Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Works For Me Wednesday (Kids Room)

{Climbing up on Soap Box}

I think it's a bit absurd that most parents find it necessary to give each child their own room. If you are such a parent, I am sure you have your reasons. Hear me out, then ignore me. It's not personal, it's more a comment on the state of this country.   

My 3 kids have shared a room for all but 4 months of their little lives. Mckenna and Gabe's introduction to room-sharing was seamless. Juliana's was a bit (read A LOT) harder.  But, we have persevered and now the 3 of them play and sleep in the same room.

My kids share a room because:

1. They learn to get along, even when it's inconvenient.
2. They learn to play each other's games, to think of their siblings' wants and needs and not only their own.
3. They gain compassion for one another. When one is sad, scared, or frustrated the others comfort her.
4. They conspire, plan, consort, and get hyper together...oh wait, that's not why they share a room, it's a side effect.
5. They make memories together. There is nothing better than staying awake past bed-time (7:00 around here for this reason) and sharing, laughing, giggling, planning, dreaming and wishing with your siblings. 
6. They grow closer--we often find the 3 of them asleep on the same bed. 
7. It opens up our other room for other reasons. When we have extra room, God does things. It's that simple.

{Jumping off Soap Box}.

This is how we do it (and see this post for where everyone's clothes are):

The closet. Hanging shoe rack and dress-up dresses, bins for dress-up, nerf guns, and big cars.

The desk. Small, but gives Mckenna her own space. 

The beds. They rock. 3 beds in one, Juliana's pushes in, and the bottom drawers hold their PJs.

Remember this custom Bookshelf? Still loving it! Holds all their toys and books, except what you saw in the closet.

Mckenna's art shelves. A cute basket to keep them organized. 

Gabe's Puzzles (far left) and Legos. These white drawers are perfect for Legos. Each set gets its own drawer and he can take out one set at a time and build right in the drawer. 

Hat and Sunglass rack. Gabe's sunglasses are ALWAYS missing. 

5 comments:

The Robbins' Nest said...

Thank you, Thank you, Thank you for sharing. As Bill and I contemplate another baby, our 2 bedroom town house seemed a bit small. But I'm having a change of heart. Thanks!
Also:
LOVE Mckenna's cowboy boot rug and hat/sunglasses rack!
Where did you get that bed? PERFECT!
I don't suppose there are plans to that wonderful HUGE book/art/toys shelf? I love that there's a place for the plastic drawers!

I'll be calling you when #2 comes along to find out how to keep #1 asleep before #2 is sleeping through the night! And no...#2 is not on the way, I don't think!!

Fourgiven Momma said...

My boys don't share a room yet, but I look eagerly toward the day when they will. I'm waiting until the baby is out of his crib then they'll get to share. Also, I must say, I love your organization. It looks very similar to how I keep my kiddo's room, but we don't have quite that big of shelves - only in my dreams! :-)

cajungal01 said...

I love your post! This is a common soap box of mine. I have friends that ask "ughh...my kids just don't get along or really seem to even like each other. Yours seem to really love each other. What's the trick?" (now mine certainly have their moments...) I always say "have them share a room!" We have a four bedroom house BUT one room is mine and hubby's, one room is theirs, one room is a guest room, and one room is a playroom. So although we have room for the kids to be separate (boy almost 6 years old, girl 3.5 years old), we like them together. And it's worked! They truly think more about each other now that they've been sharing a space. We LOVE it! :0)

Stephanie said...

This is a good post. I remember getting a little frustrated when people would ask us...with every baby..."so when are you going to move to a bigger house"...We have 5...3 girls who share and 2 boys who share. You have made some really good points. I never thought about the compassion for others. But it's true, my kids are that way. The thing I notice is that it keeps us from buying/getting/keeping things we don't need. It has been good for the kids too. If they really want something but there's no room in the inn. They have to choose what to remove to make room.

Anyway. Great post and a worthy soap box.

Devin said...

Amen and Amen.