Toronto Star

Kondo’s magic is delegation

Show isn’t just about making space, it’s about making kids take on responsibi­lity at home

- KATE LEWIS

On Jan. 1, I eagerly settled in for a Netflix binge of Marie Kondo’s adaptation of her internatio­nal bestseller The Life

Changing Magic of Tidying Up. The show ostensibly teaches the families it helps — and the viewers at home — how to determine whether clothes and other household items “spark joy,” and if not, to thank the item for its service to you, then peacefully let it out of your home and your life.

The result is billed as a clutter-free, happier home, yet what the show truly reveals in many cases is moms who are exhausted ringleader­s of their families’ lives, and the dads and kids who are content to let them fulfil that role. Kondo’s magic is life-changing — especially for the moms — once those families begin to truly share the running of a household.

There’s palpable tension at the beginning of the first episode of Tidying Up

With Marie Kondo as the husband criticizes his work-from-home wife for sending the laundry out, even though he works 60-hour weeks and they have two small children at home.

Another mom tears up as she describes the emotional weight of downsizing into a two-bedroom apartment with her family and the pressure she’s put on herself to make it feel like home. “It’s my favourite room not to be in,” her husband says of the kitchen.

He sheepishly admits he’s never cooked even one meal for his family there. Her son explains he likes having his mom in charge of knowing where all his stuff is, so that he doesn’t have to think about it.

With two preschoole­rs at home, I know quite well how this story starts. Life right now is a constant calibratio­n of my children’s moods and their energy and their belongings, and the answers usually involve me. Where are their coats and mittens and hats? (Answer: One out of every pair of mittens is gone for good. We will never have a matched set again.)

It’s easy to see how moms often begin taking on this all-encompassi­ng responsibi­lity for multiple lives, and also easy to understand how hard it can be to stop once you’re accustomed to making all the decisions and doing all the things. That’s not to say dads don’t often fill that role, as well, or that every mother does.

In a later episode, it’s the mom who has the most difficulty adapting to Kondo’s method. But research suggests there’s still a persistent gender gap when it comes to who does the majority of the housework, one that even trickles down to children.

Yet teaching each family member to be responsibl­e for their own belongings, and by extension, for themselves, is a key component of Kondo’s KonMari method. Kondo is a mother — both of her daughters are under 4 years old — and realizing that she has two small children yet remains vigilant about organizati­on is daunting (at first) to many of the families she meets on the show. Tidying is a behaviour she models at home. She says her children already emulate the way she folds clothes.

Research backs up Kondo’s idea that even very young children can be involved in the work of keeping a home running smoothly.

A recent NPR article examined several studies of Mexican and Guatemalan families whose children not only help with chores, but do it without being asked. This incredible phenomenon, the incredulou­s researcher­s found, was due in large part to enlisting the cheerful and enthusiast­ic help of a surprising age group: toddlers.

Letting young children help with tasks such as washing dishes or sweeping — no matter how badly they did the task at first — showed up time and again as a huge part of how those children learned to capably handle bigger responsibi­lities later on, according to the article.

With my own children, my attitudes toward their capabiliti­es were wholly shaped by my son’s first year at primary school in Japan. Beginning at age 2, he was expected to remove his sneakers at the door and place them neatly in his cubby, hang his backpack on his hook and set his cup and cloth napkin neatly on the table each day.

Now, at nearly 5, he leads his 2-year-old sister in cleaning off the table. She’s taken to it so well that she attempts to clear off after finishing her meal at restaurant­s.

By the end of each episode, the families Kondo has assisted have been converted into true believers. More importantl­y, there is joy — true, infectious, pure joy — on each of their faces. But the happiness and tears of the mothers are what resonates most with me.

“I came around to check on everybody and I saw the most amazing thing,” the mom who’d downsized tells her husband after Kondo has worked her magic on the household. “Everybody had everything folded. They had it lined up, standing, nice and neat, on its own,” she says.

“Marie brought a whole bunch of joy upon our home. I think my mom is way less stressed out,” her daughter says.

Adds her brother: “She lifted the weight off my mom’s shoulders. A lot of weight. Because now me and my sister can do things by ourselves without asking her.”

“The tidying process provides a unique opportunit­y to understand what is most important in one’s own life,” Kondo says during the show.

She’s talking about belongings, but she’s also talking about creating a home. Most importantl­y, she’s talking about how to happily share life with the people who make it worth living — and to teach them to do the same.

 ?? MARIE TAKAHASHI THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Profession­al organizer Marie Kondo guides entire families, not just moms, into pitching in at home in the Netflix series Tidying Up With Marie Kondo.
MARIE TAKAHASHI THE WASHINGTON POST Profession­al organizer Marie Kondo guides entire families, not just moms, into pitching in at home in the Netflix series Tidying Up With Marie Kondo.

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