Less Stuff, More Joy

Cindy Tsai-Schultz (Alison’s mom) strikes again with a witty and inspiring blog. She shows the way supporting Nia House’s Yard Sale can bring you joy in life. Thank you, Cindy.

With four hours left before Alison and I needed to board a flight to Colorado, nothing was ready. Snow and ski gear strewn on the floor of our bedroom.   I was cranky and sweaty and I needed to make lunch for the kids, walk the dog, clean the house and finish doing laundry so I can pack for the trip. Peter was in LA and was going to meet us in Colorado in a few days so I was solo with tons of snow and ski gear and kid for this trip.

FEAR overtook and I FREAKED.

I pulled it together and packed for Alison: regular clothes, ski clothes, ski gear, books, dolls, crafts, car seat, food for the plane, and iPad. Check.

Packing for myself was less than stellar. I did pack ski essentials – skis, boots, poles, snow jacket and pants, socks. The rest, not so good. 10 days in Vail with one t-shirt, one yoga pant, and a sweater and the clothes I wore on the plane.

But once we got to our final destination, the freak-out was long from my memory. Even with my poor packing skills. Vail was awesome.

This morning after hitting the snooze button one too many times, I was looking around and I realized that we have a lot of stuff. And most of what I do in my spare time is managing stuff. I am the official family stuff getter and stuff manager. And I’m don’t like it.

This got me thinking. In Vail, we were in a very small condo. There wasn’t much room for stuff, which was good because we didn’t have much stuff. The grocery store was a 3.5 mile walk (we didn’t have a car) so we went once, stocked up and cooked what we had. When we weren’t on the slopes, we had a great time – talking, eating, and playing. No one felt deprived, bored, or hungry.

Can I bring some of that back to Berkeley? Can I spend most of my spare time talking, eating and playing instead of being the stuff manager?

I’ve been reading The Sweet Spot, Finding Your Groove at Home and Work by Christine Carter (Senior Fellow at the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley). One of the take away messages is – we make too many decisions in our daily lives. We need to save our brainpower for the larger and more important decisions and the small less important stuff can be on autopilot.   For example, what we wear. We have a closet full of clothes but nothing to wear. Christine Carter suggests designing your clothing around a “uniform.” The rest goes away.

Marie Kondo, the new organizational guru from Japan says to discard everything that does not “spark joy,” after thanking the objects that are getting discard for their service.

Thank you stuff for your service. Good-bye. More joy, less stuff.

This morning, I put large plastic bins around the house. If there’s something that I haven’t used, don’t wear, or doesn’t spark joy it’s going in the bin and going to Nia House for the Annual Yard Sale.


The Yard Sale is May 2, less than a month away. 

Clean out your closets and have more joy.

Decorative Cement Walkways

A group of three children and a teacher went on a neighborhood stroll to collect leaves. With the help of Scott, Esme’s dad, and with the natural falling of leaves from our avocado tree, the collected and fallen leaves laid in the wet cement of our campus walkway. (Yes, the cement mixers returned!) Beautiful leaf imprints now adorn the walkways of our new toddler campus. It is easy and exciting to imagine the toddlers thrill at discovering these. This will happen so soon!

Foundation

Not one, but two cement mixers welcomed children during their arrival Nia House. A huge tube pumping cement from the cement mixer to the open dug out lot had to be hurdled to pass through the sidewalk. In toddler and preschool life- this is living. For staff and long-time supporting families- this is happening. The foundation for Nia House’s toddler campus was laid.

Sunday Mornings

Sunday mornings are special times at our house. We are greeted in bed by our 3 and 6 yr olds! We aren’t in a hurry to eat, get dressed, grab lunch boxes and get out the door as part of our regular routine. So, It’s our time to relax. While in bed, we then discuss what we want to make together for breakfast. Most Sunday mornings the decision is bacon and eggs, pancakes, waffles or muffins. Willem and Evelyn are really great helpers (after some initial work!) and can almost make it themselves. They know most of the ingredients, where to get the mixing bowl and spoon, the measuring cups and stools or chairs so they can properly do their job! As they grow, their level of skill and independence has also increased. We then enjoy our delicious breakfast while we talk about our plans for the day. It’s a great way to start the morning!

Thank you, Jeff, Laurin, Willem, and Evelyn for sharing your Sunday morning with Nia House! It would be fun to hear from the community- How do you do Sundays?

 

Berkeley Project Day and Parent Work Day- Success!

On Saturday Nia House hosted a very successful Berkeley Project Day and Parent Work Day. Windows were washed, repairs made, plants pruned, walls painted and more. In short, Nia House was bustling!

Thank you parents for your hard work and presence to your children’s school. Brazil and Xochi were proud to know that their mom, Pilar, painted the walls. Daphne lit up when she learned that her dad, Chris, changed the light bulbs! Though the children weren’t present at the workday, they observe the school improvements and also appreciate your help.

Berkeley Project Day volunteers, we appreciate your enthusiasm and hard work. It is invaluable to have community members support our work. We hope you had fun and know that you are always welcome back. We certainly enjoyed you all.

P.Diddy, Julia Child, Prince Harry, & Gabriel Garcia Marquez

What do Julia Child, P.Diddy, Prince Harry, and Gabriel Garcia Marquez have in common? Each holds an education inspired by Dr. Maria Montessori. It is exciting, and not all too surprising, to see that some of the most innovative and creative minds have been taught using the very methods used here at Nia House.

 “Is it a coincidence that many of the mavericks on the leading edge of innovation and creativity in our culture are Montessori graduates? To the millions of Montessori students, families and supporters around the world, the answer is obvious. Montessori offers an education for life – and with that come the skills needed to succeed in our ever changing global society.”

http://mariamontessori.com/mm/?page_id=571

Here’s a list of some famous Montessori educated people:

Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Founders of Google

Sean Combs, Puff Daddy

Jeff Bezos, Amazon Founder

Jimmy Wales, Founder of Wikipedia

Julia Child, chef

Steph Curry, NBA superstar

There are more! To see a longer list, check out:

http://www.mslf.org/famous-montessori-students/

“When Barbara Walters, who interviewed Google founders Messrs. Page and Brin in 2004, asked if having parents who were college professors was a major factor behind their success, they instead credited their early Montessori education.  ‘We both went to Montessori school,’ Mr. Page said  ‘and I think it was part of that training of not following rules and orders, and being self-motivated, questioning what’s going on in the world, doing things a little bit differently.’”

 http://blogs.wsj.com/ideas-market/2011/04/05/the-montessori-mafia/

We are incredibly eager to see what will become of our current Nia House students and will soon share the accomplishments of some our graduates. Stay tuned.

Pictures taken from:

Julia Child  

Puff Daddy

Gabriel Garcia Marquez:

Prince William and Prince Harry

Maria Montessori

 

Demolition

These last few days have been filled with excitement, cupcakes, important milestones and hard work.

Just this morning (Monday, November 10th), an excavator arrived on a flatbed truck and in about an hour, the site of our new school building was leveled. A few of us watched and cheered as the excavator dug into the old building, taking claw-fulls of old house down to the ground. We now have a site that is nearly ready for more of Nia House.

Check out this stop-motion video, taken by one of our Board members:

Groundbreaking Ceremony

On Friday night, we celebrated with the school community during Nia House’s official Ground Breaking Ceremony. Mayor Tom Bates, Senator Loni Hancock, Nia House Founder Tia Waller and Board President Jeff Vincent helped commemorate the event, offering words of encouragement and recognition of Nia House’s journey.

Throughout the Ground Breaking Ceremony, families participated in a photo shoot with the plan of including their photos in our very own Nia House time capsule. If you missed our Ceremony and still want to participate in the time capsule, please get in touch- we’d love to include you!

Thanks to everyone who helped celebrate our ground breaking. What a weekend it’s been! Special thanks to the Ridolfi family for baking the ceremonial cupcakes.