Tuesday.

Last night I was clipping the kid’s fingernails, because I lead a very glamorous and exciting life, and I stopped to look at ONE’s 4-year-old hands. I feel like I don’t stop and take the time to look – to really look – at my children often enough.

ONE’s fingers and hands have gotten so big. I can’t remember the last time I really saw them. He has clubby hands that come from my side of the family, with stubby, bitten-down nails and a trace of grease leftover from the other day when he took the chain off his bike. He has big boy hands … the kind that are used to build forts and space creatures and houses out of Lincoln Logs.

He laughed and said, “What are you doing, Mommy?” I told him I was just looking at his hands. Then I told him how big he’s getting and before long, his hands will be as big as mine. Then we discussed his plan to become a train conductor.  

This morning, TWO and I walked ONE to class and were returning to the car when I noticed our shadows on the ground. My baby is walking. And before I know it, he’ll have big boy hands, too. So I stopped and took a picture and I am so glad I did, even though I look like a boxy giant with a teeny tiny head.

I wouldn’t trade this day for anything.

T minus 4 days.

I have a wonderful mother-in-law. She is letting us use her hotel points to get a very nice room in New Orleans this weekend in celebration of making it through 7 years of holy matrimony. 

It’s only 4 days away, but we haven’t discussed it much — mostly because we’re afraid we’ll jinx it … a weekend alone? No children? Free to hold hands, walk at our own pace, do what we want?! We haven’t done this in well over a year, maybe longer. I honestly can’t remember for sure

I can’t wait.

Giant Baby Arms.

I had big plans to cook a ton of food on this rainy Saturday. I took the kids out to get groceries, in the rain, which was my first mistake. I had a super long list, which was my second mistake. My third mistake was to underestimate the scope of TWO’s reach.

He knocked a bag of flour off the shelf with his giant baby arms, and that is when we made our exit. 1/3 of the way through my shopping list. So I took him home and fed him.

The end.

 

Posted in TWO

Time Is Up, Frumpy Pants.

Before I became a mom I didn’t get why moms in general always seemed to look so frumpy. I spent my entire first pregnancy worried sick that when I officially became a mom I would suddenly stop caring what I looked like. 

I recall telling my friends – bless them – how worried I was that I would, without good reason, start wearing purple scrunchies and sweatshirts with teddy bears appliqued on them. I was also worried my husband would no longer love me, and I would be a terrible mother who couldn’t do anything right. As a side note, I’d just like to say I am so sorry to anyone who ever had to listen to me voice my many pregnancy fears. They were all ridiculous and uncool, which pretty much sums up how I am when I’m pregnant.

Fast forward 4 years. I am a stay-at-home mom. In my former life as a working mom, my sole reason for getting dressed every day was to make sure I wasn’t ridiculed by my co-workers. So … when that factor was removed, so was my sense of shame. I’ve gotten so accustomed to wearing workout clothes that when I have to put on normal clothes (like jeans) I feel grumpy and uncomfortable. I’m used to elastic expansion and anything else just sucks.

To help you understand what I mean, I’ll show you. Yesterday I stopped by a popular children’s consignment store. I looked a lot like this: 

Why yes, that IS Scotch tape on my cell phone case.

And the woman getting herself and a tiny baby out of the car next to me looked a lot like this:

(source)

It was embarrassing. I gotta step up my game. It’s time. First order of business: make, and actually show up to, a hair appointment. I’ll keep you posted. 

Until Next Time,
Frumpy Pants

Milk.

Husband is some kind of milk fanatic and guzzles more of it than anyone else in the house. We’ve been keeping a lot of it on hand since TWO went off formula. I like to give the kids Horizon milk because it is a lot better for them, but it’s expensive and watching Husband pour a huge glass of it to make chocolate milk just because he has a sweet tooth kind of chaps my hide.

Yesterday morning we had just a little milk left in the house and I caught him red-handed about to drink it from the jug.

I have solved this problem.

 

Not My Pal.

My friends have all joined My Fitness Pal. I actually joined many months ago, after TWO was born and I hit a weight-loss plateau. Tracking my food intake was semi helpful to me and I lost about 29 pounds, but now I’m at another plateau and I need to bust through it.

I’ve been saying that for like 6 months.

So, I succumbed to the peer pressure and got back on the MFP wagon and immediately remembered why I fell off in the first place. This is what tracking my food intake does to me.


That is one half of a can of Pringles potato chips. The other half is in my belly. Being under the stress of a specified calorie allowance makes me do this. I think it must be psychological.

Maybe you’re wondering what I’m doing with a can of Pringles in the first place, if I am trying to lose weight. Well, I got mad at my Husband this morning and I took them and then ate them out of spite. Then I got mad thinking about what My Fitness Pal, who is not actually my pal, would have to say about that. So I ate more of them.

The only choices I have as a rebellious dieter are to not diet at all, or figure out a way to diet that works for me. I better figure it out fast, because someone left an Oatmeal Creme Pie in the kitchen.

Steel Wool.

Husband and I have never once bought each other anniversary gifts. We’re pretty low-key … we normally go out to dinner, but this year we had grandiose plans of taking a weekend away to New Orleans. Because we NEED a weekend away, like, yesterday. But we have no money.

In fact, we’ve been hoarding cash in a gravy boat so we could purchase a new computer. Husband just finished setting it up this evening.

Me: Our anniversary is in like two weeks. 

Husband: (laughing)

Me: What are we going to do?

Husband: Make each other CRAFTS.

Me: (Googling) This website says the traditional gifts for the 7th year of marriage are copper and wool. 

Husband: I’m going to get you some steel wool. 

The Refrigerator.

We are currently borrowing a refrigerator from my uncle, who got it from my grandmother. It has a large mark on the front where some careless painters got paint on it. I use this as an excuse to display all kinds of things, like this magnet my parents gave me recently …


This picture of Husband and ONE when he was tiny and needed help to toddle around …


And finally, the manifesto.


The author is one of my mother’s discoveries, researcher, author and speaker Brene Brown. Her name is supposed to have a little mark over the “e” on the end but I can’t figure out how to do it. She seems like an amazing woman. If you visit her website, you’ll see what I mean. I love her message of authenticity; I feel like I met someone who has researched and studied something I just now figured out – that to be yourself, truly, is the greatest gift you can give yourself and your family.

I downloaded this manifesto from her site because I loved the very end of it so much. It says, “I will not teach or love or show you anything perfectly, but I will let you see me, and I will always hold sacred the gift of seeing you.”

It gets me every time. Love this lady.