September 30, 2019

October Goals.

Let's recap September...

How did September fly by so quickly? I'm not normally one to think this way. Actually, I thought two weeks ago was the last week in September and it was not, so I was really thinking this then and now it's just like, okay, maybe it was an appropriate length of time. 

Finish baby book- Done. This was leftover from August. Actually, what I finished was his baby calendar...the baby book is something I haven't seen since week 36 of pregnancy. Sigh.

Sell things- No. I listed everything. No one wanted anything. I have noticed that people will bite at the weirdest "for sale" posts though. And many I know here usually "ask around" to see if anything is free (that exact specific item). I like the idea of getting use out of an item more than once, more than I like the idea of giving something away for free (Goodwill is kind of sketchy in their business practices, I believe). And I like the idea of giving something away more than I like the idea of packing up some of this baby gear to move across the country next year. We'll see what happens.

Sort Wells' clothes/get fall clothes-  I did sort a lot of his clothes but it's been so warm here that he's still wearing whatever fits from summer. My mom and dad, I admit, bought him his fall wardrobe. So he's ready to go whenever it decides to cool off. The winter coat I bought him in February still fits so maybe that'll last til Christmas. He also got new sneakers a few weeks ago, fitted properly at Stride Rite, so fingers crossed they also last the rest of 2019.

Also...I got fall soap, ordered picture prints from the last few months, and figured out that my driver's license is good for as long as Scott's in the military with no renewals needed.

I also read 2+ books and Wells has a Halloween costume.

And I did contact the rental agency about renewing our lease...they said it "shouldn't be a problem" so I'll make a note to follow up in a month.

That was a long recap ^

Moving on.



Bathroom/Linen closet clean-out. Having been in this house for 9+ months, it's time to start reorganizing. I intentionally used up products/downsized when we moved last year because I didn't want to take useless things with us, including half-empty bottles. Now, I'm going to do a clean-out to prevent stockpiling.

Toddler Time. This is cheating because I already did it, but I started taking Wells to Toddler Time in September. I was going to wait until October, but he just up and started walking (not just toddling) over Labor Day weekend, so I figured he was ready. He does fine there because there's a lot of other June/July babies who are just his age. Now I need to transition him out of the baby group he's in. I really enjoy it and he's not a bully or anything so he can get along with 9-12 month olds just fine...I just can't keep him there forever.

Go to one fall-ish festival. There's multiple fall festivals in this part of the country and I have one in mind for October. The goal is to get there or get to at least one.

Paint a pumpkin. I decided that instead of carving pumpkins (which I haven't done since elementary school anyway), I will pull out the finger paint and Wells can paint a pumpkin.

15 month pictures. I haven't taken pictures since 12 months because he won't sit still and I'm not going to be one of those who takes pictures every month until kindergarten (I know someone who does). But I figured I'd instead update with pictures and a post every three months or so.

That may be enough for one month.

September 27, 2019

5 on Friday.

1. I think the smell of dead leaves is just the best smell.



2. We started watching Yellowstone* the other night. So far, I recommend it. (As long as you're not offended by the maiming/killing of animals and/or people. I had to leave the room a few times in those first three episodes.)
But I also never felt the absolute pull to go back and finish Unbelievable, which I recommended last week, so maybe I've become a serial Do-not-finisher when it comes to TV now, as well as books (I DNF'd two this week).

*Since no one who recommends this actually explains how to watch it, we discovered you can stream season 1 for free on the Paramount app (connected to the Amazon Fire), but we had to also choose our cable company (it came with the internet package, so we have it) on the screen before it would let us watch. So I don't know how to watch if you're a cord-cutter. 

Technology. 

3. After I recommended the enchilada quinoa to a moms' group a few weeks ago, I started thinking about my other go-to recipes. This tortilla soup. This quinoa pizza pie. We had both this week. The tortilla soup, which I've recommended here before, is one that I double and freeze into about 5 or 6 batches, so I usually make it three-ish times a year. I also add black beans and cilantro and make my own taco seasoning because it's healthier (I just ate chips and queso for lunch so take that for what it's worth) and because it's a great way to use up the spices I already have taking up cupboard space.

Also, Wells loved the quinoa pizza pie. I put a video of him eating it with a fork on Instagram yesterday.



4. I had a mole cut out of my back yesterday so I'm modifying everything from showers to workouts this weekend because of the stitches.

I AM grateful that, even though our doctors' offices are 45 minutes away (on a good traffic day), our insurance pays for this type of thing. It's still very odd being away from a military base and having military insurance in a regular city. I was given some prescriptions at the dermatologist and it took four pharmacies before I got one that would accept our insurance. The pharmacies wouldn't even let me BUY the products...they needed insurance coverage for their own quotas, I suppose. (This is what socialism will look like, btw. They tell you what you can get and when/where you can get it.)

Speaking of socialism...

5. I think I'm going to start posting my favorite tweet from the week...I spend more time than I want to admit on Twitter but I learn a lot. It's kind of like a nice little cesspool chasm of links and articles and memes and thoughts and opinions. There's nothing wrong with that, right? Anyway, cancel culture reared its ugly head as always, and this tweet greeted me on Monday morning:


And, for what it's worth, Andy Ngo, the gay Asian with immigrant parents, has been called a white supremacist by those with a far-left ideology. 


In case you missed it...I did an updated "what's in my bag post" and a sleep training post this week.

Next week: new month, new goals!

AND while I have some time this weekend...does anyone know a surefire method to cleaning out iCloud storage? It's always "full" and I delete, delete, delete and it never makes a huge difference. I think it's a scam.

There's a lot of (  ) in this post. Sorry. At least it's not a book. I recently read a book with more than necessary when it came to (  ) and that author needed a better editor.

September 25, 2019

What's in my bag? {September 2019}

I always like to see what's in other peoples' totes.

Not just purses, but why is it necessary to carry a tote bag if you're not going to use that bag for necessities?

Longchamps and Neverfulls particularly interest me (though I will *never* have a *never*full unless I walk into a lot of disposable income with no better purpose). I always like to see what people deem important; many use Longchamps for travel, for work, for day-to-day, etc. I never could quite get behind using an expensive bag to tote around germy school papers/supplies, and I don't often travel...so day-to-day it is. I bought this organizer last winter. It has a zipper pocket in the middle and most organizers don't. The "medium" size fits a Large Le Pilage Tote.

While I would really enjoy the idea of using one of my favorite crossbody bags right now, it's just not practical. Wells goes everywhere I go, so it's nice to just stuff any necessities in one bag and not worry about whether I have a diaper bag with me at all times. I usually still keep the diaper bag in the car and just reload it once a week or so if we've been out and about a lot. It also gets reloaded after every playgroup (toys get washed, snacks get replenished, etc).

But, day to day, it's nice that I can just grab one bag and go out the door. I needed to clean this bag out after a few weeks anyway, so I figured I'd take a couple of pictures.




From the top, clockwise:

Wells' snacks, dog bag(?), stuck-in-traffic snacks, lots of change that I put in the change jar, cheap sunglasses, water bottle, toddler jacket and extra pair of socks (?), wallet (Fossil, < $50), pouch with chapstick, hand sanitizer, etc; receipts to be thrown away, multiple shopping lists to be thrown away, trash...to be thrown away.

In the middle is the anniversary band Scott got me for our 10 year anniversary this year (I think I forgot to share it here)...it was in the side pocket because jewelry bothers me if there's anything messy happening and I took it off for some reason or another. Whoops. 

Rose gold, right hand ring. 


And I refilled the snack container. I haven't gotten a fancy one (the non-spilling kind) because baby dishes/supplies can quickly take over your kitchen, and he does pretty well with just this. Also, he drinks really well out of my water bottle so I generally only take this one with us, and not his own cup, when we go on short trips out of the house. I haven't made use of the cupholder on his carseat yet. 

Other posts filed under "Purse" can be found here. There's a lot of them. 

How did you transition in your "purse life" after a baby? It's slightly more complicated for me than it used to be!

September 23, 2019

Sleeping Training life

*Disclaimer: What I've learned is that every baby is different. Just because your baby sleeps through the night now, doesn't mean he/she always will. Just because your baby doesn't sleep through the night, doesn't mean he/she never will.
I do not consider myself to be ANY GOOD at the topic of baby sleep and feel at a loss for words when others bring up the subject. I have nothing to say. Wells did not react to any of the usual methods like "the other babies", so my advice is to do some trial and error and read about a few different methods before committing to a method of sleep training. Also, I don't have a single method, which is why I could talk about baby sleep all day, but I couldn't concisely give advice if asked. This post is a bit of a brain dump, so I can remember what happened when I tried to sleep-train Wells at 13 months.

And, as per the discussion I ended up having at a moms' group the other day, cry-it-out doesn't bother me that much. I know his cries. And his I-don't-want-to-go-to-sleep cry is much different than being hungry or in pain. Him just not wanting to be in his crib means he needs to sort that out on his own when I know I've done everything I can to make him happy and comfortable.*

I initially sleep-trained Wells around 4.5 months last November. I couldn't take the midnight bedtimes plus wakings 2-3 times a night. There was no predictability and I know some people do okay without predictable sleep and I am not one of those people. Back in my teaching days, I was regularly in bed before 9pm and up at 5am.

Being in the throes of newborn sleep right now is hard. That being said, I think anything before 3 months is "forgivable". Meaning, they're up all night and that's okay. I could live with it. It was around that 3 month point that I started thinking there had to be a better way. This was, for us, also the time that Scott's school schedule really started ramping up and he couldn't help me as much at night. By 4.5 months, I started looking for solutions.

I wrote a post here but, basically, Wells took to self-soothing in his crib (we moved him there at 3 months) pretty easily.  He would still get up a few times a night for a bottle, but he was putting himself to sleep every night. This went on from November until June.

In June, he started refusing to go to sleep. He'd go down at 7pm as usual and then wake up screaming at 8pm. Or he'd roll around, never actually going to sleep, until we'd relent and go get him and he'd crawl all over the couch like a wild man until 9-9:30pm when I'd force him, kicking and screaming, back to his crib. It was a very strange pattern of events.

By the end of July, I was done. He needed to be trained again and, I knew, he had to stop eating at night. I'd been hoping he'd just...stop?  Everyone has a story about how their baby eventually just figured it out. Unfortunately, coming up on 13 months, he was drinking up to 3 bottles in the overnight hours. Quality of life was low, taking him places overnight was stressful, and it was slightly embarrassing to admit to moms of younger babies that he didn't sleep through the night.

Finally, another mom (of a 6 month old!) told me it was fine and I could do it and I just, basically, needed to let him figure it out on his own at night without me getting up to help him go back to sleep. In short: I needed to let him cry it out. She said they had just done it and it was life-changing.

I know a lot of parents take issues with cry-it-out. Scott isn't fan of it, for example. Personally, I don't have a problem with it. Especially if you stick with a gentle version of the method like I found in this book about self-soothing. Babies crying in pain or hunger bother me a lot. Babies crying because they don't want to go to sleep don't. For Wells anyway, there's a huge difference in his types of cries so I never felt uncomfortable letting him cry because I knew, deep down, that it'd be temporary.

This is the framework of what happened when I sleep-trained Wells at 12 1/2 months. Again, he was putting himself to sleep each night (we never rocked him, really, because it never quite worked for him), but he was waking up multiple times a night and wanted a bottle for comfort.















The point is that sleep-training is exhausting and a necessary evil for some babies. While I wish I would've gone all in 4 or 5 months ago, if it wouldn't have worked then, I would have been so incredibly discouraged and not wanting to try it again. It took a lot of energy and desire to psych myself up for this and he took to it quickly! I met a mom last week who said she did a 14 day program and it took allllll 14 days for it to work for them. 

All that being said, we've adjusted some things in the last few weeks/month. We're still working on the bottle thing. He has no patience for a sippy cup when he wants a bottle. It's like he'll drink the milk no matter what but it doesn't "count" to him unless it's in a bottle.
I'm changing him from 8 oz before bed to 4 oz because he's, I think, too full? And he's been waking up at 2am just to talk to himself lately. I have tried to go in and change his diaper but he will NOT allow me to roll him over in the crib so I just rub his back for a minute and he goes back to sleep. We'll also look into moving his bedtime from 7:30 to 7 as winter comes too. I heard some people talking about how horrible it is when we move the clocks back? It definitely didn't affect him last year so I don't know what to expect now. 

September 20, 2019

5 on Friday.

1. Reality Steve posted all the women from Peter's upcoming season of The Bachelor, plus a lot of location spoilers (I won't link to it in case you're easily tempted). The season starts filming tonight. I, in all of the first world problems I make for myself, can't decide if I'm going to read along and be spoiled or if I'll just go with it. January through March is a long way away. I'm so over the men and women from this last cycle.

2. We tried the library story time yesterday. It's two minutes away so it takes little to no effort on my part. It's only 30 minutes so I don't need to pack up snacks/diapers/drinks. It's a different crowd than the normal playgroup we go to and the children's room is set up like a preschool classroom with so. many. toys. And while the librarian is reading and singing, the toddlers get to pretty much do whatever they want. It was a look into what preschool may look like in two years, but it should be really good for him.


Not at the library but playing with trucks at toddler time on Wednesday.

It sounds awful but I don't really care about the book aspect of it. I can make him read at home if I want to some day, and I can read him books at home. I'm not overly impressed when moms brag about their 1 year old "loving books". That's not a thing at 1 year old. This is about socialization and having somewhere to go and, again, getting ready for the potential of childcare or preschool at some point.

3.  We've been watching Unbelievable this week on Netflix. It was very good. I'm not done with it yet but I plan to finish this weekend. It's a true story so I'll be reading up on some of the articles afterward but I don't want to link to much when I'm not sure what's a spoiler and what's not.

4.

I posted some fall decorations on Wednesday but, let's face it, I did not go all-out. I bought a few mums and I didn't get a new wreath just because so few things will look good with a yellow door.

5. Wells' Halloween costume did arrive yesterday (a week earlier than expected) and it's just big enough that it should fit in a month. For a second I thought he'd be afraid of it, because that's how I would've reacted as a toddler. But he loved it. Jett did too, so I have to keep it out of his reach or it might get shredded. 




Happy Friday...maybe the Steelers will lose again this weekend? 
We sure picked a bad year to move to Pittsburgh! 

September 18, 2019

Currently 9/18/19

I don't really do "currently" posts anymore and I'm not sure why, but it seems like a good fit for the middle of each month.

Each of these seems like the answer would be simple but they all kind of turn into a turkey trail so...you've been warned.

Doing. Fall decorating. Just for the sake of this blog and this army life, here's a few pictures of where my decorations are this year.



I've realized that I can only put things up high with a toddler around. Also, the picture frame is empty because I'm waiting on my newest set of prints from Snapfish. The little frame is Wells in his Halloween costume last year. I think I'll just add to it every year, starting a collection of frames. 


Reading. I started A Curious Beginning and then The Immortalists, which I had on hold, came in at the library and I saw The Huntress on the shelf by the circulation desk and I thought I'd grab it since so many seem to love it. I probably won't even read it. Something about big sweeping WWII novels is not for me right now.

Wearing. This is funny. It's been so annoyingly hot here that I am still in gym shorts and tank tops every day and I actually avoid going places that aren't just the park because I don't want to think about what people think about me. True story: I only go to the library to return/pick up books when I'm already dressed to go somewhere else (meaning, a playgroup or Target).



But I am currently wearing my favorite nail polish: Essie Guilty Pleasures.
It's summery and pink but not in an annoying way? It just works well with my skin tone so it's my go-to. I love OPI Strawberry Margarita for most of the summer (and if I get a proper pedicure somewhere I always choose the hottest pink they have), but it's kind of dark/bright for September and I'm usually sick of it by now. Also, I love OPI's brushes so much better than Essie, but I like Essie's formula more because it comes off with remover much more easily.

Watching. Nothing. I was always having reruns on in the background when we lived in Colorado because it was a nice open-concept house and I could see and hear the TV plainly from the kitchen/table. In Wyoming, I was either laying on the couch with a newborn watching TV or listening to podcasts while doing other things. Here, I can't see the TV from the kitchen or dining room and I don't really get to sit and watch during the day and there's nothing I care enough to watch at night if I'm alone. I'd rather read a book or scroll the news or something online. Scott and I watch things together but we just finished a show last week (Four Weddings on Hulu) and now, nothing.

So, short answer: maybe recommend a show to me?

Eating.  I made this marinara the other day to freeze and one thing I don't like about a gas stove is that things don't "simmer"; they cook. Next time I'll do the crockpot.

Buying. Milk. Wells drinks so much milk. Like, it's all he ever wants. He may be moving into a picky-eating stage because the other day I made homemade pizza rolls (okay, semi-homemade) thinking that maybe he'd eat that because he loves pizza. Instead he pointed at the oatmeal I was eating (clearly Scott was away for the weekend if I'm eating oatmeal for dinner) so I shared that with him and he loved it. Then, I tried to give him spaghetti and meatballs the next day and he saw the big Tupperware of steel cut oats I'd just batch-cooked for the week....so he ended up eating unflavored, plain steel cut oats and like 7 noodles for dinner.

Anyway. We go through a lot of milk. Sometimes he drinks it out of sippy cups but he has totally made the connection that bottle = milk, so there's that. He walks over to the corner of the kitchen where his snacks and bottles are and points and cries when he wants milk so that's not good.
 I did ask a professional about the bottle thing since he's 14 months now and she said not to stress out over it because he's still little and it's not a big deal in the grand scheme of things. She said figuring out sleep is more important which is why we're still on the mission of transitioning to one nap (because fighting him to take two solid naps a day is quite the battle at 3pm).

Anyway. I buy a lot of milk.

Thinking. Pessimistic Ross is the best Ross. I'm not a die-hard Friends fan (I was when I was a kid), but I love when Ross gets all shrill and out of control.




Considering. Our next move, physically and metaphorically. Our time in Pittsburgh isn't even close to up, but I've had to do a lot of introspection about what I want/we want the next few years to look like. It's hard because there's always variables you can't control.


Believing. Jett has gotten his comeuppance. He has been infringing on everyone's personal space since the day he was born and certainly since the day he came home with Scott. Now, Wells is infringing on him and he's suddenly insulted by the intrusion. Wells follows him around, trying to share toys, and Jett gives these little groans and growls and tries to get away. I try to encourage friendliness. Scout has NO patience for Wells but he just ignores him completely and runs away if Wells gets too close. Jett is the one we worry about because he seems to have a shorter fuse. I'm the only one that Scout ever growls at and I tell Scout Go ahead, bite me, I dare you when he's being all Scout-ish. And that's usually the end of that.

Making. I made this for my Teachers Pay Teachers store over the weekend. It was originally supposed to be a set of posters but then I realized I *personally* would've used it as a presentation also, so I made it into a Keynote presentation and ended up with two different products.




Ordering.  Wells' Halloween costume. It should be here next week and, if it fits, I'll share, but otherwise, I'm out $30 and starting over.

Listening. I haven't been listening to much except my daily podcasts. In the background, it's usually Little Baby Bum on Netflix, though. But right now, I'm listening to impatient grunts from Scout because he wants, I'm certain, to be walked, but I did something to my foot yesterday and it really hurts so that walk might get put off.

Whew. Told you this would be a long one. There are no short answers these days.

I forgot to share this in the memes I posted last week. I thought it was hilarious because I used to play Bingo often.








September 16, 2019

Please just let me walk my dogs.



I know people thought I was weird for walking my dogs around our field every day in Colorado. I didn't really care what they thought, especially given that I was wearing rubber boots and carrying a rifle with me most days.

Trampling through tall grass at high altitude is great exercise so I don't regret any of that walking.

I would walk the dogs on the trails in Laramie as well. Great exercise at altitude, kept me in shape for labor and delivery last summer, and helped me to lose baby weight when I put Wells in the Ergo and took him along. I didn't get quite as many weird looks there, because there were always a ton of people on the trails. I got a lot of questions about the baby though.

I did some of my very best thinking while walking. I listened to so many audiobooks. I listened to podcasts. I got blog post ideas. I would refresh my mind after a day of teaching and feel like yes, I can tackle all of those papers to grade and data to input that I had to bring home with me. Fresh air as a cure for restlessness and stress is not an overrated idea. It helped me a tremendous amount in those uncertain post-partum months, dealing with sleep-deprivation and whatnot. Plus, the stress of moving across the country, trying to sell a house, of not knowing what a new place will look like/be like, etc. Taking the dogs on a two mile walk each day was most likely what kept me sane last fall.

Flash forward to present day, in Pittsburgh.

My biggest struggle has been walking the dogs. Where, how, and when specifically.

Where: It's Pittsburgh.

How: Off-leash is preferred and I don't do dog parks if they're not on an army base (where they're closely monitored). Otherwise, they're gross.

When: What time of day that Wells and I can both work with and is okay weather-wise.

My solution has been, more or less...

Drive 15 minutes to a park in the morning. It's usually not crowded during the day. Use the stroller to push Wells and let the dogs run the trails off-leash while I walk. They're on electronic collars so I have decent control and they follow my "rules" pretty well.

In the evening, after dinner, I load up the stroller again and leash-walk the dogs with one hand, while pushing the stroller with the other for about a mile around the neighborhood. Up and down the hills, winding through the streets. I usually listen to Matt Walsh's daily podcast while we walk, with my phone just sitting in the stroller.

#1 The dogs expect this second walk now so I can't not do it.

#2 The outside time/fresh air helps calm Wells down for bedtime. So, I could leave Wells with Scott, but that would ruin half the purpose for the walk. Sometimes Scott comes with us, but sometimes he stops at the gym during this time (he has like an hour commute...that's 7 Pittsburgh miles in traffic = 1 hour...so I don't like to obligate him to an evening activity) and I do not deviate from our schedule because #bedtime. But sometimes I leave Wells with Scott because it's just easier and sometimes I walk just Wells, like on the weekends if Scott has taken the dogs out for the day to hunt or hike.

But back to the general point of this post:

I don't walk the dogs grudgingly. This is how I get my exercise. Plus, they need as much exercise as possible.  Wells has been walking dogs since he was 3 days old when we took a family walk to the park in Laramie last summer. It just is what it is. Hopefully we'll have a few acres again in a year or two and it won't be so hard. People have always kind of left me alone while I do this daily task, and I need this pseudo-alone time to get on with the rest of my day. I am very much an introvert and need to be alone to get my energy.

But not in Pittsburgh.

Generally, 2-5 people or sets of people will stop me to talk. To comment. To ask questions. This is in a span of about 20-30 minutes.

It's like it's so incredibly odd to see someone walking two dogs at once and then when you add in the stroller, they can't help it.

"You have your hands full!" I hear this comment at least once a day, but usually more. Usually from the same person more than once because I see the same neighbors day in and day out (yes, it's awful).

"Sorry!" As their dogs run off their porch to come sniff and see Jett and Scout. I don't care, but good Lord. What is the point of those collars and that invisible fence if you have to chase your Bernese Mountain dogs (plural) onto the street every time we walk by?

"What kind of dogs are they?" I thought Brittanys were more popular here or, at least, people 'round PA knew what they were.

"I admire you!" Literally, I don't know what to say to this, so I just say thank you.

"You need some help!". Yes. I do. Or I need a 35 acre field. Either would solve the problem.

A lot of the time, I put my headphones in because then I don't actually have to stop, I can just wave (which is really hard to do with no hands free). And sometimes I put my headphones in and call my mom so I look like a crazy person (to the technology-uninformed) and like I'm talking to myself but I look busy and people generally don't have anything to say then.

Because honest to goodness, I just want to be left alone.

We live in a neighborhood with a lot of retirees/near retired people and I don't have the energy to strike up the same conversation again and again. It's not that I don't like talking to people, it's that I have to turn off my podcast, I have to make sure the stroller isn't going to roll away, I have to make sure the dogs aren't going to jump or sniff or get tangled. And then I have to form the coherent sentences to make the person know that, even though we have Alaska and Colorado license plates, I can carry on a conversation. Our neighborhood is not super kind to newcomers and I've kind of given up on explaining our story: My husband's in the army. He's stationed in Pittsburgh for a year or so. ...yes, we're just renting that house. ...Wells, he's a year. ....Brittany spaniels. ....oh, someone has to walk them, so it might as well be me!

^that's usually how it goes and then I continue on my way, actively avoiding people if I can. I don't even tell people we're from Pennsylvania anymore. I used to think that would make them like us more, but it's so much work to explain. I just let them assume whatever they want now. The other day, someone asked and I said I'm from "near State College" because generally people know where that is because of Penn State. She asked if that was in Pennsylvania. ......

Also, I'm grateful to live in a settled and safe neighborhood (most houses built in the 70s and I'm sure the original owners still live in most of them), because that's not always the case. However, it has indeed taken 7+ months for people to warm up to us and seem to care that we live here. They're generally more receptive when they see we have a baby.

And don't @ me on this: people here are not nearly as nice and kind as they are out west (Alaska and Wyoming...Colorado was okay but the cartel is taking over that state so...).

There's a lot of immigrants in the neighborhood as well and they're all terrified of the dogs and Idon'tknowwhy because they don't so much as bark. There is one little girl who loves to look at them so I often stop when I see her in her driveway so she can decide if this is the day she wants to try and pet Jett (sometimes she does). She likes to look at Wells too because she has a baby sister.

My point, I suppose, is that walking the dogs used to be my alone time. Even taking Wells along, it's time when I can just think and relax.

Now, it's turned into social hour and I'm kind of looking forward to winter when all of the people will retreat into their houses for 4-5 months and maybe then I can walk the dogs in peace. Wells can come if he wants.

September 13, 2019

5 on Friday: New sheets, long week, and funnies.

It's been a long week. I actually thought yesterday was Friday multiple times. I just feel like I had a million things to do and never enough time to do it all. I got a flu shot, which led to a nasty histamine reaction on my arm (that hasn't gone away), and I feel like I hauled Wells all over the place...meaning, I had to repack his bag with new toys and snacks and drinks every day (twice on Wednesday).

1.  I ordered new sheets.
TMI: I've had night sweats on and off since I had a baby. It just never has completely gotten better. Usually it doesn't happen when I'm not at home, though. Which led me to believe that maybe I just needed better sheets. This isn't a claim that better sheets solve night sweats. I was assured that "eventually" they'd go away. BUT after using these tencel sheets for the last week, it hasn't happened once. So I consider that a win.



I actually hadn't bought new sheets since 2016. We bought our king bed at the end of 2014 and, when I sent Scott to Walmart the day it was delivered to get a few things, he came back with the best cotton sheets Walmart had (which still weren't exactly cheap) because I'd completely forgotten that "oh yeah, we'll need different sheets because we only have queen-sized ones". So that's what I've been using since them and we also have nice flannel sheets and a duvet I invested in back in 2016, but flannel sheets are a 100% no-go if I'm sweating at night and, plus, it's still annoyingly hot in the northeast.

Anyway. Tencel sheets. These weren't the most expensive but they had good reviews and I'm very pleased with them. If you're looking to give this material/style a try without spending $300, try them.


2. I'm having blog comment issues. There's so many ("so many" used loosely here) no-reply ones that go to "blogger spam" and I don't find them until I go into my moderation page? It's confusing. Still better than Disqus, though, because I like to reply through email. But yeah, it's an issue. I get way too much spam not to moderate. But I hate that I can't reply to no-reply comments. So if I ever don't reply to comments, this is why.


3. I made this the other night and it will be a repeat for sure. I used fresh corn and cotija cheese, but those were the only changes I made. I recommend eating it with tortilla chips.


4. Fall has not arrived. This was when I first turned on my car but, in all fairness, it only cooled down to 94 degrees by the time I arrived home and this was at 5pm. Not very September-ish.



5. Because it's been a long week...













The weekend looks a lot like last weekend, to be honest. But hey, maybe I'll finish a book, so my reading in general can look better come next month. 

Oh, no BIP anything this week because holy boring. I have no thoughts and opinions about any of what I half-watched. 

September 10, 2019

Book (singular) in August.

August was not my best month. I half-read, half-enjoyed one book. In fact, it seems disappointing to even share it here. I'm disappointed in myself, in one way, but August usually goes like this for books. And that's okay. I pushed myself too much in July when it came to reading.

So if you're wondering why you haven't seen any book reviews on Instagram it's because you just haven't.

I did read one book in the last four-ish weeks.

It had a lot of promise and then it just stopped having promise. 


I try not to, as a rule, say what I'm currently reading because I don't finish a lot of what I start. I have a book from the library right now that is not good, so I probably won't finish it. I just picked up Where the Crawdads Sing after being on the wait list for months, so I'll be starting that sooner rather than later.

However, currently, this is what's on my Kindle...

Circled are the ones I haven't read yet. 


Also, at the library the other day, I looked through the shelves of large print books for sale in the lobby. I got this for 50 cents. I rarely ever would read a book like this twice and in large print, that would likely drive me crazy because large print is unnecessary for me (at this point lol) but I can't pass this up. It's one of the best stories I ever read.  I may actually have to re-read it because it's been about 4 years and I don't remember how it ends!
If you want a great fall book, try it. I'd say it's perfect for November.


Linking up with Jana and Steph!


September 9, 2019

It's still summer, I think.

Saturday was a little weird because Scott had to work. I kept a regular schedule for us, though I usually mix things up a bit on the weekends. I'm really trying to nail down a nap schedule because, even though I don't want it, Wells is starting to migrate in the direction of one nap. He'll take a nice morning nap, sure, no matter what, but then he'll miss his afternoon nap or skip it or will just roll around and yell in his crib for an hour.

On Sunday, we kept him busy all morning and then he did nap from 12:30-3:00, which was what "they" say he should do, ideally, on a one-nap schedule. Basically, I did some research and discovered that, at now 14 months, he should be having 4-5 hours of awake time before bed. I've moved his bedtime to 7:30 (it was 8:00), which means there's literally not enough time in the day for two naps.

Anyway.

I could talk about sleep all day. And I probably will in a future blog post.


I splurged in Target on things I never generally buy anymore: I needed some structure in the form of a devotional and I think Lysa TerKeurst is pretty credible, right? I mean, she's no Beth Moore, if you know what I'm saying. 

Also, I feel the pull to go the paper planner route and this one looked serviceable. 

I listened to this most of the weekend when I was cleaning. If you have kids of any age or are a teacher, it's a must. They have two seasons. I haven't listened to season one yet.

We went to a park near our house and played for a bit. I think now that he's walking, I'll take him there a few days a week just for something to do. Even a lot in the winter, to be honest. He's gotta be tougher than the $800/40 classes toddler gym I looked at. I spent a lot of time with Alaska kids, so he's not going to be too coddled. 

My parents gave me this geranium on Memorial Day weekend and it's died and come back like three times at this point. It's still looking good. 

Fall definitely arrives here sooner than I remember.

No picture but we went to the only pho restaurant within a 100 mile radius last night (just kidding, there might be a couple downtown but we don't live downtown and I'm not doing that at dinnertime with a toddler). It was okay? I mean, the pho/bun bowls are the #3 thing I miss about Colorado. And I only miss like 4 things about Colorado. 

We've been staying up late watching Four Weddings and a Funeral each night. Last night, I decided I just had to go to bed early because I couldn't stand it anymore. I left Scott on the couch with this game at halftime. I'm really glad I didn't stay up. 
Ugh. 



September 6, 2019

5 on Friday: Bunnies, Pilates, and BIP

1. This past weekend, we went to my parents' house because Scott had a 4-day weekend. He was actually in Florida from Monday night to Thursday night for hurricane preparedness (a surprise trip), was given his weekend in Pennsylvania, and then thought he'd be going back this week. Luckily, he didn't have to but I suppose it's always on the table for next week. Sigh.





2. Jett killed a rabbit the other night. The bunnies in our yard constantly tease him/them. On Wednesday evening, as the dogs sometimes do, he was caught on the other side of our "fence" and I assumed he'd gotten stuck over there. He just peered out, around the bush, looking at me. I thought he was being obstinate and called for Scott, who luckily was home. Scott went out there to lift the fence up for him (he'd gone under it) and there was Jett, sitting proudly with his kill. He'd just refused to leave it. So Scott let him run around the yard with this dead bunny for a bit.

[No picture. But I'll never get the image of Jett trotting around proudly with a bunny in his mouth out of my head. ]

This is when I should tell the story of when, last fall in Colorado, Scott was loading up the truck at 3am to drive to Wyoming in the dark (I was in Wyoming) and the dogs were running around the yard. He called for them to get in the truck and Jett jumped up and dropped a dead bunny in his lap. Scott yelled and threw it out the door and Jett jumped back out and grabbed it again. Like, he was just going to take it along for the long 4 hour drive so he had something to play with.

3. Pilates Challenge.


The Balanced Life is starting a free 10-day Pilates challenge next week. My workout game has been...off for a while. "Multiple reasons" is my excuse, the way it's the excuse for everyone. For awhile there, I was doing really well with 30 minute Pilates videos almost every day. Then it turned into I-don't-have-time-and-or-energy for a long video (well, I do, but we all use our free time differently) so I just started skipping it. Then, this week, I told myself I had to start back up with 10 or 15 minutes a day. If I do it during morning naptime, it's finished and I can just move on with my day.

The point is: this challenge is designed to demonstrate that 10-15 minutes a day is enough if you're trying to build a habit. I promise it's enough. It's kind of marketed as an easy way to add in self-care to the hustle and bustle of fall ("self-care" is kind of a horrible word, but that's an opinion for another day).

But if you're looking to add something efficient and effective into your day and don't have time to go to the gym, this is a good start! I'm using it as a way to reset my routine.

Sign up here!


4. We watched Three Identical Strangers the other night. I had heard it recommended on The Popcast a year ago but, at that time, you had to pay to watch it on Amazon or something. This time it's on Hulu. I fell asleep but finished it the next night. It's fine. It's really sad. I didn't like the ending premise of "anyone could have a twin". No. Not anyone could have a twin. 98% of us would know if we had a twin.

Also, we started Four Weddings and a Funeral, the series, on Hulu last night. I thought it was really funny and smartly written. I never liked The Mindy Project but Mindy Kaling did this show too. I like her well enough, but I just didn't like her flagship show.

5. BIP.

If I hear the word "clarity" one more time...

It's the new "right reasons". You don't need "clarity". That is code for "I need to go on a date with someone else and really want to get my bang for my buck out of this experience and you never know because someone better might come along". How millenial of them all.

I never thought I'd feel bad for one of the twins, but I felt bad for Haley. It was pretty humorous the way she lamented all of her problems to Blake, of all the people on that beach.

Speaking of Blake, he's really the funny part of the season. Kristina is playing the role of "suspicious Russian" well.

And, per usual, on HTMF, they defended Derek to the hilt. Just because he's a regular guest on their show and gives them an iota of credibility because they can get an "alum" on the podcast. Never mind the fact that they spent full minutes complaining about Chase. Chase and Derek are pretty much identical in making this franchise their careers and riding out those 3rd and 5th place finishes (I think?) from 3+ years ago for as long as possible. Plus, Derek has ghosted girls in the franchise and/or screwed them over, which is something you'd think Emma and Claire would ask him about or have a problem with in a general sense.

But anyway.

There's a toddler running around with my $5 sunglasses and if he breaks them, I'll need to go to the store today because I can't function without sunglasses.

The plan this weekend is to decorate for fall.

Approaching the beast. Scout does not like mobile Wells.
But at least Scout does not randomly kill woodland creatures in the backyard.