My four girls.  Meg, Mita, Enu and Elle. Sometimes they are four peas in a pod. Sometimes. Other times, I’ll be blunt here, most times they are a circus act.  Hubby and I often say to ourselves, “They are so easy when there are only three of them.  What is it when you add a fourth?”  The funny thing is that it doesn’t matter who you take out of the equation, who has the play date away from home or is at a Girl Scout event.  No matter what three girls are home, they get along better than when they are all four together.  This has been a question we continue to ponder as we raise the girls.

Well, low and behold I have found a resource that assures us that we are not in fact crazy.  There is scientific evidence that raising four girls is the hardest family combination. The Telegraph just published the following article:  Want to be happy? Have two daughters.  Here is a quote  from the article that describes what I have lived:

“It also emerged two girls rarely annoy their parents, make limited noise, often confide in their parents and are unlikely to wind each other up or ignore each other By contrast, doubling the number of daughters is likely to lead to a whole world of pain, the report found.”

While the words World of  Pain may seem harsh the the average reader, I can say that I have felt world of pain before. You see, I had that so-called perfect combination. Hubby and I had two daughters.  Five years a part.  I had it easy I must tell you. Meg was the text book oldest child. Over-achiever, helpful, fearless and compassionate. When Elle came along, Meg was about to enter Kindergarten. I had Meg to myself for five years and then Elle and I had our one on one life when Meg was at school.  I am a big proponent for spacing your children for this reason alone.  I had great one on one time with both girls. Meg was independent while I was busy doing the baby thing with Elle.  Two girls were cake to me. I was able to work two days a week, provide insurance for the family and take care of my home.

Something was up in my heart though. I wanted more kids. I wanted to do the adoption that I had been dreaming about for decades. I wanted to open our home up and parent a parent-less child.  I had assumed that Hubby would want a boy to round out our family. He insisted that girl would be a better fit as we already had two and that our house was small. They could share a room if needed and we would save money on hand-me-downs and toys.  We had it all worked out, Hubby and I!

The how we ended up deciding on growing our family from two girls to four is a long 500 word post in itself for another day. The reality is that now we have four girls. Ages 11 1/2, 11, almost 9 and 6.  Using the word drama doesn’t even begin to describe their interactions. Everything is an issue. EVERYTHING.  This is something that most people do not understand. To have four girls is to become an expert on childhood politics.  I could run for Senator with the skills of negotiations and peacemaking I have learned in the last three years.

A crisis can emerge from a simple hair band.  A misplaced earring can throw my family into a day of hell. I. Am. Not.Joking.

I have taken a list from the above mention article and have made my own comments to it.

1.Fight and argue all the time (Yes and yes. It doesn’t matter over what, they just have to be mad about something.)

2.Difficult to reason with (Reason? What is that. You can not reason with emotionally charged sisters.  Then add the PMS! Reason….)

3.Ignore and dislike each other ( It is amazing how they can hate each other one minute and be best friends the next.)

4.Bedtime routine is a nightmare (We stagger bedtimes and this has helped TREMENDOUSLY.)

5.Create a lot of noise around the house  (If my house is quiet the girls are not here.)

6.Rarely confide in you (Yes with two of them, the other two still let me in on stuff. I think.)

7.Hard to deal with when ill (If I get ill they actually act okay for me. If they are ill, we actually get more one-on-one time. God has blessed us in that they have not all been sick at the same time. He knows I couldn’t handle it!)

8.Takes ages getting ready for school (This is getting more evident as they turn into tweens. The straight-iron is on full force in the AM.)

9.Had to buy a bigger house and car (Yes and yes.)

10.Hard to cope with on a daily basis (I have gone mad. Literally. I am a low-key person the daily drama has done more harm to my person than anything else in my life. I stopped working two years ago because of the daily life grind.)

As an adoptive family, I have often blamed our problems on adoption issues. We adopted older children and messed up the birth order for three of the four girls.  After reading this article I now think that maybe our struggles would have happened anyway, just in having four girls. This is something interesting to think about, and maybe I can let go of some of the mama guilt I’ve felt. There is comfort in knowing that this truly can be a tough situation and not just me lacking.

Would I do it again if I had read this article? Yes. I would have laughed haughtily  at this article if I had read it three years ago. I would have rolled my eyes and made a comment about how people need to get a life and do real research.

I love my girls with a fierce mother-bear love that consumes me. I also roar like a bear more than I should. My stress level is all whacked out and I am not always the best parent in the world.  I am trying. On the really hard days I envision life fifteen years from now.  When the girls are out of college, starting lives and families.  We are all laughing about the crazy times growing up. In this vision they are strong, they love each-other and they are friends.  I have to believe that.

There is nothing in this world better to hear than the sound of my four girls laughing together. It happens, not often, but it happens and for that reason alone I would do it all over again.  They make me happy.

*Hey check out the post Jenna posted on Blogher about this article!

 

Meg age 2. Bella age 3.

My first child is a Cocker-Spaniel mix. Hubby and I bought her off the streets of  Lima, Peru when we lived there. We were a young married couple who wanted to baby something, but weren’t ready for an actual baby. So we went looking for a kitten.

Neither Hubby nor I are big cat lovers, but we worked long days and wanted to have a pet that could be litter box trained.   At the pet street (a street filled with pet vendors) all of the kittens were sleeping. But Bella was just playing around and happy as can be.  We walked away, we didn’t want a dog.  We talked all afternoon about how cute she was, but we didn’t want a dog.  Soon Hubby went to go by the dog we loved but didn’t want. She had actually already been taken back to the owners home, but they brought her back to us and history was made.  At least the history of our family.  A funny factoid, we brought Bella home on October 10th 1998. Meg was born on October 10th 1999.  I didn’t realize this until months after Meg’s birth when I was reading my old journals!

So Bella, pronounce Bay-ya not Bell-a, was ours. A happy, yappy active little puppy. She peed everywhere, she ran down the halls yapping. She could fit in Hubby’s shoes.  I can remember the downstairs neighbor yelling at us for giving her a bath … she said she would die of a cold!

We loved her immensely, even after she chewed the phone cords.  We thought she would grow to be a big dog and bought her a large kennel. She never grew to our expectations.  When it came time to fly her home to Ohio she was this little dog in a huge cage. Very cute. I can remember landing in Houston and picking her up and trying to walk her on some paper in the airport so she could pee, not an easy feat.  I think she was to scared to urinate!  She never learned any commands and the joke is that she only speaks and understands Spanish.  Walking her on a leash is still impossible, some things she just never picked up.  She doesn’t play well with other dogs, but gets along with our cat okay.

Oh, the guilt I felt when we had her spayed. I was pregnant with Meg at the time and felt like I was a bad person to not let her experience having children. You could say I was a bit emotional!  After Meg came around poor Bella was ignored for about a year.  Then she spent years being petted roughly, sat on and poked and prodded by Elle as well. Mita and Enu hated her when they first came home. In Ethiopia dogs are for security not pets.

Eventually Bella  has turned from a play thing to our families precious doggy. She is cuddled and loved, dressed and pampered.  We love her dearly.

She will be 13 at the end of July. She cannot see very well, hear very well and she is losing her bladder control and barfing a lot.  I am very sentimental about my Bellita and am hoping she will be around for a lot longer.  The vet ran some lab tests today. She called it a Geriatric Panel.  How is that possible? It seems like only yesterday she was my little puppy.  Amazing.

Very cute :)

 

I’m really missing my social media.  I feel like I don’t know what is going on with anyone.  One might read this and say, “Who cares?” and to some degree I don’t care. I know that it is not necessary to see the recipe that a  friend is making for dinner, or to see the latest picture of your baby.  Not necessary, but still important non-the-less.  That may not make sense to some, but I don’t get to see my friends and family everyday. We are all busy with kids, school, jobs and appointments. Seeing a little bit of a friend’s day does make me feel closer to them, that I am involved in their lives. Even if it is just a comment on a post, it lets them know I am thinking of them.

So I am missing my connection with the world. I can still call and email and even in real life visit, and  I do.  Social media just makes things fun and easy, if not necessary to survive.

Again, as I posted last week. I am spending more time with my Bible study and in prayer and using this exercise of Lent to make me a better person ( I hope!).

This experience is not useless, nor is it easy. It is a bit lonely. Only a few weeks left!

Photo Credit

 

Sometimes they still like you enough to goof around.

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To tease and hug you. To act silly and not worry about being cool.
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I wish this could last forever.

 

We starting watching the Back to the Future series with the girls.  Well the older two, the younger two didn’t make it through the opening credits.

We told them that we were ten when this movie came out.  Comments such as “They had flashlights, back then?” ” They had Diet Pepsi back then?” got old very quickly!  They really think we are ancient, but I guess I thought my parents were as well when I was eleven.  They also though the Delorian was a GMC.

It is fun to watch a movie I haven’t seen in decades.  I totally forgot how funny it was, how great the music was (Earth Angel is the best), the dances and dresses all fun to watch with the girls.  It was also a decent series to watch with the kids. We recorded it off the TV so it was edited for us and had a few minor cuss words and no sex, just a bit of kissing and a make out scene.  Wow. A movie with no sex in it. Amazing.  With the eleven year olds a make out scene produces giggling, but they giggle at everything anymore.

Hubby said if he had a time machine he would go back into time and live as a Native American. I said I wanted to be Laura from Little House. He then made a few remarks about me not being domestic enough to be a pioneer girl. Whatever. I could so be Laura.

What time would you go back to?

Photo Credit

 

At my Girl Scout Cadette meeting last Friday I brought up the crisis in Japan.  We are doing a Journey (A new Girl Scout badge book) named Breathe this year and are learning about the aspects of air.  Radiation leaks seemed to fit in nicely(okay, that sentence is weird) so I thought we would discuss it.

First off  I asked them “What is going on in Japan?”  Several girls ( I had about 14 girls there) shout out “Earthquake, Tsunami, Flooding, It is flattened”.  Then after some time someone says “Radiation”.  Bingo.

What is radiation? ” Um, bad for you.” “Gives you Diarrhea.”

Where does radiation come from? “Bombs from war.” “Nuclear power.” Bingo.

What is Nuclear Power? “Bad.”For War.” “Dangerous”

Is there anything good about Nuclear  Power? ” No.” “No.” No.” “Well, it does give us power.”

So Nuclear Power can be useful and dangerous? “Yeah.” “You have to be careful with it.” Bingo.

So in about five minutes fourteen girls were able to concentrate, after school no less, on a current event.  They knew what was going on, even though they wanted to act as if they didn’t. They are listening to what we talk about, they are catching some of the news we watching. They can figure out problems and solutions even though they act like they cannot.  We need to realize that and make sure we are talking things out with our kids so they are getting the full side of the story and are able to verbalize thoughts and fears.

I am editing out the diarrhea conversation that happened between the above comments.  Once the word diarrhea entered the subject matter they all got silly and talk of atomic toilets and nuclear flushers went rampant.  Fourteen 11, 12 and 13 year-old-girls silly. Who would have thought?

To end out the lessons we wrote Haiku to send to the Girl Scouts in Japan.  They wrote two. On silly diarrhea one and one serious one.  Here are some samples, don’t pay to close attention to the 5-7-5 rule please!

Were sorry about

What happened things will turn out

Do not lose your hope.

DH age 11

Did you hear the news

Japan is having problems

Our prayers are with you

LT age 13

Your flag is still

Waving white and red

Haiku is for you

EN age 11

White flying Japan

Stand proud honor repeat yeah

You’re in our thoughts yeah

RS age 12

This one is great, though not quite a Haiku

True-fully I am

Sad to see your destruction

Your arches, once so beautiful

Are tearfully torn apart

Rain is before the rainbow

Your luck is to start.

JGK age 12

Some things are not good

What’s happening is not good

Good things are coming

MM age 11

 

I love these girls!

 

Lisa and I oxygenating!

On the last Sunday in February I drove myself to the big city and got on a plane.  As soon as I hit the airport I felt exhilarated.  I was going on a trip.  I love to go to new places, I love to travel alone without worrying about keeping hold of the kids. I love to people watch.

As a mom in a small town who doesn’t work outside the home, life gets a bit predictable. I see the same people, cars, dogs day after day.  It’s no wonder I ran out of things to blog about in February!

As soon as I set down in my isle seat I opened up my Def Leppard notebook (seriously, it was on sale and I so love the Hysteria album cover art) and started writing.  Lots of drivel, but at least my mind was working and my pen a moving.  It felt good.

My next few posts will be about my silly nothings, but they will be new silly nothings!

(Sorry for the dark picture, it was my cell phone:)

 

AIDS. HIV.  What runs through your mind when you read these words?  Do the words frighten you.  Do you think twice about your own HIV status? Do you think of a friend or family  member with the disease?

Did you know that every nine and a half  minutes a person is infected with HIV?  Did you know that there are different strains of the HIV virus and that you can have one or more of the viruses?

Rock the Red Pump is a campaign to promote awareness of HIV and AIDS.  Take  a few minutes and read some facts here:  AIDS/HIV 101

Realize that  Black and Hispanic women are statistically more likely to contract the disease.  How can we reduce these numbers? What is the best way to educated our children to prevent transmission?

Let’s remember that AIDS did not go away just because science came up with effective treatments. It is still a desease that affects lives in the USA and is currently devestating developing countries. It still needs to be paid attention to and I don’t think it is on our radar as it was in the 1980′s and 1990′s.

I don’t have red heels, but if I did I’d be wearing them today!

 

I’m drawing a blank for my blog. I have no ideas on what to write about.  It is the end of February and I’m so over winter I don’t want to post anymore snow pictures for Wordless Wednesday.  Since I have made my reading goals a bit lofty,  it is taking me longer to read and then review books.  I have lost some of my smart-a**ness from being cooped up way to much. What is one to blog about?

Oh yeah. I ‘m going to Vegas on Sunday!  That should make me come up with something. I can blog about all the money I didn’t win, because I don’t play. Or I can complain about how it is no fun to fly anymore or that the security didn’t find me worth patting down.

Seriously I need this trip, my mind seems like a blank field right now.

I think I’ll do some blog-reading and get ideas.  Not steal ideas, just glean some inspiration from everyone.

Stay with me folks, something is bound to come up;)

 

I was watching Survivor with my girls and hubby tonight.    One of the reasons I watch it season after season is for the scenery. However, I was sick of some of the scenery this time around.

Why can people not just wear shorts?  That fit. That fit and yet are still functional.  They know they are going to be running around in front of cameras, so why not wear something flattering? Why not want to show your best? Plus your family and friends are going to watch you and remind you for the rest of your life how good or how bad you looked.  That should be all the motivation one needs. Hint, Hint.

If you have a great body and want to show it to the world, fine, but leave something for the imagination please.

If you don’t have the best body, fine. Cover your A** please.

And men, please no briefs.  White or any other color.  They are not flattering on anyone but underwear models.  Stick to swim trunks or cargo shorts.

Just my thoughts on really important things.

Art Credit

 

At the end of the month I am flying out to Las Vegas to meet an old, dear friend.  She is about three months older than me so maybe I shouldn’t say old!  We have been friends since the seventh grade when we ran cross-country together. She still runs. I haven’t run since 2006 and then it was an impromptu race with a six year old (it didn’t turn out well).  Anyway… Said friend and I try and see each other once a year and this year we decided to have a child-free get away.  Las Vegas just seemed easy as we both have been there before, neither of us have gambling problems and there is a lot to do!

We know about the museams the cupcakery and the shows. We are sad that the pool is still closed because it is still cold (to cold for a pool, but nice for us frozen tundra people), but plan on walking a lot and just chilling.  I hope to find an Ethopian resteraunt to eat in as well.

What I am asking you all is for tips on things that we should not miss!  Any ideas, any secret places in Vegas that are fun that we might not know about?  I should clarify that we are still wholesome mommies and wives and have no plans on changing that status!

Artwork

 
Classic Brown Thank You Card
For hundreds of thank you card designs, click here.
View the entire collection of cards.

I chose this card instead of the traditional Valentine’s Day card because I can use it as a Thank you Note as well!

Don’t forget to enter my giveaway! Click HERE.

(Disclosure: Shutterfly may or may not give me a discount code for sharing my creation!)

 

“Love goes toward love. “

– William Shakespeare

Valentine’s day means a lot of different things to a lot of different people. Traditionally it is a romantic holiday, for lovers only, but I challenge that train of thought. Love is not just for the romantically involved. To me Valentine’s Day is another day to remind me to show those I love that I love them in a special way.

 I love my girls, my parents, grandparents, my brother and sister-in-laws, my nephews and nieces, my friends as well as my Hubby.  So why just leave Valentine’s Day for dates and school parties?  Those of you who know me, know that I love celebrating the little moments. Valentines Day presents itself the perfect opportunity to tell my girls that I love them with a cute little something (this year, heart necklaces).   I also like to do little things for my friends and family. Candy, cards anything that spreads the love.  Little love notes to the kids at breakfast or in their lunch boxes are great ways to celebrate Valentines day. A phone call with a Happy Valentine’s Day message will always be welcome to any loved one.

Of  course I think that Valentine’s Day is a bit commercial and that people spend a lot of money when they don’t necessarily need to. I do, however, refuse to become pessimistic about the holiday.  So I  celebrate Valentine’s Day. I make sure that one more time my loved ones hear those three magic words.

Now that I have told you what Valentine’s Day means to me it is your turn! Simply comment on this post about what Valentine’s Day means to you and I will randomly draw a number and give away 25 FREE Shutterfly cards just in time for Valentine’s Day! You all know how I love Shutterfly. They make great, quality products that are really fun! Check out their V-Day cards here.

One Valentine’s Day I gave the girls luggage tags from Shutterfly with their pictures on them! They loved it and still use them years later! Check out photo gifts from Shutterfly here.  Also look at their selection of thank you cards. It is always nice to have Thank You cards handy when you  need them.

Giveaway Rules:  Leave one comment answering the following “What Valentine’s Day means to me…” by February 5th Midnight. I will use Random.org to pick the winner.  Winner has 24 hours to get back to me, after that I will pick another winner.

Extra Entry: Follow me on Twitter @FourAgainstTwo and leave a comment saying you did and your Twitter handle.

Good luck!

 

Disclosure:  Shutterfly is giving me 25 free cards to keep and 25 free cards to give to one lucky reader in exchange for my post about what Valentines Day means to me and sharing the Shutterfly links posted above. I, of course, love my Shutterfly and was happy to write this!

 

 

Clipart Credit

 

This little light of mine

I love to let it shine

 

It helps me open up doors

And not trip on my floors

 

It lets hubby sleep

While  I’m looking for socks for my feet

 

I gaze at my children sleeping

And they don’t know that I am peeping

 

All by this little light of mine.

 

No need for mag-lights, lighters or night vision sight

I just need my cell phone for light

 

A poem that came to me this morning while Hubby was looking for his iPod with my cell phone light.

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I was thinking  today on the fact that I don’t have a lot of self-motivation.  I am also not easily motivated by other things or people.  I think something is wrong with me.  I must be a bump on a log.

I exercise at Curves.  They have this Smart program that is geared to motivate you into a better work out.  When the computer blinks orange you are supposed to become motivated into working harder until it turns green. Last Monday the Head-Curves-Lady (official title!) said, “Don’t you just work harder when you see orange?”  I lied and agreed, but thought, “Not really.”  I seem to be content with the orange and excited when I do see green.

Trash talking doesn’t push me into things, most speeches don’t inspire me.  Guilt does do the trick, but is that authentic motivation? I think not because you stop when  you have done the least amount needed to stop feeling guilty.

Doing some internal searching, I have tried to find times when I have been really motivated. They seem to be when I’m royally PO’d about something, usually having to do with my kids (school lunches, sex offenders down the street) a social injustice (people without health-care, racism) or when I’m listening to loud music (Def Leppard mainly).  Re-reading that I realize that I could be considered a crazed, empathetic mom with a teenager’s ears!

So what gets you motivated? Failure? Success? Family? Friends?

Any suggestions on how I can get myself motivated?  I’ m listening with an open mind, but cannot promise anything. Hmmmm,  I have low expectations as well it seems!

Photo Credit

 

As I posted last week, I am doing a reading challenge to read more classics.  I just finished my first book of 2011, Dracula by Bram Stoker. Yes, you read that right. It took me eight days to read it.  I have two reasons for this 1) I’ve been crazy busy and 2) It is hard to read this old time language! I am normally a very fast reader, but found that I had to have a quiet room and had to be fully awake to keep up with my book.  Anyway, here is my official review.

I loved it and totally see why it remains the book people refer to when talking vamps.  I found it to be entertaining and suspenseful, without being to dark or graphic with horrific details.  I told Hubby that I could see why this was once considered the scariest book ever, but with our modern day desensitization (my age showing here) it wasn’t remotely to scary for me. I’m not a horror movie or book kinda person. The reason I like Twilight so much is because it has what I call Moral Vampires.  Dracula was not a moral vampire! He was evil with some self-control, and he was smart but limited by his condition.

The story starts in Transylvania and it was great actually reading the beginnings of all the tall tales and legends that are talked about in movies, books and in everyday life.  There are five other main characters besides Count Dracula in the book and they are extremely moral characters themselves. They are not chasing vampires for thrills, kisses or blood, but to rid the world of the evil that has effected their loved ones.

I loved how they talked to each-other and at the same time I wonder if people really did talk with such poetry and prose? Is this just the writing style of the day or because they didn’t have to express themselves in 140 characters or less?  One passage of speaking lasted several pages long and I had to read it twice because I kept getting lost in the descriptions!

First published in 1897 the sexism was very obvious and not tongue-in-cheek.  Mina, the only female main character, was in the end the hero (in my opinion) and beloved by all but this is how she was described at one point of the books:

“Ah that wonderful Madam Mina! She has man’s brain – a brain that a man should have if he much gifted- and a woman’s heart…we man are determined -nay, are  I say pledged – to destroy this monster, but it is no part for a woman. Even if she not be harmed her heart my fail her in so much and so many horrors; and here after she may suffer….”

Dr. Van Helsing is who we hear about, but as I mentioned above, she rocked the whole story and Dracula would still be among us if not for her. Okay, joking. Not real I know!

I am very glad I decided to read Dracula.  I would highly recommend it to the vampire crowd or to the not-so-much-vampire crowd as well. I think I would let my oldest (age 11) read it with no problems as well. She is an avid Harry Potter, Narnia, Eragon fan and I think she could handle the Count!

The next stop on my book reading adventures is a modern read by Jennifer Weiner, Fly Away Home, and then  I will get started on my adoption reading challenge.  The next classic book that I am thinking about reading is The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Thanks to The Deranged Book Lovers for hosting the classic Reading Challenge!

What are you reading right now?


Art work credit

 

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I love my girls. Obviously.  When they love something, I start to love it (for the most part..sorry Beiber).  Then I obsess…just a little bit.

When Meg was a little over a year it was all about Bear in the Big Blue House. I took her to see the stage show in Columbus. She had the jacket, the backpack and the Pip and Pop dolls.  Then came Dora. I drove two hours and stood in line for a very long time for her to get to meet her idol. I stayed within reason.

Then the American Girl Dolls.  I went a bit overboard. Meg was in Kindergarten when we read all of the books.  When she got the Felicity doll I had a matching dress made for doll and girl and we went to Williamsburg on vacation that year.  A trip to American Girl Cafe in LA (We were going to LA anyway, it wasn’t just for the cafe!) made me fall even harder for the dolls.   Mita and Enu both got dolls (Josephina and Ruthie) on their first Christmas here.  This year, Ella got her first doll, Kit.  I love the history that goes with the dolls.   I agree they are expensive and I don’t buy the accessories for that reason, but I do think they are quality and will last a long time. My hopes are to see the grandkids playing with them (in many years to come – decades even).

The day that Meg asked to put her American Girl things away in the basement my heart broke. I couldn’t help but feel it was to early.  But time moves on and here came Harry Potter. A new obsession that , surprise , has captured me as well (we have been to platform 9 3/4).  Along with Princesses (Disney trips), Tinker Belle (She read us a book!), Pinkalicious (Halloween costumes and a party), Star Wars (Princess Leia came to Elle’s party) and Selena Gomez (we saw her in concert).

So the girls will grow out of these things, but where does that leave me and all of the time, energy and money I have invested?  It leaves me with a broken heart and an appreciation for living in the current moment.

I love my girls. I love what my girls love. I need my own hobby.

 

My mom is in the red...she shuns the camera!

When I got back from Blogher 10 last August I tried to convince my mom to start a blog.  She agreed quickly but it took us some time to figure out her theme.  As she has always secretly wanted to be a bartender I suggested that she review and share different drinks, from kids sippy cups to adults’ wine glasses.

I am proud to announce she has launched her blog this 2011.  Please read her and let her know how cool she is.  GrandmaOnTheRocks.com is where you can find her and she is on Twitter @GmaOnTheRocks

Oh and she is coming to BlogHer11 with me in San Diego! Look out world, here we come :)

 

My new camera has led me to try some new things.

I did this on Photobucket:

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Photo credit Mandy W. 2010 and RP 2010

 

Yeah me for longer hair!

Last year I wrote myself a letter regarding how to make Christmas less stressful and more fun.  True to form, I forgot all about said letter until this morning, December 22nd!  I just read the letter and am happy to report that I did pretty good this year.

I did not buy matching dresses for the girls with adorable headbands.  I did not care if Elle wore her snow boots or not (she didn’t!) in Christmas activities.

I did not try and get the family picture my heart desires.

We did cut out some fluff activities to keep the running and the spending down. Really Hubby, we did!

The older two girls were in choir and did some Christmas shows while the younger two sang in a local Christmas show that required very little preparation.  I did miss the Christmas play at church this year, but not having to struggle with getting them to practice was a good thing.

Last year I was not handling my stress well.

What have I done to help decrease the stress? I started to exercise three times a week when the kids went back to school. I’ve seen a therapist to help with various stressful issues. I’ve dropped some responsibilities and said no more than yes to requests of my time and energy.

Stress over illnesses, time crunches and the never ending upkeep of raising a family will always be there. It will never be easy, but I guess it is all how we handle it.

Matching bows are not required. Who knew?

 

As I mentioned in my Advent Quilt post, not one of my 25 activities involved a craft.  This was intentionally done as I HATE crafts and am really BAD at them.  Then in my infinite fallibility, I changed plans. I found this great Star Wars snowflake pattern.  How could I mess up a snowflake?  Well, I can and did.

Here is what they were supposed to look like:

                                                  

Here is what mine look like.

Case closed. Never again. Until I forget.  If you would like to find the pattern and try them yourself click here. Please don’t show off your success though!

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We always seem to want a reason.  We want things to make sense and not leave us wondering.  During a time when all the information you would ever need is a Google away, it seems that the answers to the big questions are farther away than ever.  Or maybe we are so spoiled with finding out things quickly that we cannot handle the big questions with no answers.

My cousin recently died at 49 years of age, leaving a wife, two daughters and many extended family members.  To young, to smart, to funny to die.  No reason, just cancer. A very rapid, fast growing cancer that gave him less time with us on Earth. No explanation can satisfy the whys of it all.

My mom was diagnosed with Dermomycytosis a few weeks ago. A debilitating, possible chronic disease that has her very weak and at times in a lot of pain. She can no longer work, but wishes she could. No reason for this diagnosis, it just happened.

My father-in-law is struggling with advanced prostate cancer and is in Hospice. The pain is horrible, the wasting away a misery. It is easy to become bitter.

One of my daughters was crying on the floor tonight yelling to God,”I’ll do anything, I want my mom back.”  How I can I explain something to a child that I am not even sure of myself?

Last week I was talking with another daughter and told her that in a perfect world we would never even know each-other, but the world isn’t perfect and since it isn’t  I’m so blessed to be able to be her mom.  What kind of conversation is that?

When things like death and illness happen our need for an explanation can change us. We can become hardened to life and deny all good. We can hate God and all the comfort He can bring. We can dive into finding an explanation of any kind, that can bring any comfort so much that we may lose who we are.

We all have different beliefs even if our faith is in the same vein.  I hate hearing things like “It was God’s plan.” “God needed him more than we did.” “We all have a reason to be on this Earth and his was done.”  I know that these words may bring comfort to some. I don’t want to belittle them. I, however, believe that God didn’t plan for Steve to die so young, my mom to become ill, my father in law to die painfully, two of my kids to lose a mother and a country.

Things happen in this life, in this world. God is here to comfort, support and love us. I do believe in miracles and have to be careful not to get to jaded to see them.  We will never know all of the whys in this world and we don’t have to.  If we forget the struggle to understand and make sense of things maybe we can go on and live our lives the best way we can.

This past weekend at a Christmas program they sang Peace On Earth by Casting Crowns.  It stick in my head and helps me with my none-understanding.  You can click on the song title above to listen.

 

I heard about the Christmas episode of NBC’s Community from the One2One Network this past week.  For those of you who don’t see me regularly, I don’t watch a lot of TV. We don’t even have TV provider. We watch through NetFlix and the computer. I don’t watch any reality shows except Survivor with our older two girls. I like MI5 with Hubby as well as Modern Family and The Big Bang.  Other than that I really don’t know what is going on in TV land.  So I had never heard of Community.  What caught my eye on this episode is that the show is in stop-motion-animation.  How cool is that! I call it Claymation, because I am not technically-savvy.  Oh well!

So I got a sneak peak to this episode and loved it!   Chevy Chase, and John Oliver (from the Daily Show) are two of the actors I recognize, even as stop-motion characters.  The episode is entitled  Abed’s Uncontrolable Christmas. The plot follows the character Abed on his quest to find the meaning of Christmas. The story-line is full of making fun of how Christmas has become very PC and a “Happy Holidays” rather than “Merry Christmas”. It does this without offending people or putting others down. Very refreshing I must say!

I won’t give it away of course, but I must say that I almost wet myself when he opened up the box at the end! Clever, funny and worth watching!

When is it on you ask?  This Thursday, December 9th at 8 eastern/7 central time on NBC.

Should the kids watch it?  This show is not for kids. It is a fun stop-motion show that will make the kids want to watch it though! If you kids are under five you can probably get away with them in the room with you, but there are a lot of innuendos and parts that you will find yourself explaining to the older kids.  Put them to bed and watch it without them!

I laughed really hard through the entire show and will for sure be looking to watch the show and see the series in real-life!  I hope it is as good as this  Christmas episode is.

Thanks to the One2One Network for letting me preview this show!

 

 

(Disclosure: I was not compensated for this review, but could win a prize from the One2One Network, for giving my honest review of the above show.)

 

I was going to use the title Off With His Head with this post and threatened as much to Hubby yesterday evening.

Yesterday our advent activity was to make Christmas Cookies.  As it was a snow day I thought we would have a lot of time to get the cookies done, but with all of the outdoor play in the snow (Yeah  Outdoor Play!) we didn’t get started on cookies until after dinner.

Hubby comes running when I call the girls to the kitchen in hopes of nabbing some cookie dough.  The look on his face when he saw the pre-packaged cookie dough cut into Christmas shapes was one of shock and laughter. I guess he had been expecting some homemade ball of cookie dough that I had made from scratch in all of my snow-day-spare-time.  He went on to say things like “recipe has been in the family for generations” and ” handed down” under his breath while laughing. I’m glad I could amuse him.  Not!

I immediately removed the cookie dough from his hand as he did not deserve my hand-bought morsels.  Well, I tried to take it away but he is bigger than I am.

So my cookies may not be from scratch, but the girls had fun, the cookies taste good and the mess was minimal for mom.

So there.

 

When Meg was just a year old I was looking through a Pottery Barn catalog in January and found an Advent quilt on clearance.  I mean really on Clearance.  I think it was twenty bucks and I was head over heels with it.  I started making plans as soon as it arrived and couldn’t wait for December to come.

When it finally came I was totally prepared.  We did crafts, stories and songs.  The advent quilt event of the day was always done.  You have to remember that at this time I was perfect mom with one child!

Over the next few years I was able to maintain this perfection and the Advent quilt became a tradition. In 2004 Elle’s due date was December 21st and we had just moved into a new house in November. The advent quilt was somewhere packed and I couldn’t find it.  We still did our Christmas traditions, but the advent quilt was not there to oversee it all. I missed it.

Fast forward to 2008. I had four kids and was still on an adrenaline rush after the Adoption and had energy but didn’t focus to well.  I tried the Advent quilt and failed miserably. I couldn’t keep up with everything. Remember, I HATE crafts but feel an impulse that I have to do them! The advent quilt became more of a nuisance than a fun thing. Last year, I did even less with the quilt although we still put it up.

This year I’m doing it differently. There is not one craft on the quilt line up. The activities are simple, easy to switch around and bring our true meaning of Christmas into view.  For all of you craft lovers out there I assure you that the kids will have plenty of opportunity to get messy with  paint and glue between scouts and school! I want to have fun with my advent quilt and not be ruled by it.  I have also learned that the advent quilt activities have to grow with your children.  Make it fun for them or there isn’t much reason to put in all the work. 

With the holiday season starting after Halloween, many of our typical Christmas activities are already done by December. We put up our tree Thanksgiving weekend.  Our sponsored child’s gifts have to be turned in by December 1st.  There is also the fact that somedays have two activities scheduled. Then of course we have a birthday to throw in!  With all of these factors in mind here is my list, in no particular order:

Christmas lighting at our local courthouse/Concert with Meg and Mita

Elle’s birthday

Making Christmas Cookies

 Wrapping Gifts- is “more blessed to give than to receive.” Acts 20:35 (NIV)

 Caroling for the Grandparents

 Elf someone

 Story starter:  A few days before Christmas the elves were scurrying around the workshop finishing up on the toys when the lights went out…

 Matthew 1:18-25

 Luke 2:1-14

 Luke 2:15-20

 Santa Letters

 Local Concert all four girls are singing in

 Go out of your way to be nice to someone today and then tell us about it at dinner tonight.

 School Parties

 Elle’s Daisy Program

 Elle’s Birthday Party

 Story starter:  It was the night before Christmas and Selena Gomez had yet to start her Christmas shopping…

 Christmas Day Rocks! Happy Birthday Jesus.

 Write Christmas Cards to kids in the hospital over Christmas

 Christmas movie marathon

 Tell a Christmas joke at dinner tonight. You have all day to find one!

 Deliver gifts to the neighbors.

 Drive around and see the Christmas lights.

 Story Starter:   Bella was getting ready for Christmas Eve when she heard the cat calling out.  Going outside to investigate, Bella notices tiny footprints in the snow…. 

Hot chocolate party!

 I’m most excited about the story starters as my kids love to tell tales right now and are so dramatic.  Four girls dramatic. Who would have thought!

 

Check out some other Advent themed posts:

 

StopDropandBlog

 

Quiet Fish

 

My kiddos with cousins!

I’m back to finish what I started. I hated not meeting my goal, but do realize that thankfulness doesn’t have a deadline so I must write a few notes on the rest of my topics and then let this topic lie awhile!

#7 Friends

I have never had as many friends as  I do now.  I am not a social person historically and never seemed to stay in the same place long enough to make friends until now.  It took me a while to open myself up to making friends, I must admit, but I am so happy I have invested the time and energy it took to cultivate the dear friends I have now.  To have people to talk with about nothing, everything and all the in between topics is priceless.  Thanks you my dear friends for making my life a richer one.

#6 Moon-roofs

I love my moon roof.  I open it whenever I can and let the wind blow. A great stress relief and a wonderful way to feel youthful!

#5 Books

Books are the greatest invention that ever was. Nuff said.

#4 Enu

Enu, my daughter number three.  The girl whose smile and laughter can burn into my heart with love and in the same breath drive me mad with the constant talking.  Enu teaches me patience when I don’t want to be taught. Enu’s spirit is so great big all I can say is,” Look out world here she comes!”.  I adore you my dear one.

#3 Family

I can never express all my thoughts and feelings about my family. They are why I breathe.  My parents, my brother, sister in laws, nieces and nephews and of course husband and children are all amazing individuals who teach me so much and offer so much love and support.

#2 Home

Home is my refuge.  It always has been. Hubby and I are homebodies whether our home is a simple rented bedroom in Peru to our current house that holds all of our kids (and thirty-five years worth of stuff). There is nothing like the feeling of walking  in my doorway and feeling the peace that home brings.

#1 The Future

I try to be careful not to wish the present away to fast, but I sometimes do think  about the future and what my girls will do with their lives.  I see lots of laughing, tears and prom dresses in my future.  College stories.  Destination weddings (my hope is the girls will want a great wedding trip rather than a wedding!) and maybe someday grandchildren.  No matter what the future holds, I hope my girls find happiness  and a fulfilling life. I hope hubby and I get to travel more and age well! There is excitement in the future and what a blessing to be living during this time!

 

Okay. So I have less than two hours to go to meet my goal of twenty-five blogs of things I am grateful for Thanksgiving.  I’m a bit bummed that I wasn’t able to blog every day as I had hoped.  The last month has been a busy one with illness on top of the normal craziness of having a family with four kids. The doctors appointments, worrying and running around have really made me realize all that I do have thankful for.  I guess that living my thankfulness is going to have to replace my writing it.  I will at some point expand on these  but for now, in no particular order:

#7Friends

#6 Moon-roofs

#5 Books

#4 Enu

#3 Family

#2 Home

#1 The Future

 

#8 Mita

Mita is my second oldest daughter. While Elle is my Joy, Mita is my hero.  She has come through such adversity in  her ten years of life.  Most people would given up or been sour on life by now. Mita is thriving with her sweet smile and her streak of stubbornness.

She has been my little girl for just under three years now. She is no longer little though and while that makes me sad at times, it is amazing watching her grow into the beautiful women she is meant to be.

I love you Mita and hope you will someday understand how much.

 

I got these cards off Shutterfly for the girls to write their letters to Santa!  So very cute.

Dear Santa Christmas Card
Shop Shutterfly.com for elegant Christmas photo cards.
View the entire collection of cards.

I just love my Shutterfly!

(Disclosure:  Shutterfly is offering gift certificates for bloggers who share cards. I do not know if I will recieve one, but I love this card and it is worth a shot!)

 

My twenty-five days of thankfulness blogging experience is almost over. I’m a bit behind, but will be at my goal by Thursday. I’m sure of it.  Pretty sure. Wouldn’t bet the house but maybe my lunch sure that I will have these twenty-five blessings done up in writing!

#12 Computers

What would I do without my computer?  I would be lost. I would have to go to the library to look up information. I would not be able to map out my directions at the drop of a hat. Phone numbers?  I would have to let my fingers do the walking while using a good old fashioned phone book.

I love that I can type out letters and emails to the kids’ teachers quickly, put a feeling on twitter to share will the world and look at pictures my friends have taken in another state as soon as they are taken.

I may be addicted. I have had to pace myself at times, I have stepped away from my computer at times  I may be loving it a bit too much and not getting things done that need to get done.

I adore living in the age of the Internet and am very thankful for my computer!

© 2011 Four Against Two Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha