Month: February 2005
Jumble of Thoughts
In Ecclesiastes 11:1 it says roughly “Cast your bread upon the waters and you will find it after many days.” I keep being astonished at how kind and wonderful people are to our family. Everywhere I turn someone is doing something kind for us. The thought keeps coming to me that this is our bread from past years coming back to us. Only I’m fairly certain that we didn’t throw out this much bread. It seems odd, and somehow backwards, that we should be so greatly blessed for living a lifestyle that so many people only dream of having. I won’t pretend there aren’t hard bits and stressful bits, but it seems like every time we run up against one of them, a friend is right there to help us over.
In semi-related news, I’m going to get to go to a segment of LTUE. Thursday morning a friend/neighbor has volunteered to watch my kids so that I can go watch Howard sit on a panel with all sorts of famous people. The headliner there is Jerry Pournelle. I may actually get a chance to meet him. If nothing else I’ll get to be with Howard for an hour or so sans kids. Maybe lunch will even be involved. The only problem is that, like Cinderella, my time will be limited. I will almost certainly have to dash out in the middle of something very interesting. Oh well. At least I get to go.
Completely unrelated to the prior two thoughts is the fact that we watched Monsters Incorporated today. When that movie hit the theaters Link was a toddler and I found the character Boo to be impossibly advanced for a toddler. It seemed like no toddler could be that alert/aware/verbal so young. I watched it again when gleek was 2 and realized that Boo was actually fairly realistic. Today I watched Boo and thought “she ought to be able to talk better than that.” Patches is “Boo-aged” and he is the chattiest of my kids. Not only is he chatty, but he is very determined to prounouce things correctly. I love it. I love talking with him and watching him get smarter every day.
That’s the end of my thoughts for today. I’ve been too busy dealing with sick and messy house and tired to post regularly. I guess I was saving up.
Rhinovirusocerous
I just checked my calendar. We’ve had sickness in the house since the first week of January. This rhinovirusocerous keeps trampling through knocking family members flat and then coming around for another pass. Howard has been knocked flat twice. I was knocked flat once and feel like I’m going down again. Kiki has been down twice. Patches three times. Gleek once. Link twice. I’m tired of winter. I want sunshine and warm weather so that we can all get outside and stop being sick.
Weather forcast for the next week: Cold, gray, rainy.
Gray Saturday
Motivation was really hard to come by today. Usually Saturdays are full of bustling work. I’m going to blame the rain. The cold wet gray outside made me want to curl up with a book not run around cleaning or inducing kids to clean. Some cleaning got done, but not enough. I finished my book though and it it was a really good story.
Perhaps the best thing today was that all the bits of ideas that I’ve had floating in my head began to coalesce into a story. Hopefully this story won’t take six months to come together the way the last one did.
In House Dating
Enrichment night last night also featured a session on “Dating Your Spouse”. The teacher was a woman who is very outspoken and talkative. She rattled off this list of things that she and her husband do together. (Roller blading, motorcycle riding, bowling, dining out, movies, it went on and on) I sat there thinking “Wow that’s cool” and feeling insecure that Howard and I don’t have many “dates”. It is hard to get out together to do fun stuff when money is tight and paying a babysitter isn’t often an option. Responsible parenting is death on spontaneous trip taking or friend visiting. In theory we can set up a babysitting trade with another couple so that we can take turns going out. What seems to always happen is that they watch our kids once or twice and then never ask us to watch theirs. Then I feel guilty and don’t call again. It seems like everyone I know has other babysitting solutions.
Rather on dwell on the stuff Howard an I can’t do right now, I decided to create a list of things we can do without sacrificing the well being of the kids or the budget.
Jigsaw puzzles
Watching DVDs
chatting while cleaning
wandering in the back yard
Talking over insaniquarium or a different game
Just talking
Sit together for lunch
Things I’d like to do more of:
Playing games (scrabble, Star Munchkin, Cannibal pygmies, Falling, Give me the brain…)
Take walks/hikes
go visiting friends
And that’s where my brain stalls. I KNOW those lists could be much longer, but I just can’t think of other things. Howard if you think of stuff let me know. If any of you have sugguestions feel free to post comments. I want to be armed against the next “What shall we do tonight?”
Being Friends
Last night I had a girls night out. Our church hosts one every month for the women in the congregation. It’s called enrichment night. There is on site child care, classes to attend, treats to eat, and friends to talk to. I really enjoy going to them.
One of the teachers last night spoke on “making friends”. I was interested in this topic because I’ve come to realize that most of my friendships aren’t typically feminine in nature. I have friends whom I really like, but it just never occurs to me to call them or organize a get-together. I can go months without having a social event with a friend other than Howard. If my friends need help I’m right there and vice versa, we can count on each other, but we don’t hang out as much as we could. This applies to long-time deep frienships as well as neighbors.
I watch other women who are always going out to lunch or going shopping or even just visiting. They usually aren’t having deep conversations, but they are having small amounts of human contact regularly. And on this foundation build lasting friendships. I watch that and wonder what I’m missing. What would it be like to have a girl buddy to hang out with regularly?
I know how to do deep conversations, I’m not as good at chatter. People frequently denigrate “small talk” and if it goes no further there isn’t much point to it. But chatter lays the foundation for deeper conversations. Chatter allows people to find comonalities and gradually grow frienships from acquaintences. I wish I were better at just picking up the phone to talk. I never make phone calls unless I have business to conduct. There is value in just calling because you wonder how someone is doing.
Part of the reason I’ve been content to let this whole frienship thing slide is because I have Howard. He is the best friend I could ask for. We share life, love, stress, pain, and laughter. Having Howard here sates the imediate need for someone to be with, and adult to talk to. And yet on those occasions when we do spend time with other friends Howard and I both feel refreshed and invigorated. I need to make space in my life to nurture friendships.
Yet another thing to make space for.
Feeling Grumpy
Last November we bought a 20 lb bird when they were cheap and had the bucher saw it in half. 5 days ago I pulled one of the halves out of the freezer with the intent to thaw and roast it. This morning it had leaked fluid all over the fridge and had there for reached This Must Be Cooked Today status. So I roasted it.
Hours later I picked up Link and Kiki from school. They were both in tears. They both had unfinished work from school and the rule around here is that homework can wait until after dinner, but unfinished schoolwork must be done before playtime. So instead of having time to relax I had to sit at the kitchen table with screaming/fighting Gleek and Patches. Link and Kiki both needed 100% attention to be coddled through the necessary work without complete breakdowns into I Can’t Do This land. Because once we fall into that pit nothing I can say or do will make the homework happen.
The schoolwork got done. The turkey was dry. It took me two incessantly interrupted hours to dismantle it and stow all the edible bits away. The kitchen is a disaster. The kids are all squabbling. I have no interest in eathing turkey or in trying to induce kids to eat it. The rest of the house is a wreck too. And I still have to coax and maneuver 4 kids into going to bed happily.
I’ve discovered a new nightmare
A four year old boy drove his mother’s car to the video store. The full story is here (http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/02/07/young.driver.ap/index.html)
Gleek just turned four.
Yikes.
Garden Planning
For the past 4-5 years my primary gardening interest has been flowers. I wanted to grow pretty things. With the budget much tighter this year I am very interested in growing things that I can feed to my family. I am so interested that I plan to dig up a section of lawn to create a vegetable bed. This will mean lots more outside work this summer. I’m not against that. Since snow is due today and will put a damper on actual yard work, I’m spending lots of energy trying to plan. I have to figure out what to plant, when to plant it, how often to plant it, and how to take care of what got planted.
I’ll definitely plant:
Roma Tomatos
Onions
Anaheim chilis
Snap beans
Sweet peas
Chives
Basil
Sage
sunflowers
Savory
I’m considering planting:
I favor summer squash, Howard favors pumpkins
turnips
lettuce
chamomile
dill
marjoram
thyme
elephant garlic
One of the things I’m most excited about is the grape cuttings a Schlock fan has promised to send for Howard and My birthday gifts. I’ve figured out where I want to put them, but I’m a little reluctant to actually dig up the spot until the cuttings actually arrive. Of course since the ground is currently frozen it is probably moot.
I want spring and it’s only the first week of February.
Spring!
Well, not really spring. But today was one of those gloriously sunny and warm winter days that make me start thinking happy spring thoughts. Such days are always followed by cold and snow and sadness that spring isn’t actually here yet. At least today’s weather allowed me to get outside and do some mental Yard-work-to-be-done triage. I’ve now got a list of things to do in February. Another list for March. A third list for April. I’m not going to think beyond April yet because the May, June, July lists are likely to be full of unaccomplished February, March, and April items.
Howard was bitten by the spring-weather bug too. He went disc golfing.
Snow is due Sunday afternoon. Sigh.