My house is
only messy when I have unexpected guests.
I call this
the “guest phenomenon.”
Recently our
hot water heater went on the fritz. This of course happened at the most
inconvenient time. I cringed in embarrassment when the repairman showed up. Piles
of dishes lingered on the counters from all the homemade mixes I had been
making, and we don’t have a dishwasher. We had just brought in all of our
winter clothes and they were piled up ready to have the “storage stink” washed
out of them. The floors were in desperate need of a good scalding hot mopping.
And we all had showers to take. I apologized a million times to the repairman
for the state of the house. And I was even more embarrassed that I had to call
him back for a second time because the water still wasn’t heating up and my
mess was still there.
In between
the time the repairman showed up the second time, we had guests that were
arriving on short notice. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t mind having guests show
up unannounced; we have an open door policy to all our friends and family: come
over any time and make yourself at home. And it also keeps me on my toes.
“Dirt” I have never noticed before suddenly makes an appearance and I finally
get around to cleaning it up after my guests leave because I’d hate for it to
still be there should they come around again.
So, since I
haven’t had a cleaning post in a while, I thought I would just give a few tips
or tricks on how to give the house a quick clean when you have a very short
time to do so before guests arrive.
"We musn't panic!! We musn't panic!!!" (From the movie Chicken Run.) |
So let’s say you have a 10 minute window
before the guests arrive. And let’s say these are not overnight guests….
Start with
the bathroom(s).
Bathrooms, in my opinion, show a person’s true cleaning
skills…..or lack thereof.
Remember
this phrase: Good smells equal clean. Even the dirtiest of bathrooms can seem
clean if they smell good.
Light a
candle or spray some air freshener.
Tidy up the
counter space and throw dirty linens/clothes in the hamper (or in the tub, well
hidden behind the shower curtain...)
Fold your
towels that are hanging out on towel bars if you have them.
Replace the
toilet paper roll with a new one and give the end sheet your best hotel paper folding.
(This really does make a bathroom look clean!)
Give the
sink a quick rinse. You don’t have to scrub it. Just get rid of dust, hair or
toothpaste globs.
Then move on
to the next room.
Entrances
and common areas are next.
Grab the
laundry baskets and start piling them with items that do not belong in the
room. You can stash these in a room that you can close the door to, that you
know your guest won’t need access to.
Give pillows
and throw rugs a quick shake if you can.
Light a
candle or spray the room with some air freshener (remember…good smells equals
clean)
Shut some
blinds or curtains if you can and turn on the table lamps. Sunbeams are
beautiful, but not when they are highlighting the dusty furniture.
Do a quick
crumb check on the floor. You don’t have to break out the broom or vacuum. Look
for the big stuff and toss it in the garbage.
Then on to
the next room.
The
kitchen….it’s my worst enemy when I have guests….
So let’s
shine some personal light here….and don’t judge me too harshly because haven’t
we all been here…..
You have a
huge pile of dishes and no time to wash them. And if you are like me….no
dishwasher to stash them away in. If you have one, stash what you can in there.
If not…well… use the oven.
Just don’t
forget they are there. I will embarrassingly admit I’ve turned the oven on and
forgotten about my dirty stash of dishes.
And don’t
“hide” dishes you might need to use while your guests are there. Nothing tells
a guest you’ve kept a dirty house when you have to open the oven up to get out
a cup for them to drink out of…
We are big
coffee drinkers, and most of our guests are too. So I always put on a pot of
coffee before they arrive. This helps with the whole “good smells equal clean”
idea. If you don’t drink coffee, then have at it with the air freshener.
Load up the
laundry baskets you used in the common areas with anything else that doesn’t
belong in the kitchen.
Give the
counters a quick wipe down and empty the trash can if it sits out where guests
can see.
And off to
the next room(s)
Bedrooms
I prefer not
to have every door shut in the house should guests arrive unexpectedly. It’s a sure
sign that I am hiding a mess.
We do have
one room that we always has the door closed (our office/craft room) but most of
our friends or family know what’s behind the door and (hopefully) don’t suspect
it hides a mess. Just that we want to keep the toddler out of there.
The quickest
and easiest way to make a bedroom look clean is to make the bed. There could be
piles of clothes on the ground but if the bed is made, the eyes seem to over
look the floor.
You can also
pile the clothes out of sight, but still in the room. Just stand outside the
room and look in. Find an area you can’t see from the door way and stash stuff
in that area. Or the closet if need be. If all else fails…pile up the clothes
inside the washer and dryer. (Yes…I have done this…and no I am not proud …)
Once again…give
it a spritz from the air freshener or light a scented candle.
Other rooms
Do a quick
run around to any other room your guests my pass by or look in. Spread out
messes look worse than “organized” messes.
Can you pile a few things up
together? That way the eyes focus on one group of things rather than a bunch of
individual things that are misplaced.
Any over flowing trash cans? Empty them.
Is the room cluttered with papers and books? No need to hide them. Stack them
up neatly giving the appearance of clean.
There is one
room I don’t worry about too badly when the “guest phenomenon” occurs. My toddler’s
bedroom is always a mess of toys. I could, and do, clean up his toys every few
hours but he disagrees that his toys should be organized and prefers them all
over the floor. It’s an endless battle. So, I cave in and leave it a mess most
of the time. But most of our guests are not shocked his room is scattered with
toys so I can get away with leaving the mess.
And that
about covers it. A “clean” house in
about 10 minutes. Now you can enjoy your guests and give it a proper cleaning
after they have left.
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