The Lazy Genius Podcast - How to Deal with a Messy House All Summer Long
Episode Date: June 15, 2026If your summer looks different than the rest of the year because you have kids at home and everything is more chaotic or your rhythms are a little different because of summer activities and travel and... just reading more than tidying, this episode is for you. Helpful Companion Links Order my book The PLAN or ask your library to consider carrying a copy. The Stone Roses by The Stone Roses Creature of Habit by Courtney Barnett Pumpkin by Georgie Parker Group Project by Hi Lo Jack Music Speaks Louder Than Words by Candi Staton To Keep by Dominique Adams Big Flower Light Go Bloom by Henry Jamison Sign up for our every-other-week podcast recap email called Latest Lazy Listens. Sign up for my once-a-month newsletter, The Latest Lazy Letter. Grab a copy of my book The Lazy Genius Kitchen or The Lazy Genius Way! (Affiliate links) Download a transcript of this episode. Want to share your Lazy Genius of the Week idea with us? Use this form to tell us about it or record your idea and share your voice on the show. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey there, you're listening to the Lazy Genius podcast.
I'm Kendra Adachi.
This show 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're lazy genius is.
a genius about the things that matter and lazy about the things that don't, and I am so glad that
you are here. Today's episode 473, how to deal with a messy house all summer long. If your summer
looks different than the rest of the year because you have kids at home and everything is more chaotic,
or your rhythms are a little different because of summer activities and travel and, I don't know,
just reading more than tidying. This episode is for you. I want you to leave this episode with two
things. First, I want you to feel better about the mess that you do have. And second, I want you to have
some strategies to help you deal with the mess if you want to. I think it's good to have perspectives
that reframe our mess, because mess isn't necessarily going away. But that doesn't mean that you have to
live in squalor, especially not if you don't want to. So we'll take care of both of those things today.
After that, we will have a little extra something where I share an update on my album project. I share
update back in April, so it feels like a good time to, you know, give it another peak.
Plus, I've listened to a couple of albums recently that I cannot stop listening to.
Just so sticky good and great listens for the summer, too.
So I want to share this with you.
As always, we'll celebrate the lazy genius of the week with a wild idea for cleaning up art
messes.
And we'll finish up with a mini pep talk for when you're already tired of a long season.
Before we get into that, I want to remind you of the difference between.
two of my books that people love to read during the summer and before school starts back up again.
I know it just ended, but, you know, so that isn't for a while. But you might be someone who, like,
can barely get in a couple of pages of a book a day, especially nonfiction and double especially
if you have, like, tiny kids who make the idea of summer reading a joke. Still, I have two books
that are great reads to help with managing the chaos of life. And I think one is great in the summer
and the other is better in like August, even into September.
They're both great whenever.
But if you've been wondering what book of mine will help you be more of a lazy genius
in the specific way that you need, here is the quick rundown.
So I think over the summer, if you want an easy read that you can pick up and put down
over and over again and still apply it right away, I would read the lazy genius way.
It is my first book.
It is my best selling book.
It is super simple and helpful.
It is the book that teaches.
is the 13 lazy genius principles so that you can start to lazy genius your life, your own way.
Principles like, decide once, start small, let people in, be kind to yourself, ask the magic
question. And if my math is correct, eight more. It's like having a great pantry in your kitchen
full of ingredients that are really dependable. And then when you need to make a certain meal or
create a specific solution in the case of this metaphor, you have like a lot of great ingredients
to choose from. Now, sometimes you need just one principle, decide once it's going to solve it for
you. Other times, you might combine two or three to make a situation in your life feel a little
easier. So that book released in 2020. I wrote it in 2018 and 2019, which is wild because my kids
at that time were two, six, and eight. That is way different than 10, 14, and 16. So that is a great
for the summer. It feels light and helpful and an easy read to pick up and put down.
All right. Then in like August or September, read the plan. The plan is my book on time management,
specifically our lazy genius version of time management, which does not focus on optimization
and greatness as the goal, that instead it focuses on contentment and wholeness as a person.
We're not trying to manufacture and plan a perfect life.
We're just trying to live.
So the first half of that book, of the plan, is really all you need to focus on right now, if you want just the basics.
So that first half is where I teach the plan pyramid, which is a framework that puts traditional planning into like a kinder context.
Okay.
Now the back half of the book, it will, it's great.
It will help you think through like planning a week and plan a week.
and planning a project and all kinds of planning things. But really, you just need to have a grasp on
the plan pyramid on that acronym plan, prepare, live, adjust, and notice. Not everyone is gifted
at preparation or traditional planning, nor do you need to be. In fact, lazy genius planning is built
on an equal relationship among preparation, noticing what's working, and then adjusting as you go.
some of you are great at noticing people and energies and vibes and what's working. Some of you are really
great at adjusting on the fly and pivoting when something goes awry. Some of you are good at preparing and putting the whole plan in its place. But you need all three skill sets to be a lazy genius planner. To be someone who wants to live every day, not just like optimize and produce every day. That feels like a great book to read going into a busy fall season, even just the first few chapters are a huge.
huge, huge help. So that is the difference between those two books and even when you might want to
read them. So again, you might want to read the Lazy Genius Way this summer, dip in and out while you
dip in and out of the kitty pool with your children. And then when you're getting closer to the fall,
read the first few chapters of the plan to either get a refresher or for the first time a new
understanding of the plan pyramid. Okay. Now before we get into how to deal with a messy house all summer
long. Let's take a quick break to hear from our sponsors, which makes the show free for you to
listen to you. Before we do, this is your quick reminder that we have a podcast recap email that
goes out every other Friday. It's called latest lazy listens. It summarizes the episode.
You don't have to take notes, which is so great, especially on an episode like this that does have
some steps to it. So if you would like to get that recap email, head to the lazy genius collective.com
slash listens. All right, let's get into how to deal with a messy house all summer long.
I'm going to give you three things to remember to help your mindset.
Then I'll share one strategy, one, that will help you keep order in the places that matter.
Then we'll do a quick rundown of some summer house rules that might help keep some chaos at bay.
All right?
So we're going to do mindset first.
Why?
Because how you think impacts what you do.
And you don't need to be doing anything extra or
unimportant in the category of housework when you could be doing things that are extra and unimportant
in better categories this summer like reading and play. All right. So mindset number one,
you will never have a completely tidy house. That's it. That's the end. You will never have a
completely tidy house, let alone a clean one. It's so hard. It's so hard, especially in the summer,
to have every room free of clutter and mess because people are there for
longer. Everybody is eating and playing and taking off socks and you just can't expect a tidy house all the
time. I mean, you can. You can expect it. But when you do, you're going to get mad. Because unmet
expectations are like a whole thing. If you expect a decently tidy house most of the time,
you will be frustrated. And you will take that frustration and you'll turn it into a system
that will fail in three days.
So don't do it.
Just change the expectation.
Expect to have a messy home.
If you expect it, anything cleaner than like that normal baseline of chaos is very exciting.
It's an ice cream on a Tuesday.
So just expect a messier than usual house.
That's number one.
Number two, reframe mess as,
life. Not life is a mess, but mess is life. When the kitchen is full of dishes, it means people are
eating. Eating is life and also that's great. When the living room is covered in toys, mess is life.
It's playing and fun and having a good time at home without screens, mind you. Something you're
probably trying to have less of anyway. Don't resent the mess you get from no screens. It's life.
It's wonderful, curious, playful life.
If the couch is covered in a tangle of blankets and pillows like mine is right now, see that mess as life.
It's a consequence of kids watching something together and being cozy at home.
Don't see laundry as just a mess.
It's life.
It's kids playing outside and getting dirty and having a great time.
Now, listen, I'm not trying to be like Pollyanna over here, even though I do have a lot of optimism in my bones.
But so many of the things that bother you don't have to as much when you think about them differently.
mess is in the eye of the beholder. So behold differently. Expect the mess, like I said in number one,
and then see that mess is evidence of life. You probably want a warm home that your people love to be in.
Well, guess what? You're looking at the evidence of that. It doesn't make cleaning up go away,
but it sure does make it easier. Mess is life. That's number two. And the third mindset is that this
a season. You have been through a messy house before. You will do it again. It will not kill you.
It will eventually end. Now, you might even have a decently tidy house in a couple of days
when you and your crew do like a quick family tidy together. It could last several hours.
Who knows? But the chaos of a messy house, it can, it can lead to like a mournful,
desperate and Shirley vibe where your thoughts are like how tragic this season is. Like if you look
around and it's just the worst of the worst of a messy summer, your season is going to feel
pretty grim. There's just like so much stuff everywhere. But like that is not the moment to mourn
this season. You can. I have to. But I just want you to not stay there. Don't let yourself
stay there for very long in the depths of despair about summer. Remember that everything is
a season and we're going to live in this one right now. We can't change the season itself,
but we can change how we view it. It is where we are. So let's honor it the best that we can.
It'll be over eventually. And one of these days, it'll be over forever. And that will be sad.
Like one of these days, summer with kids is going to be gone. Now, listen, I'm not going to tell you
to, like, treasure every moment because that is too much pressure, but you could treasure a handful of
them, or at least like look at them. Look at some of the moments. Take a deep breath, spot the good
that's here now in this messy summer, and smile at a couple of the moments. This is a season.
And there's some good stuff here if you stop being annoyed long enough to notice them. So those are
the three mindsets to remember that will help you mentally manage a messy house all summer long.
Again, except that you'll never have a tidy house all at once. And if you do, it will.
will not last very long at all. Mess is life, and this is a season. So take some deep breaths,
internalize those. All right. Next comes a piece of strategy to help you tidy what matters.
Okay. It's pretty simple. It comes in two parts. I want you to name which room and which category of
stuff, you want to keep the most tidy the most often. So which room is the best room to give your
tidying energy to every day, both for your own mental health and then for your family's ability
to function? Since you cannot expect to have a tidy house all at once, what room, what single
room would you prefer to be tidy before you go to bed? Which room? Which room? Which room? Which room?
gets the attention when you only have room to attend to one room. You get to decide. But that decision,
that's going to help you this summer. You're going to attend to the room that needs it the most.
Now, it's not the room that needs it the most because it's the messiest. It's the room that needs it
the most for the health and safety of your family and your brain. So like if I had to choose,
it would be the kitchen. I'd rather keep the kitchen mostly clean, especially when everybody goes
a bed like before that than any other room. It's the kitchen. If the living room is messy,
whatever. That feels easier to tidy quickly anyway. Bedrooms, you cannot walk, you cannot barely
see the floor of my daughter's room right now. Granted, she is in the middle of a room clean
out, but good gracious, it is a, it is an obstacle course of the highest proportion. But I don't
care because guess what? My kitchen's clean. That's what I care about.
The rest of it doesn't really matter. So once you decide what that is for you, decide the room that gets your
first attention and maybe your only attention that day, it just makes it easier to let the rest go.
So pick your room. Second, pick your category. This is for all rooms. This transcends rooms.
But what category of items makes you the craziest and would be best to tend to first? So mine is
is dirty socks. I hate dirty socks on the floor. I think it's gross. I don't want to touch them.
And my people, all of them, every single one of them, they leave dirty socks in every room all the
time, especially in the summer. During the school year, when they come in the house and they take
their shoes off and then they put their socks, dirty socks in the in the sock bucket, like the
napkin bucket that I've talked about before. But in the summertime, that does not happen as much.
and there are dirty socks from my husband and all three of my children everywhere.
I can deal with just about anything being out and like messing things up.
It's like we have solutions for this.
I'm a resilient person.
But dirty socks is where I become a person I do not like.
I do not like.
So figure out what that category is for you.
It might be dirty dishes.
So if the dishes in the house stay in a rhythm,
even if the rest of the kitchen and house, like, isn't tidy or clean, you're going to feel better.
Or maybe it's pool stuff.
Maybe you're a pool family and, like, the wet towels and the missing sunscreen and the flip-flops everywhere.
All of that just makes you want to cry.
So that's your category that you're going to put your best energy into.
It could be snack wrappers, dirty tissues, ew, toys, shoes, discarded mail, or like the stack of cardboard boxes from, you know, online.
orders or whatever. So look at your mess and notice what category makes you the most anxious or
frustrated or angry or like motivated to pick it up out of spite. Now we don't like doing things out of
spite as a rule. But it is helpful here in identifying what category you might want to focus on.
Like what do you angrily pick up the most? That is probably your category. So pick your room,
pick your category. Mine is the kitchen.
and dirty socks. What is yours? All right. So let's do just like a quick little recap before we move on to
this next thing. So I want you to remember our three mindsets. Okay. Expect the house to be a mess.
See mess as life and live in the season. Okay. That's the deep breath for your soul. Now you've also
named the room and the mess category that you want to put your best energy into. Great. All right. So next,
I want you to tend to those two things, that room and that category.
with those mindsets in mind, I want you to attend to those one step at a time. No big systems,
friends, one step at a time. My favorite tool to get you started is a house rule. Set house rules is
one of the 13 lazy genius principles from the lazy genius way. And those house rules are how you
keep chaos from getting started. If you can target where your particular category of
mess starts and you put a house rule there to keep that mess from picking up steam, you will keep
the mess that matters at bay. Now, house rules take time, especially if you have more people on board,
that eventually you will start to feel a rhythm in an area that used to feel super challenging.
Now, because you need to start small, which is another lazy genius principle, don't make seven house rules.
and then begin. If you have to work hard to remember all of your house rules, you have too many
house rules. You've started with too many. So start with just one. Try one for a week or two.
See how it works. Let it find a tiny rhythm and then start with another one. Now, I know you're thinking
that like summer is so short and you're going to run out of time. You're going to run out of weeks
to do all these things that you want to make rules about. But here's my counsel on that.
if you create seven house rules right now,
I can almost guarantee by the time you get to the end of the summer,
you may have two, may, maybe have two of the seven.
The bigger you start, the smaller your number will probably get.
But if you flip it, if you start with one this week,
and then you add another every two weeks of the summer after eight weeks,
you're going to have like four or five house rules that are probably working fairly well.
So starting small, it actually gets you more because you can slowly let things grow,
rather than like building something shoddy in a moment of spite.
So take your time.
Plus, every time you start small, you are proving to yourself that you can.
Every small house rule you add every couple of weeks or even months, that is a practice.
That is a practice of being a lazy genius.
You're not rushing to fix it.
You're just paying attention to your most important problem right now and slowly trying to
solve it one step at a time.
Okay.
So back to a messy house during the summer.
I want you to think about a house rule one for either the room that you want to keep clean
or the category you want to keep from taking over your house.
So pick whichever one you think will be the easiest to implement first and just start.
Okay? So you might tell your family that this summer, it matters that the dirty socks stay off the floor because they make you feel sick to your stomach. And it also makes laundry harder since people are likely to run out of socks more quickly if they're not actually in the laundry and getting washed. So this summer, everyone, we're going to have a house rule where if there are socks on the ground, anyone in the family is allowed to shout, socks, and everyone has to come. The sock culprit has to get the socks.
but everyone has to come when socks are screamed,
that can make some people in the group accountable.
And they're like watching for socks because like maybe one sibling does not want to be
interrupted by another kid's dirty socks.
So they're going to be like, hey, dude, your socks are in a living room.
Grab them before mom scream socks and we don't have to run, you know?
Now listen, that's really silly.
But hey, if your most annoying thing is dirty socks and your children,
don't like to be interrupted.
Like, do whatever you can to make sure the dirty socks don't accumulate without anyone else noticing.
Like, make it worth it to them where it's a rule that you have to come running.
And maybe, like, if they don't come running, they have to come and get the socks even if they're not theirs.
And nobody wants to touch other people's dirty socks.
It's so gross.
Again, silly, but single house rule.
And just start and see.
Now, the same is true for a house rule in the room that matters, right?
That's the category that matters.
this is the room that matters. If the most important room is the bathroom, because you only have one
and it needs to be tidy and ready to use every day, then make it a house rule that nothing gets left out.
Like everything in that bathroom has to be put away when you're done. Not everywhere in the house,
just in the bathroom. So if you notice that a kid left their toothbrush on the side of the sink
after they brush their teeth, instead of putting the toothbrush back and the toothbrush holder,
go get the kid.
Say, hey, bud, remember house rule to put away bathroom stuff, and I saw that your toothbrush is
still out.
So can you go take care of that, please?
Like, be kind and direct.
Eventually, kids will be annoyed at having to go back over and over again, and they'll probably
start following the house rule without needing to be reminded because they're tired of
having to go back.
You'll have to put a little more effort in at the top.
to help them see. But stay kind and be patient. They'll come around. One house rule at a time.
I grabbed some house rule ideas that you all have shared over the years to help you think about the
possibilities for your own home as you kind of brainstorm what a house rule could be for your category
or for your room. So I'm just going to run through a few of these and hopefully it'll get some
of your own creative ideas going. I'm just said juices and that's not okay.
All right, so here's one from A. Kirkman about bathrooms. She says, this is brilliant,
you guys. I can't even deal. I lock one bathroom. This is during the summer. I lock one
bathroom. We have two in our house. One my boys use and one my husband and I use. Like all stay-at-home
moms, I have more to clean in the summer and less time to do it. And then there are guests.
So, during the summer, I lock the boys' bathroom and I make them use hours.
This way I have only one bathroom to clean, and I always have a bathroom that is clean and ready when guests arrive.
No more running to scrub the toilet or scrape away toothpaste gunk when I hear a car coming up in the driveway.
This way I have less to clean and I enjoy unexpected guests a lot more.
I mean, lock in a room?
That is some brilliant genius energy right there.
House rule is one bathroom during the summer.
Don't use the locked bathroom.
That's your house rule.
That's great.
Now, is there going to be a transition because the kids are using your bathroom? Yes, of course there will be. That you're choosing what matters more. A. Kirkman would rather have a locked, always clean bathroom and only one other bathroom to clean, even though that one bathroom is probably going to be dirtier because it's four people instead of two, that that's a worthwhile choice because of what matters the most. Changes everything when you name that. Love it. Okay.
Okay. Next one. Amber says, one suction cup hook per person in the showers for all the wet swimsuits
that need to drip dry. It keeps them off my floors. All right. So if your category is dripping
swimsuits, then you're like, holy moly, all the swimsuits, I can't, I can't, and they're driving
you crazy, this is a great idea. This is a house rule. Swimsuits on your hook, right? You can just do that,
Keep that going and everything else is going to feel easier because you're tending to the most
annoying category. All right. Here's one from Kate. To help manage our large family's messy
house all summer, I've created a summer schedule that includes a blitz tidy. So before we go out
and enjoy our day at the lake or adventuring, everyone tidies the house until it's put back together,
usually 10 minutes. That way we aren't coming back to a big mess. So this is great.
and works well for Kate since she has a lot of hands to help tidy. You can also simplify this by
choosing your most important room. That it's not the whole house, right? But before you leave for an
activity, you quickly tidy that room, the one that matters the most. That's the house rule.
Now, if you usually run behind and you don't always have time for the tidy or you feel like it's
being crammed into too small space because you're just trying to get out the door, well, first you
could just build it in, like start getting ready sooner so you have time for the tidy or you tidy
before you start getting ready to leave. You know, that's like the first thing you do. Or if you know
that you're going to leave later in the day, like you can just tidy the most important room anytime
and you know that when you leave, it's going to be tidy. Like two minutes you guys are going to do
wonders no matter when you do them. All right. Here is a tip from book babe. We got a hand-me-down vacuum robot.
now I say, auto is coming so all the things need to get off the floor.
And the kids named the vacuum based on the button on top that says auto mode.
The kids clean up without a fight because it's not me telling them to clean.
It's me helping them save their toys and craft supplies from auto.
So we used to have a robot vacuum.
His name was Sucker Buddy.
And he was the best.
He was the best.
But then we got like a new chair in a rug that had like a really high pile.
and it just made sucker buddy. Sucker buddy did not function anymore. And so we had to put Sucker
buddy away. But robot vacuums are so fun for kids. Like name the vacuum, stick googly eyes on it.
And yes, make it a house rule that when Otto or Sucker Buddy or whatever your name is is coming,
it's time to get the stuff off the floor. It's like a game almost. The response is immediate.
It's so helpful. That is a great house rule. I love this one from Bethany, especially if you are
category is dishes or your room is the kitchen. We eat breakfast outside. It gets us out the door to
play for a few hours before it is too hot. And then we've all burned off some good energy before the
heat drives us in. Bonus, cleaning up breakfast for a 10-month-old and two preschoolers is much
easier out of doors. Isn't that great? House rule is breakfast outside? Done. Like, it checks a lot
of boxes with just one rule. All right, here's another dish related one from Mara. I always wanted to avoid
dirty dishes in the summer, but instead of buying tons of expensive paper plates and going through them
every like three days, I grabbed some food fry baskets from the dollar store, and I found somewhere
to buy a giant pack of restaurant basket liners. I even cut them in half so that they go longer.
And for 90% of the snacks and meals that my kids eat, the paper liners keep the baskets from needing to be
washed it all, and then I just throw away the paper and restack the baskets.
That is a terrific house rule.
Eat your food in a fry basket all summer.
And then maybe you have a rule of like empty your fry basket when you're done.
Or if you have children who eat a lot of ketchup on things and the way that they empty
their fry basket tends to like get the ketchup on the basket because they make the house
rule, like teach them how to throw the paper away.
you know like the house rule is you dump it like you flip it over and dump it or you pick it up
by the corners or you know like that that is there is a way to throw away the food inside or the paper
inside the fry basket so that you don't get ketchup on your fry basket or barbecue sauce or
whatever it is so that's you might start with meals in the fry basket that's your first house rule
the second one is like empty it when you're done so that the kids can use to that and then
a few, when you start to see how they do that, then you might add another one a couple weeks later
where you're like, this is how we empty the fry baskets. House rule is, you know, whatever.
So just add on this and think about how easy, how much easier kitchen cleanup or dishes are
once you slowly implement a house rule like that. And think about how much easier it makes all
the other chores because you have tended well to the thing that matters the most.
And then finally, the room that you might want to tend to is actually your schedule.
Let's just like pretend that maybe your biggest mess happens in your calendar.
It's not really your room.
It's the organization of summertime.
So Katie shared this idea for summer.
Monday through Wednesday, I schedule appointments, doctor appointments, vet, car maintenance,
all those things.
and then I leave Thursday and Friday and the weekend days open for play dates, day trips,
on the fly long weekend trips.
So when my kids ask for a sleepover or a day trip somewhere and I'm not near my paper calendar
because I'm analog, I say, let's look at Thursday or Friday because I know they're going to be
open.
I feel like it's given me a less chaotic summer schedule, which my kids don't even notice,
but I love.
So that's really great.
That's a house rule that says like responsible things.
And you can even add like chores, whatever it is. But like the responsible days for the most part
are Monday through Wednesday and all the fun is going to be Thursday through Sunday. Like that's,
that's a house rule for your schedule. That's so great. So I hope some of these house rules have just
given you ideas. You don't need to like follow them, but they can, you know, spark some ideas for you
for what matters the most for you. Now there, there are just so many ideas in the world. All right.
So don't get hung up on finding the perfect one.
You don't need the perfect house rule.
Just try one in the room that matters the most or the mess that matters the most.
It does not have to be optimized.
It does not have to be the best one ever.
Just pick one and see what happens.
All right.
So to recap, you're going to remember three things.
You're going to expect the mess and not expect everything to be tidy at one time.
It is unlikely.
So just let it go.
Next, you're going to see the mess as evidence.
of life, try that tiny reframe to be kinder about your space and the people who make the mess.
And then third, you're going to live in your season.
This season will end.
So just be here now.
Find the good.
Stay present here and enjoy it.
Okay.
That's your mindset.
Then you're going to pick one category and one room that will get the majority of your
tidying attention.
All right.
If that room is good, the other rooms feel better.
If that category is good, the other categories feel better.
So name those so you can invest your limited time and energy in the best place.
And then set you and your family up well by choosing one house rule to help that category or that room work even better.
Keep the chaos from starting with your house rule.
Make it as small as you can and only start with one.
You can add more overtime.
And that is how to deal with a messy house all summer long.
All right.
It's time for a little extra something.
I have an album project update for you. As a reminder, I'm trying to listen to a ton of full albums
from start to finish in 2026. My initial goal was something like 300 albums split between ones I've
never heard before and others that I definitely have. And as I have said before, I think that number
will prove to be too high that I've still listened to way more full-length albums in the first
half of the year than I ever have in years past. Plus, all the new stuff. There's so much new stuff.
So it's been so fun. At our last update, a couple of months ago,
I was up to 65 total albums for the year. So it was like first quarter, 65. And today I'm at 91,
which is 26 additional albums since that last update. I think I thought originally that I could do
like four or five albums a week, but it's shaping up to be closer to three, which is still great.
So last time I told you about two albums I was loving then, Creature of Habit by Courtney Barnett
and Pumpkin by Georgie Parker. I have listened to both again since then, especially Creature of Habit.
It is just so windows down and it has zero language.
So it's great for car rides with kids that I have four new albums to share with you today
that will be on my regular rotation after 2026 of For Shore, one of which I've listened to,
I think maybe six times already.
It's crazy.
Also, I cannot play clips, which breaks my heart.
Like, I would love to give you the vibe of these.
But it's like a legal thing, you know, so we can't do it.
But just look them up.
Look them up to get your vibe.
Okay, before I share the four, I do have an honorable mention. Go look this up just for the experiment of it. This album is called The Stone Roses by the band The Stone Roses. This album messes with your mind. It was released in 1989. So you'd think it'd be like an 80s sound or at least making its way into the 90s with like big synthy pop vibes or something. Y'all, this album feels like it came out in 2005 in the best way.
It's like groundbreaking.
I do not understand how this music was made in 1989.
It's like 1960s rock meets Weezer.
It is a great album, for one.
It's really great.
That it's also just so bizarre to listen to, like knowing it came out in the 80s in
1989.
Like I even played it for my oldest kid and a couple of his high school friends on a drive
home from school.
And I was like, hey, listen to this.
When do you think this album came out based on the sound?
And they were all like early 2000s, which,
was impressive that they know what that sounds like, but they were right. It sounds early 2000s,
but it came out 1999. It's crazy. So that's the stone roses. Go listen to the stone roses by the
stone roses. Okay, here are my actual four albums to recommend. The first one is not four tiny ears
since there is language, but it's the album group project by Hilo Jack. So Hilo Jack is a group,
it's like a collaborative group made up of three existing artists, right, that got together to make
this really genre-bending album. So I came across them because one of those artists is Clyde Lawrence
from the band Lawrence, who I love. They're the ones who sing What You Want, which is like the best
like energy-making song ever. Oh my goodness, it's so good. Anyway, this album is really fun and surprising.
You've got Clyde, who sounds like Michael McDonald. Then you have this indie rock guy and there's
also a rapper. So it's this really cool, again, genre-bending collaborative.
Great vibes. Love it. Again, does have language. So watch it with the children. That that's
group project by Hilo Jack. I've listened several times. I will listen again. Number two,
music speaks louder than words by Candy Staten. Okay, this came out in 1977. This lady is,
she's been nominated for like several Grammys. Some of the songs are really familiar. Her voice is
spectacular. It's like very funk, soul, a little disco. It's,
such a good time. And if you like musicianship, if you like the actual musicality of music,
like you turn your head at a really great lick or a cool horn arrangement or you make like a
happy grimace when a guitar player like play something super cool, you will love this album.
It is so excellent and really fun for summer. So again, that's music speaks louder than words
by Candy Staten, S-T-A-T-O-N.
Number three is such a sleeper.
The artist is Dominique Adams.
And y'all, she has like 3,000 listeners on Spotify.
That is not a well-known artist.
And I do not understand.
Her album called To Keep, to Keep.
It reminds me of Jacob Collier, but like, smoother.
Her voice is, I mean, it is hot knife through butter.
The style is so.
so interesting and soothing and cool. There's also a lightness to her music that just feels like
the best soundtrack to a rom-com. It's just so good. I don't understand why more people are not
listening to her. I don't even know how I found her. I think it just, the album got served to me on
Spotify. But go listen to the album, To Keep by Dominique Adams. Holy actual Mully. And then
finally, the album that I've listened to, half a dozen times, easy, easy, is Big Flower Like Go Bloom
by Henry Jameson. This is the perfect album for being in the car with kids or at home, but wanting
your own music. It's the easiest listening. It's like incredibly complex, though,
and musically interesting. His voice is great. He's got some great. He's got some
great collabs on there, including there's a song with Jacob Collier. If you like Ben Howard,
some of his songs remind me a little bit of Ben Howard's music, even his voice a little bit,
like very rich and atmospheric, but also very fun and cool. It's just so good. So in my
album project spreadsheet, which I will eventually share at some point, like probably at the end
of the project. So I have two ratings for each album. One for how listening. One, for how listening.
something is. And then another that I call heart rate, which is how much I personally love it.
Because, you know, like some things you love, but they're not easy listens, just like any day.
Or some things are super easy to listen to, but they don't grab you, right? So this album got a nine out of
10 in both categories. I don't think I have any 10 out of 10s yet, which is maybe just too hard
to name a perfect album, but like this could essentially be a 10 out of 10. I don't know.
But it's in both categories. I love it so much. And it's also so easy and fun to listen to,
which is why I've listened to it so many times. So again, the title, Big Flower Light Go Bloom,
Big Flower Light Go Bloom by Henry Jameson. And that is today's A Little Extra Something. And now for
this week's Lazy Genius of the Week. This week we have Julia, who writes, my lazy genius of the week idea
as something I use at work, but can definitely use at home too, especially if you have kids.
I'm an art teacher for young students, and I don't have a lot of time in between classes to
clean up messy projects. So I ordered puppy training pads, and I placed them on the tables to
protect them and catch any liquid spills, paint, mess, et cetera. It saves me so much time,
and usually I don't even have to do more than throw away the pad and move on. Well, listen,
We have never had a P-pad tip before.
So today is a big day.
This is pretty brilliant and also legit funny, depending on the ages of the kids that you're
using this for.
Like, that's a lot of comedy to do your art on a puppy P-pad.
But I can totally see a parent having a pack of these for certain kinds of projects that
allow you to say yes more quickly because the cleanup is not as daunting as it could be.
So, listen, there's a first time for everything.
And I'm happy today is the first time for a P-pad tip.
So thank you so much for sharing, Julia.
And congratulations on being the lazy genius of the week.
And now for a mini pep talk for when you're already tired of a long season.
So the other day, it was just like the second or third day that the boys were home for the summer.
And I was like, oh my goodness, when is it going to be September?
I was like, I was in the very early days.
Like, like barely, barely plural days of a messier than usual house of being interrupted by kids
who always have a question.
Weirdly, Sam's question has evolved from like, can I have a snack?
That's what it used to be.
To can I take the car?
So, like, that's not weird at all.
But I felt it.
I felt the mounting frustration.
And then I realized I was like just two days into the summer.
It was like mildly devastating and also like pretty funny.
that sometimes you're at the start of a long season that's not summer or not funny.
You're in a place that could be way more frustrating than messy kids.
You're dealing with a struggling marriage or a tough relationship with a kid or a job
that you have to just like tough out for another year before you can leave or you can be at the start
of the summer already dreaming of a different kind of day.
So there's not a solution here.
But I do think an important thing to remember is to be where you are.
and look for the good that is here now.
Thinking about how much longer this hard season will last is devastating.
It's discouraging.
There's no good news, really.
And then when you look back at how things once were,
while comforting maybe for like a little bit,
that doesn't offer much either because it's making you wish for something you don't have.
Contentment is hard in a challenging season,
especially when you have like a lot longer to go.
But if you and I can look for a bit of good today, if we can focus on the small things today,
if we can rest today, if we can connect with someone today, it makes today a little better
and tomorrow not quite as daunting. So be where you are, even if you're at the beginning.
Look for the good that's here now. Stay connected to the small things that bring you joy.
And if there aren't any, find some. Listen to music, call a friend, hug your kid, bring coffee to a neighbor,
eat watermelon, like be where you are.
It helps even when you are in the beginning of a really long season.
And that is a mini pep talk for when you're already tired of a long season.
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It does.
It helps more people learn about the show and learn how to be a lazy genius,
We want more of that in the world.
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.
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Head to the lazy geniuscollective.com slash 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, and I'll see you next week.
