
I used to think ordinary was something to escape. Now I’m not so sure.
Coffee brewing. The dog wandering through the kitchen hoping someone drops something. Laundry waiting to be folded. Junk mail piled up on the kitchen table.
Nothing anyone would photograph for social media.
And yet lately, I’ve been thinking that ordinary homes – real ones, lived-in ones – have quietly become something we apologize for. As if the gap between what our homes look like and what we see online is proof that we’re doing something wrong.
I’m not sure that’s true. In fact, I’m becoming more convinced that maybe it isn’t.
____________

When Did Ordinary Become Something We Apologize For?
Here’s what I notice when I scroll: perfectly styled homes, giant kitchens, spotless spaces, beautifully curated lives. And without quite meaning to, I start to absorb a message – my life should probably look more like this.
But most real homes don’t look like that. Most homes look like groceries on the counter and dishes drying beside the sink and shoes piled by the door and dinner cooking while someone asks where their socks are.
That isn’t failure. That’s life.
____________
What Actually Makes a Home Feel Good?
When I think about the homes I’ve loved most, I almost never remember what they looked like.
I remember favorite foods. Warm kitchens. Familiar smells. Laughter. Routines. The feeling of being safe.
Comfort rarely comes from expensive things. More often, I think it’s built – slowly, quietly, repeatedly. It comes from familiarity. From repetition. From knowing exactly where the coffee cups are without thinking.
____________
My Grandparents Understood This

I miss my grandparents a lot. Their home was not extraordinary. It wasn’t huge or trendy or particularly decorated. But they understood something I think many of us are quietly forgetting.
They focused on people.
I remember my grandmother pushing me on the swing tied to the clothesline while freshly washed sheets moved in the breeze. I remember games. Favorite treats. Sitting outside. The feeling that they always had time.
The things that felt so special to me were probably just ordinary Tuesdays for them. They had no idea those small moments would become the things I’d hold closest.
They kept a nice home, yes. But they never acted like the home itself mattered more than the people inside it. And years later, I still use things they taught me – not because the methods were complicated, but because they worked.
____________
I Live Somewhere Between Two Worlds
If I’m honest, this is where I spend most of my time. Between worlds.
Part of me wants slower mornings, simpler meals, less pressure. Part of me still scrolls dream kitchens and imagines bigger rooms and prettier spaces and what life could look like if everything worked out.
I want ordinary. Bit I still dream about beautiful kitchens. I want contentment. But I still have goals.
For a long time I thought these things contradicted each other. Now I’m not so sure. Maybe enjoying ordinary life doesn’t mean abandoning your dreams. Maybe it means refusing to put your life on hold while you pursue them. Maybe I can appreciate today’s kitchen while I’m building tomorrow’s. Maybe I can love this season without pretending I don’t want something better someday.
_____________

Ordinary Life Is Still Life
There are seasons where it feels like real life begins later – after more money, less stress, a nicer house, fewer responsibilities, better circumstances.
But what if this is life? Not the waiting room. Not practice. Not preparation. This.
Sometimes ordinary life looks like being exhausted after grocery shopping but still making dinner. Sometimes it looks like caring for your garden when your body hurts. Sometimes it looks like caring for family when you are tired. Sometimes it looks like reheating leftovers because that is what you have energy for.
The dishes. The grocery shopping. The caregiving. The tired evenings. The coffee. The dog underfoot. The ordinary Tuesday.
These small things rarely feel important while were doing them. And yet somehow they create home.
_____________

Final Thoughts
Perhaps the goal was never to create an extraordinary life. Perhaps it was to notice the beauty already living inside ordinary ones.
I still have dreams. I still want things. I still hope for more. But maybe ordinary was never the enemy.
Perhaps what I miss about my grandparents’ house was never the house itself. Perhaps it was how ordinary life felt inside it.
Maybe ordinary was the thing I was trying to build all along.
from my hearth to yours,
Becky
______________

If this post resonated with you, I’d love to invite you to join The Home Journal.
Every week, I share simple recipes, homemaking encouragement, practical tips, and quiet reminders that home doesn’t have to be perfect to be meaningful.
Join us here and receive simple, practical homemaking for real life.

Leave a Reply