Sick in Bed and Scrapbooking Paraphernalia

Sick in Bed and Scrapbooking Paraphernalia

OK – I wished I looked this cute as I lounged in bed today, listening to my iPod and letting out a moan every once in a while to let everyone know, “I have a fever, pity me. (Oh and by the way: don’t expect me to figure out what is for dinner.)”

So between moans and petting the dog (this was our first sick day together and he, along with Roger, took very good care of me) I bummed about having no brain to write the VERY COOL blog post about what I did to get rid of my jewelry yesterday. So when I do have two brain cells to rub together, you will get your very cool blog post.

HOWEVER, my friend Cheri wrote a VERY COOL blog post about getting rid of not jewelry, but another womanly secret shame – Scrapbooking Paraphernalia.

(This is not an issue for me. I have told my kids that I don’t scrapbook, but each of them will get a beautifully decorated shoebox on their wedding day filled with all their childhood pics. I strongly suggest that they each marry someone crafty.)

So as you work on today’s project: Deciding what thing from your past you need to let go of (you don’t have to get rid of it today, just tell me what you are getting rid of,) check out Cheri Gregory’s Post and get super inspired.

I am going back to bed.

Puppies Behind Bars

Puppies Behind Bars

No, the title of this post is not because our new dog, Jake, decided that the $742 dollars that we spent in chew toys just wasn’t enough to keep him entertained and decided to eat Roger’s $65 phone headset instead.

Really, the reason is that a very fun and funny blogger, Erin was caught reading my book (oh my how I love Google Alerts who tell me anytime someone mentions “Kathi Lipp” or “The Husband Project” on the Web. Self-obsessed? Who me?) on her website and we started up a webby friendship.

She is doing something very cool that combines my love of Jake and my weird fascination with Oprah. Recently on the O’s show, she showed a program where dogs were being trained behind bars by prisoners. It was amazing – these prisoners, many who had never known unconditional love in their lives – were training dogs to be companions for people who really, really needed them.

 

My puppy-loving heart just broke.

 

Well Erin is raising money to sponsor one of these dogs by designing and creating dog and cat collars and selling them, then using the proceeds to sponsor her very own Puppy Behind Bars.

 

I am not one of those people who dresses up my dog. I have no need to buy him little outfits (and had a hard time keeping a straight face when my step-daughter asked me if I wanted some hand me downs for Jake from one of her friends – DOGGY HAND-ME-DOWNS!) but we figured he was manly enough to sport a madras collar – especially for the 4th of July. We received Jakes collar on Friday and I have to say he looks quite handsome in it.

If you want to check out more of Erin’s handy work –and support a great cause that benefits dogs and people, check out her blog at Puppy Love By Erin

If you would like to be entered in a drawing to win a designer collar by Erin, send a picture of your favorite pooch or puddy tat to me at blog@kathilipp.com by this Friday. A winner will be randomly drawn for a collar of your choice donated by Erin – and your cat and canine pix will be on display for the world to see.

Can’t wait to see all the cuteness.

Jewelry for Water

Jewelry for Water

Today’s Project – Get Rid of 21 pieces of Jewelry

So when you were cleaning out your jewelry last week, did you come across any of your “guilt gems”? These are the pieces that you don’t wear, but have a hard time getting rid of.

I have several pieces, but the main piece that weighs on me is the wedding ring from my first marriage. What do you do with something like this?

It has been sitting in my underwear drawer for six years. I have had various thoughts about this ring: Do I save it for my kids? (Why would they even want it?) Do I just keep it? It doesn’t seem right to take the symbol of my first marriage, hawk it for cash, and then go to Vegas. What to do?

All these thought go through my heard and take up more energy than this little ring should.

That is, until I read Susy Flory’s book So Long Status Quo. Take a look at what Susy has done with her jewelry.

Jewelry for Water

I had jewelry, sitting in a drawer gathering dust. I didn’t wear it much. Some of it was out of style or didn’t even fit anymore. Then by chance I saw a brief video with an opening scene that turned my stomach … filthy greenish water being collected in plastic jugs by African women and children from what looked like a weedy ditch.

Some startling statistics popped up on the screen:

  • 25,000 people die from unsafe drinking water every single day
  • 80% of all sickness is attributed to unsafe water
  • It is the world’s number one killer

The video, from the Africa Oasis Project (link to: http://www.africaoasisproject.org/), draws support for a charity that drills deep wells and brings fresh, clean drinking water to African villages where none exists.

I wanted to help, but I had no money.

Then I thought about the jewelry in that drawer.

At home I checked the price of gold. It was trading at over $900 an ounce. I gathered up rings, bracelets, and necklaces and headed down to a local certified jeweler. While I waited for him to finish with another customer, I wondered if I was doing the right thing. My heart began to beat hard. What was I doing? Many of the pieces had been gifts for special occasions. A gold nugget necklace had been created by melting down my father’s college ring; he had died when I was 20. A stunning Italian gold bracelet had been a graduation gift. One of the rings had garnets, my birthstone. I began to have serious second thoughts. Was it really worth it? Would I be sorry in the morning? Would people think I was crazy? Would my family be offended? Would anyone understand what I was trying to do?

I thought of Jesus, telling the rich young ruler to sell everything he had. I thought of the children from the video, filling plastic jugs with green water. And I remembered my jewelry drawer, overflowing with so many things I really didn’t need as much as those children need fresh water.

Now that I look back on it, it’s simple. We have jewelry; we don’t need it. They need water; they don’t have it. So I did it; I traded my jewelry for water. And you know what? I don’t even miss it.


——-from So Long Status Quo: What I Learned From Women Who Changed the World, by Susy Flory (link to www.susyflory.com)

 

I love that Susy took things that had sentimental meaning and traded them for something that could make a difference in someone’s live.

So here is my question for you. Do any of you know of a reputable place where I could trade my ring for cash? I want to use the money to 1) Support my friend Katie who is doing a mission to Cuba, and 2) Do microloans for a group called Kiva.com (More about them in an upcoming post. Kiva Rocks.)

If you know of a place – either brick and mortar or on the net, please let me know and I will get the process started.

 

 

GROI Project Day Five – Opening Up Pandora’s Box

GROI Project Day Five – Opening Up Pandora’s Box

At first I thought there was no way that I could get rid of 21 pieces of jewelry. It’s not like I am Liz Taylor and have to have someone vault and itemize my baubles.

But, as soon as I started to go through all of my stuff I realized that there was plenty of stuff that needed to be dealt with: Target specials that looked very cool in the store, but really didn’t go with anything, pairs of earrings that have lost each other along the way. Bracelets that need to have needed to have their clasps fixed for three years and even if they did I wouldn’t wear them.

Often times there is a lot of sentiment attached to jewelry, and I don’t want you to become overwhelmed. So here is what I want you to do: Grab out 21 things – whether they need to be donated to a charity, thrown away, repaired or dealt with in some other way. Gather them up and we will start to deal with them tomorrow.

Bitter Much? For those of us who need a Little Encouragement

Bitter Much? For those of us who need a Little Encouragement


OK – so we have been at these projects for a while now and you may be wondering if it’s really doing anything. Your life is still a mess, you still don’t have clean socks and it doesn’t matter if you do these stupid little projects because it’s hardly making a diffrence.

 

Bitter much?

 

So if you need a little encouragement today, let me share a letter that I received from Cathy who has been doing the Project. I love how she asked for help to get it done – we all need a partner in crime when it comes to bringing life into order.

 

Hi, Kathi,

I love getting your blog’s. I’m not that familiar with how to post, so I thought I’d just reply to this email.

 

My sister Mary came to visit last weekend, and I asked for her help in the bathroom, because it was a two-person job. I had soap, shampoo, tooth brushes, etc. from Costco in big packages, and no place to put them, so they’d been on my bathroom counter for two months.

 

We set up a bunch of laundry baskets, and she sat on the toilet seat (lid closed, of course) while I pulled from each cupboard. Items went into baskets as “Cathy’s cosmetics”, “Jim’s stuff”, “Medicines”, “Travel sizes of stuff we actually use”, or “Shared stuff” (like toothpaste and toilet paper). Everything else went into the last basket — “Throw out”.

 

In the process, I had discovered I had bought the same product more than once, because I had no idea I already had the first one.

 

When we were done, I had tossed travel sizes of items I never use, old cosmetics, samples I would never open, old toothbrushes, hair brushes, etc. and I had room for everything to go under the sink with space to spare. Now there’s a drawer for Cathy’s stuff, a drawer for Jim’s stuff, a center container for shared stuff, and separate shelves for medicines, first aid, and travel. And it’s easy for me to see how many I have of anything.

 

Having my sister help was important, because there was so much stuff, and not enough room for me to walk to each deposit site. (I don’t get up as easily from sitting on the floor reaching into the back of cupboards as I used to). She says she didn’t do much, but she was the extra extension to my reach to help distribute into each pile, and then hand back to me.

 

Regards,

– Cathy

GROI Project Day 6: What’s in Your Wallet

GROI Project Day 6: What’s in Your Wallet

Project for Today:

Clean 21 items out of your purse/wallet.

Here is an easy one for the you – something you can do while driving in the car with your husband, (as long as you are in the passenger seat,) waiting for you kids to get out of T-ball practice or while you are watching 24.

Things to take a look at:

  1. Expired stuff: credit/debit cards, Driver’s Licenses, etc.
  2. Old stuff (Roger just got rid of one of those plastic calendars that fit into your photo holders – FROM 1995 – and no, I am not kidding.)
  3. Receipts that you don’t need
  4. Wrappers
  5. Gross make-up

Do it quickly and don’t look back. Just pitch it.

Day 5 of the GROI Project or “What is that Smell?”

Day 5 of the GROI Project or “What is that Smell?”


Today’s Project: Throw away 21 things from your fridge.

Note from Kathi: Hey girls – my server has been having issues, so I am sorry that you haven’t had your projects – but don’t worry – we are back on board!

I know technically I should be cleaning out my fridge once a week. But honestly, it takes one of the three following event to happen before I dig in:

  1. There is an untraceable smell
  2. The take out containers from the five of us make it impossible for me to find a place to put my pint on non-fat milk (you don’t get to judge until you have five adults living under one roof)
  3. Anytime I go to Costco

So today – I toss!

Items I will be taking a long hard look at:

  • All the ketchups, designer mustards, pineapple salsas etc. that have ended up in my condiment graveyard
  • Any take out boxes (this may sever some relationships kid-wise, but I am willing to run the risk)
  • The veggie bin: I get all motivated to eat healthy in the store and at the farmer’s market, but when it comes to acutally preparing those super-healthy-organic-and-locally-grown veggies… their chances of making into actually dishes? 50/50
  • All milks will be given the sniff test

     

     

So, in clebration of getting rid of my culinary glut, I will also be giving away one of my previously loved books to a randomly chosen commenter:

 

Julie and Julia: My Year of Cooking Dangerously is a very funny – if not raw (wow, pun totally not intended) read. I loved the book (after all, it was a PROJECT she was working on,) but she does cuss like a sailor who drank a little too much cooking sherry.

Since I don’t use those words, but also realize that a lot of otherwise great books use those words, I still offer it here, with appropriate warnings J

GROI Project Day 4 – Now It Gets Personal

GROI Project Day 4 – Now It Gets Personal


You thought you were safe. You thought we were going to stay in nice easy non-personal spaces for getting rid of stuff; like your underwear drawer. You were wrong.

 

So now it gets personal.

 

Let me ask you a question: How crammed is your inbox?

 

When it comes to this time-saving technology, for me it can be as overwhelming as a messy room.

 

I receive between 40-100 emails a day in my main mailbox. (I have a yahoo account for things I have signed up for and loops.) Those are e-mails that, for the most part, that I need to respond to. It can get a tad overwhelming. But this week I got it down to Zero! Whoo – hoo and neiner neiner.

 

And yes – I am working on my Christ-like attitude thank you very much…

 

If you are overwhelmed by your inbox, could you get rid of 21 e-mails today? Once you start, you can’t stop. It’s addicting.

Case in point: here is my screen today. Isn’t it pretty?!?

I got it that way yesterday, and then tweeted on Twitter that I had my inbox to zero. (And maybe I was a tad self-righteous…)

That is when my obnoxious (loving) friends started bombarding me with e-mails so it would no longer be empty.

 

If you need some step-by-step help in the inbox area, look at this great post from Michael Hyatt about staying on top of e-mail: Michael Hyatt’s Blog Especially helpful for those of us running a business or involved in some kind of ministry.

So start responding and deleting! Put a post in the comments so that we can celebrate your lighter box together.

GROI Challenge Day 3: The Magnificent Obsession

GROI Challenge Day 3: The Magnificent Obsession

Don’t we all have that one thing that is just oh-too-much.

For me, it is books (OK my daughter would argue it is also handbags, but I can only deal with one obsession at a time.)

I have no idea how much you have of your obsession, but I do know that I need to get rid of a lot of books. My plan is to get rid of 21 books this month. But not today.

Today I am going to start small – you know the old adage: One Book at a Time.

So as I get rid of some of my books, I thought maybe some of you would like to be blessed by them (really, I am not just passing on junk – these are great books that I have read – but I need to make room for all the other great books I want to read.)

So leave a note in the comment section and let me know what obsession you are going to be dealing with this month. If I randomly draw your name, you will get that book – postage on me.

Today’s Give-away Generation Next Marriage. You will love it!

 

Here are the results of the cosmetics clean out:

In return – I am getting a new eye shadow. (I mean look at that nasty eye shadow I was using. Ugh.)