KIDS PROJECTS- Getting Ready for a OPEN HOUSE? How to Decorate Your Table for Valentine's Day

Valentines Day is just around the corner and if you are planning on having open houses or even just having a home party then one project for your kids to enjoy would be having them set up your Valentine Table.





How to Decorate Your Table for Valentine's Day
Whether you are planning a Valentine's party or just want to get your house dressed up for the occasion, decorating your table is an essential step in getting ready for this romantic holiday. Keep it simple by choosing one of the following table ideas.

Instructions
STEP 1: Decide on a tablecloth first. You don't need to buy a heart-covered tablecloth. A simple lace one will do, or try a plain pink or flowered tablecloth.
STEP 2: Purchase a dozen pink or red roses and display them in a crystal vase in the center of the table. Arrange some strings of decorative imitation pearls in swirls around the vase. Place two tall pink candles on either side of the flowers. Set one foil-wrapped heart candy on each plate and tie the napkins with ribbon.
STEP 3: Sew Valentine-colored cloth into hearts of different shapes. Stuff the hearts with batting and arrange them in a bowl or basket in the center of the table. Place napkins in simple napkin rings and place a real or silk rose through the holder as well. Set a small Cupid figurine near each plate. Scatter Hershey's kisses around the table. CONTINUED....


6 Tips for Working at Home With Children

I found this Blog that I really like that is written by a DAD that stays at home....


During a typical week, I work from home for twenty to thirty hours. Although this allows me greater opportunity to see my wife and two small children, it can also be a little tricky at times. I’ve developed the following rules and routines for making the best of the situation.
Create an office separate from the main living areas of the house and declare it off limits during working hours.
Help your child make a child readable sign for the office door so that he will know when it is and isn’t acceptable to burst into the office. CONTINUED.....

Creating a Kid-Friendly Study Area

Creating a Kid-Friendly Study Areaby Pamela Cole Harris
Is your child's idea of a study area involve drapeing his legs over the back of the sofa and reading upside down with a bag of potato chips on his stomach? Does she study on the floor with the TV blasting and the cell phone to one ear? Does your children spend hours staring at their textbooks but very little time studying? It may be time to create a
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START DESIGNATING CHORES -PART 1

Okay, so now we are sitting at our desk and its dinner time all of a sudden. Time can sometimes just go so fast, especially if you are having a really good business day or you are on a roll. It is now time to start designating the chores. First, if you have older ones ( which I mean 8 yrs and up) the chores will have to be split up and dinner can start being done once a week by someone other than you. This is also good in the long run, so they can start cooking in the kitchen, if you havent done that already:) This article at has some good points.

CREATING A NOT TO DO LIST By Ramona Creel of OnlineOrganizing.com
When I sit down with a client to work on prioritizing and delegating, the biggest challenge we face is deciding what kinds of activities and responsibilities to give up. Quite often, we get so entrenched in what we think we SHOULD be doing, that we forget to pay attention to what we ENJOY doing. So when it comes time to let go of the boring, tedious, and time-consuming tasks that eat up our day, we have a struggle trying to identify them. It is incredibly difficult for people to admit that they can't do everything themselves. Well guess what -- you can't! And I don't know that you would want to, even if you had the time. Some activities in life are unpleasant, outside of your range of expertise, or just not what you want to spend your time on.
And there is nothing wrong with admitting that you don't want to do something, as long as you can find someone else to do it for you. That is the purpose behind creating a not-to-do list -- helping you identify chores, errands, and daily responsibilities that you can (and should) delegate to another person.
GETTING STARTED
They key to creating a successful "not-to-do" list is awareness -- paying attention to what you do, how long it takes, how often you do it, and whether or not you get some benefit from that particular activity. However, we spend so much of our days on autopilot and in a state of overload, that simply trying to recall how you spent yesterday morning can be a real challenge! You will make things much easier if you keep a NOTEPAD nearby, where you can record your daily activities.This doesn't mean that you have to log every second of your day ("8:00 -- got up" / "8:05 to 8:10 -- used bathroom" / "8:15 to 8:45 -- had breakfast" isn't really going to help you be more effective and efficient!) But if you can start tracking your work activities (could be paid outside work or housework or whatever fills your day), your travel time to and from activities, and any other external responsibilities (committee meetings, carpools, volunteering), you will begin to see places where you can trim and tighten your schedule through delegation.So as you sit at your desk or work in your house or travel in your car, make a note of what you are doing -- such as "checking e-mails" or "cleaning oven" or "buying groceries." Then, estimate how much time you have spent on that particular chore or errand (don't forget travel and preparation time). We will continue on later with some in-depth questions about whether this action needs to be done at all (!!) and whether it needs to be done by you. But for now, that's the start of your "not-to-do" list.
HOW MUCH IS YOUR TIME IS WORTH?When you were a kid, you probably had no clue what it took to earn money -- and you had no qualms about spending it freely on anything that caught your eye. But when you got an after-school job or started working for your allowance, you became a lot more discriminating about where you spent your hard-earned cash. It's the same with time. Very few people in our society really know what their time is worth -- in concrete financial terms. But until you recognize that your time is intrinsically valuable, you will never be able to make informed decisions about where your time is best spent. Here's a general guide you can use in determining how much an hour of your time is worth -- determine your annual salary and divide by the number of days you work each year. Then divide by the number of hours you work a day. That's how much your hour is worthNow, think about how much time you lose to disorganization a day -- multiply that by how much your hour is worth. Then multiply that back again by the number of days you work each year -- that's how much one wasted hour a day for a year is COSTING you. Staggering, isn't it?So, you can always look at delegating in terms of the biggest financial payoff. When I hire someone to take care of an item on my not-to-do list -- and I pay them $25 an hour while my hour is worth $60 -- I'm coming out ahead. The same is true when I can hire someone to do a task in a half hour that would take me 3 to complete. I can be focusing on higher priorities -- things that feed my soul or grow my business or let me know I'm alive -- without worrying that the work isn't being done.
LOOK AT COSTS VERSUS BENEFITS Have you ever caught yourself spending a lot of time on a very low-payoff activity? Maybe it's something that really does need to be done -- like addressing 1500 envelopes for a routine mass mailing or cleaning all of the window screens in your house -- but it's not something that is going to tremendously improve your quality of life. And it might be a hugely time-consuming activity, where the rewards you will reap don't even begin to compare to your investment of time and energy. Most of these kinds of low-payoff jobs really serve as maintenance. The completion of these small activities doesn't make a major impact on your life -- but if left undone, they can erode away at your home, your career, your health, your peace of mind and cause serious problems down the road. That makes these chores perfect candidates for your "not-to-do" list -- items that really need to be done, but not necessarily by YOU. Here are some of the most common suggestions I hear from my clients -- see which resonate with you as being potentially delegable:- house cleaning- grocery shopping / meal preparation- paperwork (filing / mailings / organizing)- errand-running- yard work / landscaping- home maintenance / car maintenance- follow-up with clients (phone calls / e-mails)- travel / meeting / event arrangements
ARE YOU HAVING FUN?
Of course, you have to pay attention to more than just the financial cost of each task you perform yourself. You also have to ask if you really enjoy the work. Even though I could probably find someone else to maintain my website for me, I really enjoy the process of creating new pages, bringing ideas to life, and watching my "baby" blossom and grow. It is time consuming, but I'm filled with a renewed energy each time I sit down to add a new section to my site. So the payoff for me is in the emotional charge I get -- the sense of satisfaction and creativity -- and that is priceless, regardless of what my hour is worth.On the other hand, my sister loves gardening. She finds it incredibly relaxing to dig in the dirt and watch a tiny bud explode into color in her front yard. Now lawn care is pretty much my idea of hell -- so I would probably hire someone else to take care of my shrubbery and flowers (if I had a yard!) It's all a matter of what energizes you, what fills your life with joy, and what you look forward to doing. If an activity fits this description, keep it for yourself and find other less-pleasurable chores to include on your not-to-do list.
IS THIS THE BEST POSSIBLE USE OF YOUR TIME?
The final question I always ask my clients when setting up their lists is, "What is the best possible use of your time at this exact moment?" We usually tend to focus too much on the daily grind -- paying bills, keeping the house clean, writing reports, etc. -- and too little on our real PRIORITIES.
Do you really need to be organizing the garage, or spending time with your kids at the park? Is it a higher priority that you decide where to put the coffee pot and how to arrange the chairs at the upcoming sales meeting, or that you develop a strong agenda and provide guidance during the group discussion? Ask yourself where you will get the biggest bang for your buck. That should be where you focus your attention, and let someone else handle the rest.
FINDING AN ALTERNATIVE
Okay, so you've made a list of items that you would love to delegate -- who do you hand them off to? You have so many options!- Get your family involved in the act -- kids and spouses are just as capable of handling those daily chores as you are!- Ask a co-worker for some assistance -- and offer to help out the next time he or she needs a little bit of a break- Make use of your support staff (administrative clerks, assistants, and other assorted minions) -- that's what they are there for- Hire an independent contractor or freelancer to help with household and business tasks that you don't have time for- Develop a local co-op for sharing those time-consuming domestic (trading off on cooking, cleaning, errand-running, or child care) -- or set up an informal swap with a neighborJust remember, you aren't in it alone. You simply have to decide what you want to delegate and then be willing to ask for help. Good luck!**************************************************************************************Ramona Creel is the founder of OnlineOrganizing.com -- offering "a world of organizing solutions!" Visit OnlineOrganizing.com for organizing products, free tips, a speakers bureau -- and even get a referral for a Professional Organizer near you. And if you are interested in becoming a Professional Organizer, we have all the tools you need to succeed. (Copyright 2001, Ramona Creel)*********************************************************

HOW TO EXPLAIN TO YOUR KIDS THAT YOU ARE WORKING


I would be sitting at my desk and my Cheyanne will hand me a bunch of drawings of all the happy faces in the world and this will force me to stop and give her my undivided attention. Lets face it- this will happen alot. Your kids find you more accessible now, and that is what you wanted right? But sometimes you have to sit them down and let them know that you are working, but after you are done, you need to be in the habit of giving your kids the same if not more, attention as you do your home business. This can be hard to start off, but with alot of planning and some consideration of your kids, you can do this.

What you can start off with is a list of things that you can immediately use to derail your kids into doing something else. For example, I keep a list of things hanging on my corkboard in front of me, because when I am focused on my business, I am generally not in the mommy frame of mind. So all I have to do is glance over and start going through my list of things that I know that my little girl can do without me, quietly, either on the floor next to me or on a little table, or at least in the same vicinity as me. The first thing that is on the list is:

1. Take out the box of Color Crayons and Coloring books. ( Can find this at any dollar store)

She shakes her head/ Next is

2. Put in a video or dvd with headphones on the portable laptop of her favorite character( Mine would be a stack of burned CD's of Barney or Dora)

Nope,that didnt do it/ Next is

3.Ask her if she wants a snack of wheat thins and Cheese slices and a juice box


Sometimes, Food is all you need. But I don't mean stuff them with junk food though. Make sure its healthy stuff.

A Simple list like that can help you tremendously, especially if you are talking on the phone with a client. Make sure you are in tune to your kids needs and always keep 10 things on the list. Try to change the order every other week or they will know what you are up to. Happy Parenting!


Step 4. Create a time block

Put some time aside for your business. I know, I know , this is hard and can lead into you doing work at 1am in the morning, but if anyone must, you must make it a part of everyday life. Just like the kids were used to you going to work everyday, they should be in the habit of expecting you to be "behind the Curtain" after dinner unless its , lets say- Thursday, or what ever day you pick to be "non-work day". Making it a part of everyday is going to be the factor if you succeed and keep moving or you may end up not following through. The habits must start with you.

5. Decorate your area

Lets say that you have a little bit more than a wall to do your business. Well when Tiana comes home from school, she usually brings me some kind of drawing that she made. My sister-n-law gave me the idea to start hanging all that precious artwork up on a corkboard that is just for them. What you would do with that cork board is that you put it in the area or vicinity of your"office" so that you can tell the kids that you are always thinking of them and that the reason that you do your business is just for them, and that would remind of them of it.



Step 3. Make their goals, your goals

Now your family knows what you need. Now what do they need? Does your son want to play xbox or playstation for an hour with out interruption? Does your daughter want to go to the movies with her friend this week? Do your kids want pizza on Friday? Find out what your kids yearn for and tell them that if you make your goal, then you will make their goal. I guarantee you that if they know that something is in it for them, they will be pushing you to make your goal!




Step 2. Make Your Goals

Do you have goals? Did you write them down? Can Everyone is your family see them? If they can't, then how can they help you, especially in your time of need? You may not know it, but your family could be your gold mine that you have been looking for as far as business is concerned. But they cannot help you if you don't let them know what is going on. Sit them down at dinner and let them know that this is your goal for them month and that you need this to do it. They may have some ideas for you and their understanding for you being "behind the curtain" alot could subside, because now they know what you need to do and eventually they will reap the benefits.

Step 1. Find YOUR Space

You cannot even start thinking about a home business until you know that you can have your own space for it. Im not talking about a huge office area- but a corner of a room rather. Or an hour of time that you can use a room to yourself. I just took a shelf in my family room and put all my product their and when I would work first I would tell everyone that I plan to work, and second I would bring everything that I needed in a binder near my area and either put a curtain up that divided the room or a divider that you can get a Target or Walmart. Either way it ways a way to say to the kids- mommy's working right now and as soon as you see her off the phone, then you can have her!

Here is some good information on organizing your area, or at least getting started!

WHERE DO I START?


By Ramona Creel of OnlineOrganizing.com



Cleaning out your junk can be incredibly freeing -- but where do you start? There's so much to do!! Before we talk in detail about "de-cluttering," let’s take a minute to look at the bigger picture. Here are a few rules of thumb to follow when you begin cleaning out -- either at home or at the office:



START WITH THE GREATEST PAIN


Begin working in the area that is the biggest thorn in your side -– the part of your home or office that causes you the greatest pain. If you find yourself saying, day after day, "Man, I wish I could get my (bedroom, desk, storage closet whatever) straightened out. This mess is driving me crazy!" –- you know that’s where you want to begin. What is your area of greatest pain?



HAVE A PLAN OF ATTACK


Create a list of the areas you want to work on, in order of priority. Be sure to include a deadline for completing each project. This will help you focus on the big organizing picture as you work your way through your home or office. It is much easier to stay on track if you have a specific timetable within which to work. Crossing tasks off of your "to-do list" as you finish them also reminds you that there is a light at the end of the tunnel! Just don't let yourself feel overwhelmed by it all -- understand that you will be getting to all of your problem areas, in due time.



LIMIT YOUR SCOPE


Try to tackle one SMALL AREA at a time –- a drawer, a cabinet, a shelf, a closet. Don’t attempt to clean out the whole place at once. Chances are, you will get overloaded, you will become frustrated, and you will GIVE UP on the entire project. Plan to set aside some time each week to work on a different area. Once you get started, you will be surprised at how quickly the job goes. It’s amazing what you can accomplish when you "get into the groove" of cleaning out.



WORK SYSTEMATICALLY


Do your best to move systematically through your home or office, completely FINISHING one area before you begin another. Avoid hopping from one task to the next if at all possible. There is nothing more frustrating (and draining!) than finding yourself surrounded by a bunch of half-finished projects. And it will be even harder to find things down the road if you have only organized part of your closet or cleaned out half of your filing system, while the other half is still a wreck.



FIND THE ORGANIZING STYLE THAT SUITS YOU


Some people work best if they empty an entire storage area before organizing it. Others find that too overwhelming, and choose to tackle their clutter one item at a time. You need to decide for yourself which of these methods suits your personality best. But there is no "right" way -- only what's right for you. Remember, there are as many different ways to organize as there are people on the planet!



ENLIST SOME HELP


If you can recruit some organizing "assistants" -- do it! This is a big job, and it will go a lot faster if you have some help. Consider drafting your friends, family members, or co-workers -– put on some music, serve them pizza, and turn cleaning out into a party. You might even consider hiring a Professional Organizer. Just be judicious about who you bring on board. If you what you need most is an objective opinion, your nosy mother-in-law may not be the best choice!



CUT YOURSELF SOME SLACK!


This is hard work -- and it's going to take a minute. So don't get frustrated with yourself if you can't tackle every pile of clutter in one weekend! And don't drive yourself until you drop -- cleaning out does not have to be painful. Just go at your OWN PACE. Most importantly, be sure to reward yourself every time you finish a particularly challenging task -- even adults need "gold stars" (or a cappuccino or a movie or a soak in the tub) every now and then!



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Ramona Creel is the founder of OnlineOrganizing.com -- offering "a world of organizing solutions!"

Visit OnlineOrganizing.com for organizing products, free tips, a speakers bureau -- and even get a referral for a Professional Organizer near you. And if you are interested in becoming a Professional Organizer, we have all the tools you need to succeed. (Copyright 2000, Ramona Creel)

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So you chose to stay at home with the kids?

Well first off- it is a hard decision to make to stay at home. I had that same experience, but I have five kids and I knew that they would be somewhat of a distraction, I really didnt think that it would affect my business, but it did. And I love my kids, but it was time for some distraction plans and such. So I hope that you can take the ideas that I have and use it to your own and advantage.