December 22, 2024

"I’ve gotten so lazy with my youngest one, because there’s so many, that at night I put him in his clothes for the next day..."

"So, he has dinner, he takes his bath, but then I’ll be like, 'Hey, dude. It will save an extra five minutes if we get dressed now and then you can sleep later,' and I can sleep later, wink wink."

Said the celebrity Tori Spelling, quoted in "Tori Spelling Gets Backlash for Dressing Her Son for School the Night Before—But Should She?"

That's in Parents, last September, and I'm seeing it because it's linked in a new article in New York Magazine, "On the Internet, Everyone’s a Bad Mom."

This article goes into much more serious problems with "momfluencers" and the people who sic the authorities on them, but I just want to talk about the classic life-hack discovered by Tori Spelling and millions of other moms and dads: For young children, there is no real pajamas/playclothes distinction. The important thing is not to put the child in bed with dirty clothes, but if you've given the child a bath, you can dress him or her in clean clothing that is completely soft and comfortable, and the child can go to bed, sleep through the night, and get up fully dressed for the day. Just add shoes.

The trick is to find suitable clothing for this dual purpose and to put the clothes in the laundry after one day's use. The main reason not to do this is if you think the ritual of assembling one's outfit in the morning teaches valuable lessons. I'm giving this post my "laziness" tag only because Spelling said "lazy." I don't think it's lazy. I think it's smart.

41 comments:

Wilbur said...

I would've never thought of that.
Seems time-efficient but I'm sure there are people with objections of several sorts.

Roger Sweeny said...

Certainly not lazy. But different clothes for bed and verticality provides a nice re-inforcement that in bed you're supposed to sleep and after you get up, you're supposed to stay awake.

rhhardin said...

Sleeping in your clothes works if the dog has diarrhea and so asks to be taken out every hour or so. Just slip on shoes.

Dixcus said...

Yes, she should get all the backlash. What a horrid mother.

Kate said...

Spelling's life hack is predicated on the notion that a government agency should dictate when a child and parent wake, and that because it's such an early start time a hectic morning becomes the norm.

Kevin said...

Biden's handlers take note!

reader said...

I think this would be kid specific. My son was a very warm sleeper. He would get sweaty and his pajamas would be damp and oily. They would dry a little gritty from the salt in his sweat. I would not want him running around in those clothes after he woke up. He may still sleep this way. Even as an adult my sister sleeps this way.

Imagine wearing your gym clothes the rest of the day after a hard sweaty workout. That’s fine if you’re going to be alone but not if you’re going to be close contact with others.

Cappy said...

Always take celebrity advice. /sarc

ronetc said...

From my childhood, just go to bed washed and in underwear, dress next morning. Still only one clothing change.

Dave Begley said...

She has 5 kids. I looked it up. Two are Goths.

Koot Katmandu said...

Seems like a good Idea to me.

Aggie said...

Maybe it's nobody else's business, but especially, mine.

gilbar said...

the Key Takeaway is:
make Sure your parent is an important Film Exec, then YOU will get rolls.

David53 said...

"For young children, there is no real pajamas/playclothes distinction."

Really? Her child is 7, probably in the second grade. I think there is a definite distinction.

Jamie said...

As a child in Iowa, I used to sleep with the next day's clothes in bed with me in the winter, and dress under the covers in the morning. Much warmer!

n.n said...

A wrinkle and time.

tim maguire said...

Some kids at my daughter’s high school attend in their pyjamas and I judge them and their parents for it. But everybody sleeps in their day clothes sometimes and I don’t see any reason to object to making it a habit.

Mary Beth said...

Some people, even at a young age, are prone to insomnia. Having a clear delineation between bedtime behaviors and clothing and waking behaviors and clothing can help develop good sleep habits and patterns.

Being dismissive when you clearly haven't given it much thought is telling. Just sayin'.

Peachy said...

she too busy? wha? doing what? getting botox injections?

Peachy said...

A story like this from a struggling single parent on a fixed income - then I'd buy it.

Peachy said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Ice Nine said...

Well, that's nice - the kid wears sweaty, wrinkled clothes all day. Wait, what did she say...to save five freakin' minutes in the morning?!

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

What happened to Torry Spelling Consuela De La Morrela?

Did Trump get to her?

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

In case you are wondering.

Mason G said...

"It will save an extra five minutes if we get dressed now and then you can sleep later,' and I can sleep later, wink wink."

But it doesn't save five minutes. If you didn't dress him the night before, you could go to bed five minutes earlier.

john mosby said...

Of course, Joey B saved parent-kid prep time with shared showers….

JSM

JaimeRoberto said...

Of course it's also possible that she's joking.

Ficta said...

Pioneering computer scientist Larry Wall said the three virtues of a great programmer were: Laziness, Impatience and Hubris

Rocco said...

At age 7 he is old enough to know to automatically put his PJs on after his bath all on his own.

JaimeRoberto said...
"Of course it's also possible that she's joking."

Or that.

Leslie Graves said...

This is why https://www.hannaandersson.com/ and its cheaper knockoffs exist, and why I shop there.

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

Humor was a vax victim. Didn’t you hear?

Readering said...

For me it would have meant wearing a tie to bed

Leora said...

I tried to do this on my own when I was seven but my parents objected.

PM said...

The high school kids where I live wear - what appears to be - pajama bottoms to class. So that's the downstream upshot.

Derve Swanson said...

Why do all the people without kids/grandkids/nieces and nephews care a whit about how other people are raising theirs? Stop being so judgemental.

This is why y'all down have any children in your down line... Stop it. The mothers do not like being judged anymore than you did. Get another hobby.

MacMacConnell said...

Remember the Ivy League girl toting a mattress to class? Ivy League, "best and the brightest"!

Deep State Reformer said...

Well, THAT kid is going to have issues.

NotWhoIUsedtoBe said...

I did it for the kid that took forever to get dressed. It's better than being late or yelling at your kid in the morning.

Joe Bar said...

We used to do that in college. But I went to a military school where you had 5 minutes to formation.

Aught Severn said...

This comment deserves to be AITA'd on reddit. I would be interested in the consensus.

Aught Severn said...

We used to do that in college. But I went to a military school where you had 5 minutes to formation.

Amother great trick was to use shirt stays on your sheets under the mattress, then only sleep on top of them so you never had to actually make your bed, only fold the blanket...