Photo Journal for 30 July 2008

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I love my new digital camera. I take pictures compulsively now. They're not necessarily good pictures (I leave that to my sister and my sister-in-law) but they are records of my days. For whatever that's worth...

30 July Album.

The coffee shop where I usually go on Tuesdays - Solid Rock in Eureka. Comfy chairs.
The coffee shop where I usually go on Tuesdays - Solid Rock in Eureka. Comfy chairs.
But this is where I usually sit at Solid Rock. Harder surface, yes, but lots of room for laptop, phone, notes, books, etc.
But this is where I usually sit at Solid Rock. Harder surface, yes, but lots of room for laptop, phone, notes, books, etc.
Our emo child.
Our emo child.
 
I'm on a mission to find good, affordable coffee. I can't handle paying $12/pound on a regular basis. So this week it's a duel between Dunkin' Donuts and Starbucks. I actually paid less for the Starbucks.
I'm on a mission to find good, affordable coffee. I can't handle paying $12/pound on a regular basis. So this week it's a duel between Dunkin' Donuts and Starbucks. I actually paid less for the Starbucks.
I'm working on it.
I'm working on it.
Robbie is usually cute, sometimes just weird. He'd been running a high fever for 2 1/2 days at this point, so maybe he was a little delirious. Teething is so fun. He threw his head back and looked to the side the whole time I was feeding him. I thought maybe his neck muscles stopped working.
Robbie is usually cute, sometimes just weird. He'd been running a high fever for 2 1/2 days at this point, so maybe he was a little delirious. Teething is so fun. He threw his head back and looked to the side the whole time I was feeding him. I thought maybe his neck muscles stopped working.
 
Random food shot: last night after we got home from worship practice and put the kids to bed, I made this amazing omelet. Is it okay to brag about your own food? Bacon, swiss and cheddar cheese, and topped with fresh-from-the-garden tomatoes, chives, and parsley.
Random food shot: last night after we got home from worship practice and put the kids to bed, I made this amazing omelet. Is it okay to brag about your own food? Bacon, swiss and cheddar cheese, and topped with fresh-from-the-garden tomatoes, chives, and parsley.

A Wee Bit o’ Ranting: Christian Radio

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One day, one fine, fine day, when all our other business ventures are operating like well-oiled machines, our kids are self-sufficient, and we have time and money to spare, Joe and I are going to start a radio station. A Christian radio station. A good Christian radio station. A good Christian radio stations that does not play songs from the 1990s and does play something besides the poppy, redundant, gooey stuff I'm listening to right now.

Sigh.

Some day.

The Results of a Time-Out

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sundayafternoon.jpgAfter yesterday's time-out, I feel much better. Almost like I really do have a hammock like that one. I do have a hammock somewhere, I just don't have the trees... One step at a time. It's too hot for a hammock right now, anyway.

So yesterday (and this morning) I got through the revamp of my freelance writing blog, an item which has been haunting me for a few weeks now. There are so many freelance writing sites out there, and they all cover the topics so well. I really hate the idea of being redundant. If it's already being done, and done well, I don't want to do it too.

I'm happy with my changes. I think I've hit on a resource niche for freelancers that isn't really covered well. Here's hoping, cowgirls!

In addition to the blog revamp, I set some priorities and got rid of a few obligations. Not really anything huge, but a few significant, if small, changes. I feel better.

Image Credit: Lili Vieira de Carvalho.

Taking a Time-Out

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megoofy.jpgSo my sister just started a blog, which I thoroughly enjoy reading. Her post today is especially thought-provoking. Here's a blip from that radar:

"I'm talking about that fine line between being a wife, a mother and not losing who you are as a person. It is far to easy to disappear in the daily routine. The endless parade of dirty mouths, hands, and bottoms that need to be wiped. Sippy cups that need to be filled, beds to be made, floors to clean, meals to cook, and before I know it the day is over and I haven't taken 5 minutes for myself. And I begin to feel invisible. That I'm not seen for me, but rather for what I do. It's not easy to find time for yourself."

Ow. Yeah. That's me on a lot of days. And then what else do I do? I decide, I need to do something for myself, something beyond Mommy duty (which we all love, yes, but which is not the sum of our being). So I start, oh, fifteen enormous projects. A freelance writing career. A business with my husband. A basement remodel.

And then I wonder why I'm not more relaxed.

Will I ever learn? I like working so much that I just keep piling on more work until I begin to hate work because I am overwhelmed by it. I'm missing a balance that I desperately crave, and so to find it I pile more on my list: get organized, de-clutter, buy a new planner, go through my notes, get some budgeting software, clean out my closet. Yeah, that helps a lot. fritzialone1-4-web.jpg

A friend from church, Fritzi, is a time management consultant. I was reading an article on her site about finding time for your husband, and this bit just  struck me:

"It grieves me to see mothers frazzled, disorganized, frustrated, and defeated when the Lord wants to make our burdens light and give us order, grace and dignity in our lives for His glory. If this typifies one's life style and mode of operation, something is out of balance and they are carrying burdens the Lord did not call them to take upon themselves."

Hmm. "Carrying burdens the Lord did not call them to take upon themselves." Burdens like being the perfect mother, perfect wife, perfect sister, perfect daughter, perfect friend, perfect entrepreneur, perfect writer. At this point I'd just settle for pretty good mother, wife, sister, daughter, friend, entrepreneur, writer. It seems impossible, though, to get it all happening at the same time. If I focus and start feeling like I'm making progress in one area, I give myself a little nod of congratulations and then realize I've neglected something just as important. Do you do that?  I start feeling really good about spending time with my husband, talking, actually having a date... and then I realize I haven't called my best friend, emailed my Dad, or spent much time with the kids all week. So the next week I am on it: I'm calling, I'm emailing, I'm playing, and at the end of the day I realize I've gotten no work done, I've written nothing, and I'm way behind.

So what's the answer? How do I find balance? How do I set these priorities? How do I find time for myself? How do I pursue my interests and keep the household functioning? What's most important right now: husband? kids? friends? family? work? This is why people get Prozac. (Just an aside: I heard on the radio that there are about 350,000 dogs on Prozac in the U.S. I really don't know what to say to that, except... it's the end of the world as we know it.)

Here's what my sister says (and I think it's smart):

"So how do you balance the demands of motherhood, being a wife and being a person? Take 10! that's my motto. I had to learn how to think smaller. ...I'm learning to take 10 minutes here and there for myself. It may be simply to be in a room alone."

Here's what Fritzi says (and I think it's smart):

    "Set some time aside, like it is an appointment you must keep, and get away for an hour or so to spend time making a list of what you believe God has called you to do and what you perceive could be eliminated from your weekly schedule of events. ...Schedule time weekly to plan your week's work and extra activities and then scale down from there."

I'm already thinking of some obligations I need to eliminate. Most of them are self-imposed. It's not other people who want too much of me, it's me who wants too much of me. As much as I wish I could blame somebody else when my day is too full and my life is too stressed, it comes back down to my decisions. Those not-very-smart ones.

overworkedmom1.jpgA good friend told me some years ago that every Yes means a No. If she says Yes to something that takes her away from her home and family, she is saying No to being with her children or taking care of her home. Sometimes that's necessary and good. Domestic life is not the sole purpose of our existence, people, and we do need to realize that. If I say yes to every organizing, decorating, child-training, cooking idea I come up with, well, I'll have to say a big no to everything else. That's not balance.

This afternoon, instead of trying to smash my way through a list that's far too long, I'm going to take some good advice. I'm going to take ten, and then I'm going to think about what I can eliminate. I don't want the best to be consumed by the good. I don't want the tyranny of the urgent to obfuscate the important. I don't want to be invisible.

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Image Credit: IBABuzz.com.

Robbie Laughing

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We’re Watching You…

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Me and Robbie getting pretty serious.

You can see the rest of the photos from our Belleville trip last week, if you are so inclined.

Hallelujah, Somebody Is Seein’ the Light!

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Look, I'm just saying - social networking isn't actually NEW and if you weren't making it worthwhile before all the online venues popped up, you're probably not making it worthwhile now. Easier doesn't always mean better, or more productive, or more efficient. It just means lots more ways to get distracted.

Don't agree? Think (online) social networking is amazing, totally different than anything that's ever been on the face of the earth? You're not alone. I assume I'm in the minority opinion here, which is okay. That's a spot I'm pretty comfortable with.

It's just the introverted me coming out... and that biiiiiiiiig part of me that resists all trends simply because they are trends. I know, I know. I'm working on it.

Wordless Wednesday: Pass the Bread, Honey

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Wordless Wednesday img_5547.JPG


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Can't beat fresh, buttered toast (from homemade bread) with a generous spread of butter and drizzle of honey. Add a cup of hot coffee... Mmmm.

I make a batch of bread about once a week. I don't even have to look at the recipe now... it's simple and it always comes out. I'll put the recipe below.

My three favorites from this week's WW:

img_5520.JPGChica at Photo-Projectz: Great horse pic.

Robin's Woods: blackberry blossoms. (I'm going blackberry pickin' next week!)

Kim at What's That Smell?: love it!

THE RECIPE

Easy Homemade (White) Bread

5 teaspoons yeast (instant or SAF; I use SAF)
3 tablespoons white sugar
2 cups very warm water (you can put your finger in but you don't want to keep it there)
1 1/2 tablespoons salt
4 - 5 cups all-purpose or bread flour
Another 2 cups warm water
Another 3 - 4 cups flour
Preheat oven on warm. In a large bowl, whisk together the yeast, sugar, and 2 cups of warm water. Let sit for five minutes while you grease three loaf pans (or two loaf pans and a cookie sheet, if you want rolls) . The yeast mixture should get foamy and smell, well, yeasty.
Add the salt, then start adding the flour, one cup at a time, until the dough becomes thick and hard to stir. Add the next 2 cups of water and add the remaining 3-4 cups of flour, one cup at a time. You may need more or less flour. The dough should be thick and sticky but you should be able to handle it. A little variation here won't hurt.
Once you get all the flour mixed in, knead it by hand in the bottom of the bowl for a couple of minutes. Turn it out onto the counter. Clean your bowl, dry it, and butter or oil it. Put the dough back in the bowl and butter or oil the top of the dough. Turn the oven OFF of preheat, and set the bowl of dough in the oven with the oven door slightly open.
In one to one and a half hours, check back in. The dough should be doubled in size. Take it out of the oven, turn the oven on preheat, and gently punch down the dough. Divide the dough into three equal portions. Shape into three loaves and place in buttered loaf pans, or form balls out of one portion if you want rolls or hamburger buns. Make the dough balls about half the size you want the finished product to be.
Return the dough to the oven, turn the oven OFF of preheat, and let rise with the oven door slightly open. Check back in one to one and a half hours. If the dough has doubled again, turn the oven on 350, close the door gently, and set the timer for 30 minutes. (If the dough has not doubled, give it another half hour and then continue.) When your timer dings, check the bread. If it's golden brown on top, take it out of the oven, let it sit for 15 minutes, then remove it from the loaf pans to cool completely.
Slice, butter, drizzle with honey. Eat.

Tuesday Trends: Globalism Killed the Local Star

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hugtheglobe.jpgThe funny thing with trends is that they're so extreme. I've found, in my many years of wisdom, that extremes are almost always wrong, in one way or another. There's something to be said for walking a road of moderation. Seems like the Bible even says something about that...


So this article from David Sirota wasn't really a surprise
, just a confirmation of what I've long suspected: our trend toward "a global economy" has created a backlash, and we are beginning to experience it in our local worlds.

Sirota doesn't actually discuss globalism, per say; he talks about the homogenization of American culture:

"The nationwide journey has been a blur — and not because I’ve been under-rested and overcaffeinated, but because America’s newly homogenized culture has made everything seem the same.

Indeed, in making anywhere into everywhere, homogenization has swallowed up not only our downtowns, restaurants and radio stations, but even our understanding of American democracy. The essence is that our culture has lost sight of the importance of local."

Here. My backyard. We all got so excited about the immense possibilities opened up by the internet and other technologies that we decided hometown stuff was just, well, kind of boring.

I can flip on the radio and hear twenty commentaries about the Middle East, the trouble on Wall Street, or the latest presidential campaigning. I can find news about politics in Zimbabwe, Myanmar, and China. I can listen to live radio from Ukraine, Uzbekistan, and Uruguay. But do I know the name of my aldermen? Have I been to a city meeting lately? What do I know about the people running for county assessor?

Hmm. Time for the trend to swing back the other way. Watch for hyper-interest in all things local, coming soon to your very own backyard.

Image Credit: woodleywonderworks at flickr.

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