Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Spelling Homework

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Tonight while I was helping my 7 year old with her spelling homework:

#1: How do you spell “squares?”

Me: S-Q…

#1: U comes next, ‘cause Q and U are like, best friends…kinda like Britney Spears and Paris…

Me: {astonished} Hilton? {#1 nodding} Britney Spears and Paris Hilton!?! Who told you that?

#1: It was on the news.

Me: {uncontrollable loud laughter} Do you even know who those girls are?

#1: {nods and shrugs} Your hat fell off.

Me: You’re such a girl.


I honestly don’t know when she was watching the news—I haven’t even watched the news in the past couple days. I thought all she watched was PBS…I guess I don’t know it all! Is this true? Are B & P tight like that? I’m guess I’m not on top of my celebrity gossip.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Kiss the Glam Goodbye

kiss the glam goodbye

Here's the last installment of the "glam" theme. It's funny how some themes come naturally and some are such a challenge. (I guess that's the point of a self portrait challenge!)

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Nemesis

I am a pretty quiet person. As I have said before, and will say again, I am a peace seeker. I am pretty shy until I know you really well, and even then, if I am the center of several peoples’ attention, I feel very uncomfortable. Like when the candles are in front of me and everyone is singing that one song and snapping pictures, well, I’d like to hide under the table. I am a pretty good mom, if I do say so myself. I am a loving, and nurturing person, and I make a concerted effort to show love and acceptance to my children. I compliment them constantly. I am not telling you this to toot my own horn, but simply wondering if I undo the good aspects of my personality when my Nemesis overcomes me. Do I undo the love? Kinda like the Incredible Hulk, when all the sudden everything becomes too much and he turns green and huge and his clothes rip off and he goes on a rampage. Because sometimes at the end of the day I am tired. I have had enough. I need my peace back. And children never…NEVER want to go to sleep. When there have been too many people crying and whining and clinging and giving me unreasonable requests, there comes a point when my Nemesis takes over. No more Missy Nicegal. My voice becomes deeper and louder, and sometimes shouts escape my throat. My eyebrows move together into a furrow. My lips become a tight line with my jaw clenched. My chin moves toward my chest and the fingers become rigid, moving between fists and finger pointing. My hair is usually stringy at this point, and make up smudged giving the face a tired and evil cast. Instead of a loving mother, the Nemesis puts the children to bed. It’s sometimes as if they can’t go to sleep until the Nemesis has said goodnight in a gruff and final voice. I feel her coming on, and I push her back any way I can. Sometimes my voice is so fake and singsong I roll my eyes at myself. But I have survived the Nemesis for a few more moments. But I don’t win the fight every night. And when the Nemesis has put the children to bed, she stomps down the stairs and mutters to herself for several minutes. Then after several cleansing breaths and moments alone, the heart rate resumes, the fists slacken, the lips relax and the eyebrows rest above the eyes again. The Nemesis has relinquished her claim over me and I realize that my children have said goodnight to her instead of me. What if they get us confused? Did she destroy their healthy self esteems and soft innocence? Did she say anything that I would never dream of saying? Did she make them feel sad right before they enter dreamland? I hate the Nemesis.

www.sundayscribbings.blogspot.com

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Name That Song

The Rules:
1. Please DO NOT guess in the comment section. E-mail me (see my profile page for my e-mail address).
2. I really send a prize, so be honest and fair. (If you can sing it when you read the lyrics, you know it.)
3. Previous winners may still play.
4. Be the FIRST to e-mail me with the correct song title & artist and win.

Good Luck!

This month's lyric is:


She's a summer love in the spring, fall and winter
She can make happy any man alive

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Everyday Glam

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When one has three children, sometimes it is glam to feel fresh and clean after a piping hot shower. It doesn't take much!

more glam here.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

31 Things About Me

1. I have a bad memory
2. I am still in love with my husband
3. I was just served breakfast in bed
4. I have a bad temper
5. Usually people don’t believe that about me, but my husband could back me up
6. I can be completely content one moment, and something frustrates me and I am crying and questioning why life can be so hard
7. I have had to wear glasses/contacts since the 4th grade
8. I love where I live
9. I love mellow, soulful music
10. I rarely wear earrings—they make my ears sore
11. I make up for it by loving necklaces
12. I love the night sky
13. I recognize many constellations and usually am aware of which phase the moon is in on any given day
14. I believe in God, that He is the father of our spirits
15. I believe you can’t have a father with out a mother
16. I believe we lived with Them before we came to Earth and that we will live with Them again after we leave Earth
17. I love to snuggle
18. My children fill up my heart with love and affection and adoration
19. I love stripes on my children’s PJs
20. I love my barn/studio—it is a dream come true and I am surprised by the fruition of this blessing and satisfied every time I enter it
21. I feel the most ‘myself’ when I am creating something
22. I have wanted to be an artist for as long as I can remember
23. I still dream about becoming an artist
24. I got married when I was 20
25. I had my first child when I was 23
26. Most people think that’s very young, but I figure they must be thinking about themselves, because it has worked out beautifully for me, and I wouldn’t change a thing
27. I love reading
28. I love the ocean and am so grateful to live near it
29. When I have lived far away from the ocean, I felt a little panicky and felt like a piece of me was missing.
30. I eat chocolate every day…several times a day (does that make me an addict?)
31. Today is my 31st Birthday

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Pointalism

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A peek at a painting that I'm being commissioned to do for a Christmas card.

I love the smell of the paint. I love the farmiliar feel of the brush in my fingers and the sound it makes clinking against the glass when I'm rinsing out the color.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Chocolate Cake, Please.

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I have three more days of being 30. Last year was exciting, not traumatic like I thought it would be to exit the 20’s. I think the apprehension just was in hiding somewhere, because suddenly being 31 sounds so…strange. Am I where I pictured myself in my 30’s?

My mom hates aging—the aging process in general, and I’ve always been impatient with her about it. I think she’s beautiful. She looks unbelievable for a 50-something woman. But now I think I get it. She can’t picture herself as a 50-something woman. Now I can imagine being 50-something and thinking, wait, is this really me? When did this happen? I don’t FEEL 50-something. {It’s happening already! I don’t FEEL 30-something.}

But then there’s this whole other side of me that is so relieved to be 30-something. I am older and wiser than a decade ago. I have more confidence. I am comfortable in my own skin {most of the time}. I have more love in my life. I am better at expressing myself. I know that I still have a lot to learn (as opposed to thinking I know it all), and that’s not threatening, it’s exciting instead.

Deep breath.

This is good, right? I’ve heard the 30’s are great. I’m going to wrap my arms around it, and make sure it’s great.

I’m turning 31 on Saturday!! Bring on the cake!

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

It's about time...

breathing

My web page, www.cottageroaddesigns.com is up and running. Feel free to drop on in and have a look around!

SPC: Glam

Glam #2

Had a little more fun with it this week, although I got a couple looks from my kids...

www.selfportraitchallenge.net

Sunday, November 12, 2006

I don't want to be a passenger in my own life.

(a pep talk for myself)


Sit down.

Just put your hands on the wheel.

You know where you want to go—just
put your foot on the gas
and steer.

It’s no longer enough to watch out the window
and sing the songs

hum the tune.

There is beauty in watching;
in being carefree—
along for the ride.

But there is also
beauty
in taking control;

being in the driver’s seat.

Soon,
the feeling will become natural
and you will start to
compose your destination;

To command the wheel
while enjoying the ride.

Sunday Scribblings

Friday, November 10, 2006

Life Immerging

My mom was in town to help out while I was on bed rest. Two kids with a pregnant mom on bed rest is bad news. Thank goodness mothers have mothers who know that we always need our mom. I awoke in the morning and rolled over to my husband and said, “She’s coming today. Are you ready? I can feel it.” That afternoon, he accompanied me to my doctor appointment (for the first time in nine months). Of course, I cried when the doctor said no to my request of her to strip my membranes. After all I was very large and very hormonal and very sick of pregnancy. I longed to meet the person who was letting herself be known inside me. I longed to look into her eyes and welcome her into my life and into my family.

My doctor sent me to the hospital for some tests, (I had pregnancy-induced hypertension) and when the nurses released me to go home to rest in bed, I said, “I’ll see you in a few hours. She’s coming today. I can feel it.” They laughed and went on to the next hormonal woman.

The pains started in the store. We had stopped off to run an errand, and suddenly I was having to stop every few minutes and breathe through the pain. My patient husband stood with me and held me up. We continued shopping for a while—these things take time, you know (labor & delivery AND picking out new DVD players). By the time we arrived home, we were ready to call Auntie Jess to come watch the kids. (Part of the deal of having my mom help out assured a front row seat to her first live birthing experience.) Suddenly I felt a great urgency. I announced that we had to leave immediately, and off we went to the hospital.

I had been checked in, changed into my little gown, and had monitors on my belly to listen to the baby. I was getting the IV, and the nurse accidentally went right through my vein. She was considerate enough to only work on me when I was not in the middle of a contraction. Suddenly the contractions were one on top of the other. They got worse, and there wasn’t time in between them. All of a sudden alarms started sounding, and in came several nurses. The baby’s heart rate was dropping. They hastened the doctor on duty and I could tell that something was really wrong, because they stopped being nice to me. They started shouting directions at me, no matter that the contractions were unbearable. “Roll to your other side!” (This is quite hard to do when one is firstly nine months pregnant, and secondly in the middle of intense contractions!) “Get on your hands and knees!” (Believe me, that little gown slipped right off.) There I was on my hands and knees, completely naked, the alarms sounding loudly in the room, the doctors and nurses running in and out saying things like, “Prepare the O.R.!” “Get her doctor up here right away!” My husband had panic on his face. They told him that they were going to have to do an Emergency C-section, and they didn’t know if he would be able to be in the room or not. They threw a pair of scrubs and a mask at him and told him to change, just in case. The doctor reached up inside me hard and fast in the middle of my pain and broke my bag of waters. The warmth gushed out of me and puddled at my knees as I moaned. “Cover me,” I whispered. “Someone, please cover me.” (I can’t help it, I’m modest, and even though I was in the middle of a trauma, I didn’t feel like being nine months pregnant and naked on all fours!) My sweet mother came over and found a blanket and placed it gingerly over my trembling body, and I was so grateful.

They started rolling my bed to the O.R. and I tried to get from my hands and knees to my back when I realized we were in motion and going toward the hallway. I found myself praying, perhaps out loud, asking for the strength I needed to make it through this experience. They stopped my bed in the middle of a bright, sterile room, where there must have been about ten people, including my doctor. (How did she get here so fast?!) There were several nurses at my feet, pulling and pushing, until I was in the right position. I jolted as a catheter was inserted quick and hard, and I heard the reassuring words from a nurse, “that’s it, it’s over,” and I looked up and the masked anesthesiologist was talking to me. He was asking me questions. My husband came in, and told me he couldn’t stay, and that he loved me and gave me kiss. I smiled at him, and he looked like a little boy as he backed away out of the room. My hand got cold and then my wrist, and the room and the noise and the light all faded.

The next thing I remember was waking in convulsions, and my middle was in so much pain with each jerky movement. My knees were knocking together, and I was so cold. I opened my eyes and moaned in pain and my husband suddenly showed up at my side. “Please, help,” I managed. “Hold my legs steady.” I passed out, thankfully.

When I woke next, I was in a different room and the nurses were gently nudging me, saying, “She’s hungry, do you think you could nurse her?” My eyes wouldn’t stay open and I tried to lift my useless arms, but they were like lead weights, and they wouldn’t move from my side. I tried to communicate that I wanted to see my baby, but my mouth couldn’t form words and soon I would be unconscious again.

Sometime later I opened my eyes and found my husband close by. I wondered what had happened while I was out. I asked about our baby, and he said my mom was holding her in the nursery. He told me she was just fine and perfect. Within moments my mom was handing me my child. My weak arms found their way around her tiny body and felt natural as they snuggled her in close.

“I’m so glad you decided to stay. I’m so happy that you fought,” I whispered to her. “I’m so glad you’re here with me. Welcome.” The love was immediate and profound, and the reality that she had chosen to fight for life was a part of her being. It was communicated from her soul to mine, and she seemed content with her beginning. A new life had immerged and it was hers.

Wednesday, November 8, 2006

From the Journal

of Henry David Thoreau

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Walden Pond at sunset. (Photo courtesy M. Rowinski)

Every day a new picture is painted and framed, held up for half and hour,
in such lights as the Great Artist chooses, and then withdrawn,
and the curtain falls.
And then the sun goes down, and long the afterglow gives light.
And then the damask curtains glow along the western window.
And now the first star is lit, and I go home.

Tuesday, November 7, 2006

SPC: Glamour

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No time--just went through my picasa and found the most glamorous picture of me that I could find. I'll try to get into this challenge...just need some time to breathe....

www.selfportraitchallenge.net

Wednesday, November 1, 2006

tid bits about my boy

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Upon the arrival of our new refrigerator, a few random objects were placed inside to check the dimensions. my boy came into the kitchen to check it out. He opened the door and said, “Oh! It comes with it’s own mayonnaise.”


Whenever we are driving home from an outing, my boy talks and talks….and talks. The other night, this is what I heard:

Blah, blah, blah, blah….blah, blah….blah, blah, and Thomas could not defeat Caleb, our Master. But I could defeat him. Blah, blah blah…


He's always talking Boy.


On the way home from picking #1 up after school, she was telling us how funny one of her classmates is. My boy promptly said, “I bet he’s not as funny as me!”

A typical prayer given by my boy: "...please bless us that we will have a really, really good day. And bless us to have fun. We're thankful for the food. Please bless us to be happy, and that we'll have a really, really, really, really fun day. And please bless us to be really happy, and have really, really good dreams. And bless that we'll have fun..."