Why can I not attain this house to stay verbs? First off I am 19 and about a year ago my boyfriend...

First off I am 19 and about a year ago my boyfriend and I moved from our outdated apartment into a large house so we can help hold care of his grandfather. Mind you his grandmother passed away many years ago so the house is within need of some serious love.

I go to institution and work full time and keeping this house clean is so hard. My boyfriend does adjectives the yard work, which is tremendous, and my job is keeping the inside verbs. But I just cant keep up near it all.

I tried cleaning one room a day but I NEED MORE DAYS! LOL. Please assistance, is there a product that keeps away dust or something that can label my life easier. The house is entirely hard wood floors? <Anything for that?

I lived beside my mom my whole life and I thought girls be the worst in the bathroom until i moved in next to two boys! EWWW LOL

I like to be clean. Its not similar to this place is a pigs sty, I just want to be able to protract it. KUDOS to all you homeowners it is hard work!
Your boyfriend got the easy finishing of the deal. :-)

Unfortunately I don't think there's anything you can do to maintain dust away!! But you can make dusting easier by getting rid of clutter in the house. If you enjoy knick-knack type stuff, get rid of it, pack it up or put it in a cabinet near a glass front so you don't have to dust it (and around it) adjectives the time. If you have a garage or other storage space, use it to store things you don't need inside the house. An uncluttered space is MUCH easier to hold clean. If you have furry pets, brush them regularly -- and outside if you can -- to issue the dander and fur that ends up on everything else. If anyone in the house smokes, ask them to smoke outside; that will make a big difference. When you dust use a product close to Endust, or Pledge, or OldEnglish, which helps pick up dust better than just using a plain cloth. Don't use a spine duster -- all it does is brush dust around and then it settles somewhere else! But those swiffer dusters (pledge also make some) are good at actually removing the dust.

Bathroom: drop a 2000 flushes or other tablet into the reservoir. That won't clean the rest of the bowl, but at least you won't hold to scrub inside it all the time (if at all).

Kitchen: line the oven floor next to foil, and cover the drip pans under the burners next to foil. Much easier to change the foil when it gets gross, than to scrub the oven and drip pan.

Floors: put an area rug or shoe stand by the front door and ask people to start removing their shoes when they come within the house. Once you get in the mannerism, it's not such a pain, i swear. Put a chair at hand, too, so people can sit down to put their shoes on or take them past its sell-by date.

Also, get a swiffer - they're great on hardwood floors. You'll still need to do a heavier cleaning sometimes, but simply for keeping dust from building up, a swiffer's a great thing. (No I don't work for Swiffer; I just really similar to their stuff).

Rooms: you have more rooms than days so start prioritizing. Usually the kitchen and bathroom(s) get dirtiest the fastest, so conceivably they each get their own designated light of day of the week, but maybe the bedrooms only involve to be cleaned every other week. Honestly -- when I dust my dresser, I can see new dust on it literally later alike day. It's a no-win battle. Once you adopt that, you can stop beating yourself up for not winning! And congratulate yourself for keeping up beside it as well as you are!

Most of all -- relax!! You've get a LOT going on. It's really OK if there's a little dust in your house. (If your boyfriend doesn't agree, trade responsibilities next to him for a month - you do outside, he does inside - and he will get it.) Life is not all nearly cleaning. After you graduate you'll have more time to keep your home pristine if that's what you want to do. In the meantime, present yourself a break.

And maybe tell your boyfriend that for your birthday, you want Merry Maids.


let me notify you first You CAN NOT teach your boyfriend to be clean. I own tried for 23 years MEN DO NOT CHANGE. so you either spend yyour days nagging him or just pick up after him and be done near it. you can tell him to put his clothing and "stuff away" if he does you are a winner. and afterwards you can tell ME how you did it. Yes your right a house is very rock-hard to maintain. Also men are slobs in the bathroom, in attendance is just no way around it. You can guide your boyfriend to be neater in there, approaching I did with mine, but you can't teach his grandfather. Now you are doing the right article by going room by room. Maybe you can get a friend or even your boyfriend to give you extra serve on the weekend so while he maintains downstairs for a while you can tackle the other rooms! Good luck you will go and get through it! Or try a made service for a day or a few hrs, the rates aren't so bad, really merely call up and ask. Some places depending on where you are, are smaller quantity the $100.
Answers:    I use Flylady.web and I highly recommend her system. Keeping the house clean is terribly hard, people don't realize it until they own to do it themselves. I have tried a lot of housekeeping systems and Flylady's is the one and only one that really works. I have simple morning and evening routines. I have a plan so I know what I'm doing, but it's flexible. I finally consistency like I can keep higher than my house, instead of my house being on top of me. Here's a connection:

http://www.flylady.net/

Please check out her system. Don't get overwhelmed and feel close to you have to do the whole article at once, do it gradually. It really works! Good luck!
This house is probably full of dust from years of not cleaning. Be sure when you do clean that you use a damp cloth or mop. Otherwise, you are only rearranging the dust. If you go over every surface near a damp cloth or mop, you will be washing greatly of dust down the drain. It will be a gradual process, but you should make progress each time you walk over things.

Another thing is to keep the filter in the air conditioner or furnace disciple very, very verbs. You might have to change them every week for awhile until they stay verbs for at least a month.

We moved into a neglected home, and it is unbelievable how dirty the filter would get in newly a few days. If you can afford it, buy the best filters you can find--rated 1200 or above.

Be sure the dryer is not blowing dust and lint into the house too. I put a damp cloth over the compartment where on earth the lint screen goes because it leak a little around the edges.

I also have dust filter in the air vent that come into the rooms, and we take our shoes off when we come within from outside.

You might have guessed I have an allergy to dust mites, but I loathe the sight of dust as well. I bought a great mop at Home Depot. It is a Rubbermaid Commercial; it have pads that go on near velcro. Really easy and efficient to use.
You can verbs off the pad and rinse the dirt stale and put it right back on.

Good for you for being so concerned near cleanliness at the tender age of 19.
I have mostly hardwood floors and I use a stick vacuum on those. I find it works much better than a broom. You might have to hollow the canister more than once if itĄŻs a large house and you can swing the cost, consider getting a Dyson because it will hold more than a tiny stick vac.

Otherwise, think just about which rooms matter: The kitchen needs to be cleaned only just about every day, but that shouldnĄŻt bring hours. The bathrooms probably need it once a week. But then what over rooms do you own that get super dirty and need frequent cleaning? Beyond weekly dusting and vacuuming, I do immensely little to the rest of my house.

Nothing can keep dusty away, but since this is an old, neglected house, how verbs is the upholstered furniture and drapes? You might want to consider taking the curtains to the dry cleaner and having the furniture steamed. Some of your problem may lie surrounded by those items.