One Step Report #43

Cozy.

That about sums up my heart tonight.  The children are in bed.  Correction:  Seven of the children are in bed.  One of them is back out of bed.  As I type this the sounds of my four year old contentedly eating the dinner he refused to touch four hours ago carry through the house.  October is complete and with a happy heart I prepare to greet November.  You may be tired of my pictures of the sky, but I cannot resist sharing one last fiery October sunset.  Honestly, it’s been a beautiful month.


This week’s report:  107 steps.  Oh, how I wish this number represented forward progress in areas that really matter to me.  Unfortunately the week was crammed full of  urgent but unimportant tasks and activities.  If  nothing else, at least I have a list of all the things I did when I wanted to be doing better things.

With the end of another month, the current grand total of steps for the year is over 3,000.  Who would have guessed?

Highlights:

1.  After almost 15 hours of time in 5 days dedicated to his soccer team, our son’s fall season is over and we are officially done for a couple of months.  (Could you hear that sigh of relief?)

2.  With the end of his season, I am taking a leave of absence from my part-time, unpaid position as shuttle driver.  I intend to stay OUT of my car as much as possible.  Yes, we’ll still have gymnastics four days a week, piano lessons, Scouts, etc. but removing the soccer and lacrosse schedules makes the calendar look rather dreamy in comparison to September and October.

3.  I thoroughly enjoyed the things my four year old son said to me this week.  A couple of examples:  “Mom, my leg muscles are insanely huge.”  After watching the Math Circus DVD by Leap Frog, I overheard him walking around the house saying “And zero is our special friend.”  That boy is a riot, I tell you.  And for the record, I should state that he walked into the Primary room of his own accord today. For weeks he’s been laying on the floor to kick and scream immediately following Sacrament meeting.  Big victory.

4.  On Monday night I had a great learning experience as a mother with my two year old daughter.  Precious.

5.  I bought a new hair dryer this week after my old one died (when myself and 3 daughters all had wet hair and it was raining outside).  They seem to quit on me after only 6 months or so anymore.  Is it just me?  I’ve tried multiple brands, and they all fizzle out and stop.  If you’ve got one that works, I’m anxious to know what kind it is.  I’m tired of buying them.

6.  I had professional pictures taken of my little one this week.  I’m excited to see them, and really hope that one of them captured the essence of her.

7.  One of my dear friends who moved away in August was back for a quick trip.  I loved seeing her, catching up briefly, and sharing a hug.

8.  We had a truckload of dirt delivered, and my awesome husband moved it to where our flower beds will be in the front yard so that I can plant tulips (which are en route via UPS because I couldn’t find what I wanted locally). Somehow we got lucky and managed to schedule the dirt delivery when the weather was pleasant.


9.  I cooked some favorite recipes.  Yum.

10.  Today I had the opportunity to teach a short lesson on the topic of reverence. It was a great experience for me.  I know that it is never my own intelligence or wisdom that I’m sharing, but it is always an experience I enjoy.  Today was no different.  I learned so much.

11.  And just to keep things real, we have this picture from our ultra reverent scripture study this evening:


That would be me with three children climbing all over me.  And here’s proof of how quiet we weren’t:


I have no explanation for the thirteen year old who felt that taking pictures was an appropriate way to “follow along.”  All I can say is that we’re not quitters and we’ll do better tomorrow.

And so another week has come and gone.  The next promises to be an exciting one.
Have a great week!

Jennifer

The Ups and Downs of Halloween



It  is dark outside and the rain pours down.  We’ve completed a short trip around the block as a family, letting the little ones fill tiny buckets at neighbor’s homes.  Soup is on the stove and  happy noises carry from remote corners of the house.  Half eaten pieces of candy already grace the table and a trash brigade has hit the family room floor more than once.  Every once in a while the doorbell rings, and more people run to the door from inside the house than from without.  The older children pass out, the baby peers through their legs, and the middle group has chosen to perch on the landing above on the second floor, yelling “Happy Halloween!” to all our trick-or-treaters.


A tangible feeling of contentment settles over me unexpectedly.  I love this feeling of being safely gathered in.  After all the stress of Halloween week I’m almost giddy with the knowledge that all obligations have been fulfilled and now the night is ours, ours to use as we wish. That’s all I really want from this holiday, the chance to observe it simply.


A simple dinner of soup, salad and rolls  is eaten by some of us and picked at by the rest before the older crowd leaves for round two of trick-or-treating.  I should clean the kitchen but my heart calls me instead to savor the moment.  The younger ones and I gather blankets to snuggle together and watch a movie.  Ironically, the pouring rain has brought more trick-or-treaters than all the years we’ve lived here combined.  The candy bowl empties and we turn off the porch light, another Halloween (almost) over.


I can’t help but review the week as I snuggle with my little ones.


Every October I know Halloween is coming and I think I have until the 31st to get things in place.  The reality is, however, that both costumes and candy are requested at more activities earlier in the month every year.  The costume box has been open in my studio for more than a week, contents spilled all over the house as my children have tried on various items approximately 8,732 times in the past 7 days.   I can’t say I’ll be the least bit sorry to pack them all away; I really don’t mind the color of my carpet.


Honestly, I struggle with Halloween.   There is little about it that meets my family’s needs.  We don’t need a constant intake of candy.  We don’t need to wear a costume to every extra-curricular activity under the moon.  My budget doesn’t really need me to supply bags of candy for 7 or 8 different parties and my little ones don’t need me to be gone several times during the week to help at one party or another.  My older children don’t need to be tired and grouchy from lack of sleep and too much sugar.  We don’t need more arguments about which piece of candy may or may not have been eaten by so-and-so.  And yet all these things we didn’t need provide the commentary on how the week played out.  So many important things needed my attention and didn’t get it because of the time that was diverted to Halloween festivities. And all for a holiday whose real meaning couldn’t be further from what I want to teach my kids.


I’m learning something about myself as my family grows.  I have little patience for things that interfere with what I’m trying to accomplish in my home.   Price tags are higher than they used to be.  For every one thing that I do, there are a half dozen things I needed to do in addition.  I’m not talking about extras; I’m talking basics.  A glance around my house tonight is evidence of all the basics that went undone this week in favor of lesser things.  Dishes in the sink, baskets of unfolded laundry and a general feeling of clutter all testify to the extra time I spent helping children put together costumes and driving them to 6 different Halloween parties in addition to our usual commitments.  I’ve felt a little Grinchy about Halloween this year.


But children simply love it.  And because I have children, I go with the flow (in action, if not in heart).


As today’s scheduled activities melted into an empty slot on the calendar I realized that there are things I quite like about Halloween.  While I drag my decorations from the basement reluctantly, I don’t mind having them up.   I enjoy dabbling in some Halloween-themed recipes.  I enjoy watching my children concoct costumes.  A few years ago I announced to them that I’m officially done spending money on costumes and that from now on we get creative.  My oldest daughter is wearing her 4th costume of the week.  She has been a pirate, a corpse bride, a painter and a fairy.  One was borrowed, the rest assembled using supplies we have on hand.


Friday morning when the school kids left in costume, my four and two year olds started trying things on.  If I’d known when it started how many different costumes they would try on (over and over again) I would have taken a picture of each one and written down the time of day.  It is not an exaggeration to say that they stayed in each costume for less than 10 minutes and that they changed clothes non-stop for more than 5 hours.  Messy?  Oh, yes.  Creative?  Absolutely.  Tonight’s costume for my two year old was a princess dress paired with a Strawberry Shortcake hat.


The garage opens.  My big kids are back, bags heavy with loot.  We sit together in the family room with bowls of popcorn and watch the end of the movie.  We’re all together and it feels good.  It’s been a nice night and tomorrow I can pack everything up and move on.  I don’t have to do this for another year.  (Yippee!)


November, here we come!


Hopeful Homemaker

Halloween Decor (for the record)

I noticed this week that I posted pictures of my Halloween decor last year, and thought it might be fun to have a record of what I’ve done from year to year.  So, now that I’m ready to take it all down, here are a couple of shots of what made it out of storage.


I’m not sure why I love this crow so much, but I do.  I love the vibrant colors that he’s decorated with, and the way he stands like a sentinel over my table.

The dining room and front porch are really the only rooms in the house that get a touch of Halloween.  My favorite spider web tablecloth graces the table once more, but with a slightly different centerpiece.


This year it’s one of my favorite pewter pieces filled with colored leaves and paired with the crow, a white pumpkin and purple spider mums.  I enjoy hanging the bat from the chandelier.  As usual, my beaded spider webs hang from photos and from the silver cabinet.




Outside, my favorite Halloween banner spans the porch stairs.  I’ve hung the witch indoors for years, but this year decided to hang her on the front door.


I let my children make all the decisions about decorating the porch this year.  The thing I love about this last shot is the bright colors in it.  The blue and orange against the white makes me smile.  Isn’t color a miraculous thing!?


And so there you have it, the 2010 Halloween decor.  I wonder what next year holds?

HH

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