100th Post

I realized last night I’ve posted 99 times to my blog.  So for this, my 100th post, I wanted to share a few things I’ve learned about myself, blogging and the blog world.

1.  It’s a lot more fun than I thought it would be.
2.  It’s super cheap therapy.
3.  There are some really amazing women out there, doing beautiful things with their blogs, their businesses, their lives.
4.  I’d like to meet a lot of them.
5.  As in other areas of life, it’s easy to see the neat things others are doing and want to do it all… and end up being successful at nothing.  Priorities are the key.
6.  I’ve noticed that people write about their faith on their blogs.  They do it without apology, including it simply because it’s part of who they are, what they do, how they think.  They’re not preaching;  just being themselves.  I like that.  I like feeling like there’s a place where people are able to be genuine and real and where they don’t have to separate their faith from the rest of their lives.
7.  I really want to learn how to take better pictures. (I should probably read my owner’s manual for my Canon) 8.  Suddenly I wish I knew a lot about web design and programming.  Funny thing is, my husband is a programmer but I hate to bother him with my silly little blog when he’s got real projects with real deadlines to work on.
9.  I know I’ve merely put my toe into the world of blogs, but it’s been a fun discovery.  Reading about what others (meaning regular people like me) are trying and doing helps me swallow my fear of failure and just try something.  I am reminded that creativity is an essential part of life, and that finding beauty in everyday things is a key to happiness. I love seeing so many people doing that.
10.  100 posts later, I’m a little more hopeful.  Hopeful that I’ll reach my goals, hopeful that I’ll get my house clean, hopeful that our family is on the right track.  Hopeful that from my little corner of the world, I can make home a better place to be and (hopefully) help somebody else along the way.  (Do you think I could use the word hopeful a few more times in 3 sentences?)  But remember my goal:  nurture hope.  Hope in everyday, family life.
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Happy day to you!

Life with 8 kids

A few weeks ago, one of my sons invited a friend over to play who had never been to our house.  This friend comes from a family of two children.  I suppose it’s a brave thing to come play at a house like mine, with 8 kids running around, especially on a day when several of them have friends over and the number is somewhere around 13 bodies running all over the place.

So, this boy’s Mom came to pick him up, and as luck would have it, 5 minutes before she arrived I heard an explosion coming from the direction of my infant’s diaper.  I picked her up immediately, and I am not exaggerating when I say that from her armpits down, she was literally swimming in what her diaper was supposed to catch.  It was soaking through her clothes at an alarming rate and I had to take care of it immediately.  I said a silent prayer that Sue would be late, but of course she wasn’t.

She knocked on my door, and of course the only person who heard it was her son, who answered my door, and me, who was in my bathroom cleaning poo off a baby while a large amount of it ended up on me (picture a crying baby waving her arms and legs around while you try to clean her off).  I scrambled, got her changed and a new diaper on, then quickly changed into the first clean shirt I saw in my closet, washed my arms and hands and ran down the stairs to catch them before they left.  I was thinking, now isn’t this a great impression to make?  She can’t even find an adult to talk to when she comes to pick up her son!

I explained what had just happened and she seemed to forgive me.  At least, she stayed to chat in my entry for a few more minutes, and as we talked, my door opened and closed at least a dozen times, and probably no less than 3 bodies went in or out every time.  Suddenly I looked at her and it dawned on me that she might be experiencing some serious sensory overload.  She was starting to look a little overwhelmed by the activity that was buzzing around us.  At length she asked me, “Do you think that he’s still in your house, or did he go outside?” and I had to confess that with all the ins and outs I hadn’t even tried to keep track of which group he was in.

Finally, she turned to me and asked all the questions she’d quietly wondered as she contemplated her life with two children and my life with eight:

What do you feed them all?
Where do you shop?
How do you afford it?
Is it ever quiet?
and other questions like that.  I wished I’d had some great answers, but all I could think to say was that I think my life is a lot like everybody else’s, just, well, MORE.

So in the back of my mind I’ve been reviewing her questions lately, and I’ve come up with a few thoughts.
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BEDTIME.  Occasionally it goes really smoothly.  We have family prayer and then my husband and I divide up the bedrooms.  We pray with each child, express our love and tuck them in, etc.  I have to say that my husband is WAY better than I am about spending a few extra minutes to make them each feel special.  I’m usually so tired that all I really want to do is see them close their eyes, not give them a reason to stay awake.  Sometimes they stay in bed.

But sometimes it’s more like playing that arcade game, Whack-a-Mole.  (Except that we’re not really whacking anybody, just carrying or chasing them back to their beds.)  As soon as you get one down and think you might have them all taken care of, somebody else pops up and you’re at it again.  At length they all go to bed, either because they’re finally tired or they’ve heard enough threats that they know they’d better not show their faces again.:)

FOOD.  I’m convinced that I could cook 8 full meals a day and then they MIGHT stop telling me they’re hungry.  The funny thing is, I’ve got a couple kids who are somehow allergic to meals.  They come tell me they’re hungry and I say something like, “I’m so glad you’re hungry because I just cooked dinner and we’ll be eating in about 5 minutes.  Do you want to help call your brothers and sisters so we can get started?”  and somehow, without my knowing, that was an invitation for them to lie down on the floor and begin screaming that they don’t want to eat dinner!  Translation:  they wanted me to give them something sweet or crunchy or generally not good for them.  I have a three year old who has hardly eaten in the past month because all he wants to eat is “something.”  He says, “Mom, I want something.”  I say, “I’ll make lunch.”  Then he starts screaming about how awful lunch is.  I really don’t want to give in and start feeding him junk, so I usually press forward with the meal I’d planned and he usually boycotts my meal because it doesn’t fall into his undefined category called, “something.”  And so we continue like this, day after day.  What a nut!
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Occasionally I wonder if I should just bring an air mattress into the kitchen and sleep there, since they’re hungry all day long.  My oldest son has a friend who thinks that I literally don’t do anything but cook because he’s never seen me doing anything else.  Once he’d been here and seen me in the kitchen for 5 consecutive days, he started stopping by every day to see what I might have to eat.  Last Saturday night I picked him up and when he got in my car he said, “So, have you been cooking up anything good this afternoon?”  My reply:  “NOPE!  But we’ll let Nate pop some popcorn or something as an appetizer while I figure something out.”  (I hadn’t planned on feeding 3 teenage boys that  night, so I needed a few minutes to brainstorm and pull it together.)

The funny thing is, sometimes they like it and sometimes they don’t.  Sometimes they inhale a huge meal in 5 minutes and sometimes they hardly eat.  I can make a favorite recipe and have them all declare it’s gross.  I figure as long as there’s food to eat, they’ll turn out ok.  I do my best.  The other day one of my boys asked me where the chips were kept.  “On the floor,” I replied.  “That’s where you all put them.”  (Actually, it was mostly the work of #7, but it sure felt good to say it.)

HUMILITY.  We have a lot of bikes at our house.  My husband has one, and the kids all have them.  I don’t have one.  Since our marriage 13 years ago, I’ve had only 6 weeks total when I wasn’t pregnant, nursing, or both.  Doesn’t make for lots of bike riding.  Either I’m pregnant and don’t really want to, or I’m not in the mood to go spend all that money on a bike and a little kid trailer to hook onto it.  A few years ago we got a little motorcycle and my husband invited me to take a spin on it.  My oldest child guffawed and exclaimed, “You can’t even ride a BIKE!”  I got on the motorcycle and took a spin.  You have to quiet them somehow.
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A few weeks ago one of my children was in a potentially dangerous situation. I set the baby down and ran to help my toddler.  I heard my almost 9 year old son exclaim, “Did you see Mom just now?  I didn’t know she could RUN!”  And I think, oh wow, what has become of me?!
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Earlier this year my father’s stepmother died.  Her funeral was wonderful and I learned a lot of things about her that I hadn’t known.  She was the type who would call the teenagers and invite them to go toilet paper houses.  When her house was getting it, she would hide in the laundry room, open the window, and through the screen she would use her squirt gun to get the invaders wet, laughing the whole time.  In her 89th year, she spent several days dipping cotton balls in chocolate for her April Fools day party.  She was famous for her chocolates, so she just sat nearby and chuckled as she watched people pop one of her “chocolates” in their mouths and then choke on the cotton.  The night of the funeral I asked my kids what they had learned or liked about the funeral.  This same son said, “I learned that I would like you to be more like her.”  “In what way?” I asked.  “Oh, I just think I would like it if you were fun,” he replied.

What could I say?  I mean, I was the one who asked!  So you just nod and thank your son for sharing his feelings and say to yourself, “Well, if I cry, I’ll make sure you don’t see it.”  and then you go on with life and try to be more fun.

HOUSEWORK.  I’ve learned that children love to play in clean rooms, so this is how it goes:  I clean a room.  I go to the next room to clean.  While I clean the second room, they play in the first room and mess it back up.  They just follow me from room to room until we’re back where we started.  My husband comes home from work and I say, “I promise that I cleaned all these rooms today, even if they look the same as when you left!”  Sometimes our house looks great, and a lot of the time it doesn’t.  I figure I just need to do my best to keep up with things and it will work out somehow.  After all, I do have 100 fingers touching things, 20 feet leaving shoes and dirty socks all over the place, and 3 little ones filling diapers at various intervals.   I try to remind myself that everybody says that you end up missing it, so I tell myself that while I clean up after them.  I’m witness to the evidence of healthy, happy children.  What a blessing!

Two days ago my almost 2 year old paid me a visit while I was in the shower.  She came to say hi and then decided to bring me the clean laundry that I’d just removed from the dryer.  She just started throwing it into the shower with me.  I groaned and tossed it back out.  Of course she returned to put it back in.  I surrendered.  It already had to be re-washed, so why fight her?  Why not just enjoy the end of my shower?  I left it there.  A few minutes later she came back, pushed open the shower door and began to retrieve the wet clothes.  “Rorry Mom” she said as she toddled away.  I stood there and thought, “Wait a minute!  I don’t think that’s a toddler trick I’ve ever heard of before!  I’d better write that one down!”
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Last month I  had some friends knock on the door at the last minute and ask if they could move a meeting from another location and hold it in my living room instead, in 5 minutes.  Once again, I was holding an infant with a blowout.  “Sure” I said as I looked around at the day’s clutter and went upstairs to bathe the baby.  Ten minutes later I came back down to find my 3 year old son standing in the family room throwing ping pong balls into the living room, where the meeting was happening.  “Don’t throw balls at them!” I exclaimed.  “I’m not, ” he calmly said as he threw another one.

Recently I commented to my husband that most of what we’re experiencing in this parenting adventure is just plain real life.  It’s just that we’ve got a LOT of living going on inside these walls.  I’m learning to laugh at the moments that make me feel/look like one of THOSE moms (the ones who everybody uses as an excuse not to have children).  I call myself a Mom in the Middle.  My children are old enough, and there are enough of them, that I’m well past the stage when you think you know it all and you think you know how your children will always look and act (which is usually much better than everybody else’s children look and act).  I’ve been doing this long enough to know that my kids will embarrass me, and that I’ll probably have a few opportunities to embarrass them back.  I also realize that I’ve got a lot to learn.  I’m just at the beginning of the teenage experience.  My children haven’t yet made any of the big decisions that can alter the course of their lives.  I don’t know how they’ll turn out.  I don’t know if  I’ll end up feeling like a failure or a success.  But I do know this.  I love them.  I love them so much it hurts.  I pray for them.  I know that they are God’s children and that I am merely a custodian.  I know that He knows how to take care of them and I just need to learn to listen better to what he’s trying to teach me.  And I also know that he knows how to take care of me while I learn it.  And I know that I couldn’t do this alone.  How grateful I am for our three-way partnership:  me, my husband, and God.

What more can I ask for?
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Sleep, I guess.  Cause that’s when they’re all quiet.

Jennifer

Rouenneries by French General

I’ve been waiting to see this fabric for MONTHS.  I’ve been stopping by my local quilt shop WEEKLY since the first week in October to ask the same question:  do you have French General’s line in yet?  And they kept telling me to come back next week.

Then, finally, on Halloween, I walked into the shop and saw this:

Rouenneries by French General on the bolt

Oh my!  “Forget Halloween!”  I thought.  Let’s do some sewing!


So beautiful!  I love the reds, the neutrals…

Rouenneries fat quarters

I seriously stood there, just looking at all of it, unable to decide which prints I liked best or which to purchase some of, for at least 20 minutes.  Finally I just got out my camera, because I couldn’t really decide, and I can’t afford all of it (not to mention the fact that my fabric stash is already too large).

Rouenneries on bolts

The wovens were amazing.  That one above, with the red dots on a neutral, is so classy!
These linens with the birds are also beautiful.

Rouenneries birds

And can I just say that this little dot and stripe pattern near the selvage on each bolt is the cutest thing ever?
What a classy way to introduce yourself to the world of fabric designing!  In case, you’re not familiar with French General, you can visit their website and learn more about Kaari Meng here .  I promise, you’ll love looking at all of the vintage beads, baubles, millinery and so forth that she sells.  Really beautiful.

Rouenneries selvage

I’ve never seen a line of quilting fabric before where I actually wanted a piece of every one.  This time, I’d love some of everything, thank you.

The bummer is, though, that none of the quilt shops near me ordered the print that I liked the most (based on pictures).  It’s an oyster stripe with big bold neutral stripes of equal widths.  I had this project all planned out in my head and it was built around that print, but nobody has it!  Thank goodness for the internet, where at length I was able to locate an obscure quilt shop which has some of it.  (What would I do without the internet?  It makes possible so many treasure hunts that could never happen otherwise.)  When it arrives, I’ll get to work on my project.

In the end, I went home with one of these:

Rouenneries layer cake

A layer cake, which will provide a nice sampling of the beauty.  Something about seeing a stack of fabric bundled up like a fresh pad of paper really gets me.  I’ll sew a simple quilt with it, supplemented by some 1/8 yard pieces of a few wovens which I purchased as well.  With this line, I’m preferring the patterns that let you just look at the fabric, instead of having the prints themselves overwhelmed by the design of the quilt.

There’s also a kit for one of these with my name on it.   So simple, but gorgeous.

Rouenneries quilt

And don’t you think that dotted fabric would make a smart looking one of these?
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I’m thinking I might need to grab one of those patterns and make one, since my current purse is, literally, threadbare.  You can find it at Fig Tree Quilts .  I love their patterns.  Someday I’m going to make this one .  Every couple of months I get the pattern out of my stack and look at it and sigh.

Seriously, everything I’m seeing lately I’m thinking would look lovely with the Rouenneries line and it appears that I’m not alone.  So wherever you are, Kaari, well done.  I love it.

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