Skip to Content

Perfection, and laundry.

In the wintertime, I normally try and do a load or two of laundry every day, so that I can keep up with the line-drying. Since it’s cold now(and wet too, often), I can’t really use my outdoor clothesline, so I’m limited to using my two drying racks and hangers. Then too, in the wintertime there just is more laundry, especially since we’re keeping our house so cold this winter. We’re all usually wearing pants and at least two shirts, so we create a lot more laundry than we do in the summer. So, it’s especially important that I do laundry regularly when it’s cold out.

This last week, I skipped doing laundry for a couple of days due to the Thanksgiving holiday, and when Saturday rolled around, I faced the pile in the photo above. That’s not an enormous amount of laundry if you’re using the dryer, but that’s a lot to try and air-dry. There were at least six pairs of adult jeans, and those alone would more than fill up my drying racks for 24 hours. So, I reminded myself that line-drying is not an all-or-nothing sort of thing, and I dried at least three whole loads of laundry in my dryer.

I thought I’d post about this because I didn’t want you all to think that everything in my frugal life always works out perfectly…I get behind on laundry and have to use the dryer, I fail to plan properly and end up spending more on groceries than I want to, I get sick and tired and end up ordering pizza, and so on.

But, just because it doesn’t always work out exactly the way I want it to, it doesn’t mean I should quit trying. The fact of the matter is, I do manage to avoid using my dryer a lot of the time, I do save money by planning my menu and grocery list, and I do resist the urge to eat out more often than not.

Voltaire said that the perfect is the enemy of the good. In other words, all too often we quit trying something just because we can’t do it perfectly which is silly, because doing something imperfect is better than not doing anything at all.

So, plan your menu, even if it’s just some of the time. Air-dry some laundry, even if it’s just a load here and there. Eat leftovers for lunch, even if it’s just one time a week. Make meals at home as much as you can, and don’t sweat it if you have to eat out sometimes. Because if you wait until you can do all that stuff perfectly, you’ll never even get started.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Anna

Wednesday 11th of July 2012

Thank you so much for this post! I battle perfectionism, too, but I'm learning that by waiting until everything is done, clean, folded, put away, etc, I'm missing out on fun to be had with my babies and family and friends. I do the very best that I can, but I'm learning that the world will not stop turning if I have to use the dryer, order a pizza, or leave the bed unmade and toys on the floor every now and then.

ah

Friday 26th of February 2010

Okay, I am thrilled and happy that many can line dry. I love to line dry. But, I have a little draw back with this method. I live in an area that has a mill, and the air is not as clean as I would like. So, I do not have this option. Also, there is a lot of wood smoke in the air six to nine months of the year. I use my dryer, no choice. But, I always wash in cold water, and add small amout of bleach if I feel the load needs it! I am very careful to pull the clothes out before the drying cycle ends, so that the next load can go in quickly and still get some of the heat. There are so many small things that can be done to save energy time and money!!

Denise

Tuesday 19th of May 2009

I have been line drying for years and only use the dryer to soften up the clothes. I live in Hawaii so I've had plenty of space to hang out side and no space to hang outside. Right now I can get away with hanging my towels on my outside lanai (balcony). I've also lived in Colorado during the winters and still hung my clothes! To solve the problem I hang a shower curtain rod over my washer/dryer (they sit between 2 walls). I use, what we call, Japanese dryers - Amazon has a small one called Clip and Dry. They are large rectangle, square or round plastic racks with clips and a hanger hook on the top. I can hang 10-15 shirts on one! They come in all sizes. I also put shower rods in bedroom doorways and use hangers to dry my shirts or the smaller hanging drying racks. I also use the shower rod in the bathroom as well. My family is use to having a laundry day and ducking under clothes to get into their room!

Janeen

Tuesday 13th of January 2009

I never thought of air drying in the winter. I don't have an outside clothes line either....there certainly are more ways I could be frugal. Greag Blog!

Kristen

Saturday 6th of December 2008

I should probably get some of those. I do hang a lot of shirts to dry that way, but that would be a nice space-efficient way to hang jeans too!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.