Episode 291: 22 things to toss and eliminate in your home and life this year


It's 2022 already. Happy New Year, mamas!

This is my favorite time of year to decluttering, purge and start fresh, but to start?

In honor of the new year, I'm giving you 22 things you get toss in right now in your home, in your schedule and in your life to make more room for what you want.

More value comin’ atcha. Check out these resources:

  • Mom life makes staying consistent with your routines and habits 10X harder than it needs to be. Let’s fix that and get (and stay) consistent, zero perfection necessary. Download your free consistency tracker and mini-training here.

  • Looking for a podcast episode on a specific topic? We’ve made it simple. Check out the Mother Like a Boss™ Podcast Directory here and find the episodes you’re looking for organized by topic.


If you loved this episode as much as I loved sharing it, there is more where that came from.

  • Be sure to subscribe so you don't miss out. And I would just loooove if you would leave a review and rating. It's a little thing that makes a big difference and helps me to continue to bring super valuable content and fabulous guests.

  • Have a topic you want me to cover on the podcast? Submit them to us here. This show is all for you, mama. Let's talk about the things you most want to hear about.


Whether you're looking to create more than just an organized command center for your family, or you're ready to make this year that you finally get your ish together, I've got you covered.

Homemakerish U is a modern solution for creating a home that’s manageable and a life that’s uncomplicated for any mom, in every season.

Join over 3500+ other moms who have taken control of their lives and homes by stepping up to become #homemakerish

EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

Well, hi there friends and a happy new year to everybody. This is our first episode of 2020 to many, many good things to come this year. I can feel it. I know no one should be claiming this as their year. I saw an amine we're just supposed to come in slowly not touch anything, but I just, I feel, I feel something about this year.

There's going to be a lot of growth and a lot of great things, obviously. Life is a rollercoaster. So we never don't when there's going to be ups and downs. But I know that we have a choice right now to make this a great year or to repeat things from the past. And I am going to be someone that is, uh, is growing this year.

And I would love for you to come with me. So let's start it out right now with 22 things you can remove in 2022, I just decided, you know, It's a new year. Let's talk about getting rid of things from last year, not bringing them into the new year. So there are physical things here, like, you know, decluttering, and then there are also things that aren't physical in nature.

And we're going to talk about those when we get to them, but really just a combination. Of 22 things that you can get rid of in the new year, just like a list in no particular order whatsoever. Now I realized that you can go online, you can go on Pinterest or Google and you can just find giant lists of things you can declutter in purge from various rooms in your house.

But I thought it would be great to talk about them a little bit, because some are a little deeper and some things are a little more difficult to get rid of. And so I thought we would just have a little discussion about it here on the mother, like a boss podcast. So let's. In absolutely no particular order.

The first thing expired makeup lady. Gentlemen, anyone listening who wears makeup get rid of the expired makeup. It is so bad for your skin. I, the older I get, the more I learn, the more I, I grow and become wise. Uh, the more research I've done, the more I realized like expired makeup is really gross. It, um, heart, it can Harbor a lot of bacteria, um, and it can really be harmful for your skin.

So just get rid of it, especially if you're not, if it is so old. That it has expired now, and there's still a lot left. It means they're not using it that often. You probably don't need it. So get rid of it. Uh, something that I started doing many years ago is I really started investing in quality makeup.

Uh, I realized that not everybody is at a point in their life where they can do that, but I choose to spend my money on quality products for my face, because I know that they're going to be better for myself. Um, and so that I don't have like a particular brand. So I know every time I mentioned something, someone's like, what do you use?

I use a variety of different brands, but what I mean is that instead of just going with, you know, like wet and wild or whatever, like you can get at the dollar store, go with things that make my skin feel really good. Um, sometimes a little more high end. I'm sure it's not high end. I'm sure. It just, for me, it's high-end because it's all perception, but get rid of that expired makeup.

If you can't remember when you bought it, it's time to throw it out. It's probably really growth and harboring a lot of gross yucky things. So get rid of it. The next thing, photos on your phone that you absolutely do not need. Here's something you can do in just five minutes. So if you're someone that has like 20,000 photos on your phone and you're like, Kendra, that is way too much work for me.

Just set a timer for five minutes and go through and delete as many as you can then maybe the next day go through another five minutes, another five minutes, do it in small batches. This is something that I do. About once a month or so is I just go through that five to 10 minutes and I just like mass delete things.

So that includes things like screenshots doubles, triples, quadruples of photos. You know, when you take a photo now digitally, you can take a bunch in a row. Um, just so that you can catch something really good. Delete all those extras. You're never going to use them. It's like the doubles we used to get when we would go to.

The drug store and have our, uh, disposal cameras developed. The I'd always get doubles, but you know what? 99% of the time, I never even used the doubles. It's not like I was sharing them with anyone. So they're wasteful in, in your digital, in digital form, they're wasteful because they're taking up space, they're taking up space on your phone, like actual memory, many times making your phone work slower and you can't do certain things on your phone.

If it's taking up all of that space. So just five minutes at a time getting rid of them. The other thing, other thing I really recommend doing. This kind of goes one step further is creating albums on your phone. Uh, just creating different albums. Um, you, if you say you had like three kids, you can have a different album for different children.

Um, you can have a different album for different times or seasons of the year, um, events. So like my son plays soccer. I might have an album that's just soccer. So when I want to go and find a picture of him playing soccer, I can easily find it. It takes. Five seconds to create an album on your phone. Like no time at all.

And then what you can do is when you're going through and deleting, you can actually just easily move them to another folder. Um, just makes things so much more organized and organization doesn't have to take as long as people think it does. And if you start now, it will be easier for you to stay organized in the new year, but get rid of those photos that you're not using.

And you're never going to look at it again, and you're never going to care. Next ripped sheets and blankets. These are great to donate to animal shelter. So check with your local animal shelters and see if they need them many, many, many times they would love to take your ripped sheets and blankets, um, used, you know, not going to like not going to be used for someone to sleep with anymore.

They can still use them in animal shelters. That's usually where I've donated things in the past, uh, which is really great. You don't have to throw the. They can always be used somewhere else. My husband actually takes like when we've, uh, gotten rid of different sheets, um, either they've ripped a little bit or when we got a new bed and so we didn't need the sheets from our bed anymore because we upgraded and got a bigger bed and they didn't feel.

He takes them and he uses them for his business because he owns a fabrication company. So a lot of times things that he's working with are oily and greasy and dirty. And so he uses them to actually, um, just hold some of his parts, move them, keep them in his car, move them from a shop to home and back again.

So there are. Definite uses for them. You don't have to throw them out. You don't have to add to the wastefulness of the country or the world, um, that most people are talking about. Instead you can just find a place for them. So just call up your local animal shelter. See if they'll take them, get rid of them, get them out of your.

The next is chargers to electronics. You no longer own. Nope. Seriously. This is such an issue. Having chargers for things you don't even own anymore. Get rid of them. You don't need them. You don't own that thing anymore. You don't need to charge her for it. You can't charge something. You don't own period expired.

Especially in the pantry. So many of us know about our refrigerator and like, uh, you know, going through and like, Hmm. Something really smells in here. Oh, it's because this cheese has been expired for two months or, oh, it's a rotting tomato or something. Like, we all know that, but in the pantry or in your cabinets, things sort of get pushed to the back and.

They can expire really easily without even knowing it. And so this is a great time. I just think it's such a wonderful time in the new year to go through and do like a, just a fresh start going through your pantry, going through your cabinets and just getting rid of expired food, um, or even going through and looking for it's like maybe things that you bought that are canned, that are not expired yet, but that you're like, you know, I bought this and really, we have a lot of it and I don't need.

Maybe I can donate it, donate it to a local food pantry or church somewhere that takes non-perishable foods. So expired food, get rid of it. The next thing is one of our non-physical items that we're going to get rid of in 2022. Okay. It's the obligations that don't align with your priorities. Or never did.

So this is a great time again, in the new year to just take a look at all of the things you're obligating yourself to all of the obligations you think you have all of the expectations that you think are put on. And get rid of them. If they don't align with your priorities, sit down for five, 10 minutes and take a look at your schedule.

Take a look at the things that you fill your days and your weeks with and ask are these aligned with what is most important to me if they are not, it is a great time to purge them and let them know. Next up is habits that don't support your goals going right along with obligations that don't align with your priorities it's habits that don't support your goals.

Again, not something you need to do all at once, but something to do, maybe one at a time, trying to get rid of some of the habits that don't support your goals and replace them with habits that do that's. What we want to get rid of in the new year are any habits that aren't supporting us. I don't use the term good and bad habits because I think.

That can send us down this road of morality and feeling not good about ourselves. Because if we say this is a bad habit, we feel very ashamed, very embarrassed, very judged. But when we say this supports me, or, you know, this just doesn't support me, it's less judgemental. It's less emotionally attached right now.

Instructional manuals for appliances you no longer own. This is a great time of year to just go through the, all the instruction manuals who have, maybe you have them stacked up somewhere. Maybe they're sitting in a drawer or a cabinet, uh, maybe they're in a filing cabinet. Just go through them and get rid of.

Uh, manuals for stuff you don't own, you would be surprised how many manuals you have for appliances. Um, for items you actually don't own any more. This is something we do about once a year in our house, because we keep all of our physical manuals in a folder and it's kept in a drawer in our case. And so I know that many years ago I could, it was getting like fuller and fuller.

And I was like, I think it's time to go through this. And I went through and there were things, there were manuals in there for things that we didn't like I got rid of already or broke. And I bought a new one. Like, I don't need that anymore. It's something that seems so small, but can make a world of difference if it's cluttering up your space, really.

Next is broken toys or missing parts of toys. Now I know toys is a big undertaking, but again, this is something that you can just do in 10 minute batches. This doesn't mean that you have to go through and do all of these in one day or at one time, this is a podcast episode. You can come back to next month and you can relisten.

But broken toys or toys that have missing parts, just clutter up our spaces, broken toys are actually dangerous as well. Many toys when they're broken, create sharp edges, there also can create smaller pieces, which can be a choking hazard. It is a great idea to just get rid of that. We need not be precious about broken toys.

It's broken, get rid of it. It's missing parts. Get rid of it. It's not, it doesn't function the same way anymore. And when we're precious about all of that stuff, we're missing out on giving our children the opportunity to really play with and enjoy the toys that they do have to really have that full experience when we're just like so precious about those toys.

And if our kids. Are having a difficult time getting rid of those, talking through it is a great, um, it's really a great thing to do. It's wonderful to communicate early on and to help our kids work through those emotions versus just avoiding them, which is what a lot of us do is we avoid the conversation.

Well, it's really hard for my kids to get rid of their toys. So we have. Well, things are going to be difficult throughout their entire life. And it's our job to set them up for success and help them work through difficult emotions, help them understand them, help them feel validated in them and work through them versus just completely avoid.

Also toys that can be donated that are barely used anymore toys, that they've outgrown toys that they just don't use. That can be donated a lot of times. Um, especially, I don't know. I think of toys that, um, you know, like, uh, blocks or, um, what am I thinking of? Doll like small dollhouses or dolls or, um, like I'm thinking of the thing that had the blocks and the hammer, um, that you can play with.

Sorry, I should have written these down, but I'm just thinking off the top of my head of things. Many times can be donated to like doctor's offices and dentist offices, pediatrics, because they like to have them in the waiting room, which is really awesome. Or you can just put them in a box and put it on your Facebook and say, Hey, anyone that wants some toys, we have a whole box of toys, you know, about three to five years old.

If anyone wants to come, they're totally free. My answer to the question of, should I sell things is to me. 99% of the time. It is not worth my time to sell something. I do not want to have to deal with messages back and forth. People, haggling, negotiating, waiting for someone to show up at my house. Oh, they don't even show up at my house.

So now I stayed home and they didn't even show up then getting there then looking at it, deciding they don't want it. I have no. I don't, unless it is a large item that I know I'm going to get a significant amount of money for, I would rather donate it and bless somebody else's life. That's how I feel about most things that I'm donating or selling clothes that don't fit.

This is a tough one, I realize, but I want to give you my insight on this. Okay. Number one. I know that I know how painful it can be to outgrow clothes, you know, especially as a woman that has had children and has gotten older, uh, I understand what it feels like. Believe me, I understand this is something I've gone through for years.

What I realized though, is that keeping those close with the intention that someday I might fit in them. Actually causing me more harm because it was making me believe that the me, that I am now is not good enough, that she was only good enough when she was a certain size. If I can't be that size, that I am not good enough.

And it was really causing me much more pain. Also, I've realized that as I've been going through, you know, health journey, um, Whether I fit into clothes or don't fit into clothes. I want to be able to purchase new clothes. I want to be able to love the clothes that I'm in. I don't want the clothes to define me.

I want to define the clothes. And so get rid of those clothes that don't fit you anymore. If you want to keep one thing. But ask yourself, why am I keeping this at D how long have I had this? If I've had it for 10 years? Is that even in style anymore? Am I even going to want to wear that thing anymore and remind yourself that you are worthy as you are right now?

If you are on a journey to lose weight or to get more fit or more healthy, that is wonderful. And that is your personal journey that you are allowed to have. And remind yourself that maybe when you go on that journey, you're not going to want those clothes anymore. You'll want new ones, but I just cannot express how important it is to not let those clothes sit there and mock you and make you feel like you're not good enough with as the person you are now.

You are good enough. You are worthy enough as you are right now, and you don't need clothes to define who you are as a person. Next step is piles of paper of info. You can easily find online. Most things you can find online. Now, 99.9% of paperwork can be found online. And there is so little need for as much paperwork as we still have such little need for it.

Most of the stuff can be found online and you can also scan or take pictures of a lot of. If it's say a notice or a letter that you need, and you can take a picture of it and just keep it an album in a Google drive in a Trello board, you can keep it somewhere and completely remove that piece of paper that is sitting there at the piece of paper might not seem big, but when it's piled on top of 30,000 other pieces of.

It gets pretty big. So really going through and getting rid of stuff that you can easily find online instruction manuals are usually that way as well. Most instruction manuals, you can find online, any brochures, anything about businesses, all of that stuff can be found online. So really going through and getting rid of that, just a quick purge, even five to 10 minutes at a time.

This isn't about doing it all. Just a few minutes at a time. Next up is mugs, glasses, dishes, things like that. I love monks. Okay. Listen, this is a tough one for me. I love it. But I also know that there is one of me that drinks coffee in my house. Now my daughter now drinks tea, and she drinks decaf coffee.

So I get it. Okay. There's two people. I have enough mugs for like my whole village. I just, I love coffee mugs. I love having different kinds for different seasons. Here's the thing I now have. I have the space for it. I didn't used to. So I had to be very careful when I lived in like our first house, we had 1, 2, 3, 4 cabinets, no joke.

We had a very, very small kitchen. And so we just did not have the space to have a ton of mugs. And now we do have more space. We have a lot more kitchen space, way more cabinets, bigger kitchen. So we do have that space. However, I still, when we moved into this house last year, I went through. And I just got rid of some mugs that I just didn't like, I don't need these.

Like if I'm not using them on a regular basis, I don't need them. For me. There's like a five to seven mug rotation that I have. Uh, and so I just keep those, but it's not just the mugs. It's also glasses and dishes, things that may be chipped or broken or you don't use, or you have too many of consider going through and donate.

Um, you can, again, find places that you can donate them, find people that need them, especially people like just starting out, um, that may be young and like college students, they might need those and they don't want to have to spend money on them. Um, also consider people that have. Maybe Ben displaced by a fire.

Um, and they really need things right now. They don't want to have to go out and replace them. Uh, just any anyone out there that might be in need, you don't have to throw them away. I mean, unless they're chipped and broken, cause that can be dangerous, but there are always people that can use those. Uh, that would be so grateful.

I know when I was just first starting out. Oh my gosh. It would've been amazing. If somebody was like, I have a bunch of mugs and I have like a bunch of glasses. Oh, thank you. I don't have to spend money on that would have been. Okay, let's get into another non-physical thing to get rid of in 2022. And then as the weight of expectations of others that you would never agreed to.

I have something that I say all the time, which is that you are not obligated to meet the expectations of people. You never signed a contract with many times. We think that other people's expectations of us have to be met, but if you never signed a contract, Not even physical, but like a mental contract.

If you never signed up for those expectations, it's not your job to meet them. It's their job to manage them. Okay. I'm going to say that again. It is not your job to meet their expectations. It's their job to manage them. It's their job to communicate them. It's their job to discuss them with you. It is not your job to meet expectations.

You never agree to. Okay. Let's get into apps. You no longer. Take a look at your phone. Really? This is a great time to do this. Take a look at your phone and how many apps on your phone you've downloaded and never used. Now I know it might seem simple and your public, like who cares if it's there, but any clutter, anything that we're not using is clutter and any amount of clutter takes up space.

And anything that takes up space is not allowing space for something else. Now on your phone, it might actually be taking up real space. You can't use because it's being taken up by that app, but it also many times makes things harder to find because when there's a lot of clutter on your phone, then it's harder to find the things you actually use.

This is a really good one that I encourage people to do often, but in the new year, I feel like this is the best time to do. Getting rid of, or going through your friends on Facebook pages, you follow people, you follow on Instagram and going through and removing ask yourself a very simple question. This question is life-changing for me, when it comes to who I follow, who I don't follow, who I am, friend, who I mute, all that stuff.

Is this person or organization or page or company adding to my life. Are they adding to it now adding to it can mean a lot of different things. I don't just follow people that are like educational. I'm not just following people that are teaching me things. I follow people on Instagram, purely for entertainment, purely entertainment.

Like they I'm, they're not here to teach anything. They're just funny. They're just entertaining. I follow certain accounts because they just post like cute dog pictures. That's it, it adds to my life. It makes me happy. It, when I go there, I feel like happier. I follow accounts that just share like really good quotes or daily affirmations.

It's adding to my life. I follow certain accounts that are, um, discussing news in a way. That makes me feel good and doesn't make me feel like the world is coming to an end every single day, that's adding to my life. And so that is the filter by which I add people or remove people. Also remember that just because you're removing someone from your Facebook or you're muting them or unfriending them, or you're unfollowing a page, it doesn't mean that you disagree with them.

It doesn't mean that you don't like them. It doesn't mean anything. It just means that right now, that is not something that is adding to your experience and you have to protect your own experience. You have to take agency over what you're seeing in your. Whether that's on Facebook, Tik, TOK, Instagram, Twitter, whatever it is.

Uh, it is not somebody else's job. To only put out stuff that you want to see when you want to see it. It is our job to take agency over what we see by curating our feed with who we want to follow. If we no longer align with something, it is our responsibility to remove that from our feed and say, you know what?

This just isn't serving me anymore. Or this person isn't serving me and it's okay. The next thing broken outdoor toys.

The next thing, broken outdoor toys. So just like the indoor toys, a lot of times when it comes to outdoor toys, We go through that same process. If we end up getting them at garage sales or we get them for Christmas and we just end up with a whole bunch of outdoors. That our kids don't even use. And again, if they're broken, they can be dangerous.

So this isn't just a matter of like, just get rid of it and save your space. I don't think we realize a lot of times how dangerous it can be to have broken stuff around. So just get rid of it, go through, get rid of it, old towels, again, something that you can donate or recycle as garage rags. So something you can cut up into smaller racks.

And use for like outdoor cleaning. I don't recommend using towels or old towels for indoor clean. Unless you're just like sopping up something wet. The reason is a lot of people don't know the, um, that the reason, many times you don't clean with say like a terrycloth towel is that they can, they can sometimes scratch.

Um, just if you feel, feel like a terrycloth towel, like just like a bath towel, um, and then feel, say like a cleaning cloth, they feel very different. They're actually created very differently. Uh, a towel that you're meant to dry off with is meant to do just that it's meant to absorb. It's not meant to clean, it's not its purpose.

Um, and I also just find that they don't do a great job. They just, I mean, For no other reason, towels just don't do a great job of cleaning. They leave streaks. They're just not as absorbent, especially over time. If it's an old towel, it's probably lost some of that, but what's great is that I cut them up and we just kind of use them for cleaning up things outside or in the garage, um, even in the car, things like that.

Um, but you can also find out if your local animal shelter needs them. Garbage from the car. That's another thing we can get rid of, go through. It's such a great thing to do. Um, again, especially in the new year, even like once a month, just going through, put a timer on for 10 minutes, just go through, remove all the garbage from your car.

You don't have to do the vacuuming or the cleaning or the detailing if you don't want to, but even just one good sweep of it. Even getting the kids involved, especially if you have a larger car, like I have a pilot. If you have a van getting all the kids in there. All right, we're going to put the timer on for 10 minutes.

Let's see. We can get all this garbage cleaned up. Everyone gets a bag, throw it away. It can become a game. It's great. Fun. Next. This is the hot topic. Greeting cards, like cards that you've gotten, unless you're already doing something with them. Like, unless you have an album and each time you get it, you put it in the album.

Okay. It's time to get really honest about this. Why are you saving them? I realized that for some people they're sentimental, but I have said this for years and I'm going to say it again. And I don't care how bluntly. When everything is sentimental, nothing is sentimental. Sentimentality is based not only on the memory that you have from it, but the specialness and uniqueness of it.

If every single thing that every single person ever got you is sentimental. It loses its sentimentality. It's like, it's like something being important. Everything can't be important or nothing. Isn't. And so we have to ask ourselves, why am I keeping this? Can I just keep one? So maybe it's something like, Hey, you know, your, your grandmother gave you a card, you know, at every single holiday.

Well, is there a way that you can just pick the most special ones, maybe the ones that you think are the prettiest, maybe the ones that she wrote a special note in, or is there a way to scan them and maybe have like, uh, some kind of Google drive that holds them? Or maybe you can. Uh, print them out in a special book.

There are ways that you can declutter them without removing the memory. I am not saying don't be sentimental. Don't save things, but we do have to ask ourselves, what are we doing with these? And here is something that I ask myself all the time when it comes to what I keep and what I get rid of. And I had one time, somebody was like, oh, that's so morbid, but it's true.

So I don't care if it's more of a. If I die tomorrow. Do I want my kids and my husband to have to go through this stuff. Do I want them to have to wonder what to do with it? Do I want them to keep it just because they think mom wanted them to keep it? I don't want my stuff passed down through generations, guilting them and burdening them.

I don't want. And so I want to only be keeping things that I know have like real sentimental value that my children would know have sentimental value, and then they can choose whether to keep it or get rid of it because once I'm gone, I honestly don't care if they get rid of. Or they keep it. And I don't want to burden generations after me with my stuff that I couldn't get rid of.

So that's something that I ask when I am keeping anything. I don't keep greeting cards. I think I have a couple of cards that I've kept over the years that were special occasions, like, um, an anniversary or my husband wrote a really sweet note in it or something like that. I have thank you notes that I've kept that, you know, people have sent different times over the years.

But they're few and far between because that's what makes them so sentimental and beautiful, but having a gigantic box of greeting cards that people have sent me, um, that's a lot of burden to me. That's a lot of burden because I'm never going to go through those and then I don't want that passed on. So it's a really good thing to ask yourself is what am I doing with them?

And is there a way. That I can maybe create something special from this that I can go in. Like I said, I can scan them in or take pictures and I can create like a, a pretty picture book that takes up so much less space. Okay. Two things last but not least. Number one, kids clothes. Doing a big household purge together is so fun.

It can be a lot of fun. Yes. I am going to use that word because we're really just going through and saying these don't fit anymore. And now we can bless another family with them and donate them. Yes, I donate. I do not sell clothing. I don't sell, I don't care. What I spent on the clothing. I am not spending my time selling pieces of clothing.

I don't want to consign it. It's not worth my time. That's me. You may be different than you have to ask yourself. Is this worth my time? Because time is money, no matter how you slice it. So for me, I would rather just donate it, get it out of my house and bless somebody else's life and last but not least beliefs about yourself that no longer serve you.

Just take a second today, tomorrow the next day and ask yourself what beliefs you have about yourself. That you're ready to get rid of. Maybe it's that you're not worthy. Maybe it's that you're a cluttered person and you'll never get rid of this stuff. Maybe it's that you're disorganized. Maybe it's that you feel like you're not a good mom or good enough.

Whatever the belief is about yourself. If it doesn't serve your highest good, it's got to go. It, we, we are ready to get rid of them in this new year. We are ready to set ourselves up for success. We are ready to see success in our lives. And those beliefs do not need to come with us. It's time to take a garbage bag, fill those beliefs up, fill the garbage bag up with those beliefs, tie it up and throw it out.

We don't need them any more. Thank you so much for listening to this episode and all the episodes of the mother, like a boss podcast, we are coming up on 300 episodes. We're going to be celebrating that in February. With a really special episode, it's going to be super fun. Um, something that we haven't done, we did it once before and I'm going to leave it at that because I want it to be a surprise and something really awesome.

But I just want you to know that the reason we are getting to 300 episodes and about 3 million podcast downloads is because, because of you, it's your support. It's your listenership. It's your sharing out? It's your, um, telling friends about it? It's you're sharing on social media. That's why I continue to do this.

It's for you. So this is going to be a great year. We have some awesome podcast episodes, planned some great value. Um, we're going to be talking more about our programs and how we can serve you, because I believe that my programs are the next step. If you're getting value out of this for free. The programs that I have are a thousand times more, a thousand times better.

And I'm not going to be shy about talking about them in this new year. So just be open to that, or don't be open it's completely up to you, but I really believe in them, especially Homemakerish U™, my signature course. Um, I'm going to be very honest about talking more about that and welcoming so many of you in, because I believe that it is life-changing and can be life-changing.

So, thank you so much. I hope you had a wonderful holiday season, a wonderful new year. Let's do this together and as always go forth and mother like a boss.