Sunday, February 28, 2021
Three Books that Made Me Feel the Spirit of Elijah
Thursday, February 25, 2021
One of My Kids
One of my kids flips off their siblings all the time.
One of my kids yells "cannibalism" when they jump off things.
One of my kids sings and dances like Rick Astley. All. Day. Long.
One of my kids won't stop saying "ass."
One of my kids wears the same clothes everyday.
One of my kids picks their nose so much that they have sores around their nostrils.
One of my kids is constantly badgering us about every COVID precaution we should be taking.
One of my kids won't flush the toilet when they poop.
One of my kids won't flush the toilet or wipe when they poop.
One of my kids is obsessed with The Simpsons and is always trying to sneak-watch it.
One of my kids claws their siblings and leaves scars.
One of my kids currently has a ten-inch scratch on their forearm from the clawing kid. The clawing kid had skin under their fingernails from that one.
One of my kids always farts on their siblings.
One of my kids is going through a High School Musical phase.
One of my kids has horrendous tantrums almost every night at bedtime and keeps breaking the doors in our house.
One of my kids has gross stuff inside their mask everyday (food... boogers... blood...)
One of my kid’s feet stink so bad we make them keep their shoes in the garage.
One of my kids likes to stick a shoelace in their ear. Wait no. That’s Scotty! Now I know where my kids get it all from!
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
Sick Days and Counterfeit Energy
Yesterday Zoe had some sniffles, so I kept her home from school.
One crazy thing about this past year of masks and COVID is that we have not been sick. I remember on March 12 of last year, I bought some cold and flu medicine. It's funny how I can remember the dates - it was a Thursday, the day after the WHO declared the pandemic, and our governor was having an afternoon press conference that I feared would cause people to panic shop, so what did I do? Spent the morning panic shopping so I wouldn't get caught in the afternoon panic shopping rush. Anyway, the store was limiting the purchase of cold and flu products, so I bought the maximum four - two for kids and two for adults, and until yesterday, they remained on the shelf of my storage room, coated in dust. In a "healthy" winter, I go through two bottles of cold medicine a month for the kids at minimum. Yet, here we've gone nearly a year without touching any.
I don't want to jinx anything, but I'm putting it out there... We have not been sick like we have been in any year past. I know many people who say the same, and I've heard a lot of teachers and school staff state that they haven't been sick. It's pretty wild.
Anyway, having Zoe home from school was quite the experience. By 9:00 a.m. she was bored and trying to convince me to take her to school. Eva has afternoon kindergarten, so she was home with Zoe for the first few hours of the day. Then when Eva left for school, Zoe got even more bored. I let her paint, and I read to her for a while, then I let her play Minecraft. But she was pretty unamused about staying home.
She followed me around for a lot of the time and talked my ear off. She asked question after question.
"Mom? Is Snoop Dogg a robot?"
"Wanna see me stand on my head?"
"What time is it?"
"How do artists know how to paint fruit bowls?"
"Can I teach you how to play Minecraft?"
"Where does blue come from?"
"What about brown?"
"Do we have any finger paint?"
"Is it time for Daisy to come home from school yet?"
"What if a YouTube star moved into Grandma's neighborhood?"
"How much longer til school gets out?"
"Why do fairies have pointy ears?"
She exhausted me to the point of doing something I've never done before. I drank a 5-hour energy.
Now, I'm no stranger to caffeine, but I haven't had soda since Labor Day of last year, and I've never really had an energy drink. So I was excited to see how my body would respond to the shock of a 5-hour energy. Scotty and I bought a couple of 5-hour energy drinks to keep us awake for New Year's Eve, but we ended up not using them. So when exhaustion washed over me as I tried to navigate a day alone with Zoe, I remembered that I had a 5-hour energy on top of the fridge, and I went for it.
That? Was one nasty dose of juice, I'll tell you what. I chugged it down, and then I writhed for ten seconds in disgust. Ho. Ly. Cow. And the noises that came out of me, "Blech. Agh! Oof!"
Nasty. Nasty. Nasty.
After I drank it, I sat on the couch and waited for the magic to happen. My stomach made some really horrible noises. Was it the 5-hour energy or the awful Panda Express lunch I regretted treating myself to on the way back from the dentist? I'll never know. But thank heavens I wasn't out in public because my gut sounded like a creaky door hinge.
Nothing amazing happened. I stayed tired, but I managed to NOT fall asleep flat on my face. Is that it? Is that all I get after stomaching the most non-strawberry tasting, strawberry flavored liquid known to man?
Or maybe... just maybe... it had a delayed effect. Because I listened to three hours of an audiobook last night while laying in bed. Normally I can listen to fifteen minutes tops before I’m dozing. So perhaps my 1:00 pm dose of 5-hour energy activated around 9:00 last night.
Monday, February 22, 2021
It's Not So Bad
Today so far:
I woke up with a feeling of something in my eye. I can't find anything in my eye, and I'm on hour three of that uncomfortable sensation, so I've probably scratched my eyeball or my eyelid somehow.
I have a sick kid home from school.
My hair is caked in a film, making me wonder if I forgot to rinse out the conditioner (something I do more than I care to admit).
I have a dentist appointment this morning. That will be fun with my sore, watery eyeball.
I also have a mysterious bump that I'm hoping is not a staph infection or cellulitis. I'm a little paranoid of bacterial infections after Scotty had to have a staph infection cut out of his leg in 2012, and Daisy spent four days in the emergency room with cellulitis in 2018. Mysterious bumps are bad news. Avoid them at all costs.
But all is well. It's just a weird morning so far.
Yesterday for "home primary" I had my kids watch the Friend to Friend broadcast that the church released on Saturday. My kids have never been very agreeable when it comes to church broadcasts, so I anticipated their resistance and a lot of whining. I never thought we'd make it through the entire 45 minutes. To my astonishment, they were totally into it!
Eva and Zoe love to read the Friend magazine on the toilet. I hung a magazine rack on the wall, and they always pull the laundry hamper up to the toilet like a desk and flip through magazines.
Part of what held their interest during the Friend to Friend broadcast was that they talked about so many things from the last few issues of the Friend magazine. Zoe repeatedly said, "I saw that in the Friend!" Then she was excited to show me all the things from the broadcast in her magazines. "See, Mom, this is the boy that we saw on TV. Here is the rock art like the lady made on TV." It was fun to see her recognize those things and express enthusiasm over them.
Part of the Friend to Friend included learning how to draw a picture of a child praying. Again, my kids were totally into it! They drew praying children all day yesterday.
It was one of those small parenting victories that made me feel like maybe things aren't so bad. We've really had some struggles with Zoe and Eva lately, so I'm so grateful for a small "win."
Thursday, February 18, 2021
How I Read
As you know, I like to read. I didn't always enjoy reading, though. There are some books from childhood that I loved and read over and over again, and I did have a fondness for The Babysitters Club at an age when I definitely had to keep it secret from my peers, but for the most part, I really wasn't a reader until I was in my twenties.
For this reason, I have to be patient with my kids for not being readers even though it tears me apart. I always thought that if kids grew up seeing their parent read, they would naturally become readers. It didn't work for us.
I go through spurts where I don't really feel like reading, I can't focus, or I don't enjoy anything I start reading. I've never been able to read while pregnant, and it takes about nine months post-partum for me to start reading again. When I was in school from 2014-2017, I didn't enjoy reading for leisure because I had to read so much for school. So there are occasionally times when I don't read regularly, but when I'm in my groove, I read 2-3 books a week.
I'm often asked how I'm able to read so many books. It's something I think about a lot. I worry sometimes that I'm not spending my time wisely by reading as much as I do. I've wondered if maybe I should make a "one book per week" rule or something, but there's a part of me that thinks, "No! That's ridiculous! If you want to read, just read."
I realize that I'm spoiled for having enough time to read, but at the same time, we all have something we naturally make time for, and for me it's reading. So yeah... I read a lot. But some people exercise a lot. Or clean a lot. Or run a lot of errands. Or watch Tik Tok. Or scour the news. We all have things that we squeeze into the cracks of our day, so I can easily look at someone else and wonder how they have time for "such and such." In truth, we usually have time for what we make time for. We just choose differently. Now, granted, right now my life is pretty simple and slow. I don't have a lot going on, so I really do have excess time to read. I'm not volunteering at the school, I'm not taking any classes, my church callings are on hold, and I don't work. So I confess, I have more time than a lot of people do... just don't tell anyone. I'm cherishing this life while it lasts, and I don't need anyone messing with the beautiful boredom that I've been enjoying this past year.
Secret simple life aside, here are some of the ways I fit reading into my days:
1. Audiobooks
I admit, audiobooks aren't my favorite way to "read." I have a hard time focusing (could it be that I'm a poor listener?), and I struggle a little bit with comprehension because of it. So I have to opt for simpler audiobooks, and they have to really hold my attention.
But audiobooks are perfect for my current phase of life! This is one way to sneak in some reading without guilt because I can get a lot done during an audiobook. I often listen to books while I'm cleaning, while I'm driving, and while I'm doing mild exercise (like walking or lifting weights). In fact, I'm more productive when I have a good audiobook to listen to.
I used to think that listening to audiobooks was cheating, but now that I've gotten more accustomed to it, I no longer feel that way. Listening is different from reading, but it requires its own set of skills, and I think it makes you a better reader. It's true for kids. Why wouldn't it be true for adults, too?
I usually have an audiobook in process at all times. I listen to them at increased speed. I generally start out at 1.25x, depending on which app I'm using (my most common audiobook apps are Overdrive, Audible, and Deseret Bookshelp Plus), and up the speed as I get acclimated to listening. The speed really just depends on how well I can focus.
2. Speed reading
I can read pretty fast, and I've adopted some speed reading techniques over time (hand pacing and slightly decreased subvocalization). I don't use those techniques with everything, though, as I don't want to be completely sloppy. I can't speed read with fantasy, sci-fi, or classic literature because I need to really focus and take it in slowly to understand what's going on (and then I still don't always get it).
3. Time pockets for reading
I have a lot of 10-15 minute time pockets in my day when I can fit in some reading. I usually wake up a bit earlier than I have to, so I will lay in bed for a few minutes and read. I read in the car while I'm waiting for kids to come out of school. I read in waiting rooms. I read while I'm waiting for water to boil or the Instant Pot to depressurize. I read while Eva is in the bath. I read in between helping my kids with their distance learning - that way I'm at the table with them while they do school.
(I have a friend who reads while blow drying her hair. I haven't figured out how to do that).
I see reading as something I can start and stop without difficulty, so it's a little easier for me to read a few pages of a book than it is for me to start doing dishes and have to stop after three minutes.
The bulk of my reading is done at night. Scotty always goes to sleep an hour or more before I do, so I read after he falls asleep until I'm ready to fall asleep myself. Sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night, so I read until I can fall back asleep. Just this morning I read from about 2:00-3:00. I don't feel like it prevents me from falling back asleep. In fact, I think it helps. Reading while laying down makes me sleepy.
I've yet to drop a book on my face, but it will happen someday.
4. Making it a reward
Sometimes I play a little game where I alternate between 30 minutes of cleaning (or any other kind of productivity) and 30 minutes of reading (or the like). I use reading as my reward. "If you load the dishwasher, you can read for 20 minutes!" (and let's be honest, I'll probably listen to an audiobook while I'm doing the dishes, too!)
So that's how I make reading work for me. When asked how I'm able to read so much, the shortest and truest answer is... I choose to. And no one should feel like they need to do the same. I enjoy reading, so it's easy for me to sneak it in. Hopefully you find little pockets of time to do what you love, too!
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Lest You Think I Play the Piano
One of my life's biggest regrets is not learning how to properly play the piano.
I tried. I took lessons for a minute when I was five. Then when I was 21, I started taking lessons again. I ended up having to quit after about a year to accommodate my job.
When I was growing up, the organist at our church told me that she learned how to play the piano when she was 27. I always thought that was really cool because it showed that you can learn new things at any phase of life. I kept brushing aside my lack of piano skills, saying I would wait til 27 like Sister Madsen. Then 27 came and went, and I never learned how to really play the piano.
Despite my lack of piano lessons, in the years between 5 and 21, I still played the piano a lot. Without formal training, I came up with my own methods and developed a lot of bad habits that I couldn't unlearn when I started taking lessons at 21. As a teenager I learned a lot of the easier hymns by playing them the way I heard them. I relied on the written music to help me memorize them, but I couldn't actually read music. I would have to count the lines to figure out which notes I was supposed to play, and then I would practice them over and over until muscle memory allowed me to get through the song. I didn't know proper fingering or timing, and if I messed up, I could never get back on track without starting over. I was able to hack my way through prelude a couple of times for Young Women and seminary, and I tried to accompany from time to time, but I never got to the point where I could play well with people singing other than a couple instances of "Choose the Right."
Since I regret not learning to play the piano, I'm forcing my kids to take piano lessons. I told them they can quit when I can open the hymn book to a random song, and they can play it. Unfortunately, none of them are very good at piano, so after years of lessons, no one is close to being set free.
At this point in life, I don't know that I want to try and learn to play the piano again, but I'll never say never! I know a woman in her 50's who just started taking lessons a couple of years ago. Perhaps she'll be my new motivator. At least that way I can keep procrastinating for another 13 years.
Monday, February 15, 2021
Hey, Butter Butter!
Throughout the pandemic, we've been given quite a bit of food. There are a lot of places around here that give out free food to help ease the burden the pandemic has taken on families. My family has been fortunate to not experience that need, however, we still frequently become beneficiaries of the food. I feel guilty, so I try to utilize the food well and do my part to give back to the organizations that are helping out in the community.
Our neighbor volunteers at a food pantry in a different county sometimes, and at the end of the day, he gets sent home with a lot of leftover food. Several times in the past year, he has shown up at our house with a cooler full of stuff. It's been such a wonderful blessing, but it's also been pretty funny because we've been given some very unusual items - like 24 boxes of Triscuits and 10 lbs of dried cherries. It definitely gives me the opportunity to be creative.
Last week our neighbor brought us a gallon of heavy cream. We put it in the fridge, and I planned a few menu items for the coming week that call for a half cup here or there, but I worried we’d have to throw the rest out (it was two days from the recommended “use by” date).
In the middle of the night on Friday, I suddenly remembered that I know how to make butter. Several years ago, the cost of butter was really high (as a former dairy employee, I have a habit of watching the fluctuating prices of dairy products and eggs), so I bought a bunch of heavy cream on closeout for 20¢ a pint after Thanksgiving, and I made my own butter and froze it. We used homemade butter for nearly a year.
The other night I got really excited when I realized I could make butter. I could use the whole gallon of cream! How resourceful! How domestic! Plus, I recently bought a Blendtec which would be superior to the Ninja I formerly made butter in.
Since I couldn't run the blender in the middle of the night, I got straight to work early Saturday morning (right after eating a fabulous breakfast sandwich that utilized some of the ten pounds of American cheese a different neighbor brought us) (seriously with the food! Remember the bananas of five weeks ago?) (no complaints here... just awe at the food that comes our way).
I made the butter in the Blendtec. It didn't do as well as I thought it would - in fact, it was quite touchy with the cream, and I had to pulse and stir a lot more than I ever did in my Ninja.
It got the job done, though. Nicky was intrigued and wanted to try making some of his own butter in a shaker bottle.
I ended up with three pounds of butter, and I also made a batch of honey cinnamon butter.
I separated the buttermilk and froze it in 1/2 cups portions. I saved some cream to set aside for banana pudding.
It's actually pretty fun to make butter, so I'm glad I thought to do it. It's thrilling when it finally becomes "butter." It happens so quickly! One second it's cream, and then BAM! It separates into butter and buttermilk, and it makes me feel powerful. "I told this cream to be butter, and it obeyed."
Nicky was pretty proud of his butter, too. We used his to make grilled cheese sandwiches... with the aforementioned cheese.
The whole process, with everything I made, took about an hour and a half from start to finish. I thought, "Hey, that's not too bad!" until I remembered that I bought four pounds of butter from Sam's Club last week for $6.98. Making homemade butter isn't such a money saver when butter is that cheap. So basically, I worked at the rate of $5 per hour, and then my dear hubs spent a half an hour cleaning up after me.
I'll just keep telling myself that is was so much fun because you can't put a price on fun!
Sunday, February 14, 2021
Five Things I Learned in Young Women
1. I learned how to cook
2. I learned how to play sports
3. I learned how to sing and lead music
4. I learned how to lead and teach
5. I learned how to pray
Valentine's Day Countdown
Thursday, February 11, 2021
Back to School Book 2: The Outsiders
After reading The Scarlet Letter, I wanted to choose something a little easier for my next book. I decided to go with The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton.
My first encounter with anything "Outsiders" was in 7th grade. The girl I sat in front of in math class kept a copy of The Outsiders on her desk, and as we started talking and getting to know each other, she told me she liked to carry the book around with her because the boys on the cover were hot. Lynsie remains one of my best friends to this day (though she no longer carries a copy of The Outsiders around with her... that I know of...)
That same school year, we ended up reading The Outsiders for English class.
Plot-wise, if you were to ask me a month ago what The Outsiders is about, I would have said, "There are some kids with weird names, and they get in fights." I didn't remember the nature of the fights or anything else about the story, so reading it again was like reading it for the first time.
First off, I have to say that there's no question as to why this book is so well-loved and iconic. I definitely didn't appreciate it as a teen, but as an adult, I can better pick up on the depth of the characters and the themes in the writing.
Secondly, I'm in awe at the fact that S.E. Hinton started writing The Outsiders when she was fifteen years old.
FIFTEEN.
I mean... c'mon! I'm double her age +7, and I can hardly craft a photo caption that's worthy of note. The girl had a gift! (Her name is Susan, if you're wondering).
Anyway, what is there to say about The Outsiders? To put it simply, I really liked it. I found Ponyboy to be quite endearing. His relationship with both Sodapop (his brother) and Johnny (his friend) is very sweet, though I think he'd prefer me to say "tuff." He radiates goodness without perfection, and I always appreciate that in a character. There is still complexity in him, as there is with all of the characters in The Outsiders.
After finishing the book, I had to also watch the movie! We watched the movie after reading the book in English class, and clearly it didn't help solidify the story in my memory. The only thing I remembered about the movie was Emilio Estevez in a Mickey Mouse shirt.
It was fun to watch the movie and see all of the young actors - Patrick Swayze as Ponyboy's older brother, Darry. Rob Lowe as the notably good looking Sodapop. Ralph Macchio as Johnny (pre-Karate Kid). And even Tom Cruise as the incredibly annoying, insignificant character, Steve.
(Side fact: Ralph Macchio was 22 when he filmed The Outsiders and The Karate Kid. He plays a 16-year-old in The Outsiders, but he doesn't look a day older than 12!)
Now that I've read the book and watched the movie, I have to say, The Outsiders is probably the truest movie based on a book that I've ever seen. S.E. Hinton owns the rights to the movie and says there will never be a remake, and I'm glad for that!
Now that I'm two books into this goal of reading 10 books from my school days, I'm feeling pretty pumped and excited about what I'm going to read next (I haven't picked yet). I have a list of possibilities on my phone that just keeps getting longer. There is much reading to do!
Wednesday, February 10, 2021
A Tale of Two Bathrooms
One challenging thing about having Scotty work from home for the last year is that he works in our bedroom, so I'm always sneaking around in the background of his virtual meetings trying to retrieve clothes and shoes or put away laundry. Scotty also works in very close proximity to the bathroom, so anytime I take a shower or flush the toilet, I have to be mindful of the presence of his co-workers, lest some Church employee in Brazil hear my restroom sounds.
Blow drying my hair needs to be planned around Scotty's conference calls... which he has ALL DAY LONG. Today I took my blow dryer to the downstairs bathroom so I wouldn't disturb Scotty. I don't like going to the downstairs bathroom because A) my supplies aren’t down there, and B) that bathroom stinks and always has (I think it's in the floor under the toilet, and someday we need to rip everything out and renovate. Until then... pew).
Even though I don't like using the downstairs bathroom, I’m grateful we have it.
When I was growing up and dividing time between my mom's house and my dad's house, each of them only had one bathroom. My mom lived in a really small house - small enough that our fridge blocked some of the cupboards, and we had to turn sideways to squeeze between the fridge and the oven to get to the hallway. The single bathroom had to accommodate five people.
At my dad's house, we had anywhere between 8-11 people living at a time and sharing one bathroom. Whenever we took road trips, we would spend the last half hour of the trip negotiating who got to use the bathroom in which order when we got home. I developed a habit of going outside to pee behind the garage when I was little, and one time, my step-sister and I thought it would be a genius idea to start using the toilet in the camping trailer. Our parents weren't very happy when they unexpectedly found the septic tank hosting our weeks' worth of urine. We had other non-conventional ways of relieving ourselves that I can't exactly write about on the internet. Suffice it to say, in a house of seven kids with one bathroom, desperation results in creativity.
Eventually my dad installed an extra toilet in the laundry room. It wasn't ever a "bathroom," though. It was just an unfinished basement (used as a bedroom) with a toilet, washer, and dryer in it. No sink. No bathtub. No walls. No door. Eventually my dad built a wall on one side, and I think we might have hung a sheet on the other, but pretty much anytime you used the downstairs toilet, you ran the risk of anyone in the family walking in on you. And heaven help you if you ever had to do a number two. My dad was always lecturing us about the size of poops that the basement toilet could handle. It was never worth the risk.
When I was 12, my dad moved to a house with three bathrooms... just in time for everyone to start moving out. My mom moved to a house with two bathrooms when I was 15. A few years later, Scotty and I got married and moved into a one-bathroom house for a while. Then we lived with his mom for three months, who also had one bathroom.
Now we've lived happily for 17 years (our house-iversary was February 1st) in our humble, two-bathroom home, and even though one of those bathrooms smells like an outhouse, we know we are experiencing the greatest of luxuries... multiple restrooms! With walls! And doors!
Tuesday, February 9, 2021
My Little Groundhog
Thank heaven it was to her satisfaction, because she never would have relented if I hadn't made her dream come true. She insisted that I make her an extra mask in case the first one broke, so I obliged and sent her off to school with buck teeth and a spare.
This is one case where masks came in very handy... they allowed an easy solution to my daughter's need to be a groundhog for a day. And that is a small glimpse of life with Zoe.
Monday, February 8, 2021
And Then it Snowed Dirt
Wednesday, February 3, 2021
Currently {February 2021 Edition}
Reading: The Law of Moses by Amy Harmon (which is a novel, not a book about the Old Testament - lest you be confused).
Buying: Only what we need. I've been keeping the budget pretty tight lately in an effort to get some money saved up. I feel like I've been living this restricted lifestyle for so long, and yet, it's just been a month. Any day now, I'm going to climb out a bedroom window and take the bus to Costco to spend $1,000. I could use the door and drive myself, but there's something about a window and a bus that satisfies my internal need for rebellion.
Things I'm not buying but find tempting:
Craving: egg rolls. I've been on a Chinese food kick lately. Can't stop. Won't stop.
Listening to: a few Y Religion podcasts. They're a little bit boring, to be honest, and I rarely get through the whole thing (I usually skip segment 3), but I listen to them sometimes because I like the research.
Trying: to stay caught up on the reading for Come Follow Me. It's been really nice studying the Doctrine and Covenants because I don't get overwhelmed by the amount of reading each week. Sometimes I even read through it two or three times!
Wanting: a new wreath for my living room because this ol' thing stabs people in the head when they sit under it.
Annoyed by: people who park on the street to pick their kids up from school and leave a big gap between their car and the car behind them, but not a big enough gap for someone to park there.
Playing: Lots and lots of Wingspan. Between the board game and the Nintendo Switch, I probably played thirty times while we were quarantined. I won't tell you how many times I lost.
Feeling: weird. I'm trying to figure out how to get back to "normal" after having my kids home for so long. They had 17 days of winter break, then went to school for five days, then had another week off school, then two weeks of quarantine. Now that they're finally back at school, I'm trying to figure out what my life is supposed to be like.
Struggling with: relationships. I have joked that 2021 is a year for damaged relationships because I've had some really awkward and/or weird things happen with other people thus far.
Procrastinating: changing my blog banner from Christmas.
Wearing: My favorite pants and a black hoodie.
Eating: honey sesame chicken from Citrus Pear. I tried a new thing and signed up for a freezer meal prep class, and then I wasn't able to go because we were quarantined. But luckily, my friend was able to bring all of the stuff to me so I could assemble my meals at home. Filling my freezer with food was the only thing I did during quarantine that made me feel productive and somewhat normal.
Looking forward to: getting my hair cut tomorrow. I need a cut so bad! I had to cancel my prior appointment for quarantine.
Worried about: Daisy going to junior high. This week we had to decide whether to send her to junior high for 6th grade or keep her in elementary school (it's complicated), and any thought of sending her to junior high makes me physically ill. She wants to stay in elementary, so phew! I can put off that nightmare for another year.
Nicky will be going to high school next year, which is absolutely crazy to me! But I'm not nearly as worried about him as I am about Daisy.
We were thrown for a loop during our quarantine because we had to sign our kids up for next year's classes, and we weren't ready! Our kids weren't at school when they handed out the paperwork, so all of a sudden it was like, "Oh! And by the way, you were supposed to sign your kids up for school, like, yesterday."
The good news is, we were able to get Nicky registered to take his PE class right now so he will have more room in his schedule next year.
Grateful for: the tiny screwdrivers Cousin Cyndi gave me. I had to fix my laptop again this week, and they came in handy!