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Mom Is Sick…So Now We Live in a Frat House?

January 16, 2013 By: Stephanie7 Comments

Yesterday I was sick. Although my husband is amazing and let me sleep in, (when you are a mom of three 8:00 is sleeping in) I still had to deal with the kids to the best of my ability for the rest of the day.

Looking around at all the junk food and unwashed masses, I couldn’t help but think that this felt vaguely familiar.  Then it hit me…

When the mom in a family is sick, it is pretty much exactly the same as living in a college frat house.

Hear me out.

frathouse

1. The food- Forget well-balanced meals or vegetables of any kind, for that matter.  Tuesdays are $1.99 Happy Meal days at our McDonald’s and we took full advantage on the way home from school pick-up.

2. My husband may have showered yesterday, but I know for a fact that the kids and I were greasy little monkeys.

3. Much like a frat house, the sheets are gross.

4. I backed out of all my appointments like a college kid skipping class.

5. When you are a college boy who passes out this is what happens: (Sorry Chris. That’s my husband in the middle proud of his handy work on one of his roommates.)

chris

When you are a mom, if you fall asleep for 2 minutes this is what happens (if you are lucky. It could be a lot worse.)

crayon

See? It’s basically the same thing.

Except you are expected to do it sober.

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What You Should Know Before Your C-section

January 9, 2013 By: Stephanie7 Comments

Ladies who have gone through c-sections share tips and tricks that helped them during their hospital stay and what what they wish they had known. The comments on this one are helpful too!

My youngest baby turned one a few weeks ago and I would like to take this opportunity to reflect upon her birth.

For some reason, not very many people share their planned c-section birth stories. There is no drama of the water breaking and the mad rush to the hospital. It is a little surreal to walk into the hospital and check-in for an appointment to have your baby.  I have had two planned c-sections, so I consider myself to be a veteran. Today I would like to offer some unsolicited advice for anyone who is preparing for a c-section. Remember, I am not a medical professional and my c-sections were already a few years ago, so talk to your doctor because some of these rules may have already changed or be different at the hospital where you are having your procedure. 

In no particular order:

1. Get your hair done and your eyebrows waxed a few days ahead of time if you can. I know it sounds vain, but do this for you. You are going to be puffy and bloated and on drugs and people are going to be telling you how beautiful they think you look and wanting to take lots of pictures. You will probably not be able to shower for a few days. I did blow dry my hair, but I did not do my eyebrows before we went to the hospital and now this picture has been on Facebook for YEARS.  Try to concentrate on the gorgeous baby in my arms and not the caterpillars over my eyes. I dare you. 😉

eyebrows

2. You are not allowed to wear make-up, lotion, perfume, or deodorant on the day of your operation. I have no idea why you can’t wear deodorant, but you can’t.

3. This was the best advice I got from my friend Shelley: Go buy 4 or 5 old lady night gowns for your hospital bag. You know your great grandma’s flower printed “house coat?” Go get one. Get the ones with snaps or zippers down the front. They are perfect for breast feeding and you aren’t going to want to wear pants for a while. Even if you aren’t planning to have a c-section, stick some of these in your hospital bag, because you just never know. I found mine at Kohl’s. 

4. They are going to give you very strange disposable one-size-fits-all mesh underwear. Take extra. Especially if you have staples. Getting real underwear snagged on your stomach staples is no fun.

5.  Speaking of staples, don’t worry at all about having these removed in a few weeks.  I was terrified of this because staple removal sounded like something out of a Frankenstein movie, but it doesn’t hurt any worse than plucking your eyebrows. (For more on eyebrows, see #1.) If you get stitches instead of staples you won’t need to worry about this.  

6. Think about if you are comfortable with medical students in the room. I did not allow any medical students to observe my first c-section because I didn’t think I wanted any strangers in the room. I was already disappointed that my experience was going to be far from picture perfect. I wanted it to be as close as possible to the way I had always imagined my birth process: just me, my husband, and a doctor and nurse. By the time I was doing it again, I didn’t mind and I allowed medical students in the room. I had a different doctor for my second birth than I did for my first, but I found that when the students were there, the doctor took more time to explain and do things exactly “by the book” because he was being observed. I healed much faster, had much less swelling, and was therefore able to breastfeed, which I had not been able to after my first c-section. Plus, the fact that he was explaining every step of the process (to the students) actually put me at ease as well. 

7. Intense shoulder pain can be a sign of gas. Don’t ask me how I know this.

8. Speaking of gas, you can’t eat anything until you pass it. And you will be starving because you can’t eat anything after midnight the day before your procedure either. You might have to go a full day or even two without food. But you might have a morphine drip, so that’s a plus.

9. Be prepared to embrace the maxi-pad. Not only will you be wearing GIGANTIC ones for days, maybe weeks, afterward. Also, you might not be able to handle tampons for a while because they aggravate your scar tissue. Don’t ask me how I know this either.

1o. You may not be able to have photos taken in the delivery room. Hospitals have different policies about this. You will need to ask ahead of time. If you were planning on having a photographer document the birth, you should know up front that in some hospitals, that might not be an option.

11. No matter how scary it seems, just like a vaginal birth, in the end it will be worth it. You will probably even be willing to do it again. 

I did.

c-section

Ok ladies, what did I miss? What other advice do we have for our friends preparing for the big day?

 

 

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My Dream Day: What Moms Really Want

October 23, 2012 By: Stephanie7 Comments

Lately, I’ve been feeling burnt out from the stress of selling our house, starting our first (and still probably only) year of homeschooling, starting a new part-time job (Shhh…too early to talk about it), and so on.

I was whining about it so much that last night my husband asked, pretty irritated, what exactly it was I wanted.  I really don’t want anything that special or out of the ordinary. I told him my dream day would look like this and I bet other moms have similar fantasies:

A Mom's Dream Day

10:30 am- Wake up and wonder what is going on. How could I possibly have slept that long?

10:35- Wander out of the bedroom and discover that the house is clean and there is a note on the table. It would be a nice touch if the note was sitting next to flowers.

10:36- Read the note. It says that my husband has taken the kids somewhere fun and far away so they will be gone all day. Sesame Place? The Crayola Factory? What do I care? I have the house all to myself all day.

10:37- Take my Kindle and lie on the couch. Alternate between reading and watching daytime tv. (oh, yeah, P.S. It’s a weekday, so hubby had to take off work. That just makes it more special. Don’t roll your eyes at me. He takes off for golf tournaments and deep-sea fishing trips, I can get one day.)

12:00- Order pizza. I’m not cooking and I’m not getting out of my pajamas. Promptly fall asleep on the couch.

12:36- Wake up to the doorbell. The pizza’s here. It’s a Supreme because nobody else in my family likes that, but they aren’t here, so there.

12:45- Receive an email with pictures of my kids’ smiling faces. They are having lots of fun, so I don’t have to worry about them.

1:30- Decide to go outlet shopping. Hubby has been very thoughtfully planned that this day occurs on a payday. Maybe a payday immediately following a huge tax refund. The only downside is that now I have to get dressed.

2:15 – Arrive at outlets. They aren’t crowded because it’s a weekday. Spend as much time as my little heart desires in the Pottery Barn outlet. Spend no time whatsoever at the parking lot playground. Find the captain’s desk chair on wheels that I have been wanting for a few years for a crazy low price and buy it. Somehow manage to get it in the car. Browse other stores and buy some non-maternity clothes for me.

4:00- Get a call from a girlfriend and decide to meet for dinner at Panera Bread. Drive home, stopping at some quaint Amish stores or antique shops on the way.

5:00- Meet her at Panera Bread. It’s Baked Potato soup day. Hang out and chat for a while.

6:30- Come home to find that my family is back and the kids have already had their baths. Listen to their stories about their day, read books, and put the kids to bed early because they are exhausted from their big adventure.

7:00- Take a bubble bath. Come out to discover that on the way home Hubby picked up White Chocolate Raspberry Cheesecake from the Olive Garden and was saving it as a surprise. He also stopped at Target and bought me one of these. I shall wear it for the remainder of the evening. He won’t be able to keep his hands off me.

source

7:15-Eat cheesecake and watch a movie on the couch with my husband while wearing adult footie pajamas. I’ll even let him pick the movie. I’m nice like that. His choices are Reality Bites (which is my favorite movie of all time, but he hates it), Twilight, or Magic Mike.

10:00- Decide to go to bed. Step on the scale before turning in and discover that I’ve lost 5 pounds despite the pizza, Panera, and cheesecake. Tell hubby that there are a bunch of bags and furniture items that need to be unloaded from the back of the van. I want to write from my new chair in the morning.

What does your dream day look like?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Pumpkin Sweater Hats

October 17, 2012 By: Stephanie1 Comment

How to make a pumpkin sweater hat for fall. Super cute and can be a great start to a DIY Halloween costume

I can’t believe it’s been years since I made the original pumpkin sweater hats! They are really easy & fun. Here is the original tutorial from 2010:

I made pumpkin sweater hats for the kids and I am in love with them! I can’t wait for them to wear these hats to pick pumpkins later this fall. It’s  so adorable I can’t stand it.

Start with an orange sweater

Cut the band off the bottom. This will be the band of the hat. Cut it to match the circumference of the head of the person for whom you are making the hat. (Wrap it around his/her head and cut it to length)

Next, trace a plate to get a perfect circle. Use a dessert plate for small kids and a regular plate for bigger kids or adults.

Cut out the circle. Next, pin the strip to the circle, right sides together with the edge you cut toward the outside. (This will keep you from having to hem the bottom of the hat once it’s together.)

Sew along the outside edge.
There will be a small opening where the two ends of the band come together, sew that shut as well.

Now turn the hat right-side-out. There you have your basic sweater hat (the same one from my earlier tutorial), but we want to turn this one into a pumpkin.

Cut two pieces of green fabric (I used an old tee shirt) into the shape of leaves and a piece of brown fabric (I used a sweater) into a small rectangle.

Stitch around the edges to prevent unraveling and then sew these three pieces together.

Sew the stem and leaves onto the top of the hat and you have yourself a brand new pumpkin sweater hat.

You could pair it with an orange t-shirt for an easy DIY Halloween costume.

Hide your sweaters. These sweater hats are addictive. I’ve made 4 of them tonight.

And, as always, I like to see how much money I saved by making stuff myself. These pumpkin sweater hats retail at Gymboree for $15. (although they were on sale this weekend.) I just made 2 for free in less than half an hour. That’s $30 in my pocket. I’ll take it. 🙂

Pumpkin Sweater Hat How to turn an old sweater into an adorable fall hat for your toddler. This is a great beginner sewing project!

 

How to make adorable pumpkin sweater hats in less than ten minutes out of upcycled sweaters

 

Baby photo credit: Deposit Photo

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Letters From Mommy

September 29, 2012 By: Stephanie3 Comments

Do your kids ever say something outrageous or off the wall that you think you’ll never forget, but by the time you want to tell your husband or your mom about it later that night you already forgot?

I do that all the time!

That’s why earlier this year I started keeping a book of letters for each of my kids and I’m already so glad that I did.

I can already look back and see some funny moments I would have otherwise forgotten.

I want each of my kids to have memories recorded in my handwriting.

When they are old enough, I hope I continue this tradition and they can write letters in their notebooks as well.

 

It only cost about $1 to start this tradition for each child, but I know they will treasure these memories forever. I think they will like each having their own book of letters from mom. I made sure to buy the books in a “signature color” for each kid, so I wouldn’t mix them up and write a letter in the wrong book. (I can totally see myself doing that!)

Although I take about a million photos every week, I’m not a scrapbooker anymore. I’m glad to have a place to record our memories.

I think it’s so important when you have several kids to recognize each of them individually.  Do you have anything special that you do for each child?

 

_____________________________________________________________________

Oh! I also have some exciting news. Have you noticed the new button on my sidebar? I’ve been selected as one of the Top 35 Most Pinteresting Moms! I was super excited when I was asked to join. I’m not sure how I managed to land a gig among such talented ladies. They are hilarious and they have a lot of fun ideas. Make sure to check out our group Pinterest board!

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Diary of a Reluctant Homeschooler: Week 1

September 7, 2012 By: Stephanie2 Comments

Our first week of cyber school is over & I feel a little better.

I’ve learned a lot.

Week 1 Review of Kindergarten Homeschooling

For one thing, if you call it cyber school instead of homeschool, traditional homeschoolers are much less likely to get mad at you. Who knew there was a whole other mommy war battle going on between those who chose to educate their kids at home via online charter schools and those who do it without those resources? I’ve gotten quite a few rude comments via Facebook & email about how other people’s tax money is paying for my kid’s education. Really? We’re not accepting Welfare over here, we pay school taxes too. My personal stance on the issue is that if we are already paying for it, we might as well use it. Why wouldn’t I use a “free” (again, my taxes paid for it just as much as anyone else’s) award-winning, standards-based curriculum or computer?

Interestingly, the only negative feedback has come from traditional homeschoolers. I get it (sort of), they’ve fought hard to keep the government out of their kids’ education and they are cheesed that they have to pay for their own curriculum on top of the school taxes they have to pay. Sorry, guys. That’s your choice, just like paying for tuition at a private school would be. I’m sticking with what I know, which is public school and how to teach it.

We also have quite a few friends who traditionally homeschool who have been very supportive, so that’s helped soften the blows quite a bit. Many of our friends who have enrolled in public schools have expressed an interest in cyber schooling after they saw the curriculum we received.

Eddie and I have both been extremely impressed with Nicholas’ progress and performance this week. We’ve completed all of the math and language arts lessons and he has demonstrated mastery on every task. There is no way he would do that in a gen. ed. classroom. He even asked to do extra work last night when Eddie came home.

There is a lot of overlap in the subject areas, which is nice, I guess. They did identifying shapes and colors in math at the same time as color words in language arts, for example.

I like the language arts curriculum a lot, but in my opinion, math is too easy and the other subjects are WAY too hard.

Nicholas has a documented learning disability in math. He tested in the .04% range. He has only gotten one answer wrong this entire week. Either I’m the best teacher in the universe (which is entirely possible 😉 or it’s just too easy. That’s awesome for us, but if your child is on or above grade level, I can’t imagine using this math curriculum. However, I did see on the school’s Facebook page that some of the kindergarteners are starting with first-grade materials, so maybe that would be an option.

History is ridiculous. In the very first lesson we had to learn about the earth, then all of the continents, attributes of each continent,  as well as complete a paper that detailed famous structures that were located on the various continents like the Great Wall of China, the Great Barrier Reef, the Grand Canyon, etc. That was ONE lesson. In Kindergarten. Sheesh. Luckily, we only have to do history twice a week.

Also, history is different than social studies in this curriculum, so on that same day, we had a completely separate lesson about the Pledge of Allegiance.

Art was equally as intense. We were observing the features of an oil painting of Henry VI as a child, then comparing and contrasting it to a sculpture of a cowboy riding a horse. In order to do that, first, the lesson took us through the various aspects of a realistic portrait, then sculptures, then we had to learn about abstract art just for fun. Then there was a test. My poor kid had to take a test about Henry VI on the first day of kindergarten. Twice. He only got a 60% the first time, so he had to redo it. (The school policy is not to let you move on until you have an 80% or higher.) How dare he not know enough about English royalty by age 5. Clearly, I have been slacking on my motherly duties.

Apparently, the curriculum writers for art & history have never met an actual 5-year-old boy, or else they would realize that their audience has the attention span of a fly on crack and plan accordingly.

The last thing that I will complain about (I’m not sure why this feedback seems so negative because I’m actually liking it ok so far) is that I don’t appreciate that there is no “opt-out” option for tasks that are already mastered. We have to complete one online lesson to get to the next and I also have to complete a portfolio of completed paper assignments. For one of the lessons I gave him the final assessment first as a pretest and he got 100%. We should have been able to skip that lesson altogether, but we had to spend an hour “practicing.” Pre-tests, people. It would be awesome if there was a pretest at the beginning of each online lesson, it could track progress between the beginning and end of the lesson and also allow for a lot less time wasted completing unnecessary work. If the student demonstrates mastery of a task before you teach it, then you don’t waste time teaching it. Duh.

Even though I might sound a bit grumpy,  I really like a lot of the aspects of it so far. I have found that I’m much more patient than I thought I would be and that Nicholas is progressing faster and further in just this week than I would have expected to see in the entire first month. Phonics is his best subject. Who would have thought? The teachers have agreed to excuse us from the required live class sessions on certain days so that we can still participate in Community Bible Study and our Mom N Me program. Also, it is going pretty quickly. So far we have been able to complete most, if not all, of our work by lunch each day. We also got to go to a meet & greet last night with some more people from the school.

It was definitely the right choice for us.

*Update: Here are all of the posts I wrote about our homeschooling experience.

Diary of a Reluctant Home Schooler

How to Set up a Homeschool Nook

Diary of a Reluctant Home Schooler, A is for A-ha moment!

Diary of a Reluctant Home Schooler, Weird and Overwhelming

Diary of a Reluctant Home Schooler, The Supplies Are Here!

Diary of a Reluctant Home Schooler, Our First Day!

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10 Things I Learned From My Parents

August 9, 2012 By: Stephaniecomment

Eddie and I were both lucky enough to be raised in loving homes with good parents who made very intentional choices. We are making a lot of the same choices as we parent our kids, but I’m not sure some of these things would even be on my radar as a mom if it hadn’t been for the way we were raised. In no particular order, these are some of the things I remember from my own childhood that I have or will try to apply to my parenting.

Ten Parenting Practices to Try

1. There is no clean plate rule. Obesity is a problem on both sides of my family. My mom was always very insistent that we learned that when we were no longer hungry it was time to stop eating. If that means there are still a few string beans left on the plate, that’s fine. Our kids aren’t required to clean their plates either. They aren’t picky eaters, but they don’t always eat in large quantities. Kids tend to go through phases anyway, if one of them is going through a growth spurt, they might eat 2 or 3 helpings of something, but there will also be times when they barely touch the food on their plate. We eat dinner only about an hour or so before they go to bed, so there is no snack and they know dinner is their last chance to eat for the day. If they haven’t touched it, sometimes I will wrap it up and it will be their lunch the next day. It isn’t wasteful and there is no guilt associated with not eating what mommy worked hard to cook, etc.

2. Steer clear of food as comfort or reward. Again with the food theme, and again this comes from my mom. When we were little we were not allowed to have food after we got hurt. She didn’t want us to associate food with making us feel better. Instead of a lollipop after a shot at the doctor’s office, she would ask if there were stickers or a prize bin instead. If we scraped our knee at my Mommom’s house and Mommom wanted to give us an ice cream cone to cheer us up, my mom said that sounded like a great idea for after dinner, but maybe right now we could sit together and read a story.  I’m not actually as good about this as I’d like to be. I do give in to the lollipops after the shots, but we use stickers as rewards for going to the potty instead of M&Ms. It’s more of a guideline for me, but for my mom, it was definitely an important rule.

3. Individual time with each child. My dad traveled a lot for work when we were little, but once a year we each got our own weekend with him. He would take us anywhere we wanted to go and the only rule was that we had to be able to drive there in one day. One year I chose Niagara Falls and the next year I chose Colonial Williamsburg. My sister chose Lancaster, PA once and copied my Niagara Falls idea the following year. We haven’t done anything quite so elaborate yet, but we do try to make sure to get some quality time with each child doing something they enjoy as often as possible. Eddie might take Nicholas to the driving range, for example.

4. The right to privacy and personal space. My mom was very big on this. She always wanted us to have our own rooms and she left our stuff alone. I remember once my sister read my diary and there was something in it that would have gotten me in big trouble. I really don’t remember what it was, but I remember being terrified that my sister had found out and her delight as she told mom that she had read it. My mom stopped her mid-sentence and then my sister got in trouble for reading my diary. I didn’t get in trouble at all. I have no idea if she snooped around later to find out what it was (I probably would have) but to this day my mom insists that she never read my journals. I hope I have that kind of discipline when my kids are teenagers.

5. The value of an education. Eddie and I both come from families where it was just assumed that we would do well in school and go to college. Once I got a C (an 83 average was a C at our school) in French class and I was grounded until I brought it up to an A, which I was able to do fairly quickly. It was made very clear to me that I was only in trouble because I was obviously slacking off and I was capable of much more than that. If I had been putting forth my best effort and my best was a C, it would have been celebrated instead of punished. Apparently, it worked because I went to college on a full academic scholarship and graduated early. Setting my kids up to be as academically successful as they are able is important to me. You can read more about that and why we decided we needed to keep Nicholas at home if you click on my homeschool tab.

6. The ability to make your own choices. I wasn’t allowed to pierce my ears until I was in middle school, and there was one time (also in middle school) when my dad refused to let me buy a Tupac Shakur t-shirt on the grounds that his teenage daughter was not walking around with a picture of a convicted sex offender on her chest, but other than that we were pretty much allowed to wear whatever we wanted. Sometimes I would sneak a midriff top into my purse and change in the bathroom at the mall after my mom dropped me off. I confessed to that recently and my mom was all, “I already knew that. Do you really think I let you and your friends walk around unsupervised for hours? I was always following a store or two behind you.” hmmm…apparently my parents figured as a teenager I needed some kind of rebellion and that seemed fairly harmless, so they let me have it. We were not allowed to do anything permanent that we might have regretted as adults (no teenage tattoos) or anything that could alter the perception of a potential employer or college admissions counselor in an interview (no face piercings), but I was allowed to dye my hair and wear whatever I wanted. It probably helped that we went with a school that had a dress code that didn’t really allow for crazy hair colors anyway. I know this is going to be hard for me as a parent, but I remember that it meant a lot to me as a teenager to be able to make my own decisions about my body. If Abby wants to dye her naturally blonde Goldilocks curls when she’s a teenager I am going to die inside, but it might be important to let her do it.

7. Religion is important. God was integrated into every aspect of our lives going to Catholic school and church and spending summer vacations going to Bible school. We said grace before meals and bedtime prayers and were taught to say a Hail Mary every time we heard a siren. We were also taught what other religions and cultures believe. Both of my parents have always been very firm believers in collecting knowledge from every possible source. (I pity the fool who tries to take on either one of them in Trivial Pursuit)  

8. Give children as many life experiences as possible. There’s all that talk about building schemas, and I don’t know if they did this deliberately or they just enjoyed some peace and quiet while we were away, but as long as we could afford it, my parents let us participate in as many new experiences as we were offered. Can my grandmother fly my 12-year-old self and my 8-year-old sister to Las Vegas and the Grand Canyon? Yes. (I’m pretty sure Charlotte came back as the only third grader who had spent her summer vacation at the MGM Grand.) Can she also take us to a Native American pow-wow? Sure. Bus trip with the senior citizens to Strawberry Festival? Why not. Can I go camping in Canada with Lauren’s family? Yes. Can I go on the school trip to France? Yes. My sister loved soccer and played for years and years, eventually getting really good at it. I, on the other hand, liked to bounce around trying lots of different things. Sewing lessons? Yes. Girl Scouts? Yes. Dance? Yes. Gymnastics? Yes. Softball? Yes. Volleyball? Cheerleading? Tennis? Once I signed up for something I had to commit to the whole season or session, but after that, if I wanted to move on to another interest that was fine. I do wish I would have stuck with one thing long enough to be an expert, but I like that I got to be involved in all of those different things.

9. Be willing to break your own rule and treat each child differently. Every child is different and they need to be parented differently. I just told you that my sister and I weren’t allowed to quit a sport in the middle of the season, but we have a much-younger brother and my parents did let him quit once. He was in the second grade and playing on the school soccer team. In the first game of the season, his team lost and he cried hysterically. The next week his team won, but he still cried hysterically. When we asked what was wrong he said that he felt so bad that the other team had to lose. He was hypersensitive to the fact that there was always going to be a winner and a loser. It broke his heart every time he had to play. He felt horrible not only for himself, but carried the weight of the loss for his whole team if they lost, and the weight of the loss for the other team if his team won. He was 100% miserable, so they let him quit. He’s just not into team sports. I’m sure my dad would have loved his only son to be the athlete in the family, but that’s just not the way my brother is made. No one is trying to force him to change that part of himself.      
   
10. No labels allowed.  There is no such thing as a bad child. It was always, “Hitting is bad.” or “Biting is bad.”  Never, ever, ever, “You are bad.” Always, “That noise you are making is annoying.” Never, “You are so annoying.” Interestingly enough, my mom also refused to tell me I was pretty. I heard it a lot from other people, but I did notice and I asked her about it once. She said she wanted me to have more intrinsic value than that. Don’t place your self-worth on being pretty, even if you are, because one day you will be old and wrinkly or you might get disfigured in a car accident. You will still be the same person, you will still be you even if you are no longer “pretty.” She wouldn’t say, “You are pretty,” because I was more than that. It wasn’t until I had Abby that I understood. Now it actually annoys me that 4 or 5 times a day strangers will tell her she is so pretty, but no one ever says anything else about her. They like what they see, but they have no idea who they see. 

(BONUS) 11. Generosity and spreading the wealth. We didn’t have a lot of money when I was little, but when I was a teenager my dad’s career really took off, and eventually, we became pretty wealthy. The funny thing was that my parents’ lifestyle didn’t really change all that much. We stayed in the same school and they had the same friends and did the same activities they always had. We did eventually move out of the condo where we had been living and into a single-family house on the water, which had always been my dad’s dream, and they had nicer cars, but that was about it.  My dad was always open to the idea of sharing money with anyone and everyone, often to a fault. Eventually, it would be one of the main reasons my parents got divorced (financial infidelity). I did learn, however, that if you are financially blessed, it is important to share that blessing with people who aren’t. It isn’t at all unusual for me to hear stories about how my parents paid someone’s tuition or helped a single mom get through a rough divorce, or gave someone a start-up seed for their business. Even before there was a lot of money, they would make sure to take whatever blessings we had and pass them on to other families.

I remember after I made my First Communion my mom donated my fancy white dress to the church. The church hadn’t asked for any dresses as far as I knew and all of my friends got to keep their special dresses. I thought keeping my dress was a no-brainer because I had a little sister who would need it in a few years. My 7-year-old self was perturbed until a few weeks later when we got a letter that read something like this: Thank you so much to whoever donated the First Holy Communion dress. I have not been able to afford one and they are not usually available in thrift shops either. Because of you, my daughter has finally been able to receive her communion! Even though I was still annoyed that some other girl got to keep the dress, I was happy that Jesus was alive in another little girl because my parents made me share my dress.      

Create Your Own(3)

I’m sure there are plenty of other things I learned (like general life skills. You wouldn’t believe how many 20-somethings I met in college who didn’t know how to write a check or do a load of laundry) and there are a lot of things Eddie learned from his family, most notably the value of hard work and earning your keep, that we will want to work to instill in our kids as well. What are some of the values that you learned from your parents that you want to make sure you are deliberately teaching your children?

Looking for more parenting tips? Here are the 5 best pieces of advice I’ve learned from other moms.

Great, practical tips from generations of mothers. Love the sock tip! 

 

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Preschool Olympics Party

August 2, 2012 By: Stephaniecomment

preschool olympics

My friend Korie hosted a special Preschool Olympics Party Playdate in her back yard today.

We were transported across the pond

 

and there were representatives from many different countries

 

(I love how she included flags from countries where the kids’ parents have or will serve as missionaries.)

There was clearly a lot at stake

 

It didn’t take long before alliances were formed

 

Spectators filled the stands

 

Contestants participated in track and field events like jumping hurdles

 (How cool is that? It’s a pvc pipe in the ground on each side with a pool noodle bent over top)

and relay races

as well as shot put

sharp shooting

Snchronized swimming

 

and diving

 

There were also plenty of souvenirs. Download the O is for Olympics page here. 

 
 

 and local cuisine in which to indulge

 
 

One by one, the winners were called to the podium

Gold medals for EVERYONE!
Korie said she found most of her ideas on Pinterest. We had nine kids all together, including the babies, and all of them stayed engaged for almost three hours! 
 
Thanks again, Korie!  

linking to Serenity Now

 

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There Will Come A Day

August 1, 2012 By: Stephaniecomment

 
 
There will come a day when we look back and miss this stage 
 
 
 
 
 When back yard tomatoes are no longer plucked in wonder by dirty little fingers
 
 and dandelion weeds aren’t good enough to offer to your mother 
 
 
When she can relax poolside without it leading to this
 
 
A day when silly faces and sopping wet curls
 
 
give way to boys and gossip magazines
 
 
 When little boys stop running too fast to be in focus
 
 
 
When brothers and sisters do not hold each other’s hands in public
 
 
 
 
When the youngest among us put down the bottle and step into the world
 
But not today. 
This is my Wednesday.
My seeds in my garden
Me and my water hose
We’ll help them to grow

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A Lesson in Selflessness From the Sock Drawer

July 23, 2012 By: Stephanie6 Comments

 
life lessons from the sock drawer

My husband and I have been a couple for twelve years. By that point you (I hope) have reached a happy stride in your relationship and things are comfortable and normal.

But sometimes you get taken aback when little gestures take on a whole new level on intimacy.

Has something like this ever happened to you? I hope it has.

I walked into our bedroom and Eddie said, “I was putting away the laundry and I noticed I have some empty space in my sock drawer. Yours is really full. do you want to move some stuff over?”

“You’re offering me half of your sock drawer?And you’re putting away laundry.”

 “Well, yeah, there was laundry on the bed and I wanted to go to sleep.”

“Awwwww….you want to share your sock drawer….” tears welling up

“Um…okay.”  

“Do you have any idea what this m-m-means?” sniffle.

“Obviously not, but if I knew I was going to get this reaction I would have done it a long time ago.” 

“Awwwww…” Hugs. Tears.

And later you wake up hoping you didn’t just make another baby.

A few years ago, it wouldn’t have been a big deal at all. Now, as a stay at home mom I feel like I share everything with everybody. There are very few things that are mine.

I no longer have my own house, my own career, my own bank account, my own car, or even my own time in the bathroom. I share my body with nursing babies, developing fetuses, doctors, and a loving husband. I share the food on my plate, and frequently have my shirt used as a tissue or a spit up rag.

All of that sharing all of the time can leave you drained and sometimes cranky. 

I do have my toothbrush, my deodorant, my jewelry box, and my clothes in my dresser. That’s pretty much as far as it goes with things that are mine and mine alone.

And it does not occur to me to share them. Ever.

If I had been the one with empty space in my drawer my thought process would probably have been, “Sweet. Now I can buy more socks.”

His gesture meant a lot to me because I wasn’t prepared to do it myself. 

And then I realized my husband was modeling the kind of selflessness I am supposed to be showing our children.

Offering something that was his and not at all begrudgingly (that is the part I sometimes still struggle with) because he saw that I needed it more than he did.

The way that I should be seeing, “Mommy, can I try a bite of that?” “Me too!” “Me three!” as giving them a deserved learning experience because I’ve had lobster many times and they haven’t yet had it even once, instead of sharing reluctantly while rolling my eyes and thinking for the love of God, can I get through one meal with no one else eating off my plate? 
   
The way I should be more patient when I have three small children crowded into a bathroom stall with me, because it’s not their fault that they are too small to take care of certain needs themselves.

The way that the memories are worth the messes.

The way that reading the same book for the third time in a row is more important than checking my email for the third time in one day.

The way that seeing this face every day is worth the stretch marks and losing some sleep.

The way I should remember when I feel resentful for giving up a career or no longer having the discretionary income to do trivial things like monthly pedicures, that two thousand years ago a man was nailed to a tree making much bigger sacrifices for me than I am making for my children.

The way I need to stop seeing them as sacrifices and start seeing them as letting people share my space.  I don’t need all of it anyway, and it means a lot to the people who are able to share it.

Just like the sock drawer.

I wish all of you a partner who happily lets you into his/her drawers. 😉

I absolutely do think that as moms it is important for us to make ourselves a priority and take care of our own needs, but sometimes I know I can let the “me culture” we live in get in the way of having a servant’s heart– and that is what my family needs the most from me right now.  

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Welcome! I’m Steph.

This is a little corner of the internet we like to fill with honesty, heart, and humor. Read More…

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Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese

Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese

Stephanie Giese is an indie author based in Florida. She writes stories about realistic problems with humor, heart, and sass. Her work has a strong focus on mental health and consent. Her North Bay small-town romance series is set for release in 2025.

Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese

4 months ago

Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese
I know it’s a small thing, but I believe small things can add up to big changes. my entire North Bay series, including Out of Left Field, Right as Rain, and Way Off Base, is free on Kindle from Jan. 30-Feb. 3. Please take the funds you might have spent on my books this week and reallocate them toward the areas in our country that need them the most. Follow creators like Dad Chats who can direct you toward practical needs local to them. I hope my quirky romcoms can bring you some comfort and joy during difficult times, and I hope together we can take small, practical steps toward big changes. ... See MoreSee Less

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Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese

4 months ago

Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese
I know there is an overall feeling of helplessness in our country right now. So many of us are at a loss for what to do beyond making phone calls and social media posts (which are still important, but can feel like not enough). I believe strongly in the power of small things adding up to big ones. As one person, I might not be able to do much, but what I CAN do is use my voice and my books to work toward the change I’d like to see. That’s why, for the next five days, from Jan. 30-Feb 3, I’m making the Kindle versions of my entire North Bay series (Out of Left Field, Right as Rain, and Way Off Base) completely free. Art has power, and I do hope these comedies can bring you some comfort and joy in difficult times, but most importantly, I also hope you’ll consider redirecting the funds you might’ve spent on my books and donating instead to one of the many charities working tirelessly in our cities right now. If you are located in an area like Minnesota or Portland, please use the space below to make people aware of the organizations in your area that need help. ... See MoreSee Less
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