Marie Kondo's Lessons For Parents in Tidy Up on Netflix
9 Things Every Parent Should Take Away From Marie Kondo's Tidying Up Series
When Marie Kondo first released her bestselling book, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, parents everywhere called foul. Sure, it's possible to employ her decluttering methods as a young millennial or empty nester, but for those of us in the throes of early parenthood, the prospect of only keeping things that "sparked joy" was a practical joke. I myself am a tidy person with a passion for organizing, and even I was skeptical of her process. Sorry, but 90 percent of kid gear — battery-operated walkers, plastic sippy cups, grass-stained polka-dot leggings my kid demands to wear daily – doesn't give me the euphoric "ching!" feeling she writes about.
When Marie — a mom to two girls, a 2-year-old and a 1-year-old, who admits that "even my house gets cluttered sometimes" — brought her philosophy to Netflix with Tidying Up, I gave it another chance.
I'm sure glad I did because over the course of the eight-episode series, I learned a handful of skills that would benefit most parents struggling to survive the day-to-day chaos that comes with having toddlers for roommates. It might not feel like "life-changing magic," but the following lessons, if practiced consistently, well help any family become not just tidier, but happier, too.
1 Fold Laundry in Front of Your Kids
2 Store Clothes Upright, Not Stacked, in Drawers
3 Teach Every Family Member to Be Responsible For Their Own Belongings
4 Give Everything a “Home”
5 Be Respectful of the Things Your Kids Value and Don’t
6 It’s OK to Get Rid of Sentimental Items That Don’t Spark Joy
7 Don’t Feel Like You Have to Get Rid of Everything
8 Use It as an Opportunity to Teach Gratitude
9 Make Tidying Up Fun