Saturday, August 17, 2019

First Day of School Pics 2019-2020 - Yes, those are Handcuffs.

These boys are growing way too fast and it is hard for my heart to keep up.

Thing 1 started high school! He has the flown the homeschooling coop and is doing a hybrid program where he attends 4 half days a week. He is looking forward to electives in backpacking and beekeeping! (hmmm, I wonder if a hive would fit back by our chicken coop).

How is it possible my "baby" is in 5th grade? I think I should have held him back.

And our resident middle schooler is looking forward to TRACKS with his best friend  (an outside-in-the-woods school one day a week). 

We had a GREAT first day together just the three of us - and the noisy parakeet, co-dependent dog, dwarf hamster and chickens. We enjoyed a big breakfast and Bible time all together as a family, rode bikes and climbed trees for PE, and then got down to business with some seat work.

Homeschooling tip --- handcuffs help.
Kidding!!!! (mostly)



Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Pantry Mini-Makeover

Our bifold doors could not hold up any longer to two teen and one tween boy! I'm pretty sure they would have to be made out of titaniam to survive that much usage. Plus the pantry is located in such a small hallway so that if any door was left open no one could walk through. Super annoying! So when they broke AGAIN recently I decided to try a teen friendly doors off design. 

banished by-fold door

before

after - ta-da!



I'm watching them as closly as our dog on a squirrel to make sure things stay in their proper places. Only time will tell how long this system lasts - but I'm already wondering if there is a no-door fridge out there somewhere that would support our house of boys....hmmm.

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

3 Pics of Life with Boys ðŸĪ”🙄ðŸ˜ģ

When you ask your teen to save the box top. ðŸĪ”

When your teen randomly buys a stuffed kitty at a garage sale and then doesn’t know what to do with it. 🙄

When a boy goes to get a snack in the middle of a nerf battle???ðŸĪŠ

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

I Blinked

I blinked and these three turned 15, 13 and 10! How did that happen?! We had so much fun celebrating each of them - my spring babies.

Thing 1 had a bunch of guys over for football and battlefront and lots of pizza!


Thing 3 celebrated with cheesecake and lasertag with a couple good buddies.



Thing 2 had his bday on spring break in AZ and requested this shirt!

But before we left we managed to surprise him with a Narplings party!



Sunday, April 14, 2019

On Grief this Easter Season


The tears came pouring out again unexpectedly as I searched through an old pile of frames in the basement. My dear friend all smiles surrounded by her four young children and husband stops my search. This time I don't even try to push grief away. I cry as if it were 10 days, not 10 years since death snatched her away with no warning. Clicking doggy paws pause at the stop of the stairs and in a moment my hand is full of black fur as she leans against me.

I ask God for the thousandth time why she had to go. The heavy ache in my heart reminds me of His Words to Adam and Eve, "What have you done?"  Did they hear the heart twisting pain in His question? Did they see the sorrow wasn't about the broken rule but what it meant for them? For Him? For all creation from that day forth? Death had entered into perfection and tainted it all. Every relationship, every plant, every animal - all of creation was now undone.

God knew. And He saw it all - all the hatred and sickness and sorrow and horror from generation to generation- all at once. And He saw the cross as He watched their slumped backs turn away from the garden for the last time. He knew He would get us back and He knew all it would cost Him.

How we all long for The Day when grief is finally out-run! There will be no more death to seperate us.

 I will see her smiling face again.

Older posts on Grief
This Side of Heaven   Jesus Wept   Life and Shoulds   In the Storm  Picking Up the Stitches  

Finding A Healthy Whole  Perfectly Perfect     Record of Faithfulness:Remembering Jo 


Thursday, April 11, 2019

A few recent snapshots from life with Boys #iloveraisingboys

Thing 3's breakfast EVERY morning at the hotel on our recent vacation.


Thing 2 rock climbing with a broken arm.

Thing 1 being silly with me in Zion.

Rock sliding/running. 

What happens when I ask Thing 1 to take the coffee cake out of the oven while I dry my hair.

Whenever she is left alone for 5 mins with her older brothers...something like this always happens.

Friday, February 15, 2019

30 (ish) Dangers In Marriage and Parenting


"Warning: Avoid Death" the sign on the farm equipment warned at the Walworth county fair. I remember my dear friend Heather thinking this was so funny that she made t-shirts with it imprinted on them for our husbands. We all had a good laugh over this straight-forward advice. But not all dangers are obvious.

If you google "dangerous" it says:

dan·ger·ous

Dictionary result for dangerous

/ˈdānj(ə)rəs/
adjective
  1. able or likely to cause harm or injury.
likely to cause problems or to have adverse consequences.
"it is dangerous to underestimate an enemy"

After 18 years of marriage, 14+ with offspring, we've stumbled our way through many things no pastor or parenting book warned us about. So I humbly (read: humorously) submit my own list for your reading amusement.

Dangers to Avoid: 

  • asking your wife if she has PMS (hubby wants it noted he has NOT done this)
  • eating mom's secret goood chocolate stash
  • leaving the TP roll empty
  • shopping with an over-tired toddler and no snacks 
  • someone waking said toddler before naptime is done
  • someone waking pregnant-tired mom before naptime is done
  • the clearance rack at Target (sometimes good and bad are two sides of the same coin)
  • 3 hours alone in Target (ditto)
  • walking into Target 
  • driving by Target (ahem...)
  • the REI garage sale 
  • skipping a pill
  • a momentarily unattended child with hair and scissors
  • permament markers and boys
  • Natural Family Planning
  • eating a tiny sliver of your delicously smelling chocolate b-day cake before it is decorated that your husband asked you to take out of the oven but didn't tell you NOT to eat a tiny sliver of it
  • buying her an appliance for any special occasion (again, hubby has avoided this bc we have a rule about not buying me anything with a cord unless I specifically ask for it)
  • happy hour at Starbucks
  • miscommunicating with your hairdresser (okay, not directly marriage or parenting related but impactful on both nonetheless. Hence an emergency mid-week consolation lunch date with hubby after I accidentally became a red-head. oops.)
  • dogs with IBS (so long carpet)
  • potty training (ditto)
  • thinking "I've got this" about anything 
  • boys being quiet (RUN!!!)
  • not returning the kitchen drawer scissors (scotch tape, etc.)
  • sending your son into 7/11 without SPECIFIC instructions as to what size slurpee to purchase
  • sneaking black beans into the brownies (sorry again, hon)
  • walking barefoot through the toy room
  • legos hidden in the shag rug
  • walking into a pet store with your child
  • looking at puppy pictures
  • diaper blow-outs
  • feeding a toddler too many fruit snacks to keep him quite during the Christmas Eve service (so. much. vomit.)
  • letting a boy chug a soda and candy during intermission at the play (ditto. what goes down too fast comes up wayyyyy too fast and wide)
  • comparison
  • spending too much time on social media
  • living, schooling, parenting, etc. to meet outside expectations
  • telling yourself a story about "them"
  • looking to them to fulfill you 
  • believing your not _______ enough
  • not asking for help
  • not taking care of yourself (put your own oxygen mask on first!)
  • believing lies about yourself, them, God
  • taking them for granted
  • not soaking up enough TRUTH, LOVE and HOPE 
My Jesus once told me, 
           A thief (read: our dangerous enemy) is only there to steal and kill and destroy. 
                                     I came so they can have real and eternal life, 
                                           more and better life than they ever 
                                                          dreamed of. 
                                                          (Jn.10:10 - MSG)

We all want that abundant life. Some dangers we can avoid and some we need to trust Him through. I hope this list brought a smile of recognition and encouragement on the journey.

Blessings! 


Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Funny Things



This is my place to record so I can remember some of the funny things my Things do that make me smile. 

After reading the email inviting Thing 1 into the highschool program we were all hoping for, he immediatley asked if he could go back to the store to buy that Yeti for the hot chocolate machine they have. I think that feature was at the top of his list of pros for that particular school. That and he can still be home by 2 every day. :) I'll take it - and all the time he can still be at home with us...they time is going by way too fast.

While on a tour at the Glen the guide asked Thing 3 (age 9.5): "And why do you think the sidewalk ends here?"
T3 paused a moment and then replied, "I don't know. Maybe it is the beginning."

Last night while watching live tv - a rare occasion around here while Mountain Men is free on Amazon - an actual commercial came on TV. It happened to be for incontinence undergarments (another reason to stick with streaming). It actually showed a woman in these disposable underpants and T3 exclaimed, "Why would they do that?!" in grossed-out-little-boy-shock. (It really wasn't pretty). I giggled at his response and then he added, "Seriously, they could have used a dummy!" By then I was practically ROTF. Hopefully the internet will be back up and running tonight so we can be safe from depends commercials.

A few weeks ago I bought a spiralizer while running errands with two of my Things. T2 (age 12.5) exclaimed as he saw the box, "What is that?!" "Gross!" "Delicious! Ha! I doubt it!" "Mooooooom! We DO NOT have to eat this DO WE?!!!" And on and on he went. And the slightly naughty side of me just kept quiet and smiled and let him believe that zuccinni noodles were in his near future. A mom of three boys has to get her kicks where she can.

Awhile ago when my parents were visiting T3 (age 8 then) hollered up the stairs, "Mom, grandpa wants you to come here. And you'd better listen because he is your Dad!"

On the way to church:
T2 (11) - "Something smells like chips." Turning to T3,  "Your pants smell like sour cream and onion potato chips."
T3 - They do not!
T2 - Do Too!
T3 - Do NOT!
Loooonngggg sighhhhh from the front seat. And they wonder why I won't volunteer anymore in their Sunday school classes...

Picking up boys from the pool I asked how things went. "They told us we can't throw T3 around for exercise anymore."
ðŸ˜ģ

Me: It's National Coffee Day!
T3: It is?! Can I stay home from school?!?!
Me - LOL.  He knows how I roll.

I wonder if that Yeti comes in pink....




Thursday, January 31, 2019

Write Your Name


Brody 
Daisy
George
Lila 
Henry
Sam 

Do you remember flipping through the baby book of names while looking forward to the day you would hold your child? My kids love to hear the other names we considered for them. And we may or may not have, just for kicks, convinced one of them that we changed his name when he was two. Don't worry, we told him the truth eventually (I think). Names are important and our interest in them from a young age testifies to this truth we know deep within us. They mark our identity.

As a homeschool mom I constantly discern between what I think is important versus what is unessessarily carried over from public education. One question that comes up regularly is, Do I have my kids write their name on their work? I know with 30 students this is needed but with 3 I can usually discern who wrote what. Usually.

But still I press on with them writing their name for 2 reasons: 1) I want them to OWN their work - even if it is subconcious. 2) I want them to be in the habit so when they are at outside classes (days where I outsource their education for enrichment or I just don't want to teach 8th grade science...ahem), I want them to remember to put their name down. My goal is to raise them for others to enjoy as much as I do and I want the other teachers I partner with on my good side. Hence the big bag of Lindor chocolate truffles I bought to go in their Christmas gift bags...but I digress.

Yesterday, after reminding them AGAIN to write their name and date (because I also think it's important for them to know where in time they stand at that moment even if many days look alike as a homeschooler),  I overheard my 9-year-old comment, "I need to get a stamp with my name on it."

Me in the other room: silent smirk.

Then I remembered their dad has one from his office that has a FB style thumbs up with his name. The apple doesn't fall far from the Graf tree....and I think I know what I'm putting in their Easter baskets this year along with the traditional flip-flops and candy.

 The Bible God says He calls us by name and we are His.
“Fear not, for I have redeemed you;
    I have called you by name, you are mine." Isaiah 43:1
Knowing that I am His tells my heart all I need to know deep down inside about who I am. I pray you find the same peace and confidence in being called by name by the One who formed you.

Addendum: I literally had the following conversation just hours after crafting this post.
Me looking at my oldest son's online grades: Why are you missing two assignments in science?
Thing 3: I did them but I forgot to put my name on them so she returned it and and I gave it back.
Me - long internal sigh. Note to self - buy more truffles for science teacher.
             
At least we still have 4 1/2 years left to get this down before he goes to college.

Thursday, September 27, 2018

The Scent of Childhood


If each season of childhood had a scent, the soft baby fuzz of a newborn would be the fragrance of those tiny early months. Along with spit-up, pampers and endless loads of laundry aromas. The toddler years are more of a sticky smell of squishy hands trying to do it all themselves. And lil boys start to get that, well, lil boy smell of sweat and grass and sunshine that sends them straight to the bath full of protests every evening. And if the tween years had a scent, it would definitely be Axe body spray.

Recently one of my middle schoolers (yes, I have TWO at ONCE) told me a hilarious story about his study hall. They are not allowed to talk above a whisper and mostly all you hear is the teacher loudly shushing for 55mins, but one day there was a new sound and smell filling the air. No, not that...thankfully! When a classmate set down his bag the Axe body spray concealed within it started spraying, filling the room with its oxygen-sucking, eye-stinging, cough-enducing essence. Students were gasping air while the teacher gave the poor kid a lecture on endangering others who have asthma. Thirty years from now he will remember that moment and cringe, but hopefully grin, as the smell from his own son's axe body spray fills his home.

One day while grocery shopping one of my boys brought me a bottle of his own Axe spray and asked me what I thought. That is one of those boy-mom moments I slowed down to capture knowing all too soon he will care more about what other females in his life think about how he smells.

As a parent I often feel like I'm making up the rules as we go, just trying to keep up with their changing needs and abilities. When they were toddlers we instituted rules to keep them safe from the hot stove and steep stairs. Now that they are tweens and teens we enforce rules to keep the air quality in our home within breathable limits. Good or bad, any smell that is overpowering is encouraged outdoors. So now he can only put it on his mom-approved body spray outside with lots of reminders that even tiny drop GOES A LONG WAY!

That principle applies to any smell and too often I think I leave the wrong scent...more of a tired-frazzled smell. That is often the scent of motherhood but I want it to be much more. God is challenging and growing me here.

I'm re-reading my favourite book of the year, With: Reimagining the Way You Relate to God(If you've been around me long enough to have a deep conversation within the last six months I've quoted this book to you, told you to read it and may have even thrust a copy in your hands.) A lot of the things Skye wrote really challenge me, one of them being:
            "many of the people accomplishing the most for God seemed to reflect his character the
              least. Rather than being marked by peace, patience, kindness, gentleness, and love,
              many of them were anxious, impatient, rude, aggressive, and sometimes even spiteful."
               (p.11).
Ouch. I'm finding that how I walk with God and the need to live within healthy boundaries has a lot to do with the aroma I leave behind. Hopefully not an overpowering Axe body spray type of odor, but the loving essence of Christ. When my kids remember the scent of their childhoods, I hope the fragrance of God's incredible, unconditional, and steadfast love for them fills their senses.

Thursday, September 13, 2018

It's All Your Fault


Photo by Kayla Harris on Unsplash
We have a little running joke in our house, when something goes wrong we say, "It's all Zoey's fault." Since she can't disagree and easily looks guilty she gets blamed often. It helps us make light of life's frustrations, like red lights when we are running late, or a lost library book. And frankly, it is easier to blame the dog than to take responsibility.

 I've been thinking about apologies lately. Who I need to forgive. Who do I need to ask for forgiveness (okay I need to start thinking about that one). It only took a few chapters of a book on apologizing for me to realize sometimes I'm a terrible apologizer.

As you can imagine, homeschooling provides A LOT of opportunities for practicing this social skill. When you are around the people who know best how to push your buttons you get them pushed often. Isn't that the very definition of siblings? The more time my boys spend together, the more opportunity to work through conflict...in the midst of history and math and climbing crab apple trees together.

This book on apologizing is stirring up a lot of new thoughts for me, especially in how I teach our sons to give and ask for forgiveness. I ask them questions about apologizing: Why they think it is important? Who are they having a hard time forgiving right now? How does knowing God forgives us help us forgive others? They answer these daily questions in their learning journal, a safe space for them to ponder and process. And I get a deeper look at what's going on inside those mysterious boy-minds.

If only it helped me understand why I found a knife murdering the butter, a display of Mo Willems books on my couch, or why the pictures are now all facing the front door? I'm guessing... it's all Zoey's fault.



Update 9/20/18 - Now that I have finished that book on apologizing I can tell you I agreed with about 80% of it. She isn't writing from the same worldview that I hold but it is good to think on why I disagree. And like any book you need to "chew on the meat and spit out the bones."

Thursday, September 6, 2018

Gray Hair



Thing 3's latest thing is randomly responding to me by saying, "shrug." I'm not sure where he picked this up. I wonder if it has to do with reading too many comic books and thinking the characters are saying "shrug" instead of the narrator telling you they are shrugging???  No matter the source, this little man continues to make me laugh randomly with his funny way with words. And when he and his brothers aren't making me smile they are giving me gray hair.

One glorious unusually unscheduled Saturday I was desperate to get to a painting project in the garage. I directed the boys to a pile of scrap lumber, some tools and their fort in the backyard thinking they would add a few walls to enclose it a bit more. A few hours later with my hutch a happy antiqued gray (to match my hair, of course) I went out back to discover they had added a third story unenclosed platform to their playset a good 12 feet up. With the trampoline pushed up next to it they can now jump from an even higher level to their deaths delight.

I spotted my first gray hair at least a year ago and promptly named it after our oldest son. A few months ago my hair stylist gently informed me that they were multiplying. I smiled and said that I would name them after sons #2 and #3. I haven't seen them but I'm sure there are only 3 up there. :) But the more I watch my boys grow, laugh at their funny ways, and gasp as they fly off the fort, the more I'll be visiting my stylist, because really, who wants their hair to match their antiqued trendy gray hutch anyways? And I've run out of boys to name them after...




 

Thursday, August 30, 2018

The Great Chicken Campaign

Our "youngest child" is on the other side of porch door whining because, even though she is inches from me, she isn't right under my feet. I've kept her inside for the safety of our newest additions, two feathery friends we are "fostering" who are currently spreading woodchips everywhere in search of "treats". WE HAVE CHICKENS!!! - the culmination of an extensive chicken campaign in our home. The push for enough electoral votes recently gained great speed and crossed the line to a victory!

I can trace my first longing for these fowl friends to my childhood and endless hours in a hot suburban house sitting in "summer dark" and watching "Little House on the Prarie". Fast forward many years and I did get to live on the prairie but was busy growing three boys and two enormous gardens in our snake infested backyard. (If you knew me then you may remember this blog was known as "My Life on the Prairie" and filled with mastering the art of potty training and library fines).

But now those said boys are old enough to help with the cleaning of the coop and at least one has enthusiastically joined in my political persuasions regarding the necessity for chickens. This combined with the urgent need of friends to remove these HOA-contraband animals from their premises before putting their house on the market (reason number 1006 I can't ever live in a new neighborhood - they come with HOAs), and ta-dah, I can hear their little clucking egg-producing-songs drifting up through my master bath window.

Currently, Maggie and Rosalyn (named after two of our esteemed former First Ladies) are here for temporary shelter, but it is the hope of the adults in the "birth family" to persuade the "child-parent" of these two feathery ladies, to make this a foster-adopt arrangement upon their departure to Texas. I'm already eyeing some scrap lumber to add on to the coop so we can adopt a few more, but like every political career, you've got to start small and work your way up!

My main mission right now is to keep that trembling dog/child so eager to "meet" our new charges on the other side of the storm door while they cluelessly (but cutely) taunt her inches from the glass. And while humming the theme song to "Little House" I'll be collecting some fresh eggs with a big grin on my face.

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

A Boy and His Dog

I never realized when we welcomed our youngest child, albeit four-legged, that she would literally be treated accordingly. She receives many treats, has a bed on 2 floors of the house, leaves her toys everywhere and steals others that become her slobbered domain. Unfortunately, she is also teased like a youngest as well. My man-children find continual entertainment in laying on her, taking her toys, falsely announcing "squirrel" to get a reaction, building structures all around her while she sleeps, and so on. This behavior really caught me by surprise.

I can sort of understand the pestering coming from my youngest son since he does not have a smaller sibling to dominate. But it still baffles me a bit; I can only attribute this dominating behavior to their boy-ness. Especially when I see their dad poking at her ears or paws while she sleeps just to see her twitch.

The opposite of this strange relationship with dogs might be even harder to understand: pushing a little dog in a stroller. I like to tease my husband that that will be us someday when we pass an older lady pushing a carriage full of furry noise. It is fun to see the look of total unbelief mixed with strong resistance cross his face. Maybe kind of like it is fun for him to watch Zoey twitch in her sleep.

Thankfully Zoey is a very tolerant dog and as the youngest in the family, when not being picked on, is rightfully very, very spoiled. She spends most of her time curled up on something soft and fluffy (usually all my throw pillows that are ALWAYS on the floor...sigh) waiting for her next walk or treat or the doorbell to ring. Life with 3 boys is full of testosterone-driven mysteries - and I wouldn't have it any other way.




Monday, February 12, 2018

Testosterone

Photo by Jens Moser on Unsplash

Why does every nerf battle end in WW3 in my living room?

Testosterone.

Why is EVERYTHING a competition (eating, sleeping, walking, getting dressed, washing dishes....)?

Testosterone.

Why can't they find that item on the floor 2 cm from their toes?

Testosterone?

Why are bodily functions so funny?

Testosterone.

Why do they always have to go UP the slide? Climb the top of the swingset? Jump from the tallest tree?

Testosterone.

Why do I have a cabinet full of empty TP rolls?

Testosterone?

Why are throwing rocks off a cliff so entertaining?

Testosterone.

Why is blowing anything up so enthralling?

Testosterone.

Why do they always have holes in the knees of their pants and their brand new tennis shoes?

Testosterone.

Why are they so physical?

Testosterone.

Why do they wrestle and think it is fun?

Testosterone.

Why is EVERYTHING a weapon (pencils, lanyards, playdoh, sticks, food....)?

Testosterone.

Why do they literally think so differently than me?

Testosterone.

Why are they so territorial about everything (their comic books, their seat, their food, the air around them...)?

Testosterone.

Why are they so fierce and yet can be so tender?

Testosterone.

Why do they love to conquer?

Testosterone.

Why do they take so many risks?

Testosterone.

Why do they eat 5 tacos for dinner and then ask for a bowl of cereal?

Testosterone.

Why do they constantly want to know what is for dinner (even as they eat breakfast)?

Testosterone.

Why do they want to grow up to be just like their amazing Dad?

Testosterone.

Why are they almost as tall as me already?

Testosterone.

Why am I raising them to leave me for another woman?

Testosterone.

Why am I going to have three more strong men to protect me someday?

Testosterone.

Why do I love raising boys?

Testosterone.









Friday, April 28, 2017

Love's Aroma


Have you ever watched a mother hold her new baby? She closes her eyes and feels his new skin against her cheek as he nuzzles into her. She gently kisses his downy head…. and that still isn’t enough. She inhales deeply his sweet scent, taking part of him back inside her with her very breath.

He was one with her and now he is his own amazing being. She delights in everything about him, forgetting the months of fatigue, discomfort, pain of childbirth and a body that will never be the same again. She breathes in his very essence delighting in his sweet baby smell.

Ezekiel 20:41 tells us, “As a pleasing aroma I will accept you.”  These words astound me with the grace of the Gospel. I’m amazed after all I have done that He welcomes me into His Presence at all. He could still call Himself a gracious God and merely tolerate my presence. He could justify a distant love on any day based on my pitiful attempts at honoring Him. But He doesn’t just forgive me. He doesn’t just accept me.  He desires oneness with me. A restoration of our former unity before the Fall. He welcomes me into Himself as pleasing aroma. Love's aroma.
  
Just as a mother misses that baby growing safe and secure inside her, He misses that unity with us. A complete intimacy where nothing separates our love. Where we are safe and close and completely dependent on Him to enjoy this fascinating world He has created.

He prays for us to be one with Him. Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us…(John 17:21a)

He begs us to be one with Him. I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing. (John 15:5)

He beckons us to stay safe in His love.  As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. (John 15:9)

If you have children, inhale that sweet scent of your babes today. Remember that is how our Father feels about you a million times over.  If they are long and lanky like mine and smell all boy, breath them in anyways. Squeeze them tight. Then send those sun-kissed, delightfully sweaty boys up for a bath. 

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Why I Really Run

This morning I ran on our "new to us" fancy treadmill for the first time. We were very blessed to store this beauty temporarily for some great friends. It comes in handy for days when I can't run outside. I plugged in my podcast and started jogging. It wasn't long before I had been visited FOUR times by two little boys, who desperately wanted a turn. One of those times was to inform me that a toilet was plugged. It was then that I remembered why I run. 

I don't run because I love sucking air, my side cramping and sweat dripping down my shirt. It isn't because I love having my legs feel so tired for the next two days that I can barely walk upstairs to bed at night. And it definitely isn't because I'm a naturally born runner.

I run for three reasons.
 1) I have a serious and steady relationship with dark chocolate. And an occasional flirtation with    
      Boba.
 2) I get to be ALONE
      - to think
      - to pray
      - to listen to an entire podcast without someone telling me the toilet is overflowing
3) I love to be outside and CO weather, though schizophrentic at times, is much more conducive to this in January than South Dakota. 

Running (READ: slowly jogging down steep hills and panting up them) helps me be a better mom. That, and a lot of dark chocolate...

Now to tackle that toilet go out for burgers...and possibly put a lock on the basement door before tomorrow's run. :)




Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Funny Things - My boy's make me laugh every day.

Me- Don't forget to brush your teeth and comb your hair.
Thing 2 - Why do we have to look good?
Me - It's called "basic grooming!"

Thing 3 wanting someone to ride bikes with him.
"Maybe Dad will be kind enough to ride bikes with me when I finish my chore. Sigh. Everyone is growing up too fast. Including me. I'm double growing this year. I grow a centimeter per day."

Thing 3 at the library as I'm returning about 50 lbs worth of books.
"I'll be in the kid's section reloading!"

Thing 2 - Sitting on the couch with his rat while playing LOTR Risk with Thing 1. "Mom guess what? You won't be finding any rat hairs because rats don't shed!" (What a relief?!?)

I just stepped over a boy sprawled out in the middle of the kitchen floor burping repeatedly.

After spending two hours scrubbing down our kitchen I walked into the dining room to find a boy's pants abandoned under the table.

"You're not smiling mom" Guster (says to me while I'm baking Christmas cookies. Then he turns to his father who is wrestling with Christmas lights "You're not smiling Dad. Get with the program." I'm smiling now.

When my T1 (12 yr old) realized he was stuck in the van all the way to Denver listening to Anne he yelled from the backseat "Stop the Pain!" LOL- but they all loved it, I know!

T3- Are we going to order new glasses today so I can be a smarty pants? 
Me- (hmmm, I think we are already there!)

I had my kids listen to the Breakpoint commentary today about Reformation day. They thought he said "95 feces" instead of "theses" and couldn't stop laughing to hear the rest. #homeschoolfail. Maybe we will come back to this one next year...#homeschoolingboys

My son just asked me to set up a playdate for his rats...these boys make me laugh every day!

T2 - While rediscovering legos again with his brothers bc I moved them to a different room. "We are really CREATIVE at making trees into WEAPONS!"