105 Tips To Make A Mom’s Life Easier – Book

Posted on Mar 18, 2011 by 1 Comment
105 Tips To Make A Mom’s Life Easier – Book

Ah, if only it took 105 tips to make my life easier. I think it would take more like 10,005 things to line up for life to be easy. At the top of my list would be someone to clean my house, dinner magically prepared, homework completed without a fight and a permanent chauffeur to cart my kids around to activities.

Only then might I have a slightly easier life. I haven’t even talked about laundry yet!

This book, called 105 Tips To Make A Mom’s Life Easier, encourages a different approach to feeling overwhelmed. And it doesn’t involve being more organized – it involves embracing and being okay with a little disorganization.

Tell me more! I like the sound of this! Or do I?

I haven’t read the book yet but the thrust of it appears to be – don’t sweat the small stuff. Figure out what must be done, what someone else can do and what doesn’t really need to be done at all.

Can the argument be made that no one in my family ever needs to clean the bathroom? If so, this book is worth its $12.95 price tag.

The book takes all sorts of household tasks and helps you decide how to approach them. If the task does need to be done, it suggests ideas on HOW to get it done.

The book includes tips from both real and “expert” moms, if there is such a thing.

This would make a fun gift for any busy mom, a teacher who has kids, or for a baby shower.

You can pick up a copy of 105 Tips To Make A Mom’s Life Easier at The Organized Parent.

Posted in: Books-DVDs, For Moms
Gigi Ross

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Comments

  • Ruby T.

    If delegating were only that easy! Sure, I’ll tell my mom, friend or kid to do a task I don’t want to and *voila!* they magically agree? Cool.

    The real task I think to “making life easier” is making ourselves parent our kids in a way that they accept that household duties are a part of life, and they have their share. Of course all our groaning about it doesn’t give them the message that it’s so fun to do, and that’s where I think I’ve made my mistake. Why would my child want to do something she knows I dislike intensely?