Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Sugar(less) Peace

A New Year is upon us. 
Goals will be set.
Gyms will be joined. 
"I'll do _____ for a whole year!"
It's the resolution solution. 

Normally, I forgo resolutions and don't change anything. 
This year, however, with the help and prompting of a dear friend...

Ugh...
I'm going say it...
I'm going to make it official...

I'm going to go a year without...

SUGAR. 

I'm not sure you understand the weight and gravity of that statement so let me repeat it:

I'm going to go a YEAR without SUGAR. 

And now my brain is asleep. 

No cookies. 
No ice cream. 
No chocolate. 



I can see most of you reading this saying, "Why?!?"

Well, I don't know...
I'm crazy. 

Okay, no, I actually have my reasons. 
Some foods are a crutch for me. At the end of a long day, I'll rest on the couch with my secret stash of chocolates and unwind. It's a terrible way to unwind. I should just do some twisting yoga poses or...here's a crazy thought...go to bed, but instead I stay up too late and enjoy my chocolates. 
Or cookies. 
Or whatever treats I have made that week. 

We don't usually buy processed treats. I make them. And I enjoy making them. 
Cupcakes. 
Cookies. 
Cinnamon rolls. 
Vanilla cake with a caramel drizzle (or drenching). 

Yuuum. 

*eats celery and pouts*

So, for this whole year, I will push my discipline to the limits. 
I will test my strengths. 

I will forego the delicious sweetness that saps away my energy and strength. 
And it does too. It takes my energy and slams it into a concrete floor. When you have three little kids, ages 3 & under, that is not cool. A mama needs her motivation and energy to get through the day. 


Every goal needs a Game Plan. 
This is my game plan: 

Substitute, substitute, sustitute. 
  Instead of eating chocolate chips to unwind at the end of the day, (oh, yes, I do), I will first actually try to unwind. A few twisting yoga poses and a glass of water. If I still want to snack on something, I'll eat celery or apples with peanut butter.  Lots of good fats and vegetables will hopefully keep the cravings at bay! 

Fruit
I am still going to eat fruit. Fruit has a lot of health benefits and I plan to keep them in my diet. Natural fruit sugars are okay as long as I am also eating the fruit. My goal is to stay away from sweetening things with natural fruit sugars and limit my intake to the whole fruit. I have to be specific with the guidelines or I will cut corners. I'm a terrible cheater... 

Limited Natural Sweeteners
Maple syrup season is right around the corner. We'll have sap boiling, syrup finishing, and jars of sweet, delicious goodness just laying around the house tempting my every last thread of will power. 
So...
I've decided that once a week I can use maple syrup or raw, local honey to make a sweet treat. 
There are rules to this though. It has to be a type of protein or energy bar that doesn't use processed flours. What do I mean? 
Nuts, dates, honey, flax seed, and oats in a food processor makes a really wonderful energy bar. 
Hopefully this will satisfy any craving for sugar that I have without overdoing it. 

Watch out for Hidden Sugars
Sugar is in e-v-e-r-y-t-h-i-n-g.
Breads, salad dressings, dried fruits, pasta sauce, dips, etc. 
Ketchup. 
Ugh, I love ketchup. 
I have to be very careful to make most of my dressings and sauces. Making my own will help me watch my unintentional sugar intake. 

Have a buddy 
It wasn't actually my idea to cut out sugar for a whole year. I'm just not that crazy. Leave it to a good friend of mine to go there. Deep down into crazytown. But, she made her point about sugar being a deterrant from getting back to a pre-pregnancy weight. Since we have babies 3 days apart...I felt like she was speaking right to me. (She literally was, but you know what I mean)

So I'm going to do it. 
I'm going to eliminate sugars from my diet. 
Sayonara, sweet delicacies. 
Adios, cheesecake, cookies, chocolate bars....
Pies, cobblers, ice cream, frosting, cake....


Wait!!!
I take it back!!

Oooookay....
No.
I'm good now. 

HERE WE GO! 

Wishing everyone out there Sugar(less) peace and...of course...Hair Peace! 

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Birth Peace

I'm still reeling over the events of the past week. I feel like I have been caught up in a whirlwind that is just now starting to settle.

I am no longer pregnant. 

I now have a squirmy, delicious baby to hold on the OUTSIDE of me...and I'm still in shock. 

After 42 weeks and 6 days of pregnancy, I feel an incredible relief to have my long desired baby in my arms. 

This is the story of our sweet Baby #3, Sage Nehemiah:



After 41 weeks of pregnancy, I started to undergo standard and noninvasive testing to determine how baby was tolerating his uterine home. All of the tests showed he LOVED it. He was thriving and perfectly content. 
I started to really think that I might be the first woman in the history of women to be pregnant forever. 

Sure enough...I would not be. 

On Saturday, the 18th, I started noticing my Braxton-Hicks contractions were coming at a steady rate. They were not painful by any means, just noticeable. Remembering back to my labor with my daughter, we decided to let the kids spend the night with the grandparents, just in case. 

With each postdates pregnancy, I have been on the schedule at the hospital to be induced. The first two pregnancies, I came in, on my own, no more than 24 hours before. This time was no exception. 

Around 3am on Sunday morning, I had a contraction that woke me from a hibernating bear kind of slumber. I passed it off and settled back in bed. 

The next contraction threw me out of bed. 

I had four of those in about an hour and felt like labor was really about to kick into gear. 
Oh, it did. 
The contractions started coming at 4 minute pace each about 1 minute long.

Part of me was still in denial. 

The hubs woke up to the sound of me working through my contractions...

I was still in denial. 

We texted our doula and told her we'd be going to the hospital soon. 

Still in denial.

We stopped at McDonald's to load up on a healthy labor breakfast. I got about halfway through my sausage biscuit before I was slammed with a big contraction and, yes, I was still in denial. 

The on-call doctor checked me around 7:00 and said I was probably about 6-7 centimeters dilated and 75% effaced (or thinned). 

Guess what??? 

I still didn't believe it.

My doctor came in and we chatted through a few contractions and talked about the days events. Then I was moved from triage to a room and labored for a little while longer before my Doctor came in and said he was going to go with his wife to church. He wanted to check me first, and when he did, found my cervix was much thinner but still about 7cms dilated. 

I decided I was officially D-O-N-E being pregnant and had him break my water in hopes it would speed things along. He went to get ready for his church's service and I was left with high hopes that things would get moving and I would have a baby. 

Well, let me tell you, the second contraction I had after he broke my water nearly threw me across the room. 

It was intense. 
And it kept getting intense. 
All of the sudden I was on the side of labor where things get REEEAL. 

They called the doctor back after half an hour right about the time I felt like starting to push. I was still at 8-9cm, but able to push to a 9-10. I didn't realize this and, despite being told otherwise, I had it in my head I was still at 7 centimeters and could be sent home. 

Seriously. 

These are the crazy thoughts that go through a laboring woman's head. 

When I heard the whole room, teeming with people, giving me words of encouragement and telling me to "PUSH", I was so confused. I felt like pushing and really wanted to push, but I missed the part where the doctor mentioned I was a 10. In my head, I thought it was too early. 

So in my confusion, I asked, "Am I even complete yet?"

In unison, the room hollers, "Yes!"
"He's coming!" I hear. 
"His head is right there!"

I was in disbelief. All of this had happened from 9:20, when my doctor broke my water, to about 10:30. It seemed like minutes! 
So...
I pushed 
And then I stopped. 
That hurt
A lot.
The kid was not coming out that way. They were going to have to shove him back in and I would find another way. 

I hear,
"You can do this!"
"Only you can push him out!"
"Almost there!"

I was staring at the ceiling debating with myself about whether or not I could muster up the strength to birth this baby for whom I had been waiting so long.

"You're doing this!"
"He's almost here!"
"You've got this!"

I took a few deep breaths in and gathered the strength that could only come from God and brought my sweet Sage into the world. 


Relief when his head emerged. 
Relief when his shoulders were born.
Relief when all of my sweet man was finally ready to greet the world. 
Relief when the organ that sustained my beautiful baby for 10 months came loose. 

My husband was able to help bring him into the world. He helped deliver and, as strange as it may sound, it was comforting to know that my husband played a part in Sage's delivery. 

There he was. 
The arms and legs I had felt for months within me, were now holding onto my skin. 
I waited so long for his arrival. 
For his squishy, wiggly body to fold up in the crook of my arm. 
I am exhilarated and spellbound by our little man. 

Sage Nehemiah Mason was born at 10:46am on Sunday October 19, 2014. 
He was 9 pounds, 11 ounces and 22 inches long. 



Sage's birth was hard but it was amazing and empowering. 

I felt loved, supported, and encouraged by the amazing people in the room. By my doula, who kept me focused through the most difficult parts of the labor. My sister who kept me laughing and encouraged in between contractions. My incredible husband who I can't even begin to describe. He has remained my rock and my support through the whole pregnancy. When I was so sick I could not get off the couch, he took care of the kids and made everyone supper. When I didn't think I could make it to the end of the pregnancy, he reassured me and supported me through the defeated tears. When I thought I could not deliver my son alone, he helped me in the best way...he literally helped deliver him. 
I'm floored and emotional about it all. 



I'm taken aback by my overwhelming feelings of love for my newest little man. 
I feel whole when I see our little family together. 



The Lord has truly answered prayers and piled blessing upon blessing on us. 

Wishing everyone out there Birth Peace and...Hair Peace! 



Thursday, July 31, 2014

Due Date Peace



I have never gone  before 42 weeks with my pregnancies. 
The looks I get when I tell people that is awesome. 
People try to figure it out. They'll ask, 
"Are they sure about your dates?"
"Who's your doctor?"
"Why didn't they induce you?"

We based my "due dates" off of early ultrasound so everybody's in agreement that the dates were pretty accurate. I'm pretty sure I made my doctor very nervous because he had never had a mom go to or past 42 weeks. In truth, he had probably induced moms before they could get there. But I was convinced that, for me, induction was not the way to go. 
When a mom is induced, the ideal scenario would be that she was showing signs of being labor ready. Dilation and effacement are the most detectable signs but even they mean very little in regards to when a mom may go into labor. 
My body was showing zero signs of readiness. ZERO. 
Big, fat, pregnant ZERO. 
This set me firmly against induction as I knew it would probably be a rough induction. Long and arduous and potentially dangerous. 
So I wanted to wait. 
 
People would ask, "When are you due?"
I'd say, "Two weeks ago."
They would show signs of shock (I think one person nearly had a stroke) and slowly step away like I was a leper. 
One woman in the mall starting looking for warm blankets and boiling water. 

Was it hard to wait so long? 
Yes!

Did I like the long wait? 
No! 

So why did I want to wait? 
Well, there were a few reasons. 

First and most importantly, nothing was wrong. Through monitoring and tests, both me and my babies were perfectly healthy. The placenta wasn't "dying" (which is a common excuse for induction post dates), the baby wasn't in danger, my fluid levels were perfect. There was nothing my doctor could have come up with to convince me of the legitimacy of induction. 

Both of my babies were born healthy. They weren't "expired" or "old". They weren't even big. My son was one pound  heavier and an inch longer than my daughter and was born in two easy pushes. That's a full million pushes less than with my daughter. (wink) Bigger baby does not always mean unbirthable baby. I don't know how many times a woman is asked, "How big do you think the baby is?" Really, all this question does is put the idea in a mom's head that her baby might be "too big" to birth. Let me assure you, it is totally okay to birth a "bigger" baby. 

Anyway...

As hard as it was to say "no" to the suggestion of induction, the evidence for its necessity just wasn't there. 

Finally, at 41 weeks and 4 days with my first, I agreed to come in at 42 weeks and 1 day (though my earliest ultrasound put me at 42 weeks and 6 days...eek) and start a more natural induction process. It was a Monday and my induction was scheduled for 7am. Early that Monday morning, at 1 am, I woke up with contractions. No cramping or "hey I think that was a contraction" contractions. I woke up with full blown contractions. 6 minutes apart and consistent. Then 5 minutes. Then 4... 
My sweet little baby girl was born at 7:47am, all on her own. Forty-seven minutes after the induction was supposed to begin. 
She continues to push boundaries at the ripe young age of 3 1/2. I have a love/hate relationship with this quality. (I have no idea where she gets it). 




With my second, at 42 weeks I agreed to come in at 42 weeks 3 days and start a more natural induction process. It was a Monday...

You can see where this is headed. 

The Friday before, I was desperate to avoid this Monday induction. I got a pedicure and a sweet friend of mine sent out a massage therapist to stimulate my pressure points. The next morning I used castor oil on my skin (feet and belly) and prayed that things would get going. 
They did. My squishy sweet man was born at 6:47am on the Sunday morning. 24 hrs before his scheduled eviction. To this day, he doesn't like to be told what to do... (I have no idea where he gets it). 


So with baby #3, I am fully prepared to see the days following my due date of September 28th. I really hope that I don't have to see them, but I'm prepared. The patience and stamina it took to see my due date come and go...and basically evaporate...was surprisingly difficult. It took a great deal of endurance. But as they say, "Good things come to those who wait." 

So I encourage all of you pregnant mamas to trust your instincts. Be educated and informed about all of your options. Due dates are arbitrary and your baby is more important than a number or day we determine. Only 5-10% of babies come on their due dates. 

The medical community still does not understand what brings on labor. There are suspicions about hormones, baby development, size of uterus, etc, but the true catalyst of labor is still unknown. Even induced babies won't necessarily be born on the day of induction. Often times they are born days later. After all these years of women giving birth and the advances in medical technology, we still can't predict the arrival day of a baby. 

Let me repeat that...

We still can't predict the arrival day of a baby. 

I love helping moms with their pregnancies, labors, deliveries, and postpartum experiences. I love being a doula and seeing moms give birth to their babies. It's a truly miraculous thing. Babies all come into the world with uniqueness and individuality. I want to fully embrace this and encourage other moms to do the same. 

Embrace the uniqueness of your baby and your body and remember that, though guesses can be made, your baby's arrival date cannot be predicted. 

Wishing all the pregnant mamas out there Due Date Peace and...Hair Peace! 


(Disclaimer: There are necessary reasons for the use of induction, I just want to encourage pregnant mamas to not let "impatience" be one of them) 

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Place Peace

I've been reading a book called "Restless" with a wonderful group of ladies. The chapter we read this week was about Places. 

Where are you? 

Are you supposed to be there? 

Am I supposed to live in the middle of nowhere with my husband, staying at home, and raising children?
 



The answer, I've discovered, is a resounding yes.

I always had a desire to "go"! 
In college, I had the amazing and incredible opportunity to travel around the world. It was an experience I will never forget and it spawned a desire to go and see. A few months after I returned, I was scheduled to spend a semester at a University in Thailand. It was an exchange program that I was very excited about. However, a series of events occured that kept me from going. The month after I was scheduled to leave for Thailand, I met the man who would become my husband.

Instead of going to Thailand, I stayed in my current University and took a ceramics class where, lo and behold, I would meet the man with whom I would spend the rest of my life. It's quite romantic and little bit "Ghost" with Demi Moore and Patrick Swayze, but all in all, I'm so grateful for the events that kept me in America and lead me to my husband.

There are many people who are afraid to go and travel; t
o spend years in a foreign country. I was never one of those people. I wanted to travel! I wanted adventures in foreign lands! I wanted to meet people and get to know their cultures!
What I didn't want was to stay in one place and live a "boring", "culture less" life.  
I was afraid I would be called to...wifehood

Motherhood

 I was afraid my desire to travel would be railroaded with a calling to stay at home and be a wife and mother. That was before I realized the huge blessing of being a wife and mother. 

I have traveled the world, been skydiving in South Africa, had a snowball fight on the Great Wall of China, served orphans in India, played ball with kids in Mauritius, and seen countless more amazing things.
But, I will tell you, being a mother is one of the greatest, most rewarding things I have ever done.

Motherhood has taught me selflessness like NOTHING else I have ever encountered. It has tested my character with fire (disquised as children). It has given me great joy.  I am intensely blessed because of the life I live now. 

 God has had his hand in my life from day one. Blessing me with things for which I did not ask. I thought my life would have been better spent photographing wild adventures across the world. Little did I know, I'd be photographing wild children in my own backyard. 

Sometimes, we don't know what is truly best for our lives. 

We can have incredible experiences and experience life with richness and fullness no matter where we are. We have to be willing to open up and allow life to BE rich and full. And, let's not confuse full and rich with EASY either. Some of the most rewarding things come from struggles and pain. Come from hard work.

Having peace in our places is key. Critically evaluating where we are in life is so important. Being open to God sending us someplace (or keeping us somewhere) we aren't expecting, whether deeper into our homes or deep into Africa, is crucial to fully utilizing our potential WHEREVER we land.

So, I ask myself these questions and encourage you to ask them as well:

Am I being fully intentional where I am in life? In my job, my home, my circle of friends?

Am I using every day with purpose? Or am I just biding my time?


I am so thankful for the women in my life who have taught me to truly love being a wife and mother. Those women who want to live a full and rich life in their circumstances have inspired me to do the same.


I hope everyone reading this sees their life as intentional and meaningful. And if it doesn't appear to be so, that you begin to start your days with intention and meaning.

Let's not crave what someone else has, but instead, crave to have peace in our places.

Wishing everyone out there Place Peace and, of course, Hair Peace.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Pregnancy #3 Peace



So I generally feel a little uncomfortable writing about my pregnancies. But I have been asked multiple times why I don't blog about it. I usually don't have a good answer. I usually just say, "Everyone blogs about their pregnancies". 

While that may be true, as a doula I find myself reminding my clients that every pregnancy can be different. 

Eating my words is how I get nourishment through my days, especially while pregnant. 
 

So:

This pregnancy started like my others. 
Dizziness and shortness of breath. 
It's crazy really. Before the pregnancy test, before the other obvious pregnancy signs, I start getting short of breath. Like going from walking/running miles uphill both ways and smiling, to standing up from the couch and feeling like I need an inhaler. 
Why is that? 
I usually chock it up to my body trying to grow a human. 
Yep, that usually does it. 

I took a test that evening (which isn't the BEST time to take it) and saw a small shadow of a line. It was sooooo faint. I wasn't even excited because I was so unsure of the result. I decided to wait a few days and take another. 

SIDE NOTE: You can purchase pregnancy tests for 60 cents to $1 that measure the same hormone that the $25 tests measure. 

A few days later the line was still faint so I texted the picture to my partner in crime, Cecelia, to see what she thought. (I suppose my partner in crime should be my husband, but, if you know my husband, you'd know how silly he thinks I am with my "crimes".) 
She was very certain the line was positive, while I still remained in doubt. 
A week later the tables turned and she was the one uncertain about a faint line. :)


So I was pregnant. It was true. How was I so sure? 
A week later I couldn't keep food down. I couldn't keep water down. I was either pregnant or on the verge of death. 

Now, some women glow through pregnancy and seem to float in the clouds with tiny pink and blue baby clouds floating next to them. 
Not me.
Not a lot of moms I know. 
We tend to sink like a rock next to the porcelain throne only moving to roll to the couch. 
There's no floating here. 
I feel terrible for my family, especially my husband. Cooking is NOT an option. Laundry gets amazingly behind. Cleaning gets eliminated completely. Moving and breathing is hard enough.
This continues well beyond the magical *12 weeks* of which many books speak. I'm still battling the pukes at 23 weeks, just on a much smaller, less dramatic scale. 

I was thrilled to be pregnant. But I knew the first two trimesters would be hard with two munchkins running around. 

Now, I don't get worried about much during my pregnancies. I get sick, yes, but I know many women who have increased anxiety and depression while pregnant. Thankfully, I don't battle that. But there was one thing this pregnancy that had me rattled. 

This is the story:

I was at the doctor for my daughter's appointment (we see a family doctor who treats me as well as my children). I had been to see him the previous week for my OB appointment and had standard blood work done. My doctor finished my daughter's appointment and then looked at me kinda funny. He pulled out some papers and said he needed to tell me something that wasn't easy to talk about. 
I had an ultrasound the week before and I saw that my placenta was covering my cervix which, later in pregnancy is considered placenta previa and warrants a Caesarian section. (This is no longer a concern as the placenta is now a decent distance from the cervix) I figured this was what he was wanted to talk about. What he said next floored me. 

"You have tested positive for HIV."
......
.........
"I'm sorry, what?!"

"Because I know you and your lifestyle, we are going to do more tests. It came as quite a shock to me."

"I'm sorry, what?!"

As a monogamous, sober, stay at home mom, this was THE LAST thing I was expecting to hear. I'm not exactly in the high rick catagory and I was negative with my previous pregnancies. 
 I asked where I could have possibly gotten it. I do attend births and had possibly come in contact with fluids but none of my clients had been HIV positive as far as I knew. 
Toilet seat? 
The Ohio River?
 I was baffled. 
 He had me do more blood work and ordered a more extensive, comprehensive test. The results would be back in a few days. 
You can imagine all of the things going through my head. What did this mean for my life? My kids' lives? My husband's life? How did this happen? If I was negative for my other pregnancies, when did it happen? I even worried about how people would perceive me. 

After two days the doctor's office called to say that the new test had come back negative. They were unsure of why the first test came back positive. I can tell you, my relief could have been weighed on a scale. 

Just one more reason to be thankful for a healthy pregnancy. 

WHEW!


I often feel lazy and worthless during my pregnancies and struggle with inefficiency and how it affects my family and those around me. 

Many women workout daily, eat very well, and take their vitamins regularly during pregnancy. I usually watch those women with my feet up, eating a cheeseburger while my kids watch a movie.  

While I do actually understand the importance of exercise and nutrition during pregnancy, it's much harder to put into action. I do yoga and walk during my pregnancies and try to get veggies in where I can. But, I also do a lot of sitting and eating out. 

Pregnancy is a beast of its own. Unlike anything else I've ever known, including the flu. 

I am truly amazed at the human body's ability to create another human from two simple cells. I stand in awe of the Creator's intent for the uterus. The collaboration of a woman's body functions and the baby's growth and development. 

I am in love with the kicks and punches that come from my growing belly. Even when they are directed toward my ever full bladder. Or when they happen at night. I am not really one to complain about the baby keeping me up by kicking when I want to sleep. Obviously, the baby is not intentionally keeping me awake and those movements are crucial to development. I'm thankful. I'll place my hand on the baby and feel peace and relief knowing my baby is still moving and growing. 

Our sweet little boy is doing so much developing. I often have to remind myself, it's OKAY to rest when I'm tired. If I need to put on a movie for my kids while I rest on the couch, it's OKAY. If my options are nap or laundry, napping should be first. This body is made to nap. To rest. To rejuvenate. It's also made to eat! Yea food! 

At 23 weeks pregnant with #3, I reflect on my first pregnancy and I think...What was I thinking?!

Not about getting pregnant, but about not napping. Not going to the movies more. Not going on more dates with my husband. Not walking around stores by myself just because I could.

If you are pregnant with #1 while reading this, I encourage you to get a pedicure. Go to the movies. Go places that aren't kid friendly. Go on dates with your baby daddy! But most of all, nap. Nap, my sweet, pregnant friend. 


I just want to encourage all of you pregnant mamas out there to be kind to yourselves. Don't be too harsh with yourself if you aren't able to run marathons or eat perfectly everyday. Be gracious and thankful for all of the wonderful things happening in your body. 

If you are a soon-to-be-daddy reading this, be generous toward your baby mama. Most likely she's giving herself a hard enough time. And talk to your baby. It warms a mama's heart and familiarizes baby with your voice. (They can hear you!)

Wishing everyone out there pregnacy peace and...Hair Peace! 

(I don't have medical issues. My babies have been very healthy so far. I am really, really blessed. I am so thankful for the blessing to get pregnant and stay pregnant. It really seems like a luxury anymore. There are so many women who struggle physically and especially emotionally with infertility or loss. My heart breaks in as many ways as it can for these women. I admire them for their strength and stamina. I was told it would be very unlikely that I would ever have children so I have a glimpse in to how some of these moms may feel. However, I cannot fully understand the pain as I did, in fact, have children.)

Friday, April 25, 2014

Beg, Borrow, and "Steel" Peace


Babies are expensive. 
Having babies is expensive. 

Those sweet, squishy, delicious babies have a heavy price tag around their little, yummy toes. 

So, as budgeting people, how do we afford our delicious bundles of joy? 

They usually don't cost anything to make. (wink wink)

But after conception, it's gets PRICEY. 
We add to our "eating out" budget when I get pregnant because I am worthless the first trimester and can't make toast without puking. 
You think I'm kidding. 
But I'm not. 
Worth. Less.

And then there's prenatal care. 
And vitamins. 
And maternity clothes. 
And baby prep.
And... And.... And....the baby's not even here yet!!! 

How on earth do budget conscious people have babies? Let alone more than one?? 

Here's how:
BEG, BORROW, and STEEL 

Let's start with Beg
Have a birthday coming up? Ask for onesies. 
Christmas while pregnant? Ask for diapers. (Don't be ashamed, people often enjoy buying you something you actually will use. Maybe it's a bit tacky, but so are ugly sweaters.)

 No special holidays while pregnant? Get on your knees and ask people for baby things.

I'm just kidding. 
(Or AM I?)

Now onto Borrow:

Having babies is a very common thing. It's a beautiful, miraculous, wonderful thing, but lots of people have babies. And those babies usually grow up and grow out of things. One thing about baby stuff is you can keep it for subsequent children but in between it just sits in storage. OR! It could be used! 

Most of the things I have for my children have also seen numerous other children. I am so grateful for the people in my life willing to lend us their kids clothes. 

Borrowing expensive luxury items like swings, bouncers, cribs, cradles, strollers, and the famous Bumbo seats can really save a great deal of money. It's nice to have a pretty, cohesive nursery but the baby truly just needs a few essential things. Focusing on such essential things can keep your money in your pocket and not in Babies R Us's pocket. They have deeeeeeeeep pockets. 


Which brings me to Steel

Steel??
 (Not S-T-E-A-L. I would never suggest you steal from others😄)
Steel. 
Steel will. 
Steel impulses.
 The ridiculously strong ability to NOT buy the $16 layette at the baby stores. 

Babies R Us is a bright shiny store with bright shiny things for our bright shining baby stars. 

Keep your wits about you, ladies, this place will suck you in and steal (that's STEAL not steel!) your money. 

A tough, strong-as-steel will can push you to resort to yard sales, thrift stores, and other moms' storage units and save a lot of money in the process. 

I try to remember these things when we get pregnant to keep us from spending our savings on, cute, non essential baby items. 

I find it helpful to consider the baby an addition to the already formed family and not the center of the family's world. This helps me to remember the needs of the family as a whole and what would benefit us emotionally, financially, and physically. That limits the importance I place on baby items and gives more weight to the amount of money I actually DO spend. 

So, moms, moms to be, ladies, dads, etc... I encourage you all to look through the heavy consumerism that surrounds the world of babies and focus on the essentials of your family. The whole family. Save money where you can. Put to use the many, MANY used baby items already out there. 

Wishing everyone out there Baby Spending Peace and...HAIR PEACE!! 

Garden Peace

With spring finally blossoming, I've managed to get excited about flowers and vegetables. 
Whoopty-do, right?

Wrong. 

I think every summer, "I'm not going to do a garden next year."
And then winter rolls around and all I wanna do is dig in the dirt in the springtime. 

I keep surprising myself with the motivation to do a garden come springtime. 

This year, I'm pregnant. 

Eek. 

It should be no big deal, but I manage to spend my first (and second) trimesters hugging the porcelain throne and then returning to my indent on the couch. It's a tough time for everyone in the family...especially my husband. The kitchen itself is a serious trigger as well as dirty diapers. That leaves my husband to pull a lot of extra weight around around house. 

Sooo...when I hit week 5 1/2 and the sickness started full force, I dismissed the idea of a garden completely. (As well as showering, standing, moving, breathing...)


Now, here we are at 13 weeks and I'm digging dirt out of my fingernails! 
With the beautiful sunshine and napping kiddos, I managed to plant lettuces, carrots, and radishes. 

A small garden but an enormous amount of gratefulness that I am feeling well enough to move let alone plant. 

Even planting a little lettuce in a planter on a sunny porch can make a little salad! 

You don't need to be a garden master to plant a few vegetables. 



I encourage everyone out there to plant something wonderful this week: vegetables, flowers, or even just a little peace in someone else's heart. 

Wishing everyone out there garden peace and....HAIR PEACE!! 

Soap Peace

Everytime I go to store to buy soap, I'm appalled at either the price or the ingredients. 
My skin hates me if I buy the wrong kind of soap. 
I make my own body wash from Dr Bronner's unscented bar soap, water, and glycerin, but sometimes I like a little scent. There are a lot of smells that go along with having small children in an old house...
That's actually a huge understatement. 
Small children. 
Old house. 
Hard working husband. 
Dog. 

So. Many. Smells. 

I like a little scent sometimes but buying commercial always frustrates me. So I like to buy local, handmade soap that have natural essential oils. 
There is a soap shop about 15 minutes from us that is DIVINE! Divine, but pricey. And rightly so. A good quality soap, with good quality ingredients takes effort, time, and money. 
How do I know this??
Well, my adventure buddy extraordinaire, Cecelia, and I embarked on, yet again, another crazy adventure in self sufficiency. 
I deeply cherish our friendship for many reasons. One reason is that she agrees to do crazy things and asks me to do crazy things. I most always say yes because I end up loving the craziness. 
So when Cecelia asked me if I want to make soap with lard we saved from the pigs we raised and slaughtered...(yes, THOSE kind of crazy things) of course, I said, "Yes".

Cecelia had been saving her wood ash from the very cold winter days with the bright hope of making amazing homemade lye. But after a serious effort producing little reward, we broke down and bought lye from the store to begin making our own soap. The wood ash idea hasn't died, just been temporarily postponed. 
Two pregnant women (yup both pregnant) with 5 kids (7 total if you count the belly babies) making soap for the first time...ever. 
That's just the way we do things. 

So we began. 


Homemade lard from the pigs we slaughtered ourselves, coconut oil, essential oils, water, lye, soap molds (one of which is a PVC pipe), gloves, stainless steel pots, and cinnamon tea for courage. 

After researching, Cecelia discovered the need to be very cautious with lye. It can be really harmful to skin, eyes, etc. It was a healthy fear that produced such pictures as this:


(Behind her is their beautiful orchard!)

And this:


Making the lye proved to be less eventful than we had originally anticipated, but the precautions were still necessary. And...we got in a hearty laugh or two. Or seven. 

So our first batch was the test. The test to see how we handled everything. The test to see if we could do it. Just...the test. We had low expectations. 

We made the lye, melted the lard and coconut oil, and began the cooking mixing process. 

And then...

Whoosh!! OUR SOAP STARTED BUBBLING OVER EVERYWHERE!!! 

Laughing and freaking out we moved the soap from the grill to the grass and tried to stir it down. 
It finally calmed down and our bewilderment lead to giggles and a drive to make the best of what we thought was a horrible situation. 
We kept going with the process, added essential oils, and made this:


Now THAT is a beautiful soap. It's eucalyptus and tea tree soap with Violet petals for eye appeal. 

We are very proud of the soap because we pushed on through a confusing and, what seemed to be, a bad situation.

We fed the kids and ourselves, put the little ones down for naps and made more soap. 

These are the little ones:
So cute :)

We made patouili and cedar wood soap and a rosemary salt soap, each double batches. And we did each batch a little more smoothly than the last. 

The soaps have a curing time of a few weeks so we can't use them right away, which is torture!!! They smell so good!!! 

I always enjoy trying new things, especially with good friends! 

I encourage you all to embark on your own crazy adventures and explore everything this life has to offer. 
Make things with friends! Hard work is often the most rewarding. 

Wishing everyone out there soap peace and...HAIR PEACE!! 

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Chore-less Peace

My toddlers don't have chores.
Do I think chores are a bad thing? Absolutely not. 
So why don't my kids have them?
Because they do "chores" without knowing it. 

They have no idea that doing dishes is a chore. 

They don't understand that helping me fold laundry is a chore. 

They have no clue that throwing their trash away, picking up their toys, or wiping up their messes are chores. 

To them, it's just how it is. 

"It just happens," as my three year old would say. 

I think chore charts are genius. And I will probably use them later. But, for now, I'm just letting them "help" me. They can't read and a chore chart would be just one more thing to keep up. 

We give praise for listening and obeying if I ask them to do something, but they don't get rewards for helping out. Am I grateful? You bet! This mama doesn't care if if takes 7 hours to fold laundry if one day it takes 7 minutes. 

Why no rewards?

Life. 

Teaching our kids to do things to help out is important. But teaching them to help and not expect anything in return is vital. We live in a take take world. I want my kiddos to go against the grain and give give give. 

They'll be given a chance to earn wages in our home later in life. But for now, we're going to try and establish a helpful attitude. 

I want to teach hard work and appreciation. After those foundations are established, we may branch into chore charts. For now, we're going to focus on helping without receiving reward. Giving without expecting. And doing without the weight of chores. 

I am, by no means, an expert in parenting but this is the way we would like to do things for now. One thing I have learned is that our parenting is constantly evolving and adapting as our kids grow and change. Our family is very different from others and I try to remember that as I hear various parenting advice. 

I encourage you all to embrace the uniqueness of your families. I also encourage you to instill a giving attitude in your kids as I try to do the same for mine. Our world can always use a little more generosity. A little more kindness. And a little more peace. 

Wishing everyone out there Chore or Chore-less Peace and...HAIR PEACE!!  

Monday, February 3, 2014

No-poo "Cheater, Cheater" Update Peace

So I cheated. 

It's for the good of those around me though. 

So, I cheated, but, you're welcome. 

Almost one week after I started the "no-poo" method of washing my hair, my hair turned into a grease ball. I think it's because I put my hair up wet. But still. 
So today I washed my hair with Dr Bronner's Castile bar soap and rinsed with apple cider vinegar. 
My hair definitely feels cleaner after washing with the Castile soap. 

So here's my general thoughts about the "No Poo" method:

Likes:
1. Curlier hair
2. No chemicals 
3. I really like the apple cider vinegar rinse 

Dislikes:
1. The baking soda: It makes my hair feel like straw while I'm cleaning it but, ironically, doesn't feel clean after the fact. 
2. The greasy feeling my hair had after a week or so. And my hair is not naturally greasy. 
3. My hair is much fluffier. For someone with thin hair, this method might work very well! But I'm not okay with making the mane...fluffier. 

So, will I keep it up?? 

Sorta

There's a woman locally who makes her own shampoo bars from goats milk (that she milks herself) and honey (that she collects from her own bees). I may give those a try and continue to use the vinegar as a conditioner. 

But I might use shampoo too. 

You never know. 
I'm as unpredictable as the wind.

I know a lot of people have responded to my "No Poo" trial and I encourage you all to try it out for yourselves. Everyone's hair is so very different. It might be the shampoo answer for you! 

Give it a shot and let me know how it goes!!! 

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Trailer Peace

We live in a trailer.
A bonafide double wide.

It's not even a fancy new one that might, sorta, not look like a trailer.
It's a through and through 1970's double wide trailer. 

Now, despite what you may be thinking, it wasn't always my dream to live in a trailer. 
In fact, I was originally against the idea. 

My husband and I had the opportunity to get a beautiful piece of land in a beautiful remote location and we took it! The thing about this land was that there was no house on it. Though we are fans of camping adventures, living in a tent wasn't really feasible. 
So we looked.
We looked at building plans, taking out loans, living in an RV, etc. We had so many options but one opportunity presented itself that was particularly uninteresting to me. A free double wide trailer a few miles down the road from our land. "If you can haul it, you can have it," is what we were told. 
My husband immediately said "Yes"
I did not so immediately say "Yes". 
We went to look at it and I started to warm up to the idea.

 It was free after all. 
Free and clear home. 
No mortgage. 
Now it started to look a little more appealing.

After a lot of hard labor from my husband and my in laws, we got the trailer split (not the easiest task!) and ready to haul. 
We moved the trailer to our land and, suddenly, it became home. 
We have updated here and there. But really, the house had been well kept and just needed some cleaning and personal touches. 

We have now had two babies in this home and it is just that...a home. 
Not a trailer. 
Not a house. 
A home. 

We are sheltered from winds and rain. Warm in the cold winters. And cool in the hot summers. 
We have delicious, hot meals at night, and a never ending supply of memories to make. 
Candles burn to create a sense of comfort but the true comfort is the love within the people in this home. 

It no longer matters to me what the exterior a home looks like, only the joy and love that saturate the interior. 

We have been brought up in our society to scorn specific types of homes, catagorizing them by size and shape, often neglecting the sweet families making it a home. 
We judge people all too much by the cars they drive, or the houses in which they live. When truthfully, our houses will one day fall away. Moth and rust will even eat the castles and the mansions. Our world is dilapidated and will continue to fall into ruin. 

I now love our home, not because of its classification, but because we have made it our own. 
Anytime I get the, "Woe is me, small house blues", I remind myself how thankful I am to have such a warm and protective home. 
Anytime my walls seem paper thin, I remind myself how much closer they bring me to my family. 

And anytime random things fall apart, I drop to the ground and take cover half expecting our house is going to sporadically implode!! 
Just kidding. 
Mostly...

I have to consciously remind myself to shrug off the stereotypes that our society instills in our heads and be thankful for the major blessings I have in this life. 

I encourage you all, no matter your house woes and troubles, to make a home within your house. Create a warm inviting place with a gentle and thankful spirit. 

Forget the shell of your house, a home is made by the people in it. 

Wishing everyone out there house peace and...Hair Peace. 

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

No-Poo Update Peace

I have curl again. Mmmm....sorta. 
My hair has been so weighed down with conditioners that my curl was more of a crimp gone bad. Now it's kinda like a crimp gone not so bad. 
(The 80's were made for my kind of hair.) 


After Day 1 of no shampoo, I'm feeling a little more at ease about not using my shampoo.

A few things I like:

1. My hair isn't as weighed down. 
Conditioner keeps my frizzies down a bit, but it keeps the rest if my hair down too.

2. My curl is more defined. Not Shirley Temple curly, more like a weird after surfing, stick your head out the window while driving curl. (I don't surf)

3. I feel better about what's going on my skin and what's going down the drain! 


A few things that will take some getting used to:

1. Obviously, no lather. We often associate lather with clean. I often associate lather with clean. 

2. My wet hair feels "clingy". That's the only way I can describe it. Not static clingy, like, "clean" clingy. Dry hair feels normal though. 

3. I missed a few spots and they still feel greasy. I have a lot of hair. I do everything in layers with my hair and it takes a lot of shampoo to get it all clean. My baking soda application method was super willy nilly. It was so foreign to me that I just stood there looking at the baking soda in a stupor. So for day #2, I put the baking soda in an old spice jar so I can "shake" it on my hair. 




Here's a couple of pictures: 

No grease on the top. You're welcome world. 


 
The last one was my wet hair. Pre frizz stage. (It felt very strange taking a "selfie")

My hair is naturally frizzy and I don't expect that to change. But I am impressed that the no-poo method does not make my hair frizzier. Win.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Shampoo Peace

Shampoo is something I rely on, like I imagine many of you do as well.

I have a mini stroke in my hair follicles if I run out of conditioner. 

After a lot of chemical reduction in our house and food, getting rid of shampoo was OUT OF THE QUESTION!

Not gonna happen. 
Are you kidding me??
Have you SEEN my hair?!
You really don't want to unleash these locks from their shampooed, conditioned, straightened cage! Prepare to get bit.

But, after reading this article:

I decided to give it a...try. 
Try!
Not change. 
Chance.
Those no-poo fools have 14 days to change my mind!

For 2 weeks, I'm NOT going to wash my hair with Shampoo. 
(What's WRONG with me?)
Well, I'll tell you: 
1. I've always known about the chemicals in shampoo and try to brush it out of my frizzy mind. This is one label I refuse to read because I know it's not pretty. But I'm addicted.
2. I'm always trying to save money. No shampoo? Lower toiletries budget. Yeah. I'm okay with that. 
3. If this works like I hear it should, my hair will be stronger and shinier by the time I'm done. 

We shall see.
I'm a skeptic. 
Big skeptic. 
This is what I usually use:


See that "clinical strength"? Yea. I have seborrheic dermatitis and extremely dry skin in patches. Including my scalp. This is the only formula that keeps the itching at bay. 

So now I'm going to use this:


The bar of soap is not for my hair. It's a bar of Dr Bronner's Castile soap for washing the rest of me. ;)

The middle container is baking soda. I'm already a believer in the cleaning power of baking soda...for my sink. Evidentially, a little baking soda in the hair is better than shampoo. A few tablespoons per wash should do the trick. 

(Synicism drips from every word I type)

The glass has two tablespoons of raw apple cider vinegar and about a cup of water. This is my conditioner. Eeeeeeeek. 
I've known that ACV is supposedly great for itchy scalps. I'm about to test that out. 

I know a few friends who have done the no-poo thing and loved it, but I'm the kind that has to do it for myself. 

So...

Here goes nothing, friends! 

No Poo Day #1!!

Wishing everyone out there HAIR PEACE! 

Monday, January 27, 2014

Stuff Peace

Stuff. 
We all have it. 
We all want it. 

What is the main reason I have an ungrateful heart?
Stuff. 
Specifically...these two kinds of stuff:
Stuff I don't have. 
Stuff I do have. 
Just can't win, right??


#1: Coveted stuff. 

Wanting what someone else has. 
Not to steal, but to have one of my very own. 

I always seem to like other people's stuff more than my own. 

The grass is always greener it seems. 

After my husband and I took a serious look at our finances, I had to take a serious look at my heart and my intentions for buying things. Was I buying out of need? Or want?

As we headed toward financial security and self-sufficiency, we had to take a few hits to our pride. We didn't need the "new, best, coolest". We had to stop before we bought something and ask "Is it in the budget?" If the answer was "No", then we had to wait and save up.

(Ugh, waiting is the WORST!)

Knowing our true intention saved us from impulse spending. And also brought to light an ungrateful mess in my own attitude. 

Why?? 
Why do I want this thing?

Usually the answer was/is "_______ says it's awesome!"

Or

"I saw _______ use this and it looked like it worked really well!"

Someone else...
They have, I don't...

What I SHOULD be asking is:
"Can I do without this?"
"How can I make my own?"

Financial security and self sufficiency can be a bit humbling. Ok, more than a bit. REALLY humbling.


 Driving cars that aren't shiny or new. Living in homes that aren't modern or chic. Wearing clothes that are handmade or thrift store purchased. All of these things can test a person's character in the merry ol Land of New and Now. 


Okay. 
*deep breath*
#2: Cluttered STUFF

I see clutter in the house and I immediately think "CHAOS". But that's not always the case. And I often forget that, sometimes, clutter has purpose. 
My ungratefulness for my husband's skills rears it's ugly head when I, like a purging tornado, tear through the house grumbling about all of our STUFF! Throwing things away or organizing in a rage.

Ironic, right. 
First I don't have enough, now I have too much. 

It's not the clutter that bothers me as much as how it makes my house look. I used to think I wanted to be a minimalist. But then, I realized minimalists must have everything outsourced or done professionally. 

Collecting things that help establish self sufficiency can cause...clutter. 
 Ugh, clutter. 
 I sometimes watch "Hoarders" so I feel better about certain areas if my house. 
Clutter can make a girl go nutsy, am right?!? I see articles on the World Wide Wonderful about how clutter can increase stress. (And then I see it's right next to a billion other articles about: 19 Ways I'm Failing my Kids, 39 Ways Someone Else is Better, 45 Ways my Cat can Climb a Tree, and other worthless articles, and I feel a little better. The internet can be good but, man, can it be worthless. And make you feel worthless in the process) 

More often than not, the stuff that clutters our house has use and purpose. My eyes only see chaos, and I end up with an ungrateful heart. 

Hunting for our food means having hunting things. 
Tapping our own trees for sap means having buckets, old water jugs, and miscellaneous supplies around. 

Sewing, pottery, cooking, plumbing, electrical work, mechanical work...all of these things have "stuff" attached to them. 
When a minimalist sees our house, I'm pretty sure something inside of them curls up and dies. 

The clutter comes and sticks around. But, I have realized I need to remind myself it's not useless, it's actually helpful. All of the clutter (most of it) helps us maintain our budget and do things ourselves. This keeps the purge urge at bay.  


This road to humility that I'm on is long, bumpy, and cluttered, folks. 

I want to be grateful for the resources we have and use them wisely. Not coveting what others have or overlooking the important things. 

We live a different life than a lot of people and I love the way we live!!!  

The buying of new things, the shell of our house, the shine of our cars, nor the organization of our clutter can establish who I am inside. I need to be reminded of that...often.

I want to greet guests with hot tea on a cold day and not worry about the pile of hunting clothes by the front door ;)

I want to talk with friends on my very mismatched couches and get to know them better. 

I want people to ask, "Why do you have empty two liter bottles with wires on them?", so I can give them a sample of our syrup. 


I want gratefulness to come with ease. 
I guess I want a lot of things in life, but most of all, I want to learn to love others without hesitation. Humbly and graciously. 

Wishing everyone out there Stuff Peace and...HAIR PEACE!!! 

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Make Peace

Today was a "make" day. 

I simultaneously ran out of dish soap, hand soap/body soap, and deodorant. 

Don't mind me. Just a stinky dirt ball strolling through town. 


Luckily, I have come across some awesome recipes for all if these!! I can make dish soap, one gallon of hand soap, and two containers of deodorant for a portion of the cost to buy new. 


I repurposed my old deodorant container to make this:

6 T coconut oil
1/4 cup (4 T) baking soda
1/4 cup (4 T) arrowroot 
(Recipe from wellnessmama.com)

Heat over low heat in stainless steel saucepan, whisking until all is incorporated. 
Pour into cleaned deodorant container or glass jam jar. 
Use and abuse! This stuff WORKS. 
My sister and I always talk about how having babies is stinky. Your hormones make you sweat like crazy while pregs and nursing. Using commercial deodorants with fragrances and aluminum can make a preggo woman chuck up her eggs and/or a nursing baby turn up their nose. So it's either use these deodorants....or smell like BBQ Fritos. Ooooooor....
Mix a few ingreds together and Voila! 
I chose to give this deodorant a try and love it. It works on Nursing mom BBQ Fritos stench.  Also, love that I keep all these ingredients in my pantry already. 


On to the hand soap
One gallon of hand soap from a bar of soap. 
Wait, what?!?
Yep ONE GALLON
From what?!
ONE bar of soap. 

Love it. 

This is the recipe I used: 

One 8oz bar of soap, (I used dr bronner's unscented soap)
1 gallon of water
2 T Liquid Glycerin (found in the band aid section or beauty aisle at any drugstore or grocery store)

Grate soap. 
Boil water.
Melt soap in boiling water. 
Add glycerin. 
Stir it up....

Pour into containers (I don't recommend plastic if it's hot). Leave overnight to set up. Full your hand soap dispensers. 


Diiiiiissssssh Soooooaaap

Ingredients:
1 1/4 cups boiling water
1/4 cup castile bar soap, grated
1 tablespoon washing soda
1/4 cup liquid castile soap

Add everything to boiling water. Let cool. Reuse old dish soap container.
I doubled this recipe. I could have filled mine to the top, but I put some in another container and shared a little with a friend. 


There you have it folks. 
Just one more way I keep our budget down! 
Make, make, make! 

Wishing everyone out there Make peace and...Hair Peace!

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Laundry Peace


Kids bring so much laundry. 
I remember folding my daughter's tiny clothes before she was born and thinking, "I'll just wash her little clothes with our things. It won't take up much room."

Then the spit up came. 
And the drooling. 
And the exploded diapers. 

All of the sudden, my daughter had more laundry than my husband and I combined. Something so tiny made such a big mess. 

Because one huge pile if laundry wasn't enough, we went and had ourselves another kid.

When I thought the laundry would just double, it seemed to quadruple.
 
I see moms with large families and large houses and think, "Now, where are they hiding all of their laundry?"

I needed a system. Not a cleaning system, but an "already clean" system. I had baskets of clean clothes and no motivation to put them away because they were just going straight back to the dirty clothes hamper. 

So, I decided to try setting the kids clothes out, for the whole week, one day. 




It's UH-mazing. 

Genius idea, right? 

Thank you, thank you. Yes, I'm a genius.

Okay, okay, the idea was not mine. 

I'm so thankful for the group of moms I have around me who are willing to share genius ideas such as this one. This mom in particular, does this system with 6, count em, 6 kids. So folks, it can be done! 


Once a week, I fill these baskets with one outfit, socks, undergarments, and one set of PJ's. (The baskets were 25 cents a piece) 

Who knew that a few plastic baskets and a little organization could do so much for my kids laundry?!

And, I must disclaim, there is a little bit of work (work it, work it). Once a week, I have to actually do the basket filling, but after it's done... Ahhhhhhh.

The work I do once a week drops the work I do in the morning and evening down significantly. 

Busy mornings, I just pull the ol' snatch n' grab, and my kids practically dress themselves. 
Practically. *wink*

At night, there's no searching for matching jammies with tired kiddos. 

7 baskets, 7 days, 2 kids, less stress. 


I'm sorry what??

Less. Stress. 

*HALLELUJAH CHORUS*

Damage control. 
That's all parenting is sometimes: damage control. 

I love trying new things to see if they work for our family. This was one thing I found so helpful. 

I encourage you all to try new things! 

Wishing everyone out there laundry peace and...HAIR PEACE!