Thursday, May 31, 2018

His Observations, Her Observations

As is true for many husbands and wives, Scotty and I pay attention to completely different things. For example, Scotty notices if someone's tire is low or if their plates are expired. I'm oblivious. I notice when someone has a new outfit or haircut. Scotty is none the wiser.

One of the things Scotty has always noticed is what kind of bikes people ride. He's been checking out other men's cycling equipment for our entire marriage. Any time we pass someone on a bike, he ogles, and then he comments on the quality of the bike and how much it probably cost (I'll interject here that my first anniversary gift from him was a Gary Fisher). 

Another thing Scotty is always checking out is rope. 

Yep, rope. 

When we watch The Greatest Showman and 'Rewrite the Stars' comes on, I admire the music and the choreography. Scotty admires the rope. 

I guess it's good that there's something there for both of us.

When your husband has a fascination with rope, you get to have a garage full of miscellaneous rope. Scotty is always sure to have emergency rope handy for all adventures. Here he is preparing his rope for scout camp last month:


I made fun of him and accused him of wanting to impress other men, but then it poured rain, and his rope came in handy for typing up tarps. Technically, he did impress the other men.

When we went hiking last week, we saw a lot of amazing petroglyphs and flowers. We also saw this rope:


I never would've noticed it because I was too busy finding hearts in rocks.


Last night for scouts, Scotty and the boys built a monkey bridge between two trees, and one of the other men made the comment that he'd sure like to have some rope like Scotty's. I think it was a dream come true!

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Oh What Do You Do in the Summertime

We are one and a half days into summer break, and I've already exhausted all of my "keep them busy" resources.

Yesterday morning I went for a walk at 5:40, and when I got back an hour later, everyone was awake watching TV. I let them keep watching until 8:00. Then we had breakfast, I made them do their chores and get ready for the day, we stripped their beds and did a few loads of laundry, and they read for 20 minutes.

I made my kids a summer checklist of things they need to do every morning as well as a chart for their daily afternoon chores. When they saw the list, they lost their marbles.

"Don't you know it's summer? Summer is supposed to be fun! We aren't supposed to work during the summer."

Why, yes! I'm making my kids do terrible things all summer like get dressed, make their beds, and brush their teeth.

The horror!

(Actually, the real "horror" is the fact that I have to write things like this on a list in the first place. Why can't they just brush their teeth on instinct?)

After a morning of unfair hygiene tasks, I made lunch - homemade mac & cheese. I add this detail not to brag - "oh look at me! I'm the mom who makes homemade mac & cheese all summer" - but because I want you to know that lunch took an hour to make. I did this intentionally to fill some time.

After lunch we went to the library, got Slurpees, did perler bead art, and blew up the inflatable pool.

At that point... it was 2:00 p.m., and I was starting to question the validity of the eight clocks in my home.


The kids played in the pool for an hour, did more perler bead art, did their afternoon chores, and then watched two more hours of TV. After Scotty got home, they alternated between watching TV and playing in the pool until it was time to go to bed.

The day was so incredibly long. Today has been the same, except there has been more fighting (which is hard to believe), so I've spent more time administering discipline. Nicky and Daisy have been awarded early bed time, and they've had to go to the "Sorry Stair" multiple times.

This evening, Nicky and Scotty have scouts, and my girls have already started making demands for a Girls' Night. All that's been asked of me is to let them eat giant lollipops, go to an ice cream place, build a fort, paint, do water balloons, and learn French.

{Once Upon a Girls' Night}

And after a day of having all of them in my personal space since 6:30 a.m., I can't think of anything else I'd rather do with my night.

Je suis fatigue.



Monday, May 28, 2018

It's Been a Good Weekend (and ten other random facts)

Fact #1: My kids are officially out of school for the summer. Since school ended and then we headed right into a holiday weekend, I'm not mentally considering it "summer break" until Tuesday.

I'm scared.

Fact #2: On Saturday morning, my kids were all awake by 6:02. Scotty was gone for a while in the morning, and by 9:00 a.m. I felt as if it should be dinner time. I've got some long days ahead of me.

Fact #3: Last week, Daisy and Eva had two nights of dance concerts. Nicky always comes along (by choice) for both nights. You've heard of "Dance Moms." I want to start a reality show called "Dance Brothers." Nicky has a lot to say. A lot. I spent most of the concert telling him to shush. No commentary. No singing. Just shush!

Fact #4: It's pretty hard to convince my 11-year-old son to shush during a dance concert when there's an old dude behind us drumming on the bottom of his metal auditorium seat through every song.

"Why can't I sing? How come that guy gets to make noise?"

"Because his mother isn't here to offer him loving guidance. Look how lucky you are to have me!"

(Seriously, though, that was incredibly annoying).

Fact #5: I've realized in recent months that I eat like a dude. I can't help it, I like manly food. I often look around my food places and realize it's me and a bunch of male construction workers. Then I smile and take a bite of my philly cheese steak sandwich.

Fact #6: As I head into summer break with my kids, I feel like I need to create some sort of structure for them. But I can't. I don't have it in me. I just have to take it day by day. I know I'm going to make mistakes this summer. I might yell too often or let my kids watch too much TV. We might fail to read, We'll probably eat too many potato chips, and we'll very likely get sunburned.

I don't want to spend the whole summer beating myself up over my failures, so I'm trying to find a way to celebrate the successes - however few and far between they are.

Fact #7: For the entire school year, Nicky has worn Hawaiian shirts and gym shorts. He made sure to wear the same Hawaiian shirt on the last day of school that he wore on the first day of school. Unfortunately, it got torn the week before school ended, so I'm going to make him get rid of it. He doesn't know it yet, but we are going camping soon, and I'm going to make him retire it in the fire. He's going to be so mad.

Fact #8: Nicky has been begging me to let him have a "bald haircut." He's been very persistent about it, and the last time I cut his hair, he sobbed and sobbed because I didn't buzz it. We finally compromised, and I told him he could shave off all his hair for the summer. Our neighbor offered to give him a free buzz for the summer because he complained to her about how I wouldn't let him be bald. He's redeeming his free haircut this week.

Hold me.

Fact #9: For the summer, I wanted to drastically reduce my use of social media to help with my depression. I deleted Instagram from my phone and won't be using it at all this summer, and for Facebook, I decided to do a "No Scroll Summer." I will still use Facebook for a few things such as sharing my blog posts and communicating with some select groups, but I will not scroll!

(If I announce it here, I have to stick to it, right?)

Fact #10: I need to go to bed, but I've reached that point where going to bed is too much work, so I just stay awake. 

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Depression, Denial, & a Doctor

About a year and a half ago, I wrote this post about some of my experiences with depression. I've struggled with depression off and on for most of my adult life. I have a hard time calling it what it is, though. Even though I've come in and out of it, it's still onerous for me to think it's depression. It feels so deeply like a spiritual problem, and I have the tendency to place the blame on myself.

My "depression" (even now, I'm finding it difficult to name it) manifests itself in the form of anger & irritation, a low sense of self-worth, fatigue & low motivation, and spiritual aversion. Only when I'm on the other side am I able to see it for what it really is. I'm currently experiencing all of these things, and I'm half objective about it and half in complete denial. The only reason I'm half-way able to admit it's depression is that yesterday, a thought came into my mind, "You know what this is - you've experienced this before. Call your doctor."

The funny thing is that I just filled out a depression survey at my new doctor last Tuesday, and I "decided" before I filled it out that I don't have depression, so I filled it out as if I don't have depression. Then in the comments section I wrote, "I've been treated for depression and anxiety in the past, but I don't currently need treatment."

Denial.

I don't want to do it. I don't want to be a person with depression.

{I'm not too depressed to enjoy a good giph}

I don't know if it will do me any good (in fact, I am in a mind space where I truly don't believe it will help - I remember feeling this in times past) but I'm going to the doctor in the morning. I'll start medication... again... and despite my lack of faith in it, maybe it will help me get to a place where I can help myself (non-medicinal routes aren't realistic right now because I have no motivation to work toward healing).

I'm not sure why I'm blogging about it. Somehow it makes me accountable, I guess. And it gives me something to look back on later to see if I'm improving. If I read this in six weeks, and I don't feel better, then I know I need to explore other solutions.

Pancakes


When your husband is undergoing a special procedure, you might want to make him some special pancakes.

And when you're kids ask about the special pancakes... you might want to tell them they're balloons.

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

The Truth About Potty Training

A few weeks ago, Eva reached the milestone of being "daytime" potty trained. She still has to wear diapers at night, but our diaper use has gone from eight a day to one a day, and I appreciate the financial benefits. The problem is... having a potty trained child isn't all it's cracked up to be. People romanticize the idea, but honestly, it's a royal pain in the tush. All I do these days is deal with potty-ing. Here are some of my potty stories as of late:

Watch Your Step

On Eva's first journey out of the house sans diaper, I wasn't sure how she'd do in a public restroom. We went to Smith's, and immediately as we walked in, she said she needed to go potty. I took her to the restroom, and she refused to go inside. She said the toilets were scary (this is always a possibility with children, as you probably know. Some are just downright terrified of the large toilet and/or the sound of the flush).

I took her in the restroom THREE TIMES while we were there, and with every amount of bribery I could muster, I still could not get her to pee in the potty. Finally I decided to check out and see if I could get her to use the little IKEA potty that I keep in the stow-n-go of my van.

While I was checking out (curse you, self-check-out!), Eva peed all over the floor, and let's just say... it wasn't a small amount. She just stood there in the puddle holding herself and crying. It pooled around both our shoes and all around the shopping cart wheels.

I had to go tell the employee that my child peed on the floor. She was pretty chill about it, in the beginning. She came over with a wad of paper towels and wiped it up... kind of. There was still pee all around the wheels of my shopping cart and all over Eva's and my shoes, so with every step we took, we spread the pee.

Then the employee crouched down to Eva and said, "It's okay to have accidents sometimes, but tell your mom to take you to the restroom next time!"


And then the employee went right back to helping people with their groceries. Didn't wash her hands... didn't use any type of cleaning product on the pee.

And I wheeled my cart with the pee-soaked wheels out the door, leaving streaks all along the way.



The IKEA Potty

Like I said, I keep a little IKEA potty in the stow-n-go of my van. It's very convenient for emergency situations. I've found myself in at least 15 "emergency situations" in the past three weeks. I tell you no lie. I have to let Eva pee in the potty in my van at least once a day during car pool or while running errands. When she tells me she needs to pee, she is a ticking time bomb. Since the Smith's incident, I've learned that I have precisely three minutes from the time she says she needs to pee until she actually does.




All Done

Since we've been embarking on the Great Public Restroom Tour of 2018, I've taken the opportunity to go to the bathroom, myself (might as well take care of business if I'm in there anyway, amiright?) On a few occasions, Eva has decided she can't wait for me, so she unlocks the stall door, and if it's an outward swinging door, she takes off. I keep getting stranded on the toilet, and sometimes I make eye contact with the strangers outside the door. Every single one of my children has done this to me. EVERY DANG ONE.


Wow, That's Fancy Stuff

Fortunately, Eva's fear of public restrooms was short-lived. I don't have the patience to deal with that kind of stuff, so I'm glad she got over it. Now she's fascinated with public restrooms and wants to check them all out.

The first time she experienced an automatic toilet, it blew her mind. I thought it would scare her, but she looked at me, wide-eyed, and said, "Wow, Mom! This toilet flushes all by himself!"



The Line

About once a week, I meet my friend Christie for lunch. Last week we were meeting at Cafe Rio, and I got there before Christie. The line was getting long, so I went ahead and got in line to hold us a place. About five minutes into our wait, Eva started saying she needed to pee (remember how I only have three minutes?) I kept trying to convince her that she could wait, but she started holding herself, so I knew there was no way we were going to make it. I had to get out of line and take her to the bathroom, and when I came back, the line was out the door. I couldn't get back in it. I just couldn't. So I had to surrender and apologize to Christie (Christie is a trooper, though so she met me at a park and brought the food).

At the Park

I took my kids potty at Cafe Rio, but that didn't stop them from needing to poop at the park.


There are no restrooms at the park, so I was desperate. I had the little potty, but I'd never used it for poop. I had to think fast... how can I make poop happen at the park without it being horrible? I ended up lining the potty with a grocery bag and having my kids poop in it.

Um... yep.

Two days later, we had a repeat incident, but that time I didn't have a grocery bag so we used a hamburger wrapper... and then I disposed of the contents in a Happy Meal box.


Don't judge me.

There is nothing glamorous about the newly potty trained.

In the past week I've had to shampoo my mattress, Eva's mattress, the car seat, and the couch (twice) (these accidents happen when she naps). I have to take Eve to the bathroom everywhere we go, sometimes two or three times in a half hour.

She throws a fit at night because she doesn't want us to put a diaper on her, so we have to wait until she falls asleep and we can change her. Then in the morning, she doesn't want to change back into underwear, so I have to chase her down and steal her diaper off her body.

Overall, I'm grateful we've accomplished potty training, but I think I know what the theme of my summer is going to be: Creative Bathrooming.


Monday, May 21, 2018

Weekend Journey

I love getting out of town. It doesn't have to be very far or very fancy. Sometimes I just need to leave. This weekend was such a time, so Scotty and I planned a last-minute trip to Vernal - which is about three hours east(ish) of Salt Lake.

We left early Saturday morning and, after a few food and toilet-related stops, we rolled into town around 11:00. We headed to McConkie Ranch where we went on a little hike to see some petroglyphs. Three of the children were in good spirits. The other one... well... it's nothing new. We're happy with 75%.







There's a little shack at the trail head where you can sign in, leave a donation, and hang a post-in note. It also has a fridge full of soda you can buy for a dollar (honors-style). The petroglyphs are on private property, so it's really nice of this family to allow access for hikers.



{Nicky's note}

After our hike, we checked into our hotel and then we headed to Dinosaur National Monument. We took the tram to the quarry and saw the dinosaur bones. We went to Vernal when Nicky was a baby, and the quarry was shut down (it was closed from 2006-2011), so I was excited to get to go this time.




We bought the kids the National Parks Passports - which we should have done a long time ago because we've already been to a lot of places and missed out on the stamps. I guess we'll just have to go back!

We didn't realize that the town of Vernal shuts down at 5:00 pm and all day Sunday, so we didn't get to go to any of the dinosaur museums. In hindsight, we should have gone to those first and saved the petroglyphs for Sunday. Oh well.

We stopped by the Vernal temple and attempted a family picture.


Families can be together forever and stuff. This is when the kids kind of hit their breaking point. They had been shockingly good despite the overload of activities, and dinner time triggered the end.

We went to dinner at a place called Country Grub.


We went back to the hotel and took the kids to the pool. It was the slipperiest pool floor I've ever walked on, so it didn't take long for one of the kids to fall and get hurt.

Bed time came along, we slept, and then all the kids were up jumping around by 5:30 Sunday morning (we always ask for a room on the first floor when we stay at a hotel, and I specifically mention my bouncy children).

On Sunday we drove out by Steinaker Reservoir and hiked to Moonshine Arch. It was a great hike - easy enough for the kids but challenging enough to burn a few calories. It also had very little traffic, so we had the arch to ourselves.


After the hike, we hung out at a park for a while where I tried to force my children to do bar tricks like I did as a child. This was when I realized that I have ultimately failed my children. They are completely incapable - it's like they are broken - and now I can't stop mumbling, "Kids these days..." because, really, KIDS THESE DAYS!

Vernal made a great overnight trip. Our kids were really good. I mean, there were meltdowns and fights and stuff, but on the behavior scale where 1 is "they were perfect angels" and 10 is "we left them on the side of the road," they were a solid 3 where on most vacations they are a 7-8. I'm just going to count my blessings and not assume this is permanent.

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Life With The Girls

The other day I wrote about Zoe and Eva trying to take over our bedroom by moving their stuff into our drawers little by little. The next night, I had to take Nicky to the doctor, and while I was gone, they moved the rest of their stuff into our room.

They emptied all of their dresser drawers and put their stuff in backpacks and suitcases and loaded it all into our room along with most of their toys.

They were so proud.

And since they are so little, and it was bed time, all we could do was make them take it back in their room and go to bed, so everything ended up on the floor.

Yesterday I had to sort through every backpack and suitcase and put back all their clothes (have I mentioned that Zoe has a backpack obsession? She has like 12 backpacks, and she keeps convincing people to buy her more). In addition to the backpacks and suitcases, they also stuffed clothes inside toys, like the Doc McStuffins dog carrier and the Melissa & Doug shopping baskets.

I'm still not done cleaning it up.

But this experience made me realize something... MY DAUGHTERS ARE CRAZY.

And because of life circumstances, I am home alone with them a lot, and as soon as Scotty and Nicky are out of the house, they think it's party time. "Girls' Night! Girls' Night!" they chant, and then, without even consulting me, they come up with a list of 30 Girls' Night activities, and I have to crush their little spirits by telling them that we're not going to plant flowers, ride bikes, eat ice cream, put on make-up, and bake cookies to deliver to "everyone in our town" because we need to take baths, and by the time I replace the damaged subfloor and water-logged sheet rock that results from their splashing, it will be June.

I have been known to beg Scotty to not leave me alone with the girls. Most of the time, I don't have a choice.

Last night we went to my grandma's house to mow her lawn, and she gave the girls some real flowers so they could make flower arrangements (one of their many messy hobbies). On the way home, Zoe started the "Girls' Night!" chant and listed off all the things she was going to do at home. "We are going to go home and have a Girls' Night and put on dresses and decorate the house and have a dance party."

I compromised... You may put on dresses and dance, but you may not decorate!

When we got home, Zoe chanted "Girls' Night!" some more (even though Scotty was home) and then instructed everyone that it was time to "get ready." Then she started frantically running around the house yelling, "Mom! I need tape!"

TAPE!

The girl is always looking for tape, and I'm seriously considering becoming a tape-free household because... MY DAUGHTERS ARE CRAZY.

I asked her why she needed tape...

"TO TAPE FLOWERS TO THE WALL!!!"

I reminder her that there was to be NO DECORATING.

"I'm not decorating, I'm just taping flowers all over the walls to make our whole house pretty for our dance party."

Sigh.

I put my foot down. There would be no taping flowers to the wall. So Zoe found a loophole, of course, and stuck flowers in every nook and cranny: in the piano keys, in the bird cage, in the computer armoire, in between books...

I can't win. I can make a "no decorating" rule, and I can hide all the tape, and I will still lose every time.

I love them, I do. But they exhaust me. They're messy, demanding, and full of big ideas. They have many traits that will serve them well later in life when they are better capable of cleaning up their own messes.

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Currently {May 2018 Edition}

Reading: The Hideaway by Laura K. Denton and The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah. I am also half way though Gilead by Marilynne Robinson, and I just can't get myself to finish it, but I have to because it's for my book group, and not finishing it would be the ultimate betrayal! (Becky? Amy? Please convince me to get going on this!)

Watching: Gilmore Girls still. I've reached what I call my "point of frustration" in the series, and I really want to give each of the characters therapy.

{How I feel about the ER}
Wanting: a diagnosis. Last week a sharp pain started in my lower right abdomen. I've seen four doctors. I've done three urine tests, three round of blood work, two ultrasounds, and a CT scan, and they haven't yet found the cause. I have no other symptoms - just pain. Over the weekend it was excruciating. So far this week, it's been tolerable. Thank heavens.

Craving: nothing.

That's not like me. What's happening here?

Wearing: sleepwear. It's 6:30 in the morning, and I've been up since 5:00 trying to be quiet.

Singing: "Can't Stop the Feeling." Yesterday my friend told me she hates that song, and it's been in my head ever since.

Relieved by: the Jordan River Temple finally opening next week.

Stressing about: the entire month of May. May is always crazy, but this May is especially crazy.

Neglecting: our garden. We are still trying to get our garden cleaned up, but we never have time. I planted two garden boxes last week, but that's only 1/4 of our garden.

Feeling: a little uptight, angry, and opinionated... which is exactly how I felt last month, too.

Buying: milk. I went to the grocery store a few days ago and then forgot to bring our groceries inside for two hours. It's a little sour.

Trying: to explain to my son (who sitting next to me reading family history - as all 11-year-old boys are prone to doing at 6:30 in the morning) that Prussia was a real place and not a typo.

Missing: having a cat. I don't want another cat (we have too many pets as it is, and my husband and three-year-old are trying to convince me that we need a snake), but I miss the Colonel and his wee beady eyes.

Proud of: Zoe and how much she has progressed in the past six months. Her speech is amazing now - - there are just a few sounds she struggles with, but we rarely misunderstand her anymore. Her social emotional skills have gone from below average to above average, and she has just blossomed recently. It's been amazing to watch. I have her IEP meeting next week, so we'll decide what she needs as she moves in to kindergarten.

I am also proud of Eva for... dare I say it... potty training! About two weeks ago, she took the lead, and now she is day time potty trained. I'm not sure when she'll ever be night time potty trained (considering her diaper weighs ten pounds every morning), but I'll take it!

Excited to: have my kids out of school for the summer. I never thought I'd say that, but I'm actually looking forward to having them home for a few months.

(Seriously, who am I?)

Frustrated with: soooo  many things. I can't even tell you.

Burdened by: mucus. I have a sinus infection. I'll spare you the details.

Looking forward to: going camping in a few weeks. Assuming I can. Portions of my life are on hold until my abdomen pain is resolved.

Thankful for: my home.







Tuesday, May 15, 2018

This Week in Parenting

-1-

Nicky has been working on his Citizenship in the Nation merit badge. One of the requirements involves looking at the headlines in national news every day. Because of this, we've had to have many talks with him about things like politics, sexual abuse, North Korea, sex ed, and gun violence.

I never knew I'd be so grateful for a volcano in Hawaii.

The volcano talk? I can handle that one.

-2-

Last night Eva kept asking me a question, and I couldn't understand her. She was so frustrated with me, so I finally said, "Yes," having no idea what I was agreeing to. She then ran upstairs to Zoe yelling, "She said yes!" (That was a little bit terrifying).

A minute later, Eva started screaming like she'd been hurt, so I went to see what happened.

Apparently, the question she was asking was, "Me teenager?" and I said, "Yes." I guess she and Zoe had been arguing about whether Eva was a teenager, and Zoe was adamant that Eva was not a teenager, so Eva came to me for back up. When I asked Zoe why she punched Eva in the face, she yelled,"BECAUSE EVA IS NOT A TEENAGER! SHE DOESN'T EVEN HAVE A DRIVERS LICENSE!!!"

Alrighty then.


-3-

Nicky has been getting trouble lately for mouthing off. He can be a little sassy pants, and he is quite defensive. I got after him last night for speaking disrespectfully to his dad, so he told me that he wants to have his voice box removed because that's the only way he can control what he says.


-4-


This morning I noticed one of Zoe's nightgowns peeking out of Scotty's sock drawer. Upon further inspection, I discovered that Zoe has been moving her stuff into our room bit by bit - as if she can do it slowly over time and we won't notice. When we asked her about it, she confirmed that yes, she has been slowly trying to take over our room. Eva is in on it, too.

I read in a parenting book recently that if your children rule your bedroom, they rule your life. Hmm...



Monday, May 14, 2018

Birthday Posters - The Rest of 'Em

A couple weeks ago I did my final birthday poster for the school year. It's always a relief to get the May poster hung and to walk out of the school knowing that I have a three month break ahead of me. I do experience a little bit of guilt over the summer birthdays that don't get acknowledged, but since my birthday is January 1st (a holiday and close to Christmas and a date that usually didn't get me any recognition at school) my overall attitude is "suck it up, it's not the end of the world."

You can see the first half of the year's posters in this post

Here are the rest:

January


I always thought Olaf would be very simple to make, but he is surprisingly detailed. Love that little guy! 

February


This was the second time I've been able to do a winter Olympic-themed poster, so I've been doing this a while! It didn't look as good as I hoped. 

March


Couldn't pass up a chance to do a Greatest Showman theme. 


April


May



Saturday, May 12, 2018

A Few Inconveniences

When the three-year-old helps herself to the container of strawberries...


When a straw goes through the bottom of the styrofoam cup the day after I clean out the cup holders...


When the five-year-old insists that I provide booster seats for her stuffed animals...


When I sit on a Milk Dud, and I don't notice it's stuck to my pants until I've already been out in public...



Friday, May 11, 2018

Things We've Done Lately

Went on a mock vacation to Park City

My sister-in-law invited us to stay in Park City with her last weekend. We were only able to stay one night since I needed to be back for some church things on Sunday, but it was really fun and really nice to get away from home for a night. The kids had a blast playing in the pool and hanging out in the condo. We were pretty lazy, and it was awesome.

The biggest source of entertainment was the shoe tree. It kept my kids (and Scotty) busy for over an hour as they plotted ways to get shoes down from the tree so they could throw them back up into the tree.




The kids did some crafts, and we walked around Main Street. It wasn't very busy so we were able to ride the trolley (which was very exciting for our little Daniel Tiger fans).




Ate at a real restaurant... 
with a server and everything

A few years ago, as we tried to implement regular family scripture study, we started a "family store." Each time we read scriptures as a family, we would give our kids a marble. Then at the first Family Home Evening of each month, we would bring out the "family store" - a box of dollar store crap and treats that our kids could buy with their marbles. This worked really well, and our kids loved it, but I got tired of having cheap junk all over the house (something that will never go away, but why should I be the one providing it?) so after a couple of years, we told our kids we weren't going to do the family store anymore, and instead, we would do a fun outing or have a special treat every time we finish a book in the Book of Mormon.

Since the book of Alma is really long, we wanted to do something "bigger" when we finished Alma. The kids, of course, thought this meant we could go to Disneyland. Um... no. But I wish. We finsihed Alma recently, and Scotty and I decided to take the kids to dinner at Texas Roadhouse for our celebration.

Just a side note: Kids meals at Texas Roadhouse cost no more than kids meals at Chick-Fil-A. My three-year-old ate STEAK, mashed potatoes, and bottomless rolls for the price of chicken nuggets. In fact, my meal only cost a dollar more than the combo meal I like at Chick-Fil-A since we got the "before 6 p.m." dinner deal.

Anyway... taking kids to a restaurant is always risky, but our kids were so good! Sure there were moments of crawling under the table and there was some very loud commentary about the progress of Zoe's bowel movement in the bathroom, but overall, our kids were pretty well-behaved and the country music was just loud enough to drown out the worst of their noise. We realized that it's been a really long time since we ate at a sit-down restaurant with our kids. In fact, every time our server came to that table, Eva would say, "Who's that?" or "Why he here?" She had no concept of being served food in a restaurant, and she was really confused.

Put on a concert

For the past couple of years, Scotty has played bass in a band. Sometimes the band puts on basement concerts. It's a fun event with lots of friends and family of all ages. Scotty's brother came for the first time, and afterward he said, "That was awesome! I wish I would have brought my kids, but I thought there would be marijuana."


There was no marijuana.

Just music, popcorn, glow sticks, hand sanitizer, and a fog machine.

Worked on scout stuff

Scotty, Nicky, and I decided we would try to get Nicky's Eagle as soon as possible because we thought the LDS Church might drop their sponsorship of the BSA within the next few years. We've been checking out merit badge books from the library and signing up for classes in the community. Now the end date has been announced: December 31, 2019. I'm actually really happy about the change, but I'm also glad they gave us enough time to meet some goals before the transition.


Dealt with snow

We are eleven days into May, and there hasn't been any snow. Phew! But during April, we got a few bizarre weather patterns where we had almost 80 degree weather one day and snow the next. I couldn't even get out of the neighborhood because the traffic was so bad from the storms.



 Went on a date

I already wrote about our experience seeing Hamilton, but what I didn't tell you was that we started the night really early. We went out for cheese steaks and cheesecakes!



And then we found some seats on Main Street in downtown Salt Lake City, and we just sat there for an hour. Because we could.

We got to the theater about 45 minutes before the show started (I wanted to be in my seat as early as possible so I could just enjoy being there). The doors opened 30 minutes before the show, so we used the extra time to get some photos, use the bathroom, and check out the merchandise.

I wish Scotty and I could go on more dates. They don't all have to be this fancy. But right now we hardly ever see each other. It's not a good thing. 








Wednesday, May 9, 2018

15 Topics in 15 Years

Fifteen years ago today, Scotty and I said "I do."

(Actually, that's not true because our wedding ceremony didn't include that exact wording, but suffice it to say that by the end of the day, everything was tidy and legal, and we were stuck together in all of the official ways).

We hoped that we would be able to do something special for this anniversary (15 years is a good excuse to do something fun), but it just isn't in the cards (see #3 below). The good news is that we have five years to start planning something great for our twentieth (ha!)

(Now please imagine a picture of Scotty and me together posted here. Perhaps we are looking at each other, laughing candidly. A twinkle in each of our eyes. This picture does not exist outside of anyone's imagination, so try to hold it there a while...)

(Keep holding...)

(Look how happy we are!)

(Wait for it...)

(Don't you want to be us?)

(Just a little longer...)

(Okay, you may release the image).

In honor of our fifteenth anniversary, here are 15 things that Scotty and I talk about all the time:

Topic #1: What we see on Instagram

We have very, very different Instagram feeds. Scotty follows a bunch of people he doesn't know. His Instagram is full of food, travel, and sports. I only follow people I know personally (with the exception of Fallon, Jackman, Timberlake, and Underwood). At the end of the day, we have lots to talk about.

Topic #2: The shapes of our heads

When we were young and skinny, we joked about how I had a "hamburger" head and Scotty had a "hot dog" head. Sometimes I wonder if I had an exaggerated image of Scotty's long, skinny face, but then I look back at photos, and I am shocked at how truly narrow his head and face used to be.

Scotty and I stand in front of the mirror a lot and talk about our head shapes and how they have changed. I'm still a "hamburger" head, but the bun has gotten thicker. Scotty is no longer a "hot dog" head, but I still take every opportunity to call him one because I think it's funny.

Topic #3: Vacations we can't actually go on

We have a really big list of places we'd like to go but probably never will. Scotty likes to type in scenarios on Get Away Today, just for fun. I like to look at flights I'll never go on.

Topic #4: Things that bug us

This is probably something we should spend less time talking about, especially lately... because there are a lot of things bugging us.

Topic #5: Our ten-year plan

In about ten years, we will hit some pretty big milestones. Our kids will start entering adulthood which means college, missions, and weddings. We've tried to be proactive in planning for these things, but we'll see... part of me thinks the world can't possibly last another ten years, and if it does, we'll be living in an underground bunker. But it's good to have a plan just in case.

Note to self: add underground bunker to ten-year plan.

Topic #6: Things we want to do to our house

The list is long, but there's never enough time or money. Just today I asked Scotty if he would put an outlet in a particular spot in the living room. He said yes, and then I said, "Well, I can wait, like, twenty years. No rush." Because really...

Topic #7: Moving

This is actually something that I try to talk about a lot, but Scotty shuts me right down. Moving is not part of our ten-year plan, but for my own peace of mind, I have to entertain the idea every now and then and see if I'm still where I belong.

Topic #8: The calendar

We have a family meeting every Sunday night where we go over our calendar for the week. Without this conversation, we are completely lost and dysfunctional.

Topic #9: Our bed

Anytime we spend a night away from our bed, we come home and talk about how much we love our bed. Here's the truth about our bed: we sleep on a mattress that we bought for $25 from a hotel that was remodeling. It has a ten-year-old memory foam mattress topper on it that has huge chunks missing from our children and our cat (may he rest in peace).* There is no new mattress in our ten-year plan. Why ruin a good thing?

But really, after fifteen years, we are still living primarily on hand-me-downs and second-hand purchases. This is not what I envisioned my life would be like at this point, and yet, there's nothing wrong with it. Nineteen year old me would have died if she'd seen what my life is like now!

Topic #10: How lazy we want to be

We make a lot of comments to each other about how we don't want to be parents "today" or how we just want to stay in bed and watch TV. I'll have you know, though, we have never stayed in bed and watched TV all day, and we parent our children daily despite our lack of motivation. It may not be quality parenting, but it is parenting nonetheless.

Topic # 11: Vasectomies

Scotty and I talk about vasectomies ALL THE TIME.

ALL. THE. TIME.

My friends can attest to this. In fact, raise your hand if I've talked to you about vasectomies in the past six months.

See?

Topic #12: Church re-caps

Since we spend at least two hours in entirely different areas of the church each Sunday (I'm in primary and Scotty is in Young Men) we give a full report after church each week.

Topic #13: What I bought at the store

I'm also always recounting everything I buy at the store. This especially includes stuff I get a good deal on, like when ClickList is out of something, and they substitute something bigger and better to make up for it! Woot woot!

Topic #14: What the "bros" are up to

Scotty spends time with a couple of friends throughout the week. They do some side jobs, play basketball, and... who knows what else. So I get updates on the bros. Things like, "Today Mark send me a twelve minute Marco Polo of his dog staring at a hamster."

Topic #15: How fat we are

I try really hard to not use the "f" word, but can I be honest for a second? Scotty and I are blown away by how fat we are. We don't know how it happened. We just woke up like this one day!

----

We've had a wonderful fifteen years together. Here's hoping we're still willing to share an underground bunker after fifteen more.
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Just for fun, here are links to my past anniversary posts:


Fourteen

*I feel like I should clarify that my cat's death was unrelated to the claw marks he left in our memory foam. 



Thursday, May 3, 2018

If My Kids Were Characters


Nicky:

A little on the mopey side. Often steps aside at school and scouts to let the more dominant personalities have their way. Easily overlooked. Feels picked on for being the only boy in the family. 
 When he's happy, he's really really happy! But when he's sad, he's really really sad.

Daisy:

Stubborn and sassy. Will argue about anything. Acts out to get attention. A bit of a diva who loves having people do stuff for her. 
 Difficult at home but very well-behaved everywhere else. Teacher's pet.

Zoe:

Spunky and silly. Always moving. Always up to something. Has big ideas. Makes really big messes. 
 Does not like to wear socks.  

Eva:

Not a baby anymore but not a big kid either. Still little and cute but has her own ideas and opinions. 
Never likes to leave my side. Peed on the floor at Smith's today.