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Organizing and Cleaning - The Misconception of Talent vs. Learned Skills

Reblogger Michael Jacobs
Industry Observer CalDRE #01165532

 

For me, this was a new perspective on the model of doing things from Professional Organizer Shanna Perino.  There are so many great ideas here and I am posting it since I was the only comment(so far)on her original post and I believe there is so much useful information contained here.   Need more organizational hints, suggestions and so much more?   Visit's Shanna's blog.  I do every chance I get.

Original content by Shanna Perino

Organizing and Cleaning - The Misconception of Talent vs. Learned Skills

Yesterday, I was working with a client, helping a young man get his kitchen set up after moving into a new home.  As we worked, I ended up teaching him a few things about kitchens.  He readily admitted that he hardly knew anything about how to use some of the tools in a kitchen, let alone how to set one up.  He mentioned that he had told a female friend about working with me and how she had remarked that even though she knew she could stand to be better organized, she didn't see the point of hiring an Organizer.  He said he had the impression that she felt like somehow she was less of a woman if she couldn't organize her own home. 

I actually run into this quite often.  Many women deal with large amounts of shame when it comes to their home keeping abilities.  I've heard many women express that it's one thing for a man to be messy and disorganized - most people don't think twice about it because typically men are worse at it to begin with, and secondly, they don't often care that much if they live in a mess.  We don't often wonder if a man is embarrassed about it.  But if a woman's house is unkempt, then somehow her abilities are called into question, as well as her standards ("How can she stand to live in that mess??  Doesn't she have any pride?")

It stands to reason why some women allow the situation to get really bad before the finally call for help.  They keep trying to manage it themselves, but it keeps getting progressively worse.  They keep thinking they "should" know how to do this.  "I'm a woman, so I should have an instinct for cleaning and organizing."  

Well, I can tell you that if you feel that way, I know how you feel.  I felt exactly the same way.  For the first years I lived alone, without someone to share the chores with, I struggled with keeping on top of everything by myself.  Between working and keeping the house clean and organized, and having a life of my own, I sometimes felt like I was burning the candle at both ends just with that much.  I couldn't begin to imagine what working women with children went through. 

But later, when I discovered organizing, I found the secret to letting go of the shame and the self-imposed superwoman expectation.  The "secret" is: 

Cleaning and organizing are LEARNED SKILLS.

The definition of the word skill is "Proficiency, facility, or dexterity that is acquired or developed through training or experience."  The keywords here are training and experience

Stop thinking just because you are a woman, you should just have these skills - that is, essentially, a contradiction in terms, since skills are aquired, not inborn.  Human beings don't have inborn skills like many animals do; we have to be taught everything we know.  Yes, there are people who have inborn talents, but talents are inclinations.  A gifted musician still has to be taught how to read music and play an instrument.  Having talent may make learning the skills easier, and after learning the skills, the talent takes over. (The definition for talent, by the way, is "a special natural ability or aptitude."

So, take sewing as an example.  Most women I know wouldn't think of themselves as less of a woman just because they don't know how to sew.  Ask them if they know how and they will just tell you they never "learned how."  Nobody is born knowing how to sew.  Sewing is a skill, a series of steps through a process.  Well, so is Organizing and so is cleaning.   Speak Russian for me - now.  What's that?  You never learned how?  I've known people who grew up in bilingual households who could understand the foreign language but couldn't speak it because they never learned how.

Even for someone like me, who has a talent for Organizing, the skills - the process - still had to be learned.  I probably have the gene for it if it exists - I don't know of anybody on both sides of my family going three generations back who isn't organized or a neat freak.  But I still didn't have a thorough understanding of the process, of the how-to, until I educated myself because I wasn't taught a specific process.

Generations of women growing up prior to about 1960 were largely brought up with the expectation of being a wife and mother.  Many girls were brought up with daily exposure and instruction on domestic skills such as cooking (a skill, yes?), cleaning, shopping, laundry, ironing, etc.  At the turn of the 20th Century, it was commonplace for girls to miss school on Mondays to stay home and help with the laundry.  

Somewhere along the way, mothers stopped teaching their daughters these skills.  Maybe because women were no longer being raised with the sole expectation of being a wife and mother, we didn't assume having the skills was necessary.  The problem is that men, as a rule, didn't automatically pick up the slack (especially not the earlier generations) and women for the most part are still left holding the household bag in addition to putting in hours at the office AND managing children AND starting our own businesses on the side, and so on. 

So, what does all this ad up to?  If you are a woman who doesn't know how to keep a house clean or stay organized it's NOT YOUR FAULT and there's NOT SOMETHING WRONG WITH YOU.  Recognize that you just didn't get the training for it and you could learn if you had the opportunity.  Cut yourself a little slack and hire someone to come in and teach you how.  

It's really no different from learning any other process except that you will have private instruction in your own home and the chance to get hands-on training with things you will be using in the real world every day.  Isn't that the best learning situation possible?

I would love to get feedback from other women about what domestic skills you were and weren't brought up being taught how to do.

 

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A Sense of Order Logo

Shanna Perino
Professional Organizer
A Sense of Order
Organizing for the Home and Office
www.asenseoforder.com

 

Posted by

Michael Jacobs

 

CalBRE # 01165532

P. O. Box 587

Pasadena, CA 91102

Call/Text:  818.516.4393

mtj916@gmail.com

 

 

Suzanne McLaughlin
Sabinske & Associates, Inc. (Albertville, St. Michael) - Saint Michael, MN
Sabinske & Associates, Realtor

You are so right! 

I won the Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tomorrow award in high school.  I didn't know how to hardboil an egg!  Honestly.  My mother was a wonderful cook and baker and candy-maker, etc., you get the drift.  Once in a while, I would peel potatoes. 

That award had NOTHING to do with homemaking skills and everything to do with writing. 

But, I also won a blue ribbon in 4-H for my caramel rolls and dinner buns.  Again, nothing to do with me....my mother taught me and made me practice until I could make them....which I never did for another 10 years after I got married.  Still didn't know how to hardboil an egg.

Skills are called skills because they need to be cultivated and practiced.  Cleaning and organizing are learned through study and practice. 

Bless you for teaching this philosophy.  We aren't lacking simply because we haven't been taught.  You can LEARN anything. 

Apr 13, 2011 11:00 AM
Michael Jacobs
Pasadena, CA
Pasadena And Southern California 818.516.4393

Hi Suzanne, you are so right --- skills whether they be in cleaning, organizing or real estate need to be practiced, studied and refined.  Thanks for your thoughtful comments.

Apr 13, 2011 11:05 AM
Joy Daniels
Joy Daniels Real Estate Group, Ltd. - Harrisburg, PA

I know I don't have a talent for organization and cleaning and am very willing to pay someone else to handle it for me.  Thanks for you post!

Apr 13, 2011 11:08 AM
Michael Jacobs
Pasadena, CA
Pasadena And Southern California 818.516.4393

Hi Joy -- I think it's important to know where our talents are and to be in a positon to let the experts be in control.  

Apr 13, 2011 11:16 AM
Judy Klem
Transition Stage LLC - Shelton, CT
Home Staging, Senior Move Management, Fairfield/New Haven counties

Hi Michael - Really great re-blog! The skills we are learning really are shifting as each new generation comes along. I'll amble over to Shanna's blog now and add my comments there as well.

Apr 13, 2011 02:02 PM
Michael Jacobs
Pasadena, CA
Pasadena And Southern California 818.516.4393

Hi Judy -- yes, things change(shift)constantly --- that's both exciting and scary at the same time.  

Apr 13, 2011 06:37 PM
Shanna Perino
A Sense of Order - Organizing for the Home and Office - Nashville, TN
Certified Professional Organizer/Licensed Realtor

Michael, thank you so much for the reblog! 

Suzanne - I am with you, I wasn't taught to cook and I still struggle with it today!

Joy - anytime, glad to know you don't struggle with delagation!

Michael - I remember someone saying (maybe it was Stephen Covey??) something to the effect that the mark of a good business person is someone who delegates work out to experts in that field, so that you can do what it is you are good at.

Judy - thanks for stopping by!

Apr 21, 2011 01:19 PM
Michael Jacobs
Pasadena, CA
Pasadena And Southern California 818.516.4393

Shanna -- you're welcome --- this was a great post and I was happy to re-blog it.

Apr 21, 2011 04:02 PM