• Give it to God

    We, from the Midwest, don’t like it when…

    1. You tell us your opinion. We have one too and if we aren’t close, keep that stuff to yourself!

    2. You correct our kids and we’re standing within range. I’ll correct my kid, you shut up.

    3. You correct us. At all. Ever. Simply be polite and smile.

    4. People think of us as stupid. Just because we conjugate a word different than y’all do does not mean that our IQ score just took a nose dive.

    5. You think we’re a bunch of farmers. First of all Chicago, Kansas City, Detroit, and Minneapolis are all cities. Big cities. And we don’t farm in the city.

    6. We stand in Que lines quietly. We will start a conversation with anyone around us. It could be about the weather, a game, or even your family. Again, be polite and just have the small talk.

    7. You tell us to stop apologizing. We apologize. A lot. Just find a friendly way to say “that’s alright”. Even if there isn’t any reason to be apologizing.

    8. You act like a jerk wad and don’t hold the door for the old lady, mom with a car seat, or the perfectly healthy and fit gentleman walking ten feet behind you. Just hold the door open.

    9. You let your lawn go to hell. Show pride for your property and yourself and cut the grass weekly during the warm months. It’s the least you can do for your neighbor.

    10. We’re asked about tornadoes. It’s not like it’s a weekly activity of ours to go try to race into the eye of the beast or something. We just know what it smells like when they’re coming.

    11. We become super self-aware of our quirks. We know we say “ope” “yeah, no” and “no, yeah” almost thirty times a day. But just… don’t point out when we do it.

    12. You do not say “excuse me”. It’s rude. We do not like rude. Our children are saying “excuse me” from the moment they start forming two word sentences. It’s essential to polite living.

    13. You show up to a cookout without something to eat. Always bring some sort of food with you. Even if it’s just a bag of chips.

    14. You don’t know what the license plate game is. How is it possibly you got to adulthood without playing this game?

    15. You don’t have enough cheese on something. Cheese is lifeblood, people. The cheesier, the better. Just always assume you didn’t add enough and then throw a little more on top of it!

    16. Deer are around. Those bastards are idiots. They will see your car lights and then jump right in front of them. It’s why we love hunting season so much!

    17. When someone from another city comes into our city and starts claiming that their city has better barbeque. I can promise you, it’s not better than our cities barbeque!

     Listen, if you’re coming to the Midwest, brush up on your manners, learn how to small talk a little bit, and be prepared to make eye contact with strangers. We’re like the Labrador retrievers of human kind. We just want to be friends with everyone and we don’t mean to upset you with our friendly ways. And we really hope you’ll stop seeing us, one day, as simply fly over states.

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    Can something be too cheesy?

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  • Give it to God

    Hostage Situation in Progress… Part 2

    The sun came out today. But we, sadly, did not. We stayed put. Like were obligated to do.

    But you know who isn’t staying put? This freaking cardinal that decided to nest in the tree right outside my bathroom window.

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    Now, I’ve got nothing against birds, per say. But this one is making a play for numero Uno on my hit list. This little red jerk wad thinks it’s perfectly acceptable to spend every morning from the moment the sun comes up ‘til at least 2 in the afternoon, sitting on the ledge of my window to just peck and peck and peck at the window.

    This window, by the way, is frosted. He cannot see anything inside at all. Why this blasted beast has chosen to come after my bathroom window is a curiosity indeed. But I got to hand it to the dumb little thing, he is resilient. I’ve smacked that glass more times than I care to count trying to finally scare him away and yet he returns minutes later to continue his incessant pecking.

    Please dear reader, keep in mind I’ve actually known about this bird and his insane tendency for over two months. But it never bothered me before. However, it’s bothering me now!

    Because now I’m stuck home, trying to find ways to fill my day and keep my kids active without getting in trouble. I’m stuck here, able to hear that tap, tap, tapping happening over and over again. I’m stuck here with very little to distract me from that tapping. He just keeps going. All. Flipping. Day.

     So today we were tackling the shameful “craft room” which is located 9 feet from that frosted glass window. The girls were enjoying this bird’s crazy antics but me… oh heck no.

    I would turn my back to take something out of the closet and like magic the bird would land, tap three times in rapid succession, and then just when I turn around to smack the window, he would fly off. Oh, how my darling daughters would laugh at this. What a fun game mommy was playing with the little red bird outside.

    Truly, I am an animal lover. I like all animals. But this guy, he’s not your average bird. He’s clearly possessed and needs to be taken care of. Anyone know of a decent BB gun that could take this red rascal out? Heck, at this point I’m willing to put up with my cat allergy and getting one of those to take care of this.

    via GIPHY

    On the plus side, I was able to clean out and organize that craft room/closet space. I can now open the door all the way and walk fully into the room. My girls now think it’s going to be the best hiding spot for our next game of hide and seek and my boys can now get all their model projects out of there and actually put them together. So it was a win all around.

    Except for the dang bird. He is going to lose after this day!

    Also great news is that brilliant husband of mine discovered the issue with the car and was able to get all the parts today. I can see the end in sight people! I will be free again soon!

    How great were the Looney Tunes?

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  • Give it to God

    Hostage Situation in Progress…

    On Sunday my car started acting funny. We were 14 minutes from home when a red light came on saying the transmission was overheating. So we pulled over and Eric checked it out.

    Sure enough the car was leaking transmission fluid like a sieve. Now Eric knows quite a bit about cars. In fact, back in the fall he had to take the transmission out to fix the flywheel (you don’t have to know what that is, but it’s important for the car to go vroom vroom). So he tells me were just going to have to pray really hard that we can get it home and in the garage while it drives the whole way in first gear.

    Prayer was key here, because I certainly didn’t think this was going to happen. It didn’t work last fall when the transmission busted, and boy let me tell you, that led to the world’s biggest headache I have ever personally experienced. But what should have taken 10 minutes to drive ended up taking us almost 30 minutes. We were, thankfully, able to get it all the way home and in the garage.

    Now comes the verdict. Husband climbs under that giant hunk of metal to check out what we are dealing with. And sure enough, comes back out to tell me it’s not a quick fix. He’s going to have to take the whole front end of the car out again to get the transmission out and then take the transmission apart to see which of those gaskets doesn’t want to hold up its end of the bargain here, so we can replace it.

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    I looked to him with fear in my eyes… “How long do you think this will take? Can I drive to get the boys from school tomorrow?” I asked him, ever so hopeful.

    Now my husband is a great man. He understands his wife better than I know myself. He knows that without my car I’m stuck in my house with my children with no chance of a furlough. And he know that’s not good for anybody involved. But, sadly, sometimes things are out of his control. So he has to tell me the terrible truth. I’m going to be car-less for at least the week.

    A WEEK!

    But not just any week. Nope it’s the week where my boys have Thursday and Friday off school. It the start of spring break for them. I was already promising trips to gymnastics, and the zoo, and all different parks. And now were all basically grounded.

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    I woke up this morning, day 1 of this hostage situation, and saw that even God was sad for our situation and wept with us, as it pours buckets of rain on us. It feels almost like the Almighty is saying, “see it’s no fun outside anyways, staying inside won’t be so bad”. But I know the rain can’t last the week. I know tomorrow the sun will come out and dry it all up and we will still be stuck here.

    I’m trying to see this as a positive though. I like positives. So I’ve sat here all afternoon and made myself a little weekly schedule during my captivity.

    It’s not quite spring but that doesn’t mean I can’t get a jump start on the cleaning. I plan on cleaning out all the things that don’t get cleaned very often. Like the fridge, the catch-all cabinet, and under the sinks. I hope to organize my kitchen cabinets and maybe make them more user friendly. Hopefully I can organize my “craft room”, which is really, currently, just my fancy name for this large closet that we keep throwing stuff we don’t know what else to do with or where else to put it.

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    See, I can find positives in this awful situation. And so long as my children don’t start climbing the walls, I’m sure we can make it through this.

    I’m just really regretting our Lenten promise to give up TV now! :’(  

    via GIPHY

    How long should children's artwork hang on the refrigerator?

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  • Give it to God

    I Need a Refill Please.

    So heres a simple but very true fact of being an adult. Friends are hard!

    Its so easy to get lost in the challenges of life; be it work, romance, or parenting, and completely neglect outside relationships. But another essential truth to adulting is…. we need friends!!!!

    We need these people! Someone that we choose to keep in our lives. People who have proven to be your champion, cheerleader, and confidant. People who have seen your worse and given you their best, without reserve, without judgement, and without expectation. We need people that keep us going when things get tough. People who cheer us on when we start succeeding. People who wont let you put your hand in the fire, and will guide you, always, back to the light.

    These people are essential to help you reach your full potential in life, help you become your best self.

    So today I woke up feeling overwhelmed in my house. It wasn’t anything major causing these feelings either. Just the normal everyday life for a mom of five; getting everyone up and ready to get the boys to school, making sure they all ate their breakfast, stripping sheets off a bed after a nighttime accident, and getting Wednesdays laundry started. But I had to do all of it on very little sleep, since our little M decided sleep is for the weak, and I was up with him for half the night.

    I saw everything I had to do this morning as if they were just huge tasks to be completed. Nothing appeared to want to go my way. Two of my kids wanted to fight waking up, and took four different warnings to actually start getting dressed. The towels I forgot I put in the dryer the night before didn’t fully dry so I was unable to switch out the laundry loads and get started on the Wednesday laundry. P decided she preferred her milk in a coffee mug instead of bottle, and then proceeded to spill 40% of her milk on the floor. And while normally these things don’t get to me, this morning it was just a little more than I wanted to handle.

    Then G starts asking about the plans for our day and all I can think about and see is messes all around me. I need to vacuum, and mop, and the half bath has about a billion band aids scattered on the floor that still needs to be picked up, and I didn’t get a single thing printed out for preschool today so I’ll be using workbooks again and making up some flash card game on the spot. I need to make prep bags for my morning smoothies, and get the next five days worth of oats prepared. Not to mention, I still have to fix the boys curtains… and the list goes on and on.

    Truly none of these things are new or bothersome to me on a normal day.

    But today was different. I didn’t handle this morning well. I realized I needed to take a minute and figure out what was important. and I concluded that what really needed to happen was that I needed a refill!

    What I mean is, I needed my friends. I needed the people who are always supporting me and telling me I’m not screwing up, and can commiserate with me about the never-ending task list of things to get done. I needed someone to reset my internal “mom-guilt” clock back to zero before it ate me alive.

    Adulting is hard. Parenting is harder. Friends, though, can make it fun!

    Five years ago, I never would have guessed that I would be able to surround myself with allies at the drop of a hat. That I would have people in my corner that understood, deep down, how hard this morning was to handle. I never would have believed that five years ago.

    So, five years ago I was living in Canada with two little boys and a husband who worked 13 and 14 hour days. My closet family member was in Chicago, more than 9 hours away. I had just experienced a miscarriage that set me into a terrible state of depression that lasted the entire Canadian winter. I felt so alone back then and I can remember telling Eric that I needed friends. But, I made the excuse that it didn’t make sense to try and make friends, when we would just be moving home in a few months… It was rough.

    You see, back then I was also still pretty awkward, and basically a huge dork. I didn’t think I had anything to offer, friendship wise, and figured “what was the point” in trying. So I spent several long early years of motherhood attempting to figure it out on my own.

    Thankfully, that did not last.

    We did move home that summer, and I got pregnant with G. But one of the best parts was we joined a new church. A church that had an 8 am mass! This was awesome. Going to mass when our kids were still tired enough to not drive us insane meant we cold actually hear what the weekly gospels were about, but it also meant we got to look around occasionally and see the other families in the church. This is where my life started to change in a big way.

    One Sunday morning after mass I took a huge leap of faith. I could feel that God was telling me that I needed to find new relationships in my life. That I didn’t have to feel so lonely. I felt compelled to try and make a new friend.

    I had seen this woman several times and often smiled at her, before I finally worked up the courage to approach her and actually say hi. This was my first step into a new world of relationships for me.

    This one women gave me more courage in a single ten minute conversation after mass than I had had in the last three years combined. She was thankful that I approached her and sought out a friendship. While I was so grateful that she didn’t reject my awkwardness right away.

    After this exchange happened, we started play-dates for our children. First it was the library, then the park, then we met for a weekday mass. She brought along a friend who quickly endeared herself to me as well, and I could see the three of us growing to be closer.

    During this same time I was also making friends at the morning “coffee and doughnuts” after mass with another set of women. Women who were like me. Awkward and unsure of how to make adult friends. Women who wanted that close companionship but didn’t know how to do it. We actually managed to build our friendships on these ideals. The ideals that we had no idea what we were doing but we would figure it out together.

    These women have grown in the last three and half years to become essential to me and my family. My children’s best friends are their children. My husband’s camping buddies are their husbands. They’ve grown to become such an integral part of our lives that I wouldn’t know down from up if I were to suddenly not have these ladies in my life.

    They constantly fill up my cup. They remind me how human we moms are allowed to be. They help me to recognize when I have unrealistic expectations for myself. They pray with me when I cant see through the dark parts of life. And they lift me up constantly.

    These wonderful ladies have taught me one essential fact of life, that if I can pass nothing else along to my children, it will be this… find good friends. Find people who will stand in your corner. Find people who want to see you happy and successful and loved. And then love them back just as much! Find people who can be your refill.