Friday, February 25, 2011

"Happiness is the way"

This is for a few special people on my mind lately:
  • my kiddos who can't wait to be "big enough for _____" (fill in the blank with developmental milestone of your choice)
  • the other mommas like me eager to move beyond "this stage"- whatever the current challenge might be, but also wishing they could keep their little ones little
  • the family member coping with the continued consequences of a terrible violation of trust
  • the co-worker anxious to find a full-time job and "start life"
  • and the wonderfully strong woman whose diagnosis this week shocked us all into remembering to treat each breath as a precious gift.


"For a long time it seemed to me that life was about to begin- real life. But there was always some obstacle in the way, something to be gotten through first, some unfinished business, time still to be served, a debt to be paid. At last it dawned on me that these obstacles were my life. This perspective has helped me to see there is no way to happiness. Happiness is the way. So treasure every moment you have and remember that time waits for no one. Happiness is a journey, not a destination."

— Souza


Wednesday, February 23, 2011

This dog...




... only looks sweet and innocent.

Okay, actually she is really sweet. She's the clumsiest, snuggliest, biggest lapdog I've ever met. (Well, there was this Great Dane I met when volunteering at a shelter once, but besides him, it's Sophie, hands down.)

But she is not innocent.

She has started chewing again. Chewing everything.

A few days ago the girls and I came home from the playground, and I stumbled upon a macabre scene. Tinkerbell's head, arms, torso and some shreds of her clothing were scattered under the dining room table (aka Sophie's Den of Destruction). The rest of her dress (actually one that was borrowed from Cinderella) was in pieces in the living room. Fortunately, I was able to hurry the girls upstairs and secretly dispose of the evidence. Does this make me an accessory?

Besides the gruesome attack on an innocent fairy, Sophie has recently destroyed a bean bag (that wasn't messy at all), a stuffed cow, two Dora sippy cups, a flannel fitted sheet, a few plastic snack bowls, a swing for zhu zhu pets, three pencils, some semi-important papers, countless crayons, and more take-and-toss cups/lids than I care to recall. She has also stolen cloth napkins from the table, towels from the kitchen and laundry basket, and socks and dirty underwear (!) from the laundry room.

I'm filled with dread every time I come home (or even just downstairs) and am greeted by her guilty face and apologetic tail wag. It's like she's saying "I did it. I can't lie to you and I know you'll be mad. I JUST CAN'T HELP IT."

I think it's boredom. We try to get her exercise, and she and Al love to race around the yard. But the mornings have been cold and dark and our afternoons/evenings so inconsistent that we keep putting off that "walking routine" we dream about. It might also be pent-up frustration; she spends a lot of time on a long tether (because she still jumps the fence), watching squirrels and neighborhood cats that are just out of reach. Even inside, she watches...






So for now, we just have to try to remember to keep things out of reach. And give her new things to chew.

Anyone have any suggestions?

Or any empty peanut butter jars or pizza boxes my dog can tear up?



The clean-up is a pain, but it is much better than the alternative.


Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Hard on her

Poor Big Sister.

For almost three years, she was the center of attention. Then she had to share the spotlight with a tiny new baby, who became a cute, pudgy sister and then an entertaining, beautiful toddler...

And then a kid. Another girl. Another sister.

A rival.

Each new stage has been a hard adjustment. But when Little Sister was obviously younger, Big Sis seemed to "get it." She still didn't like sharing her mother (or her Nana), but she tried to help and be relatively gentle and patient with "the baby." The sibling dynamic was challenging, sure. But it was relatively peaceful.

Those days are gone.

Let me back-up a bit and be sure that anyone reading knows this about me: I am an only child. I had some cousins close to my age that were the closest thing I had to siblings. I have only a faint understanding of how annoying a younger sibling can be. I don't know what is a "normal" amount of bickering or wrestling or eye-rolling or shouting or... you get the point.

I do see Little Sister climbing all over her big sister, interrupting her, trying to mother her or bother her or smother her or who knows what. I know it must be hard on her.

And, I am realizing more and more the things Big Sister has to give up or put on hold because of her sister. They are things as simple as sharing a stick of gum or waiting her turn to talk. And they are things as complicated as laying in bed trying to fall asleep and ignore screaming or bouncing or babbling in the bunk below her, or trying to comprehend why Little Sister gets to stay home with Mommy while she has to go to school every day. They are things I never really had to deal with as a kid, and things I may not always notice like I should. They add up, I am sure. It's hard on her.

I'm not trying to sound dramatic. MOST people have siblings- it is not an uncommon tragedy, but rather a fairly boring reality of life. But when you're watching the Wrestlemania on my couch, and sending two surprisingly scrappy little girls to separate rooms over and over, it seems... bigger.

As I struggle with how to fix it (the question I always ask and ultimately realize that I will never answer, because that's pretty much just how parenting goes...) I'm at a bit of a loss. One thing I quickly figured out: Yelling at my kids for yelling at each other is ineffective, and a bit ridiculous. Like Chris Farley in Billy Madison.

I'm just trying to spend a lot of time with both of the girls, separately and together. I'm trying to gently remind them over and over and over again to use their words and to be polite and respectful. I'm praising the sweet things they do for and with each other. And, yes, I am punishing the bad stuff. TV and other rewards have been restricted. There have been too many time-outs to count. Last night I took some advice from a friend with five kiddos and made them sit together in time out, holding hands, after their frustrations with each other ended with punching and kicking.

Some days, I want to scream. I want to find some way to get Big Sister to understand that you can't win an argument with a precocious two-and-a-half-year-old, that "she-really-is-only-doing-what-you-do-because-she-thinks-you're-the-most-amazing-person-in-the-world," and that there is a step in the conflict resolution process between the first "STOP!" and pummeling the crud out of each other. I want her to understand that SHE IS FIVE and her sister is NOT.

But then I remind myself that, despite her 3rd grade+ reading level, her ridiculous vocabulary, and her eye-rolling and other preteen behavior, SHE IS FIVE.

And I try not to be to hard on her.


Monday, February 21, 2011

I love CVS


I got all of these items for less than $8.50 after tax.

That's 4 bottles of laundry detergent (and you better believe I grabbed almost every "20% more" size Purex on the shelf), some Easter candy to put away (I will not eat it before Easter... I will not eat it before Easter...), and 3 new eyeliners.

Those were an unexpected surprise; I decided to use a coupon for $7 off any Physician's Formula cosmetics purchase that printed on one of my previous receipts. I just grabbed a $7.49 package of eyeliner (since I lose or dry out or break or otherwise use up eyeliner much more often than other cosmetics. You'd think I was Cleopatra or Tammy Faye... anyway...) When the clerk scanned it, the price was $1.82. WHAT?! So I ran back and got two more to see if they did the same thing. One of them was even cheaper: $1.54! And the craziest part? Before I could head back and find something else to get me up to my $7 total, she scanned the coupon and it gave me my full $7 off.

$8.50 total

So, yeah, I was proud of myself. Proud enough to take a picture of random groceries.

Simple pleasures, right?


Sunday, February 20, 2011

Song for Sunday: a holy flame that burns

All To Us
Chris Tomlin

Precious cornerstone, sure foundation
You are faithful to the end
We are waiting, on You, Jesus
We believe You're all to us

Let the glory of Your name be the passion of the Church
Let the righteousness of God be a holy flame that burns
Let the saving love of Christ be the measure of our lives
We believe You're all to us

Only Son of God sent from Heaven
Hope and mercy at the cross
You are everything, You're the Promise
Jesus, You are all to us

You're all to us

When this passing world is over
We will see You face to face
And forever we will worship
Jesus, You are all to us




Saturday, February 19, 2011

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Book Review: Then Sings My Soul, Special Edition


Because I really enjoyed the original Then Sings My Soul by Robert J. Morgan, I was very excited to receive the special edition from Booksneeze sometime in November. Obviously, it has taken me a long time to review this one, for many reasons. For one thing, my husband stole it for December sermon preparation. I can see how it would be very good for that purpose.

But really, I'm having a hard time reviewing because I was disappointed. I liked the original so much, and I was sad to find that 76 of the 150 songs in this "special edition" were exactly the same songs AND entries as in the earlier edition. I expected a little overlap in the songs, especially since the first one had a few Christmas and Easter hymns in it already. But over half of the book is exactly the same as the first. Granted, the additions to this edition (sorry) are good songs- great holiday hymns and some of the old standards that we sang in my small Baptist church growing up. I was a little concerned about the "patriotic" section, but that is based on my own opinion of the blurring lines between Christianity and Nationalism. Basically, my biggest disappointment was that there wasn't enough NEW stuff.

That being said, if you don't already own a copy of the first one, Then Sings My Soul: Special Edition is a great book with lots of amazing and inspiring insight to the origin of some of our favorite hymns. If you do, be prepared for some de ja vu.




Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from the publisher through the BookSneeze.com book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”



Thursday, February 10, 2011

My Funny Valentine



I can't get over how big Little Sister looks in this picture...




Sigh.