Simple Woman’s Daybook

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more daybooks at Peggy's 

For today, August 2nd, 2010

Outside my window… overcast but the sun appears to getting the upper hand.  It is Germany and this battle is waged more or less daily.

I am wearing… note to self, go buy yourself some new workout clothes so you don't have to tell them you are in the same grey pants again Kim….  I won't leave the house this way I promise but I have not worked out since the movers came and am feeling it. 

I am hearing… little boys waking up and noticing the toy I unearthed from a box this am.  Aidan nearby in the kitchen trying to decipher the pancake mix directions.  And Tess wandering in saying, "Mama," more like a statement than a request.  Abbie follows with the same declaration. Mama? Check.  Therefore we conclude that the universe is still spinning in its proper rotation.  We may carry on with our day. 

From the kitchen… Moira made Alannah a fondant cake for her party Friday.  Huge cake.  All day project.  The Cake Boss, I am not.  It is really impressive what a 13yo can do however. 


 

I am creating… got most of the art up on the main floor and hung curtains.  

From the learning rooms… curriculum planning.  We are so ready to be back to school.  Ok, those of us younger than 13 and older than 16 anyway! 

Pondering these words…

"I don't want to make any mistakes, Gerry.

Well, you are in the wrong species, luv,

be a duck."

said with the perfect Irish accent – you know like "be a dook" (rhymes with book)  which has some kind of freaky, hypnotic, Pied Piper effect on the women in this family.  Must be genetic!  Must. go. to. Ireland. 

From last night's movie PS I Love You.  I cried through the ENTIRE movie.  I took a break to take dh's call then resumed weeping right where I left off.  I so don't like making mistakes.  I so make them. I am so trying to relax and embrace change.

a few plans for the rest of the week… park day and unpacking boxes which seem to have vomited volumes of craft supplies in my basement. 

From my picture journal:

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 (new living room)

7 Quick Takes

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1. I heard a few weeks ago that Stories for the Homeschool Heart was indeed going to the publisher.  I look forward to seeing the finished volume and am pleased to have been included.  If you would like a free copy read on:

Nominate a mom you know who has a 'homeschool heart' Tell us in less than 200 words how she has inspired you and why she has a 'homeschool heart'. Send your entries to TheresaThomasEverydayCatholic at gmail dot com OR pattiarmstrong at mac dot com. Winner and nominee both win a free copy …of the book. Entries due August 30.

Stories hmsc heart cover 

(cover credit Purestock/Getty Images) 

2. It's rhetorical.  

Kieran has a knack for being right where dh wants to be.  He is like Visa. ; )   The other night his father tripped over him when turning back around to grab something.  He asked in exasperation WHY he had to be right there??  Kieran, being Kieran, was ready to provide an response but then stopped and said, "Hey, Dad? Is this one of those questions you are supposed to answer or the kind you aren't?"  psst: no <g>

3. Park day at the Seewoog again this week.  

The children are making friends and Tess spent the afternoon tagging along, usually hand in hand, with this little girl.  I passed the time learning about the ICE train and planning a ladies outing to a nearby city with the lovely homeschool ladies.  A very nice day.  

Tseew 

Seewducks 

  

4. Rainbow

 I am taking this as a good sign : ) 

Rainbowvalley 

 

5. Method Bathroom Cleaner 

…claims to smell like a spa.  To me, it smells uncannily like Old Spice.  Every time I use it I am right back in the kitchen of my grandparents farm pouring Coffee Rich over an itty bitty single serving cereal package and Grandpa is getting ready for the day in the bathroom right outside the doorway.  Grandpa was a reluctant farmer and probably the only man on the planet who used aftershave before starting barn chores.  I don't recall thinking anything at all of that at the time but having lived on my own farm since I realize how unusual it is. 

6.  It's All Mush

  As we were driving home after a day out I remarked in the car that I couldn't shake my headache.  "Try drinking some water, Mom," Aidan suggested.  "Your brain is 80% water."  

"Really?" I asked. "So what is the other 20%"  

"I dunno," says he, "I guess, like, mush."  

He knows me lol!  Though I suspect he may have my percentages off. Which may explain why last weeks 7 Takes contained six…  Dear Reader, you are very kind to overlook these things. 

7. Trash Talking

  Have we talked about the garbage?  Dh joked when we got here that you needed a PhD to figure out garbage disposal and he wasn't kidding.  For starters, our garbage can looks like this:  

Trash 

 

It gets emptied every two weeks.  TWO WEEKS people!  Reason being, we are to recycle  90% of our trash.  There are yellow bags for metal and plastic and a blue can for paper and cardboard.  But you can only put plain clean paper and cardboard in the blue can.  If it is of "mixed" contents like waxed milk cartons or envelopes with clear windows it goes in the yellow bag.  There is a brown can for 'biodegradables' which is raw food and peelings, apple cores etc.  Cooked food scraps and meat are verboten. Glass goes into freestanding pick up bins located in other villages. There is a bin for clear glass, a bin for brown glass and a bin for green glass.   There are limited options for bulk pickup and dropoff but bulk is defined much more conservatively here – no more than the trunk of a modest sized sedan. And don't think you can do that more than once or twice A YEAR.  

I find myself in predicaments like the other day when they spilled the oats before breakfast.  Is it biodegradable?  Is it black can trash?  The carton goes in the blue can and the lid goes in the yellow bag.  Or standing before the trio of glass bins with a cobalt blue wine bottle in hand.  Hmmm.

The garbage  system has ramifications I am just beginning to perceive.  How different would your life be if you did not have unlimited options to store and dump?  It makes you REALLY think about what you bring into your car and your house because it all has to eventually go someplace.  I find myself thinking more carefully about purchases.  The German 'less is more' ideal becomes more and more understandable.  It is all about stewardship.   Let me tell you it does make the average American consumer  (not even talking cost here, but quantity) appear to be caught in a binge/purge cycle that would likely shock our European neighbors.  As it is, you can readily tell the American families on the street by our  volume on garbage day and we do not begin to touch the US norm. 

And so, Where is Kim you ask?  She is busy recycling.  And let me tell you, the next time some joker feels the need to tell me what my children's carbon footprint is,  and sure as shootin' someone will, I am so gonna need to see their trash can first.  Hmph. 

life – the adventure

"We are called into a life of adventure.  It is in our heritage and our call.  


Zip2
 

Jesus uses adventure to confront who we are and make us who we are to be.  


Zip 1
 

Adventure may not come in a form you expect or at a time you anticipate.  God's adventures are personal, purposeful, and productive.  So come, step out into adventure this season.  Experience life as He intended – a God-centered adventure."

– Wanda Ventling and Allen Edeker, Life Beautiful magazine Summer 2010

Simple Woman’s Daybook (or nightbook)

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For Today, July 26th, 2010

(more daybooks at Peggy's)

Outside my window… overcast and cool.  The clouds tend to collect in the valley making it look like the forest is smoky.  

Fogvalley
 

I am hearing…. Abbie absolutely bursting with language.  Her word choice blows me away.  We were at the thrift shop sifting through a rack of baby clothes when she grabbed a top and said "Cute!".  I picked up a skirt that would match which did not meet her approval.   "NOT cute!" she said very decisively and would not allow it in the cart.  She has a variety of adjectives for situations which arise in our house: 'gross', 'ewww', and 'asgusting' make frequent appearances. 

Otherwise, it is wonderful to hear the piano again, even off key!

I am wearing… I think the same thing I was wearing the last time I sat here for a daybook, workout clothes.  Though to shake things up a bit let me tell you about the new bronze flower stud earrings I picked up at Target before we left.  Little rhinestone centers.  Very retro. Seen no less than three times last week. 

I am reading… the new Life Beautiful magazine.  I love it. Just happens to feature a girl's birthday party, which is right up our alley this week. In other news, catching up on Mrs. G.  Lest someone tsk me let me add that this could be said about moi as well:

"Mrs. G. is friends with people of many different faiths. Obviously, with these different faiths, come widely contradictory and opposing beliefs and philosophies about everything from deities, origins of life, holy books and doctrines to parenting styles and the choicest slice of pie in Seattle. They don't always agree to disagree…there are sometimes spirited discussions, but somehow these friendships keep on keepin' on. Mrs. G. thinks it comes down to respect and the realization that they all mainly do the best they can."

From the kitchen… iced oatmeal cookies.  Friends kept the boys while the movers were here Friday.  We sent them with Alannah's cookies which were a major hit.  I guess it may sound lame that I send my daughter's baking as gifts instead of my own.  If you tried some of both you would say no more.  I will never bake as well, nor enjoy it half so much as she.  It's a gift she has.  She says she used this recipe but I can't swear she didn't tweak it. The icing she whipped up out of her head so can't help you there.  The response from the friends was WOW!  Wow, wow WOW.  Move over Mrs. Fields.

Icedoat
 

Around the house…. I could sum up with Kieran's comment the other night.  He came in from outside and looked up at the china cabinet and said, "It looks just like home in here!"  The furniture has arrived and we are working at breakneck speed to unpack.  We bought and assembled a wall full of IKEA bookshelves Thursday night.  By Sat we had all the bedrooms, kitchen, dining, and living rooms pretty well done (minus wall art and curtains).  Now we have books and clothes to tackle.  Hoping to finish most of it by Alannah's bday party. 

I am creating… a new home. Specifically, working on wall art and window treatments next. 

I am thankful for… the way my husband has so skillfully redirected us this past month.  Had a bit of a meltdown on Saturday over a misunderstanding regarding china cabinet arrangement.  Stop laughing.  That can happen to me.  What, you can't picture me chasing the man out onto the patio debating about which pattern to display? It ended badly on my end.  Not my finest moment of late.

Moments like that are rarely over what they seem though.  It was just the last thing that happened in a string of no sleeping, hard working, emotionally charged few weeks.  He knew that.  That is why he found me in the utility room a while later, insisted we had come too far to fall apart over transferware, to discuss where the communication had misfired and how we can prevent that in the future.  

And that, my friends, is why I love this man. We by no means boast marital perfection.  But we are here today, saying these things and trying to really hear the responses.  For that, I am thankful. 

A few plans for the rest of the week….  Alannah turns 16 this week.  We are planning a birthday party with her new friends to feature a fondant cake by Moira. (see above re: my baking…)  She confided that she is uncomfortable receiving gifts so she is planning out party favors for each of them in return because she sincerely will not be happy with nothing to give in return. We look forward to celebrating the gift that  she is.

Pondering these words…

Let mercy lead 
Let love be the strength in your legs 
And in every footprint that you leave 
There'll be a drop of grace 
If we can reach 
Beyond the wisdom of this age 
Into the foolishness of God 
That foolishness will save 
Those who believe 
Although their foolish hearts may break 
They will find peace 

Rich Mullins

from my picture journal:

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on living the dream

Burned out from housekeeping, diaper  changing, paper grading, meal making, nose wiping, and the dust bunnies that sneak in from all sides?  Get some perspective today because you are living the dream.  

Love the quote on her sidebar as well:

"When we traded homemaking for careers, we were implicitly promised economic independence and worldly influence. But a devil of a bargain it has turned out to be in terms of daily life. We gave up the aroma of warm bread rising, the measured pace of nurturing routines, the creative task of molding our families' tastes and zest for life; we received in exchange the minivan and the Lunchable." 

— Barbara Kingsolver


Thank you to my husband for making this dream possible for me. I do not take it for granted, though I still do not do this as well as I would like. 

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on hurrying

"The less we are certain of the purpose of living, the more we hurry to 'kill' time.  Whoever loses his way always drives faster.

Holy people never hurry; 

their vision of timelessness gives them time. 'They who have faith do not hurry,' says the Old Testament prophet tells us."

Simple Truths, Fulton Sheen

I am 'thinking life through with Fulton Sheen' as the subtitle suggests, thanks to my friend Wesley Anne. This is my thought for the day.  

Hurry, hurry has no blessing as the saying goes.

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Simple Woman’s Daybook

For today, July 19, 2010

(more daybooks at Peggy's)


Outside my window... hot and muggy. We had a reprieve this weekend but the heat came on strong this morning. Glad we got the hike in yesterday.

I am wearing... white microfiber top and gray workout pants and tennies. Had a session with Gilad this morning, which was not as nice as my sessions with Leslie Sansone. Noticing the workouts from the 90s are more uptempo and frantic, thus harder on the joints and not necessary more effective. 

Considering these words: 

" If you can't be a good example, then you you'll just have to be a horrible warning." 

-thanks to Jen for giving me my options lol. 

I am creating: Got the new little portable sewing machine set up this weekend and fixed hems. It works like a charm for a cheapie machine.  I didn't want to spend a fortune knowing I would be running it on a transformer. Definitely like the Singer better than the Brother machine. 

Sew
 

Also, picked up a new Photoshop Elements book which looks promising. Need to figure out all the "large array of tools, options, palettes, and menus."  I am an intelligent woman.  I can do this. I think. 

From the kitchen: fresh produce, German coffee, dinner taken to our friends with the new baby. Should probably add that pork chop dinner last week which my husband matter of factly pronounced the worst plate of food I have ever sat before him. Truly was that. Havent mastered the oven temps and everything gets hotter here, either due to the altitude or the voltage or both.  Those chops would have made very respectable hockey pucks, let me tell you. Ugh.

I am planning…  where the furniture will go when it arrives, a playdate for the boys, the new school year, and to walk the trail a few more times this week. 

(ps – plans altered before publishing – movers arrive in the am)

From the learning room: Last week was Irish dance camp. 

Ceili 3
 

The big girls (above L) and Kieran will be enrolling in the dance school this school year. Very very cool. 

Ceili 1
Ceili 2

Looking at Teaching Textbooks.  Aidan began The Shining Company. Journaling all around.

I am thankful for… an evening of laughs and window shopping and TALK talk TALKing. Needed that, though I am more confused than ever about what I want the house to look like. And yes, it probably takes up more thought time for me than your average Joe. Not sure why that is. Design is terribly important to me even if no one else ever sees it. Beauty is its own excuse I guess.

Pottery
 

I am reading… Blue Ruin is finished.  If I had to share one book with my daughters as they become young women who will be discerning future spouses this would be it. Fiction can be so much more effective at showing vs telling. I hope they bury this message deeply in their hearts. 

From my picture journal…

Game 

 game night on the patio in jammies

7 Quick Takes


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I have had so many thoughts that never make it to the keyboard lately.  No time to type.  Not that there isn't time.  Just not time to type. As so often is the case there doesn't seem to be a good time of day to be sitting here. Will do my best to play catch up with 7 takes: 

1.

 The girls began Irish dance with a daily camp this week.  They are loving it.  Dance was just the ticket for Moira especially to embrace this new place, this new life.  She is blooming before our eyes and smiles have replaced the reserved introversion of the past weeks.  When she isn't dancing she is kicking the soccer ball. 

Speaking of which, my deep-seated aversion to vuvuzelas not withstanding, several of them begin soccer or football shortly.

2. 

We have a tv but it isn't connected.  We have been renting movies but have no US channels.  Without that crutch we have turned to the library with gusto.  We had to make two trips this week since we ran through our books. 

Favorite books this week:

old Hardy Boys for Aidan

Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe for Kieran

Grace Livingston Hill for the girls and I – More Than a Conqueror

Stephen Beisty's Castles which includes the story of Germany's Neuschwanstein. "Ludwig sits at the table. His teeth hurt so much he can only eat soft food." 

I should wow you with a deeply philosophical read here. But I admit I checked out an old Victoria Holt novel, Judas Kiss, which I read in high school. Takes place in Bavaria and I am all about that lol.  Twaddle, someone will certainly note. Still,  her historical fiction really did instill a love for history and travel that stuck obviously. I am with Karen Andreola who quotes

"Besides my Bible, I always keep three books going that are just for me – a stiff book, a moderately easy book, and a novel or one of poetry. I always take up the one I feel fit for. That is the secret: always have something 'going' to grow by."  

That is me. Piles of books that bear little resemblance to one another. 

3.

As the calendar squares tick off the arrival of our household goods approaches – ever closer. Dh and I confided to each other that we were ambivalent about that.  In a way it has been like running away from home. We have adjusted to open empty spaces.  It is clean, it is freeing.  But, home is catching up to us and we both keep saying we wish we had lived without our stuff for a month BEFORE packing so we could really see what we needed and wanted to keep.  Now I suspect there is still too much stuff coming and I am not sure if this stuff defines us accurately.    

4.

The enchanted forest around us both fascinates and frightens me. I shared about the hawk attack.  Now there is a new twist – wild boar, which are apparently multiplying at an impressive rate and attacking humans regularly. What we had thought were coyote howls in the evenings appear to be boar.  I am assured that they are nocturnal and most of the attacks involved homeward bound party goers.  Here is hoping. I am not thinking about the boar that crashed into the church during the daytime, am not am not am not…..


5.

The 'back home' house suffered an intrusion, a defiling this past week.  That has also occupied my thoughts in recent days.  Marsha Johnson of Waldorf Educators was sharing recently about blessing her food, blessing the plate upon which it sits and blessing the light which falls across the table as she ate it.  Those words demonstrate a profound sense of gratitude for all that is and so articulated the essence of mindful living we are attempting to inculcate in our kids.  And then one boy back home…. I don't understand.  My world, so rooted in creation and stewardship, suddenly came face to face with defacing and destroying and the stark contrast has been a shock to my senses. 

6.

On a new beginning note, we did purchase a new bed after all.  It is French.  It is old.  It is lovely with its amber toned woods and deep carving. It is rock solid sturdy.  New bedding followed.  Neither are what I envisioned.  Both are absolutely delightful.  Both were dirt cheap.  Not cheap as in "oh I only spent $2000, instead of the $5000" (which makes me say, whatever!) but rather in the "Omigosh, for that I could have gotten pressed wood at the discount furniture warehouse!" sense.  Seriously.  A steal.  

"Gandhi said that whatever you do in life will be insignificant. But it's very important that you do it." – Remember Me


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on letting go

I have read and reread this essay over the past 24 hrs.  I couldn't say it better myself so I won't. 

Since it is similar to some other things I have read and has triggered a lot of reflection on my part I will elaborate on some points though.

"as a wife and mother I am living my dreams"

This is my repeated conclusion.  I have toyed with going back to school on and off for many years. Still not ruling that out.  Increasingly however I come back to the truth that this IS what I want to be doing.  Nothing else is on hold or set aside or being secretly longed for.  I have the life I determined to make, although I may not have been able to fully picture how it would all play out. 

 It is much harder than I expected. It is far more challenging.  It does not have a time card I can punch to validate the effort.  And there is no punching out at 5pm.  However the opportunities – creative, spiritual, emotional – are vast and remain largely untapped in the general public.  I am glad to be here. 

"I only spend time with friends I cherish."

This is only sort of true for me, but more true than it used to be and online and off.  I am becoming ever more realistic about what it means to be a friend in the truest sense of the word.  It takes time. It takes listening. It takes remembering. There is a limited amount of all that I have to give and give well after job #1 above.  

Facebook may tell you that you have hundreds of friends.  You don't.  Be charitable to all.  Be intimate with a few.  Not because you are selfish or stingy, but because those you love deserve the best you have to give, and further, because the very definition of intimacy implies discretion and exclusivity and is grossly distorted in cyberspace.  There is a sort of emotional voyeurism and prostitution online which troubles me.  It is changing the face of friendship – on the one hand bringing people of common interests together from afar, on the other it is tearing down the walls of propriety and privacy and inviting the evaluation and condemnation of strangers. I am still sorting out how I feel about all that. 

on the flip side she mentions letting go of relationships which tear you down.  She talks about forgiveness even if "there is never a reconciliation."

This is a touchy subject and  I have faced it personally.  There is a balance to be negotiated between letting go and abandoning, between forgiveness and excusing, between letting go and giving up, between knowing what you can do and knowing what only God can do, between knowing when to be actively involved in the healing process and when to be quietly praying behind the scenes – which is definitely NOT doing nothing.  Letting go may mean letting go of our expectations of others and discerning what role we can and should play in one another's lives. 

I think these lines fall in a different place at different times in our life.  As much as I am moved by the words of many creative young women online, I have noticed that by and large their faces are much younger than mine.  That underlying angst, the need to vocalize and debate and articulate is different at mid 40s than it was at 30.  I have seen heated discussions about the merits of cloth diapers, disposable diapers and no diapers at all.  To homeschool or not to homeschool?  Is homesteading the only viable answer to the dangers of mass food production and property rights violations? (and I can tell you my opinions on all of these are not what they were 15 yrs ago)  Further, is it even valid for others NOT to come to the same conclusions as we have. It is possible for us to be happy and thriving if we choose very different paths than we have considered in the past? Maybe letting go means sometimes letting go of the way we were so sure was right.

It seems at 30 you begin to discern there are problems with myriad possible solutions and it does seem as if you could just land on the correct ones the problems would be solved.  Maybe that is what is different in middle age, different approaches to the problem of pain and a different solutions.  Susan said it best:

"One of the blessings of middle age is that you've been through a lot of changes, a lot of ups and downs, maybe some crises, probably some loss. And what you learn, if you welcome the lesson, is that it all ends up not mattering. What matters– really matters (and I'm not being spiritually trite here)– is loving God and loving others."

If our 30s were about solving the problem of pain perhaps 40s bring some understanding that not everything needs to be solved by us or perhaps that acceptance and trust are more likely to help us learn the lessons that pain brings than actively working on eliminating the challenge ever could. It is not there for no reason.  God does not will evil or suffering in our lives but He does use it. Letting go may mean letting go of our timetable for the resolution of our problems and further, the means by which they are resolved.  

It may even mean our whole picture of what 'resolved' looks like – our  definition of both problem and solution – is likely to evolve significantly. A dear friend and I have mused about the trials and the blessings in our lives and how often we have been very wrong in deciding which were which.  That is one point I can't stress enough.  

I am usually wrong about which are which.

Letting go for me, today, means letting go of my assessment of which is which and trusting that somehow, some way, it is ALL blessing, even when it hurts. It's about welcoming the lesson, as Susan says, and it is far easier said than done.  Age does not automatically produce that response, but practice does. It comes down to a determination to see the blessing wrapped in the pain, because it is there.  It is always there.