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Kendra Adachi
This episode is sponsored by Cozy Earth. You know how there are certain clothes you put on at the end of a long summer day and your whole body goes thank you. Finally. That's been Cozy Earth for me. They're all day tee and the women's rib knit pajama set are so soft you can't help but notice it. They're not heavy or clingy like a standard cotton tee can be when it's hot outside. The rib knit pajamas especially surprised me. They're soft without being slouchy, cool without feeling flimsy, and they make the whole getting ready for bed situation feel like a little cue to your body that you're done for the day. Cozy Earth stands behind everything they make too, with a lifetime warranty and 30 days of hassle free returns on clothing. If anything isn't right, summer lives here. Head to cozyearth.com and use my code LGPOD for an exclusive 20% off. That's code LGPOD for an exclusive twenty percent off. And if you see a post purchase survey mention that you heard about Cozier Earth right here. This episode is sponsored by Merit Beauty. I really love Merit Beauty because it feels like they actually care about how most of us get ready in the morning. Like I'm not trying to do a full face, I'm just trying to look awake and like myself before I leave for the day. So I have loved the minimalist foundation and concealer stick for such a long time. It's fantastic. But listen, maybe a new favorite product is the Clean Volume Mascara. It has quickly become my favorite mascara, if not my favorite makeup piece. It is so good. It uses a small, precise brush with a buildable tubing formula to create amazing lashes that do not look like butterfly wings on your face. I love that it's buildable, it doesn't clump, it just looks so natural. If you have not tried Merit, now is a perfect time because the new Clean Volume mascara is available in the Best Sellers kit along with my favorites like the Minimalist, the Flush Balm and more. Right now Merit Beauty is offering our listeners their signature makeup bag with your first order at meritbeauty.com that's M E R-I-T beauty.com to get your free signature makeup bag with your first order merit hey there. You're listening to the Lazy Genius podcast. I'm Kendra Adachi. This podcast is not about hacking the system to find more time or hacking your energy to get more done hustling to be the best or to make the most out of every opportunity is exhausting and unsustainable. So here we do things differently on this show. We value contentment, compassion and living in our season. We favor small steps over big systems. Here we are, lazy geniuses being a genius about the things that matter and lazy about the things that don't. And I'm so glad you're here. Today is episode 476 crowdsourced tips for an Easier Summer we are smack dab in the middle of summer and now seems like a great time to assess what's working and what is making summer easier. Today we're going to hear from all of you with tons of great tips on an easier summer. And I know that there will be something in here that will solve a current problem problem anyone listening might have to make the second half of the summer easier. One of the best parts about being a lazy genius is getting better at solving small problems. The more we keep things small, the more helpful change we actually make. And this episode is that in a nutshell. Lots of compassionate problem solving of the small things about summer that can grow into bigger frustrations. We have tips on lunches and snacks and swim meet dinners. We have tips on structuring days and keeping cars less chaotic and helping kids do chores without losing your mind. If the last few weeks of episodes have been my how tos to get you thinking about all the ways to make summer easier, this episode is the crowdsourced collection of the best of the best, practically applied. So thanks in advance to everyone for sending in so many great ideas. After that, we'll have a little extra something where I share about my day off in the latest Lazy Letter, my monthly newsletter that went out last week. I always answer people's questions in a segment called Reply. We get tons of email responses every month, and last month someone asked about my day off and if I actually take the day off, like for real, don't do anything on my to do list. And because honestly, that sounds like crazy for a busy person with a job with kids and responsibilities. It is a fair question and I did answer it briefly in the newsletter, but I actually wanted to go into it a bit more today. So that will be today's a little extra something. Then we'll celebrate the Lazy Genius of the Week, even though this whole episode is full of Lazy Geniuses of the week with a brilliant tip about the bane of my existence, dirty socks. Then we'll close with a mini pep talk for when you don't feel like you can stop now before we get into all that, we need your help. So you guys are really smart and your thoughts about what we do here always matter. We have made decisions based on your feedback for years and it's time to get your feedback again. Every year we have a survey that helps us make decisions for the upcoming year and we for real, listen to you. Like last year's survey led us to putting my dozen or so book reviews into a separate reading email every month. And that has been a wildly good idea. The latest lazy letter where the book reviews used to live. It feels like it can breathe more. It has more room for like personal essays and ideas to share. Plus this new reply all segment that I already mentioned and then the book list. The reading email. It is a more easily digestible email for readers with more room for me to share what I'm reading next, what book suggestions you have given me that month, and like even an essay on how reading is going right now. So those were tremendous ideas that we got from your survey feedback. Your survey feedback also led us to adjust the formatting of this podcast. We're lucky to be a show popular with sponsors, but because we had so many more ads, the show sometimes felt like it was half ads, half show when it used to be 20 minutes long. Plus, so many of you indicated on past surveys that you wish the podcast episodes were longer. So guess what we did. We expanded the episodes to include a little extra something and mini pep talks which offer a more balanced ad load as well as a listening experience that you like more. We have used survey data to plan book tours, create email resources, and even make the playbooks. I just cannot tell you how impactful your feedback is to Team lg. We're coming up on our annual team retreat where we get together in person and we're going to cast our vision for this next year, figure out what we want to create for you, and make adjustments that benefit the majority as best we can. In order to do that, we need your feedback and you can give it by filling out our Lazy Genius survey. It's a few minutes of your time, but incredibly important to us. And as a thank you for that time, we're going to randomly select three participants who are willing to share their name and email address just so we have a way of contacting you. And those three people will receive a $100 gift card to the store of your choice. So you get to help us make better stuff for you and you just might win a hundred bucks. So that's pretty fun. Participating is super easy. Just go to the link in the show Notes either on your podcast app or on our website. Fill it out, include your name and email address at the end. If you would like to be in the thank you gift card drawing and then you're done. Since we need time to analyze the survey before our team retreat, the survey will close on July 17th. That's about a week and a half from now. If you're listening to this episode on the day it comes out, so there's plenty of time. But if you're like me, you hear about something to do, you think like, oh yeah, fine, I'll do that later. And then like your middle aged female brain walks into the metaphorical woods and never returns. If that is you, my deepest sympathies for our hormonal brains that need extra reminders. And maybe you can like just pause the episode now and pause what you're doing and just click on the link and do it now. Or like send yourself a text reminder or set an alarm for later when you're less busy to fill it out if you want to do that. I also think it's important to note that even though the survey really does give us like the majority breakdown, there are some of you that have very minority experiences. And it's really lovely for us to know that. So even though we are trying to serve the most people as possible with our choices, we also get to serve people better by knowing the minority. So even if you're like, well, I might not feel the same way about the podcast and the email as most people, actually that is just as valuable. So please share no matter what. I'm just so grateful for all of you, to this whole community for being such smart, thoughtful, kind people. I want to continue making shows and writing books and sending emails that make your life easier, better and kinder. So thank you for helping me do that. All right, before we get into your tips for an easier summer, let's take a quick break to hear from our sponsors, which makes this show free for you to listen to. But before we do, here is your quick reminder about the podcast recap email that we send out every other Friday. It's called Latest Lazy Listens and it summarizes the episode. It shares the lazy genius of the week as well as the other segments we have on the show. And it has a little extra note for me to help encourage you through the weekend. So if you would like to get that recap, you can head to the lazygeniuscollective.com listens. All right, let's get into your crowd sourced tips for an easier summer. We'll run through these in categories and first step is food. Food happens to all of us. The people need to be fed. So let's hear some favorite listener tips to make summer food easier. First is Amanda Pagler with one hilarious tip. Here's what she says. I call it Big Meat Monday, though it rarely falls on a Monday. Once a week I will cook a big cut of meat, roast a whole chicken, pork shoulder, a chuck roast, etc. And then shred the remaining meat to use for a couple of meals later in the week. This summer I've decided once that from this leftover meat I will make tacos and stir fry. If it goes further than that, we'll get a bonus pasta or whatever. The prep to cook the meat is generally quick and easy. Just seasoning and throwing it into the oven or crock pot for a long cook and having the meat on hand cuts down on prep time, planning and dishes for some other days in the week. Listen, I want to do this just so I can implement something called Big Meat Monday. That is amazing. Please name your things. It's always more fun. Great idea Amanda. All right, I love this one from Shay Guider. My most recent decide once for the summer is saying yes to Popsicles. I bought some cheap silicone molds on Amazon and have been using smoothie leftovers to make a new batch regularly. My toddler thinks I'm the actual best mom ever for being the one to suggest a 10am popsicle. And bonus points that I'm sneaking in veggies and fiber. We always eat them outside too, which gets us out in the yard earlier in the day and leaves only sticky hands and cheeks to clean up. Yes, let us all declare this the Summer of Popsicles. Like, even if you don't have kids, we need the Summer of Popsicles always. All right, now we're going to hear the voices of some listeners with your favorite summer tips. First, you'll hear from Amber with her own popsicle tip because it is the Summer Popsicles followed by Sarah, Katie and Hillary.
Amber
Hi there. My name is Amber. I live in Colorado Springs, Colorado. One way that I am making summer easier is as we know, fruit goes really bad really quickly in summer heat. And so when I see raspberries start to turn or watermelons start to get some extra juices around it, I tend to throw it into the blender, blend it all up, and then pour it into popsicle molds. And we have fresh cold fruit popsicles out of almost gone bad fruit.
Sarah Williams
Hey there Kendra, Sarah Williams from Forest, Virginia mom of three, ages 2013 and eight wife of 21 years to the most amazing husband. We decided long ago when our oldest was becoming of age to become a swimmer that swimming wasn't an option. So swim team quickly became one of our summer structured activities. While Monday nights are crazy and we are trying to figure out how to get to warm ups at 5pm, searching for goggles and searching for towels and trying to find a sharpie to mark arms for kids events, I realized very quickly that there was no time left to make a decision on dinner. So our decide once for dinners on swim team evenings is order pizza and pack the snackle box full of vegetables. My kids know that at the swim meet after they've done warm ups they can come grab a slice and they have to pick two colors from the snackle box so that they're well fed, energized and ready for the swim meet. We also just pack our most of us have water bottles with ice water and this helps us save money at the swim meet. Which can be tempting but also too when you're crazy busy in your Monday and all of a sudden it's swim team time, you've already had your dinner ready and decided so that's my one way to make summer easier. Thanks for having me on Kendra Hi
Katie Jumper
Kendra, I'm Katie Jumper from Cincinnati, Ohio and the way I've made my summer so much easier this year is by coming up with a two week summer lunch rotation. Lunch was the bane of my existence trying to figure out what to feed the kids every single day and I would wait until everyone was hangry and then make PB and Js because I just couldn't think of anything else fast. Or I'd have the kids make their own lunch but they'd have the same decision fatigue and while old enough to make their own food, they feel extra loved when I make it for them. We were all sick of sandwiches and deciding so I came up with 10 lunches with some help from the kids. And so Monday through Friday it's written down. Everyone knows what's coming, I make it for them, but they're welcome to opt out and make their own lunch if something else sounds better.
Hilary Solley
Hi Kendra, this is Hilary Solley. I'm from Cleveland, Ohio and this is my second summer being a lazy genius about using my freezer for meals in the summer. Before school let out, a good friend and I got together and we batch cooked and froze several different things that our families would like. This year we did taco Meat, turkey, meatballs, enchiladas, stuffed shells, and we made a bunch split it up between the two of us. And it's a great help. On nights where I can't think of anything to cook and I need to pull something out of the freezer right away, or when I'm meal planning and I just can't think of something to eat, I know that I have some meals already in the freezer. It's been a huge, huge help and has made summer time cooking just a little bit easier. Thanks for all that you do.
Kendra Adachi
All right, now let's transition into tips for summer gear and logistics. Summer has different types of needs and schedules and making rhythms for. For short lived things like that, it can be a little tricky. So these are really great ideas to make all of that feel easier. So the first idea is from Monica Holmes. Here's what Monica says. Getting the kids out the door for camp each morning is a whole thing. We borrowed the Nestor's home base concept and applied it to sunscreen. For the duration of summer, we keep a ceramic bowl on the kitchen counter that holds an array of sunscreen. Voila. Sunscreen is contained in one spot, made as pretty as sunscreen can get. And no one has to send out a search party before coffee. Yes. I love this so much. So the nester is always smart about making home decor work in a practical and still beautiful way. And her home base concept is excellent that way. It's why I have spoons in an old planter, hairbrushes that stay in the living room for night braiding also in an old planter actually, and a bowl on the table for all the keys and wallets and sunglasses. Containing similar stuff that you need on a fairly regular basis is something that's like a little bit obvious, but when you put it in something pretty close to where you use it all the time, it's like so, so helpful. So a sunscreen bowl in the kitchen during summer is such a great idea. All right. Courtney DeCarlo says this. I've decided once that the top of the dryer is where all summer camp supplies live for the summer. Every day when the kids come home, the backpack goes right to the laundry. Wet and dirty things go in the wash, bags go on top of the dryer and clean extras sit on top of the dryer for packing. Every two or three days is the machine machine fills with dirty clothes or bathing suits and towels. I run a load and then fold and put those things right back on top of the dryer to enter the rotation again. Okay, here's why I love this one. This is probably harder to do all the time because it might feel like too responsive of a process. Like waiting for the washer to fill up might be tricky with everyone's clothes getting dirty at different rates, but when you're talking about summer camp, everyone is dirty and stinky and going to be changed out of the same clothes at the same rate when everyone gets home. So this is like such a great seasonal approach to stuff and laundry. And I love it when y' all make choices just for your season. It is truly how life feels better. All right, I love this one from Nikki Flannery. Just wanted to give a shout out to the Summer at the Pool episode from a few years back. It has been in my head for a while since listening, but this year I finally bought a dedicated drying rack that now lives on our screen porch right off our mudroom. Towels, bathing suits, floaties all land there right after coming home from the pool or after being rinsed off. I also know it will get double use in winter on snow days for all the wet snow gear after playing outside. I haven't even told my kids about the drying rack house rule officially, but after a few weeks I saw my 5 year old hanging up her bathing suit herself. Yes, this is so good. Isn't it so fun when you start something that does not need an official announcement but it still kind of works and then people just sort of follow suit? I love that. And great call on using the rack for the winter. I do love that pool episode. I couldn't remember the exact name of it, so I just googled Lacy Genius Pool to find it and it's episode 266 how to lazy Genius A Summer at the Pool. We still use so many of those tips and it makes the season so much easier. So if you're a pool person and you go a lot and you have not listened to that episode, you should go listen to that episode. I'm so glad it helped you, Nikki. All right, here's another pool tip from Sarah Sakuda. To make summer easier this year, I placed three fabric bins in the hallway right outside the bedrooms of my kids ages 6, 4 and 2. We call those the swim bins. Each kid has their own bin with a laminated photo of themselves on the front so there's no confusion. Also, side note, I'm guessing think it's because those children can't read yet. Swimsuits, swim shoes, goggles, and swim diapers for the toddler for each kid can be Found in the bins. They know where to go when it's time to get ready for water play. And I found the swim bins to be so much more convenient than going into three separate bedrooms to locate swim stuff. Man, this is really great. It's so empowering, too, because it's giving these tiny kids ownership of their bins and of getting ready without trusting them to do, like, the searching of all those things, you know? I love this, Sarah. It's such a great idea. And finally, here is an audio clip from Jessica.
Jessica
Hi, my name is Jessica from Chesapeake, Virginia. And something our family does every summer that I didn't think anything of until I read your email is we never or almost never fully unload our trunk. We live about 20 minutes from the beach, so we're there every week, sometimes a few times. So we always keep our wagon, our beach chairs, a fun beach game that we have, the boogie boards, the tent, all of that stays. We also have a beach bag and that pretty much stays packed for the entire summer as well. So it always has our sunscreen, goggles, and, like, the favorite ball that everybody wants to play with. And as soon as the beach towels are dry, into the bag they go. Because we just realized it, it was such a production to get ready for a beach day that that kind of took out some of the thinking. So at this point, we just say suit up, and then my husband and I will pack up the cooler and then we're ready.
Kendra Adachi
I love that there are so many great places where we can. It feels like we're being inefficient or messy by keeping things out and you're not. You're actually making it easier for yourself, like keeping your stuff in the car all the time, like Jessica is. It's so great. All right, let's next talk about tips for rhythms and light structure to help summer go more smoothly. All right, this first one is from Melody Norris. Melody says, as a homeschool mom of four, I knew we couldn't abandon all sense of routine summer. So a couple years ago, we implemented theme days. Make something Monday, take a trip Tuesday, water Wednesday, thinking Thursday, and friends and family Friday. Some weeks, the themes switch days, or we even double or triple up on our themes, like a museum trip with friends that includes playing in water, for example. But we have a basic framework. This system has made it so much easier for all of us to still do our thing, play outside, read books, just enjoy summer while still letting us know it's not complete chaos. This year, the kids got in on the planning. And together we brainstormed ideas for each day. And now we're just checking them off as we go. And I'm not pulling my hair out hearing I'm bored 9,000 times a day. Man, I really do love a theme. If you have kids who respond to structure and are smaller and love, like the good name of something and a good theme, like write that theme for as long as your children let you like it, is just the best. All right, Melinda Lucas shares this us. I'm a teacher and mom of five, and I'm blessed to be home with my kids all summer. This does, however, make for some very long days. I bet. I wanted to have somewhat of a schedule for the long days at home, but a time schedule just didn't work out. I decided that instead of doing things at a certain time, we would just follow a certain order of events. This worked so much better. We still got everything done. Schoolwork, chores, lunch, calm time. And I didn't have to stress about what time it was when the first thing was finished. We just moved on to the next and so on. After all, we had all day to get things done. Yes, Melinda, this is great. This actually ties in with today's a little extra something and the mini pep talk later about really changing how we think about being done. And in this case, for Melinda, it doesn't have to be tied to a time. You can just put the things that you are hoping to do that day in order and then do the next one when the previous one is done, no matter how long it takes. I love the ease of that. It's productive if that's the goal, but it's not hustley, which is something we could all use more practice in. So that's a great idea. All right. This next one is from Sterling Maximo, which, listen, I just have to say, is the coolest name I've ever heard. Sterling Maximo says we designated Tuesdays is our standing adventure day for me and the kids. At the start of the summer, we each added must do items to create a family summer bucket list. And we used the weekly adventure day to check off one of those items. We agreed together that adventure day lasts only as long as everyone is up for it. Rather than planning a long day of preset activities, we commit to just one bucket list activity. Everything after that is optional. A menu of bite sized bonus fun. If the energy is there, the kids know we can head home the moment the mood shifts, which removes all pressure and somehow brings out a go with the flow spirit and Even my most schedule oriented child now this right here is being a lazy genius. It is so great to have themes for every day if you want to, especially when your family like really thrives on that. Like Melody, who we just heard from actually. But for some of you, having a theme every day is like too much. You can't remember. It's like too much to manage. And the expectations of certain children might be so high that a theme day every day is like untenable. But this is scheduling what matters. One day a week. The summer bucket list is there and there's one day a week to do something from it. So simple. But I also love the ease of not making it a full day thing of deciding that ahead of time. Like we can just go home when it's done if we want or not even done if we're done, it's like we're gonna go home now. Like this is such a beautiful case of open handed planning. Remember our plan pyramid from my book the plan, the three sides are the P, A and N from plan, Prepare, adjust and notice so that you get to live, which is the point of the pyramid and the point of the whole thing. In the L and plan, Sterling is equally preparing, adjusting and noticing by having this adventure day, noticing moods and energies and then adjusting what she prepared so that people can go home if they're ready. This is just like top tier lazy genius planning that puts people before everything else and I just love that. All right, here are a couple of audio clips from Mary Ellen and Cola.
Mary Ellen
Hi, my name is Mary Ellen from Westfield, Indiana. I have two elementary age boys and so in the summertime I like to create theme weeks that give us a little structure and order to our summer vacation. So we've done baseball week and shark week. But my favorite is when we do Christmas in July week and we watch Christmas movies and listen to Christmas music. And the best thing that we do is we will think of all the people in December that we want to give Christmas gifts to, like the teachers and the bus drivers and the neighbors. And then during Christmas in July week in the summer we craft one gift
Kendra Adachi
for all those people.
Mary Ellen
And then in December I just have to go grab my 20 gifts out of the storage room and we already have them ready to give out at Christmas time.
Unnamed Husband (mentioned by H)
Hi Kendra, longtime listener, first time caller. I am lazy geniusing this summer in conjunction with my husband by breaking up each of the 10 weeks of summer with one parent in charge. So that helps for scheduling our appointments, scheduling his work travel and my work appointments. If it's my week, then I know that I have to check in with all the kids schedules and make sure that I'm available or I get coverage for a drop off if I end up having an appointment. And the same for him. He knows when he can travel and when it's going to be the most convenient. And so far I think it's going to work pretty, pretty well.
Kendra Adachi
So splitting a the summer weeks between the adults in the house is such a great way. If you are a home that doesn't necessarily have a really equal division of labor or you feel like you are the mom who holds all the strings, doing that kind of thing in the summer could be really great practice for your partnership to flip flop weeks or even days sometimes just to be like, hey, you've got this one. You're checking in and kind of going through like what the process of that would be. So I really, really love that. Also, how great is Christmas in July? And then like figuring out gifts for those people and the kids making them and it's like a whole activity. That's such a great idea from Mary Ellen. Okay, so our next category is giving kids more ownership and responsibility over the summer, which is a very helpful and sometimes really challenging thing to do. So these are some of your ideas. This one is from Carissa Jensen. My best hack so far this summer was adapted from you. Oh, that's nice. We are trying very hard to raise capable kids and part of that is giving them chores. However, it is a little overwhelming to try to keep track of multiple different chores assigned to multiple different kids. This is correct. And who is doing what this week, et cetera. So instead of assigning specific chores this summer, we assigned zones that they are almost completely in charge of. The zones switch each week, so no one kid has the same zone all summer. I explained to them at the start of the summer what it looks like in each zone to tidy it up, clean it, basically take care of it. My favorite part of this is each evening at some point I holler out, own your zone. At that point, they each know that they need to go to their zone and go through either the actual checklist that I wrote on a note cart or a mental checklist of what needs to happen in that zone. It hasn't been a perfect process, but I have found that my kids really enjoy having ownership over something. Man, I love this. Okay, a couple things. So I love zones so much. Like up my dirty dishes zone, there's so many uses of zones. But in this regard, I know that Sam Kelly, the author of the soon to be released book Notice and Do, talks about this as a great way to manage chores and expectations. With kids having a zone, empowering them to be like, this is what a clean zone looks like or tidy zone looks like. It teaches them to own it themselves, to notice what needs to be done and just doing it without having to be micromanaged the whole time. I also love Carissa, that you said that. It has not been a perfect process, but it does make it easier. This is such an important expectation, you guys. Nothing's gonna work right away. Like, it just won't. And the sooner that you stop expecting it to, the easier your small solutions are gonna be. All right, this next one is from Brittany Dickmeyer. In years past, I have packed up one pool bag, and we've taken turns carrying it. This year, I decided each person can manage their own pool stuff. I bought three pool backpacks and filled them with goggles and pool toys. Now, when it's time to go, the kids pack a towel, a water bottle, and a snack in their own bag, and off we go. I keep my bag ready, so I'm only carrying my stuff. It's not a revolutionary idea, but it's helping me put everything in its place this summer and teaching my kids planning and responsibility along the way. I love this, Brittany. So I started doing this with Annie. I think it was last summer. I don't remember exactly, but she will usually take her shower at the pool after we're done swimming and sometimes even wash her hair. So we would have, like, you know, a little shower bag, like a little zip bag that had shampoo and a little loofah and all the things. Well, last summer, like, or for all the summers before, it was so annoying. Just, like, pulling out that little shower bag and then another towel from the big pool bag that was, like, all of our pool bags. And then she might forget something or whatever, but then sometimes, like, she would take the pool bag with her somewhere, and some of my stuff was in it, but I didn't have access to it because we just had the one pool bag. So, yes, we got her her own pool bag. And it's been amazing. So she's responsible to pack it each time. And it's so much easier if she is going to the pool without me. Right. Like, if the time that my novel was in the pool bag and she took it away and I did not have my novel.
Katie Jumper
No.
Kendra Adachi
So now she has her own. It's great. So I love this idea. All right, here's another one from Lauren Starn My favorite thing I've been doing that has been making the summer easy is post it note jobs for the kids. I have a 9 year old, a 7 year old and a 4 year old. Since the 4 year old can't read yet, his daily job is to help me pick up all the toys around the house. But the big kids get a post it noteworthy with a short list of jobs to finish every day. It includes cleaning their room to keep them from getting out of hand, practicing piano, and with one short chore like washing their laundry, putting their laundry away, emptying all the bathroom trash cans, or replacing the dirty towels around the house with fresh ones. The whole post it takes less than an hour to finish. This is something we do during the school year, so it was relatively easy to keep our house in order even though we've been doing so many fun things outside the house this summer, y'. All. This is why I really love small steps. Like if you adjust things season to season and you just like tinker to find what works rather than quitting and starting over and finding a whole new system because it's a whole new season. If you keep what's working enough and just like adjust it a bit, you actually start to create real sustainable ease at home. Like if you do one simple thing like post it, no chores and then you just keep doing that, adjusting as you go from season to season. Whether it's school year to summer or your kids being able to read or having like more capabilities because they're getting older, like it's going to eventually work so well, it becomes automated and it keeps your house more in a flow like it did for Lauren. So small steps baby. Keep tinkering. Make them work. You got this. All right, Lily Thayer Derek says, you inspired me to do something very simple this summer to manage my My teens and tweens plan less days. On days when they don't have a scheduled commitment like work or camp, we have told them that they need to do the three following things. 1 move their body, 2 use their brain and 3 do something to help the family community. They have three hours a day to do this in any order or way they want, whether it's playing outside, reading and mowing the lawn or swimming, playing a game and doing the dishes. So far it's working pretty well. Still much more screen time than I think they should have, but at least I know the essentials are covered and the bonus is that I'm inspired to do those things on my down days as well. This is Great. Lily. I think teaching kids, like, simple rhythms with empowerment and ownership within those rhythms is something that is going to serve them for their entire lives. So that's really great to start now with that. All right, two more categories. This next one is about expectations. I mentioned that a minute ago. But, like, this, it's for real now that we really need to, like, be careful about our expectations. We need to, like, keep practicing relaxation around doing all the things, having super high expectations, and, like, just do. Just do what matters. Right? So first is Allison Hefner. I am in the throes of first semester nausea and simply gave myself the freedom to stop making plans. Kids are going to day camps and occupy during the day while my husband and I work. Eight weeks of no play dates or gatherings initiated by me won't kill us. Our calendar suddenly emptied because I am the social initiator. And now we just live, and we are surviving. Isn't that lovely? And now we just live. I love that. It's not that Allison will never plan a social event again. Of course she will. But in this season when she doesn't feel good and she's pregnant, like, just stop planning stuff. What a gift that is. Julie Woolery says one way I'm making my summer easier is by not thinking about new challenges in the future. I'm a schoolteacher and found out that I will be teaching a new class next school year. I'm traveling this summer and moving my oldest child to college. When I found out about the new class, my first thought was that I needed to spend the entire summer thinking and planning for the next school year. But I have the opportunity to be with family. I don't get to see often and focus on my son. So I decided the new class is for August Julie. August Julie will plan and think about the new class, and it will be completely fine this summer. I'm focusing on the people in front of me. Julie. The first time I read this, I teared up. Like, truly. August Julie. August Julie will plan and think about the new class, and it will be completely fine. And you're right, it will. And even if the fine looks different than you'd like, you're still doing this because being integrated and whole as a person is more important than being great at planning your stuff. Plus, June and July Julie will be so grateful to August Julie for taking that mental load for now so that a college move in and a trip to see family, they can be their own wonderful things. So I just love this so much.
Hilary Solley
Much.
Kendra Adachi
All right, here's one From Noel Denny. My lazy genius hack is let go of all expectations of what the best summer ever could look like. I. E. Planning something different for every day and assuming I know what my kids will want to do. And I'm taking cues from my kids. They're three and a half and five and a half years old and I'm due any day with my third boy. So I knew it would have to be an unplanned summer. So far we have done so many fun things that have happened just because I left our days open. Some days we have random activities like play dates planned a few days in advance. But most of our activities have been day of decisions based on what my kids want to do. I know once this baby comes, I'll be limited and I wanted to give myself the freedom to do what they want in the moment rather than scheduling out every hour of every day. See, this is also such a great take on being a lazy genius. The goal here, it's not about like having theme days or not having theme days. The point is to do what matters to you. And if what matters is to relax expectations and follow your kids lead, that is what you will do. If your goal is to maintain some structure so that your homeschooled kids have an easier transition back into a regular year, you're gonna have theme days. That's what you're going to do. It's all about what matters to you and the choices that come from that. Even when two different people have like the opposite results in those choices, it's gonna work. That's the beauty of being a lazy genius. All right, one more from Ashley Struckle. Lower the standards. We are in and out a zillion times a day. So the house just will not stay as tidy during the summer. Which is fine because we live here. But in prior years I would stress myself out about it turns out just lowering my expectations for the summer. It leaves us all a little less tight sense. This is the truest of truths. Like if you change how you think, it changes what you do and like end of story. And then here is a fun idea from Aaron in Aaron's actual voice.
Erin
Hi, Kendra, I'm Erin from Durham, North Carolina. We have a lot of really great friends in our neighborhood and wanted to spend more time with them this summer. We've tried this in the past and always get hung up with coordinating schedules and trying to find times that work for everyone. The result is that the hangouts never happen. So this summer we've chosen the same day and the same time. Every week to have people over in our backyard. It's super casual. Some weeks everyone shows up. Other weeks it's only half of us. But it's still a fun connection point that has really brought some simple joy to a summer weeknight.
Kendra Adachi
That's so great if we simplify the choices, especially lowering the expectation of like, is this gonna work for everyone? It's probably not. But if you just have something locked in, it's so much easier. It's like its own version of decide once. It's so much easier to keep things that matter moving. All right, we are gonna finish with a little bit of fun and whimsy. These are not so much like tips about making summer easier, but they are definitely ways to make summer more delightful. All right. Karis Havens says, a few years ago, we moved to a neighborhood that is mostly flat and has great sidewalks. Our kids were 2 and 4 at the time, and we started something that summer that we call jammy walks. After dinner, we have the kids get their PJs on and we go on a family walk. Sometimes we will entice them with a popsicle. The kids love it. And after daylight savings in March, when the sun is up longer, they start asking for jammy walks after dinner. It gives my husband and me a solid 30 minutes to catch up on our days and have some mostly uninterrupted conversation while also getting some exercise. Jammie Walks is so adorable. What an adorable name, y'.
Katie Jumper
All.
Kendra Adachi
I swear the names of things are so important and delightful. Like Big Meat Monday. Just call something by a fun name and like, it automatically gets better. All right, this one is from Tiffany Wolfe. My 13 year old daughter and I go on periodic ice cream adventures with the dog in tow. At night, I announce we're going on an adventure and she and the dog get in the car. We listen to questionable 80s and 90s rap songs at full blast, all windows down, sing at the top of our lungs, get ice cream, and then come back, returning to our very vanilla lifestyles. This is so dear. I love that getting ice cream in his adventure is an adventure, first of all. But like, when it's captured by a name and 90s rap, it is an adventure. Like, that's so fun. That's the best, Tiffany. All right, one more from Grace Shute. What helped in the past was giving each kid their own day, Johnny Day. So it is less planning on your part. They feel so special. Other kids can't complain. Otherwise they won't get their special day. And you are a hero. Oh, man, we used to do this with our kids before they became more independent and just like, you know, now they just do their own stuff. But we did. We had a Sam Day, a Ben Day, an Annie Day, and it was so fun. Like, they got to choose what we ate, what we did. If they wanted to funnel any activity cash into getting, like, a Lego set or something, we put it on the calendar. Everybody looked forward to their day. We would do it in the same week. Usually that worked better for our family rather than scattering them about the summer, because then it sort of felt like a little unfair that someone got theirs really early and then like, a little kid had to wait four more weeks for their day. So we would do them usually in the same week. But anyway, it was so fun to have, like, a day for the kid over the summer. So I really love that one. All right, let's end with these audio messages from Chaney and Jess.
Chaney
Hi, my name is Chaney and I live in the Maryland suburbs. Suburbs of Washington, D.C. and one of the things that we are doing this summer, and it's not revolutionary, but it was a great reminder for my husband and I, is we did a full comb of all of our credit card points and what they can be used for and different perks that I think just lie dormant in our emails for a long time. And we basically curated a list of all sorts of things that we can do with credit card points and then built out days and weekends on our summer calendar to take advantage of those. And now we're doing fun things for relatively low to no cost, including a baseball game, a weekend trip to Virginia. We went to a restaurant in Baltimore that we wouldn't normally go to because of this specific, very nuanced credit card perk. And so this is just a reminder that sometimes there are creative ideas and ways to save or cut costs that you might already be paying for and forget to take advantage of. And so we just had a meeting and went over everything and planned out the next few months of the summer. And now we have a lot of really exciting things to look forward to.
Jess Jones
Hi, my name is Jess Jones and I live in Hernando, Mississippi. My lazy genius summer trick this year is twofold. One is I have been trying to add a little extra whimsy to my life, trying to make the really mundane things feel magical. So what I did was I created a summer menu for our house. I have named our house and given it a brand. So Hill House Provisions and is the kitchen. It's also the coffee shop. So Hill House provisions summer menu. And I made sure to choose things that could either be made in 30 minutes or made in a crock pot so that I wasn't heating up the kitchen for long periods of time because we live in the south and so we do not need extra heat. Also, that includes, like, breakfast. Breakfast and lunch and snacks. All things are covered. I just look at that list at the beginning of my grocery shopping and figure out what on the menu do we want to have that week? And it makes it really simple while also being a little fun, a little silly.
Kendra Adachi
We all need a little fun and a little silly. This is what I mean, guys. Like, giving your kitchen a name like it's a restaurant, like your Joanna Gaines is so fantastic. So name things. Name these very, very simple things to add either whimsy or delight in whatever category for the rest of your summer and just, like, see what kind of joy that brings. I really think that these tiny moments where you just, like, smile at your own life are. They're just so impactful. They're so impactful. So I just loved all of these tips. Thank you, everybody, for sending them in. This is living in the season at its best. And I just love how at ease everyone is about summer and making all of it a little bit easier. So that is our crowdsource tips for an easier summer. All right, today's a little extra something is all about my day off and if I actually take the day off. So this is the specific question that we at. Does Kendra really spend her Fridays just relaxing? How does she ignore the giant to do lists that all moms, especially moms who are business owners, have? All right, this is such a great question. And while I answered it in the newsletter last week, I wanted to answer it again here with my voice and a little bit more info. So the background here is that I take every Friday off. I can't do that during the summers, or I just don't because it's too complicated to, like, kick my family out of the house once a week. But during the school year, when everyone's at work, at school, after I drop off my last kid at school and then before I pick up the first one in the afternoons, I do nothing but what I want. I read, I watch tv. Maybe I'll go thrifting if I want to leave the house, but I rarely do because it's such a treat to be home with no people and no responsibilities. At least no responsibilities that need to be tended to right now because I have chosen it to be that way. I Am convinced that the way you view time determines how you spend it, what you believe about your to do list and your responsibilities and your freedom to rest, all of that. It impacts how you choose to actually spend your time. For example, if you believe that you need to finish your list before you can relax, you will never relax because a list is never done. Like, not really. There's always something more to do. If you believe that you're being irresponsible for taking a day off, or you feel this pressure to like, justify it or apologize for it, or you do a lot more the other days to like, compensate for the day off. You're not gonna ever really fully relax when you take the day because you don't really feel like you deserve it. If you have been here for any length of time, you know that I do. I do not love the way the current, like, cultural way of looking at getting things done. Like, we live in a productivity industrial complex that wants us to be better and faster at all costs, mostly so that we can spend more money honestly. Like, we're not supposed to be content with our lives. We're supposed to want bigger and better. We're supposed to want more. We're told that our bodies and our homes and our jobs and hobbies and outfits and French and date nights and the way we drink water, all of that needs to be optimized for the best experience possible so that we can have perfect futures. Now, that might be generalizing it a bit, but actually, like, not by much. If you go to the self help or productivity part of a bookstore or like your podcast app and you scroll titles of books and episodes, you're gonna see all kinds of resources to optimize your life, to help you get more done and be the best person you can possibly be every for the rest of your life. But that is usually based on what you produce. That's the measurement. And even if it's not, even if that's not what the direct thing is, that your productivity is the most important thing, there is still an air of discontentment and dissatisfaction with your life. There's an assumption that you should be discontented and dissatisfied with your life because it can always be better. Now, I'm not saying you can't be discontent. So many people are, and that's fine, might be legitimate. But when discontentment is the rule and greatness is the goal, y', all, there is no room to take a day off. Like, it doesn't compute because there's just too much to do. That's why the Question by this reader has almost like a, like an air of disbelief in it. Like, does Kendra really spend her days just relaxing? Like that's the wording. Because honestly, it sounds so counterintuitive, counterproductive, even countercultural to be a woman with children and a job and take a day off once a week without apology or shame or like a neglected to do list. Family or life, you guys, I believe with my whole heart that so much of the stress that we feel with an overwhelmed life is because we are trying to to get it all done. We see done as the goal, as the finish line so that we can nap or play or rest or whatever. It's just absolutely never going to happen. You will never ever, ever, ever, ever be done. You just won't. So you have to choose to be done. I choose to be done on Friday. I choose to let unfolded laundry wait until the kids get home from school. And instead I read. I choose to not see that rest as an earned thing that is just a regular part of my healthy life. I want my kids to have that kind of rest. I want cause to have that kind of rest. I want you to have that kind of rest. But it comes from believing that productivity is not the end game and that contentment with the undone is a perfectly lovely way to live. Now, have I developed some helpful things over the years that make that day off feel more relaxed? Yes. I don't make a to do list for the entire week. I only make one for Monday through Thursday. Like Thursday is the end of my work week. There's no option for carryover which makes Fridays feel intentionally empty. I don't cook on Fridays. We get our house cleaned every other Thursday. But then even on the off Thursdays, like I make sure along with my family that we do a pretty decent tidy on Thursday night before everyone goes to bed. So that Friday it feels intentionally settled. Now does that always happen? No. But the baseline is that it will. All of that didn't happen all at once either. Like it happened over time as I protected those five hours on Fridays. And really it is. It's just five hours. Like last year I would get home from the last school run around like 9:15, 9:30. And then I would have to pick up the first kid. I would leave the house around 2:15, 2:20 to get them at 2:30. So this next school year it will be a little bit different because Sam is going to drive himself and his brother Ben to school, which is super fun. And then Annie is likely going to have an after school program or walk home. So that might buy me another 45 minutes, which is super fun. But those hours to me are sacred. Like, I miss them terribly in the summer, but I also mostly find their absence okay, because I know it's just a season, and I still bring that mentality of contentment and choosing to be done into my summer life, too. Like, you will never be done, so choose to be done for now. You can do more stuff tomorrow if you want. So, like, just relax. And what's weird is when you do, when you choose to stop and rest, even though things are undone, you have more efficiency. When you do get stuff done like you do, you get more done when you stop trying to get it all done. It's very bizarre, but it works. The rust and loose grip on productivity, they make out actual productivity so much easier. Now, if you're new here and you're like, what is all this? Tell me more, Please go grab my book the Plan and just start reading. But for now, yes, I do actually relax on Fridays because. Because I believe that I can and that I should. And that is today's a little extra something. Now it's time for this week's Lazy Genius of the Week. This week we have Lori from Atlanta. Lori, right? I was listening to you talk recently about being irritated by dirty socks on your floor in the summer, which inspired me to reach out with this idea that we used at my house when my kids were younger. For my three boys, we declared no socks Summer. They wore only Crocs, keen sandals, and loafers for church. No socks required. No socks to pick up, launder or match, or put away. It was the perfect solution. Man, this is really fantastic. Like a no sock summer. For those of you who hate dirty socks too, like, please use this tip. Sadly, my children are like anti sandal and anti croc. Like, at least the boys are. And they're the main culprits of the socks. I know. Thoughts and prayers for me. Kaz is also a culprit. He does wear socks when he goes for a run and, like, mow the yard or whatever. But I might just have a life of dirty socks and that's okay. But listen, I absolutely love the idea of no Sock Summer. This needs to be an option for many people in many homes. And again, great name, guys. Just name the thing. It's way too fun. Thank you so much for sharing this, Lori, and congratulations on being the lacy Genius of the week. All right, now for a mini pep talk for when you feel like you can't stop. I think I Just sort of gave one in a little extra something. But let me quickly reiterate this particular piece of it again. If you think you're not allowed to stop, then you're not telling yourself the truth. You can stop. Like you get sick and stop, your friends stop and you don't get on them about it. People stop all the time. The lack of stopping isn't about not having the right systems or like being the exception, the one person who has too much to do. You have to believe that you can stop. You have to believe that you can leave something undone and go to bed. You have to believe that you can read for an hour on your couch even though there's stuff to do, and that you're not a terrible person because of it. And might I remind us that men rarely have this belief, or at least not to the extent that women do. Like men stop all the time. Men don't feel guilty about resting. In general, like, this is a belief that women have been taught and have internalized like over decades and it is preventing you from believing that you are allowed to stop. It's keeping you in the cycle of believing that the well being of your home and your people, it relies entirely upon your shoulders and that well being should also be like top notch in order to count. I do not believe any of that is true. Now if you do, that's okay. You can keep trying and hustling and being efficient and not stopping if that matters to you. There are lots of other like podcasts and books and stuff out there for you. But if you stay here with me, and I hope you do, I will keep telling you that you can stop. When you feel like you can't, it's because you've lost sight of what matters, which ultimately is your humanity. Your humanity matters far more than your productivity ever will and you're always allowed to stop. The more you practice stopping, the better you'll get at stopping. And like I said before, getting things done in between those stops. So change your beliefs and you will change your behavior. And that is a mini pep talk for when you don't feel like you can stop. If this episode was helpful to you, or if you've been looking for a way to support the show, please share this episode with someone you know or leave a kind review on Apple Podcasts. Every mention and share it makes a difference and turning more people into lazy geniuses. So thank you so much for your support. This podcast is part of the Odyssey Family and the Office Ladies Network. This episode is hosted by me, Kendra Adachi and executive produced by Kendra Adachi, Jenna Fisher and Angela Kinsey. Special thanks to Leah Jarvis for weekly production and an additional special thanks to Kara Smith for preparing all of these submissions for this episode. If you would like a podcast recap every other week, be sure to sign up for the latest Lazy Listens email that goes out every other Friday. Head to thelazygeniuscollective.com listens to get it. Thanks y' all for listening. And until next time, be a genius about the things that matter and lazy about the things that don't. I'm Kendra. I'll see you next week.
Gin Hatmaker
Hey, it's Gin Hatmaker. Here's what I've learned in midlife Joy isn't the reward you earn after all the work. Work is done. Joy is the work. That's what this new series on for the Love is all about. The sacred yes. It's choosing delight, rest and pleasure on purpose. Because saying yes to yourself, that's the thing that finally lets you fill your table with everybody else. Come find your sacred yes with me. Follow and listen to for the Love wherever you get your podcasts.
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Kendra Adachi ("The Lazy Genius") hosts a special episode compiling the best listener-sourced tips for making summer life easier, more manageable, and more enjoyable. With a focus on being "genius about the things that matter and lazy about the things that don’t," Kendra curates a wide range of submissions, from streamlining summer meals to infusing daily life with whimsy. The episode is a practical, joyful celebration of community wisdom, built on the podcast’s core values of contentment, compassion, and seasonality.
Kendra: “No sock summer! Just name the thing. It’s way too fun.” (54:33)
The episode is a warm, affirming, and highly practical tapestry of ideas for reducing summer stress. Kendra maintains her signature mix of gentle humor, reality checks, and heartfelt encouragement, always reminding listeners: “Be a genius about the things that matter and lazy about the things that don’t.” Her curation of listener voices emphasizes both concrete tips and the underlying permission to live in the season, lower impossibly high expectations, and find joy in the small things.
Best for: Anyone looking to simplify summer life, reduce mental load, empower kids, and incorporate a touch of daily delight—with full permission not to do it all.