 So the house is, uh, it's a little messy. Yes, the house leads have had it with a messy house. The house leads clean house. The house leads are gonna clean house. I remember being a kid and on the weekends it was like Mom, Dad, Adam, or Adam, Eric, the four of us would get together and it would be like, all right, before we do anything else, it is house lead clean time. Yes, we had GI Fridays, which was called General Inspection Fridays where all of us kids, well it was only T&I then, um, or I think tomorrow was a baby then. We would have to go around and clean. All right, we're gonna start downstairs. Ready? One, two, three, go. Are you ready for this? Born ready. I couldn't wait till the kids got this age. So they can freaking help. Careful of the wall. Where are you going with that? Go in the garage. Shoes, put back, look at that. Okay, Rai-Rai. What is your job? To rinse the dishes. You have to rinse. You have to rinse. You ready? Okay. Mom, can I know some people are probably like, you're putting it in the dishwasher. I'm just one of those people. We have an amazing dishwasher, but this is how I was raised doing it. So I'm doing it old school way. That way the dishes are really clean. So you rinse, and mommy puts in the dishwasher. Thank you. Good job, Aiden. Okay, you do it. What is this, babe? What's in this Disney thing? It smells horrendous. What are you doing? Easy brother, easy, easy. 11 years old. Like I said, GI Friday, general inspection. Good job, both my parents. We're in the army, so their attention to detail. It was impeccable. So now it's the same thing with us. All of us kids are extremely clean. Like, annoyingly clean. You can take your parents for that, but my dad used to always say, would you rather be clean or the other way around? Yeah. And then my mom used to say, cleanliness is next to godliness. Nice job back, Aiden. See, you see how fast we got this done, you guys? You know how you do that? I'm afraid this is going to go everywhere. Aiden, you're not doing it right, baby. He is confidently what, Mer? At least he's trying, but the thing is, here, you almost did it. Good job, bud. All right, all right. One minor problem right here. What's that? You know what the problem is? It's not plugged in. Aiden, it's no matter to you. All right, it's vacuuming with nothing. Good job, Aiden. What are you doing right now? What are you doing right now? I'm picking a water bottle for oranges. We've got the kitchen down here. You're happy with the way it turned out? What do we have to do next? So mommy's going to grab the shoes, and now we head up to the disaster zone. Are you responsible for any of this? Yeah. You are? At least you admit it. The one clean was that one, because that one's already clean. Do you want to see that one already clean? This one's already clean? Yep, that's the guest room. It's all clean. We have cookie wrapper, cookie wrapper. I wonder where that's from. Bag of daddies. Those are actually, that's actually my paperwork. That is not my stuffy. Yep, junk over here. And now this is my fault. This is daddy's office. We're actually working. I'm thinking from the garage that I wanted to go through. So I've got to clean this up as well. Oh, wow. Right about your room is messy. Are you ready to start cleaning it? Let's close your drawer. Do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do. You got dirty clothes right there, but dirty clothes with a hamper. This is all this stuff will go. This is a lot of stuff. All of a sudden she goes down there? I don't think this is Elsa's clothes. The sad thing is I know these aren't Elsa's clothes. Let it go. Let it go. Cleaning up your room. Say that to the camera. After all these things go, I got Pocahontas. We got Peppa Pig. We got Belle. We've got... You look pretty good, sweetie. Yeah. And I got to do your bed. Ready? Okay, so get off the bed. We can't make the bed if you're on the bed. What do you think, Loma? What happened to your job? Amazing. The only one that's spread is in the cleaner. But you did a great job making it. Are you looking at yourself in the mirror? Yes. Okay. Great job. This looks amazing. When was the first time you had to clean the bathroom? Babe, I told you when. I was like 11. That was GI Friday. Yes. What was the worst thing about cleaning bathrooms? We had to do it with a toothbrush to get down by the toilet. That's why I'm very clean with toilets now. We literally had to get all in the crevices of the toilet. And that was not fun. With a toothbrush? Yeah. Do you think you're going to make your kids do the same thing? No. I won't do that. But I will tell you. The thing about a toothbrush is you can get in the tiny places. So we obviously didn't use it after that. So the toothbrush was specifically for that area. But I'll wait until they get a little bit older, like 11 or 12, when I have them actually cleaning behind their own toilets. It just teaches them to make sure that when they have their own place, this is an area that should stay clean. Because that's the worst when you go over to somebody's house and you want to use a restroom and you see it. Ready for your room? Ready for your room? Right, right. I'm going to help. Yes. Go. Go, Ray. I'll get some light that you can see. Let there be light. This looks great. Yeah, I just wanted to look, you know. Okay. Mommy, does this board stand, or does this board go down? The board, if we're cleaning up, the board has to go down. Okay. Okay. I'll start reading to you guys every day again. Mommy, I love reading. That was so much fun. You can read to me. I can read to you at night. That'll be our thing, okay? We always think we're cleaning up in the house. His sheets blow in the dark. They're amazing. We're missing something. Okay. Next room. Let's go. Let's get out of here. Next room. Come on. Is it pretty messy? Yeah. Good job, Ryan. Let's put all the cardboard away and all this paper away. What? You got to help me do it, guys. If you don't help me do it, I'm not going to clean it. So you guys have to help me do it. I have to help you? Yeah, you do have to help me do it. Okay. Who's for these? These do, they do, too. And then anytime we eat it, these. You ate those? Yeah. You eat them? Yeah. But because I'm going to put this on, I'm going to do it. When I was young, I always chose to clean outside with my dad. So I would do the cars, the yard. And my brother would always be the inside one to like, you know, vacuum and clean the counters with my mom. We actually split the chores. We did everything. So T and I, we, we would do general inspection Fridays, but which is basically cleaning the entire house. The living room, waxing furniture. I don't know if you guys use pledge. We use pledge. What's that stuff called? Old. Famous. Old spice. No. Old English. Old English. Old English. Yes. I love the way that smell. I think my favorite one was like the lemon smell. I love doing it with Tia though. Like the coolest thing is, is I always had a partner. I didn't want to do with my brother. He wanted to do it by himself. He didn't want to do it with me. So I was, I was content with doing my own thing. But man, every Friday, but if you think about it, they were very smart because the weekends, we always had a clean house. So on Fridays, that's when everything would be cleaned. I remember coming home from school, wait to do our homework on the weekends. When you have homework on Fridays, we literally come home from school, take off our backpacks, put on our play clothes and clean. I think it's, it's, it's a great, I think it's a great value to instill in your children because it teaches them to take care of their things. And that, and that's the thing about, you know, my mom and dad growing up, even if it was a barrette in our hair, it didn't matter how small, how, I don't want to say cheap or insignificant. They taught us how to take care of our belongings and those values I still have and I want to instill within my children. My parents, my parents are the same way. They came up from nothing. So we took care of things. And if one of our things got broke, we're left out in the rain, which my brother was famous for. I was famous for going outside and getting everything put away before the rain came. My brother just left crap out and he wouldn't get a new one. And, you know, I always kept, kept my stuff, took care of it that way. And it didn't matter if you can afford it. No, no. It's just, no. Take care of your stuff. And then my grandma, my grandma and grandpa came through the Great Depression. So they took care and have everything. So it was all about keeping things clean. I will say this. I am officially done with slime. With kids. Putty. Yeah. Sand. Done, done, done, done, done, done. So did you guys enjoy your, your cleanup day? Of course. What was your, what was your favorite part, right, right? My favorite part was clean. Do you know what mommy learned throughout this entire experience? It's water. No. Wait, you want to know what I learned? What did you learn? Everyone knows where things go. So there should never be an excuse for you not to pick up your toys. What about you, Aiden? What was your favorite part? Sleeping. Sleeping was your best? Sleeping was, you, you are an amazing sleeper buddy. Amazing sleeper buddy. Guess who's an amazing sleeper? Back you were. In the Maury family. Mommy. Mommy. So you got it for me. Let's go. Hey, right, right. Are you going to keep your room cleaner now? No. Hey, at least she's honest. We did it together. We did it together. Wasn't that fun? Wasn't that fun? Hey, at least we tried. You have to start somewhere. And like I said, the one thing that I noticed is that you're capable. Of messing the house up. And cleaning it up. What do they have to do? They have to help.