So, I can either choose to see this in my more naturally "the glass is half empty" perspective and say that my seventeen month old spilled my full cup of coffee all over what is left of my office (in the time it took me to help Declan button his pants after using the potty) creating a truly un-clean7ab4le mess (an7d a keyb4oard that is n7ow typin7g n7umb4ers in7 the midst of letters?) an7d this corn7er of my house will un7deoub4tedly smell like sugar an7d cream for....ever OR I could choose to see this in7 a "half full" light an7d say that I was given7 an7 opporutn7ity to clean7 behin7d the computer desk an7d to pour a fresh n7ew cup of coffee sin7ce the other was on7e I have been7 re-microwavin7g sin7ce n7:/0/0 this morn7in7g.
Yyyyyyeahhh...I'm gonna have to go with "half empty" -_- Tomorrow IS Friday right? Ok, 3 to 2 for points backing up "half-full." I'll try "half-full." Oh look, the numbers went away...Karma can be sort of immediate can't it?
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Wintertime Cabin Fever
So I sit down to write an entry and suddenly I'm overloaded with things that are on my mind. 'Which is blog-worthy?' I ask myself. Well, they all are, but I'm still working out how to do this daily writing thing so bear with me as I first try to tackle the hurdle of just making time every day to enter something!
Today I'm staring out the window at what will soon be another 3" of snow on the ground, as it pours from the sky and I'm BEGGING for winter to just chill the hell out! I have never been a fan of winter. Like, ever. Born and raised here in MA and I really feel no sentimental or nostalgic love for the season of death and ice. I love all of the other seasons, though, so I stay put and complain for 12 weeks of the year, every year, to anyone who will listen.
On top of not being a general fan of the wintertime, I stay home, full time with my 2 boys. Our days are long. Joel works in Cambridge and the commute from Central MA to work every day is about 1.5-2 hours one way. Easily, we have 12-13 hours a day to coexist in this house together with only one set of adult hands to help. Any day of any season can leave a SAHM (stay at home mom) feeling cooped up and burned out but winter, especially, just exacerbates it all.
We're at a tough age too for wintertime. I have a 3 year old that would gladly go outside all on his own and play for hours on end in the snow. Obviously he can't be trusted (nor can the world for that matter) to be outside alone for hours on end without supervision. Conversely, I have an 18 month old who whimpers and holds his breath if he's standing too close to the refrigerator when you open the door so outside in sub-freezing temps with flying snow landing in his face is never anything less than torturous for him. I do it sometimes because Declan needs the time outside and enjoys it. Sometimes Liam is just gonna have to suck it up and do things he hates to make his brother happy and vice-versa.
It's hard to keep the mood high when you spend your day in the same four walled home for a few days on end because the weather prevents you from leaving. Some things I have learned in the last 4 years of staying home to survive these times:
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Sometimes snack time can be absolutely hilarious! |
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Sometimes, you walk into Room-Time to find something like this <3 |
source it'll probably fail me 50% of the time. If I use it consistently I'll have a better perspective on its helpfulness and the days it fails me don't seem so bad. I also find, if the kids feel like they're getting room time because I'm about to lose it, they feel it's more of a punishment: a long, extended time-out with toys. And that's not what it is nor what I want it to be. I want it to be just as valuable to them in learning to problem solve, play with their imaginations and self-stimulate as it is for me to learn to relax, regroup and re-frame.
3) Exercise is an understated and under-discussed method of self help. I feel like we hear it everywhere "exercise keeps your mood high," "exercise helps your energy stay up." But for some reason those statements aren't enough for me. I once was part of a nutrition seminar at work while the students at Job Corps were on break. We were in staff training every day and I got more out of that one hour with a nutrition and exercise specialist from Health Alliance than I had in any Dr. visit or Today Show segment in my life! I want to DISCUSS exercise and the reasons it helps. Also, the reasons I (and so many others) fail at making it and keeping it a priority despite the clear difference it makes! To hear it, lecture style, doesn't do it for me. I need to TALK! I feel like I need a support group! Maybe one will be born from this Blog?! At any rate, I know the benefits are real because I have heard and felt them. I struggle with keeping the priority and schedule for my physical fitness consistent . This winter I made the commitment to run at least 3 days a week and I've kept that most weeks (barring business trips for Joel and the holiday season was hard to get to the gym). I also hear the term "baby steps" often and I think "Ok, baby steps. So one baby step a day until I have this problem nipped in a week!" When really, it means "one small step a month or even a year until you have this problem nipped in your lifetime." I rush myself, often, and have unrealistic expectations of my time. I know this winter I have felt much better than last winter where I had no gym membership and relied solely on at-home exercise videos to keep my physical activity level up. This year I got a small, portable elliptical runner for Christmas and it does wonders to just drain a little bit of energy and burn a couple-hundred calories. Sometimes when the boys are playing in their rooms I can watch the news and run (or "stroll" really, it's a SMALL elliptical) for those 20 minutes and burn up to 300 calories! I can't run 5 miles a day in the winter with the boys and the schedule we're pulling. Some can! And it's awesome! But I can't. What I also, can't do, is leave exercise out of the equation because I become miserable, angry and depressed. I need to drain the energy, the toxicity and the monotony. I can accomplish that when I physically exert my body but I just can't always exercise exertion by having an hour to myself at the gym. Sometimes it's 10 minutes on the small elliptical or 20 runs up and down the stairs. Sometimes it's shoveling snow! That counts! I know that it helps me to exercise even when I hate it and fight it and don't want to. I also know that it has helped to re-frame my expectations of exercise to fit my life as it lives right now.
Every mom I know, working moms and SAHMoms alike would have a different "Top 3 Survival Tips." These are unique to me and my household. If any of them are transferable I'm glad I shared! If you have any unique techniques that work for passing a hard day, week, month or season comment below! I'd love to hear from you! Happy winter everyone!
K
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
2104 Realizations
So it's 2014...my last blog post was in 2011, although I had to have gone in there at some point and updated my profile because my age is accurate and it says I have 2 children (which, indeed I do...). Wow, I underestimated how hard it would be to keep up with this. I need to get into the habit of just copying my FB posts here and occasionally writing something special just for the Blog. At any rate, I'm back (for the day) and trying to get inspired!
My photo of the 3 stackable block towers was what got me on here today. I took it thinking it would make a good picture and then, because I was subconsciously searching for the inspiration, I drew this parallel to motherhood from that image.
Stack #1 is the perfect, organized, clean cut, put together image I have of what I want to be in my motherhood. I want a clean house, to shower daily, have my hair and nails always nicely done, my schedule kept and my "pieces" all together.
Stack #2 is the likely reality of my motherhood. There's an apparent pattern and image there of what its supposed to be and, for the most part, it's in order and organized but there are some pieces missing.
Occasionally, those missing pieces will fill in...only to be replaced by other missing pieces. Occassionally they are all missing but I know they HAVE to be all here in the same house. It's just a matter of finding them all and putting them back together.
Stack #3 is the harsh picture I actually have of myself. It's the "well, that can't be right..." stack. The "I'll get to it later..." stack. The "Something is always lacking..." stack. Everything is mismatched, nothing is in order, everything is lopsided. All the pieces are there but I don't care enough to arrange them I just mash them all together as I flip a high middle-finger to the world and scream "Please! Judge me! I'd love that!" Its the stack I focus most on. The things I'm not doing quite the way I thought I would. The things that never actually get done (i.e. this Blog). The things that I'm afraid the rest of the world is looking at saying "What the 'f' is going on there?"
I focus secondly on Stack #1 and lastly on Stack # 2. What an unhealthy pendulum swing from extreme negative to extreme perfection...what a helpful visual realization.
Joel and I attended a marriage seminar this past Valentine's Day weekend. One of the speakers, Dr. Caroline Leaf, did a segment on releasing toxic thoughts and re-training your brain pathways (very much like "The Secret" except more biological). I left feeling a new commitment to this measure because I obviously have a need.
I need to focus on Stack #2. The one that looks pretty good! The one that is functional, ordered and missing very little. Occasionally all those pieces are there. Occasionally different ones are missing but doesn't that represent balance? I don't seek out the level of perfection in others (as represented by Stack #1) so why do I seek it in myself?
I may print this picture and put it up in places I spend a lot of time. Re-work those neurons and dendrites to focus on that middle stack because it is true and accurate. Its not perfect but it's not a disaster!
Ok, this took 10 minutes and my children are still alive! This can be done....
K
My photo of the 3 stackable block towers was what got me on here today. I took it thinking it would make a good picture and then, because I was subconsciously searching for the inspiration, I drew this parallel to motherhood from that image.
Stack #1 is the perfect, organized, clean cut, put together image I have of what I want to be in my motherhood. I want a clean house, to shower daily, have my hair and nails always nicely done, my schedule kept and my "pieces" all together.
Stack #2 is the likely reality of my motherhood. There's an apparent pattern and image there of what its supposed to be and, for the most part, it's in order and organized but there are some pieces missing.
Occasionally, those missing pieces will fill in...only to be replaced by other missing pieces. Occassionally they are all missing but I know they HAVE to be all here in the same house. It's just a matter of finding them all and putting them back together.
Stack #3 is the harsh picture I actually have of myself. It's the "well, that can't be right..." stack. The "I'll get to it later..." stack. The "Something is always lacking..." stack. Everything is mismatched, nothing is in order, everything is lopsided. All the pieces are there but I don't care enough to arrange them I just mash them all together as I flip a high middle-finger to the world and scream "Please! Judge me! I'd love that!" Its the stack I focus most on. The things I'm not doing quite the way I thought I would. The things that never actually get done (i.e. this Blog). The things that I'm afraid the rest of the world is looking at saying "What the 'f' is going on there?"
I focus secondly on Stack #1 and lastly on Stack # 2. What an unhealthy pendulum swing from extreme negative to extreme perfection...what a helpful visual realization.
Joel and I attended a marriage seminar this past Valentine's Day weekend. One of the speakers, Dr. Caroline Leaf, did a segment on releasing toxic thoughts and re-training your brain pathways (very much like "The Secret" except more biological). I left feeling a new commitment to this measure because I obviously have a need.
I need to focus on Stack #2. The one that looks pretty good! The one that is functional, ordered and missing very little. Occasionally all those pieces are there. Occasionally different ones are missing but doesn't that represent balance? I don't seek out the level of perfection in others (as represented by Stack #1) so why do I seek it in myself?
I may print this picture and put it up in places I spend a lot of time. Re-work those neurons and dendrites to focus on that middle stack because it is true and accurate. Its not perfect but it's not a disaster!
Ok, this took 10 minutes and my children are still alive! This can be done....
K
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Awesome, adaptable recipe!
I have been talking with a few mommy-friends of mine and co-miserating about how hard it is to find new, healthy food options for our growing boys. It's easy to get some initial foods established once they start to routinely eat solids: basically, whatever you're eating they can eat it too! But they eventually get bored with the same menu options all of the time as does mom! They also start to eat larger portions so you end up needing to make more of whatever it is you're eating. So, we're all in the same boat: we need new, tasty, healthy and fairly easy/quick options for breakfast, lunch and dinner that will satisfy baby, mom and dad when he's eating with us!
As many of you may know, my mother is a fantastic chef. She is self-taught and really could make great money if she turned her hobby into a job but "that would take the fun out of it" she says. I did not inherit her kitchen-savvy genes. I can squeeze out some recipes and now that I'm a SAHM I certainly have more time to practice but I'm certainly not a natural! If/when I find new things I will start posting them here to share the wealth and you can rest-assured they're not too complicated if I can master them! ;)
I found this recipe on the Rachael Ray show last week, tried it and loved it! As did Declan! My favorite part about the recipe is the paste and the apples. These two elements can be adapted to almost any sandwich you can think of. Use the paste on a grilled turkey and cheese, throw some apple slices in there and you have a whole new thing! Try it on a tortilla wrap and there's another option! I'll give you the recipe as she calls for it and then explain some of my adaptations:
Rachael Ray's Apple Cheddar Turnovers:
6 slices whole wheat bread
1 small Gala apple finely diced
nutmeg
salt
lemon juice
1/2 cup sharp cheddar cheese finely diced
1/4 cup Dijon mustard
1 tbsp. maple syrup
canola cooking spray.
mix your Dijon Mustard and maple syrup in a bowl. Mix your diced apple and cheese in a separate bowl. sprinkle some nutmeg on the apples and cheese, a pinch of salt and squirt a little lemon juice on there. Mix thoroughly. Roll out your six slices of bread with a rolling pin. Spread the syrup/mustard paste on the bread. Spoon about 1 spoonful of apple/cheese mixture onto the paste and fold over into a triangle. Pop in the oven on a cookie sheet at 400' for 10 mins or until Golden Brown and ENJOY!
My adaptations:
I add a sprinkle of cinnamon and sugar to the apple/cheese mixture.
I have a "thing" for Pink Lady apples! I used one of these instead of a Gala. She said on the show that any apple is fine. I think a Golden Delicious or even a Grannysmith would be awesome with this recipe!
I tend to like "sweet" things rather than spicy. The Dijon mustard certainly has a bite to it! So I swapped it out for a Honey mustard (which Rachael said to do on the show if you didn't like the Dijon) and liked it MUCH better! It still has a little tang to it but without that firey aftertaste of the Dijon.
The first time I tried rolling out the bread it didn't work that well (they definitely didn't look like the photo lol!) so I made it as a full-sized sandwich with 2 slices of bread and it worked just fine! I've baked it at 400 for 10 mins and I've also grilled it up in a pan like a grilled cheese and both were delicious!
Just today, I made it with a few slices of roast turkey breast and it was awesome!
I think next time I try the turkey sandwich idea, I'll "slice" the apple into think sheets rather than dice it into cubes.
I love the cheddar cheese but I'm sure any cheese would work as well. Monterey jack or a colby jack block??
This is an excellent recipe! The hardest part is the prep. (slicing the apples and cheese!) The first time I did it I had enough apple/cheese mix leftover to keep it in the fridge overnight and make the sandwiches again the next day. With the lemon juice in the mix it keeps the apples from browning. So it might be ok to make the mixture in bulk and use throughout the week.
Hope you enjoy!
As many of you may know, my mother is a fantastic chef. She is self-taught and really could make great money if she turned her hobby into a job but "that would take the fun out of it" she says. I did not inherit her kitchen-savvy genes. I can squeeze out some recipes and now that I'm a SAHM I certainly have more time to practice but I'm certainly not a natural! If/when I find new things I will start posting them here to share the wealth and you can rest-assured they're not too complicated if I can master them! ;)
I found this recipe on the Rachael Ray show last week, tried it and loved it! As did Declan! My favorite part about the recipe is the paste and the apples. These two elements can be adapted to almost any sandwich you can think of. Use the paste on a grilled turkey and cheese, throw some apple slices in there and you have a whole new thing! Try it on a tortilla wrap and there's another option! I'll give you the recipe as she calls for it and then explain some of my adaptations:
Rachael Ray's Apple Cheddar Turnovers:
6 slices whole wheat bread
1 small Gala apple finely diced
nutmeg
salt
lemon juice
1/2 cup sharp cheddar cheese finely diced
1/4 cup Dijon mustard
1 tbsp. maple syrup
canola cooking spray.
mix your Dijon Mustard and maple syrup in a bowl. Mix your diced apple and cheese in a separate bowl. sprinkle some nutmeg on the apples and cheese, a pinch of salt and squirt a little lemon juice on there. Mix thoroughly. Roll out your six slices of bread with a rolling pin. Spread the syrup/mustard paste on the bread. Spoon about 1 spoonful of apple/cheese mixture onto the paste and fold over into a triangle. Pop in the oven on a cookie sheet at 400' for 10 mins or until Golden Brown and ENJOY!
My adaptations:
I add a sprinkle of cinnamon and sugar to the apple/cheese mixture.
I have a "thing" for Pink Lady apples! I used one of these instead of a Gala. She said on the show that any apple is fine. I think a Golden Delicious or even a Grannysmith would be awesome with this recipe!
I tend to like "sweet" things rather than spicy. The Dijon mustard certainly has a bite to it! So I swapped it out for a Honey mustard (which Rachael said to do on the show if you didn't like the Dijon) and liked it MUCH better! It still has a little tang to it but without that firey aftertaste of the Dijon.
The first time I tried rolling out the bread it didn't work that well (they definitely didn't look like the photo lol!) so I made it as a full-sized sandwich with 2 slices of bread and it worked just fine! I've baked it at 400 for 10 mins and I've also grilled it up in a pan like a grilled cheese and both were delicious!
Just today, I made it with a few slices of roast turkey breast and it was awesome!
I think next time I try the turkey sandwich idea, I'll "slice" the apple into think sheets rather than dice it into cubes.
I love the cheddar cheese but I'm sure any cheese would work as well. Monterey jack or a colby jack block??
This is an excellent recipe! The hardest part is the prep. (slicing the apples and cheese!) The first time I did it I had enough apple/cheese mix leftover to keep it in the fridge overnight and make the sandwiches again the next day. With the lemon juice in the mix it keeps the apples from browning. So it might be ok to make the mixture in bulk and use throughout the week.
Hope you enjoy!
Money Saver!
So when I originally decorated our nursery before Declan had even arrived I purchased a $70 4'x6' shaggy green area rug for the floor. My house is 100% hardwood so I wanted one little area of soft fluffiness for baby to play on! Loved the rug (dearly actually) until Indiana ate an entire package of bird suet from the neighbor's yard and ever so politely, hocked it up all over the rug. My parents own a professional carpet and upholstery restoration business and even they couldn't dissolve the putrid, lard vomit from the fluffy fibers. I was heartbroken as I surrendered my splurgy purchase to the trash. I thought "I'll buy another one!" So off to Target I went to replace the rug. But alas, thanks to outsourcing product production to other countries where people are hand-stitching these things, NONE of the other rugs felt the same or were exactly the same color! Grrrr! "Ok," I thought, "I'll find some other type of rug for the room." I began shopping and was, frankly, astounded at the cost of area rugs! Even a faux-shag rug online about the same size as the 4'x6' was pricing out at around $400.00! Ummm, yeah, that's beyond "splurging" for me!
I went out one evening for a run to Marshall's just to poke around and was thinking about the rug. I looked through their selection and didn't find anything appropriate for a baby's room. (I don't think he'd appreciate a $250.00 elaborate Oriental). I had resorted, in my mind, that I would return to Target and just buy one of the same $70 shaggy rugs despite their INFERIORITY to the original one I had purchased.
Then, as I strolled through the bathroom accessories aisle, I came across these most adorable bath mats! In a myriad of colors, they were the softest, most fun chenille/microfiber blends! I thought "what an awesome rug this would be if they made large sizes!" Some quick research on my phone (God I love technology!) and I realized these were strictly a bath item. I sat there holding one, falling more and more in love with the feel of this bath mat and the idea came to me: purchase several, somehow sew them together and have a super soft, fun, decorative and 100% machine washable area rug!
Each mat was $20 or less. There were several different brands each carrying different colors. I chose colors that match his room decor, brought the mats home and began playing with different patterns on the floor. Because I had purchased different brands, some of the mats were slightly different sizes which made things a little more complicated. Eventually, I came up with this design which required cutting a large green rug into a small square and trimming about 2" off the end of the brown rug to make it equal size to the yellow and blue rugs. I purchased a large sewing needle and some soft yellow yarn at Michael's. Slowly and carefully over the course of a week or so, I sewed each rug's finished edge to the finished edge of another rug. I made sure that all outer edges of the rug were un-cut to prevent fraying. The edges I did have to cut I made sure I cut a little LESS than actually required so I could sew a little deeper into the edge to prevent fraying there. So here is the breakdown:
5 chenille/microfiber bath mats: $20.00 each = $100.00 total
yarn and sewing needle: $10.00 = $110.00 total
6'x6' size in a typical area rug would normally cost about $350.00 or more!
already successfully machine washed twice saved about $75.00 in professional cleaning costs!
My only suggestion for those who attempt on their own: wash each mat individually before sewing together. My yellow rugs are just EVER so slightly less yellow because I washed it for the first time after it was sewn together so the brown and green mats' colors affected the brightness of the yellows. Not nearly enough to be a problem or require a replacement. But you are talking to a woman who didn't replace the original green rug with the same thing because the color was different and the softness wasn't the same...I notice these things! Good luck moms!
I went out one evening for a run to Marshall's just to poke around and was thinking about the rug. I looked through their selection and didn't find anything appropriate for a baby's room. (I don't think he'd appreciate a $250.00 elaborate Oriental). I had resorted, in my mind, that I would return to Target and just buy one of the same $70 shaggy rugs despite their INFERIORITY to the original one I had purchased.
Then, as I strolled through the bathroom accessories aisle, I came across these most adorable bath mats! In a myriad of colors, they were the softest, most fun chenille/microfiber blends! I thought "what an awesome rug this would be if they made large sizes!" Some quick research on my phone (God I love technology!) and I realized these were strictly a bath item. I sat there holding one, falling more and more in love with the feel of this bath mat and the idea came to me: purchase several, somehow sew them together and have a super soft, fun, decorative and 100% machine washable area rug!
Each mat was $20 or less. There were several different brands each carrying different colors. I chose colors that match his room decor, brought the mats home and began playing with different patterns on the floor. Because I had purchased different brands, some of the mats were slightly different sizes which made things a little more complicated. Eventually, I came up with this design which required cutting a large green rug into a small square and trimming about 2" off the end of the brown rug to make it equal size to the yellow and blue rugs. I purchased a large sewing needle and some soft yellow yarn at Michael's. Slowly and carefully over the course of a week or so, I sewed each rug's finished edge to the finished edge of another rug. I made sure that all outer edges of the rug were un-cut to prevent fraying. The edges I did have to cut I made sure I cut a little LESS than actually required so I could sew a little deeper into the edge to prevent fraying there. So here is the breakdown:
5 chenille/microfiber bath mats: $20.00 each = $100.00 total
yarn and sewing needle: $10.00 = $110.00 total
6'x6' size in a typical area rug would normally cost about $350.00 or more!
already successfully machine washed twice saved about $75.00 in professional cleaning costs!
My only suggestion for those who attempt on their own: wash each mat individually before sewing together. My yellow rugs are just EVER so slightly less yellow because I washed it for the first time after it was sewn together so the brown and green mats' colors affected the brightness of the yellows. Not nearly enough to be a problem or require a replacement. But you are talking to a woman who didn't replace the original green rug with the same thing because the color was different and the softness wasn't the same...I notice these things! Good luck moms!
Thursday, August 25, 2011
A Year ALREADY?!
Ok, well, so much for my "new committment" to weekly blogging. It's such a mental block that "free time must be spent" no matter how much I ENJOY just sitting her writing for 30 minutes or so. Oh well, I suppose, with practice, I'll get better at this.
I just created, on "Shutterfly.com" my son's first birthday invitations! What a moment that was. Looking through photos of him from the day he was born until yesterday and thinking about the concept of time again. How intangible it is but how affected we are by its existence. How much I love the fact that he is happy, healthy, growing and developing but how sad it makes me feel that a year of his life is already through. The only thing I can compare it to is the feeling you get when someone deflates Christmas for you and reveals the truth about Santa Claus. Suddenly, all the magic is gone and the Holiday that used to feel like it took ages to arrive is now popping up quicker and quicker each year. And you think to yourself "just try to hold onto that magic!" But you don't and it just becomes a constant reminder that another year is done! I have had so many moments since his birth that I've basked in that magic and then so many others where I feel sad that time keeps moving no matter what we do.
Declan will be a year old on October 8th. We can't celebrate his birthday on his actual DOB because his Uncle Ryan will be off on Army training which, normally, wouldn't be such a big deal but Uncle Ryan goes "Active Duty" next year and may miss the next few birthdays all together :(. So, we opted to bump it a week so he can be there. Declan loves his aunties an uncles and I think its important for everyone to share in those memories. Photos are probably all he'll remember of this first birthday so to have everyone there in those photos will be priceless. Not to mention it'll probably make for great memories for Uncle Ryan ;)
So much happens in a year. I suppose it always has but having a baby around makes that a lot clearer. I was watching him today hiding our cable remote in the dog food bench, dumping Indiana's (the dog's) water all over the floor and stuffing toys into my front loading washing machine thinking "God, I remember when you would just lie for HOURS on your activity mat, staring at the dangly toys and be content. Now, you have about $1200 worth of toys in the living room alone and you want nothing to do with any of them unless you're drowing them in Indi's water bowl!" Sometimes, I have to force out a giggle to remind myself that this is all ok. That he's exploring his world and having fun doing it and it's ok! But keeping up sure is becoming a bigger challenge! As they say in the Army, "Adapt and Overcome."
I just created, on "Shutterfly.com" my son's first birthday invitations! What a moment that was. Looking through photos of him from the day he was born until yesterday and thinking about the concept of time again. How intangible it is but how affected we are by its existence. How much I love the fact that he is happy, healthy, growing and developing but how sad it makes me feel that a year of his life is already through. The only thing I can compare it to is the feeling you get when someone deflates Christmas for you and reveals the truth about Santa Claus. Suddenly, all the magic is gone and the Holiday that used to feel like it took ages to arrive is now popping up quicker and quicker each year. And you think to yourself "just try to hold onto that magic!" But you don't and it just becomes a constant reminder that another year is done! I have had so many moments since his birth that I've basked in that magic and then so many others where I feel sad that time keeps moving no matter what we do.
Declan will be a year old on October 8th. We can't celebrate his birthday on his actual DOB because his Uncle Ryan will be off on Army training which, normally, wouldn't be such a big deal but Uncle Ryan goes "Active Duty" next year and may miss the next few birthdays all together :(. So, we opted to bump it a week so he can be there. Declan loves his aunties an uncles and I think its important for everyone to share in those memories. Photos are probably all he'll remember of this first birthday so to have everyone there in those photos will be priceless. Not to mention it'll probably make for great memories for Uncle Ryan ;)
So much happens in a year. I suppose it always has but having a baby around makes that a lot clearer. I was watching him today hiding our cable remote in the dog food bench, dumping Indiana's (the dog's) water all over the floor and stuffing toys into my front loading washing machine thinking "God, I remember when you would just lie for HOURS on your activity mat, staring at the dangly toys and be content. Now, you have about $1200 worth of toys in the living room alone and you want nothing to do with any of them unless you're drowing them in Indi's water bowl!" Sometimes, I have to force out a giggle to remind myself that this is all ok. That he's exploring his world and having fun doing it and it's ok! But keeping up sure is becoming a bigger challenge! As they say in the Army, "Adapt and Overcome."
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
A New Commitment and "Time!"
So after writing my first, very brief, introductory entry back in MARCH I have decided that I will be newly committed to blogging at least weekly about my new motherhood! I have a penciled list in my purse of topics to discuss and I've even written a rough-draft of a piece on being a Stay At Home Mom (SAHM) that I plan to perfect before posting ;) My thoughts and feelings are there. Needless to say, I'm still struggling to structure my schedule in a way that leaves me with an hour here and there to write for my sanity and to empathize with the many new moms I know are experiencing the same struggles and triumphs as myself! For today, I need to touch on the topic of "time." Because as I sit here blogging at 11:00a.m. it dawns on me that the end of July is nearing, that my son is almost 1 year old and that I am definitely planning my 10 year High School Reunion!
I remember when I was in High School I started to feel like time went by faster each year. When I was seven, a year seemed like the longest stretch of time ever. In fact, waiting three hours for my friend to get to my house for a sleepover was torture! Then something happens in High School. It's the first thing in life that you can't wait to get to and that ends before you're ready. It's when you start to fill your free time with sports and clubs and jobs and you realize that time is somethign of value. I feel like every year since my Senior Year of High School has been more a "blur" than the last. Not that the blur isn't full of fantastic memories and accomplishments but, nonetheless, it's a blur! I just finished messaging my fellow class officers because it is time to plan our 10 year Renunion. After I threw up a little in my mouth, I realized its time to start writing!
Time is bound to be a topic I bring up more than a few times in this blog because, since my son's arrival, the speed at which time passes me by has, oh, quadrupled! Since Joel went back to work after his paternity leave our nightly routine is to eat dinner, give the baby a bath and, while I clean the kitchen and maybe throw in a last load of laundry, Joel feeds the baby his last bottle of the day and puts him to bed. Occassionally, on the weekends and/or if Joel isn't home for that time of night I get to do the night bottle and bed routine and rock my little boy to sleep and, without fail, every time I cry. I hold him and realize how he doesn't fit between the arm rests on the rocking chair anymore. I remember his 8lbs. 14 oz. body then versus his 22lb body now (yes, my son is a bit of a beast at 9 months old)! And it just dawns on me that he is growing up, already, into a little boy. When I was seven, a year seemed like the longest stretch of time. At 27, with my son in my arms, the thought of my lifetime feels too short.
I say that and I mean it. But then you know what I did? I spent my entire day yesterday trying to develop some type of block-schedule (much like high school minus the warning bells and the other adults that hold you accountable for being late), because I feel like a complete failure at managing my time. Even though my house is always pretty clean, my laundry is caught up on, there is plenty of food in my cabinets, I have this insatiable need to always be doing more. I spend my days with a nine month old baby and a 3 year old Border Collie/German Shepherd and I struggle to structure my time in a way that leaves me feeling like I accomplish things on a daily basis. Sure, two weeks of emotional build-up and a melt-down later I get a pep-talk from my husband that reminds me that I'm doing a great job at adjusting to life as a SAHM: literally living in my office, working long and unforgiving hours, getting all of the necessary things done week to week all the while keeping our son quite healthy and happy. If I could just get away from my list-making and my schedule-creating self, I might see health and happiness as sufficient weekly tasks. And maybe I could get "time" to stop bullying me into thinking that I don't use it wisely enough and that it will be gone before I know it.
The fact is, I know that time is passing me by. Watching yourself age is one thing. Watching your child age is another and it's difinitively more dramatic. I guess I could continue rambling about this all day to get to the same point which is that I don't have an answer to this one. I'm not sure I ever will. But it's worthwhile to vent about it. Whenever I get talking about time, time management, aging, etc. I think it dawns on me that they are extremely complicated topics with so many issues embedded in them that it's no wonder I feel overwhelmed by it all! Making an Excel Spreadsheet and blocking out my time day by day might be my visual fix to let me know I'm getting it all done the best way I can. But to think it is THE fix that relieves all stress and pressure related to time is foolish.
So, my son is up from his nap and I'm going to take him and my dog for a long walk with my sister-in-law and her three kids. Healthy task, happy family, Tuesday's mission: accomplished!
I remember when I was in High School I started to feel like time went by faster each year. When I was seven, a year seemed like the longest stretch of time ever. In fact, waiting three hours for my friend to get to my house for a sleepover was torture! Then something happens in High School. It's the first thing in life that you can't wait to get to and that ends before you're ready. It's when you start to fill your free time with sports and clubs and jobs and you realize that time is somethign of value. I feel like every year since my Senior Year of High School has been more a "blur" than the last. Not that the blur isn't full of fantastic memories and accomplishments but, nonetheless, it's a blur! I just finished messaging my fellow class officers because it is time to plan our 10 year Renunion. After I threw up a little in my mouth, I realized its time to start writing!
Time is bound to be a topic I bring up more than a few times in this blog because, since my son's arrival, the speed at which time passes me by has, oh, quadrupled! Since Joel went back to work after his paternity leave our nightly routine is to eat dinner, give the baby a bath and, while I clean the kitchen and maybe throw in a last load of laundry, Joel feeds the baby his last bottle of the day and puts him to bed. Occassionally, on the weekends and/or if Joel isn't home for that time of night I get to do the night bottle and bed routine and rock my little boy to sleep and, without fail, every time I cry. I hold him and realize how he doesn't fit between the arm rests on the rocking chair anymore. I remember his 8lbs. 14 oz. body then versus his 22lb body now (yes, my son is a bit of a beast at 9 months old)! And it just dawns on me that he is growing up, already, into a little boy. When I was seven, a year seemed like the longest stretch of time. At 27, with my son in my arms, the thought of my lifetime feels too short.
I say that and I mean it. But then you know what I did? I spent my entire day yesterday trying to develop some type of block-schedule (much like high school minus the warning bells and the other adults that hold you accountable for being late), because I feel like a complete failure at managing my time. Even though my house is always pretty clean, my laundry is caught up on, there is plenty of food in my cabinets, I have this insatiable need to always be doing more. I spend my days with a nine month old baby and a 3 year old Border Collie/German Shepherd and I struggle to structure my time in a way that leaves me feeling like I accomplish things on a daily basis. Sure, two weeks of emotional build-up and a melt-down later I get a pep-talk from my husband that reminds me that I'm doing a great job at adjusting to life as a SAHM: literally living in my office, working long and unforgiving hours, getting all of the necessary things done week to week all the while keeping our son quite healthy and happy. If I could just get away from my list-making and my schedule-creating self, I might see health and happiness as sufficient weekly tasks. And maybe I could get "time" to stop bullying me into thinking that I don't use it wisely enough and that it will be gone before I know it.
The fact is, I know that time is passing me by. Watching yourself age is one thing. Watching your child age is another and it's difinitively more dramatic. I guess I could continue rambling about this all day to get to the same point which is that I don't have an answer to this one. I'm not sure I ever will. But it's worthwhile to vent about it. Whenever I get talking about time, time management, aging, etc. I think it dawns on me that they are extremely complicated topics with so many issues embedded in them that it's no wonder I feel overwhelmed by it all! Making an Excel Spreadsheet and blocking out my time day by day might be my visual fix to let me know I'm getting it all done the best way I can. But to think it is THE fix that relieves all stress and pressure related to time is foolish.
So, my son is up from his nap and I'm going to take him and my dog for a long walk with my sister-in-law and her three kids. Healthy task, happy family, Tuesday's mission: accomplished!
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