Tuesday, November 13, 2012

So You Want to Defeat Dust?


  Let us be honest with one another...dust exists. It threatens our possessions, nasal passages and sanity. It is dirty. It is gross. It comes from us. Ah the joys of humanity. Creating our own messes one particle at a time.
Since this is a real issue we face, and since I have given a bathroom and kitchen tutorial, I might as well continue.

You Will Need:
Dusting oil or wipes of your choice (love me some Pledge)
Cleaning cloth(s)
Glass cleaner
Feather Duster

Optional:
Background music
Cobweb removal tool of choice. (I use a Wooly )

  1.Turn on the lights. Even if it is a bright sunny day.

  2.As always the rule of thumb is top to bottom left to right. If you are really in the spirit of things, start first with your high duster and go through each room corner to corner. This will effectively remove cobwebs and dust that collects in the high places.. Don't forget ceiling fans, and blinds. This is so good for routine blind maintenance. You can also run it behind and under furniture to remove cobwebs and uninvited guests, and on the sides and fronts of furniture to remove the dust that clings there.

  3.Now, many people do not understand the proper way to combine the dynamic duo of feather duster and your hand cloth. Feather dusting should be used on high clutter areas (hopefully you don't have too many of those), stand alone knick-knacks, lamps and book shelves. By doing this you knock the dust to the surface the object sits on, or to the floor. I recommend hand wiping knick-knacks every other clean. 

  4. Once you feather dust a room, go back with your rag and dusting oil and hand wipe flat surfaces, baseboards, door knob areas, door frames, and light switches. Move your rag in one direction rather than side to side. A clean sweep. Get eye level with flat surfaces just like you would a kitchen counter. You can see any dust that you missed.

Tip: It is best not to go the cheap route when buying a feather duster. The stiffer ones that have colored feathers tend to knock things over easily. One like this hugs and glides over things and is worth the extra 5-10 dollars. I've had mine for almost two years and use it on an extremely regular basis. ;)

Tip: Keep glass cleaner and a separate rag nearby for annoying marks you might find on windows. You'll obviously need it for mirrors and glass surfaces as well.
 
 Feel free to post comments and questions below!

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Glow

I keep waiting for the words to flow out of me like water and folks it just isn't going to happen. In my last post I mentioned posting about spiritual lessons that I learned from the Feast. I can't make it happen the way I wanted to. I know what I've learned. Written down it sounds cliche, icky and oh so like a delicious coke that has gone flat. Can't do it. Apologies. Perhaps another day.
I will try it this way...
I Peter 4:8 "Above all else remain fervent in your love for one another, for love covers a multitude of sins." This is a building block of my heart and soul. God is love. Remain fervent in Him, and you will be refined. Your sins slowly but surely fading from the blackish crimson stains that twist us, and they shall be as white as snow. (Is. 1:18)
 Being fervent means being invested. Happy. Glowing. Being true. Being yourself. Listening to the broken. Keeping your mouth and mind away from condemnation. If we remain committed, on fire, zealous and all things true then love is like breathing. We just do. And mercy follows.
A friend just posted this to my facebook wall . . .

"One word frees us of all the weight and pain of life. That word is love." - Sophocles