Archive for September, 2011

National Champs.

I realize I’m almost 6 months late on this post but I forgot about these pics [and I think Colby took them because we let the kids stay up late this night to watch the game on tv.  So so glad we did!]  So proud of the Aggie Women’s Basketball team for bringing home the National Championship.  I only wish more of their games were on tv.  Since we only have basic cable, we watched as many as we could on espn.com, but only until the final 4 were the games on national tv.

In the midst of all the “Aggies leave Big XII for SEC” talk, I’m excited to think not only “football rivalries” but “Southern charm” and “versatility” and “academic qualifying”.  And no, I’m not just trying to get the search engines going.

Add comment September 29th, 2011

Painted Nails.

The girls watched me paint my nails one day, so they asked they could have their nails painted.  I had no idea they’d want their daddy to paint!

pic taken April 2011.

He did such a good job, I’m booking him when I can’t see my toes anymore.  Which might be tomorrow…

1 comment September 28th, 2011

Fish Tacos

I have 3 kids.  This means I have a wide variety of appetites to please.  If I try a new recipe for dinner, it’s a pretty good bet that none of the kids will like it but Kevin and I will love it.

This recipe, all the kids loved, except Colby didn’t want the tortilla.  Here’s what I did.

I used these spices on top of about 1 lb. of tilapia filets.

Then I wrapped each piece in foil.

And put it in the oven at 400 degrees for 20 minutes.

It turned out super yummy on top of flour tortillas, with shredded cabbage and sour cream mixed with guacamole.  Wish I had taken a pic of that too!

1 comment September 25th, 2011

Bible readers.

All the kids were given little Bibles when we had their baby dedication service at church.  Now I think our church/preschool ministry gives a full-size preschool Bible to the little one and his/her family.  I can’t believe these kiddos will be reading stories to our newest little one very soon.

Pic taken January 2011.  When Carlee still had a “dinky”…. so glad we are rid of that thing.

1 comment September 21st, 2011

To-Do List

I am a perpetual list-maker.  If it’s on the list, I’ll do it; otherwise I forget.  Sometimes I make a list, either on paper or my phone, just so I can cross things off – such a feeling of accomplishment.

I got a lot of things done today.  But Colby & I wrote this on a day when I really needed some happy.

pic taken March 2011.

1 comment September 15th, 2011

Pregnancy Update: 23 weeks

Told you I got bigger.  And wow, my hair is getting long.

How far along: 23 weeks in that pic, at time of posting 24, almost 25 weeks.
Size of baby: 1.3 pounds, “about the size of a small melon” according to my Pregnancy app on my iPhone.  I look like I’m carrying a small melon, don’t I?
Maternity clothes: My XS shirts are starting to show my belly!  I have started wearing some of my M (bigger) maternity shirts because they’re really cute and I’m tired of the XS stuff anyway.  It’s been so hot that I’ve been sweating buckets, which means I get to change clothes a lot.
Movement: Tonight Colby felt the baby kick his hand a couple of times.  I thought the look on his face was so precious because he realized what was happening!  I’ll have to get it on video… he is so sweet.
Sleep: Eh.  Not so good.  I’ve been using a couple of different pregnancy pillows and have finally just settled on my 2 king pillows – one in front, one in back.  I have no idea if Kevin is still sleeping in the same bed as I am.
What I miss: being able to run, bike, & otherwise exercise like a non-pregnant person.  I saw a billboard advertising the first-ever B/CS Marathon & 1/2 Marathon.  It will be on Dec. 11th.  There’s always next year.
Cravings: still don’t like sweets all that much, but (again) since it’s been so hot I can’t drink enough water.  Iced tea is a possible craving.  I got a new(to me) bread machine for my birthday and I made 2 loaves of homemade bread last week.  Guess I should lay off since my glucose test is in 3 weeks?
Symptoms: Heartburn!  Started taking medicine daily (just 10 mg.) and it’s definitely worse when I go to sleep at night.  I’m trying to go to the bathroom twice before I get in the bed, so I can save myself a trip in the middle of the night.  And tired.  Very tired.
Best moments of the month: I hinted at this last week, but we are excited to share IT’S A GIRL!  Colby was pretty crushed he wasn’t having a baby brother, but I am not worried at all about him loving this baby.  Plus, Carlee has already laid claim to this baby (“MY baby”).  Kennedy is having too much fun at dance and pre-K.  :)

We don’t have a name picked out yet, although I’m trying to convince Kevin of a name I really like.  He has turned down pretty much every name except for this one, so I’m holding out for it…

3 comments September 12th, 2011

Where were you on September 11th?

It seems like this is our generation’s “where were you when JFK was shot?” question. (and the previous generation could have asked, “where were you when you heard about Pearl Harbor?”)

In 2001, I was 20 years old.  I was living in a southside dorm at Texas A&M (Underwood, I think?), and I remember when I woke up that morning that I heard no music from my radio, only hushed tones and almost scared voices from the djs.  I was kind of in a fog and my (incredibly dense) roommate at the time – NOT Bonnie – told me to turn off the music/radio and the lights because she had had a late night previously.

So, I got ready for my Ultimate Frisbee class (best. class. ever.) and prepared to meet this guy Brian, whose last name I never knew, but we’d always walk to Ultimate together because he lived in the dorm across from mine.    I think it was him who said, “Did you hear that a plane hit a really big building in New York City?”  I think I said something like, “No way.”  It was not a far walk to the Simpson drill field where we had Ultimate, but I remember we didn’t say much on the way there.

And let me be really honest – I was 20 years old and knew pretty much nothing about the world around me.  I had really no idea what terrorism was or who Al Qaeda was or even where the World Trade Center was.  I don’t think I had ever seen or heard of the Twin Towers, until they weren’t there anymore.

Later that day I went to my child psych class, really because I didn’t know what else to do but to keep my normal schedule.  The profs said they weren’t making anyone stay, but those of us who did stay talked a little bit about what had happened.  I think we were all looking for answers but finding none.  I think the profs said something about not worrying that anything was going to happen, because they still didn’t know who was behind these actions.  (And because by this time rumors had circulated about bombs being dropped at the next A&M football game…)

So then I went to Kevin’s apartment, and we stayed glued to the tv all day.  We couldn’t stop watching what was happening, what had happened, and thinking about all the specifics of that day.. the replay of the planes hitting the WTC…  the plane hitting the Pentagon and the one that went down in Pennsylvania…  And the number of people we saw who jumped from the burning building was horrifying… the cameras showed up-close shots of these people and I remember thinking how awful it must have been inside the building, if their best option was to jump from 77 floors to their death below.

In talking with Kevin’s sister, who is a structural engineer, she said everyone at her work was convinced that the building wouldn’t fall.  Because you don’t just crash a plane into the side of a building and not expect it to topple over, structurally.  But, they didn’t take into account the fire that happened and the melting that ensued, which did eventually cause the crumbling.

I really can’t believe it has been 10 years.  Kevin and I were less than 3 months away from being engaged, at that point, and none of our kids were alive to even know what all took place.  I am thankful that this tragedy united our country for at least a little while, but now I feel like we are back at finger-pointing and name-calling and not working together toward a common goal.  I think about the large number of divorces that were put on hold or cancelled after 9/11.. because 2 people realized it was worth the trouble to try and reconcile, rather than having their own way.  I wish we as a country would learn that lesson.

I also wish that our country would respect our President.  Like him or not, we elected him *as a country*.  Our country turned to our former President, looking for answers, and I think he did a lot of good.  But the American people as a whole did not agree with his policy changes in the midst of tragedy, so the President’s hands were tied.  Regardless of who we have in office, we are to stick by them, just as we stick by our favorite football (or baseball) team when they are 0-10.  We might not like what they are doing, but we have to trust that what happens was done in the best interest of our team, or our country.

The church choir this morning sang one of my favorite songs, and these are some of the lyrics:

Bow the knee;
Trust the heart of your Father when the answer goes beyond what you can see.
Bow the knee;
Lift your eyes toward heaven and believe the One who holds eternity.
And when you don’t understand the purpose of His plan,
In the presence of the King, bow the knee.

There are days when clouds surround us, and the rain begins to fall,
The cold and lonely winds won’t cease to blow.
And there seems to be no reason for the suffering we feel;
We are tempted to believe God does not know.
When the storms arise, don’t forget we live by faith and not by sight.

Bow the Knee.

Where were you on September 11th?

1 comment September 11th, 2011

Rockin’ Girls

Carlee wouldn’t even look at me to take the pic; Kennedy decided to sit down and rock out.

I think I know what we’ll be asking for for birthday or Christmas… [and Carlee is also holding a plushy Ariel doll (Little Mermaid) which she says is her favorite.  Redheads gotta stick together.]

Add comment September 9th, 2011

Kennedy & Colby’s first days of school.

Yesterday was Kennedy’s first day of pre-K.  She is attending the same preschool program Colby attended, at a church close to our house.  Kennedy is a real people-pleaser and I worry a little about her first time in a school setting.  I am praying that her teacher will see how receptive she is to praise and that Kennedy would flourish and learn well.

And, this is the only pic I could get of her – she was so excited to go in all by herself that I had to beg her to turn around and hold still for a minute so I could snap her pretty face.

Colby is on the last day of his third week of school, and he is loving it.  I can’t say enough good things about his school.  This is his teacher, and I couldn’t be happier.  She’s organized (wahoo!!!) and positive (yay!) and also has a 1st grader (not in her own class), so she knows exactly what I’m going through right now.  Colby does very well academically.  He also gets bored and wants to know exactly how to succeed so he doesn’t get in trouble.

On another note, I need to teach Colby how to smile again. I think he thinks if he raises his eyebrows, it will make his smile bigger.  What a great kid.

And, I don’t have a pic of Carlee, but yesterday, since I only had Carlee, she and I went swimming after I taught my water aerobics class.  We about froze to death, since temperatures have only been in the 80s and the hurricane winds have cooled things down a bit too.  But we had a great time together and I don’t think I’ve ever heard her talk as much as I did today, when it was just the two of us!  Mondays, Wednesdays, and a lot of Fridays might just be her favorite mornings of the week.

3 comments September 8th, 2011

Books read August 2011.

23.  Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10 by Marcus Luttrell.  This book was written by a Texan Navy SEAL.  I could stop there – what about that is not to like?  This is a look at Luttrell’s unbelievable journey into (and eventual escape from) enemy territory in 2005. Although he only mentions it indirectly, I’m pretty sure he is one of the ones who helped pinpoint Saddam Hussein’s location before the eventual capture of Hussein’s operation.  This book is a must-read.   5 stars.

24.  Unbroken: a World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, & Redemption by Louis Zamperini.  [Alicia asked me if I had heard of this book, because the author recently spoke at her church (Houston's First Baptist).   I was insanely jealous, until she told me he was only there to speak at a men's event.]  Another must-read.  Parts of this book reminded me a lot of the movie “Groundhog Day”.  Only, instead of doing the same thing over and over, Zamperini’s situation just kept getting worse and worse, the more days he was in POW camp.  I gained a new perspective on WWII and why my grandparents hated the Japanese so much.  The last 50 pages or so were completely worth it – the redemption story on the rock, out of the miry pit, so to speak.  5 stars.

25.  Ape House by Sara Gruen.  [Can't remember if I reviewed Water For Elephants on the blog or not, but I did LOVE it.  Haven't seen the movie yet.]  This is another “I Followed The Author” book.  The whole time, I kept thinking, “I can’t believe I’m reading a story about apes. Really?”  But Gruen is a good story-teller and brings in her personal experience with bonobos to tell a cute story.  An easy read.  4 stars.

Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide by Nicholas D. Kristoff & Sheryl WuDunn.  I’m not including this in my total number of books, because I didn’t read it.  I checked it out from the library and decided it was a bit too real for me during this time of my life [pregnancy and having young children].  I am unfortunately aware of the situations that would cause the need for this book to be written.  I’d encourage all of you to click the link to read the summary and reviews that follow.  And, if you read this book, please let me know your honest take.

[PS - It's not even the end of the year and I've read 25 books!  I can already tell I'm slowing down for September though; it's getting harder and harder to stay awake and read once I'm in bed.  I won't try and put a number of how many I think I'll read this year, but I will be interested to know that number.  Do you set goals for your reading during the year?  Or do you "play it by ear" like me?]

3 comments September 7th, 2011

Kennedy’s first day of dance

And, give a kiss to Mommy!

4 comments September 6th, 2011

18 weeks [mid-July]

This pic was taken when I was 18 weeks along.  I have a dear friend who does monthly pregnancy updates, which I think is cute and I hope she doesn’t mind that I’m copying her idea!  I filled this out back in July, so when you read my 23 week update a few days from now, you can see how things have changed.

For this pic, I used an app on my iPhone called Snapbucket – I think this filter is called Lomo.

How far along: 18 weeks & change
Size of baby: 1 pound
Maternity clothes: I love that all the things I bought when I was pregnant with Carlee still fit for this pregnancy.  I have tons of clothes – maternity and not maternity.
Movement: Yes.  Mostly in the evenings, during prayertime/storytime and when I’m getting the kids to bed.  (Hoping this is not a sign of things to come when the baby gets here.)
Sleep: pretty good!  I have to get up 1-2 times to go to the bathroom but still only sleeping with 1 extra pillow under my head.  (no pregnancy pillow)  I am taking a 30-45 minute nap each day.
What I miss: soft cheeses.  I squeak around the “no lunchmeat” rule by nuking it in the microwave.  Don’t know if the same rule applies to things like feta, blue cheese, etc., but I’ll have to look into that.
Cravings: meat.  bread & butter. potatoes. still an aversion to sweets.
Symptoms: finally feeling not quite so sick now.  I’m able to get out with the kids more and enjoy our last days of summer.  Haven’t had much heartburn, which is such a change from Carlee & Kennedy.
Best moments of the month: People don’t have to guess whether I’m pregnant or not – you can definitely tell!  The kids are excited about finding out what the baby is later this week…

2 comments September 5th, 2011

Four for Four [September]

A mommy blogger friend (who kind of is my inspiration for blogging and writing and who I hope to meet some day “IRL”, and who still has time to read and comment on our blog sometimes) started posting pictures of her 4 kids on the 4th day of every month.  She calls it Four for Four, and I think that’s just brilliant.  And, since we’ll be joining the ranks of having 4 kids, we’ll start blogging about it.

For now it’s just the kids and me with my large melon sized unborn baby.  We are watching the Aggies btho SMU, hence the Gig ‘em thumbs.  And, they are clean, hence pajamas.  And they ate good dinners, hence the gummy snacks with lots of sugar.

This month it should be called “Four On Mom”.

5 comments September 4th, 2011

Books read July 2011.

18.  The Sweet Potato Queens’s First Big-Ass Novel:  Stuff We Didn’t Actually Do, But Could Have, And May Yet by Jill Conner Browne.  I was recommended this SPQ series by a friend in book club, but I made the mistake of checking out this (untrue) book first.  It was very easy reading, but it was just so silly that it ruined me to want to try reading the true ones.  Being a self-proclaimed Southern girl, I found it almost offensive but funny too…  Read the reviews on Amazon (of both the true and untrue versions) and make the decision for yourself.  3 stars.

19. Wither by Lauren Destefano.  I couldnotputthisbookdown.  I read it in a matter of hours (seriously) and while the subject matter is pretty intense, the story is riveting.  Now my only regret is that part 2 of the trilogy doesn’t come out until next year!  Which means part 3 will take even longer!  I’m realizing how spoiled I was in reading The Hunger Games virtually back to back.. to back.  5 stars.

20.  The Cinderella Pact by Sarah Strohmeyer. Thanks to Patsy for letting me borrow this one.  I thought this book was cute.  Definitely light-hearted and fun, chick lit.  I still don’t know how the main character was able to deposit her paychecks legally, but whatev.  4 stars.

21.  The Glass Castle by Jeannette Wells.  Wow, crazy family.  I’m giving this book 4.5 stars, only because of some subject matter.   I am glad she told this story because I know she’s not alone in her struggle with family of this nature.

22.  Half Broke Horses by Jeannette Wells.  Once I find an author I like, I’ll try to check out other books he/she has written.  I loved the insight of putting together a story like this.  It made me grateful that my kids knew their great-grandparents only a little, but they’ll know their grandparents (all 4 of them!) very well.  4.5 stars.

Add comment September 3rd, 2011

Books I read last summer (2010), part 2

This post is alternately titled, “A-G-L-E-T, Don’t forget it!”, which is a Phineas & Ferb reference.  I didn’t really want to quote P&F, but they’re so darn catchy.  I think the writers are seriously witty and they really love life.  If you haven’t watched this show, get yourself to the nearest Disney channel or Netflix instant streaming and add it to your queue.

Speaking of not forgetting, I did forget to blog about some books I read last summer.  Most of them were (or are now) book club picks.  In no particular order -

Julie & Julia by Julie Powell.  I think this is the only book/movie duo I’ve ever read where I liked the movie better than the book.  I mean, Meryl Streep in this movie was fantastic as Julia Child.  Plus, the author of the book likes to use the F word a lot.  Really?  About a bomb, maybe.. but about cooking?  Don’t think so.  3.5 stars for book, 5 stars for movie (and, if you’ve seen the movie, DON’T read the book, you’ll be disappointed).

My Life in France by Julia Child.  Julie Powell includes excerpts from this book in the J&J memoir, so it seemed like a natural choice to want to read this book.  I was surprised at how much I enjoyed Julia Child’s memoir and life during the 1950s especially.  I was not a huge Julia Child fan after reading J&J, but this book made me want to watch her tv show and check out the cookbook which made her famous.  5 stars.  (PS – the link for this book is the 2009 “movie tie-in version” – I read the version from 2005, but there is no review listed in that link.  Apologies.)

Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child, et. al.  As I mentioned, I suddenly had the desire to learn about aspic and how to de-bone a duck.  After checking out this book, I’ll say, “never mind”.  It is worth a look, though, and now I understand a little bit more about my grandparents’ generation and why/how they cooked the things they did.. and why/how the American Housewife was born.  4 stars, if for nothing but posterity.

The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield. And now for something… completely different.  This is quite possibly the best, most suspenseful and well-written book I’ve ever read.  I can think about this book and still get chills as to how the plot was uncovered.  Fantastic and a must-read.  5+ stars.

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot.  I thought this book would be a lot like a textbook – boring, drab, dull.  But I was surprised at how well the author takes a seemingly mindless subject (DNA) and turns it into a plot for a tv series.  Well, pretty much.  Worth the read, or at least a skim.  4.5 stars.

The Time Traveler’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger.  I don’t know how to classify this book – is it sci-fi?  Whatever you call it, I’m not usually a fan of this type of literature.  But this one is a winner.  This author does a really great job of weaving the story in between time and characters.  I did like the book better than the movie, and if you haven’t read or watched either one, I highly recommend both the book and the movie – but they have different endings…  5 stars.

This post was made possible to you by the letters “A-G-L-E-&T”.  That was a Sesame Street reference.  The “aglet’ is what you call the tip end of your shoelace.

3 comments September 2nd, 2011

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