If kids come with stuff… what do we actually do with all of it? How to create kids’ spaces that actually work—for real life. We’re talking functional layouts, calming environments, and systems that help kids take ownership of their space (without you becoming the full-time cleanup crew). We get into the balance every parent is navigating: creating a home that feels good and letting kids be kids. That means normalizing mess, designing for independence, and letting go of perfection in favor of something way more sustainable. You’ll walk away with practical ways to simplify clutter, rethink how kids’ rooms are set up, and build systems that grow with your child—while also making peace with the fact that childhood is a little loud, a little chaotic… and that’s not a problem to solve.
If kids come with stuff… what do we actually do with all of it?
In this episode, Shailey and Katie break down how to create kids’ spaces that actually work—for real life, not Pinterest. We’re talking functional layouts, calming environments, and systems that help kids take ownership of their space (without you becoming the full-time cleanup crew).
We get into the balance every parent is navigating: creating a home that feels good and letting kids be kids. That means normalizing mess, designing for independence, and letting go of perfection in favor of something way more sustainable.
You’ll walk away with practical ways to simplify clutter, rethink how kids’ rooms are set up, and build systems that grow with your child—while also making peace with the fact that childhood is a little loud, a little chaotic… and that’s not a problem to solve.
• A kids’ room should function first—and look cute second
• Design for who your kid is now (and who they’re becoming)
• Skip overly themed rooms—think flexible, livable spaces
• Calm environments support better sleep and regulation
• Create simple “zones” (sleep, play, get ready)
• Choose furniture that can grow and shift over time
• Visibility + accessibility = kids actually using the system
• “Clean your room” is a learned skill—teach it specifically
• Kids are more invested when they help design their space
• Independence grows when kids manage their own stuff
• Mess isn’t a failure—it’s part of childhood
• Expect clutter, then build systems that can handle it
• Fewer items = easier maintenance (for everyone)
• Regular toy edits > one big overwhelming purge
• Your home can be functional and still feel fun
• This phase is temporary—design for sustainability, not perfection
• “Kids come with stuff. That’s not the problem—the system is.”
• “We’re not designing for Pinterest. We’re designing for Tuesday afternoon.”
• “Clean isn’t intuitive. It’s taught.”
• “Mess is expected—not a personal failure.”
• “If they can’t see it, they won’t use it.”
• “The goal isn’t less mess. It’s manageable mess.”
• “Let them have ownership—even if it’s not your aesthetic.”
• “Childhood is loud. Your house can handle it.”
• “Fewer things = fewer decisions = less overwhelm.”
• “You’re not behind. You just need a better system.”
00:00 Breakfast banter + real life check-in
03:40 Why kids’ rooms feel so overwhelming
04:40 Function first: designing spaces that work
12:10 Why we’re rethinking “cute” kids’ rooms
20:40 Creating calm (without making it boring)
23:20 Simple zones that make a big difference
25:30 Furniture that grows with your kid
28:00 Storage that kids will actually use
29:00 Teaching kids what “clean” means
32:20 Managing new stuff coming into the house
35:00 Building independence (without power struggles)
40:00 Expected mess vs problem mess
44:45 Creative, realistic solutions for real homes
52:50 How to actually purge toys (without drama)
57:00 Designing spaces kids want to use
01:08:30 Parenting reflections + what actually matters