My latest Grand Scheme

Most of my little bloggy vacation was caused by finally getting my stinking goodfornothing computer back from the shop. I’ve been spending all my brief moments with two hands reformatting everything. I lost so much stuff that makes no real difference, but is an absolute pain in the neck to put back together. itunes playlists, fonts I have to redownload and install, podcasts I have to resubscribe to, all the downloads – flash, java, spyware, itunes, reinstalling all the peripherals like printers and cameras and video cameras and a 5 year old palm pilot, recreating my little file organization, setting up email, and ALLLLLLLLL the internet bookmarks.

I have big goals for this little blog, but like everything else in my life, I struggle to find the balance. Despite my best efforts I seem to be an all or nothing kind of person. Either I’m blogging so much I have a weeks worth of entries scheduled, or I’m abandoning it entirely. Either I’m not making anything at all or I’m so frantic with creative energy that the thought of sitting still and sharing what I’m doing makes my hair itch.

As soon as October comes around, my frantic creativity kicks in to full gear. From October to January I am almost always wearing paint stained pajamas and am covered in glitter. This is the time of year that most energizes the idea centers in my brain. I have more ideas than my two meager little hands could ever hope to crank out, and so I tend to abandon everything in my life and hole away in my studio cranking out ornaments and presents and fancy wrapping ideas.

This year I’m committed to doing things differently. Knowing it was Atti’s first Christmas with us, I didn’t want to pull my usual routine. I didn’t want to over commit myself and create so much artificial stress for myself that I couldn’t enjoy anything. This year we’re scaling back on presents, I’m scaling back on my expectations for myself. This year my rule is that any decorations not finished by December 1st just don’t make it up. If the week of Christmas rolls around and I’m still trying to handmake presents, it’s time to put that away for next year and just buy something already. This year I want to spend my time with friends and family and sharing the season.

With that being the goal, I have some plans for this little bloggy space. In the past couple of months I’ve seen a lot of new readers (Hi everybody! Thanks for visiting! Buongiorno, Italianos!) and I know from my own obsessive blog reading that it’s no fun to read a blog if the person isn’t truly sharing. My plan (let’s be honest here, it’s more like a hope given my track record) is to post every day in December to share my version of Christmas. We have great traditions, and bonkers decorations, and those are what I love reading about the most, so it only makes sense that I should share it with everyone I’m asking to read my blog.

That means that I’ve got to spend the rest of this month getting my blog caught up. I’ve been working like crazy on the house, Atticus is getting bigger and stronger every day, I’ve been cooking every night, and in my typical style I’ve been getting myself too wound up to take a moment every day, sit with myself, and share what I dedicate my life to. I need to stop that.

I recently listed this place with the blog directory Delightful Blogs, and I had to write a blurb describing what I do over here. I didn’t spend a ton of time on it, I just kind of took a deep breath and here’s what poured out:

So much of my life over the last five years has not been fit for public consumption. This blog is my attempt to communicate with the world despite the messiness of infertility, premature babies, unemployment and other ridiculous bad luck. It helps not having to witness immediate reactions. I write about my new journey into motherhood, all the stuff I make, and trying to create a life of grace amid the temptations of a Southern California life. I want to be a more peaceful person, more grateful, more appreciative of every moment, with a clearer vision for the direction of my family. And yet at the moment I’m a bundle of neuroses and contradictory ambitions. There’s a whole lot I want to do in this world. I wonder if I ever will.

I’m really pleased with that. I don’t know how I managed to get out of my own way and actually articulate what’s been rattling around in my head for so long, but I think that’s it. That’s how I feel. That’s what I aspire to. That’s how I want to be better.

Thank you for your patience with me. Thank you for reading. Thank you for coming along with me as I pinball my way towards progression.

We voted!

And our guy won!

We voted!

I can’t even begin to explain how much grief I took this time around. I don’t come in contact with a single other democrat in my daily life, and the particular republicans I do come in contact with are just as single-mindedly certain about their political views as they are in their religious views, even frequently thinking that the two are nearly interchangable.

There are a million reasons why I’m thrilled to death with the outcome, but I think I’m going to let them all rest. I’ve borne more than my share of the vented spleens of the republicans I know who want to debate with the one democrat in the vacinity, I don’t think I’m going to compound the issue by rubbing my reasoning in their faces.

I’ll just hope extra hard my faith was well placed and pray for his safety every day.

The Food Nanny Rescues Dinner

Everyone, meet Liz. Liz, this is everyone.
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Who could resist this welcome?
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Liz is Bear’s aunt on his dad’s side, and she is just one of my very favorite people in the world, and a huge source of inspiration to me.

Bear loves to tell the story of when we first got married. I wore big black combat boots as I tromped all around the BYU campus, I died my hair black and wore leather jackets, and I was super active in the Feminist club. I warned him that I was not going to be some *Homemaker* (picture me holding my nose while I said that). I was not going to be [shudder] domesticated.

And of course now I could take Martha Stewart on in a crafting cage match.

I think I’m more surprised than anybody to see what path my life has taken, but I can really thank Liz for setting me on that path. In our early days of marriage we’d drive out to Liz’s house every Friday night to watch cousin Joey in the local high school football game, and every time she’d have some wonderful homey meal with fresh bread and cookies. Or all the girls would be standing around peeling apples to have a piping hot cobbler waiting for us when the game was done, and we’d talk and laugh and catch up with each other. Liz’s kids are some of our closest cousins because of those times we spent gathered around the kitchen island.

Through Liz’s example, I really saw what an influence a homemaker can have. How it’s not about drudgery or thankless martyrdom as you swoon from one unkempt room to another, it’s about setting the whole tone for your family. It’s not about being the family servant, it’s about serving your family by creating a place of peace, a place of warmth, a place of safety through your nurtuing efforts. It’s not mindless labor. It’s an artform.

And once I caught on that I had a choice – I could do everything halfway and whine about the fact that I had to feed myself everyday, or I could sack up and do it right – I set about my artistic training. I rummaged through Liz’s cookbooks and took all her best recipes, I spent hours watching hgtv and the food network, and I started cooking big elaborate meals for just the two of us.

Now thanks to Liz’s book, you can save yourselves ten years of effort.

The Food Nanny Rescues Dinner takes her 30+ years of experience cooking for a family and gives you all the tools you need for success. Her recipes are incredible, but what really makes the book unique is the structure she creates. Liz uses “Theme Nights” to make the chore of meal planning a science. Each night of the week has a subject to narrow down your options from every recipe ever created to something much more manageable, like “Mexican Night” or “Comfort Food”.

I wish I could buy this book for everyone I know. Especially everyone I know who struggles with dinner. I truly believe that cooking dinner for your family is the single best thing you can do to ensure a healthy kid, good relationships, and a happy home. I think that having someone who cooks at home trumps having a pool, having the fanciest video games, whatever. Cooking for your family will get everyone back home together.

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I’m so proud of you Liz!

My new happy place

I have a serious soft spot for fancy grocery stores. If the only deli options are cold cuts or fried chicken, then I am seriously disappointed. I want salads involving barley, and stuff in the produce department that I’ve never heard of. This is one of the fabulous things about living in Southern California: there is no shortage of fancy pants places to buy organic tomatoes. Just within ten miles of me I have a Henry’s, Sprout’s, Frazier’s Farms, Trader Joe’s and 20 miles away is Whole Foods.

But my new favorite is called Fresh and Easy. They are a small scale grocery store like a Trader Joe’s, but they still stock the necessities even if they’re not super healthy. I can satisfy my Cheez-it addiction while I’m looking for a new snack made out of rice. They have a wonderful produce section, even though it’s small, just because everything is not only super fresh, but also nearly ripe and marked with a fresh by date. It takes all the guess work out of buying fruit you want to eat in hand. You just by a pack that’s set to expire soon, and they’re sure to be perfect.
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They carry a fantastic selection of meat, especially seafood, all prepared with a variety of spices and rubs and ready for cooking. Their prepared foods are the best. They have a whole section of Thai and Indian foods that I stocked up on for my month on my own. I ate so much curry that even my sweat was spicy. It was incredible. They have a great selection in their bakery with individually portioned muffins for a family like ours that never finishes a dozen before they go bad, and they have the most incredible frozen cakes. A white cake with mango frosting, and a chocolate cake with banana filling and chocolate ganache frosting. I had those on my month alone too, and in both cases I had to force myself to throw them away before I ate the whole thing.
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I’m also a serious sucker for good graphic design, and this place has it. All the signs are so cool with their bright colors and sans serif fonts.
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My friend Ali is a major coupon user. I remember back in the day she used to study the grocery store circulars and plan out a big grocery shopping route – one place for hamburger, another had a better price on grapes, another still for milk – and I thought she was insane. Now I do the same thing, except it’s certainly not saving me any money. Now I do the bulk of my shopping at a standard store, and then hop from fancy store to fancy store looking for the very best hippy dippy food, along with the occasional chocolate cake.

Year of Pleasures #15

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Mama and Baby stay in jammies Day!

Let’s be honest, these days? Are usually stay in jammies days for me. But on those rare occasions when no therapists are coming over and I don’t have to go somewhere and nothing absolutely positively has to get done? There is nothing I like better than just lying low and cuddling my kid.

We Might Have Gotten Carried Away on This One

Ta Da!

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This cake was complicated, and I can’t say we were completely successful. But close enough. Despite the fact that at one point I got so frustrated with our dadgum royal icing that I may or may not have thrown a palm leaf across the room.

It may seem like an odd concept for a cake, but we were celebrating three birthdays. The Egyptian pyramid was for my sister-in-law Mari and my Father-in-law Mike, who are both history nuts for this period. Then the USC flag on the top is our nod to sister-in-law Dianna, who is an alumnus and superfan of the USC football team.

We had some major execution problems. For starters, you’d think a simple pyramid would be an easy shape to carve. You’d be wrong. Well, it may be a simple shape, but it turns out that carving a cake is much more complicated than we figured. I kept ending up with one side of the pyramid being thinner than the other because I could not manage to keep my knife straight. Then we tried to frost the cake and those tiny little layers would not hold still. Bear made homemade lemon curd and French Buttercream frosting to use as fillings in between the layers of white cake. It was unbelievably delicious, but even after cramming toothpicks all throughout the cake, nothing would stay put. I finally ended up slightly melting the frosting and pouring it over the top.

Then we tried to put the fondant on, but the point of our pyramid kept slicing right through it. We ended up tossing a layer across it like a saddle, and then doing two separate triangles for the other sides. Removing some of the weight like that helped a little, but by the time we got around to eating it, you can see how the fondant drooped. The bricks started out straight.

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And then of course there were those infernal palm trees. I sculpted them out of gum paste, but I let the leaves and the trunk dry separately. Only then did I discover that there was no good way to attach them together. Our royal icing refused to set up, and after throwing a slightly major hissy fit, I gave up and went to bed. When we got to Bear’s folk’s house, we caved and used hot glue.

Still, despite my completely unrealistic standards, I’m more happy than disappointed with how this cake turned out. Bear came up with putting the Nile in there out of sugar, and that was a huge hit. Micah insisted on licking the river like a lollypop and knocked over the palm trees that managed to stay up. And Bear also came up with the brown sugar sand. He’s turning out to be so creative. I think all those years working in Tresa’s Sweatshop he’s managed to pick up a thing or two.

I need your brain power.

We just got invited to THE Halloween party in our circle of acquaintances. We’re super excited, and we’re hoping that this will lead to an actual honest to goodness social life after only two years of living here. Barring any further extended hospitalization, of course.

Here’s our dilemma. We need a really great costume.

We really want to show how fun we are (Because seriously, we’re fun. It’s about darn time people around here got to see it.), we want to put ourselves out there and let people get to know us, and most importantly it needs to be a superhero since that’s the theme of the party. We’re thinking that we need to make something up instead of just being a regular old superhero. It’s also our first time with this crowd and we have no idea what their going to be game for, so we’ve decided to play it safe. Nothing even slightly controversial, including political jokes even though I would make a cracker jack Sarah Palin.

Here’s what we’ve come up with so far:

OCD and The Slob: Take a wild guess who is who.

Captain Obvious and Know-it-all Girl: I call Bear Captain Obvious at least once a week. It totally fits the both of us. My problem with it is that it’s not entirely original. Also, I think Know-it-all Girl is a little weak. Bear suggested Captain Obvious and No Sh^+ Sherlock. Oh my gosh we laughed and laughed, but it is our first time with this crowd, and who knows if they’d find it funny or inappropriate.

The Channel Surfer and The Librarian: Bear’s superpower would be a laser remote control, and mine would be supersonic shushing. And he’d have a breastplate that would read WWZMD (What Would Zack Morris Do). We’d work together with all the knowledge we’ve gained from after school specials and cliff’s notes to solve the problems of the world.

We’d love any other brilliant ideas you guys have. This is our big coming out party after all the bleck in the past year. It’s kind of hard to put yourself out there and do the work of making friends when you’re barely keeping your head above water, so know’s our chance. We want to make a splash.

Post Vacation Frenzy

We managed to sneak out of town for a couple of days over the long weekend to celebrate with Bear’s family at their beachhouse up in Ventura. I have to admit that I don’t always relish these trips. I’m really not much of a beach person to begin with, but also, Bear’s family is so big and boisterous that huge extended family gatherings kind of kick up the old anxiety for me. We celebrate Thanksgiving here every year, and that I look forward to. I always sign up for way too much cooking and then I can just zen out in the kitchen as the chaos swirls around me, and all my favorite family members pop over to visit before heading back out into the storm of kids and sand and squabbles and sun. Without that task in front of me to focus on, I can get a little carried away inside my own head. Christmas just sends me right over the edge as packs of children descend on presents and I hide in the corner I stake out every year while I take deep breaths and imagine big open meadows.

This was my first time coming out for Memorial Day. Usually the weekend is so short and the drive is so long that we don’t bother, but this family has been so overwhelming supportive and thoughtful and generous throughout all the ups and downs in Atticus’ short life, that we were dying to see everyone and rejoice in our triumphs together. It was a great weekend.

Bear’s whole immediate family was there this time, so we had some great time together, all the grandkids with their grandparents, I got some always welcome time with Bear’s brother’s wife Diana, who I dig way more than the short amount of time I get to see her would let on, and I even managed to make it through the weekend without my head exploding due to political discussions going round and round with no possible resolution.

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The weather was pretty awful. I think the sun only came out for part of Saturday afternoon, but we still wanted to take advantage of the opportunity and let Atti have his first beach trip. It was not really a success.

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The sand was very cold, and very wet, and the Rookie was not a fan.

He did a little better in the water.
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Just look at those baby muscles!

But as soon as he got his trunks wet he started screaming, so we took him back up to the house and tossed him in the hot tub, where he laughed and cooed and floated to his hearts content.

Now that we’re back in town the hard part begins. Not only do I have to get caught back up with regular life, but I have to do it while unpacking the entire car worth of stuff we had to drag with us, doing load upon load of laundry, restocking the house with groceries, and cleaning up the enormous mess the cats made in our absence. Sigh. I really envy Bear just having to go back to work. If only that’s all I had to do.

Sorry for the unexplained absence

Wow, how’d a whole week go by?

August 14th was our nine year anniversary, so this time last week Bear and I dropped the Rookie off with Grandma and Grandpa and spent a night just the two of us in a hotel next to Disneyland. It was wonderful. We went to Downtown Disney and leisurely shopped, we ate at a very fancy Spanish restaurant where we had a table on the balcony with a perfect view of the fireworks, and best of all, I actually got a full night’s sleep for the first time in six months.

But by the next morning I couldn’t get out of the room fast enough. I was shaking from baby withdrawal. These mother emotions are powerful things. We’re always trying to get them to be more independant – “just have some tummy time while I do these dishes.” “Please, it’s time to go to sleep already.” – and then when they show those baby steps toward independance I just want to snap him up and hold him close and never let him grow up. He had a great visit with the grandfolks. He played in the bath, he played games with singing grandma, and he got snuggled to bits. Yet when I called to check in on him, I got the biggest smile of the night just by hearing my voice. It’s a pretty amazing thing, being the person he loves most.

Since we got back into town I’ve been struggling to catch up. My house is in shambles, there are drifts of laundry strewn throughout the house, I still haven’t managed to make it to the grocery store, and I’m trying to hurry up and finish a couple projects before I’m tortured to death by the projects burning holes in my head waiting to be started. I have mountains of emails to return, but I don’t get much time every day with two hands free, so that keeps getting pushed off in favor of blogging because, even though I may have to type this one handed, at least there’s only one of those to worry about. It’s such a harsh tradeoff. I desperately needed that break, and yet that break makes things even harder when you get home.

Year of Pleasures #14

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Why is it that, when Bear can’t even brush my leg with his feet without me recoiling in horror, I somehow can’t seem to keep these little toes out of my mouth. It’s a mystery to me.