This past August, a red line was crossed in our kitchen. For the umpteenth morning in a row, we walked into a less-than-clean kitchen after the kids’ ice-cream, brownies, or popcorn party from the night before.
And yet we knew that we as parents were the authors of this mess. Earlier in the summer—when our two college kids came home and joined their three younger siblings—we had allowed a festive “isn’t this great they’re all together?!” sea of good feelings to overtake a reasonable kitchen cleaning policy. It’s one of the inbuilt liabilities that comes with the changing seasons of family life.
In the third week of the month, we turn our focus with you to Level 3—Household Economy, in which we care for the material needs in our Trinity House. This is the arena of family life where your own kitchen cleaning policy gets hammered out against the larger backdrop of virtue, which the Catechism defines as the “habitual and firm disposition to do good” (1833).
For a while this summer, Dad and Mom were compensating for the summertime fall-off in our kids’ “habitual and firm disposition” to clean up.Mom would clean the kitchen and Dad would do the dishes while on-and-off recruiting help from various kids.
But seven people at home together can create some massive kitchen messes, so eventually came exasperated questions like, “Hey, who’s going to do these dishes?” It wasn’t too rare for someone to step forward, and this would cause us to fool ourselves thinking, “See? We raised responsible children! They’re going to fill this gap.”
Ha. You know the illusion is over when we hook up the laptop to the printer and out comes the new kitchen cleaning schedule, followed shortly by a family meeting. That happened on a happy day in late August—one week into the new school year—and there’s been no turning back.
Now, hanging on our fridge—next to our Heaven in Your Home Flowchart—is a simple print-out detailing whose sole responsibility it is to clean the kitchen each day of the week. Our kids are old enough to do the whole job. Maybe it sounds a little harsh, but we’ve found that if we assign more than one person to a day, that arrangement will inevitably be used to find a way out. “She hasn’t done her part yet.” “He’s in the way. I’ll do my part later.” Well, parents, as we know, “later” doesn’t necessarily happen when you can always cite homework.
Not only did we make the duty hard to get out of, we also didn’t outline any consequences or incentives. There are no empty boxes for check-marks, no smiley-face stickers like we had when they were younger. It’s simple: if it’s your day, it’s all yours. And if you can’t do it, figure out a backup plan.
The Party Days of Summer are over. It’s just the way it is, and it’s working fine—with dashes of firmness, tenderness, and humor all mixed in. In the spirit of encouraging all of you hard-working parents out there, we’d like to share a few notes:
- After the first 10 days, it got easier. Undoubtedly the kids were hoping that we’d get busy and forget about that stupid chart hanging on the fridge. But we kept verbalizing the expectation.
- The kids innovate and help each other. The chart has spawned all kinds of little negotiations, trade-offs, and ways they sub for one another as things come up during the week.
- In the spirit of teamwork, Mom usually helps whoever is on deck. She can’t help herself! But she focuses on things that other people aren’t going to clean (toaster oven, anyone?) and let’s the responsible party take care of the basics. It’s a win-win. The duty-bound child doesn’t have to feel alone and Mom gets an overall cleaner kitchen.
It’s so much easier…and more peaceful and efficient to not have to renegotiate the path to a clean kitchen every day. But of course it should be said: our first calling is not to Instagram-level perfection in our kitchens, but to holiness.
“God put us on this earth to know, to love and to serve Him and so to come to paradise” (Catechism, 1721). And if a new kitchen cleaning schedule helps us to know, love and serve Him and one another a little bit more faithfully, then it’s one more small step on our family’s journey to heaven.
> Check out plenty of tips, strategies, and templates for your family’s chores here at our toolkit section for Household Economy.
> There are so many chore chart ideas out there…here’s a simple one from Blessed Catholic Mom: “How to Create a Chore Chart.”
> Our newest post at the USCCB’s ForYourMarriage.org is on “Approaching Blocks to Growth & Relating.” In it, we offer 5 tips to help end the spin cycle in marriages.
> In case you missed it last week, here’s the Catholic News Agency that cites our Trinity House Community Groups as a strategy for combatting parental anxiety, alongside its role in building faith and community among families: “Catholic Church tackles parental stress crisis with support programs and resources.”
> Please join us on Sat., Oct. 19th for a festive celebration of Trinity House Cafe + Market’s 10th anniversary!
> Ever enjoyed her time last Saturday sharing a keynote on hospitality and service at the annual Walking with Purpose Tea at St. Timothy Catholic Church in Chantilly, VA (below).
> Thanks to singer/songwriter Alli Ward for bringing her music to Trinity House Café + Market last Saturday as part of our fall 10th anniversary event line-up!
> Mark your calendars and bring your entire family to enjoy one of the upcoming Trinity House Community Gatherings, including:
- Sat. Oct. 19th at St. Veronica in Chantilly, VA | 6:00 PM
- Sat. Nov. 2nd at Blessed Sacrament in Alexandria, VA
- Sat. Nov. 9th at St. John the Apostle in Leesburg, VA
- Sat. Nov. 9th at St. Theresa in Austin, TX
- Sat. Nov. 16th at St. Francis de Sales in Purcellville, VA
- Sat. Nov. 16th at Ss. Philip and James in Baltimore, MD
- Fri. Nov. 22nd at the Basilica of St. Mary in Alexandria, VA
- Sat. Nov. 23rd at St. Bernadette in Springfield, VA
- Sat. Nov. 23rd at St. Bridget of Ireland in Berryville, VA
- Sat. Nov. 23rd at St. Theresa in Ashburn, VA
> Plan now to launch your own parish’s Trinity House Community Group later this fall or in January! Learn more here and schedule a 15-minute call/zoom with our team here. For just $499 ($399 for a limited time), your parish can access all the tools needed to host 5 transformative “Heaven in Your Home Gatherings” for families, including videos, discussion questions, marketing templates, catechetical resources, ongoing support, and more. Dioceses can also take advantage of three subscriptions for just $899. Ready to subscribe and launch a Group at your parish? Here’s where you can take the first step.
“Trinity House Community is one of the jewels in the crown of the New Evangelization in the United States. Long may it flourish!“
– George Weigel
Distinguished Senior Fellow
William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies
Ethics and Public Policy Center