Soon, soon, soon…

My personal tech squad is taking another swing at my computer, when complete, I MIGHT, MIGHT have the capability to upload tons of pictures and write tons of posts and spend time on my blog when I really should be getting ready for the realtors soon to trample through my house.

One wonderful thing is the progress we’ve made. Tom fixed the garage, I’ve chiseled away at that to do list and now the end is in sight. It’s even warmed up enough to pickup the backyard and gather enough sticks to make our own tree. Not joking. I really might try it since, as my dear friend pointed out, it might add to our home’s value. Until then, here is a photo of our backyard when we first purchased our home in October 2009. I can’t wait for my trees to have leaves again…

Update: My superhero just installed an entirely new screen on my laptop and it still didn’t fix the problem…he said “I might have to take this to someone…” That is bad, bad news. Time to purchase a card reader for this computer or the adapter to attach my camera to the computer.

Challenged

Writing has become an insurmountable challenge lately. Between a broken computer, a rush to get the interior of the house ready for the market and the crazy weather, I’ve been pulling my hair out! Let me say that I AM grateful for our backup computer, without it I would have nothing since my phone’s main skill is sending picture messages.

Let me explain the computer I’m using right now. It is a Toshiba laptop from 2005 (?) and blue and bestial. It is a bit faster since Tom removed all programs that don’t pertain to the internet, but I still can’t open some applications, like evite and even Facebook, during certain times of the day. Partially finished posts are lost, pictures are difficult to edit and the computer shuts down if I sit too close to the fire.

So here I am, shivering in a chair in the corner of the room. Plugged into the wall because the battery doesn’t remain charged. Worrying about how long the computer will overheat since I don’t have a tray on my lap. Oh and I just had to share the computer in the middle of typing for 10 minutes since Tom’s computer broke months ago and he’s been holding out for the new iPad (or might go for the Xoom).

The bright side? I have a computer savvy husband who figured out the problem…the part is ordered and I hope it gets here soon! In all honesty, I can use my computer, if I hold a flashlight directly on the screen, but that seems like it may be difficult to type or read any information. Let alone peruse my favorite design blogs.

One benefit of a nearly computer free household? We accomplished an incredible amount of work in the past week. Floor grouted, walls painted, trim painted, new flooring in the bathroom…now just more paint and item after item on my mental to do list. Our goal? To get everything done inside the house before spring sets in…that way we can finish all the work on the outside. Watch. We’ll do all this and won’t be able to sell the darn thing. Anyone want a house? Nearly in Eastern Canada? We get lots of snow, perfect for snow caves, snowmen, and building upper body strength with daily shoveling (though we will throw in our snowblower…also known as a snowthrower by the locals). There are also plenty of islands, beaches, and quaint local towns with fabulous festivals to explore. Our neighbors are friendly, the neighborhood darling, and the town snow plow guy randomly plows our driveway (like he did today). Built in 1942, our house is fairly new for the region. Any takers?

…Guess what? My computer just overheated and I had to spend 10 minutes restarting it. No, I didn’t move closer to the fireplace. I just failed to put the plastic tray under it. I will be so happy to have my laptop back!…

Tomorrow I will venture out for groceries and bathroom paint. Also a five gallon bucket of Pratt and Lambert’s China White (and some primer). I have a lipstick pink little girl’s room and an ugly, sage-ish green master suite to paint.

I also hope to get some pictures up…who knows when. It takes awhile to edit photos and I’ve lost so many on this computer, I just don’t want to waste any more time!

Enough whining. I am really excited to get this posted, I can’t wait to get back into my daily posts! (I have been writing almost daily, but have literally had computer failure in the midst of writing every post. OK, I am truly done whining…)

Man vs. Wild?

Last night Bear Grylls returned for a new season of Man vs. Wild. I love this show. When Emma was little,Tom was deployed, and I was working, I would clean my house Thursday nights with an evening of Man vs. Wild in the background. Something about him conquering nature makes me wistful for two days stranded in the Wilds of Alaska or the Australian Outback. Alone.

I’ve also realized Bear has incredible advice for everyday living. This man is the new Confucius. For example, “Being resourceful and adapting is often the key to survival.”  Wow. We are a family of survivors. We’ve moved 13 times, dealt with last minute changes in posts, careers, homes, and just about everything. A nice example is the day I discovered rot in our current home…under the lovely, trifold doors in our huge living room. On the day of closing. Oh, Tom was deploying the following week. So we survived.

before door Resourceful…

midway door Adapting…

after door Surviving.

this While dealing with this.

Yep. We managed to take out doors, replace them with windows, put up dry wall and new siding and even paint with no babysitters and in the week before Tom left (thankfully, Tom’s flight got delayed by another week or we wouldn’t have made it…adapting). Oh. And no experience. Pretty amazing. Survivors.

Other tidbits of wisdom include, “Filthy and stinky, but undeniably lovely.”

filthy Filthy.

stinky Stinky.

muddy joyUndeniably Lovely.

And a personal favorite: “The Rule of 3 for Survival. You can live 3 minutes without air, 3 days without water, and 3 weeks without food.” Well, that one doesn’t really apply here since I can’t go 3 minutes without hearing a request for food, juice and air. Just kidding on the air part, it’s me who has to remember to breathe. Breathe or die. Thanks, Bear.

Balance

Balance is a catch-word right now. Balance of roles. Balance of diet. Balance of style. Balance of priorities. Balance of how much balance one person can actually achieve, handle and strive towards. I’ve had enough balance right now. I want to embrace my scattered, stretched-to-the-limits lifestyle and run with it.

How do I achieve some sort of order in my life? I try to keep a pretty good schedule going and it goes something like this…

1. Wake up when girls wake. If it’s Regan, ignore her as long as possible. If Emma is pulling on my arm, stumble down the stairs and try not to 1) wake Regan and 2) fall.

2. Turn on Keurig to warm while passing by to let the dog out the back. Return to Keurig. Curse under breath that the little blue circles aren’t glowing yet. Get milk out of fridge and pour two sippy cups of milk. Warm milk. Wonder how long I will have to warm milk for a 5-year-old and realize that it doesn’t really matter, as long as she drinks it.

3. Make coffee. Deposit milk in girls’ waiting hands and change Regan’s diaper. Sit down with coffee. Get up immediately to fill a request…usually breakfast and a second cup of milk for Emma since she swallowed her’s in 5.9 seconds.

4. Get on computer, try to finish coffee. Fail, make second cup since first is cold. Get dressed (crossing fingers that today is a shower day), either do dishes or start a load of laundry, but never both unless I am in dire need of clean clothes.

5. Dress girls and make lunch, if necessary. Head out door to MOMS event or turn off TV for play time.

6. Finish dishes and realize it is time to make lunch. Put off lunch for 10 minutes to work on blog post. Make lunch. Alternatively, chase Regan around someone else’s home, a playground, grocery store, pet store, community center or other MOMS setting for 1-2 hours then frantically feed kids packed lunch while they argue about what they’re eating.

7. Head to school. Come home and deposit Regan in bed.

8. Spend two hours cleaning, on computer, researching, talking to mother-in-law, and eating lunch. Often at the same time.

9. Get Regan up and coax into submission with a snack or promise of something fabulous to come (yes Regan, if we get your sister right now, Santa will come to dinner…whatever it takes).

10. Either return home or attempt some sort of errand. Fail at errand if I did not inform her highness of the need to buy food after school.

11. Another snack and playtime for girls…frantically clean something, anything and wish I had more time to write and paint and refinish my backsplash and cover dining room chair cushions and sew and … settle for cleaning one little thing and planning the rest. Realize the girls destroyed everything else on the main floor while I was focused on small corner.

12. Sigh. Make dinner, feed kids and place them in bath. Alternatively, Sigh. Make dinner, place kids in bath and then feed them. I only do this if Tom is going to make it home in time for dinner and the girls had enough snacks to last another hour or so.

13. Pajama time. Family time to include crawling around floor for 10 minutes to hunt down every last Mega Block. A minimum of 3 stories for Regan before she agrees to go to sleep. Let Emma have craft time or game time with Dad. One story for Emma and then I sit on couch. Think about dishes. Get up. Dump out cold second cup of coffee. Find clean glass and pour glass of wine. Sit down. Sigh and smile about the day…or try to smile about something. There is always something…

happy thoughts

Please keep in mind that steps 1-13 are best performed with an insane 2-year-old getting into everything at every possible moment or at least every moment she is not crying “Mommy! Hug-o me!” Optimal balance will be obtained if I can stop at least 2 tantrums and 3 girl fights per day and consume at least 3 pieces of fruit and a dinner that includes vegetables. Bonus points for a lunch with vegetables.

Just experienced something that must certainly add balance to my life. I had to capture Regan three times inside school, two of those included stairs. I also had to hurl a pair of Barbie rain boots into an icy puddle while sprinting to Regan as she ran straight towards the busy road outside school. I grabbed her, shoved her in the car while crying and scolding her and went home without a goodbye to my friends. I did manage to pick-up the Barbie boots, because we all know how important those are to Emma. Wonderful friend who witnessed all this called and offered to entertain Emma for awhile, but I had to decline due to Emma’s disproportionally high number of tantrums in recent days. Sigh.

Have you obtained balance or some semblance of balance or is it a fad you’re ignoring (like low-carb and the blue/chocolate brown combo thing)? I just received an email from Parents Connect about 6 American meals to make for President’s Day. Really? We now have expectations for President’s Day?! That’s it. I’ve pretty much given up on balance. I really don’t see how its possible right now…if I make it to bed without bleeding, I’m at peace.

Modern Life of Little Girls

While scrolling through my blog feeder today, one of my new favorite bloggers, Simple Mom, had a link to this article, Little Girls Gone Wild: Why Daughters Are Acting Too Sexy, Too Soon, by Rachel Combe. She is writing about her reaction to the book, Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches From the Front Lines of the New Girlie Girl Culture by Peggy Orenstein (Combe interviewed her for this article). I read it. I felt amazingly guilty and had to resist the urge to gather all the Barbie dolls and burn the Barbie house.

image borrowed from Peggy Orenstein

As the mother of two little girls who are outgoing, bright and pretty darn cute, I am often worried about the choices I make for them (or the choices I allow them to make for themselves). The truth is that I have strong feminist tendencies, a big piece of me believes that women can and should do it all. As I’ve aged, ahem, I’ve learned that no single person can do it all and maybe the desire or intent is enough at times. Still, I want my girls to be fiercely independent, strong in their beliefs, and not afraid to face the world. Sadly, a positive body image is key in achieve all three of those desires and it is the one thing I do not possess.

This has been an issue for me when it comes to developing a positive image for Emma and Regan. I am afraid to mention anything about myself being overweight, I never use the word diet around them and try so hard not to label foods with emotional words (good and bad, etc.). I do talk about my weight in terms of health: Mommy’s working out to be more healthy; I’m not eating a cookie because I want to eat something healthy right now; or I am just not hungry. It has really put a damper on my own weight-loss efforts and I’m not sure I’m even going about it the right way. Unfortunately, there is very little evidence that my efforts will impact my girls without a drastic change in the way they interact with various media.

When I was pregnant with Emma and for her first few years of life, I refused to buy anything character themed…not even a single Winnie the Pooh anything. I was determined to keep Barbie, dress-up shoes, Bratz and so many other things out of our home and I succeeded, for awhile. I’m not sure where Emma first played with Barbie, but she was drawn to that blonde bombshell and I finally gave in.

barbie

The Barbie in Emma’s hands started it all, Snow White was her second, received a few days later, a day before Regan’s birth. She got her third the day of Regan’s birth and it just kept going.

Once I caved, her first Barbie (carefully chosen for non-hookerish attire and her purple Corvette) began an avalanche of Barbie paraphernalia. Suddenly, she was gifted Barbies and other character things left and right, Regan was a newborn and I was exhausted…far too tired to take a toy away from my sweet 3 year old and way too exhausted to remind friends and family about my “NO CHARACTER” rule. So I let it go. Our house is now bursting with Barbie stuff and and a 5 foot Barbie house. Emma literally has more Barbie stuff then any little girl I know and I still tell myself Barbie is just a toy.

How did this happen? Well, I saw the Barbie “I Can Be” line and was reassured by Mattel’s efforts to show girls the different careers and achievements they can experience: doctor, dentist, race car driver, teacher, pizza chef, etc. Right around this time Tom deployed and I found it much easier to purchase a $10 Barbie then deal with more tears. I was even encouraged by Emma’s elaborate play involving 20+ Barbies at a time, but I have never been comfortable with the role Barbie has in my daughters’ lives.

It all came to a head one evening a few weeks (maybe months) ago while we were watching the tail end of a family game show. Two moms were competing to win the competition for their families and Emma said she hopes the mom with the dark hair wins. I asked her why and was terrified by her answer: “She’s prettier than the other mom.” Yikes! The truth was that she wasn’t. She was thinner and wore a lot of makeup, but not prettier. So I asked. Emma’s answer “She looks like a Barbie.”

Man. What to do? We talked about beauty and what real women look like, but I doubt Emma heard me. She was probably too busy thinking about the latest Barbie movie and I just kept on feeling guilty.

Other than a few moments of embarrassment when talking with friends about Emma’s passion for Barbie (yes, I’m embarrassed ), I haven’t pondered the matter much until now. Barbie is a bit more obvious in her impact on body image then say, Snow White and Cinderella, but the idea that those precious dolls and their accessories stress the wrong ideals makes sense. Think about the clothes, hair extensions, play makeup, vanities and jewelry that is such a large part of being passionate about princesses (and Barbies). Orenstein points out that this teaches our girls some messages we may not want them to learn: 1) “you’re training girls that buying things makes them valuable;” and 2) “every little girl wants—or should want—to be the ‘Fairest of Them All.”

This scares me more than my pant size. Now what to do? Is it too late? Well, Tom and I have been talking about our need to say “no” to our children far more often, so we’re on the right path there. But what about Emma’s love of Barbies? She wants to be a Barbie designer when she grows up (well at night, during the day she still wants to build houses and she plans on being a kicker for the Steelers during football season). How can I discourage the presence of Barbies in my house? If only I could move to another country where Barbie isn’t on the shelf of every store…wait, there’s Portugal. Out there waiting for me…just one more reason why I can’t wait to get there.

This isn’t the last you’ll read about my war with Barbie. I promise for updates as I read Orenstein’s book (I just added it to my Kindle—love that thing!). I will also work on weeding out some of the Barbies and do plenty of research into children and body image. Until then, I’ve got to get going. Emma left a Barbie on the table next to me and I have to go hide her right now. It will make me feel a little better.