• Donate gently used makeup

    The one about how to donate your gently used makeup

    I have been on a mission to streamline everything in my life for the past several weeks. One day, I hit a breaking point when I spent about 8 hours in a complete fog, unable to do anything in my house because I was so overwhelmed by all of the things. I couldn’t get dressed. I couldn’t play with my kids. I couldn’t make food. I was literally frozen in time for an entire day while I went back and forth on how I should reorganize all of our stuff. I tried to tell myself, “It’s ok to have a messy house! You’re making memories!” But then I realized that the mess was causing me to be an angry, grumpy, frazzled mama who resented her possessions instead of cherishing them.

    So, that day, after asking from advice on Facebook, I was introduced to Allie Casazza and her methods for decluttering her life and home, and I knew that was the answer. I have been working through my entire house ever since, and it has changed me already for the better.

    It’s easy, in a way, to go through the obvious things like toys and the bathroom closet and maybe even the clothes, but I find the “hidden clutter pits” are almost harder. They seem to be never-ending, and they also feel like a secret black hole that you just fall into, Alice in Wonderland-style. You can spend hours just going through a tiny drawer in your home that you assumed was full of junk.

    Knowing how difficult these “hidden clutter pits” have been throughout my experience, I have actively avoided one area that I predicted would be a struggle — my makeup, hair products, and skincare stash.

    I have always loved makeup. Always. One of my favorite pastimes was getting dropped off at Target with my friend in middle school (looooooong before Target was actually a thing) and blowing money on cheap makeup. I loved to do makeovers on myself and my friends use up a roll of Polaroid film (the original Polaroid camera, not the cute tiny version they sell these days). There’s something about the artistry with makeup that makes it seem appealing to a creative girl like me. I also love being able to take a feature that I might otherwise dislike about myself and turn it into something that I love — like my eyebrows.

    So, suffice it to say I have quite the makeup collection. It ranges from cheap drugstore stuff to expensive brands that I bought because some celebrity or blogger recommended it. I am sucker for stuff like that.

    While I enjoy putting on a full face of makeup for a night out or special occasion, I typically don’t wear a ton of it in my daily life. I am a mama of four kids. I wear a lot of baseball hats to hide my dirty hair in addition to tinted moisturizer and mascara. I realized that in my efforts to streamline and declutter my life and home, I needed to address this giant makeup collection.

    One issue I had was what was I going to do with the stuff that still had life left in it but I didn’t love it anymore? Old, outdated, broken, yucky makeup was going to get trashed, but the new-ish eyeshadows and blushes and other items that I thought I needed but decided I didn’t? What was I going to do with those?

    I started doing some investigating, and I came across a really cool organization — Project Beauty Share. You can send gently used makeup and other beauty items to them and they will sanitize them and hand them off to women in need. These women are working to overcome addiction, abuse, and/or homelessness, and the gently used makeup that still has lots of life in it can really be a great confidence boost for them.

    There are restrictions on what can be donated, and their website lays it all out in detail. I was able to donate a ton (as in an entire box full) of pressed eyeshadows, blushes, bronzer, some foundation, and some eye and lip pencils, as well as some hair products that still had quite a bit left in their bottles. This made me feel so much better than if I were to just dump them all in the trash.

    I did fill an entire large trash bag full of items that needed to get tossed — old, broken, dried up cosmetics had to go, and unfortunately there isn’t much you can do to sanitize certain types of makeup, rendering them unable to be donated, so I decided to just let them go. Specifically, cream blushes, eyeshadows, and foundations (in a pan, not in a pump), can’t be donated to Project Beauty Share, so I pitched them. I also have not found a great place for nail polish. Shamefully, I will often buy a color and only wear it once. This leaves me with many near-full bottles that I most likely won’t use up. What to do with those? If you have any ideas — let me know!

    I put all of my everyday makeup (just the few items I reach for on normal days) into one small bin in my drawer, and then I transferred all the special occasion, more elaborate palettes and items to a small plastic tote in my closet. I simply do not need to see all of that everyday, and it also keeps it away from little hands. They always want to play in my makeup, and they never seem to reach for the $1 Wet N Wild lip gloss but rather the $22 splurge. I kept one, older drugstore eyeshadow palette in a separate drawer with a little brush so that my Shiloh can put her makeup on with mama when she feels like it.

    I also streamlined my brush collection. I washed all the ones I wanted to donate and put them in the box headed to Project Beauty Share.

    Now my vanity is streamlined and only displaying the products I actually use and love. I don’t have to “organize” anything because there simply isn’t a need for elaborate systems or storage containers. Looking at this clutter-free space will be a great way to start and end my days.

    One lesson I am learning through my decluttering experience is that the waste of money comes from buying the item in the first place. I have had to retrain my thinking and understand that I cannot get upset about ridding myself of an item that no longer has value to me. I simply should not have purchased the item in the first place if it wasn’t useful. It is a lesson to learn for future spending. And if the item had a purpose and was well-loved and simply ran its course, great! That was money well-spent anyway.

    No guilt. I am simply trying to follow the happiness and forget the rest.

    Are you a makeup hoarder like me? Are you willing to part with any of your unused products and hand them over to Project Beauty Share or another deserving recipient (like your mom, sister, or friend)?

     

    Donate gently used makeup

  • the one about how I miss you already

    My child, I miss you already.

    I sifted through your “important things” bin today. Stashed under my bed, I have been tossing artwork and birthday cards and trinkets in there for years. I found your hospital bracelet from the day you were born. I placed it in my palm and circled it back together…held it in the place where the nurse snipped it off and released you to me– in a way, for forever, but also for only a short time.

    I miss you already.

    It seems funny to say that when you’re sitting right in front of me. But it wasn’t so long ago that you couldn’t sit at all. You learned how to do that, and then you learned how to do everything– to crawl and walk and run and jump. And sing and dance and climb.

    You used to need me so much. You’d cry in the middle of the night, and even though I’d groan and sometimes say a bad word under my breath, I sincerely cherished the times I was the one who fed you, who held you, who calmed you. It felt like an eternity before you slept through the night, but when I think back, it seems like only a brief moment in my life. Time is a funny thing.

    I miss you already.

    How can I miss you? You’re not gone. Oh, but it’s coming. I know it. I feel it. Right around the corner are the days of Halloween parties in place of Trick or Treating. New Year’s Eve sleepovers with friends in place of sipping sparkling cider in your footie pajamas with your mom and dad. Birthday shopping sprees in place of themed parties with treat bags.

    I miss you already.

    Climbing on your dad’s back for a transport to your bed will get awkward. You’ll paint your own fingernails and will have your own lip gloss to wear — no need to swipe any from me. And before I know it, when I am the least ready as I’ll ever be, your bright blue and pink roller skates will no longer be your favorite set of wheels.

    Instead of a First Communion dress– it will be a prom dress.

    And then a wedding dress.

    How I miss you already.

    I knew from the beginning that you were going to grow. I wanted you to grow. But I had no idea how it would simultaneously thrill me and rip me to pieces watching you do it. Parenting is full of these paradoxes. A day can feel as long as a year, and year can pass in the blink of an eye. Everyone you meet will tell you this…from the little old ladies you stand with in line at the grocery store to the women who greet you at church to the mom shopping for jeans with her teenager.

    “It just goes by so fast.”

    You will hear this phrase so often, and you will smile through gritted teeth as you watch your child lick the handle of the shopping cart. You will smile when you want to cry as your toddler just broke a thing at Hobby Lobby. You will smile when you are counting down the minutes to nap time and the hours to bedtime. You will smile and listen, but you won’t get it until, like me, you get it.

    I miss you already.

    So tonight, while you were sleeping, I went in your room and counted your freckles. I gently tangled my fingers in your curls. I listened to you breathe. I sat beside your bed, closed my eyes, and tried to meet you in your dreams. We laughed and sang in silly voices and ate lots of ice cream and went to Disney World until it was time for me to open my eyes and go to my own room.

    I whispered I love you in your ear and I miss you already.

     

  • make latte at home

    the one about kicking my Starbucks habit

    A few weeks ago, I drank my last Mocha from Starbucks.

    In fact, because I knew that the next day was Ash Wednesday (the beginning of Lent), I got a Mocha in the morning and a Mocha that night. I may have been wired and jittery until 2 a.m., but that second one was a must. You see, I “gave up” Starbucks for Lent this year, and I wanted to be sure to enjoy it to its fullest on this Fat Tuesday.

    The next day, on the first day of Lent, I was met with regret. Why did I sacrifice something I loved so much? (duh, also known as the point of Lent) Noelle even said, “Oh great. Now we will have a grumpy mom until Easter.” My whole family recognized how much I depended on Starbucks to get me through the day — which was probably reason enough for me to separate myself from it for a while. Clearly, my habit had grown out of control.

    Starbucks is lovely and has been responsible for my good moods hundreds of times over the last few years, but it isn’t cheap. Following the birth of our 4th child, I was finding myself in the drive-thru almost daily. Not only was I buying coffee, I was also buying my kids cake pops and chocolate milk and sneaking in cinnamon swirl coffee cake for me, too. Some days, my total would be $13, but I didn’t care because my kids were happy and I was happy and I snuck in a few quiet minutes of drive time while sipping my favorite cup of joy. Not only was this becoming an expensive habit, it was also an unhealthy one. The calories in the coffee and the coffee cake were equivalent to a full meal (not to mention the sugar), and my kids were developing unhealthy habits with the cake pops and chocolate milk.

    So when Starbucks all of a sudden was gone, and cheating on my sacrifice was not an option because I told my children what I was doing (and they will hold me to it), I knew I needed to figure out a way to enjoy coffee at home. Most days, Luke drinks his coffee black or with just a small amount of flavored creamer. I personally prefer my coffee some shade between light tan and off-white, so this concept of “black coffee” was absolutely disgusting to me.

    Luke mentioned to me the idea of purchasing a milk frother. A guy he works with suggested it, and I decided it was worth a try. On my next trip to Target, I purchased a frother, which to my surprise was really inexpensive. I picked up some Belgian Chocolate creamer, medium roast coffee, whole milk, too. I was determined to make this work.

    Even though it was after dark when I got home, I immediately tested my new gadget. Following the directions, I warmed about a 1/4 cup of milk up in my mug for about 30 seconds. I frothed it for about 3-5 seconds, and then I brewed the coffee via my Keurig machine. Lastly, I added the creamer. I swirled it all around with a spoon and committed to my first taste of my new creation.

    And it. was. awesome.

    Creamy. Frothy. Smooth. No bitterness. No acidity. Appropriately sweet. No aftertaste.

    I remember dying for a few seconds and then returning to life with this beautiful, warm, perfectly brewed cup of bliss in my hands. I know that sounds a little dramatic, but that’s truly how it felt. To know that I could enjoy coffee at home without spending $4.50 a cup and consuming 300 calories/30 grams of sugar was a huge relief. I am keeping track of the money I would be spending at Starbucks and will write a check for that amount to my church at the end of Lent.

    I have enjoyed using my milk frother daily (many days, twice daily) for the past few weeks, and I honestly don’t know that I will ever choose to get Starbucks over my own coffee again (GASP). If we are traveling and not in a place where I can make my own, I’m sure I will indulge, but I don’t miss it at all. I bought a large supply of to-go coffee cups from Sam’s Club, and now I can still feel like I fit in at Target — you know, with all the moms sipping their Starbucks as they saunter down every aisle.

    If you want to make latte-like coffee at home for a fraction of the price and calories/sugar, I highly suggest “investing” in a milk frother. I put “investing” in quotes because I paid $7 for mine. I know there are many different styles out there, but this hand-held cheapie has done the trick, and it doesn’t take up hardly any space on your counter.

    I purchased mine at Target, but you can find a similar one right here on Amazon.

    After you have purchased your frother, here are the steps to success for making an amazing cup of coffee at home.

    1. Pour 1/4 to 1/3 cup of milk (can use any kind– I use whole or 2%) in a mug.

    2. Microwave the milk for 30 seconds. Trust me here. Milk that is not warm enough will not have stable foam. It will bubble, but then the foam will disappear and the drink will not taste creamy.

    3. Froth the milk for 3-5 seconds. It doesn’t take long!

    4. Add your coffee – either via your Keurig or traditional brewer.

    5. Add your creamer or sweetener of choice.

    6. Gently stir to evenly distribute the flavors and texture. If you have good foam, it shouldn’t disappear even after you have stirred.

    Enjoy!

    This post uses an affiliate link to Amazon. If you click on that link and make a purchase, I receive a percentage of the sale. If you do not purchase from  this link, we will still be friends, OK?

    make latte at home

     

  • Slime-Free Spring Break: Make Memories Without Making Slime!

    No beach? No problem.

    Well, the beach would be really awesome, but…

    Picture it now — it’s Spring Break. The newness has worn off. The kids are bored. You are looking up last minute flights to Florida, but you realize you just can’t make it happen. They want a snack. And they want to do a craft. And they want to go somewhere. And you would love to do that stuff with them, but you didn’t plan ahead. A trip to the craft store sounds awful. Pinterest is mocking you. There are no tricks up your sleeve and you’re ready to pull your hair out. And it’s only Monday. Morning.

    But that won’t be you or your kids!

    You are ahead of the game with this activity-packed PDF. It has everything you need to have an awesome Spring Break at home, no beach required. All of the ideas have been personally tested and approved by my kids and me. You do not need to scour the black hole of Pinterest only to feel overwhelmed and defeated. Not feelin’ it by Thursday? That’s OK. Scale the activity down and give yourself some grace. And guess what? NO SLIME! It IS possible to do activities your children will love without making slime!

    The best part is that each activity has its own shopping list with links which can be found right here. I recommend purchasing all of the supplies you need for the entire week and then leaving them in a box in your garage/closet until you are ready to use them. There are few things more annoying than having to stop or delay an activity to go out and buy one stinking item.

    So what are you waiting for? Download this FREE activity-packed PDF and have 5 days’ worth of ideas to keep your kids happy and boredom-free WITHOUT slime.

    These activities are best for children ages 3-8 years old. There is a good mix of crafts, games, STEM activities, art projects, snack ideas, and family bonding.

    Click here to download your free Slime-Free Spring Break PDF.

    Once you have your copy, head here for the shopping lists!

    You can also grab your beach playlist on Spotify HERE.

     

    slime-free spring break

  • Slime-Free Spring Break Shopping Lists

    After you have looked over the Slime-Free Spring Break PDF, use these shopping lists to help you gather the supplies you need. Many of these items can be purchased on Amazon, and I included my affiliate link* to any applicable items. If you have Amazon Prime, you can wait until 2 days before Spring Break to order these items! Procrastinators, rejoice!

    Ambiance

    • A beachy candle – this one has hints of that sunscreen smell!
    • A pineapple candle – I love the smell of pineapple, and this one rocks.
    • Flip flops – check out Target and Old Navy for great deals this time of year!
    • Don’t forget to download the beach at home playlist on Spotify right here. If you don’t have an account, it is super easy and free to get one.

    Activities

    Tie Dye Beach Towels

    • Blank white bath towels
    • Tie dye kit – this kit made 3 fully-dyed towels
    • Rubberbands (if the kit does not come with any)
    • Disposable gloves for adults and kids  – the kit will come with a thin pair for adults, but it is nice to have several pairs available for anyone touching the dye

    DIY Kinetic Sand

    • Play sand –  this is white, but there are lots of color options! 10 pounds should be enough for both sand activities this week —  if you have 3-4 children, you may want to buy more
    • Cornstarch
    • Liquid dish soap
    • Kids LOVE making kinetic sand, but if you decide you’d rather buy it, here is a good choice!

    Decorate Seashells

    Sea Foam Bath Fizz

    Footprints in the Sand

    • Play sand (use leftover from kinetic sand activity)
    • White flour
    • Table salt

    Ocean Orbs

    Snacks

    Beach-Scene Pudding Cups

    • Vanilla or chocolate pudding cups (or you can use yogurt cups)
    • Graham crackers (crushed in food processor)
    • Teddy Grahams
    • Gummy Savers candy
    • Drink umbrellas
    • Blue food coloring – optional

    Mermaid Mix

    • Goldfish crackers (try the chocolate, cupcake, or s’mores flavors as opposed to cheddar for this mix
    • Pretzels (whichever shape you prefer)
    • M&Ms
    • Optional mix-ins: raisins, nuts, cereal, etc.

    Tropical Fruit Salad

    • Grapes
    • Bananas
    • Pineapple chunks
    • Cherries
    • Oranges
    • Melon

    Beach-Scene Graham Crackers

    • Graham crackers (Beach-Scene Pudding Cups)
    • Vanilla frosting
    • Blue food coloring
    • Goldfish crackers (left over from Mermaid Mix)
    • Blue M&Ms (left over from Mermaid Mix)

    Sandy Popcorn

    • Stovetop popcorn kernels
    • Avocado oil (or other cooking oil of your choice)
    • Grated Parmesan cheese
    • Salt

    Ocean Water Mocktail

    • Blue fruit punch or Gatorade
    • 7UP or Sprite
    • Pineapple juice

    Jamaican Rum Punch (for the adults)

    • Dark rum
    • Pineapple juice
    • Orange juice
    • Grenadine syrup
    • Lime juice
    • Maraschino cherries

    Nail Polish for Mama’s Pedicure

     

    Click here for a printable/screen-shottable (is that a word?) version of this shopping list.

    *By purchasing something through an affiliate link, I receive a percentage of the sale. If you don’t purchase through these links, no hard feelings, OK?