19 October

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Week 4

I didn't finish Elisabeth's costume on Wednesday like I hoped, but I'm resolving to complete it by the end of Saturday, and James's on Sunday. (His is not as hard, since I don't have to figure it out as I go.) I haven't knit a stitch in the last few days. I have, however, completed a lot of the sampler because, well, I just can't stop! (Speaking of Alicia, I'm sure you heard her news! So, so, so exciting!)

Today is one of those days that's colder inside than outside, but even opening the windows doesn't seem to draw the warmer air in. We're all in slippers and I feel like I should be wearing gloves as I type this. 

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I got some new yarn, from my supplier. It's like crack, this stuff. It'll be James's Christmas vest and I can't wait to knit it!

Other thoughts: I want glasses. Or at least reading glasses, which I don't need. One of my cello students quit on Monday in a kind of crappy way, which has had me down more than it should. We've been trying to keep Millie in all the time since we got an "anonymous" threat to her on our door last month. We've been mostly successful. (It was anonymous, but we know who did it. Neighbors can be strange.)

I think next week, I will post about our favorite things to have for lunch (including my spaetzle recipe). Care to join me? We can call it "Lunch Week". 

17 October

Is today really the seventeenth?! As I predicted, October is just flying by! I'm starting to feel a little bit nervous about the Halloween costumes, which I haven't worked on all week. But of course, I do have time. I'm going to try to finish Elisabeth's today if I can.

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I'm joining Ginny in the Yarn Along again today. 

Still knitting James's sweater, which is going kind of slowly. One would think on size 10 needles that it would just fly off the needles, especially with how many sports practices and games and meets and lessons that I sit through on a weekly basis. But for some reason, it's just going slowly. Oh, well. One thing I love about knitting is that it can only be done a stitch at a time. It forces a little bit of consciousness of process and time and patience.

I'm also still reading Kristin Lavransdatter. Actually, the copy I was reading before belonged to a friend in my book group, and I gave it back to her, and then it took me a week or ten days to pick up my own copy, so I've only just started the second "book" (middle section of the complete work) recently. I love the book although I've been too tired to read very much in the evenings. 

Thank you for being here, friends. I appreciate you and your thoughtful comments more than you know. xoxox

15 October

breaststroke

This weekend, Elisabeth swam in her first meet since joining a competitive (year-round) swim team this fall. I was blown away with how much better her strokes and turns already looked (I think watching her hero Missy Franklin this summer, really observing Missy's strokes, was a help, as well as the great coaches she now has), and she swam seconds faster (more than 5 seconds faster, in some races) than she had by the end of the summer season. 

I'm amazed by her focus and her strength, both of body and will. Although she and I are similar temperament-wise (some might say "explosive"), we are also different enough that I'm impressed and humbled by her. She is much more motivated and driven at ten than I've ever been, about most things. Though I'm a perfectionist, I'm not as competitive and determined as she is. I'm proud of her, as an athlete, a pianist, and especially as a person.

I'm still struggling, existentially, with the idea that I have this daughter who competes in a sport at already a pretty high level, who has read the entire Lord of the Rings, who makes outlines and writes essays and uses words like "subtle" correctly. I kind of feel like I'm the mama of little ones, like that's what I'm good at. Even though things have changed gradually and in very seamless ways, when I stop to reflect on all of this, I feel more than a little surprised by it all. I feel like she's still supposed to be that wide-eyed five-year-old. But, oh, she is so much more. She is gracious and serious and strong and funny. 

She turned ten six months ago and I wanted to write something about it here, but I didn't. I thought it was mostly because I was in constant pain with my kidney stone and stent, and then right after my surgery, our house went under contract and things moved forward. But of course, I also didn't know what to say, and I still don't. She's more than half grown. When she was born, I had no idea where it was all going. Of course, I still don't, and we have still a long time with her here in our nest. But now I see that all the decisions we have and haven't made have, in so many ways, led to her being the girl she is now: a reader, a thinker, a lover of fantasy and art, an athlete, a musician. 

I don't worry about her. I worry about her brother, constantly. But I know Elisabeth, inside and out. I want to hold onto her, for as long as I can. But I don't worry about her. I am awed, though, that I am her mother. We never know if we're quite up to the task of parenting the children we've been given. Maybe we are, and maybe we aren't. But to be humbled, and inspired, and to learn more about ourselves through them, that is amazing.

12 October

I apologize for not posting all week. I so want to be here more frequently but this week just got away from me. I did get a fair amount of progress done on one Halloween costume, some stitching on the sampler, a tiny bit of knitting (not very much), dentist and orthodontist visits (phase two of orthodontia is coming up so soon!)

Here are a few pictures from the week. 

There comes a time in the life of the Halloween costume designer where just going for it is the best course of action.

There comes a time in the life of the Halloween costume designer where just going for it is the best course of action.

Week 3

Terrible phone photo of this, but my real camera is not doing so well either in lower light settings or when actual focus is required. :( It's old and very worn out. I have no idea when I'll be able to replace it. Fingers crossed. 

Homemade spaetzle and sautéed mushrooms.

Homemade spaetzle and sauteed mushrooms for lunch today, and often lately. Spaetzle has been a favorite lunch of mine since I was very young, and my children love it, too. For many years, we just had the boxed kind, but recently I learned to make homemade and it's so good and easy!

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Lots of leaf play. These are from yesterday when it was a bit warmer. Today was chilly. For a while, it was gloriously sunny, but now it's overcast and thundering. 

See you soon!

5 October

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It actually snowed last night. Only the faintest dusting, but snow even so. I've spent the day shivering under blankets on the couch. It seems that even though the two-year-old furncace was serviced and certified in May before we bought the house, we can't actually figure out how to operate it. The company that certified it is coming over to take a look, hopefully any minute. 

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Yesterday, my mom and I spent most of the day trying to puzzle out a pattern for Elisabeth's costume. We made some headway but I think I'm still a long way off from figuring it out. Last year's pirate costumes were fun and easy to make but I'll admit I was a little disappointed that they didn't get the number of compliments from complete strangers that I've been accustomed to. (Yeah, that's kind of embarrassing but I'm admitting it anyway. Halloween costumes are my thing, you know?) Anyway, I don't think that's going to be a problem this year, as we are going for some slightly more intricate costumes. Ahem.

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My Winterwoods sampler is coming along so beautifully. It seems like completing five things (letters and/or motifs) a week is about the right number for me right now. I like being a tad ahead in case a week comes when I'm too overwhelmed to get much done on it, but I also don't want to finish it too quickly (and I really could've finished it by now, I think). If you're still thinking about joining us, please do! It's not hard and each letter is pretty fast to complete. Even the bigger motifs don't take too long (compared to other crafts). 

Well, the furnace guy came and went while I was making this post. Our furnace is working now. We are now off to a benefit dinner for the campus ministry at our church. (Our church serves the student population of a large university.) Tomorrow morning, we are looking forward to a freezing cold soccer game. What are your weekend plans?

3 October

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October, October! I'm so, so happy, my favorite month has arrived in all its golden delciousness. I know I've shared this quote before, but it's a favorite of mine, so I think it bears sharing again:

“There is no season when such pleasant and sunny spots may be lighted on, and produce so pleasant an effect on the feelings, as now in October” -Nathaniel Hawthorne

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The way our days are going right now, I'm afraid October might just fly by. But I want to hold on to every one of its treasured, golden days. 

Some things coming up that we are excited about this month:

Costume making. I'm so sorry to be a tease (only, maybe I'm not sorry....) but costumes will be kept under wraps for the most part until Halloween night. However, if you are really good, you might be able to guess. I may drop a few hints through the month, just to keep things fun.

The end of marching band. There are only two weeks left! Well, 17 days to be precise. And then I get my husband back! And I am so happy!

GLOW swim practice. As in, swim practice with more than a thousand glow sticks in the water. Oh, my. This event, more than any other, has made me feel like the mother of a "big" kid. I don't know why, exactly. It just feels like something so totally different and grown up.

Baking. I am going to make some apple cider doughnuts. (These? Or these?) And some Halloween cookies.

And cooking. October is my favorite time to nestle in to some favorite cooking. 

A tiny bit of snow forecast for this weekend!

Knitting. Mine is coming along so nicely, and I have lots more ideas in mind. And the kids. Elisabeth needs a new project, and James is ready to start some knitting of his own, too!

Stitching. The sampler is so much fun and so beautiful!

Pumpkin patches, hayrides, carving pumpkins, favorite traditions, dry leaves, crisp air, golden sun, friends, family

Oh, October, you are so good.

29 September

First week

This week I decided to complete a little bit of extra work on the Winterwoods ABCs sampler. In order to finish by the first day of winter, we need to complete two letters and one to two motifs a week. I thought it would be good to try to frontload it because you never know what's going to come up. But I didn't want to finish it too quickly because I want to have something to stitch on through the fall, so I limited myself to the three letters and two motifs I completed this week.

I'm happy with my progress and am having such a good time stitching this! The variegated floss that comes in the kit is amazing! At first, I was wondering if it would really be a big deal but it adds so much depth and interest to the design. (Sorry the light is so bad in the above photo, you can't really get a great idea for the variegation there, but it's subtle and so lovely! This is meant to be a quick, no pressure photo, with no necessary blog post or link up, so I didn't want to take too much time styling the photo or finding the perfect light in my house.)

I'm so excited about how this is going to look and can't wait to have it hanging in my living room!

26 September

Today I decided to join my friend Ginny's Yarn Along (for the first time ever, even though she's been hosting it for what, close to two years?).*

(In Ginny's words: "Two of my favorite things are knitting and reading, and the evidence of this often shows up in my photographs. I love seeing what other people are knitting and reading as well. So, what are you knitting or crocheting right now? What are you reading? Take a photo and share it either on your blog or on Flickr. Leave a link below to share your photo with the rest of us!")

Yarn along! (first time)

I'm working on James's sweater now. It's the third time I've knit this particular pattern and I love that it's like an old friend now. I actually took this picture at the pool on Friday. Since then I've completed a lot more work on the sweater. 

I just started reading Kristin Lavransdatter on Friday. I'm supposed to have finished the first "book" by Sunday, when a book club that I sometimes try to go to will be discussing it. I don't have much time to read so hopefully I'll get that far. I'm about 160 pages in right now, and need to get to 300. So far, I'm really enjoying this book. I wasn't sure what to expect, but I wasn't up for historical fiction along the lines of Anya Seton (I should have known better, Sigrid Unset did win the Nobel Prize for literature!). This newer translation by Tiina Nunnally has been described to me as "luminous" and I have to agree. It is a beautifully written, beautifully translated book. 

*The reason I haven't participated in the Yarn Along before, despite Ginny's frequent encouragement for me to do so, is that I don't read very much anymore. Since I started taking my class two years ago, I find that all my reading time is focused on my schoolwork and for some reason, I've been loath to share pictures of my textbooks as part of it. I guess I just think they'd seem dull to everyone else. :)

24 September

My friend Ginny released her Sunday Sweater pattern today. I'm so excited about this pattern! Ginny first shared her idea for the sweater with me several months ago, as she was knitting up the first prototype. Over time, as she worked out the details of the pattern, she shared a lot of her thoughts about the sweater and the process of designing it with me. It was so cool to witness her idea come to fruition in those first two sweaters she knit. I was excited to be the first person she shared the pattern with, and that I was able to be the first person to knit it (besides herself). 

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Today I'm sharing just a sort of teaser photo, because I'm waiting to photograph it on Fiona until November. Such a long way away!

With this one complete, and a good bit of work done on the next one, I'm well on the way to completing a sweater for each of my children in time for my annual November goal. It's such a good feeling. Not only that, but I also finished last year's sweaters a while back (two were completed way back in February, the other just a few weeks ago). I'd like to photograph those and share them here soon, too. I'm currently on pace to complete something like 10 or 11 sweater-type items (I'm counting vests in the number) during 2012! What an exciting thing for me, especially considering how little knitting I did last year, and how I haven't knit at all during long periods this year. It's been bits of progress here and there, with a few big spurts. I can't even put into words how happy and peaceful I feel about knitting these days, and its quiet progress.

Saturday's progress

And speaking of quiet progress, I'm really enjoying the cross-stitch. I completed two letters and two motifs on the sampler over the weekend (photo above was from before I started on the wellies, which are above the O and P), and I might sneak in a little bit more before the week is over, because it's just so fun and addictive. I first cross-stitched when I was 10 or 11, and my mom (who used to do a ton of cross-stitch) taught me. Later, when I was first married, I thought I'd cross-stitch some hand towels for our bathroom (I bought those towels with the Aida cloth panels), but I didn't like the project much so I let it go. Anyway, I wasn't sure how I'd feel about it this time around (I so badly want the finished object but I just wasn't sure if I'd have the patience for cross-stitch!). I have been so pleasantly surprised by how enjoyable it is. More to come on that!

21 September

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It's still pretty hot here, definite summertime weather still. But the light is golden and autumny, now. 

I have a bad cold, which came on super suddenly Tuesday night. Still, there is lots going on so I'm just trying to plow through, with the help of lots of tea. I hope that I won't crash and then regret pushing through the last few days. This weekend there's not much going on, except a soccer game tomorrow morning.

And of course, some stitching! Those of you who are joining Ginny and me in the Winterwoods stitch-along, don't forget to get started tomorrow! I'm so looking forward to peeking in on everyone's progress. 

Some baby things

My sister's baby boy was born last week. And of course I made him a lot of presents, just like any good crafty auntie should. Of course, the time spent making the gifts was not reflected in the time spent photographing them, which was done on our way out to soccer before gifting them. The color is kind of bad in these, which is unfortunate. Anyway.

I had something very, very specific in in mind, and I'm so excited that it all came together just as I would have hoped! 

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The "main" present (in my opinion) was his little sweater. The pattern is Beyond Pueperium by Kelly Brooker, and let me tell you, I absolutely loved knitting it. I want to make another one but don't have anyone else to knit it for. Maybe my baby nephew will get another in the coming months....

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The yarn is Malabrigo Rios, which I love to knit with. So soft and lofty, and superwash, too! The buttons are something I picked up last-minute at JoAnn but have some interesting foil backing so the look a little "crackled". Although I wasn't sure what I wanted to use for buttons, and really went back and forth a lot about it (hence the last-minute), I was actually really happy with how these worked out.

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To go with the sweater, there were two different initial shirts for him. One in a smaller size to fit him now, with the "little n", and one that should fit him through the fall, with the "big N". I even had a very specific fabric in mind for the appliques, something I'd had in my stash at some point, but for a while thought I'd given it away during the move! Fortunately, I did still have it, which was a huge relief and I think angels even sang when I found it.

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The pants are made of some organic cotton jersey, which I love. I actually hoped to find something light blue and maybe pinstriped, but that apparently doesn't exist, so I settled for this lovely ocean blue and I'm so glad I did. What a perfect compliment to the sweater. 

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In addition to this outfit, which was the "main" gift, I also found this firefighter knit fabric (in my search for the original idea of light blue pinstriped knit), and I had to pick up a little bit because the baby's father is a firefighter. It quickly became some pants, and I added the dalmation applique to the onesie to tie it together. (An old Heather Ross print that I hoard for only the most special of things.)

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We also couldn't leave his big sister out (wasn't I just making baby gifts for her?!), so she got an inital shirt. She told my mom that it's her favorite shirt and that she's going to get some money and put it in the pocket to save for the ice cream man. So sweet. 

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Such sweetness in these days with new babies in the family.

Stitch along!

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Last month I talked about some projects I was planning. Some of the knitting projects are well underway, or even completed. But the Winterwoods ABCs cross-stitch sampler kit, sitting prominently in the picture? Still sealed up so lonely in the package, the way it has been for months. 

Last night, my friend Ginny called me and suggested a brilliant idea. Why not do a stitch along for it? She thought we could start on the first day of autumn and stitch over the next 13 weeks, finishing by the first day of winter. She didn't have to ask twice. I was all in! A perfect project, and so doable.

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{image from aliciapaulson.com}

So we decided to open a Flickr group for anyone else who wants to join us for a stitch along of Alicia's extraordinary kit (it really is extraordinary -- the quality of the materials is amazing, and Alicia doesn't miss any details). It'll be low pressure -- no posting requirements. Just a way to share progress, keep motivated, and keep accountable. So that we can actually have the sampler hanging on the wall in time for winter enjoyment!

If you would like to join us, all you need to do are order the kit (or you can also buy just the pattern and obtain your own materials), and join the Flickr group

Though Ginny did contact Alicia last night to make sure this was OK with her (and she gave the project an enthusiastic "yes!"), we are not affilated with her, so we don't get anything if you buy your supplies from Alicia. That said, for the sake of convenience and quality, I don't think you can go wrong getting any other supplies you might need (needles, hoop, even scissors!) from her. Alicia rolled out her new shop in the last week and it is really well organized and lovely!

Ginny's post this afternoon has a few more details and links, so be sure to check there, too. I hope you'll join us!

5 September

I wrote a post a couple weeks ago about August, how hard it is for me, how I finally realized that I just hate it. I didn't end up posting it because I was feeling too sorry for myself about it being August in the first place. But can I just say right now, August is over! And I couldn't be happier. Just turning the page on the calendar was a relief to me. And the weather, while still hot, is not as unbearable. And we're finding our rhythm a little bit again.

I can never not live in the West.

On the subject of family rhythm, some things have changed for us there. Long ago, two houses ago, before Fiona was even a dream, I wrote about our bedtime rhythm. I believed strongly then, as I do now, that chronic sleep deprivation in children is a real problem in the world these days. At that time, when I had two small children, very few classes and activities to take them to, and a husband who worked a lot (but not as much as now), I felt like putting them to bed early was vitally important to both their health and my sanity. 

Today, things look a little different. James is now older than Elisabeth was then, and in addition to her music lessons and occasional classes, we've added year-round competitive swim team to the mix for her, as well as soccer for him. I am right there with all the parents and "experts" who bemoan the loss of childhood and the overscheduled child of today. And (even bigger for me), I am really selfish and protective of own time. I'll gladly fill up a day spontaneously but I dread having things that I "have" to do. 

But it (finally!) occurred to me that, as homeschoolers, we are not locked into any schedule in the same way that families who go to school are. I realized, in a very freeing way, that it's OK for us to have a later dinner, and a later bedtime, if my children don't have to wake up at 6:30 in order to catch a school bus. So now we are eating dinner at around 7pm and the kids are asleep at about 9:00. This would have been a blasphemy to my old way of thinking, but these days, I'm grateful to have shaken away that more dogmatic perspective. I think it's so easy as parents to perceive one "way" as being "virtuous" and anything different to be "wrong". I've certainly done that about a lot of things, and I'm sure I continue to do so in more ways than I even realize. 

I think as mothers, too often we find ourselves in the trap of comparing ourselves, our families, to others. But why do we do this to ourselves? It's true that comparison is the quickest way to fall short. We all know that, I think, but it's so easy to think that someone else must have it "right". In the end, we have to remember that we only have to do what's right for our own families, and that might be really different than what another family needs, for so many factors: time, schedules, biorhythms, temperaments. We all need to seek a place of balance, and that's hard to do, but it's freeing, too. Instead of comparing, and fretting over whether we are doing something right, we can find that place of balance for our own families. And that's where the peaceful, joyful, felicitous family moments reside, rather than a place of anxiety.

I feel like we are at the point where we can say "yes" to more afternoon activities because we aren't locked into a daytime schedule. As I type this, it's just past lunchtime, and my kids are all playing outside, enjoying unstructured, happy childhood time. Since they get that time during the day, I am branching out, in a way that feels a little bit new to me, to letting them do more things outside the home. And I'm so glad I am. They seem happy and balanced and relaxed. It's been a good thing for us.

So it begins. That's James on the far left (red t-shirt).

{Also. The pictures here (sorry, more phone pictures -- I really am hoping to get back to my "real" camera!) were taken last week at James's first-ever soccer practice. I never set out to do the whole soccer thing. But oh, man, I really like it! He is so into it, so excited, and I'm amazed by how much I enjoy sitting there at the field during his practices. So, yeah, I guess I'm a soccer mom now.}

Earl Grey tea slushy

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At the end of last summer, I got the idea to make an Earl Grey tea "slushy" and spent a fair amount of time working out a recipe for it. Then the weather got cool and I set the idea aside in favor of hot tea and the coziness of my favorite season. The idea of a tea slushy seems to be seasonal for me, because it was just this past week that the idea came to me to try it again. 

Last year, I was experimenting with making ice cubes out of the tea itself to use, but this year I opted for a much simpler approach, using regular ice cubes and tea rather than milk as the primary liquid. I think this method is much better.

Here's my method:

1. Brew a very strong batch of Earl Grey tea. This is best done by using a greater quantity of tea rather than a longer steep time, which yields bitter tea. I used an organic loose-leaf tea from the health food store, which is more affordable than using tea bags for this purpose. The ratio I've settled on for this is two heaping teaspoons of tea per cup of boiling water. While the tea is steeping, stir in 2 Tablespoons of sugar per cup of water. This is very sweet, too sweet to drink, but just about right for the slushy. What this makes is a tea concentrate. Allow to cool completely.

2. Put 1 cup of ice in a blender, and cover with the cooled tea concentrate. Blend until thick and slushy. With the motor running, add 1/4 cup milk of choice. (Whole milk, half and half, almond milk, etc.) Blend until combined.

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3. Pour into cup, and enjoy. 

Let me know if you try it!

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Also "brewing" here (hee!), I have some projects planned! My sister is due with her second baby any week now, and I need to knit a little something for him (it's a him!). I also bought yarn for autumn sweaters for my crew. This was all made easier by a gift certificate I'd been saving, as well as a little bit of gift yarn. I'm super excited about all of my planned knits, as well as a few other planned projects, such as a little collection of Alicia's kits that I've never started but am so excited to finally get to, and also some Jesse Tree plans that I've had on my mind for literally years. It is so good to have things in the works. 

13

wedding

Yesterday my husband and I celebrated thirteen years of marriage. 

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I was thinking about where we are now, and where I imagined, as a 21-year-old bride, we'd be after thirteen years. Today we have three kids, a house, a teaching job. I think I pictured us having a house, a pile of kids, and a teaching job of a different kind (originally my husband was looking to pursue a career in higher education, rather than high school). What has surprised me is the meandering road it's taken to get to that point, the way it feels to live this life day to day, and the actual where we live (I expected us to move to another state, rather than staying in my home state). 

Still, thirteen years seems pretty impressive. We've hit the teens! My mom gave us an anniversary memory book for our first anniversary, and at fifteen, it starts skipping years (just every five, and then every ten, years). I remember looking at that in the first few years of our marriage and thinking we had ages until it started skipping! Not so, now!

I'm happy, excited, and proud of these thirteen years we have under our belt together, and looking forward to what the next thirteen will bring. 

I want to talk about towels

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I haven't been here in ages. I could talk about the progress on our house, or about the scorching heat followed by fantastic rain last week (followed by more heat), or about swimming and other summer niceties, or about the nasty summer colds four out of five members of our house currently have, or the fact that my husband is out of town and starts work on Monday (8-hour-a-day band camp until school starts in August, which really won't be eight hours a day because of set-up, clean-up, drive time, questions, paperwork, phone calls....), and how we've discussed before that his return to work at the end of the summer (now so much earlier due to marching band and an earlier start date at his new school) gets me down every year. 

But I really want to talk about towels. I don't know why, but I just want to.

I think proper beach towels are an absolutely necessary part of life. Maybe it's because we always had separate towels for swimming when I was growing up. But I really think they're a vital necessity.

My mom gave me a cooler, reusable picnic placesettings for four, some crystal candlesticks, and four beach towels for my bridal shower gift. It was actually a fantastic, creative, and useful gift (even though I hadn't registered for any of it -- bridal registries are another topic I can [and have] go on and on about, but I digress).

Two of the towels were ordinary large beach towels and two were super giant beach towels, like blankets, almost. We still use all of them. For a while, after we had kids, the big ones were Mama and Daddy's towels and the ordinary (but still big) beach towels were Elisabeth's (then Elisabeth and James's). Four years ago, we forgot to bring our beach towels with us on a trip, so my husband ran into Target and picked up four more. They must've been an anomaly because I have never before or since seen such large, heavyweight beach towels at Target. Since he got two identical blue ones and two identical green ones, they transitioned into our swimming lesson towels for the next few years, which were the key years in developing my obsessive swimming bag ritual. The kids would use two matching green towels one day, and two matching blue towels the next, all summer, ad nauseum. I washed the towels every night and folded them, ready for the alternating days. 

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Last year, we lost one of these towels and Fiona really needed to be worked into the mix, anyway, so I bought six great big beach towels on sale from Lands' End (which really has excellent sales, by the way. I have gotten $15 coats there, too, that would normally be five times that price). I still continue with the same ritual, with the older towels being used for Mama and Daddy, or for extras at swim meets.

Why did I feel like telling you all of this? Why did the silly details of my obsession with beach towels need to be my first post after such a long break?

Maybe it's because controlling the swimming bag, and keeping the towels completely orderly, is my way of having control amidst the chaos of summer, when everyone and everything seems to be exploding every which way, and which seems particularly important this summer, when we've gone through a lot of transition and haven't really settled into our new home.

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Maybe it's because, like everybody, I want to be known and understood, and this crazy little habit of mine is a way for me to tell you something about me, about the quirky things that matter to me, in their small way.

And maybe it's because, like I wrote almost three years ago, this towel ritual of mine is love. It's one of the many small ways that I love my family. I feel like it's important to say that it's not just a way that I show my love to them, as if love is some intangible concept that requires a kind of external scaffold to make it present. I don't believe that, because I think love is an action. It's something we do. It's something we choose. We love our families, in all the ways we can, the best we can, for as long as we can. We mess up. We leave the dishes in the sink too long, we lose our temper over something stupid, we forget their piano lesson. But we keep on loving them, in all the small ways that are our ways.

Also, my family isn't even aware of my towel ritual, except in some peripheral way, because they always have towels in the bag. It's not like, "Thanks, Mama! Now I can see your love for me because you made sure there were towels in the bag!" This work and love of mothering goes unseen and unrecognized. Almost always by our children, and sometimes even by our spouses. There are so many days, my friends, when I would so love a gold star at the end of the day -- either because it was a really good day, or a really bad one. I would love some acknowledgement and appreciation. As I know would you. Sometimes, every once in a while, I get that. But mostly, I don't. Mostly, I keep on loving my family in my small ways, hoping that it's enough, that I'm enough, that it will all add up to something beautiful in the end. 

I want you to know, you who are reading this right now, that your quiet and hard work is something beautiful. That your silly little love rituals, whatever they are, are enough. That pleasure you take in them, the ways you love your family, the hardness of the everyday, these things matter. And they do add up to something extraordinary. No matter how flawed you are -- as a human being, as a parent -- what you are doing is valuable. 

And that's why I wanted to talk about towels today.

Jun 13, 2012

Another quick phone check-in. We are still working in floors and painting, and haven't really begun unpacking yet, but hopefully that's on the agenda for the weekend. The painting is very nearly done, with just a wall of the kitchen and two small bathrooms left.

Yesterday my mother-in-law brought over our kitchen table and chairs. This is the first time we've ever had two eating areas in a house, and I'm so excited about it. I knew for the kitchen that I wanted a round white table, and my mother-in-law was able to find a table secondhand which she painted for me. Then (my favorite part), she found six mismatched chairs and painted them all white, as well. It looks perfect and I'm totally thrilled.

Swimming has been going great this week, as well. Fiona has suddenly had a boost in confidence and is jumping into the water independently and bobbing and blowing bubbles all the time, which is a huge transformation from just 9 days ago! Elisabeth has been practicing with the teen age group this week due to scheduling, and I think it's been good for her, both in terms of the harder workout (which she's been keeping up with!), and the fact that she's so serious about swimming she sometimes gets irritated with younger kids who just mess around. Next week she'll be back with her own age group, though, so she'd better not get too used to it!

Well, that's it for this Wednesday afternoon. Be back soon!

Jun 13, 2012

Jun 13, 2012

9 June

Another phone post tonight, as I'm too tired and sunburnt to fuss with one on the computer, which is not yet properly set up.

I've been trying to capture some before and after pictures of the process of making this house into our home, but of course I wish I'd taken even more of the "before" pictures (I think that's always the case, don't you? The contrast seems more pronounced when you can really remember what it was like before!)

So far we've stripped a ton of wallpaper and painted almost all of the interior walls of the house (when we're finished, we will have). We've demolished a low wall in the kitchen, pulled up carpet and layers of linoleum, and are now installing our hardwood floors. It's all so exciting (and tiring!), but everyday I'm actually amazed by the changes to the house.

The kids have met a neighbor girl and have spent hours this week playing outside with her. This is the first time we've lived in a neighborhood with any children in it, so everyone's excited.

Swim season is in full swing. Today we had the longest swim meet ever. All told, it was over seven hours! Exhausting! And we all came home more sunburnt than we meant to. But still, I remarked to my mom today, I love being a swim mom. It's a great sport to participate in, for so many reasons.

I want to knit something. Or maybe learn to crochet. Granny squares are calling my name. But for now, my focus (and money!) are going to the house project. It's all a season, I know. And in just a few more weeks, I know we'll really begin to feel home.

More soon, friends.

9 June

9 June

9 June

9 June

9 June

Jun 3, 2012

Hello friends! We are slowly, slowly settling into our new house after a week-long, sort of disastrous move. We're settling in to summer a little, too, with the first swim meet of the season yesterday, swimming lessons beginning tomorrow, and knitting projects on the horizon. We still have no Internet connection at the house so I'm posting this from my phone, something I've never tried before. More soon.

Jun 3, 2012

Ready or not

We closed on our house the day after Mother's Day, and we've spent every one of the last 10 days over there pulling off wallpaper, spackling, painting, pulling out kitchen cabinets, getting carpet installed, and on and on.

The new house is not ready for us to move in quite yet, and the old house is not ready for us to vacate it quite yet, but here we are and today is moving day, whether we're ready or not. Actually, we had hoped to move a few days later but our schedule was kind of dictated by truck availability.

Here are a handful of recent (phone) photos ... more to come.

Last project if the first night. Before.

And after.

Wallpaper. This took a full week to get down.

Brass-colored PLASTIC light fixture. Oh, 1979.

E's bedroom

Ignore the ugly fixture, but notice the sun coming in on the lively "Glass of Milk" white walls. J & F's bedroom.

Back yard view

Comedy of errors

New piano

We are all so exhausted.

I miss knitting. Or anything else not moving related.

Like I said.