Monday, December 8, 2008

Just Life


My Santa apron. Bought for 10 cents at a yard sale. :)



Rosie Posie, my cuddly Christmas kitty.



Attempting to take a Christmas picture. She refuses to look at me when I have the camera.




Our tree. It's in the corner this year so we have more room for chairs. My family is coming for Christmas. Yeah!



We're having a cold December evening and the chili on the stove smells good. We got a little bit of snow on Saturday evening. Lily immediately opened her mouth to catch the flakes. Is this an instinct in all children? We drove down a couple streets decked out for the Christmas season. We rode slowly pointing out the snowmen, fancy lights, carolers, Winnie- the-Poohs, etc... Lily said, "Oh, a mailbox!" Donnie and I laughed. The girl does love going to the mailbox.

I've started a little bit of Christmas baking, some cookies over the weekend and crockpot chocolate pecan clusters today. I wore my Christmas apron (from a yard sale) but the picture didn't turn out too well. Here is the recipe for the crockpot candy:

1 lb. slightly salted peanuts (my sister gave me the recipe and suggested using pecans instead so that's what I did)
1 lb. unsalted peanuts
12 oz. pkg semi-sweet chocolate chips
12 oz. pkg white chocolate chips
1 lb vanilla bark
(I added a bag of carmel balls.)


Pour all into crockpot. Mix. Let set 1 hour on low heat. Mix all together to coat nuts. Drop onto wax paper.


So easy and it makes a ton! My whole counter was filled with them. Off to the freezer they go. (Well, except a few that I kept out for my honey and me.)



Hope you're enjoying the Christmas season!

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

The Countdown











Christmas with a child is so much fun! Lily loves pointing out everything "Kermus" as we drive or shop. Last night the three of us decorated a gingerbread house. It was fun to do an activity as a family and Lily was in her glee. I didn't tell her the candy was edible until near the end, so she actually decorated for awhile. Then she enjoyed some gumdrops. All in all a good time.


I have an advent house that I bought for $2.00 a few years back at a salvage sale. It's missing a few pieces of wood and the #4 door keeps coming off, but I still think it's cute and Lily is loving it. I explained that when we get to door number 25 it will be Christmas day and her cousins will be here. She was very excited and said she would share her toys with her cousins. Can you tell we've been working on sharing? :)



I'm trying to do something special with Lily or as a family everyday in the month of December. This afternoon we read "What God Wants For Christmas" and opened the little boxes that go with it. We bought it at Lifeway after the holidays last year. I recommend it if you have small children.


I hope to get the tree up tonight or tomorrow. It's such a lovely and wonderful time of year!

Monday, November 24, 2008

Thankful

It's easy to find fault with life, no matter what stage or season I am in. I can groan out of selfishness because Lily didn't nap as long as I wanted her to, complain about this or that (at least inwardly if not outwardly), and just be disgustingly ungrateful. But today I am filled with Thanksgiving for God and the season of life He has me in. My husband works so hard and I'm able to stay at home with our children. This is such a huge blessing! It means that I get to care for Lily, watch her learn and discover, teach and train her. These are not always easy things to do but I'm grateful that I get to be the one to do them. I'm thankful that I can take a break from my housework and have a little tea party with Lily. She claps with delight, oh, how I would hate to miss that. I'm thankful that I can rest my pregnant weary body during Lily's naptime. I'm thankful for a home to care for and organize. I'm thankful that I can prepare meals for Donnie when he comes home from work and that we can spend time enjoying each other's company in the evenings. We are truly blessed!

The present economy, with so many unemployed or barely making it, makes me again realize how our security cannot be built on wealth, a stable income, etc... These truly are sinking sand. At any point a disaster could strike, but one thing remains. The love of God. We are safe in His hands. I'm so grateful that I know Him and that He saved me. What hope!

I put away my fall decor so that I could dust and clean this week before leaving for my in-laws for Thanksgiving, but the house looked so bare. I brought out a few Christmas decorations and put a vintage-gargage sale Christmas cloth on the table. The house seems alive and cheery again. There's a sugar cookie candle burning and I'm glad to be inside, cozy under a blanket. I take little breaks throughout the day. I am 19 weeks pregnant and feeling a lot better. I still have headaches and dizziness at times, but overall I think the worst is behind me.

We found out Friday that we are having a baby girl! It was amazing to see that little baby on the screen and realize she's living within my body! She moved her little legs and arms and blew bubbles for us. :) I am thrilled to have another girlie. I couldn't resist looking through Lily's newborn clothing today, remembering the early days when she was so little and fragile. The clothes seem so small! I'll wait until after Christmas to wash everything and arrange the drawers. I look forward to getting my nest in order.

I need to cut up vegetables for potato soup and do another load of laundry before Donnie comes home. Have a good Thanksgiving week!

Monday, November 17, 2008

Breakfast + Dinner = Brinner




We have a group of friends that gather every couple of weeks. The guys are studying the book Systematic Theology and the women chat and take care of babies. All three of the other gals have had babies within the last 6 months. We usually meet at our home so Lily can go to bed at 8. This week the guys volunteered to make us breakfast for dinner. They made homemade biscuits and gravy, mango and regular pancakes, fresh fruit, banana bread, scrambled eggs with proscuitto, turkey bacon, hashbrowns, etc.... It was wonderful!


They looked rather handsome in my aprons too. :) Thanks guys! P.S. Donnie cleaned up the kitchen too! (You women out there know how nice this is. :)


*************************************************************************

I'm drinking a cup of decaf coffee with cinnamon and half and half. Quite warm and yummy on this chilly morning. We've had a rainy November and I still haven't cleared out my flower beds. Ughhh! I think today is the day. I bought some daffodil bulbs last week, so Lily and I will head outside in an hour or so and begin the work. I know it will feel good to get it done.


I spent an hour last evening making lists of things I need to do, make, and buy in the next month. I love planning :). While I was working I heard Donnie yell my name. His muscles were achy yesterday so he decided to soak in the bathtub. Our bathtub has jets and he used some body wash under the faucet. I ran into the bathroom thinking he must have fallen or something. I cracked up when I saw him covered in bubbles! They were overflowing the top of the garden tub. He needed me to turn off the jet switch which is by the bathroom door. It was such a funny sight to see. I told him I wanted to take a picture but he was not too keen on that idea. :) I started thinking about it once we got in bed last night and started laughing all over again. LOL

Friday, November 14, 2008

Princess







Lily doesn't care how she looks, how messy or wild her hair becomes, or that her shirt is stained with red pepper juice. I like this about children. They are just busy being themselves. No awareness of what they look like. This morning, still in her bunny jammies, she asked to put on her princess dress to dance. It's a pink, girly dress that I found at Goodwill this summer. It will probably fit her better in a year or two, but she wears it now over her clothes. As I slipped it on over her head she smiled. I told her she was a beautiful princess. She nodded her head saying, "princess" and running her hands over the tulle skirt. I told her that God tells us we can become His children, a daughter of the King, God's princess. She just stared like she was processing. Then she began twirling and dancing. She put on quite a show, loudly saying "cheese" as I snapped a few pictures.
I caught her looking at herself in a mirror this week, smiling and admiring herself. Very cute and innocent. She likes herself. It made me start thinking about all the messages girls and women are given about beauty. What little girl doesn't feel deep down within that she is special, that she wants to be someone's beautiful princess when she grows up? But few seem to really still believe they are anything special by the time they reach adulthood. Could it be we buy into the message that there is only one kind of beauty, only one personality that is the best, that uniqueness is something to bring to conformity with the norm, that fulfillment comes from possessions or a relationship with a man?
God is the King of Kings, the creator of the universe, and the one who knits us together in our mother's wombs. He loves us unconditionally, faithfully, patiently. He loves who we are. He created our unique qualities. He pursues us and saves us from the dragons. He lovingly confronts and forgives. He desires that we display His glory and fulfill His plans. This is beauty, a quiet spirit yielded to God's will, walking in faith, in true relationship with Him. A woman who knows her purpose and delights in who God made her to be.
This is my pray for my little girl. May the messages that I give her heart always turn her to the King. I pray above all else that she will fall deeply in love with Him and follow Him all the days of her life. I also pray that this mama will have the wisdom from above to guide her to be the princess God wants her to be.


"Listen, my beloved brethren: did not God choose the poor of this world to be rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom which He promised to those who love Him?" James 2:5

Monday, November 10, 2008

A Weekend in November











We had beautiful weather in low 70s on Friday and Saturday. Friday afternoon was perfect for
perusing a few pages of a library book under a tree, that is if your toddler will play by herself. We enjoyed playing together outside for a little bit though.

Saturday my friend Phoebe took me to a cute little town near the mountains. It had a historic downtown with darling shops. (I did a little Christmas shopping.) The leaves were falling like rain. It was so pretty! I ate a soup and sandwich at a little diner, and later in the afternoon we headed to the house of Phoebe's mother-in-law. The house was amazing. They designed and built the house themselves, the outside covered in river rocks. There was even a stone gazebo that can only be entered by climbing in the windows. Very fun and such beautiful scenery with a secret garden and all surrounded by woods. The drive there was my favorite part of the day, so peaceful riding over the rolling hills. We had a very nice day! My husband was so nice to watch Lily for the day so I could enjoy time with a friend. It's always so refreshing.

I have chicken and vegetables in the crockpot, and the smell is making me hungry. Here's the recipe. It's very easy and tasty. The best part is you can make two meals of it- soup the second day.


Crockpot Chicken

2 carrots, sliced
2 onions, sliced
2 celery ribs, cut in 1-inch pieces
2-3 potatoes, quartered
3 lb. chicken or 3 chicken breasts
2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. black pepper
1 tsp. dried basil
1/2 c. chicken broth

Place vegetables in the bottom of a slow cooker and then chicken on top. Add seasonings and chicken broth. Cover. Cook on low 8 to 10 hours or on High for 3 1/2 to 5 hours. (Use 1 cup chicken broth if you cook on high.)

Chicken Soup

Take remaining crockpot chicken and vegetabes (I leave out the potatoes for the soup) and add the rest of a 28oz. box of chicken broth. You may need to shred the chicken with fork and knife. It will be very tender. Add around 2 Tbsp. dried parsely flakes. Add egg noodles (1/2 a bag). Cook until noodles are tender. Add salt and pepper to taste.

Enjoy! I like to take this meal to new moms with the noodles and parsley in a bag so they can make soup the next day. It's adapted from the cookbook Fix-It and Forget-It Cookbook.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

A Fall Day
















I don't really know how to put pictures throughout my text and I don't have enough time right now to figure it out. :) So here's a brief description of my day: I needed some fun time with Lily today. It's been a rainy week so far but the sun broke through so we headed out to play in the leaves. I tried to get her to lay down with me in the leaves, but she thought I was silly. I loved watching the leaves falling off the trees and blow through the air. I could have laid there all afternoon. It was simply gorgeous!
We each took a square of clear contact paper and stuck nature treasures on it. It was very windy so we ended up with pieces of debris attatched as well, but it was fun. I think I enjoyed it more than her. :) We taped them to our front door so we can see the sun shine through.

She asked me if we could have a "pickwick" (translation: picnic), so we ate lunch on our porch. She jumped up and down and said, "Pickwick, I so excited!" You gotta love the enthusiasm of a 2 year old. :) Then we made brownies and read books until nap time. It was lovely morning.

So, now I need to do laundry, vacuuming, and the such, but it sure was fun to play for awhile.