Showing posts with label hubby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hubby. Show all posts

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Slow Life

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What in the world are we doing?

Sometimes I wonder. Sometimes I look at the ways of our family, and how they can be so drastically different from that of our neighbors, and I wonder. Are we slowing down, just to stand out? We say we are setting an example for our children, but are we also maybe trying to set one for our community?

I know our slow it down mindset kicked off when Cash was four and we began to view food in a different way. He is now eight. I say four because that appears to be the last picture I have of a brightly dyed birthday cake. And that is what it began with. Food dyes, artificial colors, and other various petroleum preservatives. We banned it all. Began to make everything at home, from scratch most of the time. It was time consuming yes, but I like to cook and everyone was healthier and had much more pleasant attitudes. So win-win right? So I thought.

That whole foods diet began to set us apart. I was suddenly the mom that wouldn’t let her kid eat the party food. I was the one looking like a crazy person for not allowing my son to eat the donuts that were brought for the soccer game half-time. After the initial period of having to just get over it, I began to wear that badge with pride. It was easier for me to look down on those less enlightened folks who were still stuffing their kids full of petroleum than to try and inform them. Sure, I’ll stand out! My family is healthier because we questioned the Standard American Diet. See?!? Don’t you people see?!? Thankfully, my ego eventually quieted down enough for me to just go on about our lives without judging what everyone put in their mouth. I mean it was exhausting and  unfair to those around me. The vast majority of our citizens really don’t know what’s in their food and what it is truly doing to their body and mind.

“LET FOOD BE THY MEDICINE AND MEDICINE BE THY FOOD.” – HIPPOCRATES

That little quote that hangs above my kitchen bar has become my answer to just about every food related question. Easy and done.

And then…well, then came Paleo.

I jumped on the Paleo train with gusto and threw out all the grains. Save for quinoa. I really love quinoa. And yes, amazingly I felt even better than I did before! How was it possible? Did people know this? That grain type foodstuffs could be the cause of most of our health issues and daily well being? My husband scoffed. Sure he had been on board with the all natural, whole foods lifestyle. But no bread? I mean, the hell?

Then he tried it. Over a year ago. And he will now testify to its greatness.

But in true disclosure we are a Primal (not fully Paleo) eating clan. We love some dairy, and we get crazy and eat some rice or corn about once a week or more depending on the busyness level around here. And we let our kids eat gluten all they want, as long as its whole foods based. We figure when they are teens they can make that decision to abstain from grains if they want.

So all this talk about food…it was actually leading up to something. Somewhere along the way, after fighting with outsiders (mainly school issues) regarding our diet, homeschool came across my radar. (Let me quickly point out, that our middle son absolutely cannot have anything with artificial ingredients in it due to allergies, and he was repeatedly being exposed to this at school despite my careful planning and packing.) Obviously I knew what homeschooling was, or I thought I did. But after being a devout reader of Pioneer Woman, I started to see it in a different light. What is this togetherness? This willingness to learn? This, shall we say, coolness of not going to actual school? I was intrigued, but content to just read about it from the sidelines.

Like with anything I get hooked on, my reading soon became obsessive on the subject. And then I threw the pitch. “Honey? I think I want to homeschool the kids.”

And like with anything I get hooked on, he voiced his views, and then gave me the reins.

If you’ve been a reader here for any amount of time, you will know that I think homeschooling has been wonderful for our family. And it has led to a multitude of other things. A multitude of ways to slow down.

Before I was the stressed public school room-mom (for two classrooms!) who said yes to everything, drove 60+ miles a day just to take the kids to school, coached two soccer teams, baked and cooked and packed three meals a day for three kids, planned parties and hated the waste the whole time I was planning them, worried incessantly about my kids education, among a whole slew of other “issues”.

Sidenote: Have I ever mentioned how I began to abhor waste? All those treat bags full of junk that would get thrown away? Why did we have to have that stuff? There are so many alternatives. The mounds of paperwork sent home? Everything that was unnecessary began to really bother me. I would go off on rants upon receiving something else I deemed waste or having to pick up after another bag filled with plastic junk. I kept the rants internal when it was something my kids brought home that was supposed to be a treat for behaving well or earning a academic award, but felt their could be alternatives to those things as well.

My kids were exhasuted daily upon school pick-up. Falling asleep on the 20 minute drive home. Learning but not really growing. Learning to fit in. Learning things that had nothing to do with real academics. Fighting and fighting and fighting during the few evening hours we had together as a family.

So we began to slow down. And it was lovely. We had more time for each other, more time to just be and just play. I said no to anything and everything that would stress me out. Of course there would be times I slipped and forgot. Like last year when I volunteered to teach two classes at our homeschool co-op and coach my daughter’s soccer team because no one else would and the head of the soccer association asked me very nicely. Luckily, I see that those obligations were not good for me or our family so this year I will be politely declining.

What comes next?

Small things, I suppose. We switched to raw milk for our health. We added a few goats to our Tiny Farm this year. Increased our flock of chickens. We plan on implementing some permaculture techniques in our garden due to us not being the most awesome gardeners. (Although, I do still have butternut squash in my kitchen from late last summer so we must not be all that bad.) We are learning to take care of our fruit trees and we added some berry bushes. All this to help bring our food a bit closer to home. Which is ironic since we own a grocery store. But you know, we’ve done things there to help the movement. Adding an organic/gluten free section and trying to buy produce from local farmers to name a few.

In the making it for yourself department, my husband has become quite skilled at brewing craft beer over the past few year. The man spent months chopping and stacking wood to ensure we wouldn’t be having to buy any this Winter. He received beekeeping equipment for Christmas and we will have new winged friends in our backyard in a few months. He seems more interested in helping the honeybees thrive than harvesting actual honey but I’m sure his tune will change. Just the other evening, I caught him making soap.

I do my part thru my cooking and gardening and animal tending. I picked up knitting as another slow hobby and a way to take back a bit of control of our accessories. $10 for a cheap scarf? No thank you. I’ll make it myself and know whose hands it came from. Not to mention that fiber arts are just beautiful.

And the road to simple just keeps on going. I love this road. It’s not smooth by any means, and a lot of the time it means hard work. But hard work is something our society has begun to greatly undervalue. Hard work can make you stand out. Authenticity can make you stand out. I guess in teaching my children the value of both of these things, I am teaching them to stand out. I’m quite alright with that.

Friday, January 17, 2014

A Day In The Life

I really dig most of the content over at Simple Homeschool. They are currently running a “day in the life” series of homeschool mamas. I thought it would be fun and a bit interesting to post my own. So on a Thursday, I snapped pics like the paparazzi and wrote a lot of stuff down. It’s certainly not National Enquirer worthy. I like to think we are pretty typical, but what do I know. Here’s a peek into a normal day around here.

7:00am:  Yes, I am a late riser. I wish I had it in me to get up earlier but I just don’t. I quietly sneak to the kitchen for a cup of coffee. I say sneak because Miss Stella is in my bed. On my way down the hall I pass Cash, who is pretty much sleepwalking, on his way to my bed. Warren leaves for work.  I procure the precious coffee and kill an hour on the Internet. E-mail, blog reading, etc.
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8:30am: I decide we need to get a start on this day. I am pretty lenient about letting the kids sleep as much as they need to. These two are in bed by 8:30 every night and asleep by 9:30. If their bodies are telling them to sleep I let them sleep. I get them up and throw cereal and milk their direction as I head outdoors to feed the goats and chickens and let the dogs run.

9:00am-10:30am: Time for school. Math is first for both kids. Cash wanders off to my desk to do Teaching Textbooks on my laptop. Stella and I set up shop at the table in the dining/school room for Saxon. Stella powers through with only one bathroom break and two dog snuggle breaks. Cash beckons me for help twice.

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As Stella is drilling math facts and learning to tell time, I knit. I knit a lot during math, phonics, spelling, and when they read to me.

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As I wander past Cash’s room, I glance in and comment on what a mess it is. He blames it on the dog.

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10:30am- The kids take a break. Usually they are playing inside or outside. Today their break involves cleaning their rooms. For a twist they decide to clean each other’s rooms. Both rooms get picked up. I’m happy.

10:45am- Cash grabs a book and reads to me while I cook breakfast. This is the kids second meal of the day. They almost always have a small bowl of cereal when they wake, and then they eat again when I cook breakfast for Warren and I.

11:00am- Warren arrives home on a mid-day break. We eat and clean up our dishes.

11:30am- Stella needs to finish her grammar so we work on that. Cash grabs another easier book for independent reading and wanders off to find a cozy spot. Stella takes many bathroom breaks.

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12:00pm: Free time. The kids bundle up and head outside. We don’t often eat lunch due to our habit of having a late breakfast so they spend nearly an hour playing before quiet time on this particular day. Stella heads to the chickens and goats. Cash grabs his bow and arrows and practices. I step out after a bit to check on them and have to admonish them not to throw the chickens. Just because they can fly doesn’t mean you should chunk them.

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1:00pm: Quiet time. We take this very seriously. The kids go to their separate rooms for an hour. They can play, listen to audiobooks, draw or color. They usually take a snack and a drink and they are only allowed out of their room to use the bathroom. I use this time differently every day. Sometimes I do yoga, most of the time I catch up on chores, other times I just lay on my bed and read a book. Warren heads back to work.

2:00pm: Today is a History day as opposed to a Science day. We talk about Ancient Egypt some more. I read The Egyptian Cinderella by Shirley Climo and they do a narration on it. We go over the oceans for our memory work.

3:00pm: Art time and Warren comes home again. We make Artist Trading Cards to use as examples at our homeschool group gathering tomorrow. I pull up Pandora and play classical music while they work. Some days about this time, Warren and I go running. The kids go to his granny’s and mess around on the computer for 30-45 minutes while we are out pounding the pavement.

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4:00pm: Back outside to play and complete any chores that need to be done. Checking for eggs, watering animals, bringing in firewood. Stella terrorizes the chickens some more.

5:00pm: I start preparing dinner. Warren is immersed in his Rosetta Stone Lesson. Cash is off playing Legos, Stella is coloring mandalas.

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5:30pm: Dinner and dishes. We have steak bites, rice, and zoodles.  The kids eat their dinner faster than usual. The promise of dessert helps. Stella is on table cleanup, Cash loads the dishwasher. The dogs are on floor duty. Warren leaves to go back to work.

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6:30pm: Baths and warm pajamas! A few nights a week we have to go close one of our businesses, so we load up and drive to work.

8:00pm: Teeth brushing and final bed preparation. They sleep together by their own choice. I often wonder how long that will last. I read them a chapter out of whatever book we’re on. Right now its Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets. The kids listen to an audiobook to fall asleep. This evening it was Charlotte’s Web. They’ve heard it a hundred times, but still ask for it. I’ve noticed Stella walks around muttering words in sets of three like the geese from the story. Wilbur-ilbur-ilbur. T double E double R double R…….

8:30pm-who knows when: Warren and I hang out. Sometimes it’s a movie or series. Other times we both retire to our respective computers.

This was a day when we had no afternoon activities. No piano, no soccer practices, no homeschool group. Our days mostly follow this routine with a few different things thrown for variety. And dogs. Don’t forget the dogs, providing comedic relief from the rigors of homeschooling everyday.
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Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Favorite Things: The Guy Edition

Time for another gift post!

This one is for the main man in your life. Husband, boyfriend, father, brother. Once again, all gifts are from Etsy. Buy handmade! Support artisans!

 
 
 
 

 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Thursday, August 2, 2012

Hot Weather Makes For Hot Yoga

Monday evening found me drowning in my own sweat at our new local yoga studio.

This wasn't a scheduled hot yoga class.

This was the result of being in a very old building, on the top floor, with a broken air conditioner, in July, with 105 on the thermostat, in Arkansas. All those things add up to one very very hot class.

Strangely enough, I enjoyed the extreme heat. This was my 3rd class in the past two weeks and I can already see a tiny improvement in my stretchability. Stretchiness? Bendability? I attended another class last night and while the sivasana might be my favorite part, I really do like seeing just how far I can get into warrior poses. And balance poses like dancer and tree are almost like a game. How long can I stay up? Can I do it without shaking? Our instructor always says to pick a focal point for our balance poses. The lovely thing about this studio, is the old tall windows lining the wall that look out directly at Rich Mountain. A mountain top as a focal point? I'll take it!

Last night's class was extra special because a very close friend who I only see once a year or so attended with me. When we were kids playing in the hayfield, I never would have imagined we would be women one day, in a yoga class, practicing side by side. In a moment I would flashback to our childhood, and then marvel at how old we have gotten. When you have known each other for over twenty years, twenty-nine can feel old.

I would love to fill you in on my recent runs, except....yeah that just hasn't really been any. Warren drug me out for an evening run about 4 or 5 days ago. We banged out 4 miles at a pretty quick pace. I don't think we set out to run that fast, we were just trying to beat the sunset. It was only about 95 degrees so not too bad. I attempted to run on the treadmill the day before yesterday. It is outside in our large shop. 1.5 miles into it, I threw in the towel. It was completely ridiculous to try and run in that heat. I can hardly wait for cooler weather. I miss November and December morning runs.

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My IQS experiment is going well. I am into Week 2, the phase where you eat more fat. Not a problem for this gal! Breakfast this morning was a few slices of deli ham, topped with a bit of fresh tomato, two poached eggs, and provolone cheese. Accompanied by coffee with heavy cream. I am making a promise to my body to never ever ever have a Skinny Vanilla Latte' again. After drinking my coffee with cream or half and half, I can't even understand why I thought that fake sweetener taste was any kind of good.

I received an advance copy of Practical Paleo by Diane Sanfilippo and will be reviewing it here on SugarBritches in a few days. Each one of my darling kiddos is picking out a recipe to try. Look forward to fun pictures and commentary from the little ones. I can tell you from what I have already read, this book is the go to book for anyone interested in Paleo. The wealth of information is outstanding. It is that good!

Sunday, July 8, 2012

These Days of Summer

It seems like we wait so long....all school year....for summer. Sweet sweet summer. With your long hot days, balmy nights, river dates, beach vacations, lazy afternoon naps, float trips, bug bites, fireworks.


Every year I try my hardest to stretch summer out. Test her limits. Put her pedal to the metal. And most often, I feel like I failed. Like we didn't do enough. Layed around on the couch way more than we should have. I try so hard to remember how insanely busy and nonstop our school year is, so maybe a little bit of laziness is good for us. But....I still feel that guilt. This summer though, I am feeling a bit better about it all.



Our list of summer fun is growing. We have managed to:
-Float the caddo river. Just me the husband and three kids. In low water. With a limited amount of beer.
-Play in the sprinklers. Numerous times.
-Swimming hole. Check.
-5 mile run in a summer thunderstorm (we didn't subject the kids to this)
-Saw Madagascar 3 (dadadadada polka dot circus afro)
-Climbed a lighthouse
-Took a lot of photos
-Attended a wild hippie bachelorette party in the woods. (just me)
Photo Credit: Meredith Mashburn


-Took the kids to a different party in the woods. The Land of Shady is a Magical Place.
-Rock painting at the river.

-Got a tattoo (not the temporary kind either) I highly recommend Miguel at Black Sparrow Tattoo in Pensacola. Bonus points if you can guess the reference.

-Had dinner with my awesome grandmother who lives too far away.
-Let my 8 year old drink beer. Gah! Kidding. It was Abita Root Beer. He loved it.

-Went to the beach for 7 whole days.
-Ran in the War Eagle 10K Trail Run. Beat the husband by 1second.

-Got all gussied up and went on more than one date with my handsome soulmate.

-Ate lots and lots and lots of seafood.
-Fireworks. And no one got burned.
-Boat ride!!!!! With a hangover!!!! Double fun! While watching dolphins!


So maybe now I have permission to lay around and be lazy for the rest of the summer?

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Snapshots From Yesterday

 

My husband makes the best homebrew and I drank far too much of it yesterday evening.
















Crafted this sweetheart ragdoll and listed her in my shop. She is a steal at $25. Won't you give her a home with a darling girl? In trying hard to turn my hobbies into a business I started reading this book. LOVE IT! A great resource for anyone who adores handmade.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Sunday Snapshots


 Dog face.


 Pump handle.


 Trapdoor installation.



Treehouse view.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Some Birds, Some Beatles, and a Treehouse


In keeping with resolutions we have been working on a healthy endeavor. Only my husband and I
are crazy enough to take on building a substantial treehouse over a creek in January.
 We have help, of course. From the way its going, its going to be a pretty rockin' getaway for the darlings.


Kids need to be outside. We have plenty of outside for them to be in. But their own structure? Above the ground? That just guarantees that I will have plenty of uninterrupted time come summer vacation.



In between helping hold up heavy boards and working on my Paleo eating, I've added a few new items to my shop. Southern Blackbird is shaping right up. You can score the original 3 piece wall art below for only $26. I'm keeping the prices low and reasonable. I like birds, and I think that all the wisdom you ever need can be gleaned from Beatles lyrics.


Monday, August 15, 2011

It'll Grow In. Right?

 Cue scene yesterday in the living room after noticing the massive amounts of shedded fur on the wood floor:

Me: "I really need to take Allie back to the groomer. It's getting out of hand."

audible sound of husband's buttcheeks clenching at the sound of spending money

Husband: "What? We can't spend four to five hundred dollars a year getting the dog a damn haircut."

Me: "Well it has to be done and you are exaggerating....again. It would only be two hundred if I took her four times a year."

Husband: "Yeah two hundred too much."

Subject is herein dropped.


Later that evening I get the idea that I'll just clip the dog myself. I have an old set of clippers that I cut the kids hair with. Yes...the blades are somewhat dull, but I figured if I could get it done then I would have a reason to invest in a set of doggie clippers.

An hour of so later, dripping in sweat and covered in dog hair, I survey my masterpiece. I then text the husband.

Me: Well I took care of that pesky little grooming issue.
Husband: See, save money live better.
Me: Yeah you're right, it does look like she got groomed at W*l-Mart.





Oh the embarrassment.




P.S. The blog address has changed so please update your reader. Thank you!

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Beware of Ramblings

I am having the urge, in the middle of the day, to curl up and watch Sleepless in Seattle. I have no clue why. Strange, but maybe not considering my lifelong dream of living in the Pacific Northwest. I will get there someday. Someday and I'm going to go knock on Carrie's door if I do.

On a side note, I am drinking coffee in between housecleaning and interneting. I love my coffee, oh yes I do.

Know what else I love?


Sugarbaby is trying to "make" my bed for me. It is quite a site and I'm one hundred million percent sure I'm going to have to redo it. I sure hope I don't give her a complex.

I just want to get all this housework done so I can curl up with one of the three books I snagged from the library yesterday. Bill Clinton's autobiography, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, and Little Bee.

I also hit up the thrift store yesterday and bought some funky glasses (the drinking kind) and a candlestick holder. I'm going to paint it and maybe fashion some type of cakeplate base out of it.

I don't think the bread dough that I mixed up is going to rise. I wonder what happened?

Have a wonderful weekend!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

FIVE

A few years ago, we (you know those two fools up there) had a baby.



We named him Cash. He is the one on the right. The one on the left
became a big brother.


On Sunday he turned 5.




We partied, pretend camping style. With weenies, s'mores, a tent....



and of course, a campfire.


Happy Happy Birthday Cash.
We love everything about you. You make our family complete.