportions. I admit that some of the mess was the remains of my school planning that I had never put back into place, but certainly not all of it. The disease of 'leave your belongings where ever they drop out of your hands' had reached epidemic levels. It was time to take drastic action. It was time for the big blue IKEA bag.

[Insert menacing music.]

This is something I used to do long, long ago, but decided it was time to dig it out of my bag of tricks. It's a simple idea. I keep the big blue IKEA bag in the kitchen. If I find anything that it is not put away and I pick it up, I put it in the bag. A child is welcome to reclaim the items in the bag at any time (in fact, it is encouraged), but at a designated time on Saturday mornings I will empty the contents of the bag and get rid of it, no matter what happens to be inside. It's a very effective system and useful for discovering what people really care about.

I few notes if you want to try this at home. First, I give the littles a little grace. I will probably help them to find their things before the disposal because they really don't understand what's happening. Also, for the first few weeks, I will offer a reminder to older people in case someone, somehow missed the memo about when disposal was happening or decides to not really believe me. (For some children, it takes having your stuff actually thrown away before they understand you mean what you say.) Lastly, it takes a strong parent to actually follow through, especially if you know there is something in the bag that is cared about.

But it is effective... and memorable. When younger brothers and sisters mentioned the IKEA bag to M. and B. this weekend, the response was, "Oh, the IKEA bag" with great understanding in their tone of voice. It does make the house more tidy.

Comments

Paula F. said…
I read a variation of this this morning that we might employ. Each kid has a receptacle (this would admittedly be easier for smaller families) that is kept in the same location. Into it goes all stuff they've left lying around. It is emptied (as you do) once a week, always at the same time. The idea was that individual receptacles are less overwhelming for the child digging through their stuff. Either way it is done, this is a fantastic idea!
Lucy said…
I tried something similar with clothes in my girls room. My criteria was if they could go a week without losing anything, they could retrieve something from the bag.

It didn't work so well. I ended up having to buy sets of new underwear because evidently those are really not high priority clothing. We changed systems then so as to not make that a habit.
csmith said…
I do something similar at our house. We do a quick clean up before every meal and bedtime to give the kids a chance to pick up their things. Anything left out gets put into "Mama's basket". I keep the basket in the pantry and the kids can't have the things in it until I clean house on Saturday. Anything they don't come and claim then gets thrown away. The only problem is that they get a little lax around Friday because they know they can get stuff back the next day, but it does keep the clutter under control for most of the week.
Anonymous said…
We did this but they had to do a chore to reclaim something. It really revealed to them AND me what they cared about :-)
~~Susie

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