Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Carrot Lemonade


This week I made carrot lemonade from a recipe in Better Homes and Gardens (my mother-in-law has a subscription and I try to find time to read it... oohing over the pretty pictures, marveling at the lives of people who clearly live On A Different Social Level Than I do, and browsing the recipes, some of which are excellent).

The recipe calls for either pineapple juice or white grape juice. I chose pineapple, because I usually prefer it over white grape juice. White grape juice is generally just *too* sweet. After trying the lemonade the first time around, though, I might just try it with the grape juice next time. As the recipe stands, I think it's anything but a refreshing drink. It's more like a carroty kick with some sort of citrus-y aftertaste, but not a pleasant one. I ended up doubling the amount of pineapple juice the recipe called for and then I just loved it. It tastes spry and cool, a wonderful thing to just pull out of the fridge and sip on a hot summer day.


Eat More Choklit

If there are flaws in this study, I don't want to know:

This review looked at data from 114,000 participants and it is pretty much conclusive. Basically, looking at that pool of data, the best results showed that people who consumed the most chocolate carried a 37 percent lower risk of developing heart disease and were 29 percent less likely to suffer a stroke than those who ate the least. And overall it is clear that there is a benefit in fighting strokes to eating chocolate.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/gurley/detail?entry_id=96424#ixzz1We3ia86z

Now, they do caution you that the sugar and fat in chocolate is bad for you. To that, I say phooey on the fat, and yes, but on the sugar.

My current favorite way to get my daily dose of chocolate is that flax seed cookie.  Here's what I'm doing now:

Melt two tablespoons of butter (I use organic butter from Costco, and butter is a healthy fat) in a saucer.

Meanwhile grind two tablespoons of flsx seed, 1-3 teaspoons cinnamon, 1 tablespoon organic, unsweetened coconut,1/2 a tablespoon or more of cocoa powder.

Stir four tablespoons of water and about half a dropper full of flavored stevia (I like hazlenut, English toffee, or chocolate raspberry) into the melted butter, then add the ground flax seed mixture to the saucer and stir well.  Microwave for about two minutes and 30 seconds.  Let cool, gently loosen edges with a butter knife, remove from plate and eat.  You can also spread it with a bit of cream cheese.

Other sugar free chocolate goodness- melt some coconut manna, combine with cocoa powder, a bit of stevia, and some ground almonds, maybe a bit of melted butter or coconut oil.  Mixture should be solid, but soft.  Drop bits off the end of a teaspoon onto waxed paper and chill until solid.
Yummy candy.

So If You've Read the "The Edison Trait" too...

Who are you? The Equuschick is a Dreamer. Shasta and The DPG are Dynamos/Discoverers. As is the FYG who, despite what she may try to tell you, totally craves power.

Hospitality Quote

"Martha Stewart didn't invent hospitality. More radical still, she hasn't perfected it
either. Hospitality as presented to us in the Bible is not merely a practice. Instead, it is a way of life; a whole life view of the coming of God's Kingdom that offers us a
uniquely Christian ethic."

More here

Jenny's Reupholstering Another Chair

Take a look at the chair to the right of the couch- not the bright green one at the front of the picture, but the one with its back to us.



This was an old green corduroy chair from The Rattery.  The green was a bit darker than it shows in the picture- kind of avocado.  That black stuff hanging to the bottom is the bottom of the chair.   The springs apparently had a raucous party at some point, because they were unsteady, pointed every which way, and made sitting in this chair an extremely awkward exercise. You know that hindu guru exercise where the guru lies on a bed of nails? That same guru would have sought chiropractic care after fifteen minutes of sitting in this chair.

Here are the offending springs:



Jenny says the bottom had fallen out of the chair, so the springs really had no support.  She's retied them to a more stable surface.

She carefully cut off all the green corduroy, and pulled out the stuffing, which is mostly this nasty looking stuff that looks like black dog hair.  She says it's not hair, though. I have no idea what it is.



Here's the bones of the chair- you can see it has a lovely bone structure.  The brown stuff is burlap.



She'll be covering it with some upholstery fabric I picked up on sale at JoAnne's.  I went in and looked over the upholstery fabric and about fainted in the aisle.  Sixty dollars, seventy dollars- one sample I liked was 90 dollars.  I did find a couple that were 20 dollars a yard, but I really didn't like them.  We were on our way out of the store when Jenny spotted the clearance aisle and found the green paisley fabric you see in the top picture, with the springs.
It was six dollars a yard.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

FLDS Update

I started covering the FLDS story back when the state of Texas responded to a phone call they really had to have known was a hoax by kidnapping some 400 children and adult women it dishonestly claimed were children.
The state of Texas engaged in other acts I think will be recognized as violations of certain constitutional protections at some point, and those were the questions that interested me.

I never claimed (nor believed) that every single person in the FLDS was innocent, and I have never been particularly interested in the legal cases swirling around the man most FLDS recognize as their prophet, Warren Jeffs. He wasn't even in Texas at the time of the YfZ raid, but was in a Utah prison.

However, I spent enough time on the unjust kidnapping of those 400 women and children- that is roughly 400. The state was never really sure how many women and children they were holding, and *all* the pregnant minors the state was holding turned out to be adult women, one of them in her thirties), that every few months I take a look at what's going in the legal world of the FLDS.

Warren Jeffs has now been tried and sentenced to life plus twenty in Texas for 'marrying' minor girls under 15, and consummating those relationships. He's had a child with at least one. He will be serving life plus 20 years. If you're interested, you can read all about the trials and the evidence here. Some of it is pretty graphic and just nasty. I'm not really surprised, nor does this change anything I've previously written about the FLDS.

One interesting point is that there is a tape of Jeffs telling his wives Jeffs, well, many unedifying things- but he also said he is specially chosen by God and allowed to behave in certain ways forbidden to other FLDS men, that women married to him are part of a 'higher order,' and they should never tell others, including FLDS, what happens within their 'marriages' to him. That's a pretty classic sign of an abuser, not that this surprises anybody outside the FLDS. He tells his harem of victims that only he is permitted to do the things he does- that any other FLDS man would lose his priesthood.

Some of the evidence used against him was with him when he was first arrested.  But much of it also comes from the raid on the YfZ ranch, and one of the concerns many of the bloggers condemning the way the YfZ raid was handled (and we were justified by the court's subsequent overturning of Walther's orders and ordering the return of all the children) is the possibility that evidence against actually guilty parties might be tossed out eventually, on appeals, as fruit of a poison tree.  We'll have to wait and see on that.

Jeffs made the incredibly poor and foolish decision to fire his lawyers and defend himself in court- a decision I personally think is the providence of God, and I don't mean the god Jeffs serves.  If he continues in that vein, I doubt he's have much success in any appeals.  And the evidence that he was participating in deeds of darkness which he specifically condemned and denied to any other FLDS man may well be heartbreaking enough to sincere FLDS members who did not participate or support (or even know about) such actions. Perhaps the community will see big changes.

Or perhaps not.

and perhaps there will be no appeals so the question of the legality of the YfZ raid will never reach the Supreme Court..


Craft : Paper Paste

Mix 1/2 cup of flour with 1 tsp alum and enough water to make a smooth, creamy paste; then add an additional 2 cupfuls of water and bring it to a boil for a minute or so, stirring constantly.  When cool, divide the paste into equal quantities for each of the two to four colors you plan to add.  poster paints are fine, acrylic colors are better.

Alternatively- 1 cup cornstarch and 3/4 tsp alum dissolved in 1 cup of water, once dissolved, add to 6 1/2 to 7 cups of just boiled water.  Do not cook further, just add the cornstarch adn alum solution to the scalding water.  Divide the paste into portions for individual coloring and add about 1 tbs of pain to each cup of paste.

Use on smooth, hard finished or glazed paper over which you run a damp sponge. Once the project is dry, run  a warm iron over the paper.

This is called paste paper and was once used largely to decorate book end pages- it's different from marbling, which was also used for book end pages.  There are examples here.  It's essentially finger paint for grown ups. Recipe is from Early American Life, December 1978, the author of the article says he got them from from Rosamond B. Loring and Henry Morris.

There's a really good tutorial here.


Couponing

I am not an extreme couponer by any means, but I've gotten better at using them recently and they've certainly helped stretch our grocery budget. With grocery prices rising the way they are and with some medical bills we're still paying (did you know a lab charges almost $400 to analyze a placenta? and that just using a hospital for an ultrasound costs over $1,000? that's not even the ultrasound cost!), stretching is a gooood thing. This last week, for instance, I ended up with a free bag of organic baby carrots, boxes of brownie mix for .63 each, and a 32 oz container of yogurt for $1.39. The baby carrots go in the Strider's work lunches, I try to eat yogurt frequently, and the brownie mixes wouldn't normally be in my pantry but there are a couple big group functions coming up soon where I'll be expected to bring a dessert or side dish. Boxed brownie mix for .63 is, for me, worth it.

Friends and I were discussing coupons in another forum online and I ended up with a very long-winded comment about how I make coupons work for us. It was so long, I decided it could be a post here. ;)

1) One of our stores doubles all coupons up to .50. I try to have coupons on hand when I'm at that store, because while something might not be worthwhile to me for .50 off its price, it would be for $1 off its price. The 32 oz container of yogurt that I got last week went down to $1.39 because of a .50 coupon doubled. I don't mind store brands either, but this was cheaper than the store brand.

2) I combine coupons with sales 99% of the time. If it's not on sale, it's probably not worth using the coupon, because most coupons are for things that are a bit higher priced anyway. The exception would be staple items... I had a coupon off of apple cider vinegar once. I knew I was going to need it and I knew it wasn't going to go on sale anytime soon, so I went to the grocery store that had it the cheapest and just used it there.

3) I usually try to just clip/print coupons as I come across them, store them all, and then when I'm making my grocery shopping list, go through them again. I also try to have my all my coupons with me when I'm out and about because sometimes there will be an unadvertised sale that will go well with my coupons.

4) I used to be really picky about which coupons I clipped, thinking that it would be better if I only clipped ones that I was *sure* I was going to use. Now I clip many more, because I'm never sure when things will be on sale and suddenly be worth getting. The .63 cent boxes of brownie mix that I got recently are an example of that.

5) It usually takes me about fifteen minutes to go through the coupon booklet on Sundays and clip what I want (I can do it while we're watching a movie or talking). Then I usually hit the MoneySaving Mom blog once a day for news about internet coupons. About once a week, I look at the ones on my MyPoints account. Moneysaving mom is where I got the coupon link for $1 off organic veggies that I was able to use in combination with a store sale of $1 to get 1 lb of organic carrots free. It may not save us a ton of money each week, but it does save us a little bit and that little bit adds up, especially with some of the bills we're dealing with right now.

6) I don't believe in hoarding, but I do believe it's prudent to stock up and maintain good supplies for your families in a cost effective way. Coupons help greatly with that. Last week there was a Wal-Greens store coupon for .99 for Dawn dish soap and a coupon in the Sunday fliers for .50 off the same soap. We didn't need dish soap yet, but .49 is a fantastic price and so I purchased a bottle. Now when we run out of what we're currently using, I won't have to pay full price for one. I'll have one that I got for under .50 ready to use. :)

7) FINALLY. (whew. you thought I was never going to end)... it took me a while to get into a good groove and fit for me for my couponing. There are people who are more efficient at it and people who buy things with them that I just don't use (Febreeze, canned vegetables, Lunchables, etc.). That's fine. I don't need to have my grocery receipts look like someone else's; I need them to show that I did the best I possibly could for us.

Step One on Getting Organized

Step two was yesterday. If I were an orderly person, I would not be here trying to figure out how to get organized, again, after nearly 30 years of marriage, seven kids and three grandbabies going on four, now would I?

Step two was all about putting together lists, really.  Most of us who are messy are great with making plans, organizing on paper, reading all about organization, browsing websites, putting together forms and routines in a notebook (or at least printing them out)  That's fun.

What's not fun is implementing those plans.  So step one?  Oh, step one is a doozey.  It is about getting motivated to do what needs to be done.  How do you do that?  Well, if I really knew that, I'd not be here, you know?  You have to want to do the work more than you do not want to do the work. The great chasm between those two points is what separates the cleanies from, well, me.  I do not know how to bridge it.

What motivates you?  A constant reminder that sloth is a sin? A promise of cookies and a movie once you get a certain amount done? Inviting company over?  A deeply painful and humiliating experience that makes it just too painful to live this way any longer?  Or just suddenly having had it up here, maybe you bought your fourth new laundry basket this month because you cannot find the previous three, and they turned up buried under the laundry? Maybe you're tired of finding Christmas presents you stashed for your toddler especially when that toddler just made you a grandmother?  Or are you motivated by cleaning in a herd, er, I mean a group, where a bunch of people are all cleaning the same room on the same day and then sharing about it?  

I know that this works for a lot of people- probably it works for more people than it does not work for.  But me?  I don't even see the point of going to see a movie with other people- I see it just as well by myself and probably with fewer distractions.*  I'm sure not going to be motivated by the fact that everybody else is cleaning exactly the same room I am at exactly the same time.  Unless there's a prize involved. And even then it depends on the prize.

Or maybe you need to look at your family baggage and realize you do not want to end up leaving your loved ones something like this.

So find your motivation. Find what it takes to give you the umph to do something. It's going to be personal.  If you're reading this post for help and encouragement rather than for laughts, well, then, probably it's going to be hard.  It's got to be something that will get you going today, and then tomorrow, you have to find it again.

For me, right now at this time, there are two things motivating me.

1. is that I am here posting about how I am getting organized, so I'd better follow up or I will be a liar and I am not a liar.

2. Is that I want to get a head start on home-made gifts this year, so I really need to assess my craft supplies and clean them up.

What motivates you?



*For the record- I go to movies with other people because I know they like it and if I don't, it makes them think I am as antisocial as I am, and that makes social butterfly people, of whom I am married to one and have parented others, nervous.



Monday, August 29, 2011

Soothing Comfrey Salve



I made this Saturday night, and it made three jars about 7.5. oz each.

2 cups oil -- I put a few tablespoons each of lavender oil and apricot oil in a measuring cup and then filled it the rest of the way up with olive oil

2 tbsp comfrey root

2 tbsp chamomile flowers

2 tbsp dried lavender OR a few drops of lavender essential oil

1/2 c. beeswax

I put the oils and the herbs in the top part of a double boiler, and let it warm up for 30-45 minutes, stirring pretty frequently. After that was done, I strained the oil through a coffee filter into a jar.
While the oils were heating up I shaved about 1/2 cup of beeswax using a vegetable peeler. I actually may have done a little bit more than 1/2 a cup, but I'm not sure. Once all the herbs are out of the double boiler, put the beeswax in and melt it. Once it's all melted, pour in the oils. Because the oil has cooled the beeswax will start to harden, so I let it cook for a bit longer until it was all melted clear again, and then I poured it out into jars.

It smells lovely (lavender + chamomile = relaxing!) and the comfrey really helps with sore muscles and bruises. Calendula would make a good addition, but if we have any I couldn't find it so I left it out.

Homesteading monday

HG's HouseKeeping Binder

The week before last I finished putting together a household binder/organizer of sorts. Last week I started actually trying to follow it.... sticking to the routines I'd given myself, and making our place at least tidy. The week started out very well, but by the end summer heat, pregnancy, and some weak self-discipline issues kicked in to make it end with a whimper instead of a satisfied cheer. Trying again this week, one day at a time. Encouragingly, I realized as I was writing this that my bathrooms stayed tidy all week long after I cleaned it *and* that there are not nearly so many dishes left after the week-end as we normally have. So maybe I am making progress!

This is on the inside of my binder... please pardon the less than stellar script. I find the words edifying, though, and also am sharing the picture by way of a plug for library book sales. The prints are ones I got in an ooooollllld museum exhibition book at a $1/bag sale. I've cut out several of my favorites to use for projects such as this, combining beauty and function.

The binder has daily routines with specific focuses for each day (Monday: Bigger Kitchen Tasks, Tuesday: Bathroom Tasks, etc.). During the days I stuck with it last week, it helped me stay on track so very, very much. Even if I am interrupted (ha! I'm a mother. what do I mean if?), it is easy to stay mentally focused and resume my plans for the day.

The book has prayer journal pages, monthly calendars from her useful site, a folder for phone calls that need to be made and bills paid, a grocery list section (I browsed several online templates for grocery lists but ended up settling for just plain notebook paper; it works better for me), and a weekly meal planner.

(not the neatest meal plan ever, nope! It was a busy week and I made it in a rush)

This document serves as a reminder to me that Everyone Has Their Own Needs. Like the grocery list templates, I looked at many excellent meal planning templates online trying to find one that would fit our family. Finally I realized that I could just make a simple version of the one I hand wrote all of last year ('til the Striderling was born and was hospitalized.... meal planning obviously was a low priority for a very long time).... it worked beautifully for us. It will probably continue to work until the kiddos are old enough to be eating independently.
Because of Strider's night shift job, he's not up for breakfast, so I get it on my own. For the main meal, I don't do well if I say "Monday, we're going to have x and Tuesday we'll have y," because if I do that, invariably events happen on Monday to make y the better meal after all. So I try to plan out all the main meals and side dishes for the week and decide as the week goes when we'll have what. We eat our main mean around 3 pm, before Strider leaves for work. I fix lunch, pack his work lunch, feed the Striderling, and then take a nap before cleaning the kitchen. It's a good routine.
The extra cooking part of the planner is for things like bread/cookies/freezer meals that I will want to try and do outside of normal meal prep time.
So, if you find a template that works well for you, that's great! The most important thing, though, is that whatever you have works. It doesn't have to be pretty or fancy or fit exactly the image seen in SuperMom binders. It needs to simplify your life and help you be a better manager of your time.... that's it.

/end pep talk aimed mostly at me!

"The Edison Trait"

The Equuschick is currently reading the Edison Trait: Saving the Spirit of Your Nonconforming Child by Lucy Jo Palladino, Ph.D.

She is not actually further than page 51 so you cannot consider this by any means to be an extensive book review or a commendation without reservation. But you can consider this to be The Equuschick saying, yes she loves it. Yes, she identifies strongly.

‎"The convergent-thinking adult wants her (the Edison-trait child) to line up each horse, one by one. The child knows that by the time she has lined up the sixth horse, the first one is off again... The divergent-thinking child needs to try out her own ways to command the power of her thought. She needs to develop skills like hyperfocusing and multi-tasking. As she does, she learns to lead her team of wild horses. And she no longer has to fear that without her knowing it, they will lead her everywhere and nowhere at the same time."


From a passage entitled "A Chariot Drawn by Six Wild Horses," where the analogy for being an Edison-trait child is being a passenger in a chariot drawn by six wild horses. There's excitement, yes, and a feeling at the same time of great potential and powerlessness. You know you can go places, but you're afraid you'll never learn how to be anything but a confused passenger of your wild chariot.

The traditional rules given by adults ("Pay attention, sit still, just try harder," or The Equuschick's personal favorite "JUST THINK ABOUT IT!" etc.) don't work.

You have to be allowed to find a passion and experiment with it, making messy mistakes but persevering for the sake of your passion. And over time, the skills you are accumulating for the sake of the passion (multi-tasking and hyperfocus, etc.) become skills that can be applied to improve every other area of the very messy Edison trait child.

Actually, The Equuschick is of the opinion that this is good advice for every child and adult struggling with how to "do what you know."

Find one area, just any, where you can experience success. Accumulate those skills in an area you have a passion for, you will then accumulate both skills and confidence. Then, those skills can be transferred to other necessary areas of your life.

The passion may seem to be less significant and less necessary than other areas of a person's life, but it is the passion that becomes the springboard for the person lacking skills and confidence to move forward in every other area of life.

Let your children have a passion, please. And let it be of their own choosing.

More On Getting Organized

Step Two is- wait, you ask, where is step one?  Scroll down for step one. 

Step two is finding a method that works for you- mine is putting everything in a space I want to clear in a big box or laundry basket and then focusing on those things one at a time. Happily, there is an online organizer who uses just that approach.  Somebody else may find that approach overwhelming (HG, I'm looking at you), and needs to tackle areas in a more global way (does that even make sense? 'a global way' sounds like corporate jargon).  You know, big picture on down, vs small picture on out.

Fortunately, there is a method for everybody online somewhere:

I shared several helpful sites on getting the organizing and cleaning it up act together in this post.

Somehow I missed Organizing Junkie's 52 Week challenge, or maybe I just forgot about it.  Yeah, and she's already on week 34.

That's okay, though, because her approach is so easy to customize.  In fact, her approach begins with customizing-

Week 34 was on craft supplies.: there is a fine line between craft supplies and junk.


Oh, ouch.
Actually, it wasn't just about craft supplies- it was about anything you allow to accumulate because you like that stuff, and then it was about limiting your fun stuff to the space you have for it.

No, the space you really have for it.  Honestly, really, truly.  Only that space.

Unfortunately, craft supplies?  I have a room.
It's the second biggest bedroom in the house and it has two closets.
Only, it's also Jenny's sewing room.

So that's definitely one of my projects.  But again, it needn't be craft supplies- that's the cool thing about Organizing Junkie- unlike other plans where everybody cleans the fridge on the same day, she lets you choose your hot spots. The first week was for everybody to choose their own 52 organizing projects for the year.

But you can start anywhere- it's okay that it's week 34 or more.

Her Process steps are really helpful. I think she's my new favorite.  That's because this step is how I function at organizing and cleaning- when I do those things:
Remove items – empty the space completely so you can start from a clean slate – this is much more effective than just shuffling everything around.   Remove then sort & purge


 This works for me because otherwise I am paralyzed by the distraction of all that junk clamouring for attention, yammering at me to handle it, think about it, make a decision about it at once. Shoving it all in a box stills the noise so I can process things one at a time. 
Of course, this is a disadvantage when I can't finish a project at once, so the box gets shoved in my closet and forgotten about it and I find treasures six months later when I get to my closet.

So, yeah- craft room up first, then my closet.

You want before pictures?  I am just not sure we know each other that well.


So pick a plan:


31 Days To Clean - the book is only 5.00 on the Kindle, and don't miss the challenge starting in September.

Fly Lady has a control journal for holiday cleaning, this would work for a short and quick emergency cleaning as well, and she has an emergency cleaning set of instructions.  She irks me to no end (a shiny sink does nothing for me at all, and I will not wear shoes in the house), but a lot of people have been helped by her programs.

How to Clean Your House in 30 Days in 20 Minutes a Day

The Grand Plan: "Written by an online support group, the Cleaning Grand Plan is designed to help you clean and organize your entire home in 14 weeks. Since it was first road-tested by the Prodigy Get O-Homelife support group in 1991, the Cleaning Grand Plan has helped thousands of families dig out from disorder, chaos and clutter."
There is also a Holiday Grand Plan, and they have a challenge that starts this coming weekend!

Messies Anonymous's Sandra Felton has a website, email list, and free printables, lots of encouragement from somebody who has been there.

If you have another one to share, please do.

What about step one?  Being the fly by the seat of my skirt type person I am, I just decided that step one will have to be tomorrow.=)

Menu plan for Week of August 29th


Breakfasts
Omelettes or home-made granola and yogurt


Lunch

Spiced lentil soup with roasted tomatoes, from The Nourished Kitchen

Zucchini boats stuffed with ground beef (I'll be using ground beef heart), from A Mom On a Mission.


Latkes- potato, sweet potato, or summer squash (can you tell we have a lot of zucchini around here?) from A Moderate Life


quinoa parfaits, made with yogurt, cooked quinoa, and berries, from Five Dollar Dinners.



Middle Eastern Couscous from Penniless Parenting (we'll probably adapt the topping based on what we have on hand, and with some meat added.   I will just eat the sauce, not the couscous.  I'm also interested in her watermelon rind salad recipe.

Leftovers





Supper


Creamy Summer Spaghetti from 21st Century Housewife (I will have mine over spaghetti squash, and we will add some meat to this).


Coconut chicken adobo from Real Food Freaks.

Zucchini Kiku with chicken from Real Food Freaks.

Salmon Rissole from Down to Earth- I would like to try making these with mashed cauliflower instead of mashed potato for a low carb version. I might try a bit of sweet potato or pumpkin mixed in with the cauliflower

Sweet potato and black bean enchiladas with mole sauce from Real Food, Allergy Free


Leftovers


We have a couple birthdays coming up and I think the DPG would enjoy this grain free almond joy freezer pie.


Linked at Organizing Junkie

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Extra Storage





This is an old piece to a waterbed headboard.  One side is unfinished since it was supposed to face the floor when it was part of the waterbed.  We turned it vertical, placed the unfinished side against a wall, and use it for tall books and magazine storage.

More Summer Veggies

Squash (from local, natural farmer)
cherry tomatoes (mine own!)
peppers (ditto!)
red onion (grocery store, poor thing)
garlic
salt and pepper
olive oil
(also all from the grocery store)

Roasted in the oven at 425 degrees for a few minutes. such goodness...

Creative Benevolence

Ask if you can borrow somebody's car for a couple hours. Go fill it up with gas and take it through the carwash, maybe clean up the inside, too, then return it.

If you can do more, and it's near that time, take it in and get the oil changed, or rotate the tires.

Leave a restaurant/grocerty coupon or gift card (not embarrassingly extravagant) attached to the visor.

Especially useful for a single mom or a college student, but also a nice gift for a newlywed or a new dad, especially if you can take care of something on the car that he would consider his responsibility (replace a headlight, .

I read about the first idea in Lisa Whelchel's Friendship for Grown-Ups, the rest just came to me as I was typing.  What acts of surreptitious or guerrilla kindness can you think of?

Ladysmith Black Mambazo Sings The Lion Sleeps Tonight




Here's Myriam Makeba:


Once you've listened to these two versions, The Tokens seem like weak tea.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Veggies In A Basket, And Then A Salad.


The Striderling and I took a jaunt down to our local farm produce stand last week and came back with this basket of goodies. The tomatoes were discounted to .50/lb because of defects, but they and everything but the corn in the basket were grown by a naturally grown farm less than ten minutes from our house. Incidentally, I borrowed the basket from Striderling's toy shelf. His occupational therapist found an onion skin in it a few days later while we were doing therapy. Oops....

Anyway. I had plans for these vegetables! We had a can of black beans in the pantry and some chicken thawing in the fridge and I thought a chicken/black bean salad sounded lovely. I ended up doing a fusion of two recipes with some modifications of my own. Fusion in the HG's cookery world, by the way, is defined as Never Having The Complete Ingredients For One Recipe So Sort of Making It Up As We Go Along.

Making It Up As We Go Along seemed to work out quite well in this case....

Strider loooooved it, which is saying a lot, because tomatoes are not always on his friendly list. I loved it too, but that's not surprising, because every single ingredient is on my friendly list. The salad was gone within the hour, leaving two very happy people in its wake.

(why, yes! that *is* my trusty little wooden cutting board you see there...)

Dangerous Grannies

The Boy informs me that Granny Tea beats him at boxing on the Wii.  He says he would be embarrassed, but other boys in his Sunday School class report that their little old grandmama's also beat them at boxing on the Wii.

This tickles me.

Slow Food, Five Dollars Per Person

More here

This September 17, you're invited to help take back the 'value meal' by getting together with family, friends and neighbors for a slow food meal that costs no more than $5 per person. Find an event happening near you, host a dinner, or have a potluck.

That's a pretty high bar, and even a crock like me can do the limbo under it. I'm sure you can, too. The question is, how low can you go?

It needs to be a full meal- main dish, side dish or two, and dessert. To be fair, they may be assuming the meal includes a bottle of nice wine, which mine wouldn't. We'd be drinking milk, water, or, if company was coming, a lovely pitcher of herbal tea. Of course, they're comparing it to a fast food meal, and a fast food meal doesn't include wine, either.

Here's one example:



Tonight's meal is a start- two pounds of beef heart at .89 a pound- I cut it into chunks about 4 inches wide, and put the frozen chunks through the cheese grater blade of my Bosch food processor (I'm not sure the 30 dollar food processors could handle it. Next time, I will call my order in and ask if the meat market can grind it for me).
There is always some extra meat that got too soft to go through the grater blades, and it can gum up your food processor, so watch closely, removing that meat and setting it aside.  Once all the meat is ground, put it in a nice sized pan for browning- this is my grandmother's dutch oven.
Take the meat that didn't grate nicely, and put it in the food processor bowl with the s-shaped blades.  Peel and cut into quarters two medium onions, put them in the food processor, too. (I think this was about .50 worth of onion, but I'm not sure.  Grind these up and add to the pan above.
Now add some spices as you brown the meat and onions- I used Fiesta Chili Powder, black pepper from the Philippines (freshly ground), garlic salt, and freshly ground cumin.

Brown and add to the crockpot with about four to six cups of cooked beans - we are using black turtle beans because that is what I had in my freezer.  That's another trick to 'slow' cooking- advance prep.  Make up a big batch of legumes and then freeze the extras. I buy them in bulk, organic black turtle beans. This month it's 1.15 per pound of dried beans.  One pound of dried beans makes about 4-5 cups of cooked.

Next, well be adding tomatoes from the garden, peppers, and possibly a little cocoa powder.  I'll share more about that later.  If we didn't have the tomatoes and squash, we'd use canned tomatoes purchased on sale, and the side dish would be whatever vegetables were in season

The side dishes will be cornbread and butter (crackers would also work), with sour cream or cheese for topping the chili, and probably some stir fried zucchini and green beans, because we have them and they were free or nearly so. I'll have a price breakdown later tonight.

Our company is bringing dessert.

We expect to feed at least ten people, possibly 14 with this.  My guess is that will be less than one dollar per person, but I will figure the price out more precisely later tonight.

So how about you?  Do the Five Dollar Challenge Limbo with me.

This 'n' that

Jenny's swain (pictured above, he's the left side of the two guys on the tree trunk) is leaving Saturday for a nearly three week long annual rugged hiking trip he takes with his siblings and father. It's rough camping and hiking, and they take two sets of clothes, washing the other in the lake every few days.  Jenny doesn't have the camping equipment necessary, and it's not really her cuppa. 


We've been seeing a lot of these critters lately.  Naturually, that means we sing the following song to the Dread Pirate Grasshopper and Nod:
Fuzzy caterpillar
Wiggled up a tree
He wiggled short
And he wiggled long
And he wiggled right at me
I put him in a box
"Don't go away," I said.
But when I opened up the box
there was a butterfly instead
Now I could never make one,
No matter how I tried
Only God in heaven
Can make a butterfly

Take a look at this southern charmer singing it if you don't know the tune.

We're having company for supper, and since they're coming from down south where the Swain lives, he's hitching a ride up with them for one last visit with Jenny before he has to leave for his backpacking trip.  Aww. They are reading Proverbs and The Gammage Cug together.  Why the Gammage Cup?  Jenny picked it as something fun, light, but one of her old favorites from her AmblesideOnline days.

Our company is bringing the dessert.  I think we'll be having beef heart chili and home-made cornbread for supper, only not me. I'll set aside some meat and have it with a dollop of sour cream and a bit of cheese.

My new doctor prefers South Beach over Atkins, but he also diagnosed heel spurs instead of a torn achilles tendon from x-rays, unlike the old dr, so I am tentatively happy. He's also doing some more extensive thyroid testing as well as three hour blood sugar tests, which the other doctor felt unnecessary.
OTOH, he was kind of pushy about mammograms, which I have no intention of getting. "You don't trust me," he said in surprised and slightly chiding tones. "So I will drop it for now and wait until we build a better rapport and you feel more comfortable."
I would have liked to deny it, but then realized I was holding my breath while he merely checked my breathing and heart-rate. It's a bit hard to check the breathing of somebody who is holding her breath.
And, actually, no, I don't trust strangers just because they have a medical degree (see last doctor, missed diagnosis of bone spurs for me, some more serious asthma needs for Pip, and arrested for a most improper assault of a patient in his office).

I think it's time for some cheesecake shots:

Three little baby cheesecakes.  Aren't they adorable?  In pink is the baby of one of the Striderling's wonderful, wonderful milk donors.  She's talking to the Striderling.  Looking on is the Dread Pirate Grasshopper.

The DPG and I have moved on from watching the llama video on you-tube.  Now we watch Old MacDonald and Barney singing the I Love You song.  Yes, Barney.  I am so ashamed. 
We also sing Old MacDonald with him- we let him choose the animals.  The other day we were driving the 45 minutes south to visit the Striderling and Pip and the DPG were in the back, singing away, but he was tired, and he dropped suddenly off to sleep when it was his turn to pick an animal.  He awoke abruptly as we turned into the driveway half an hour later and as he opened his eyes he was already saying, "Ee-i-ee-i-oh had a cow. Moo."

Two different people left me a link to this blogpost yesterday, so I figure I must really, really need to read it, and I do like the looks of it (and of the whole blog, actually).  I particularly appreciate the point that if you don't have laundry and your basic meals under control, it almost doesn't matter what your New Year's Resolutions are.  I would add that pernicious habit of putting things down instead of away. I really think my life would be immediately improved by at least 100 percent if I just did that one little thing.  That, and go to bed on time.  Which I am not.  Don't ask what time I am actually typing this.

Time to change the subject again.

Blooming:
Picture by Pip.  And so is this one:

Glory be to God for dappled things –
   For skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow;
      For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim;
Fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls; finches’ wings;
   Landscape plotted and pieced – fold, fallow, and plough;
      And áll trádes, their gear and tackle and trim.

All things counter, original, spare, strange;
   Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)
      With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;
He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change:
                                Praise him.
Gerard Manley Hopkins

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Homemade Taquitos!

(ok, I will freely admit... this is not the best picture in the world. Don't be too hard on me, though, I was in a rush to eat them!)


I made homemade taquitos! And they were so easy! And yummy! And a way to use leftovers that didn't feel, well, left-over-y, if you know what I mean.

Day 1, I made pork tacos.... I quickly browned (on high heat) a boneless pork roast on the stove top with garlic, olive oil, chili powder, and salt and pepper. Then I smothered it with mild salsa and mild green chilies and cooked it in the crockpot for several hours 'til it was fall apart tender.

Day 2 (except it was really Day 3 or 4 because we had other things in between), I dipped corn tortillas in hot olive oil and let them get warm and soft that way. Then I put a tiny bit of the left over meat and a tiny bit of grated cheese in them, rolled them up, stuck a toothpick in them to keep them rolled (the best roller I am not). Baked at 425 for 10-15ish minutes 'til they were crisp and sizzling. SO good. I made seven in my first batch and packed up six for Strider to take as a work lunch and then ate the last lonely one. It was so good I made myself several more before the day was out and consumed them in an embarrassingly quick manner.



Four Moms (plus 1) On Large Family Logistics, Appendices


Here's what each of us had to say about this section:

 






This week we are discussing the appendices, which are of an especially useful nature to those who need some emergency remedies, who need to now exactly where to start and are overwhelmed trying to figure it out.

Like so many good habits and exercises in self improvement (frugality comes quickly to mind), attitude is foundational, attitude and (this isn't Kim, it's me), repentance from sloth. We don't overcome these weak areas in our lives through wishful thinking, but by working. Y'all have no idea how much I hate that little bit of reality.

Prayer is also vital, and so is Daily Bible Reading.

Over the years I have found there are times when the idea of sitting down to read was about as practical as sweeping the cobwebs off the moon.  Here are some shortcuts:
MP3 files of Bible reading, tapes, CDs, or printing out one chapter of Psalms each week in large print and posting it to the bathroom mirror, the wall over the kitchen sink, and wherever it is I was changing diapers that year.
I have some great free audio resources listed here
And you know, just sit down and do it.  It will probably take way less time than you think. Ask me how I know.

Kim also recommends that you really work at stream lining tasks- this is not the time to go all frou-frou on decorating projects or Martha Stewart in the kitchen.  This is the time for plastic plates (that's Kim) and disposable baking pans (that's me- I think pans are way more trouble to wash than plates), and easy, easy meals.  The crockpot is your friend.

Here are some of my streamlining meals ideas:   I personally like to combine ingredients and freeze them.
This might be the time for an emergency month of easy breakfasts of cereal and milk, or for a healthier alternative (MUCH healthier as cheaper and more filling), try three minute skillet granola.,with milk or yogurt. Make up a big batch of granola. Or make a huge batch of pancake batter (this one is high protein, and this one is grain free)

She encourages moms to eat right and take supplements (specifically the B vitamins)

For simple lunches buy bread and grated cheese, tortillas, fruit, and popcorn, or have leftover pancakes spread with peanut butter.
Slice vegetables for snacking on within a day or two of buying them- or stick to things you can eat out of hand- cherry tomatoes, olives, grapes, apples and pears.

Kim also gives suggestions for streamlining some other tasks, such as laundry.  We used to listen to stories on CD while folding, or set the timer to see how much we could fold before the timer went off.  It can also be helpful to give the smallest children a little laundry basket of their own with a few washclothes, doll clothes, and scraps of cloth for them to 'fold.'

She also suggests timing certain basic tasks- making the bed, tidying the bathroom, etc, and writing it down in your household management book.  She gives her times for things.  My own time for those same things is considerably longer than hers.I believe making my bed takes me ten minutes instead of one, and that's pretty much how it is for everything.

some of us just need to figure out a way to work through acedia

Another suggestion is to just set your timer for 15 minutes at a time and work on a problem area for just that long, and then read a book together as a family.  This does not work well for me because we have never mastered the habit of 'don't put it down, put it away.'

It really does help with this if you do have a place for everything. One idea I once saw was to get 26 banker's boxes (or any storage thing you have room for) and label them with each letter of the alphabet.  Then just put the tape in the 'T' box, the stamps in the 's' box, the rulers in the 'r' box, and so forth.


Going along with that, of course, is me hypocritically telling you that if you can't keep up with your stuff, maybe you have too much stuff, but don't feel judged because so do I have too much stuff up with which I cannot keep.

One of my favorite of the unique ideas in the book is to sit down with your children every morning and review your family's general household goals and expectations for behavior.

She also suggests posting a sign over the kitchen sink asking "Am I glorifying and serving God?"
I will add to mine this question, "Am I making the most of my time?"  Only I should place it near the laptop and near my books, and possibly on the wall where I will see it from my bed.


Here are some resources that might help with overcoming the house cleaning monster:

31 Days To Clean - the book is only 5.00 on the Kindle, and don't miss the challenge starting in September.

Make your own cleaning supplies - post with recipes

Escape from the Kitchen - great book.

Deniece Schofield's books

Fly Lady has a control journal for holiday cleaning, this would work for a short and quick emergency cleaning as well, and she has an emergency cleaning set of instructions.  She irks me to no end (a shiny sink does nothing for me at all, and I will not wear shoes in the house), but a lot of people have been helped by her programs.

How to Clean Your House in 30 Days in 20 Minutes a Day

The Grand Plan is more my style:  "Written by an online support group, the Cleaning Grand Plan is designed to help you clean and organize your entire home in 14 weeks. Since it was first road-tested by the Prodigy Get O-Homelife support group in 1991, the Cleaning Grand Plan has helped thousands of families dig out from disorder, chaos and clutter."
There is also a Holiday Grand Plan, and they have a challenge that starts this coming weekend!

What are some of your struggles or success stories with getting organized?  Do you have the book?  Share your thoughts on this section.

Please remember the linky rules:
  1. You must link to a specific relevant post on your blog.
  2. Your post must include a link to at least one of the 4 Moms.
  3. The post to which you link must be completely family friendly.
If your link is deleted, you probably didn’t follow one of the rules above. Please feel free to add your link again once you have fixed the problem. If you don’t know why your link was deleted, please ask.
 





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Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Wednesday, Tracey Ullman sketch of the Lion sleeps tonight:




This was really funny.

Open Heart, Open Home, Chapters 17 and 18

Chapter 17 is titled Creativity and Simplicity
Chapter 18 is titled At Ease

All sonnets must have 14 lines to be sonnets, but withint that restriction, creative genius can flourish (and so can a lot of drivel).  A recipe for crepes has certain restrictions- the crepe, and a filling, but within those restrictions one can create poetry in the kitchen, whether it's an artichoke and chicken crepe or a dessert crepe, or something pulled together at the last minute out of odds and ends from the fridge. Creativity functions best within limits- without limits it's not so much creativity as it is extravagance and something of a spectacle.  We all have different limits- finances, health, house size, lack of skills (cooking, decorating, social graces).  No matter what the limitations, we develop our creativity by using it.

I'm going to go off the reservation a bit with these two chapters, and recommend some other resources for you. I think the best book on creativity you could read is Edith Schaeffer's The Hidden Art of Homemaking.  She writes:
“I would define ‘hidden art’ as the art found in the ordinary areas of everyday life. Each person has, I believe, some talent which is unfulfilled in some hidden area of his being – a talent which would be expressed and developed.”
She also points out that Christians, as children who acknowledge the Creator and their relationship to Him, ought to be creative.

Some of our creative challenges have included feeding large crowds on a small budget (stew is my friend), fitting large crowds into small spaces, and decorating another house every three to five years.

Feel free to share some of your creative challenges and how you overcome them in the linky below.
Or post about chapter 18, At Ease.  This chapter is about manners and making people feel comfortable, at home.  I have two resources to recommend for complementing and implementing this chapter.  One is
Friendships for Grown-ups.  I particularly appreciated especially appreciated the information on how to find a safe friend, and the very straightforward suggestions on conversational prompts and discussion starters. This is so helpful for people like me, paralyzed by small talk.


The second is actually two resources i just discovered yesterday while browsing through a toy and bookstore in Amish country:
How to Behave and Why 
Manners Can Be Fun


These are written for younger children, but they were written fifty years ago, so the dialogue is lengthy, the text is not dumbed down, and I think we could all profit from reading them.

What are your tips (or struggles) for making people feel at ease?




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Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Tuesday, The Muppets Sing The Lion Sleeps Tonight

Tuesday: the Muppets sing Lion Sleeps Tonight:

Monday, August 22, 2011

Monday: the tokens sing Lion Sleeps Tonight:


Old guys:

Young dudes:


This, or some variation of it, is the standard version most of us know, but the Tokens borrowed it from somebody else. You'll hear more about that in a selection I've chosen which will post in a couple days. Be sure to come back tomorrow for a fun one.

Hurting Homes, Part II

I'm moving a comment from this post up to repost it on its own, with a bit of editing.  It's an important topic and, while I am not vain enough to imagine I have something to say that has never been said before, I do know human nature enough to know that sometimes we need to hear it multiple times in various ways for something to register.  It's also an important enough topic that I think it can be discussed profitably multiple times and in various ways.

Somebody shared a situation where a wife and child were subjected to abuse by the man who should have been their best human protector and defender.  The pastor of the church went and talked to the man several times, but eventually the wife could no longer subject her family to that abuse and so she left.  The family are now bitter about how the church handled it, and the commenter wondered what else could have been done differently.

I want to be clear that I am not saying it's okay to be bitter- that's a problem that anybody harboring bitterness for any reason needs to work on- but in circumstances like these, it is vital to have some compassionate understanding of what it's like to live with an abuser before you jump to conclusions about how quickly and easily the victims should get over it, let go, and move on.

There is, in fact, so much, much more that the church could have done in the situation of dealing with an abusive man for years. At some point (and not twenty years down the road), an unrepentant and abusive husband should have been disfellowshipped/excommunicated/refused communion until he actually produced 'deeds meet for repentance." . They could have stood with her and banned him from the home until he got help and truly repented of his anger. They could have offered safe haven to the woman and her children.

Consider these scriptures:

You have heard that it was said to the people long ago, "Do not murder, and anyone who murders will be subject to judgment." But I tell you that anyone who is angry with his brother will be subject to judgment ... first go and be reconciled to your brother; then come and offer your gift (Matthew 5:21-24).

The acts of the sinful nature are obvious: sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery; idolatry and witchcraft; hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions, factions (Galatians 5:19-20).

Hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions- these are all hallmarks of a tyrant in the home, and yet every week church leadership allows such people to fellowship with the flock with impunity, even to hold positions of authority (song leaders, givers of public prayer, Sunday School teachers, and even, sometimes, the very eldership.  It's wrong, every bit as wicked as sexual immorality and idol worshiping, yet church leadership turns a blind eye, or simply dismisses it as a little friction typical of any marriage- or worse, blame the victims (If you would be more patient, more kind, more .....- as though the Lord never taught that sin comes from *within* not from without).


Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen. And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, with whom you were sealed for the day of redemption. Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice. Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you (Ephesians 4:29-32).
Let your gentleness be evident to all (Philippians 4:5).
But now you must rid yourselves of all such things as these: anger, rage, malice, slander, and filthy language from your lips (Colossians 3:8).

There is no place in the church for excusing or underestimating the sinful ripples caused by anger, rage, and malice unleashed in the home. 

 
When the church leadership knows that a member of the flock has a problem with anger, with lashing out at the people who ought to be nearest and dearest to him, they need to make it clear that he is in sin and needs to correct it, or God isn't even receiving him at the altar- or listening to his prayers.

I find reason for dismay when the church leadership is having  multiple meetings with such a man drawn out over a period of years- I think in all the cases that I know of the counsel includes an attempt at evenhandedness that is unjust and blames the victim for the tyrant's rage, at least in part- the counsel includes things the victims should do so as to not 'provoke' the tyrant. But the tyrant does not act like a tyrant because of something his victims do- he is a tyrant because he has a sinful, pride filled, selfish, violent man's heart (or woman's heart- some abusers are women)- he uses the behavior of his victims as an excuse, but if they change their actions the tyrant only finds another excuse because this sort of counsel never addresses the root problem- the carnal nature of the abuser.

Here's another problem with the 'well, what are YOU doing that you could improve?" sort of advice.  This often plays right into the hand of the abuser, who is, as I said before, a very plausible con-artist.  This is what he tells his victims all the time- if they just weren't so ...., if they would just do....., if only they would own up their own faults.... then everything would be peachy and the abuser could be the nice sweetheart that he would like to be.  And because abusers are such skillful con artists, they often convince their victims that this twisted view is reality.  Then the victims scramble frantically, like rats in a red-hot maze, desperately trying to come across the right combination of behavior and words, the combination that will turn the key and keep them from being abused.  But it is a lie and a deceit. There is no such key, and there is no escape.  The illusion that there is such a key is part of the abuse, it is part of the abuser's head games, it is part of the way he keeps you trapped.  And when those who are counseling such a family turn to the victim and ask what the victim can do so as not to provoke the abuser, the abuser has been given another weapon by those who were supposed to protect the victims.  It is a heinous wrong.



Why do I object to years of 'couseling' meetings? I see it as an unbiblical approach. Matthew 18 requires far, far more than a long, drawn out series of 'meetings.' It requires actual *discipline* at some point, and not a point years down the road while children are actively being harmed and having their souls twisted and wounded, and having their sense of God warped into a caricature of their wicked father.


Imagine you are in a room alone with a Sunday school teacher who berates you, calls you venomous names, demeans and belittles you, screams at you, and tears you apart emotionally over and over. You go to the 'authorities,' church or otherwise, and you report it. They leave you in the classroom in that teacher's care while 'counseling' the teacher. She does it again. And again. And again. And again. And every single time you complain the leadership 'meets' with her to tell her that's not a good thing to do, and then they leave you right there in her care anyway. Often they make suggestions to you about how you should change your behavior so as to provoke these outbursts- they even make these suggestions in front of the teacher, which suggestions are then used as additional weapons against you. And so it continues. All talk, not any action or protection.

Eventually, you leave on your own. Of course you will be bitter about the way that was handled, because it was a sinful excuse for 'handling' it. Nothing was handled, you were knowingly left to the mercy of a violent abuser. Bitterness is a hard way to live, but it can be much easier to release it if people do not deny your feelings and tell you there is not a real reason to be upset and anger, that if you are bitter you are actually wrong about the circumstances and nothing could have been differently, when of course, it could.


This is part of the job description for all Christians, but especially for pastors/shepherds/bishops/presbyters (different terms for the same office).  Bizarrely, often times the response is to wash their hands of it and turn the matter over to the secular authorities, but that is also unbiblical.


Through the usual process, of course great harm is done to the victims, including the children, left uncared for, damaged, and neglected- first by a parent, then by church leadership who ought to be demonstrating Christ to these abused children.


But the abuser is also harmed, spiritually neglected, never brought to necessary repentance, never required to show the deeds that demonstrate repentance, and so he continues deeper and deeper into sin, all because it is just less messy and uncomfortable for others not to face the facts as they are.


The anger and rage, the reviling tongue of an abuser, these are signs and symptoms of a carnal nature. They are not 'weaknesses.' They are sins as deadly as debauchery.  The Lord's Servant must not quarrel but be kind and gentle


The victims of such abuse are often wounded, burdened, ashamed, embarrassed, and, depending on how long it's going on, shell-shocked and even suicidal. They have been living a lie as they are so ashamed of the abuse they end up protecting the abuser from others finding out. When they finally have the nerve to come forward and ask for help, they deserve more than a few counseling sessions with the abuser and the equivalent of a pat on the head and a benediction of 'be warmed and filled.'

Sunday's Adventures

Last night after church Strider let Jenny borrow the family car so she, Pip, the FYG and FYB could go to a student dinner hosted by a couple families from church. Then Strider and family rode in our van to come out to our house for the night and part of today.
The HM had his truck because he'd wanted to get to church at 6 in the morning to get his class ready (he teaches the jr high kids' Sunday School class). He put the LIttle Boys' car seats in his truck to take them home.

The Equuschick had her two in her station wagon.
As we were pulling out of town we got an anxious call from the Equuschick- her cell phone was dying and she'd been trying to call her husband and other members of the family because the car was acting up and she'd pulled in to a rest stop about 20 miles from where we were and about 15 miles from home, and the car died- smoke coming from out from under the hood.

We called the HM, because he was closer to her than we were, and then we drove on to the rest area where we joined them- the Dread Pirate Grasshopper, Blynken and Nod running free in a strip of grass between parking lots at the rest area, and the HM scratching his head over the steam and smoke coming out from under the hood.

Nod was running a little too freely, and he's not remotely good at listening or obeying, so the Equuschick pulled out the Lion 2 in 1 Buddy Harness Buddy (this is SO cool) and strapped it on Nod.  I want one for him for all the time we are outside of the house.  But anyway, if you're keeping count, right now we are at a rest stop in the middle of nowhere with five adults, The Cherub, and five children seven and under, three of them under two, and a smoking radiator.  Add to this the fact that it was past supper time and everybody was hungry, and a man in a wheelchair who mans the rest stop came out to see what was up and helpfully, but loudly enough to be heard across the entire parking lot, gave his opinion as to what the problem was and sent the menfolk to fetch a bucket from his office and told them where to get more water.

Because we pack lunch to eat after church, we had plenty to eat, it was just a hodgepodge.  We had an impromptu tailgate picnic made up of some of the Hillbilly Housewife's garlic bread sticks, grapes (they were .99 a pound!), a carton of organic cottage cheese (marked down at the natural food's store), three apples from the farmstand near the Strider's house, a pound organic green beans from the same place, one can of chili lime almonds courtesy the Equuschick, half a bag of pork rinds, and a couple of water bottles filled at home that morning.  The HM bought himself a Pepsi and a Snickers bar- he found part of the change he needed for his purchase left in the change compartment of the vending machine. We entertained the smallfry with food in the van, and then let them out to run some more.

Then the menfolk decided we had to have the car towed. Strider has a AAA card, but realized it was left in his car, so we called the girls at the student dinnner and asked them to pull out the card and give him the phone number and acct number. They gave it to him, but said they were leaving anyway, so in about half an hour they joined us at the rest stop and we had races, played tag, and Nod pretended to be a wild Lion trying to escape.We greatly amused the young family (parents and a one month old) who parked next to us for a while.   We had potty breaks, and the Strider gave Blynken an impromptu reading lesson with the tourist fliers in the rest stop lobby.  The Equuschick had bought a walker on Craig's List that afternoon, so we pulled it out, put it in the grass, and the babies took turns sitting in it and letting their toes touch the grass. 


Strider suggested we all go home, and he would wait for the tow truck, so the student dinner crew transferred to our van, the Little Boys got back in the HM's truck, and we headed home- arriving about two hours later than intended.
On the way home we learned the Ladybug is not a fan of our singing.  She was screaming (and distressing the Striderling), and we started singing to soothe her, and every time she did her volume and irritation level increased dramatically- and it was already incredibly high.  Poor FYG was sitting between the two babies because she was the only one skinny enough to fit there.  She had to shout to be heard above the din of baby howls.  One of her sisters suggested she might try binging before another such trip.  She merely muttered that she was never having children.

And when we arrived home we discovered the septic system backing up, the pump in the bathroom closet not working well, and we've not been showering or flushing toilets for the last 18 hours.  We just got the septic system pumped (nearly 400 dollars, OUCH), and it's still not draining, so the HM will change out the pump tonight when he gets home from work- a 12 hour day of rearranging one of the grocery stores.

Oh, and when we got home we also discovered our 25 pounds of organic tomatoes also needed to be processed, so Jenny, Pip, and I rinsed, cored, and ran them through the blender and food processor, then put them in the crockpot(s) with spices and herbs to cook on low until we are ready to face them again.

Wheeee.