I Cleaned My House for 10 Days Straight and My Kids Took It Personally

a red haired mom with a messy bun. In a stained tshirt and shorts. She is a nerd whose house reflects that. She love anime, romantasy books. Tv shows and movies. She is busy vacuuming her recently broke vacuum. But it broke it still works but now she has to vacuum at a bent awkward angle because the handle is broke in order to hold it together. Meanwhile her 3 kids a five year old boy and 2 younger sisters are playing in the background.

Nothing makes you question reality faster than another adult emailing you to say your house needs to be “cleaned” while you actively live with three children who treat every room like a side quest in Jumanji.

This is also a continuation of the previous landlord saga because apparently we’ve entered the sequel nobody asked for.

The email itself wasn’t even dramatic. Oh no. That would’ve at least been entertaining. It was vague in that corporate “per my last email” kind of way. Basically:

  • clean the floors
  • clear the countertops

That’s it.

Which honestly feels aggressive considering they inspected a house occupied by three tiny humans and expected it to look like a model home from HGTV instead of what it actually is: a lived-in family home where someone is always holding a snack they shouldn’t have.

And listen. Was the house cluttered? Absolutely.

Was it “dirty”? I mean… define dirty.

Because there’s a huge difference between:

  • “crime scene”
    and
  • “there are approximately 700 Hot Wheels under my couch.”

So for the last ten days I have been cleaning like I’m preparing for the Triwizard Tournament in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.

Every single day has been:
Clean room.
Turn around.
Kids destroy previous room.

Repeat until death.

At this point I’m convinced motherhood is just being the NPC that endlessly resets the map while everyone else runs around causing chaos.

The floors specifically have become my mortal enemy. Mostly because they needed vacuumed constantly. Which would’ve been easier if our vacuum hadn’t been critically injured in battle.

And before anyone asks, yes, my son was trying to help.

Which is adorable in theory.

In reality, my vacuum now only works if you hunch over holding it together like Tony Stark trying to keep a dying spaceship operational in Avengers: Endgame.

So now I vacuum looking like Gollum dragging precious treasure through The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers.

My back has never known peace.

And the LAUNDRY ROOM.

Dear God.

The laundry room looked like a fabric-based natural disaster. It took me an entire week of washing clothes just to clear it out. Not even organize it. Just reduce it to survivable levels.

I swear laundry reproduces when you aren’t looking.

I’d finish one load and suddenly there’d be three more baskets waiting for me like hydras in a Marvel movie.

Meanwhile my children continued operating as agents of chaos.

My son is currently obsessed with that new goat basketball movie and spends every waking moment trying to play “Roar Ball” in the house. Which apparently involves sprinting through rooms like he’s training for the NBA while I’m carrying folded laundry.

My three-year-old follows behind everyone leaving tiny clutter landmines everywhere she goes. Toys. Socks. Half-eaten crackers. One single Barbie shoe. The usual.

And my one-year-old has entered the clingy phase where if I put her down for more than four seconds she acts like I personally abandoned her on Tatooine.

So I’m cleaning one-handed while holding a toddler and answering questions nonstop.

“Can Jedis beat the Avengers?”
“Why doesn’t Spider-Man just use The Force?”
“Can dinosaurs play Roar Ball?”

At this point I don’t know. I barely know my own name anymore.

And honestly, the most frustrating part is that the house wasn’t even THAT bad to begin with.

Cluttered? Yes.

Lived in? Definitely.

But now my house looks so aggressively clean that I feel like we’re hosting judgmental preppy in-laws for the weekend.

Nobody is comfortable.

The kids are confused.
I’m stressed.
And the countertops have never been this empty in their lives.

I wiped down my kitchen counters yesterday and actually startled myself because I forgot what color they were.

The thing nobody really talks about is how exhausting it feels when you spend all day trying to make a home look untouched… while actively raising children inside of it.

Kids create messes because they live there.
Because they play there.
Because they feel safe there.

And somehow moms are expected to magically erase all evidence of family life before another adult comes over to inspect it like they’re Professor Umbridge evaluating Hogwarts.

But you know what?

I did it.

The floors are vacuumed.
The counters are cleared.
The laundry room no longer looks like it belongs in a post-apocalyptic survival game.

And if the landlord people still think the house is unacceptable after all this effort then honestly…

Inconceivable.

Things That Survived This Cleaning Saga With Me

Because apparently I can’t fight household chaos completely unarmed.

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I’m Birdie

A Mom, writer and full-time chaos coordinator, raising tiny humans while trying to write a book and remember when I last drank water. I escape into books, anime, and video games like it’s survival. And I’m still waiting for my Hogwarts letter like it got lost on purpose. This blog is the real, ridiculous side of mom life… because why not make other people laugh at my parenting someone should.

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