Sunday, April 29, 2018

Tips From a Hotel Room Cleaner



I spent a summer working at Yosemite National Park as a hotel housekeeper. I was 19 years old. The pay was $4.75 an hour. And the work was awful. I had hopes of staying a year in California to claim residency and pay in state tuition at one of the Universities for Art. I only lasted 7 months and went back home. 

Yosemite National Park was such a popular destination that the few hotels inside the park were booked out 3 years in advance. The rooms started at $300 a night on the low end. I was assigned a two story building at the Yosemite Lodge motel with fourteen rooms. Each room had two beds. I had 8 hours to clean these rooms, and I never finished on time without help.  We worked a mandatory 6 day workweek. The Yosemite Lodge was a glorified Motel 6 minus the TV. The reason it was $300 a night was based solely on location. 

For $300 a night, the rooms had to be clean. One eyelash on a bed sheet or one pubic hair in the bathtub could ruin a persons stay. We had access to some pretty incredible cleaning products in our metal caddies. We had a room/fabric freshener. This was Febreze back in 1999 before Febreze even existed. We also had an all-purpose spray that could kill diseases on contact. The rest of the products were basic- window cleaner, a duster, an on-your-knees scrub brush, and Comet.


Tip #1--Buy a shaker can of Comet for a dollar to clean your bathroom.

Yes, a green foiled can of Comet. The hotel could have bought anything, but we used Comet. Why? Because it works. I like Comet because it removes soap scum and has bleach but without the fumes. In my old age, I've tried the foaming bleach sprays, scrubbing bubbles, and all purpose cleaners. Just throw out all the spray bottles under your bathroom sink. You don't need them. Keep a shaker can of Comet, a scrub brush, and a glass cleaner.

Tip #2--Keep a squeegee in the shower and after every shower quickly squeegee your walls dry. 

At the hotel, we would dry the tub, tiled walls, and bathroom sink with old towels. Keeping your shower walls dry slows down mildew and soap scum. Today, I hang a squeegee off my wire caddie in the shower and spend 2 minutes dragging it across the walls to get rid of excess water. 

Tip #3--Make your bed daily. 

Housekeeping service during a stay at Yosemite Lodge consisted of re-making your bed, tidying floors, a quick vacuum, emptying trash and replacing wet towels. That's it. So what makes it feel so fantastic walking into your motel room after a long day? Seeing that beautifully made bed. Something as simple as making the bed has a huge impact on the look of a room.

Tip #4--Clean top to bottom

The goal here is to knock down any dust, dirt, hair to the floor, and then clean the floor. This saves yourself steps and the heartache of back tracking. Here is the order of cleaning tasks: 
-Dust picture frames, artwork, furniture and curtains. 
-Wipe down any mirrors, tables, counters, sinks, and the toilet. 
-Vaccum.
-Sweep floors twice with a broom (or vacuum.) Then mop.
Tip #5--Frequency matters.

I could clean a motel bathroom in 15 minutes- tub, sink, toilet, floors. Why? In contrast to conventional wisdom, hotel bathrooms are super clean. They are cleaner than your bathroom at home. This is because they are cleaned every day. The more you clean the easier it is to maintain. Try it. Give your bathroom a quick clean every week, and it will never get the chance to get grimy and nasty. 

LASTLY, This is completely off topic but I'd be a real jerk to not say this. If your room was clean, please tip your housekeeper. It is a hard, sweaty, nasty, poor paying job. If you leave a 2 dollar tip, they will appreciate it.

I hope these tips will save you time, money, and energy. Do you have any cheap and easy cleaning tips? Please let me know below. 

Thank you for reading!

Saturday, April 7, 2018

How To Get Your Husband To Bring His Lunch To Work


Better is a dry morsel with quiet than a house full of feasting with strife
PROVERBS 17:1

Can you think of anything more expensive and wasteful than shopping at a gas station while hungry? I've read not to go grocery shopping when you're hungry over and over again. But to make it worse everything is 2 to 3 times more expensive than the grocery store! So how do we keep our husbands out of the gas stations/drive thrus and save thousands of dollars this year? Thousands? Yes, THOUSANDS!

A $1.50 Mountain Dew and a $1.00 bag of chips every workday = $650.00 a year

A $5.00 lunch at the drive thru every workday= $1,300.00 a year

And these numbers are being charitable. It makes no sense to pay so much money for so little. It's much cheaper to pack lunches for work. Brown bagging is the way to go. But how do you get your husband on board?

1. Know it won't be perfect.

There are two reasons we want to our husbands to bring their lunch--to eat healthier and to save money. We can accomplish both of these, BUT IT WON'T BE PERFECT. If you want this to work, they have to actually eat their lunches. You can't make their lunch worthy of a fat camp or cardiac hospital. You could do this, but they will end up back at the convenience stores and gas stations! You can pack the most economical lunch, but if he ends up swinging by the drive thru because he isn't satisfied, you've wasted your time, money, and energy. Please find comfort in knowing without a doubt ANYTHING you pack is healthier than the gas station or a fast food joint. ANYTHING you pack is cheaper than the gas station. Baby steps.

2. Ask him what he wants to eat for lunch.

Ask him what he buys at the gas station or at the fast food place. Then, find it cheaper. If he is buying Mountain Dews, chips, cookies, candy, gum, etc.....you can buy it cheaper at Walmart and pack it. That step can save you tons of money. Try to find healthier substitutes to those quick lunch foods. You can make your own granola bars or banana bread for a sweet treat. A handful of almonds can help keep him fuller longer. You can make sandwiches, or if he has access to a microwave, he can bring leftovers. Try to compromise. Pick some junk foods and some healthy foods. Mt. Dew (fun), sandwich baggie full of chips (fun), a sweet treat (fun), fruit (better) and then leftovers (free.)

3. Make it easy.

Get a system that is easy to grab and go in the mornings. He'll need a cooler or a lunch bag. If he picks it out he'll be more likely to use it. Get some plastic sandwich containers, so his sandwich isn't smooched. Keep certain items in the same containers so he can quickly grab the foods he wants throughout the day. Get an ice pack so his drinks stay cold all day long. Pack a couple waters in stainless steal wide mouth Klean Kanteens along with that Mountain Dew.

4. Pack extra.

For those unexpected longer days, throw in an extra granola bar or bag of nuts just in case. These can help tide him over until dinnertime and keep him from buying snacks. Better to pack too much than too little. The same goes with drinks. Pack enough to last the day. Also, pack pain relievers, gum, tissues, cough drops, or allergy medicines he may need in a ziploc bag. These are also items that they buy from the convenience store. Anticipate these needs!

5. Ask for feedback.

What does he like and not like. Change it up a little, so he doesn't get bored. Make sure what you pack stays fresh and clean.

6. Have a goal.

My husband has eaten two peanut butter and jelly sandwiches everyday for lunch for 5 years. Why? Because we are saving to buy a house without going into debt. Having a goal keeps a man motivated! Let's face it. Taking your lunch may never be as delicious as french fries BUT the sacrifice is worth it to reach a financial or a health goal. Do the math and show him the numbers. Let him see how it really adds up.

7. Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good. 

If your husband does break down and buys that $1.00 bag of chips after a hectic day, don't freak out. Don't get angry. It's not the end of the world. As long as he brings the majority of his lunches, he can have cheat days. Remind yourself that it won't be perfect. See step 1.

I can't count how much money we have saved by bringing our own lunches, drinks, coffees, snacks for the car when traveling or just shopping for the day. Every time you bring food from home, you keep more money in your pocket. Stop paying premium prices for CONVENIENCE. You can't afford convenience. Talk with your husband about bringing his lunch tonight and start saving more money this year.

Thank you for reading!