This Year I Am Going To Be Silly.

This Year I Am Going To Be Silly.

These are magic salt and pepper shakers.  You fill the star with salt or pepper and can then shake the magic wand over your food and then magically sprinkle magic fairy dust upon your now magical dish.

I bought these for myself for Christmas and promptly sprinkled my magic wands over Christmas dinner.  To say it was supremely awesome is putting it lightly!

A few years ago I decided that I needed to theme my years.  Not give myself resolutions to never fulfill (exercising, I’m looking at you), but an overall theme for the year.  The first theme was “Write a Bood Story.”  I’m a writer by nature, so the idea of looking at the year as an outline was brilliant.  What would I want to include in my story?  What would I leave out?  How would I shape the year to write a better story?

This idea ended up precluding the aspect of writing a better story every day.  What would I want in the day to make it a better story?  Wasting time reading on the internet while I should be working with the kids, or taking care of something in the house, or spending time with people…was not writing a better story.  Ignoring the dishes so I became irritated when they were out of control was also not writing a better story.  The focus of “Write a Better Story” was a great way to refocus what I did that year.

The next year was “A Bigger World,” where we focused on serving others outside our home, followed by “Love” last year.

“Love” was an amazing year because I really had to hone into how to love people who were unloveable.  It is easy to love people you like, but how can you find a way…a safe way…to love people who are unloveable?  It was a challenge, to say the least, but it was totally worth it.

Because I tend to prefer the hermit lifestyle (cabin in the woods, anyone?), finding ways for me to love people without compromising my introverted-self is a delicate task.  When I think of “loving people,” I tend to think of someone saying: “…and then we did this together, and then we had a 2 hour talk over lunch, and then I brought them dinner, and then we played Scrabble all night, and then I served their family, and then I spent the weekend with them, and then….”  I get overwhelmed thinking about how I can serve the people and calling it love.  But that’s not it at all.

To love someone means you understand them, and you love them on their terms.  My very good friends love me on my terms, and they mostly leave me alone (truth).  I do not like being meddled with, and although I am very interested in discovering new ideas I am a fierce porcupine if I feel I am being forced into new ideas.  I love on very delicate and tactful terms, but when I do it is very deep and sincere love.

Other people love on different planes:  There was a woman I knew who could work a whole room of dozens of people, talk with each person, hold their babies, find everything funny, hold insightful conversations, get to know about their lives…for hours.  I was impressed every time I watched her, it was just amazing.  Some people need to talk about themselves, and it doesn’t occur to them to engage the other person.  They are hyper-focused on what is important to them, and you engage them on that level.  Some people take a long time to open up due to trust issues: you show me that I can trust you, and then we’ll talk.  Sometimes minutes, sometimes hours…sometimes years.  But you have to let them trust on their own terms, you can’t force love.

The year of “Love” was fascinating, but at the end of it I was ready to find something new.  Something fresh.  Something silly….

The theme of 2014 is “Silly, but with the purpose of connecting while being silly.”  I need things to lighten up; I know I over-think homeschooling and all my tasks I put on my plate during the day, and I self-judge myself into critic-oblivion far too much.  I need to add more joy to the day, more smiles, more happiness in what we are doing.

But for the purpose of connecting with people.

My goal is to be sillier this year in order to share joy with my kids, with my husband, with my good friends.  I don’t want to put people, or myself, off by being reckless and silly (“hey, let’s jump off a cliff!!” is not silly, for example).  I want to be silly in a way that binds me with the people close to me.  I want to increase the element of happiness in our relationship.

So, we’ll see what happens this year!  If anything, I can wave my magic wands and make things taste better, and that’s a good start!

Last Day of January: How Did My Resolutions Hold Up So Far?

In the final stages of the holiday season last December, I wrote a list of things I would like to refocus on for the new year.

Looking back on 2013, what would I do differently?  How would I rework things?  Has there been anything on my mind that I always mean to do and just never get around to doing?  Here’s what I had:

What I Want To Accomplish This Year

  1. More art
  2. More Etsy postings (and maybe even a sale this year!)
  3. Continued Progress with Homeschooling
  4. More Frequent Running
  5. A functional garden
  6. A functional blog
  7. A 10K run
  8. Attending the Blog Her Conference
  9. A scheduled plan at the beginning of every month
  10. I would like to be less lazy and more deliberate…but also more relational and less task-oriented

So, now that it is the last day of January, how did I do?

1. I finished sewing applique` projects!  Woohoo!

2. I haven’t even logged into Etsy all month. Boo on that.

3. Huge progress here.  It took a couple weeks to get back on track and finish all our work every day, but it was well worth the effort.  I personally don’t mind when things get hard during homeschooling.  The days when subtraction is something that was designed in the stone age and we were just discovering fire, the days when the only thing the kids are doing is spacing out and staring longingly at the sunshine outside; the days when it’s 3 in the afternoon and you are still working on the first subject….those days are rough.

BUT- those days force you to rethink what you’re doing.  If your lesson plans are not engaging the child, and not engaging you, then you have to toss that lesson plan.  Just crumble it up and toss it right out the window.  Do something else.  What I did was set the entire day of Monday aside for “Arts, &etc.”  German, piano, sketching, color theory and documentaries are on Monday.  This opens up the rest of the week to academics.

I originally had the kids practice face sketching so their motor controls would be trained, and it would improve their handwriting.  What is surprising is the advances they made with sketching.  We went from this

to this

in a couple weeks!  That is AWESOME.

The curriculum we use has 12 little books per subject, instead of one big book, so it makes accomplishing the books much more satisfying…and palatable.  This month the kids have finished many books, which is super exciting.

We also started open registration EPGY, which I have been looking at for a while, and it has replaced time4learning.com as an educational supplement (just covering all our bases to make sure we are actually learning up to standard).  I was a little worried when we first started because I haven’t had the kids test to see if they are on track with their grade level.  We use curriculum for their grade level, and we use the STAR test printouts to see what needs to be revisited, but nothing has ever been official.  So signing up for an online course from Stanford that was designed for homeschoolers was a little trepidatious.

I am so happy (ECSTATIC) to report that the kids are getting 90%-100% on the subjects.  WHEW!!  They also love the way it’s laid out.  It’s very quick review of the subject, and then you work.  I didn’t know how that would go, but it turns out to be exactly what they need.

So, #3 – check!

4)  Besides this week, where I have only run 1.5 miles, I’m doing good.  Averaging +3 miles a week.  I’m still not a size 10 (or 12), but Progress is progress.

5) No luck on the garden, but it’s still there.  Looking at me.  Longingly.

6) The blogging is certainly doing better.  December was a little tough to find time to write anything, and once January came I had a big case of, “what on earth do I even write about,” but I persevered and kept at it.  Blog Her Convention in the future…?

7) Well, obviously no 10K run this month.  That’s a case of “I’ll do it tomorrow.”

8) Attending the Blog Her Conference- TBD

9) “A scheduled plan at the beginning of every month” I think this is something I forgot about, and I’m looking forward to writing out the scheduled plan for February.  I can plan a week just fine, but a whole month is daunting.  That will be this weekend’s project!

10) I would like to be less lazy and more deliberate…but also more relational and less task-oriented
This was the big one for me.  If I accomplished nothing else on my list, I at least wanted to accomplish this one.

I am definitely more initially task focused than people focused, and I can get lost in checking off lists during the day; especially with homeschooling.  I’m pretty sure this is more common than not with homeschooling moms: “Do X and Y and Z, and when you’re done with that, we will finish G, H and J.”  That’s all good and well for finishing subjects, but if you ignore the child while you finish your task list (because it can become your list instead of their list, if you’re not careful!), you’re missing out on the relational gems of homeschooling.

This month I have made a deliberate point to work with the kids more, sit with them for some subjects, work on the white board with them through tough fractions and sentence diagrams (I need a white board marker fund…for serious). Nova and I have had a couple nights of writing sessions at Starbucks together, which was a lot of fun.  She is building a recipe book for herself, and I am pulling my hair out over my organizational skillz on tamarah.org.

So, all in all, it has been a really successful month!  I’ve stayed on track, made good progress, I feel good….AND I am on top of the laundry!! BONUS!

Turning 35 With Grace, and 5 Inch Heels

I will admit something to you: I have looked forward to turning 35 my whole life.

IMG_5563
17 was a monumental milestone for me – the last year of childhood.

27 was a milestone to hit, and I can’t really tell you why.  But at 27 I just felt like I was actually starting down the path I was destined for.  College was over, I had 2 kids and an awesome husband, a good life and a good idea of what I wanted to do.

30 was also a monumental year, since it was then that we decided to have some more kids, I started homeschooling, we actually *bought* a house, which I never thought would ever happen in my lifetime.  This was a good year to set some stones in the road.

But 35….I am going into our 6th year of homeschooling, we have 5 adorable kids, husband is still totally amazing and I can fit into a couple (large) pre-pregnancy dresses!  Man that took a lot of work, but WooHoo!!

35 is when I feel like I really start aging, and I am so freaking excited about this.

I have like, gray hairs!  On my head!  And one somewhere else.  That one is weird.

I have wrinkles underneath my eyes when I smile!

I can’t lose 5 pounds by cutting out the extra Snickers bar I sneak in, which was so much easier when I was 22, but now I actually have to WORK at being healthy!

I know all this seems odd, and maybe even peculiar, so I’ll explain my logic here:

My mother, my grandmother, my aunt, other women in my life who have grown old have experienced these things as well.  They have used support hose, not to make themselves look thinner, but to hold in their varicose veins.  They have opted for a large glass of Metamucil and Motrin at night, instead of a glass of wine.  They look at breakfast cereals that have extra fiber, and are happy about it.

The women in my life wore beige satin camisoles, slips and bras.  It was the uniform color of femininity, when I was little.  All their undergarments smelled like gardenias, from the bags of potpourri they had stashed in the back of their drawers.

I remember the nights when the women would get together with a bottle (or two) of red wine, an oven full of garlic bread, pots overflowing with spaghetti and a night of Dallas.  

They were in their 30s when I remember this, and their models helped shaped what I’ve always dreamed of:

Being 35, and rocking 5 inch heels with skin tight leather pants and a Corvette.

Now…the leather pants and Corvette are a little out of the question by now, but the dream lives on.  My childbearing years are over, my college has been finished for many years, my husband and I are still rocking the house and our kids are just amazing us every day with something new.

35 is a GREAT year, and I have the shoes to prove it.