Janine Young admits she once had far too many toys in her house and her kids never seemed to notice the ones she tucked away.
Now she involves her children in the process and asks them questions like ‘How does it make you feel when you play with that?’ to gauge their response. Sometimes the kids decide they don’t care about a particular toy and it’s time to let it go.
“My oldest will tell you what sparks joy and when something doesn’t. He’ll let me know immediately,” says Young. “I look at this as a skill he’ll carry for the rest of his life. He won’t need to feel burdened by things or obligated to keep things.
“Kids don’t need or want as much as people think they do.”
Check out my full interview with Janine and all of her great KonMari-for-kids tips!
After finally getting the courage to sand down our orange-y maple tabletop in the summer, I realized it wasn’t quite right.
The pale wood showed every streak of marker (thanks, kids) and it started feeling a little . . . undone.
When I really thought about it, I knew I wanted a planked barn-board table. So what was the easiest, least expensive way to get the look of barn boards? Faking it.
It was time to implement Plan B: reversing the two-tone look by painting the base of the table (and chairs) white, and darkening the tabletop. Not just darkening it with stain, though — burning it.
It took a couple of hours to burn all of the lines and then I started burning random marks to distress the wood — little dents, tiny holes, scrapes and scars. I darkened the burn between some of the planks to make the cracks wider and ‘dirtier,’ and traced some of the grain patterns to highlight them. Then I grabbed a fork and a hammer and started banging it up in different ways.
SO. MUCH. FUN.
Next it was time to stain …
Continue reading in my weekly DIY column, My Handmade Home …
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| This is the set my sister bought me for Christmas last year. I love it! |
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We brought our Chocolate Boston Terrier puppy home at the end of August, and now we can’t imagine life without our sweet Annabelle Nessa.
(She even has her own Insta account, so I don’t spam everyone on my main one.)
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| Follow me for cuteness? |
In the beginning, it was certainly an adjustment. We’d purposely waited to get a puppy until the kids were old-ish (four and six) so we weren’t dealing with two toddlers AND a puppy.
But it was still like having a newborn in the sense that your entire life is wrapped up in them. You can’t leave those fuzzy little messes alone for a second.
Shockingly, though, Annabelle didn’t have a single accident for the first 36 hours she was home with us. She peed and pooped outside every time we took her out, and I was secretly smug that I’d gotten a GENIUS DOG.
(I even had really smug plans to return the bottle of carpet pet-accident spray because we wouldn’t need it. Stupid smug me.)
… and then the accidents started.
SO. CUTE. THO.
I really struggled with the “watching the puppy constantly” part, especially since our kids ARE now old enough that I don’t have to do that anymore.
With a husband who is almost always working or sleeping, it felt very overwhelming. I still had to work and cook and clean and watch our two HUMAN children.
But the puppy was constantly needing my eyes on her or else … she was having an accident, chewing something she shouldn’t be chewing, eating something she shouldn’t be eating, etc.
I would enlist the kids to watch her when I couldn’t, but they kind of sucked at it. They’d get distracted when they were “on duty” and WHAM! Another accident.
SO. SNUGGLY. THO.
We enrolled Annabelle in puppy training classes at our local vet and they were SO helpful. She learned all of the basics (sit, stay, shake paw, etc.) with the exception of “down” (which is apparently a hard one for small dogs to grasp, since they’re so close to the ground already.
At around the 11-week mark, I remember our trainer asking how things were going. Annabelle was still having accidents regularly and we’d had her three weeks at that point.
I felt frustrated because it SEEMED like we were doing everything right. When we took her outside, she peed! She pooped! No problem.
It was just that she was also doing those things INSIDE every time my back was turned for a minute. Arghhhhh.
“Accidents? Who, me?”
So are you ready for what she told me?
The BEST puppy potty-training advice I ever could have heard? …
It’s this:
What?!
At this point, we’d been putting her in her kennel every time we left the house, as well as here and there when I needed to leave the main level (to work downstairs, tuck the kids in upstairs, etc.) She didn’t mind her kennel at all, and it was such a relief to know she was safe (and that our stuff was safe from her.)
But put her in the kennel even if I’m … in the room, but busy?! Or put her on her leash in the house?
When I was cooking or loading the dishwasher, I put her on her leash and kept it looped around my wrist. She couldn’t get more than five or six feet away from me, so she wouldn’t have an accident since I was *right there.*
(They do sell hands-free leashes but I just used our regular ones.)
If I needed to pee, I’d put her in her kennel. Yes, I was only gone a minute, but this prevented her from running JUST out of my line of sight to have an accident.
Our awesome trainer reminded me not to feel guilty about doing this.
It was the only way to ensure she wouldn’t have an opportunity to have an accident, because unless I was right there with her — playing with her, feeding her, walking her around the house on her leash, engaging with her in any way — she was safely contained in her kennel. Dogs don’t like to pee in their kennel, so she wouldn’t pee.
When she WAS with me, I could watch her closely and take her outside as soon as she started showing signs that she needed to pee — sniffing the floor, looking around, trying to pull away, etc.
She was fully trained by the 12-week mark!
I shared this advice with a friend who had also recently adopted a puppy and was struggling with potty-training, and the next time I saw her at preschool pick-up she was VERY grateful.
Keeping her pup with her or in his kennel had completely trained him, too!
So if you’re adopting a puppy soon, down the road, WHENEVER, please remember this advice. It will seriously save your sanity and also your carpeting.
![]() |
| Pin this tip! |
We brought our Chocolate Boston Terrier puppy home at the end of August, and now we can’t imagine life without our sweet Annabelle Nessa.
(She even has her own Insta account, so I don’t spam everyone on my main one.)
![]() |
| Follow me for cuteness? |
In the beginning, it was certainly an adjustment. We’d purposely waited to get a puppy until the kids were old-ish (four and six) so we weren’t dealing with two toddlers AND a puppy.
But it was still like having a newborn in the sense that your entire life is wrapped up in them. You can’t leave those fuzzy little messes alone for a second.
Shockingly, though, Annabelle didn’t have a single accident for the first 36 hours she was home with us. She peed and pooped outside every time we took her out, and I was secretly smug that I’d gotten a GENIUS DOG.
(I even had really smug plans to return the bottle of carpet pet-accident spray because we wouldn’t need it. Stupid smug me.)
… and then the accidents started.
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
SO. CUTE. THO.
I really struggled with the “watching the puppy constantly” part, especially since our kids ARE now old enough that I don’t have to do that anymore.
With a husband who is almost always working or sleeping, it felt very overwhelming. I still had to work and cook and clean and watch our two HUMAN children.
But the puppy was constantly needing my eyes on her or else … she was having an accident, chewing something she shouldn’t be chewing, eating something she shouldn’t be eating, etc.
I would enlist the kids to watch her when I couldn’t, but they kind of sucked at it. They’d get distracted when they were “on duty” and WHAM! Another accident.
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
SO. SNUGGLY. THO.
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
We enrolled Annabelle in puppy training classes at our local vet and they were SO helpful. She learned all of the basics (sit, stay, shake paw, etc.) with the exception of “down” (which is apparently a hard one for small dogs to grasp, since they’re so close to the ground already.
At around the 11-week mark, I remember our trainer asking how things were going. Annabelle was still having accidents regularly and we’d had her three weeks at that point.
I felt frustrated because it SEEMED like we were doing everything right. When we took her outside, she peed! She pooped! No problem.
It was just that she was also doing those things INSIDE every time my back was turned for a minute. Arghhhhh.
“Accidents? Who, me?”
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
So are you ready for what she told me?
The BEST puppy potty-training advice I ever could have heard? …
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
It’s this:
“Keep her on a leash in the house — or if you can’t watch her every second, put her in her kennel.”
What?!
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
At this point, we’d been putting her in her kennel every time we left the house, as well as here and there when I needed to leave the main level (to work downstairs, tuck the kids in upstairs, etc.) She didn’t mind her kennel at all, and it was such a relief to know she was safe (and that our stuff was safe from her.)
But put her in the kennel even if I’m … in the room, but busy?! Or put her on her leash in the house?
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
YES! That’s what worked.
When I was cooking or loading the dishwasher, I put her on her leash and kept it looped around my wrist. She couldn’t get more than five or six feet away from me, so she wouldn’t have an accident since I was *right there.*
(They do sell hands-free leashes but I just used our regular ones.)
If I needed to pee, I’d put her in her kennel. Yes, I was only gone a minute, but this prevented her from running JUST out of my line of sight to have an accident.
Our awesome trainer reminded me not to feel guilty about doing this.
It was the only way to ensure she wouldn’t have an opportunity to have an accident, because unless I was right there with her — playing with her, feeding her, walking her around the house on her leash, engaging with her in any way — she was safely contained in her kennel. Dogs don’t like to pee in their kennel, so she wouldn’t pee.
When she WAS with me, I could watch her closely and take her outside as soon as she started showing signs that she needed to pee — sniffing the floor, looking around, trying to pull away, etc.
NO. MORE. ACCIDENTS!
She was fully trained by the 12-week mark!
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
I shared this advice with a friend who had also recently adopted a puppy and was struggling with potty-training, and the next time I saw her at preschool pick-up she was VERY grateful.
Keeping her pup with her or in his kennel had completely trained him, too!
//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js
So if you’re adopting a puppy soon, down the road, WHENEVER, please remember this advice. It will seriously save your sanity and also your carpeting.
![]() |
| Pin this tip! |