summer thoughts

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"For most American children summer break is at hand, bringing with it the promise of cloudless, blue skies overhead, sprinklers spraying, and fireflies to chase before bed. There are ball games, freshly cut grass, and leisurely mornings to sleep in.

 For their parents it may be a different story…"

Stressed over summer break?  Feel like you should be doing more?  You can jump over here for my take over at Tan Homeschool today.  (hint – if your summer is looking anything like this, I think you're probably doing just fine.) 

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I hope you are scooping up joy by the bucketful this summer. : ) 

 

Feeding Grandma’s Chickens

 

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Where I come from houses are white and barns are red.  Not always, but very often. It just seems the way it should be.  My mother-in-law's farm is such a place, Wisconsin perfection with mown lawns and flowers planted near  the barn doors.  On summer evenings it is idyllic.  The little girls loved peeking inside the big red barn with her and visiting the hens. 

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Nor rural sights alone, but rural sounds,
Exhilarate the spirit, and restore
The tone of languid nature.
~William Cowper

Star Spangled

There was some debate over where to see fireworks this year, our first in Utah.  Zach and Megan were in town and voted Park City since none of us have been yet so that's where we headed.  

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First stop while it was still light out was the Alpine Slide.  One boy needed to think about a few minutes before committing.  We don't push that sort of thing but do encourage when they are on the fence and seem intrigued, if a little unsure.  We walked closer to the gondolas and slides and watched for a while and that cinched it.  Tickets were ordered and up they went….

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It was a loooong ride up.  So long that they texted us selfies. Then let us know they were on the way down.  

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Down was awesome. At least until catching up with Tess.  Then it became increasingly less awesome til the end.  Cautiously spontaneous, she is.  She was dead set on doing the ride but did it her way.  (read: slow ; ))

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Since we have had a stretch of scorching hot, dry weather we didn't consider that the cloudless skies would be anything else yesterday.  All our years in the Rockies should have made us wiser than that.  The wind picked up as we arrived and the Weather Channel app was warning of rain coming in right about showtime.  We debated for a while, but having lived in the Rockies we decided to ride it out and see.  Good call.  With a change in wind direction the clouds went off course and all predictions were cancelled.  We enjoyed a beautiful show.

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on the road again

"Please call." 

My phone was flashing this message when we stepped inside from the deck two weeks ago.  That call set into motion a long road trip to the midwest where we buried my father-in-law's widow and have begun to learn how to disperse an estate.  It's a new season of life, this goodbye-ing.  Honestly my head is too full to put words to it all.

I have to smile now remembering packing up from England and musing about whether these changing seasons meant travel was over for us.  Not so.  We just logged some 45 hrs on the road with three very chill and cooperative passengers.  (while their bigger siblings maintained the intricately pieced carpool routine back home.)

If I were a more ambitious blogger I would insert tips for packing or pacifying children. Truth is we travel pretty gimmick-free unless you count in the promise of a soda from the gas station each day.  Truth is, I don't have tidy definitive lists of how to do all these things we are called to do. Success increasingly seems to me to be less about procedures and perks and more about carrying on in a forward motion.  

Relentlessly. Peacefully. Cheerfully.  

Trusting that everything is unfolding exactly as it should. It's contagious, that sort of trustful stepping out each day. We notice it spreading among us and we notice the rapid breakdown between us when one of us loses it. For the record we do and we did and we  regrouped and gave do overs.  Forward motion, even if its bumbling at times. 

There have been very late nights and early mornings and lots of work in between but also so many surprises, new places, new faces.   Easier to show than tell so here are the highlights from day one on the road…

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Ending where we start, really : ) 

 

to abide

 

Jun 2015 moon morning web (1 of 1)

"Abide {stay, concentrate, give your full attention} in Me. Now part of this abiding means being focused on the example before us rather than being distracted and filling our eyes and ears with things that encourage what used to be called "our baser nature." Do you know what I'm talking about?  I've found that some books, conversations, or films stir up resentments, impatience, or other sins such as bitterness or discontent. But other images or sounds we take in encourage the good, the pure, the life-giving."

For the Family's Sake

This from my morning reading has become something of a litmus test for me. She goes on to say,

 "Not everyone is able to expend anything like the portion of time and energy on (homemaking) that she would like.  In this case we have to choose what is most important and simplify unnecessary complications in our lives." 

 

puppy love

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We are in deep.  Way deep, head over heels in love. 

My husband had been begging talking about getting a larger dog when we returned to the States. Seeing how we tend to opt for "or not" given "ready or not" we went ahead and jumped this week. 

Meet Archie, a 10wk old Standard Poodle.  Affectionate, mellow, and all legs. And very likely the subject of an embarrasing number of 'baby pictures' in the coming months. 

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fixing leaks – food waste

This summer is about taking inventory, something of a State of the Union. I am taking a hard look at where my time and money and emotion is being spent and fixing any little (or big) leaks that I am finding. As Ann Voskamp famously quips - 

A pail with a pinhole loses as much as the pail pushed right over. 

As we have been cleaning the refrigerator weekly it has became clear we are losing too much food due to poor planning and poor execution.  Time to tighten up the ship and be more intentional in what we buy and seeing it through to being used. 

Some efforts to that end:

make a menu

shop from a list

prep food soon after shopping (wash/chop/store)

store it so you can see it

use leftovers creatively

This last part is essentially what is composing our breakfast and lunch menu.  Leftover fruit, vegs and meat are finding their way into smoothies, soups, frittatas, wraps, omelettes, stir fries.  If it is likely to be used within the next day or so it goes into a small storage container.  If not, it gets frozen. (the last serving of smoothies and soup are easily poured into extra ice cube trays) 

Todays breakfast took five minutes to prep.  Line muffin tins with one slice bacon each. Pour in beaten eggs – average one per muffin cup.  Add leftover sauteed vegs. Bake 20min in oven. Mine was set to convection. Your time may vary.  We have done this minus the bacon and used leftover ground meat or sausage. (pardon the iphone pics pleaseandthankyou) 

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Anyway, maybe it's just me.  It seems as we get busy we get little leaks in the budget like this.  We move faster and there is more expense and more waste.  For a season you can compensate but it's not a good long term default.  

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making home

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"Homemaking is seen as a mere detail that can be amply covered as secondary to a job or career, which is "real life."  

however…

People and their everyday lives matter more than things or status.  Serving others is the highest calling of all (apart from prayer) – serving them in ordinary ways, giving people what they need. 

Homes absorb immense amounts of time and energy. This effort is satisfying if one has a balanced schedule and can cover the essentials without too much stress.  Essentials include the extras to the everyday round that is part of human life – the celebrations, reunions, disappointments, depression, sicknesses, disasters. 

Homes work best when someone is the contented keeper of the home life. 

Homemaker is a good description. It really is worth giving full attention to this vital task."

For the Family's Sake

It's been a long several weeks of unpacking but I am so happy to have my old books back.  We took a good amount with us on our European adventure but many were stored. It is like being reunited with old friends. 

I am rereading Susan Schaeffer Macauley right now, one of my first inspirations.  I am newly inspired and refocused in this vocation going over these words.  30 years into this journey they ring truer than ever and now feel more pregnant with meaning than ever before.  

Now, as life presents so many possibilities and distractions,  I am reminded again and again that keeping the home life is really worth giving my full attention to. 

bullwinkle by morning

 

May 2015 moose web (1 of 1)

Yesterday morning began like most mornings do.  Coffee was brewed, breakfast made, lunches packed, and people sent off to work and summer football practice. I was giving myself the celebratory pat on the back (you know, go Self! They are fed. They are packed. They are launched into their day and it isn't even 8am!) when I thought I saw something move back behind the trees. The thing I thought I saw was a pony.  There is no logical reason for this other than once upon a very long time ago we had such a pony.  That pony never scaled the side of a mountain however. And that didn't happen yesterday either.  

Nope. 

Much as it may have looked like a pony bum for a minute there, it was not a pony in my yard.  It was a…..

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MOOSE!

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oh.my.word.   

It was a gosh honest truth, real live MOOSE and it was just meandering around the yard nibbling on trees til it got full and decided right there would be a perfect place to….

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…sit a spell.

In my YARD, y'all.  

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And there he sat for the better part of the morning, with us periodically peeking out at him til he up and wandered off, all casual like. As if this sort of thing just happens.  

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Our neighbors said they spot one every once in a blue moon and generally they don't cause trouble. We watched from a safe distance just the same.  Moose are prey, not predators, but they can reach speeds of 35mph when they are defending their young or during mating season (in the fall) or say, when the neighbor Corgi tries to herd them and they get super annoyed.

They sound like a cow which we didn't know until later in the evening when he returned and made actual cow sounds.  Our neighbor texted me from her porch. We couldn't see at first in the dark until she said he was over eating our apple tree.  This enlightened us to two things.  First, we have an apple tree. Who knew?  Second, we probably shouldn't count on a lot of apples. 

He has made one more appearance so far, chasing the aforementioned Corgi back to her porch early this morning. To be fair she sorta had it coming. By all accounts this doesn't happen very often so this may be our only opportunity to see such a magnificent creature so close.   Still, I will probably look over to the hillside in the mornings just in case…

  

 

transplants

May 2015 flowers color web (1 of 5)

 It is a habit of our family's that soon after we move in, we plant flowers in our front yard someplace, maybe just a pot or two or maybe a small bed.  Thinking back on many other moves, most of which were in warm months, it seems this is a ritual of ours. It is a sure sign that we are home again and this place belongs to us.  Over the years we have developed several such moving routines that help us pick up our lives and set them down again someplace entirely new. 

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About the time I was mulling all that over I read a wonderful essay from Homemaker's Mentor about this very thing which asks Is Your Home a Daylily or an Oak?  The oak stands for years in one spot, rooted, solid, firm.  Daylilies grow and spread and then are often transplanted to new spots to once again bloom and brighten a space.  The trick to any transplanting project is to minimize trauma to the root system. Using this analogy the author offers some really helpful tips for smooth transitions.  

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I particularly love her reflections about the stages of a new home.  Year one feelings, year two, and year three. They are each different from each other but predictably similar every time.  A dear friend of mine, a master gardener, used to say of her perennials, "First year they sleep, second they creep, third they leap."  This is very like our own relocation experiences.  That first year is spent figuring out the new place, finding doctors and sports teams and favorite shopping spots.  The second year we spread our wings more and begin to have some familiarity with local events. We recognize faces when we are out and no longer need our GPS for every outing.  That third year we really have hit our stride and begin to branch out comfortably in our new community.  We feel settled.  Home.  And reality is, this is usually when it is time for us to prepare to do it all over again so it's vital that we develop ways to do it as painlessly as possible.

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As suggested, we have been working diligently to set up kitchen, living areas, and bedrooms so we can get everyone settled into familiar patterns sooner vs later.  We still have work to do, however our days are already beginning to look like our May days always have. We cook, we study, we take walks, we plant flowers, and then yes, we work on the house. 

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Things are still very new here.  We are still getting to know our way around this house, figuring out the best places for things and then remembering where those are. A home is made through a series of little steps like this one.   Day by day we become better friends with this place and wake up a bit more comfortable than the morning before.  Everyday there is a little something more tying us here – flowers to water, a life to cultivate. 

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