If you’re getting frustrated, you’re probably spring-cleaning
I have little kids at home, and it’s very important for me that Pesach not come along with fear, anxiety, or pressure — I want it to be a happy experience for them. And practically speaking, I have a small house, kids, and a job, and so I need a plan that works.
I work part-time from home, and I need to keep up my work schedule, so everything needs to happen in the afternoons or evenings.
From after Purim until Rosh Chodesh Nissan, I get ready to clean. I take stock of my cabinets and see what I have and what I need to get rid of, and I prepare food for Nissan. I try to get all of the clothes shopping off of my head, taking into account which kids will need to switch sizes and what clothing needs alterations. An extra plus of doing these things in advance is that as Pesach gets closer, stores get more crowded and not all sizes are in stock.
I have a list I keep from year to year of the things I do to make me feel like my house is sparkling. All of those extras — disposing of sheimos, cleaning the exhaust fan, bringing clothing to a gemach — need to get done before Rosh Chodesh. When I clean Erev Pesach, I’m not sorting my stuff, I’m Pesach cleaning. If those things aren’t done by Rosh Chodesh, then they’ll get done after Pesach — or next year after Purim!
Create a free account to keep reading.