From the category archives:

unlikely housewife stuff

Save for the fact that I kind of enjoy cooking, I am essentially the anti-Martha: I am not even remotely crafty and cannot make anything from scratch for the life of me; I am as messy as I was as a teenager (my mom thought I’d grow out of it – proved her wrong, didn’t I?); I hate any and all household chores with a passion; I’d recommend (and ask, pretty please) that you never visit without giving me a heads-up because you will not find my house in a very welcoming state: most days there are clothes, shoes and books everywhere, and possibly a medium-size pile of dishes in the kitchen.

That is why this blog started out as Diary of an Unlikely Housewife: because of all things I never really imagined and never fit in with… is being a housewife.

That is also why I was so shocked when, upon discovering one of the items I’m about to share with you I found myself – or rather, I could picture myself – actually looking forward to doing laundry. I know, Gasp!

The magical item in question is something I saw in the Spring issue of Adore, a new interior decorating magazine out of Australia:

That, my friends, is a laundry powder bucket. Isn’t it just adorable? Don’t you want to just put it to use right now?

What an inspired idea: approaching household duties as you approach fashion, by finding things you love enough to want to buy and want to wear/use!

The brilliant minds behind this are the owners of Steady Sticks, a shop full of adorable items. For instance, if you like the laundry powder bucket, you’ll probably also want the matching peg bucket:

If laundry isn’t a problem but you hate cooking, how about something to keep your takeout menus organized?

Ok fine, maybe you are a perfect domestic goddess who, unlike me, doesn’t need any random lovely bits of usefulness to inspire her to work harder at keeping house.

But there’s something for everyone in this lovely store! Check out this retro first aid kit organizer – you might feel like one of those heroic WWII nurses even when you are just putting a tiny band-aid on a cut:

My husband might just send these guys a gift basket. Well, he could start by buying me something, like the vintage laundry essentials. I can hardly resist anything with polka dots.

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Sometimes I think that’s what my online moniker should be. But that would give the impression that  am neurotic about a clean house, tidy rooms, perfectly dusted furniture, sparkling-clean windows. That, like Monica from Friends, I freak out when I see crumbs on my table or any dirty dishes in the sink.

That is SO not the case. My house is often messy, my kitchen sink often full of dishes (and I am SO glad that despite all the moves, I have had a dishwasher in every single house or apartment I’ve lived in in the past 10 years).

But there are things I am neurotic about. They surprise (read: annoy) my husband and because they are so unfitting to my general attitude towards house chores and such, they are the things that cause little spats, because he never remembers them ’cause they are totally random to him, and I get annoyed because I have mentioned them before.

For instance, I HATE having veggie or fruit peels on my counter. When I cook I always, always place all onion, garlic etc peels on a paper towel or in a bowl I set on the counter for that specific purpose, so that cleanup is a breeze. Of course cleanup doesn’t always happen in a timely fashion, because hello, I am busy cooking and then busy eating and then after dinner I want to chill. But the peel is NOT on the counter.

My husband, on the other hand, sometimes will peel an apple for Stella and leave the peel on the counter. Yuck. Seriously, yuck. The kitchen can be strewn with dirty dishes and all I see when I pass by is that apple peel. Yuck.

Another thing that bugs me: poorly folded shopping bags. They have a shape, and folds on the sides – it’s like Bag Folding For Dummies, dammit. So when I see shopping bags poorly folded that consequently do not stay flat and tidy in the drawer or corner but instead are kind of crumbled up and all wrinkled on the sides (I’m apparently semi-allergic to ironing, so it’s even more shocking that wrinkled anything bothers me), I forget he just went grocery shopping for the coming week so I wouldn’t have to go out with a cranky/jet-lagged/desperately-needs-a-nap-but-stubbornly-refuses-to-take-one Stella, and that he ran a bunch of errands, and that he still hasn’t been able to relax despite the fact that he’s also tired and jetlagged and it’s Saturday and tomorrow he has to wake up early to go pick up my parents at the airport; I forget all that, all I see is the badly folded, wrinkled, crumbled up paper bags and I feel like tearing them to pieces and (please forgive me for saying this) shoving them down his throat. Or at the very least balling them up and throwing them at him.

I know, I’m a spoiled, bitchy, no-good wife.

And yet, these little quirks somehow make me feel more like I fit in here, in neurotic Switzerland, where everything is always on time and everything is clean and tidy and things are well-organized.

Of course for the rest of my character, I don’t fit in so much. I’m louder than everyone else, I smile more, I speak little German and the little I speak is usually High German, and OMG my house is nowhere near sparkly clean.
But I make good pasta dishes.
And Swiss people like pasta.
So if I ever get a house inspection and they threaten to take away my Swiss citizenship because ach, no way you are Swiss, you undomestic abomination goddess, you bad, bad hausfrau – if that ever happens,  I can just bribe everyone with lasagne alla bolognese.

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Maybe to make a (bad) example out of me, maybe to make other neurotic souls feel better, the lovely gals at BlogNosh have deemed me worthy of being included in their fabulous e-mag! Looky here.

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Copyright Elisa Bieg, 2008-2009.