Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Out like a lamb?

A stampede of lambs, maybe! Golf ball sized hail. Maybe a bit bigger. Followed by almost 2 inches of rain in about 15 minutes time. Followed by pea sized hail that mostly covered our driveway! We have heard and felt baseball sized hail before so I am pretty sure it wasn't that bad. And... there is more on the way! But the day is lovely today and was made even lovelier by the company of friends who are cozier than spring! The children played together in the soggy park and we enjoyed the warmth of the sun and pleasant conversation. I can't think of a better way to say goodbye to March and hello to April!

OK, I could do without the hail. Have a lovely Tuesday!

Monday, March 30, 2009

Monday Minutes

Week 8 (and 7)

OK. Who let me forget to post this last week? Now I can't remember what I did. I know I did 2 three mile walks and 1 four mile and I think I made it to Curves once although I can always check with them later.

Sunday, Mar. 30:

Monday, Mar. 31:
Curves

Tuesday, Apr. 1:
2 mile DVD

Wednesday, Apr. 2:
Curves

Thursday, Apr. 3:

Friday, Apr. 4:
Curves

Saturday, Apr. 5:

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Next, please!

Elizabeth Foss shared this blog post talking about the newest Google Reader gadget. It is great! You add the "Next" button to your bookmarks bar and it takes you to the blog post that is next in your Google Reader line up. So now, I don't have to create tabs of all those posts that I want to go leave a comment on, I am already there!

The first time I tried it, I only had 3 new items. When I clicked on the last one, I wondered what would happen if I clicked "next" again. See for yourself! Gotta love computer nerds!

Next! >>

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Teacups For a Season

One of the changes we made when we cleaned out the girls' room was to move their teacup collection. Husband's mom has been giving all of her granddaughters a teacup every year for their birthday since they were very little. I used to have them displayed hanging on a diamond patterned wall in their room. They have been on a shelf in the closet since an unfortunate door slam lessened their numbers (only by one, thank goodness!). When we relocated them to a more convenient cabinet near the kitchen, we decided to choose a few to set out and display over the kitchen sink. Since they are growing up (sniff, sniff) and proving themselves to be more responsible they chose one to use for each season when they feel like having a cup of tea or hot chocolate. The Mary Englebreit teacups in the middle said S-P-R-I-N-G to them. Me too!


P.S. Don't you love the fire extinguisher in the far corner of my window box? I think it adds that little something extra to the picture. Hah!

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Annunciation Waffles

The children informed me that we had to have waffles today. Why? Well, it said so on their Learning Calendar. Why? Because it's International Waffle Day. Why? According to the calendar, it originated in Sweden where it is known as Vaffeldagen. March 25 is "the day where Swedish women set aside their winter tasks of chopping wood and knitting, and begin their spring tasks by preparing waffles". Again, I asked... why?

Because it is the Feast of the Annunciation (known as "Our Lady's Day" or Varfrudagen).

Truly!

Isn't that just the best? When you discover a holiday's holy origins!

Now, if you didn't know this tidbit of information in time to make waffles for breakfast, don't worry. According to this website, Swedish waffles are closer to their Belgian cousins and are often served as afternoon treats or for dessert. And since it is a solemnity and we are "fairly commanded to celebrate" my kids say...break out the whipped cream!

Here is a recipe for traditional Swedish crisp waffles or Frasvafflor:

Frasvafflor (Swedish Crisp Waffles)
(from Emma Olsson)
about 10 waffles
1 1/2 cups flour
1 cup water
pinch of salt
1 1/2 cups whipping cream
3 T. butter, melted and cooled

Stir together flour, water and salt. Let rest at room temperature for about an hour. Add the butter and mix well. Whip the cream and fold into the batter.

Give the waffle iron plenty of time to warm up before you pour in the first waffle. Be prepared to spoil the first one. Think of it as priming the pump or firing a test shot, and you won't be as anxious. The reliable key to when the waffle is done is not when the iron's light goes out, but when steam stops emerging from it. Heat your regular oven to 200 degrees F and set a rack inside. As the waffles are baked, lay each one on the rack in a single layer to keep them warm while you cook the rest.

For a Swedish presentation, serve with more whipped cream, perhaps with some blueberries stirred in, or with lingonberry jam.



BTW, it is NOT National Waffle Day. No, no, no! Don't get caught up in that controversy. I think those people are considering joining the Soda Bread Task Force. As far as I know, it hasn't happened ...yet. Still, you might want to toast your Eggo's in the basement or with blackout curtains drawn.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Our apologies...



There's a bright golden haze on the metal.
There's a bright golden haze on the metal.
The pollen count's high as an elephant's eye...
An' everyone looks like they've had a good cry.

Oh what a miserable morning.
Oh what a miserable day.
I've got this congested feeling...
I'm gonna be hacking all day.

Can you tell my husband enjoys the musical stylings of this guy?

Spring is in the air!


You Are Chirping Birds



You are a very caring person. You especially feel for innocent beings, like animals and children.

You are keyed in to the world and very peaceful. You believe that everyone is connected.

You remain focused and in the moment. You are not easily distracted.

You have a good memory, especially for things that you hear. You listen carefully.

My husband would probably disagree with the "not easily distracted" part, unless I was working on a project. Then I do tend to be very single focused. What's funny is that while I complain that I don't have a very good memory, I would have to agree that my audio memory is better than my visual memory. I can recognize people by their voices better than I can by their faces.

HT: Dawn and Jessica (was anybody really surprised with their results?:)

Monday, March 23, 2009

Here's a peek...

... at the little projects that were keeping us busy.

Headbands made entirely from scrap.

And totally reversible!

Rocking chair cushions for Baby O (or rather, for her mama, papa and big sister) I tried to match the colors and patterns in the nursery theme they picked out... Jungle Luv! The dominant colors in the bedding were the pinks but we painted the room a pretty yellow called Pale Daffodil (which I see is very popular this season) and I thought the stripes tied the blues and greens in nicely.

The Quilties can be seen below and I'd show you the curtains, but the pictures turned out the way you'd expect a picture of a window to turn out. They aren't much to look at anyway, being plain white muslin. We just wanted something to help help diffuse the direct sunlight that streams through those windows. The neat part is that I hung them with Velcro so they can be removed in the winter when we relish all of that glorious sunlight.

That's all for now. More projects are on the way!

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Our little steps for St. Joseph

I might have an olive complexion, or at least I used to when I was younger, but there is not a drop of Italian in my heritage or Husband's. But we do love St. Joseph and since we were given a "starter kit" for a St. Joseph's Altar, we decided to do it in whatever little way we could.

So, in reading about this tradition, it seems as though the underlying purpose (besides giving thanks to a powerful intercessor) is to share our bounty with others in our community and especially those less fortunate. The offerings were gathered, enjoyed and then shared with the poor but if you try to share a dish of manicotti and some poached fish with a food pantry today, you will be denied. They can't accept breads made to look like lambs unless Dolly Madison made them and they come individually wrapped. So, instead we talked about the traditional offerings and we looked at this cut and color version. Then we went to the store to see what we could find that would be a good representation. You can see our version up above. Sardines, Italian style green beans, canned tomatoes, biscotti, sparkling grape juice, orzo, animal crackers and more. Everything, except the strawberries, will be gathered up tomorrow and taken to the food pantry on our way to Mass.

It may not be traditional, but it works for us! Happy Solemnity to you and your working men!

PRAYER TO ST. JOSEPH THE WORKMAN
Composed by Pope St. Pius X
O glorious St. Joseph, model of all those who are devoted to labor, obtain for me the grace to work conscientiously, putting the call of duty above my natural inclinations, to work with gratitude and joy, in a spirit of penance for the remission of my sins, considering it an honor to employ and develop by means of labor the gifts received from God, to work with order, peace, moderation and patience, without ever shrinking from weariness and difficulties, to work above all with purity of intention and detachment from self, having always death before my eyes and the account that I must render of time lost, of talents wasted, of good omitted, of vain complacency in success, so fatal to the work of God. All for Jesus, all through Mary, all after thine example, O Patriarch, St. Joseph. Such shall be my watchword in life and in death. Amen.

Small Successes (9)

FaithButton

1.
We started work on our very first St. Joseph's altar. This is not a tradition that we are familiar with but we are doing it in our own small way, with the help of some sweet friends. It should be completed later today.

2.
I have completed sewing three Quilties, two angel dolls, one set of cushions for a rocking chair that never had any, one pillow head rest for the same rocking chair, one set of curtains for two very odd shaped windows in our schoolroom to help keep the hot summer sun from blinding us in the afternoon and two fun headbands for my beautiful girls based on this tutorial that MommaLlama shared with me. And just yesterday, my daughters asked if I was going to sew their Easter dresses this year. Wimper, wimper, sigh.

3.
I stayed on track with my exercise even though a week of sewing projects and other projects threatened to derail it.

Check out everyone else's successes, big and small, here.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Hide your raisins...

...and don't even think about zesting those oranges! Did you know there is a Society for the Preservation of Irish Soda Bread? They take their soda bread seriously!

If your "soda bread" has raisins, it's not "soda bread! It's called "Spotted Dog" or "Railway Cake"! If it contains raisins, eggs, baking powder, sugar or shortening, it's called "cake", not "bread." All are tasty, but not traditional Irish Soda Bread!

Would "French Bread" (15th century) still be "French Bread" if whiskey, raisins, or other random ingredients were added to the mix? Would Jewish Matzo (unleavened bread) used to remember the passage of the Israelites out of Egypt still be Matzo if we add raisins, butter, sugar, eggs, and even orange zest? So why is traditional "Irish Soda Bread" (19th century) turned into a dessert and labeled "Traditional Irish Soda Bread?" OK, maybe you don't like the analogy, but you get the point!
And their history:

It shocks some people to learn that St. Patrick wasn't holding a slice of Irish Soda Bread in one hand while he drove the snakes out of Ireland with the other. Soda bread came long after St. Patrick in the mid 1840's when bicarbonate of soda (Bread Soda) as a leavening agent was used in Ireland to work with the "soft" wheat grown there.
The other shock to Irish-Americans is that their Irish ancestors who left Ireland during the Famine years did not bring a recipe for Irish Soda Bread with them. Irish soda bread became popular in Ireland after the Famine years. If your Irish ancestors had the good sense to leave Ireland for America during the Famine years, they never learned about making soda bread in Ireland.
Poke around there and you will find some interesting tidbits, a lot of history, a wee bit of Irish ire but most importantly, some really good recipes. We made the white bread yesterday and even though I did not have cake flour or a dutch oven, it turned out really good! But please don't tell THEM!

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

What's a Lert?


Your Shamrock Says You Are Alert



You have a logical mind, and you pay a lot of attention to details. You are very organized.
Sometimes you find thinking creatively to be a challenge. You prefer to deal with the facts at hand.
You don't really consider yourself a lucky person. In your view, people create their own luck.
You are traditional, easy going, and appreciative of the simple things in life.


Dawn is in a playful mood this morning and it was infectious. It was exactly the kick in the backside I needed to get me in the mood to celebrate today's feast day. You see, I wasn't that excited about St. Patrick's Day this year mostly because my children decided to give up treats for Lent and there are soooooooo many fun treats to make today. So, I was pouting... until this morning when I saw Dawn's link to a copycat McDonald's Shamrock Shake and realized that we defined treats as cookies, cake and candy. Nobody said nothin' about milkshakes!

Now, if you are looking for a healthy snack to have today, this Irish Flag Veggie Tray that we made a few years ago for a homeschool party is very impressive and super easy to throw together.

We are going to have fun making Jennifer's Trinity craft and spending the day looking for signs of spring. I got side tracked from my Lenten cleaning by having so many sewing projects last week (Quilties and cushions and curtains, oh my!) but the kitchen was cleaned yesterday and tending the freezers today should give me plenty of time to catch up on what got missed last week. Have a lovely day friends!

Monday, March 16, 2009

Monday Minutes

Week 6

Sunday, Mar. 15:
Still sore from painting! I know, it sounds like I'm a wimp but I was up and down a ladder, all over the walls, and balancing on top of the bed from 9AM until 6PM. Not to mention cleaning the most complex, puzzle-like window I have ever seen, hanging a valance and moving furniture. But Baby O's nursery looks beautiful, and now my friend Liz is all ready for the room's sweet little occupant to arrive in a few weeks! We all can't wait to meet the new addition to their family!

Monday, Mar. 16:
Don't ask!

Tuesday, Mar. 17:
2 fast miles

Wednesday, Mar. 18:
Curves

Thursday, Mar. 19:
4 fast miles

Friday, Mar. 20:
2 miles

Saturday, Mar. 21:

Saturday, March 14, 2009

You can thank me later!

Those of you who live here in North Texas and who have been stuck inside thanks to the freezing cold rain that has been blanketing us for the past three days can now safely venture outside for the rest of the month without fear of any surprise torrents of rain soaking you because I put an end to all of that... by purchasing new umbrellas yesterday! Have no fear. Your spring will be sunny and mostly dry. I can't promise that there won't be any rain, just that you will never find yourself surprised and soaked.

Are you laughing? Really. This is not a joke. You see, I first discovered my meteorological powers back when I was studying in Europe. We were given a ten day holiday (like a Spring Break) to travel anywhere we wanted to provided we could get there and back in ten days. Some friends chose places like Budapest or Morocco. I chose Scotland. My father's genes at work I guess. (Mom, I had already been to Prague twice!) I traveled to Ireland with a group of friends but from there, made my way to Scotland alone. Everyone kept sneering, "Did you pack an umbrella?" Are you kidding? I was backpacking. There was no room for an umbrella. You're laughing again? They did too.

My first day in Edinburgh, I took a bus from the airport to the main part of town and proceeded to look for a place to stay. Wasn't even there 2 hours before it started to rain. Luckily, I was in the shopping district on Princes Street so I bought an umbrella and some really sweet copies of a few classic books. But by the time I had paid for everything and walked outside, it had stopped. And... it didn't rain the rest of the time I was there. Not even a drop.

So I figure, by purchasing three new umbrellas for my children, I should be able to keep the pop up thunder showers as bay for the rest of the month and maybe even well into April. (You're welcome! : )

Unless, my husband decides to wash the cars. Then all bets are off!

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Raindrops keep fallin' on my head...

A little bit of late night name that tune, or rather, name that artist. Do you know who sang that song? Bonus points if you can guess what 80's show theme song he also sang? Googling doesn't count!

Anyway, where was I? Oh, yes...the rain. If you are looking for whining or crying or moping, you won't find it here because we NEED the rain. The farmers need the rain! Husband tells me that we are still ten inches behind where we should be for the year. So we are bucking up and cozying up with some bright, cheerful spring time (indoor) crafts.

Spring makes us think of babies and we have babies to celebrate. Aren't back to back baby showers a great way to welcome spring? These Quilties are for two wee ones due in the next few months. Shortcake embroidered the angel dolly on the left for her new godsister due to arrive on Holy Thursday! She was so excited to get to make something special for Baby O and really took to embroidering! I drew the design according to her specifications. It is loosely based on this one but with some alterations. I made the one on the right for a friend of my SIL who is a first time mommy at the age of 40! And a hearty congratulations to another friend in her early forties who just told us she is expecting! A quick prayer for her teeny tiny one would be lovely! These women are beautiful examples of God's blessings and generosity even at what most people nowadays think of as "advanced maternal age". I really don't like that phrase. Let's see if we can come up with something that reflects their beauty!

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Final Thoughts

Sigh.

When I said that I knew my words would be unpopular it was because I knew that the nature of man wouldn’t let someone express her feelings without wondering if she was making a personal attack or judgment. Why do we do this to each other? If one woman expresses her opinion that homemade cherry pie is the most loving gift she has offered her family today, someone, somewhere is going to look at the bag of Oreos on the table and think,” Well, she must think I am the worst wife/mother in the world.” (I just heard the Highlander in my head, “There can be only one!” which kind of creeps me out so I’ll move along.) And I also knew that we in the Catholic blogging community (as much as I love it) have the tendency to reduce things down to black and white. If X is good then Y must be bad! If A is right then B must be wrong!

When I wrote this post about feeling left behind, I wrote just that. My feelings. Not my opinions. In fact, if you go through that post bit by bit, you will find a significant lack of opinion but an awful lot of feelings. I feel left behind. I felt anxious. I felt like Professor X (which was as weird as Sean Connery in my head from before). I feel an affection for the blogging medium. I feel welcome here. I feel sad that some online friends have chosen to spend more of their time using social networking and have devoted less time to their blogs because I miss them. One of the first things I heard myself ask while looking at some Twitter pages was, “Why didn’t she blog that?” You hear yourself ask questions, too, right?

None of the words I used to describe social networking have any implied negative connotations. Any such connotations can only be assumed by the reader. Fast food is simply fast food, not good or bad. I have never written any sort of condemnation of fast food, in fact, I would gladly total up the number of times my kids have been fed from the drive-thru windows of Wendy’s, Sonic and the like in the past six months. I’ll need to borrow some fingers and toes. I also used the word chatter (which is simply defined as talking rapidly), conversation and virtual noise. And when I joked about the wall, I was only poking fun at the designers of Facebook, not the users. Seems a little silly to me to encourage people to visualize a wall on a network designed to bring people together. That was not intended as a personal attack or a judgment nor was anything else I wrote and it pains me to think that anyone chose to interpret it that way.

I also never said that I didn’t see the benefit of social networking in some capacity, just that when blogging friends start using social networking as the preferred means of communication it cuts off communication with those people who previously enjoyed their company or it pressures those readers into jumping on the bandwagon too. More than one person has commented to my privately that they felt they had to join to stay in the loop but that this communication overload was also creating serious computer burnout.

Anyway, I am not here to bang the gavel and declare what is right and what is wrong. I simply wanted to write how I felt in case there were other people feeling the same way. Apparently there were and I thank each and every one of those commenters who told me so!

From Red with Love

Here is another perspective from my amazingly talented SIL over in the Wine-Dark Sea combox (Yes, Husband has not one, not two, but three red headed sisters!) I am posting it in it's entirety here so you don't have to scroll through to find it but do go read Melanie's thoughtful post on the the subject that has been on our minds lately:

I have two main problems with social networking sites, which is why I choose not to use them. My husband uses both Facebook and Twitter, so I've gotten to see how both work--this isn't a case of rejecting something without understanding it.

My first problem is similar to what Charlotte says above: why on earth would I want to be contacted out of the blue by people I "left behind" a long, long time ago? The people who are near and dear to me are people I already am in touch with; the others are faces scattered in memory, forever ten or twelve or eighteen to me. Granted, I moved a lot as a child, and don't remember the names or faces of most of my classmates; I also did not form many lifelong friendships in school, and can honestly not think of anyone I'd really be delighted to discover suddenly on the Internet. The reality is that most of us grow, change, and constantly become new people, and I'd find it terribly limiting to be in the virtual presence of people whose last memory of me was when I was an awkward fifteen-year-old or an immature college freshman. When you remain friends with someone, you grow together, experience maturity together, and the friendship is deeper and richer than it ever could have been in the past--but those people who remain in our past are often there for a reason.

The second reason I avoid social networking is because I can't help viewing it a little bit as a homeschooling mom. We're always trying to keep our kids from what some call "twaddle," useless busywork that occupies the time but not the mind, right? Now, I mean no disrespect for those who have found it possible to engage in deep, meaningful, philosophical exchanges on Facebook or on Twitter, but I know that such exchanges must come about in spite of, not because of, the format. The formats are geared toward quick, surface-level observations and sharings: what I did today, where I'm going this weekend, what my child said at lunch, etc. Now, there's nothing wrong with sharing these things if this is what you LIKE to do, and for those whose Facebook friends or Twitter followers are pretty much all immediate family and close, long-time friends I could see that this would, perhaps, be easier than calling each person individually to discuss daily events or weekend plans, etc. But for me, personally, to reveal this level of minute detail to people I haven't spoken to since the fifth grade, or to people who sign up to "follow" me because they once read something somewhere that I wrote, would be an exercise in "twaddle," that very thing I'm teaching my children to avoid.

Please note: I'm not saying that social networking = twaddle, or that there's nothing of value in it for those who did have lots of close high school or college friends with whom they had sadly lost touch and whom they are delighted to have in their lives again. But I can only look at this as an individual, and knowing myself, and my use of the Internet and my constant struggles to find balance between my real obligations and responsibilities and those interactions which take place online, I know that the last thing I need is the kind of format where several times a day one might see new messages or tweets or wall-writings from dozens of different people who don't live close enough to drop in, and who won't see me scrambling at the last minute to get dinner ready because I've spent too much time already on the computer for one day.

Now, how is sharing these small things online different from sharing them face to face, over coffee after Mass perhaps? To me, the difference is that when we are in a face to face, real time encounter with another human being we have a moment where we are truly present to them, and they are to us; we enter into their time and space, so to speak, and they enter into ours, and that moment of shared "now" becomes a memory for us both, and a chance to grow in our understanding of each other that goes far beyond the mere subject matter of the conversation. Online conversation can be wonderful for what it is, but ultimately it is limited; how often have arguments broken out over a misunderstanding in tone, or offense taken where none was meant? Face to face, a thousand different cues put us at our ease: smiles, eyebrow arches, twinkling eyes, friendly laughs, and a quick "I'm sorry!" if one unintentionally offends. None of that is possible in a message posted for dozens to read, and read by some long after it was written.


Does this mean that some kinds of online communication are inherently "bad" and others "good," as some have written? Not at all. I agree that any form can be used well or badly, with good intentions or wrong ones, for God's glory or for our own purposes. But again, speaking only for myself, the format of social networking with its quick messages and widespread reach would most likely be "bad" for me personally--and I really think that most critics of social networking have said as much, that our problems with it come from an understanding of who we are, and what sort of temptation this type of site could easily become for us.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Monday Minutes

It's still Monday, right?

Sunday, Mar. 9:
Bad sinus day but I did finally see the numbers on the scale move!

Monday, Mar. 10:
Outside yard work (1 hour) I am counting this as exercise for today because it was the first time we have been back in the yard since the fall but hope to make this a regular practice.

Tuesday, Mar. 11:
4 fast miles DVD

Wednesday, Mar. 12:
Curves
1 mile walk DVD (I need new walking shoes and probably won't be able to get to the mall until Friday.)

Thursday, Mar. 13:
Bought new shoes

Friday, Mar. 14:
Breaking in new shoes

Saturday, Mar. 15:
Painting a nursery all day. Not exactly exercise, but I guarantee you my arms and shoulders are going to be getting a workout!

Window Dressing

Don't you love making your kids think that you have totally lost your mind? Try painting on the windows!
Spring has started to poke it's head up here so we decided it was time to make the house look like it. This is our learning room window and I had hoped to pick up an ivy garland to drape over the top but since we are all feeling blah and not much like running out anywhere, I decided to dress the window up with some paint. Yes, that's right. It's paint. But never fear, it washes off quickly and easily with a little warm water & vinegar. I just used warm water and that was enough but the vinegar might come in handy once the paint has been on their awhile.

I only had blue tempera paint in the craft closet left over from the popcorn bluebonnets that we made many moons ago. I was able to add a little yellow food coloring to make the green but I think that the paint produces a better color. As soon as we get to the craft store, we are going to add butterflies and ladybugs and all of the other things that remind us of spring! I have promised the children that the lower windows are reserved for them. Here is the recipe:

Window Paint
2 Tbl. dried tempera paint
1 Tbl. warm water
1 tsp. dish liquid

Mix water and paint until paint is dissolved. Slowly mix in soap (so as not to make bubbles). Paint with brush or sponge, just watch out for globs and drips. The paint dries pretty fast but you might encourage your children to be patient before adding multiple layers to get a really vibrant color. The first coat was kind of thin. Also, if you add a little more paint or a little less water, it does make the paint thicker but you still will need to do a couple of coats to get vivid colors.

I'll post another picture when the window is finished.

Friday, March 6, 2009

7 Quick Takes (maybe, if I get that many)

1. My laundry room (see March 6) is so clean right now; even the curtains got washed! I am seriously fighting the urge live in there while I wash everything in my house!

2. Crunch cans are on sale right now at The Container Store (not online) for half price. These are the old style (not the new style) but I think the old style fabric patterns are prettier than the new striped ones.

3. Bigboy (aka The Loverlove) declared that he was not going to comply with my request to sit on the small couch and read a book, he was going to sit on the Loverlove seat! I don't know how he knows that it really is called a love seat

4. Oh and he really did read the book! OK, it was a short simple "Pat sat at Mass" book but not bad for a 4 year old!

5. Poor Husband is sick. He came home from work, took a shower and climbed into bed. That makes three out of six so the rest of us are keeping our fingers crossed that the tie sticks and we don't go into sudden death overtime!

6. Paint touch-ups don't go so well when the paint is about 6 years old and dried out. And if you think the store can mix you another batch that will match, you are wrong. Any tips?

7. If you haven't checked out Dawn's post about how she prepares for the week ahead, you simply must! And if you haven't read the Archbold brothers' signs of the Apocalypse, you simply must. Those are two crazy guys that I would love to meet someday! Provided the world is still here.

Go check out the other quick takes and take a peek at Jen's little bundle of Joy!

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Left Behind

I know that what I say here isn't going to be popular but I am hoping that it might help someone else who is feeling the same way, which was one of the reasons I started blogging. And, thanks to high school, I'm pretty used to feeling unpopular. So, here goes:

I feel left behind in this whole social networking craze. I once defended the internet because it was a way to build community where there was none but now, I see many friends I have communicated with in thought and word via blogs turning to social networking and in turn, neglecting their blogs. So I tried popping onto Facebook via my husband's page (which he doesn't ever use) and just couldn't get into it. It was all jumbled up and not very orderly which made me feel like I needed to tidy up and declutter. If I want to feel like that, I just have to walk into my kids' bedrooms! Then, I opened up a Twitter account, tried to pop around and see what people were talking about... and promptly had a panic attack. Seriously. All the chatter, all the conversation, all the virtual noise and I felt my chest tighten up, my heart race and my breathing get shallower and shallower. I felt like Professor X in a New York subway. Thankfully, it was not telepathy induced so I could turn it off before I started hyperventilating.

I don't want to offend anyone who enjoys these communication mediums, but I love blogs! A blog is a beautiful place filled with the character and spirit of the person who owns it. It offers pieces of them and their world. It opens your eyes to places, customs, family situations that you might not get to experience in your own world. Even if a blog is not visually beautiful, it can be intellectually beautiful and carry your mind to the pinnacles of thoughts you never could have imagined yourself. You can follow the conversations of the blog hostess and other readers and you can even choose to engage in those conversations as well. It is a notebook where you can quickly share a small silliness that you will just as quickly forget or a scrapbook to hold those precious things that you want to remember forever. And it can be a lovely place to share yourself with the world and a comfortable parlor to invite guests to come in and sit a spell with you. If blogging is like a home cooked meal, then social networking is fast food. And while fast food can work in a pinch, I'd rather enjoy a succulent pot roast with roasted sweet potatoes on the side.

Writing a blog post requires you to engage your thoughts and feelings and put them into words and phrases that will evoke a response from your audience. To those of us who aren't natural writers, there is literally a little bit of our blood, sweat and tears in every post. To read a blog is to occupy that place, that time, those tears, those feelings of the writer and to share them with her. You can let her know that they have inspired you or that you sympathize. Other people reading your comments can join in the conversation in a gentle but active way or in a passive, thoughtful way. It is a conversation that is open to everyone on their own comfort level whereas social networking feels like a thousand private conversations between everyone else, but not you, unless you join. The friendships that develop in the blog world are real friendships, but they are friendships that are almost completely based on communication. While some people are excited by this new means of communication and its potential, it is the equivalent of an exclusive club to those of us who can't keep up.

Sadly, I feel like some of those friendships that I thought I was developing have been cut off by social networking. In order to participate in those conversations, I now have to tweet or peep or read a wall. A wall... seriously? I feel left behind. I feel out of the loop. I feel dejected and a little rejected. I don't think those friendships were false. But now, I see some of those friends climbing onto the bandwagon and heading down a road that I can't go. So I'll just hang out here and work on making this place a truly beautiful space. And I'll keep popping over to see those friends with beautiful places that inspire me and hope I'll see them soon.

Lenten Cleaning

Elizabeth asked for a peek at our Lenten cleaning schedule after she so kindly shared hers and her inspiration. I was already working on mine so here it is. It involves not just cleaning but serious decluttering and a little bit of home improvement!

March 4th: Boys' bedroom
March 5th: Boys' clothes/closet/paint touchups
March 6th: Laundry room
March 7th: Girls' room/closet
March 8th: Sunday
March 9th: Game cabinet
March 10th: DVD/video storage
March 11th: Dry bar storage cabinets
March 12th: Bookshelves
March 13th: Craft closets
March 14th: Garage
March 15th: Sunday
March 16th: Kitchen
March 17th: Freezers
March 18th: Spare room
March 19th: Spare room closet
March 20th: Master bedroom closet
March 21st: Dining area (including paint touch-ups)
March 22nd: Sunday
March 23rd: Master bedroom
March 24th: Master bedrooms storage cubes
March 25th: Master bathroom
March 26th: Linen closet
March 27th: Kitchen
March 28th: Back porch
March 29th: Sunday
March 30th: Refrigerator & pantry
March 31st: School room & desk
April 1st: Living room
April 2nd:Play room
April 3rd: Powder room
April 4th: Front porch sweep
April 5th: Sunday
April 6th: Baseboards (paint touch-ups)
April 7th: Windows
April 8th: Spring bedding & Room refresh in preparation for Holy Thursday Passover Meal
April 9th: Spend the day at the hospital waiting for the arrival of a long anticipated little blessing!
April 10th: Clean car
April 11th: Hanging baskets of flowers
April 12th: Easter!!!

Small Successes (7)

FaithButton

1.
I made banana bread especially for my littlest guy who has been hungry all day lately (must be a growth spurt coming on) and who also requested it so sweetly.

2.
I reorganized the boys' bedroom, got rid of a lot of junk (with their permission) and even got rid of the old broken dresser they were using for clothes storage. I also came up with a fairly inexpensive replacement using some shelves we already had and some new canvas bins. Loooooove canvas bins!

3.
Played at the park with the kids for over an hour and taught Shortcake how to pump a swing. She needs a little more practice but she definitely got the gist of it. Why is that so hard? I think teaching them to read was actually easier!

Celebrate more small successes over at F&FL.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Hoards of Angry Grammarians

...might be tempted to ridicule me for using quotation marks here and in my Monday Minutes post below but I can assure you that the only similarities between what I call "tennis" and the real sport are the racquet and the ball.

As we were practicing our "tennis" last night, BigBoy watched as I hit the second bright yellow ball onto the roof of the local elementary school and said, "Those two balls are fiddlin' on the roof." And then looked at the rosy pink sky and sang, "Sunrise, sunset..." Thank you Bill Nye!


P.S. Today is National Grammar Day!

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

My Newtonian Fitness Plan

So I have been thinking a lot lately about health and fitness topics and I have been reading a lot about these topics. And since most of the articles I have read have been coming from friends through their Google Share buttons or via email, I can only assume that they have been thinking about them too.

One article came from Elizabeth who shared this blog post. I haven't gone back to read parts 2-8 but I am definitely going to this evening (if I can stay awake unlike last night). I agree with just about everything said in this post and really like Erin's suggestions for motivation outside of just weight loss. But, as Rachel described so well in this post, sometimes, focusing on the numbers can be just a simple expression of a more complex inner desire. A woman who says "she needs to lose some weight" might just be using a well coined phrase to simply state what might actually be a more complex thought process or it could be evidence of being caught up in a low self image which she should struggle to conquer. I know I have been guilty of both.

I am slowly learning that everyone has to find the right fitness equation that works for them and there are many factors involved in determining your personal equation. There are some women who really do struggle with and get obsessed with the numbers on the scale. I use to be one of those women until I was able to understand that body type has a big impact on what your numbers will look like.

Body type is a significant factor in my equation. You can find tons of articles on body type: how to determine yours, how to best exercise for yours, how to dress yours. I find them helpful in coming to terms with a realistic view of my body. Teresa Tapp talks about body types in the beginning of her Basic Workout DVD and that shouldn't be skipped! (Here is an article that expresses some of her points in the talk.)

I am the kind of person who weighs more than I look like I do. I am not just trying to excuse my excess weight or trying to delude myself that I am healthier than I really am. But, I have had multiple medical and fitness professionals all look at my number on the scale and say, "I wouldn't have guessed you weighed that much!" Thanks. I think.

I have the type of body that builds quickly and easily maintains a lot of densely packed muscle primarily in my legs, but also my arms and shoulders, so my fitness equation has a key component: Newton's First Law of Motion.

An object at rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends to stay in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force.

When I practice "induced exercise" as Erin describes, my whole day tends to become more active. When I allow myself to become sedentary, I tend to stay that way. When I let myself get sidelined from exercise due to illness or a busy schedule, I find it harder to jump back into it. When I have become sedentary for a long time, it usually takes a big push on my part to get me back into the routine. So, what does this all mean? Well, after almost 4 weeks of regular exercise, my weight has actually gone up! And I am OK with that. Like Erin said, someone who was only exercising for the purpose of hoping that number would decrease would be very disappointed. I fight that temptation by saying that I am working on getting healthy, not thin. There are plenty of thin women who aren't healthy and plenty of women who weigh less than I do who aren't half as strong. Thin is an impossible dream for my body type.

I think women naturally tend to talk about staying healthy in terms of weight loss mostly because of the influence of our beauty obsessed society and that's not a good thing. Some women try to accomplish loosing weight through diet only, some try to accomplish it through exercise only but the ones who end up with the best results and stand a better chance of keeping their bodies healthy long term are the ones who approach it with the goal of living a well rounded healthy lifestyle incorporating both exercise and diet (and a little Isaac Newton) into the equation.

Monday Minutes

Week 4

A day late, I know, but I crashed so hard, so early last night that I didn't get a chance to post this. That's what a new active lifestyle and procrastination gets ya!

Sunday, Mar. 1:
Day of rest

Monday, Mar. 2:
Curves
2mile walk DVD
played a game (Hah!) 30 minutes of "tennis" for the first time in I don't even know how long!

Tuesday, Mar. 3:
"tennis" practice for 45 minutes with the kids

Wednesday, Mar. 4:
Sick kids, no exercise except rearranging the boys' room

Thursday, Mar. 5:
3 mile walk DVD
2 fast miles DVD

Friday, Mar. 6:
Curves

Saturday, Mar. 7:

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Daffodil Cake for St. David's Day

As a whole, our family abstains from treats during Lent but since St. David's day fell on a Sunday this year, we decided to celebrate in a small way this patron saint of Wales. Husband's father's family is from Wales so we like to have fun with St. David even if we are many times removed from those ancestors. In the past, we have enjoyed a traditional Welsh treat called a bara brith which means "speckled bread". This year we opted for a Daffodil Cake, mentioned by Dawn in this post. You knew I would be intrigued by the phrase "daffodil cake" didn't you? Oh, Dawn, I hope your cake was sunny and bright even if your weather wasn't!

Being low on egg whites, we opted for a simpler version. I made a white cake but set aside about a cup and a half of batter, flavored it with lemon extract and mixed in some yellow food coloring. Then using a standard marbling technique, I swirled the dark yellow batter into the other batter already in the bundt pan. It is hard to see in the picture above, but the marbled affect was really striking. Simple cream cheese frosting topped it off.

If you prefer to eat your leeks instead of wear them, like we do, you can head on over to Catholic Cuisine for some of our favorite leek recipes. Or check out Wikipedia for more information on celebrating St. David's Day.