Couponing.

Ugh … money. We don’t have much of it. It’s such a downer.

I have no choice but to learn to coupon and I can’t even tell you how overwhelming it is. I watched the show Extreme Couponing to try to get myself excited about it, but I came away from it thinking that those bitches are a special brand of crazy. A brand I don’t care to become.

I hate, hate, HATE:

1. Math.

2. Things that require too much thought.

3. Standing behind someone in line who has coupons. 

I used to work at a grocery store, and I hated couponers. They would happily hold up the line over $0.35. Or they would stand in line at Customer Service forever waiting to get a rain check for an item we were out of. It just didn’t make sense to me. Time is money. It seemed like they were wasting a lot of their time. And mine.

I guess I shouldn’t have ridiculed couponers for all these years, since I am grudgingly going to become one. It’s out of necessity, not because I have a sick need for a “stockpile,” let’s be clear about that.

Now I have a stack of unclipped coupons sitting on my kitchen table … and they are mocking me. I am mocking myself. I might as well go ahead and use all the money I save on my next shopping trip to buy a pair of mom jeans and a purple hair scrunchy.

(source)

My new goal: to make couponing cool not entirely dorky.

Trick or Treat.

ONE just found a bunch of feminine products and mistook them for treats. As in candy. 

He threw a FIT because I took them away before he could open, and presumably eat, all of them. Never in my wildest dreams would it have occurred to me that while being at home with my boys, I would have the following conversation:

Me: Give me those, ONE. Those aren’t for you.

ONE: No! They’re MINE. MY TREATS.

Me: No … they aren’t treats. And they aren’t yours.

ONE: (throws a fit)

Me: Here, let me show you. See? Open it up. It’s not candy.

ONE: What is it?

Me: A tampon. 

ONE: What it do? 

Me: I’ll explain it to you when you’re older.

After I opened it to prove it wasn’t edible, I figured nothing was wrong with letting him have it. As I write this, he is wearing the cardboard part of said tampon as a mustache. So to the people who ask me, “aren’t you bored being at home all day?” THIS IS WHY THE ANSWER IS NO.

What Was I Thinking.

Against my better judgment, I bought ONE a pair of kiddie scissors. Because there aren’t enough hazards in my house. And because I wanted to have yet another reason to worry about leaving him in a room by himself.

While I wrote this, he tried to sneak them upstairs to his room not just once … but twice.

I’ll let you know how this turns out.

Pumpkin Pecan Cheesecake.

Southern Living magazine

Hello, my delicious friend.

I’ll be making you for Thanksgiving … provided I’m able to bake in peace by then.

Otherwise, I’ll be forced to bake you in the middle of the night while my family sleeps. Who knows what I might jack up if it comes to that.

I’ve never made cheesecake before. Most certainly, attempting to do so on very little sleep, in a fragile emotional state, makes the most sense.

An Honest Exchange.

I find that I can get more done in 15 minutes in my car than I can all day inside my house. I can pay bills, make phone calls, write out lists, organize coupons (HATE), and most importantly, primp in natural sunlight.

I sat in a parking lot this morning with my children in the backseat waiting for me to finish a bad job of plucking my eyebrows. ONE asked me when we were going to get out.

Me: We’ll get out as soon as I get myself together.

ONE: Oh.

ONE: (five seconds later) Are you together yet?

Me: No. 

ONE: Mommy? 

Me: Yes?

ONE: How do I look?

Me: You look fine.

(silence)

Me: How do I look?

ONE: Ummm … not so great. 

 

Negative Nancy.

This week, Husband and I had a series of arguments. Of course, I felt like he was wrong and I was right … until he told me he felt like I had been acting like a “Negative Nancy.” Burn.

Apparently, instead of telling him all of the cute and fun things I experienced in a day, I ranted about how effing hard it was. This made me pause. I don’t consider myself to be a negative person at all. In fact, I pride myself on my inner strength and ability to handle difficulty. The problem is, Husband is one of the people who gets to hear me whine about it in person … daily. The rest of you get to read about it.

If I were Husband, out working hard all day, I wouldn’t want to come home to THAT. What he said made me mad at first, and then it got me in check. I spent all of yesterday getting my shit together.

I read (in a book written by Dr. Laura — she may be crazy, but I like her work, and I find her encouraging) that as women, it is our responsibility to “shield our families” from our issues. They don’t need to know about our every insecurity, pain, struggle, and problem. That is why we have been blessed with mothers and girlfriends who will listen to us vent and offer advice. 

This struck a chord with me. I realized I can’t vent to Husband without him feeling like he needs to fix it. Unfortunately, he can’t fix the stresses I am under at the moment. He can offer encouragement and that’s about it. Luckily for me, I have a network of girlfriends who are in similar places in life and they have been an invaluable source of advice and support.

Today, I am thankful for those women. I am also thankful for my Husband, who finally decided to tell me what he felt about something instead of just staring blankly at me.

Here is a quote sent to me from one of my friends. I just might post it in every room of my house. It’s so easy to lose sight of what really matters when I haven’t been allowed to poop in peace for several days in a row.

Motherhood.

Life is hard. 

I am in the midst of one of those days weeks months where I feel certain that every member of my family is purposefully trying to piss me off. Or at the very least, drive me insane.

I thought about taking this opportunity to vent about Husband and ONE and yes, even TWO (he has colic, you recall). They are all being difficult in their own special way. I was gearing up to pound out a post about my problems.

But before I could get to that, TWO started to cry. I was sitting in his room, rocking him in the quiet and begging him to sleep, when he suddenly stopped screaming and smiled at me. He has a big, dimpled grin that just melts my heart. I’d post a picture, but it’s so fleeting when it happens that I never have time to get the camera.

It was in that moment, when his big eyes were looking at me and his face dimpled, I realized that all of my problems can be dealt with. This is the part of motherhood that makes me a better person. 

Every day, I think to myself, I can’t possibly go through another day like this. But then I do. I have no choice. You can’t throw in the towel on motherhood. You press on, minute by painful minute, until it gets better.  Sometimes, an infuriating moment is immediately followed by a beautiful moment. I am here 24/7 to soak all of them up, and hopefully, by some miracle, I will survive it and I will be better because of the lessons I have learned.

Now, if you’ll excuse me … both of my children are crying. Simultaneously. 

Boo.

I love my little dragon.

I felt guilty that I took exactly zero pictures with TWO, but he was asleep in the stroller the whole time and there was no way I was going to mess with that.

Hankering for some exceptional people-watching? I suggest you head on over to Boo At The Zoo. I was impressed, mostly because of the number of adults who made us question — are they, or aren’t they in costume? HMMMMM.