Time-saving tips, and why Immi is spoiled
So, the other week I asked on Twitter (in a state, let me tell you, of some desperation) for people's best time-saving tips.
These are the things people don't do in order to save themselves time:
Don't clean the house.
Don't have children (oops, too late).
Don't join Yahoo groups.
Don't watch TV or play computer games.
Don't dry up – let the washing up drain dry.
Don't iron.
Don't cook.
These are the things people do or have in order to save time:
Slow cooker.
Bread machine.
Dishwasher.
Batch-cooking every Sunday, freezing meals for the rest of the week.
In the interests of slow-cooking/batch-cooking, I invested in a giant slow cooker (6.5 litres!). Right now there's three meals' worth of bolognese sauce in the freezer, and a vegeterian shepherds pie waiting to be eaten for tomorrow's dinner. Definitely a good buy. It also just so happens that I bought Abstract a bread machine this Christmas, we already have a dishwasher (Abstract rearranged the whole kitchen some years ago in his determination to fit one in), and the only things I regularly iron are the girls' school uniforms. I watch very little TV (Desperate Housewives, which isn't even on air right now, and a weekly Buffy episode with Sparkler), and I can't play computer games because I get far too excited about even such innocuities as cartoon fish who have to pop bubbles to get points. Honestly.
I hate the house to be not-clean or untidy, though. And as I'm working from home, I have to be able to look up from the computer and see reasonable clean-and-tidiness. So, for the first time in my life, I'm delegating.
Yes. As well as my slow cooker, dishwasher, bread machine and husband-who-irons-his-own-shirts, I now have a weekly cleaner. It's awesome.
(It's a temporary arrangement for the next month or so while I'm mega-busy, and won't continue if I become less busy again. But for the moment, oh the joy – my bathroom is clean and I didn't do it!)