Works for Me Wednesday Ebook & Giveaway

Ever wondered how to clean makeup brushes? How to tie a scarf? How to tell your kids about sex, clean your house in under 10 minutes, or host a birthday party for a 16-year-old?

No matter what your homemaking or family relationship question, Works for Me Wednesday, from We are THAT Family, always had great tips! And now Kristen and her friend Jennifer have published That Works for Me, an ebook with over 800 of the best entries.

I have a little soft spot in my heart for Works for me Wednesday, because when I started this blog back in 2008, that’s how I got most of my traffic. I’d post a Works for Me Wednesday post, link it up on Wednesday morning, and watch the traffic come in. And many of those visitors stayed, and became regular readers. So I really feel like Works for Me Wednesday started off my little blog.

One of the beneficial things about link up parties online is that you meet all kinds of other bloggers. That’s how I got familiar with Kristen, and with Courtney from Women Living Well, and even other marriage bloggers. And that’s what I’ve always wanted for Wifey Wednesday, too, that people would meet others who are also talking about marriage and supporting marriage. So if you’re a blogger, and you’ve been wondering about how to get more traffic, I encourage you to link up to Wifey Wednesday, or to Works for Me Wednesday, or any of the other link up parties you see. They really do help you build community online!

When Kristen decided to collect hundreds of the best Works for Me Wednesday tips, she created 25 categories of helpful tips, of which marriage was one. And she decided to highlight me as the marriage blogger! Woo hoo! So I’m featured prominently in the e-book. In fact, she used five of my entries–4 on marriage, and one on organization. So she asked me to be one of the “stops” on her blog tour in April where she’s telling everybody about this great new resource.

Kristen writes,

This e-book offers a categorized, organized place for more than 800 practical, “aha!” tips to make your life run smoother. That Works For Me! is a celebration of the WFMW community, with tips from hundreds of different blogs.

It won’t organize your linen closets or remove stains, but this e-book will offer you a good place to start. We’ve searched and compiled and created an organized e-book with 24 popular categories, featuring the best of tips in each group.

The ebook is only $8.00, and it’s well worth your money. It’s so well organized, and you can find just about any tip (and you can find tips you didn’t even realize you needed!).

And Kristen has told me I can offer my readers $1.00 off! Just use the coupon code “SAVE1″ when you purchase.

And now I have some fun giveaway news: I’m going to be drawing three winners for a copy of That Works for Me! Just enter in Rafflecopter below. I’ll announce the winners Monday morning. But Kristen is also giving away $150 towards hiring someone to clean your house this month! All you have to do is visit That Works for Me and submit a tip.

I know there are tons of ebooks out there, but I really like this one because it’s filled with so many goodies! And it’s a great chance to find new bloggers. So fill up your Kindle (or you can download onto your computer to read!).


a Rafflecopter giveaway

And now, it’s great to have so many new people joining me today! I do write primarily about marriage, and if you want to check me out, my 29 Days to Great Sex is a great place to start! I also have my own contest running right now where you can win ME coming to speak at your church–For FREE!

DeliciousStumbleUponTumblrRedditPinterestShare

 Get Free Updates in Your Inbox


Photobucket

Works for Me Wednesday: Weaning off of Television

Today I’m talking TV, both on Works for me Wednesday and Wifey Wednesday! And I need to tell you, one of the best things we ever did as a family was cancel cable.

We did it about twelve years ago, when the children were very young. I used to watch TV non-stop during the day, just to have noise on. I still played with the girls, but the TV was always there.

Then one Thursday night I realized that I was depressed again. And I was always depressed on Thursdays. Tracing it back, I realized it was because I watched ER, which was a very depressing show! And I decided that I didn’t need that in my life anymore. So the TV was gone.

And because of that, my children weren’t exposed to inappropriate things too early. They know how to play by themselves. They used to make up games. They read a ton.

It isn’t that we’re total saints. We subscribe to the Canadian version of netflix, so we do watch DVDs. But we’re very picky about what we watch, and so we’re not watching just anything because it’s on, like I used to. You don’t even miss TV shows that way, because the good ones come out on DVD a year later anyway. We’re catching up on Heroes right now, which is quite good in its first season. But we don’t watch TV all night. Just for an hour a few nights a week, after the kids go to bed. And they hardly watch any at all.

I mentioned all of this in a syndicated column recently, and then got into an email conversation with Deanna Grove, who runs The Garden Place in Frankford, near my home. She writes this:

As a side thought, I also don’t believe the excuse some people may use that it’s cheap entertainment. I wonder what would happen if we challenged parents to try leaving the t.v. off for one whole week? I can guess that a typical family would be wondering around the hallways after supper like lost souls…for a couple of days. But then I think they’d find far more interesting and productive things to do. And, hey, they might actually get around to doing things they’ve wanted to do for a long time, but never had the time to do it! It may be a little more difficult for teenagers, though, with their peer pressures.

I was thinking about what she said, and it reminded me of meeting Gordon Korman when I was 13. He was 18 at the time, and had several best selling youth novels under his belt. He wrote his first at 13. It was a school project his teacher recommended he expand upon. And since then he’s written dozens of novels.

But imagine: being a published author at 13. You can do that when you’re not wasting your time on television.

It’s hard to quit, I know. I did it. You’re sure to get resistance from your family. But I tell you, it was the best decision we ever made. Even if all you do is keep TV for weekends, so that the kids have to save up for it, or only let them watch one show a week, that they pick in advance, that’s better. But the problem is that TV isn’t only bad for the kids; it’s bad for the adults. It keeps us from doing more productive things.

Let me leave you with something else Deanna wrote, as she details her journey to give up television (remember Deanna owns a garden shop):

John and I live in Frankford, and after reading your column on “television watching,” I just had to let you know how much we agree with you and what steps we’ve taken to realize what a waste of time (sorry to be so blunt) watching t.v. is/was.

A few years ago, before moving from Mississauga to Frankford, we questioned the amount of “useful” t.v. we watched and up until then subscribed to many stations. Because we spent from April to October outside (partly because we love being outside and partly because of our business – please help yourself to our website) we didn’t even turn on the t.v. during those months at all. So, we “downsized” the channels. We didn’t miss the extra channels one bit. Then when we moved here in 2007, our cable options were non-existent and again, we questioned whether we were interested in watching t.v. The answer was an honest “no.” So, for 2 years, we haven’t watched t.v. Do we miss it? Well, we get all our news whenever we feel like it from the internet, are more in tune with our community, because we have more time to do so, thanks to organizations such as the Quinte West Chamber of Commerce, and occasionally purchase good movies for entertainment in the winter. We have time to read books and be together. The house is actually clean (in the winter), we enjoy cooking and having friends over – in an unstressed manner – and (here’s the real kicker) are less annoyed. Yes, “annoyed.” We get tons of extra jobs done in the house that we never had time for before and are happier people. Of course, to be fair, we have also changed our lives from living in the big city with 9 to 5 office jobs, to living in the country, and are following our passion – designing and creating gardens. Once in a while we pop round to our friends’ house to watch a hockey game and/or doggy-sit. And when we put the t.v. on, can’t believe the useless entertainment with commercials inserted every 7 minutes or so intruding on our precious time. So, the answer is a great, big “NO.” I doubt we’ll ever hook up our t.v. now. We both think that most television programs are useless, uninformative, fake, annoying, loud, an insult to our intelligence, transparent, did I mention annoying, and such a waste of time!

So, in answer to your question in your column “…leave that infernal screen behind, are you with me?…” Our answer is “YES!!!” And now, I’ll stop being a hypocrite and get off the “checking my emails” computer, and get outside while the sunshine and birds and fresh air are calling us. These are the important things to us.

And they’re important to me, too. So if you’ve been feeling the urge to cut down on TV, here’s a roadmap to help:

1. Post sign-up sheets on the fridge where people can sign up with what TV shows they want to watch that week.

2. Make them earn TV by spending time outside/in active play.

3. Post a list of at least 20 ideas on the fridge of things to do instead of television, so that if anyone says “I’m bored”, you can send them to that list.

4. Invest in some fun board games, and start a family games night at least once a week after dinner.

5. Move the TV to the basement, to an out of the way place, so it’s not staring at you in the living room all the time.

6. Set up the furniture in the family room so that instead of being oriented towards the television, it’s oriented towards playing games.

7. Pray!

Good luck, and may you beat the TV habit, too!

Thanks for visiting! Do stay around a while! I’ve got a ton of posts on marriage, motherhood, and more!

DeliciousStumbleUponTumblrRedditPinterestShare

 Get Free Updates in Your Inbox


Photobucket

Works for Me Wednesday: Redesigning Allowances

I love allowances. I really do. I think they’re a great way to teach kids how to save money, how to spend money, and especially, how to work.

We’ve always tied our allowances to chores, starting at age 3. They receive quite a hefty sum, $1 per age per week, but with that they have to tithe 10%, save 30% for university, and divide the rest into short-term savings and spending.

And the chores have increased as they’ve grown older. It sounds perfect. It sounds foolproof. It should work.

But it doesn’t always. And I’ll tell you why.

It seems to me that allowances should be given out AT THE END OF THE WEEK. So naturally, that’s Saturday. The kids, then, should be finishing their chores Saturday morning, and on Saturday afternoon they take their money and divide it up.

That’s what everybody does. That’s what you’re supposed to do. On Saturday, you get your allowance. And that’s what we’ve done for eleven years.

And then last weekend, while we were away yet again, something hit me. The reason my kids miss 66% of their allowances is because we’re away 66% of all weekends. We’re just not around on Saturdays. So having allowance day on Saturday (as we all know is the natural allowance day) is just plain stupid.

So I am freeing myself from the shackles of the Saturday allowance tradition and moving to the Wednesday allowance tradition. After all, we’re always home on Wednesdays. We’re home on Mondays and Tuesdays, too, the days leading up to the allowance. And besides that, we always have people over on Wednesday nights, so it’s good to have the house cleaned on Wednesdays.

Sometimes you have to look at your routines and see what is working and what isn’t, and why it’s not. I’ve always loved allowances, but it took me 11 years to figure out that weekends don’t work for my family. That’s a little slow, don’t you think?

If you have a routine that you think should work, but doesn’t, step outside and take another look at it. Is there something simple you can change to make it work again? Maybe there is.

And so for me, Allowances Work for Me on Wednesdays!

If you want more information about my allowance plan, it’s spelled out in detail in my book, To Love, Honor and Vacuum.
Here are other resources you may like:
Handling Allowances
Do You Think Charitable Giving is Important?

DeliciousStumbleUponTumblrRedditPinterestShare

 Get Free Updates in Your Inbox


Photobucket