Sunday, February 17, 2013

Week 7 sum-up

Well, I really didn't do much of anything Spring Cleaning-wise last week. I did clean the house, do laundry, clean the burner grates, and clean a couple of pantry shelves. But Valentine's Day preparations took up the whole day on Thursday, and Wednesday I met with a personal set-back that had me unmotivated and emotionally exhausted. So, my to-do list is the same.

However, Friday we received news that my beloved Grandma Sue had passed away. We will be traveling to Colorado to attend her funeral this week, so with travel preparations, there won't be time to do anything else. Which is fine. I need a break. It will be nice to see my family again, but it sure won't be the same without Grandma.

One of my February goals was to call a family member each day. Well, I should have called my Grandma. I didn't, and now I will regret it the rest of my life. I talked to her on Friday, but she was unable to respond. I told her I loved her and that I hoped I could see her soon. Please, Jesus, come soon.

Life is uncertain, all too short, and full of too many heartbreaks. Love those close to you with all your heart. Call them if you are far away. Write letters. Send pictures. LOVE THEM.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Six years

Six years ago, this happened. It's been quite the ride getting to know each other and our true selves. We still love each other, but this kind of love is different than the love we had six years ago. I suppose it will keep growing and changing and so will we. But I sure am glad he is her daddy, and I sure am glad he is my honey.

Happy Valentine's Day. Love the ones you have.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Block

I have gone nearly a month and a half without experiencing a single day of Writer's Block. Well, today ended my streak. I just don't feel like writing today. I feel gross and unmotivated and sad and like I've eaten too much sugar. I haven't had any today, because I just don't feel like it. I don't feel like doing anything. I am tired because I woke at 1:30 thinking K was about to wake up and I'd be comforting her and holding her while she slept until it was time for her 4:00 feeding, just like I had the previous two nights. She didn't wake up, but I didn't sleep well after that. I managed to get breakfast and lunch on the table, take a shower, and fold two loads of laundry. I managed to walk to the pharmacy and to the bookstore. I managed to pull some art supplies out of the garage.

I have not managed to clean the kitchen. I have not managed to prepare anything for the six-year anniversary of our engagement tomorrow. I have not managed to organize even one pantry shelf. I have not managed to bathe my child or get Robert's dinner ready. I have one hour before he gets home. I just don't feel like getting off the couch.

I will, of course. I will manage to finish everything. Because life moves on, even when one is more disappointed than they could have imagined being just hours ago. Even when one is mourning possibilities that just aren't in the cards this time. Even when a hunch proves to be just ... Nothing.

Tomorrow is another day, next month is another month, and next year is another year. And maybe by then this disappointment will be joy. Maybe I will have forgotten the ridiculous, self-indulgent sadness I feel right now. Maybe ... Someday.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

February Recipe: Part One

I recently fell in love with Brussels sprouts. (Okay, that was ridiculous. It just took me nearly two minutes to type that sentence. Stupid little phone keys! Stupid uncoordinated thumbs!)

Anyway, when I was a kid, my stepdad, the gourmet chef, made brussels sprouts. Once. And never again. My sister and I thought they were the most horrific little vegetables ever to be invented, and we choked them down, gagging and making gargoyle faces. My poor stepdad took the hint and never made them for us again, although he did threaten us with them at least once a week. Once he had me cut out a picture of Brussels sprouts from the weekly King Soopers ad and he taped it to the table in my sister's spot. She was not amused, though the rest of us laughed our fool heads off.

Anyway, a few (okay, almost ten ... Sheez I'm old) years ago, a good friend mentioned that she was making Brussels sprouts for a holiday meal. I proceeded to gag and ask her why on earth she would torture her guests that way. She said they were really good roasted and that I should try them. No thank you. *shudder*

Then, a few (okay, five) years ago, I found a recipe for Brussels Sprout Soup in my favorite cookbook. I tried to ignore the recipe, but one day I asked Robert to help me pick recipes for the week, and wouldn't you know? He somehow turned the book open to that very page. I protested, I gagged, I threw a fit on the floor, but he just really wanted that soup. Ugh. I reluctantly bought the accursed sprouts and made the stupid soup for him. It wasn't THAT bad, but I still despised Brussels sprouts.

Until ...

This fall, I found brussels sprouts on a stalk at Trader Joe's. I don't usually buy things that aren't on my list for the week, but those sprouts intrigued me. I figured if Trader Joe's had them in their store, there must be some way to make them edible, and besides, they were so pretty! Like tiny cabbages. Call it mothering instinct, but I just pictured itty bitty cabbage patch dolls poking their heads out from under the leaves. They needed a home.

I googled this recipe for lemon-encrusted roasted Brussels sprouts. The recipe was simple, and the girl just raved about how she couldn't stop herself from eating the whole pan. Yeah, right, I thought, no one likes Brussels sprouts THAT much. I figured she just went a little overboard on the hyperbole. And then ... Oh, Heaven! Oh, peace on earth and good will to men! How can there be war in this world when there are lemon-encrusted roasted Brussels sprouts? I could hardly stop myself, and there were only a few left for my husband when he got home from work. Oops.

So, in my recent rekindling of interest in Pinterest (ugh, that sentence makes me ill), fueled by a non-spammy app for my Android, I repinned this recipe and got around to trying it today. And Oh.my.word. I think I may have dreams about Brussels sprouts and rosemary-infused potatoes synchronized swimming in a fountain of olive oil somewhere in Italy tonight. There's just no way that dreaded vegetable that used to haunt my worst nightmares (You know the one where you're about to shove a big, juicy Canaanite grape in your mouth and it turns out to be a Brussels sprout? Yeah, that one) should taste this good.

I didn't follow the amounts of the original recipe (who buys 1.75 lbs of fingerling potatoes?). I used 2 lbs of fingerlings, and two 16-oz bags of Brussels sprouts from TJ's, then just drizzled a bit of oil, crushed five or six cloves of garlic (you're welcome, Robert's coworkers!), sprinkled salt and ground pepper, ground a whole Trader Joe's package (minus one sprig for garnish which I forgot to use) of rosemary in the food processor, then tossed in a couple of pinches of chili flakes. I skipped the sucanat. I never have liked putting sugar in savory dishes. 

We paired our sprouts with rice, beans, and tortillas (insert joke about Mexican diets here). Even with all those extra sprouts, we barely had any leftovers. Robert even said "Thank you for lunch." And that, in my book, is a raving success.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Eating in peace

Karlina's Abuelita and Tia came over yesterday for a visit and brought Karlina's mommy a present. A wonderfully liberating gift for Mommy and Baby alike. A gift that means Mommy can eat her dinner without little fingers digging in to her plate. A present that means more than half of Karlina's food will eventually end up in her mouth instead of in the dog's mouth. A gift that means Daddy's super hot chilies are no longer in peril of infant consumption (and Karlina is no longer in peril of the multiple ill effects of said chilies). A gift that means fewer heads banging on the table while watching the dog eat. A gift that does not mean just one more thing to move around the kitchen because it straps to our existing chairs. And, a wonderfully thoughtful gift that means Mommy can once again eat food that requires two hands to consume.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Week 7: At least the oven is done ... Or not

I SO hope I can finish the kitchen this week and move on to the back half of the house. It's getting a little ridiculous that I haven't finished yet. I'm getting frustrated and that does not help my productivity. So, here's the agenda for this week:

1. Treat the burner grates with ammonia overnight. (Sunday night.)

2. Clean the house Monday. Robert is giving me a jump start today by vacuuming. What a guy!

3. Laundry on Tuesday, and hopefully clean and organize pantry.

4. Clean and contact-paper large cabinets on Wednesday. Start rearranging so nothing breakable is on any bottom shelves.

5. Finish organizing and baby proofing Thursday. Clean both sides of the door. Hopefully get the bookcase moved back into the hallway so I can get my books out of my closet.

My other goal for this week is to get stuff ready for Valentine's Day. I want to make some cards for Robert as well as a cake or something similar.

February goals are to finish one craft project this month, and call one family member each day.

Spring cleaning and Bible reading remain my quarterly goals.

Have a great week, everyone!

Saturday, February 9, 2013

K-10

This past month has been quite eventful for little Miss K. She is just doing SO much that she wasn't last month. My favorite part about this month? Sleep. Glorious sleep. She is going down for the night between 8 and 9 and not waking up until between 4 and 5. Then she nurses back to sleep and stays asleep until between 7 and 8. I'm still sleeping in her room with her, and Daddy sleeps there twice a week. But after the 4:00 feed, I go back to my own room for another hour or two. She sleeps better, I get a little more sleep, and have an opportunity to take a shower and get ready for the day before she wakes. It's so nice to not have to depend on a long morning nap for my shower. Now I can fix lunch and clean a bit while she naps.
Which brings me to naps. They are still inconsistent and all over the place, but for a couple of weeks she was going at least an hour twice a day. However, this past week, she did NOT want to go to sleep in her crib for naps. She wanted to sit up, pull up, play with her babies, wave at me (smart aleck), and generally just NOT SLEEP. She did finally sleep a couple of times early in the week, but most of the week I just tossed her in the Ergo and played some music on my phone (she loves Gaither Vocal Band to fall asleep.) She falls asleep pretty quickly that way, but I don't want her to be dependent on that, you know? Anyway, after she falls asleep, I just lay her down on the bed and surround her with pillows in case she decides she wants to escape.
She is pulling up to standing on EVERYTHING these days. Her crib and the coffee table are favorites, but she's tried the chairs, the dog (that did not go over well), Mommy's lap, her jumparoo ... I can't leave her even for a second in the living room (I'd love to knock down the wall between the kitchen and living room so I can keep an eye on her while I get stuff done, but knocking down walls is just so messy). She still is not crawling forward, but she can get anywhere she wants by scooting, pulling up, and cruising. She still doesn't want to stand on her own just yet, but she has done it for 3-5 seconds a few times. She just might be walking when I post her 11-month update.
She's still pretty little for her age. Tenth percentile for height and weight, and 75th percentile for head circumference. Yeah, her head is huge, just like Daddy. At her 9-month checkup she was 16 and a half pounds and 26 inches. She is growing so fast. Her hands are getting so big they look like they belong to someone else. She is still pretty comfortable in 6-9 month clothes, but her jammies now have to be 9-12 months because her feet get squished. Plus they put nonskid nubs on 9-12 month jammies, which she needs.
She still loves to eat anything and everything except mangoes and avocadoes, and I think we have identified a sensitivity to sweet potatoes. She has vomited the last two times I've given them to her. So we're holding off sweet potatoes for a while. She loves those little green puffs to shove in her mouth, and she cannot make it through breakfast or supper without her precious pear slices. I don't know what I'm going to do when red anjou pears are out of season.
She is saying a few intelligible words with purpose now. Baby and puppy are the big ones, but she tries to say "ropa" (clothes) when she gets dressed in the mornings, and she has said Daddy a few times too. Her vowels are more distinctive this month. Last month they were still all the "uh" sound, but she's added "a" and "e" sounds. She is forming her mouth for "o" and "oo", but they still don't sound like much except "uh." She's also saying a Ron of new consonants like g, k, d, t, f, n, s, v, and a little bit of w.
Just this week I also noticed some teeth on top and bottom that are getting ready to pop through. I ordered he amber teething necklace to help with the drooling and pain.
Man, that's a lot of stuff. I'm a little overwhelmed thinking about all the new stuff she's doing, so I imagine she's having a hard time with all these new things too. I have to keep reminding myself, especially when I can't get her to sleep, of a quote I read that said that they are not trying to make your life difficult, they are trying to show you how difficult it is for them.
By the way, my phone automatically updated to the Ice Cream Sandwich OS today, and I'm loving it, especially the new camera features that are pretty stiff competition for Instagram without all the Big Brother we-own-your-pictures stuff. Here are a few from today. the

Friday, February 8, 2013

Week 6 sum-up: Still?

Yeah, still not done with the kitchen. I did work my rear end off this week, though, and with a newly mobile kiddo, I am not able to dedicate as much time to my project as I have been in the past. Add to that the fact that now, when I put her in her crib, instead of playing with her toys and falling asleep, she wants to stand up. She can't, though, because she's tired and can't think straight, so she screams. I stick her in the Ergo, she goes to sleep, but by now half of her nap time is gone. In short: It's the baby's fault.

The cabinets above the stove are cleaned, contact-papered, and organized, the vent hood is sparkling clean, and the oven is almost there. I spent an hour yesterday scrubbing the burner grates and there's still burned stuff stuck on them. Last night, I thought there must be an easier way. Google led me to an ingenious solution: ammonia in a trash bag over night dissolves the grease. And, supposedly, I don't have to do much. I'm buying ammonia today. I also could have put them in the oven when I did the self-clean (I will next time!), but I'm not interested in running another cycle because man, that stunk up the house.  Also today I hope to finish cleaning behind and underneath the oven. And my wonderful husband said he would clean the toaster oven! Yay for help.

I still have the bitty pantry and the large cabinets, but after the oven, that will be easy as pie. Next year when I do my Spring Clean, I'm going to start with the fridge and oven when I still have lots of motivation. Then I'll be able to move on to the fun parts. Also, next year, God willing, I won't have to contact-paper the cabinets and drawers again. Yay.

Valentine's day planning/decorating didn't happen this week. Is it even worth it to do it next week? I mean, I'll plan and execute the menu, but decorating? I just don't think I'll have time. K isn't really old enough to appreciate it, either, so maybe next year. Sad face.

I did not succeed in calling a family member every day this week. I missed two days, but the other days I made up for it by calling multiple people. So it kind of counts, right? Maybe? Not really ... Sad face.

I haven't tried a new recipe yet, but I have ingredients for one, and I'm planning to make another for my hubby's Valentine's Day cake. Stay tuned.

Bible reading is still on track. I'm feeling pretty confident that I'll be able to accomplish at least this one goal. I'm already to May's readings in the OT and almost halfway through November in the NT. Happy face.

Okay, Spring Cleaning, you're kicking my butt. Six weeks left. Tons still to do ... But I remain cautiously optimistic. I will finish by Easter. I will, I will, I will!

Tomorrow Karlina will be 10 months old. Happy face! Special post tomorrow, which I'm going to write today so I don't have to worry about blogging on Sabbath.

Happy weekend, all!

Thursday, February 7, 2013

A sickening thud

The other night we were finishing up dinner, Robert was putting dishes in the sink and talking about ... something? I don't remember, but I was still at the table with Karlina on my lap, looking at Robert, when I felt her lean forward. I was holding her pretty securely so I wasn't worried about her squirming out of my lap, but as she leaned forward, her head smacked the table. Hard. She screamed for about twenty seconds, then started smiling again. Her head, however, had a big red line from the table edge, and it looked like it was fixin to form a gigantic goose egg. Oh, the guilt! I grabbed an ice pack, wrapped it in a towel, and stuck it on her head. She was having none of that. She pushed it away in the interest of getting down to play. I was sure she would have a bruise and a bump to beat all bumps. All that's left now is a barely-noticeable blip. The first of, I'm sure, many unfortunate incidents that will leave me feeling like the worst mother in the world.

 You see it? Yeah, me neither. I think she'll live. The table is fine, too. In case you were wondering.



Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Karlina's Birth Story

April 8, 2012, was Easter and my mom's birthday. Robert and I were both nesting like crazy, trying to get the baby's room painted and the furniture together. Robert was busy all morning mixing some leftover paint in the garage, trying to find just the right color. Being Easter, Dunn Edwards was closed, so buying more paint was out of the question. I really wanted to get the nursery painted before my sister and her husband came to visit on Tuesday, April 10, so we could enjoy the weekend with them in Yosemite. I taped the molding to prepare to paint the walls, and by the time I finished taping, I was exhausted and a little crampy, so I laid down to take a nap. I vaguely felt little cramps as I slept, but it was nothing out of the ordinary.

When I woke up, Robert asked me to run to Home Depot to pick up some plastic drop cloths and some more tray liners. They were closing at 6 since it was Easter, so I had only half an hour before they closed. When I got there, the baby was very active, and one kick had me almost doubling over. I did not want to cause alarm, however, so I just kept walking to the paint aisle. I picked up the box of plastic first and then went to find the tray liners. They were on the bottom shelf, so I had to squat precariously to reach them. The roll of plastic came with me, of course, but then I couldn't stand back up with all that extra weight. I slid the tray liners up onto a higher shelf, stood the roll of plastic on one end, and used the shelf and the plastic roll to pull myself up. Whew, that could have been embarrassing.

I checked out, walked to the car, and got in. As I pulled out of the parking lot, I felt a HUGE gush. Oh crap. I had put some chux pads in the glove box a few days before in case my water broke in the car, so I grabbed one, shook it out and shoved it underneath me. I tried calling Robert but he wasn't answering his phone. I yelled at the baby, "You're coming TODAY?!?" I had a couple of miles of stop lights between me and the house, and I was behind a Firebird. One would think that a Firebird would be a good car to be behind in such a situation, but the person driving this particular Firebird was either old or worried about getting another speeding ticket. They were SO SLOOOOOOW!!! Finally, at one intersection, I swerved around it and hit about 80 in the Prius in less than a block. I screeched around two more corners and then into the driveway, where I proceeded to honk and scream for my husband to come rescue me. He did not. He told me later that he heard something and asked Jose, our handyman friend, if it was me, but Jose said he didn't think so.

Finally, I figured it best to waddle my dripping wet self into the house since, obviously, my knight in shining armor was ignoring his 8.5 MONTHS PREGNANT WIFE. Jose saw me waddling, looked very concerned for half a second, then just as quickly got out of my way. Smart man. I finally found Robert, who looked at me and said cheerfully, "Hi, honey! Did you get the tray liners?" I said, "Yes, they are in the car but we have to go to the hospital." He said, "Why?" Fortunately he seemed to remember what "my water broke" meant. I told him to get the stupid car seat in the car like I had been asking him to do for months, and then to get a suitcase from the garage. I took a shower and ate a bowl of cereal since I knew I wouldn't be eating for a while. 45 minutes later, I still didn't have a suitcase. Robert came in the house dripping with sweat and said "That carseat won't fit!" And then proceeded to ramble about the instructions not making sense, etc, etc, etc. I reminded him about my suitcase and he flew out to the garage to get it while I called the hospital. The nurse who answered the phone had the NERVE to say "You THINK your water broke?" Um, yeah, lady, I just called because I peed my pants and oh by the way can you induce me today?

We finally got everything in the car (suitcase, birth ball, my favorite pillow, car seat), and took off for the hospital. By this time I was starting to feel my contractions, but I was not in any kind of pain. But, since it had already been almost two hours since my water had broken, I wanted to get to the hospital as soon as possible, first of all to avoid infection and second of all to get out of the wet Depends I was wearing to keep my pants dry. If you've never had a baby, it's difficult to grasp just how much fluid there is, and how it just keeps gushing and gushing when you least expect it to.

Anyway, when we were a few blocks away from the hospital, Robert suddenly exclaimed, "Man, I'm hungry!" I told him there were Clif Bars in my suitcase. He said, "No, I'm REALLY hungry. Would you mind if I stopped to get something to eat?" I don't remember what I said, but he drove those last few blocks faster than he ever had before.

The wheelchair escort was there waiting for me, and he took me up to Labor and Delivery. I got into the triage room after changing into the gown and infinitely stretchable underwear. The resident did an excruciatingly painful pelvic exam. I was only 1/2 cm dilated. My contractions were 6 minutes apart, and the baby was at -2 station, still quite high in the pelvis. The doctor came in and said they would keep me (duh) and that if my contractions didn't get closer together in the next couple of hours, they would start a pitocin drip. Gee, thanks for completely ignoring my birth plan, dude. I argued that I had at least 16 hours before they even started to worry about infection. Thankfully, I never saw that doctor again while I was there.

So, on to Labor and Delivery. Robert took off to eat as soon as I got to the room. He was REALLY hungry, after all. My contractions were still very mild and no less than 4 minutes apart. I was able to get some sleep between contractions, and by breathing slowly during the contractions, I stayed pretty relaxed. They had me on a monitor for the first few hours because the baby's heart rate was dipping a bit at the beginning, but they let me move around pretty much as much as I wanted. The hospital had this little open-air courtyard filled with pretty Spring flowers, and we went out there more times than I can count. By morning, my contractions were stronger, but still far apart. The doctor did another excruciating pelvic exam, this time I was 2 cm. Meh. I was bored. I didn't want to turn on the TV because I felt it would take my focus away. We had the phones on airplane mode since they don't allow you to plug anything into the room outlets. Lame. So, I walked, I sat, I breathed, I tried to take a shower but couldn't figure out how to get the hot water. Those hospital showers are complicated, man! So I took a sponge bath.

Noon was the magical hour that they would start antibiotics and I would be stuck in bed. The doc came in and said since the baby was doing well and I was not feverish, he'd let me go another six hours without antibiotics. Yay, Dr. Fabulous!

Six o'clock came and went. It was now 24 hours since my water had broken. After another stupid pelvic exam (they really try to make those as painful as humanly possible, just so you know what it's going to be like when the baby's head pops out), I was only 4 cm, 90% effaced, and baby's head was still at -2. Let's start that pitocin, shall we? I said no. I asked for another few hours since I felt my contractions were getting stronger. Three hours were granted.

I walked my little (huge) self all up and down those hallways, danced in my room, told the baby that it was time to come out now, prayed, breathed, visualized the wave, the growing circle, and the danged red triangle. Contractions were still three to five minutes apart by 9:00. No exam this time, since they didn't want to risk infection. (Praise Jesus.) They connected the pitocin drip. I cried. Then ... Then ... Oh, the pain. I breathed through the first hour, but I wasn't allowed to walk. I could sit on the ball next to my bed, but that was as far as I was going. Robert brushed his teeth and pulled out the sleeper chair so he could get some rest. The second hour, I moaned so loudly that the charge nurse came in to adjust my monitor since it was reading mild contractions but clearly I was in more pain than that. Then my nurse came in and told me there was no reason for me to be in this much pain. My birth plan was for no meds, but pitocin is an evil, evil drug. I tearfully said I would get the epidural. My husband tried to convince me otherwise, but he said it was my decision. I felt like such a failure. I silently breathed through three more contractions waiting for the anesthesiologist. I was angry at myself, angry at that coworker who had implied that I wouldn't be able to do it naturally, angry with my husband for letting me go through with it. I felt like I was not even there in that room. I was floating in a sea of anguish somewhere else, and my failure of a self was going to regret this for the rest of my life. But, oh, the pain!

The anesthesiologist looked like an angel when he came in the room. He talked with me about the epidural, how it would make me feel, and how long it would last. I said yes, okay, let's do this. He left to get his supplies rounded up, and I smiled at my husband. It was going to be okay. The baby would be fine and healthy. I felt present again.

Then, he came back. He told me he couldn't do the epidural, not on me, not on someone who had had a lumbar laminectomy. He told me I would have back pain the rest of my life. I pleaded with him, begged him, kissed his feet (in my head ... they wouldn't let me get out of bed), he said maybe. Then, definitely no. What about morphine? he asked. I said no, absolutely not, morphine makes me itch and I did not want a lethargic lump of a baby coming out of me. So, that was it. Nothing they could do. The doctor shrugged his shoulders, said he was sorry, and told me he would come back in an hour to check me. I cried and cried. Then I screamed through another contraction. It was all I could do at that point. Robert looked me in the eye and said, "You can do this. It's only another six hours." (They say pitocin dilates you a cm every hour.) Are you effing kidding me?!? Six more hours? Kill.me.now.

He said a prayer that the baby would be healthy and that I would be okay, and I didn't hear the rest of the prayer because I had a contraction, then another, then another. That little line that's supposed to go down between contractions? It didn't go down. Six straight minutes of horrifying pain. I screamed and cried and said "NO!!! NOT AGAIN!!!" And then, I pushed. I had to. I screamed that I was pushing. Robert said to wait, I said no way. He asked if he should get the nurse. YES!!! He poked his head out the door and said "She's pushing," calm as a summer breeze. The nurses looked at him blankly for a few seconds, then they all were moving. My nurse said to wait. I said no way. Then another gush (Really? More fluid? I thought I was bleeding profusely and told, or rather screamed at, the nurse). She put on a glove and did a quick check and said, "Oh, the baby's right there!" She hauled me up on the bed, made it into a chair, twenty people came in the room, and my head was spinning. The OB's and the Pediatrician and the residents and the nurses and the CNA's, and, wait, was that George Clooney? No. And there I was, feet in stirrups, in all my glory, and all these people staring at my nether regions. I pushed when they said push, I rested when they said rest, my own wonderful OB from my clinic came in to assist (boy, was I glad to see her! She just happened to be doing her weekly rounds that night), and twenty minutes of pushing later, the head emerged. My beautiful baby's head. The nurse said it was a girl because the baby's hands were by its face. I was ecstatic. One more push for the shoulders, and it WAS a girl! And she was screaming! And they grabbed a blanket and put her on my chest, where she proceeded to poop all over both of us.

Oh, she was beautiful, and she was a girl, and her name was Karlina.
6 lbs, 10 oz, 20", and cute as a bug.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Pippin

I'm working on a post for tomorrow but it's getting long and I'm not even halfway finished, so in the meantime, my wonderful dog, Pippin, my constant companion for the past seven and a half years,deserves some blog time. Here are a few pictures.

Monday, February 4, 2013

Weekly menu board

I saw this idea in my What's For Dinner? group on Facebook. I have always planned meals for the week since we got married, but I usually had the meals listed on a notepad stuck to the fridge. This is more visible, prettier, and keeps me more accountable to actually cook. And I need all the help I can get when it comes to accountability.

First I went to Target and found a $3 frame on the clearance aisle. Then, I got two different-sized packages of adhesive letters. Finally, I found a pad of scrapbook paper  on clearance at Michael's and cut a piece to fit the frame. Seriously the hardest part about this project was scouring three different stores to find a dry-erase marker that I liked to write in the meals.

Note: Throwing your menu board on the floor will result in breakage of said menu board.

I was getting ready to take pictures of this lovely menu board last evening when this happened
 Oh well. Back to sticky notes on the fridge, I guess. Hey, look! A caption!

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Week 6: Or else ...

My ultimatum for this week: Finish the kitchen or else forget about organizing the closet in my room. That has been my ultimate goal, what I'm working towards, the next-to-last project on my insane 13-week to-do list. If I can't finish the kitchen this week, I won't have time to do my closet before the end, and then I'll have to put off some great Spring activity.

So here's what's in store for this week:

1. Scrub, contact-paper, and organize the remaining cabinets, including the two above the stove, the tall and narrow pantry, and the two large cabinets on the remaining wall.

2. Scrub the remaining walls, including behind the oven, and the door.

3. Deep-clean the oven inside and out.

4. Deep-clean the toaster oven.

5. Clean the glass table top and the table.

6. Finish baby proofing.

Only six items. Doable.

My other goal for the week will be to decorate a little for Valentine's Day, make some cards for mi amor, and make my V-Day menu.

Again, my monthly goals are to try one new recipe and call one person from my family each day. Yesterday, I called my mom who didn't answer her phone. So I called my Seester instead. While I was talking to said Seester, Karlina was playing with my phone, and connected a 3-way call with my mom.

Yes, she did.

Quarterly goals remain: spring cleaning and Bible reading.

Right now, the weather is gorgeous, the sky is clear, the sun is bright, and Karlina is napping in her carseat on the way to the BEACH!! Yay. I need this outing so much. A chance to reconnect with my honey, who I feel I haven't seen in the last week and a half, and a chance to get out of the house, which I also haven't done in the last week and a half. Fresh air, sand in ny toes, and hopefully a dolphin or two.

Have a great week!

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Solo hike

I am writing this on the trail. Robert is home with Karlina while she finishes napping and Pippin and I are enjoying this warm, cloudy afternoon in the hills above Glendale. It's a blue-hazy day but I can see Rancho Palos Verdes in the distance beyond downtown LA, and beyond that, the bay, and beyond that, Catalina. In the other direction, I can see Mt. San Jacinto, some 100 miles away. Pippin is strangely unexcited, probably because we left half our pack at home. This is my first walk since we all got sick a week and a half ago, and I already feel out of shape. It's still feels amazing to be out of the rat race for a little while on this Sabbath Day. Now, if you'll excuse me, I've got a hike to finish.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Week 5 Sum-up: Whew!

Oh, man, this was supposed to be my last week in the kitchen for this cleaning project, but it looks like I may be there for another week, SOOOOO ... here's what I did.

The refrigerator is scrubbed inside and out, coils are clean, and the freezer is a little more organized. The walls behind the refrigerator are scrubbed, as well as the floor under the fridge and the ceiling in the alcove of doom. I also tackled the small appliance shelf and the inaccessible and useless sink in the corner as well as the cabinet underneath that sink, where we keep our gallon jugs of water. Today I'm hoping to clean and organize the cabinet above the inaccessible sink and contact-paper it. I also hope I can get Robert to help out a bit by cleaning the toaster oven. I still have to deep-clean the oven and clean behind and underneath it, and clean the vent hood and the cabinet above the vent hood. Ugh, why is this taking so long?

My sugar fast failed again. Yes, I ate three cookies and two Luna bars this week. No I do not feel guilty. Try again next month.

January is over! Yay for one whole month without head explosion! And boo for not cooking every day!

Goals for February:

1. Finish one craft project.

2. Cook one new recipe. Robert asked for a cake for Valentines Day. This should be fun.

3. Call one family member each day. Because I MEEEES them!

My quarterly goal of Bible reading is still on track. I started 1 Samuel this morning. Time-wise, I'm in mid-April. Also, in the New Testament, I'm almost to the end of the Gospels. Hard to read about the crucifixion, but necessary, no?

And Spring Cleaning. Hopelessly behind but I am not giving up! This house WILL be clean and organized! Seven weeks to go!

I've been having strange, vivid dreams lately. Twice in the last two weeks I've woken up and deeply regretted decisions I've made for several hours. My dreams are almost like "This is what would have happened if you had chosen differently." And it's so hard to face the consequences and guilt of those decisions, but I can't go back and change them. So I just have to move on and hope that next time I will listen to my conscience instead of justifying my rebellion. Ugh, why am I so stupid sometimes? Why didn't someone just shake me and slap me in the face? Then I remember that a lot of people did. I just didn't want to listen.

And so starts the weekend. Today is passport day for Karlina. And today I will renew mine as well. I can't believe it's been 10 years since our college band tour to the UK! I am officially old.