Daybook: Autumn Begins

Outside My Window ...

are birds in a bird bath and a little grove of trees. Beyond that, is my favorite place to welcome the autumn in all the world. I'm spending a few quick days with my father and stepmother in Charlottesville, Virginia. 

Foss Kids September '09 091

 I am listening to...

Mary Beth, Katie, Sarah, and Karoline making dinner with "Baba."

 

To Live the Liturgy...

Wednesday, we'll celebrate the feast of Saint Padre Pio with maple cookies and cappucino. We will also begin the rose novena to St. Therese in anticipation of her feast on October first.

 

To be Fit and Happy...

We went apple picking this morning, followed by an afternoon of shopping. The baby in the Ergo provided plenty of exercise. 

I am thankful for...

 a beautiful place to escape. My children love to come here. "Baba" is lots of fun and always manages to fix the right things to eat and to plan the right things to do. The boys are glad to play golf by day and watch football in the evenings with my dad. The house is so pretty and I'm not distracted by a a million things yet undone the way I am at home. I just love this town. Love it.

Foss Kids September '09 092

 

 

I am pondering ...

whether or not I want an iPhone. being able to carry my iCal with me is soooo tempting.  

From the kitchen ...
We picked 90 pounds of apples! It's going to be all apples, all the time, as soon as I get home. But tonight, "Baba" is cooking, so we're going to have steak and mashed potatoes, green beans with mushrooms, cucumber and tomato salad and an ice cream cake for dessert. (Shhh...it's a sneak preview of birthday week, whereupon four children celebrate their birthdays in the same week.)

Foss Kids September '09 103

 

I am wearing ...

A green short-sleeved blouse, jeans and tennis shoes. And I have new necklace sent to me by a cherished friend. It's utterly beautiful in its simplicity.

I am creating ...

memories with my children; memories that include three generations.

Foss Kids September '09 102

 

On my iPod...

Praying the Rosary with St. Faustina.

 

 

Towards a real eduction ...

Lots of Apple Books this week:

How Do Apples Grow?

Apple Picking Time

Life and Times of the Apple

How to Make an Apple Pie and See the World

Rain Makes Applesauce

Applesauce

Apple Cake

Alyosha's Apple

Brother Bartholomew and The Apple Grove

 

Foss Kids September '09 098

I am thinking... 

That it's nice to get away but I really miss my husband. And how weird it must be for him to be all alone in that big house.

In the Garden...

There is a mess of weeding to do. And I think it's nearly time to plant bulbs. We're planting hope this year.

Around the House

When I get home, I'm not going to be discouraged by the busy bustle and the inevitable messes. My life is a life in motion. There is poetry there and it is beautiful poetry.

.

Sarah Anne this week...

Sarah Annie  loves her mama. She won't much let me out of her sight and she doesn't want to be out of my arms. She will go to Mary Beth on occasion, especially if it means going out of doors.

Foss Kids September '09 114

I am hoping and praying ...

for the Snow family, the Barrett family, and the Cushman family. May they be consoled by family and friends, saints and angels, and the good Lord himself.

Christa Bartlett and her family

and now,

For the Mitchell family, too.

 

On Keeping Home ...

When I am stressed, I want nothing more than to be at home. But I recognize that home is where ten other people live as well and so, it isn't always such a peaceful place of respite for me.

I set the tone and I "keep home." If it is to be a place of respite for my family--and for me--I must endeavor to make it so. And if it is very important that it be that way, then keeping home must truly take its place near the top of the priority list.

I really pushed myself this week to tidy after the children were in bed, pulling a couple of nights much later than usual. I like the effect it has on my mornings.

One of my favorite things ...

Autumn on the Lawn at the University of Virginia.

The view from Carter Mountain Orchard.

Appreciating that view with someone else who loves it, a blog friend who became an in -real- life friend, much to my delight.

Foss Kids September '09 095

How's the burnout recovery going?

Very well. Some long conversations with understanding spirits, some time away, a date with Mike--all good things this week, thank you.

Foss Kids September '09 108

A Few Plans For The Rest Of The Week:

We'll return home tomorrow and fall back into a school day routine. The parish fall festival is this weekend. I'm hoping to visit with my friend Jan this week, too. Lots of good visiting!

 

 

Daybook: Break from the Blogging Break

Outside My Window ...

It's perfect soccer weather.

I am listening to...

Nicky entertaining Sarah Annie. Mary Beth mixing pumpkin muffins with Katie and Karoline.

DSC_0065 

blueberry banana boats for "B" week

To Live the Liturgy...

I think that Our Lady of Sorrows will have particular poignancy this year. The feast of St. Robert Bellarmine is  my godson Bobby's birthday.


To be Fit and Happy...

Michael and I are providing 24/7 text message support to each other as we try to avoid pumpkin spice lattes this fall. He's got a rougher road ahead than I do.  Starbucks has just opened a store in his dorm, right next to his suite. The poor guy is literally living in Pumpkin Spice Land, while trying to be entirely sugar-free. 

I am thankful for...

the opportunity to take the whole first week of school and do as Laureen White suggests: Rename it "Orientation Week" and start "for real" on the following Monday.

DSC_0163 

my favorite curriculum resource: A Child's Geography--love, love, love it!


I am pondering ...

This, and this, and this--all great advice from a down-to-earth expert.

And then, I'm pondering this, this, and this, too. Technology has changed the way we communicate and we are a generation of parents who have to learn about what this technology can (and cannot) do as quickly as our children are learning both the technology and how to navigate in the world. Michael had to get a twitter account for one of his classes this semester (go ahead; follow him). We've been chatting back and forth about the value of twitter. And we're thinking about how technology has changed both the vocabulary and the structure of the way teenagers and young adults communicate. I have decided (with a little nudging from Marybeth Hicks) not to fight it any more. instead, I choose to learn it and to share lessons with my children in the blessings and the burdens of communication in the 21st century.

A lot of links here, I know. I think this is a topic of much importance for all parents. The technology is not going to go away. If we want to protect and guide our children, we need to be aware of the world in which they will navigate.

 

From the kitchen ...

A fall menu plan is in the tweaking stage.

DSC_0067

astronomy in 3D

I am wearing ...

A white shirt with rosettes along the neckline, a green cardigan (team colors today), and jeans. Pearl earrings and a pearl St. Anne necklace make the ponytail a little less ponytail-ish.

I am creating ...

Re-running this from last week: it's still a work in progress:-)

a new home management notebook. (Links to the other versions.) The goal is for this one to be dynamic and, so, more functional. I'm using iCal. I've long known that if we are intentional, life can be lived in a fuller, more purposeful way. If we are intentional, we don't live our whole lives just managing the crisis of the moment. At least that's the premise.

Most of our lives can be planned to some degree. We can set goals and then set aside time to use to achieve those goals. Routines are a mom's good friend. Several years ago now, Katherine and I started to set all our different routines in Google calendar: school rhythms, housekeeping, meal prep, liturgical year. We shared calendars back and forth and got a little too happy over all those neat little boxes.

Then, Katherine discovered the iCal button on her Mac. And I had major issues with envy. She could make a calendar rock. She could make a whole Homemaking Notebook go digital, in perfectly beautiful shades of every color under the sun.

I acquired a third-hand, cobbled-together Mac last year before Michael left to go back to school. It's lapbook with a screen that doesn't work and a keyboard that doesn't work--so it's a desktop with a Dell screen and a wireless keyboard. Whatever. It has iCal. Last summer, I started making beautiful calendars of neat, pretty colored charts and boxes.

And then there was bedrest. Somehow, in my brain, the more organized I was, the more I was tempting the universe to knock me on my backside;-) This is, of course, theologically ridiculous and patently stupid. Order is good in a crisis. Order doesn't create a crisis. Still, I avoided iCal for a long while.

But now, we're in love again. And I'm tinkering with all those rhythms and routines. I think it will take me a good month to nail down the basic outline for each area I want in my management notebook. I'm committing to paper, printing, living it, revising, living it, revising again...you get the idea.

Here's a peek at what we're attempting to do. I put these up on Sunday. Sunday night, before I went to sleep, I realized that I had completely forgotten tea time. I'll revise today. Picture quality is terrible, but the colors sure are pretty as long as I don't think about it too much;-) If you click on the photos and then click to magnify, you CAN read the type (for whatever that's worth to anyone but me).

The largest goal of all in this endeavor is to create very large pockets of quiet and rest in my days.  Those have long been missing and I have recently recognized that they are no longer optional, but that I need them for my very survival--physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually.

It's going to be a longterm project. I might just post to Faithful Over Little Things as it evolves.

No promises there, though

 
 
On my iPod...

Hide 'Em in Your Heart Volume 1

Hide 'Em in Your Heart Volume 2

My big boys loved these when they listened to them as audiotapes in the car as little boys. And my middle kids listened to them as CDs. My little girls beg for the MP3. And everyone can sing the tunes. These verses really are hidden in our hearts.

DSC_0069 

pondering the enormity of the universe

Towards a real eduction ...

We worked out schedule kinks last week. It looked a little chaotic as we lived it but in retrospect, it was really a rather productive week. I learned that I need to keep the big kids with me more, so I'm adjusting their plans to line up a little more closely with ours. Other than that, we're good.

I am thinking... 

about what God wants from me.

What He really, really wants.

.

In the Garden...

There is a mess of weeding to do. And I think it's nearly time to plant bulbs. We're planting hope this year.

Around the House

Mary Beth is digging in to the homemaking portion of her studies this year. And, by golly, she's organizing this household with an enthusiasm, energy, and idealism that inspires me. Thank God!

.

Sarah Anne this week...

She claps. She's long known how to clap but now, she's in clapping overdrive. She loves soccer--clap for our team, clap for their team, clap for the referee. Everyone claps all the time. Her kind of good time.

I am hoping and praying ...

for the Snow family, the Barrett family, and the Cushman family. May they be consoled by family and friends, saints and angels, and the good Lord himself.

Christa Bartlett and her family

and now,

For the Mitchell family, too.


 

On Keeping Home ...

When I am stressed, I want nothing more than to be at home. But I recognize that home is where ten other people live as well and so, it isn't always such a peaceful place of respite for me.

I set the tone and I "keep home." If it is to be a place of respite for my family--and for me--I must endeavor to make it so. And if it is very important that it be that way, then keeping home must truly take its place near the top of the priority list.


One of my favorite things ...

September mornings.

How's the burnout recovery going?

Well. Slowly, but well. I began by promising myself that I would not read message boards. I love message boards. I have great respect for their  ability to inform and encourage. I even founded a message board. But, for me, message boards are just too much information, too much drama, and too much anxiety. I've taken breaks before, only those were breaks where I didn't let myself post. About a month ago, I decided that it was best that I not even read. I miss it. But it's a good decision. Then, I continued on by eliminating 3/4 of my Google Reader. There's still plenty to read there:-). Writing is actually a joy for me and not so much a burnout-er. But lately, there is little time for leisurely journaling here. Soon.

Mostly, though, my recovery consists of what I'm doing in "real life." I'm eating ridiculously well. I'm exercising. I'm seeing a chiropractor (very necessary and long, long overdue). I'm sleeping decent hours (yes, Aubrey, you made sense and I did see the crash soon after that email). I'm taking very deep breaths. I'm taking time to carefully nurture well the relationships that matter.


A Few Plans For The Rest Of The Week:

My godson Ian will be baptized today. I wish Mike and I could be there. So much. Still, I'm glad they didn't wait.

We have seven dentist appointments beginning at 8:15 tomorrow morning.

Choir begins.

Soccer, soccer, soccer...


 
DSC_0165

a budding impressionist

Daybook: Seeking Peace

Outside My Window ...

The days are growing shorter. The nights are cool and offer the promise of crispness.

I am listening to...

the dishwasher, the washer, and the dryer.  

To Live the Liturgy...

I'm hoping to spend some time at Adoration.

To be Fit and Happy...

I'm sticking faithfully to eating a protein and a carb every four hours and avoiding sugar as if it's poison. 

I'm promising myself at least a little nap every day.

I'm getting outside for fresh air with my babies.

I am thankful for...

my children. Every breath is a gift.

DSC_0091

 

I am pondering ...

Faith, hope, and joy .

 

From the kitchen ...

Cream of tomato and corn soup with grilled cheese.

 

I am wearing ...

A really darling green top that isn't a t-shirt. I've resolved to give up t-shirts as every day wear. They aren't the best fashion choice for well-endowed middle-aged women.

DSC_0128

I am creating ...

a new home management notebook. (Links to the other versions.) The goal is for this one to be dynamic and, so, more functional. I'm using iCal. I've long known that if we are intentional, life can be lived in a fuller, more purposeful way. If we are intentional, we don't live our whole lives just managing the crisis of the moment. At least that's the premise.

Most of our lives can be planned to some degree. We can set goals and then set aside time to use to achieve those goals. Routines are a mom's good friend. Several years ago now, Katherine and I started to set all our different routines in Google calendar: school rhythms, housekeeping, meal prep, liturgical year. We shared calendars back and forth and got a little too happy over all those neat little boxes.

Then, Katherine discovered the iCal button on her Mac. And I had major issues with envy. She could make a calendar rock. She could make a whole Homemaking Notebook go digital, in perfectly beautiful shades of every color under the sun.

I acquired a third-hand, cobbled-together Mac last year before Michael left to go back to school. It's lapbook with a screen that doesn't work and a keyboard that doesn't work--so it's a desktop with a Dell screen and a wireless keyboard. Whatever. It has iCal. Last summer, I started making beautiful calendars of neat, pretty colored charts and boxes.

And then there was bedrest. Somehow, in my brain, the more organized I was, the more I was tempting the universe to knock me on my backside;-) This is, of course, theologically ridiculous and patently stupid. Order is good in a crisis. Order doesn't create a crisis. Still, I avoided iCal for a long while.

But now, we're in love again. And I'm tinkering with all those rhythms and routines. I think it will take me a good month to nail down the basic outline for each area I want in my management notebook. I'm committing to paper, printing, living it, revising, living it, revising again...you get the idea.

Here's a peek at what we're attempting to do. I put these up on Sunday. Sunday night, before I went to sleep, I realized that I had completely forgotten tea time. I'll revise today. Picture quality is terrible, but the colors sure are pretty as long as I don't think about it too much;-) If you click on the photos and then click to magnify, you CAN read the type (for whatever that's worth to anyone but me).

The largest goal of all in this endeavor is to create very large pockets of quiet and rest in my days.  Those have long been missing and I have recently recognized that they are no longer optional, but that I need them for my very survival--physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually.

It's going to be a longterm project. I might just post to Faithful Over Little Things as it evolves.

No promises there, though

DSC_0161

 
 
On my iPod...
I'm Alive

Nineteen years ago I spent the late summer in the hospital with nary a white blood cell to my name, fighting an infection and praying I would live to raise my baby.

Last year I spent the late summer reading way too many horror stories about placenta previa and placenta accreta.And praying that I would live to raise my baby.

This hasn't been a very good summer. Not as bad as some.

But not good at all.

So, I'm reminding myself that breathing in and out is a blessing.

And I'm Alive.


Towards a real eduction ...

"School" started last Tuesday. And then it abruptly stopped.

Just like last year.

Tomorrow, we begin again. Because that's what faithful Christians do.

They begin again.


I am thinking... 

about what God wants from me.

What He really, really wants.

.

In the Garden...

It's nearly time to plant pansies and mums.

 Around the House

I am testing a theory shared by a dear friend. She hypothesizes that if the whole world is coming down around your ears, if you can just keep up with the laundry perhaps you can hold onto the illusion that you're keeping it all together.

Even if the illusion fades, at least we'll be able to find clean socks.

.

Sarah Anne this week...

Sarah Annie is not crawling. It might help if we put her down occasionally.

Nah.

I am reading  ...

Lots of books about Africa.

I am hoping and praying ...

for the Snow family, the Barrett family, and the Cushman family. May they be consoled by family and friends, saints and angels, and the good Lord himself.

Christa Bartlett and her family

and now,

For the Mitchell family, too.


 

On Keeping Home ...

When I am stressed, I want nothing more than to be at home. But I recognize that home is where ten other people live as well and so, it isn't always such a peaceful place of respite for me.

I set the tone and I "keep home." If it is to be a place of respite for my family--and for me--I must endeavor to make it so. And if it is very important that it be that way, then keeping home must truly take its place near the top of the priority list.

DSC_0121


One of my favorite things ...

playsilks sent with love by a friend.

A Few Plans For The Rest Of The Week:

What she said.

It's going to be quiet in this corner of cyberspace for awhile.

DSC_0135  


Daybook: College bound edition

***
Outside My Window ...
The sun is setting and the world's aglow.

***
I am listening to...
children cleaning the kitchen.
 
***

To Live the Liturgy...

I'm hoping to spend some time at Adoration.
***

To Fit and Happy...

no progress here. This week's goal is to not let the scale dictate my mood. 

***
I am thankful for...

the health and strength and resources to host a big crew of soccer players last week

the witness of a devoted mother for whom we grieved last week

a brand new GMU hoody and the sentiment behind it~romance is alive and well here;-)

~
  ***

I am pondering ...

Stephanie's strength:

There is in every true woman's heart a spark of heavenly fire,
which lies dormant in the broad daylight of prosperity; but which
kindles up and beams and blazes in the dark hour of adversity.

-Washington Irving

God Bless Her!

***

From the kitchen ...

I cooked and cooked and cooked some more for all those hungry soccer players last week. It was a joy to see them eat and an even greater joy to sit and talk with them over meals. They are fine young men and it was my pleasure to get to know them.

Boy, does the kitchen feel empty now.

And sad.

***

DSC_0006

I am wearing ...

A pair of shorts and one of Michael's rejected spare T-shirts . Bare feet and hair clip. And lip gloss.

***
I am creating ...
Daily lesson plans and master schedules for activities. Dear Lord, please help me because I so am not enjoying my iCal sessions lately. 
 
   ***
  On my iPod...
Joy for the Asking; Joy for the Keeping, a gem from Family Centered Press.
***
Towards a real eduction ...

We're binge reading and not much else this week as I juggle ridiculous soccer camp schedules. 

I'm bringing my spiral bound planners with me to try to pencil things in for when soccer slows and "school" starts.

***

DSC_0017

I am thinking... 

how wrong I was when I thought that it would be easier to see Michael leave for school this year. We've done this twice already. It wasn't. Nope. Not easier at all.

Hold them close. Hug them tightly. The days just get faster and time moves ever more quickly.

***

In the Garden...
It's time to harvest basil and make lots of pesto for the freezer.

 Around the House

I think that Michael has a secret strategy for strewing clothes and clutter all over the house with ferocity the last couple of weeks before he leaves for school, in the hopes that I'll be so annoyed that I can't wait to get him out of the house and I'll toss his stuff after him. It almost worked. But not quite.

Still, it is cleaner around here tonight.

.***

Sarah Anne this week...

Sigh. She finally warmed up to Michael and was reaching for him in the last few days before he left. He's big and strong and tosses and "airplanes" her and she just giggles and giggles. They're buddies.

I hope she remembers him.


***
I am reading  ...

A letter from my former pastor in the bulletin this week. It's a keeper and, as usual, he's making me think. I'm reminded what an extraordinarily good priest he is and that I really should write and tell him so.

And I'm re-reading a post from this time last year. It's that week again, where I'm forced away from the computer because of soccer camps. I need to re-commit to these online principles and this week will force me to do that anyway.

***
I am hoping and praying ...
for the Snow family, the Barrett family, and the Cushman family. May they be consoled by family and friends, saints and angels, and the good Lord himself.
***
 
On Keeping Home ...

I wish that I could just sit back and feel good about the progress I make some days, instead of always noticing all the things yet to be done.

I wish.

***
One of my favorite things ...
babies that smell like babies.

***
A Few Plans For The Rest Of The Week:

Still more soccer camp. And more soccer camp.

***

Picture thought 

DSC_0001

One more kiss before he goes...

Daybook: Making Home

***
Outside My Window ...

it's so hot that the windows are steamy and I can't see outside.

***
I am listening to...
little girls playing hopscotch in the room above me.
 

***
To Live the Liturgy...
we will celebrate the feast of St. John Vianney by writing letters to priests who have touched our lives.

***
To Fit and Happy...

I. must. start. walking. in. the. morning. Period.

Sigh. Last week's goal is still this week's goal.

DSC_0082

  

***
I am thankful for...
a house that is big enough to take on many forms throughout the lifetime of our family and children who can be motivated to help me make a vision become a reality. They can be. It just takes some doing sometimes;-).
~
 

  ***

I am pondering this quote...

Whatever troubles may be before you, accept them bravely, remembering Whom you are trying to follow. Do not be afraid. Love one another, bear with one another, and let charity guide you all your life. God will reward you as only He can.
--Blessed Mary MacKillop

DSC_0094

***

From the kitchen ...

Friday we had mussels steamed in beer, caprese salad, and watermelon.

Summer on a plate

***
I am wearing ...

My fat jeans. Really, I need to fit exercise in again.

DSC_0105

***
I am creating ...
brand new bedrooms and a new learning environment. 
 
   ***
  On my iPod...
 
 
***
Towards a real education ...

We've got some good things going for young ladies at Serendipity. Mary Beth begins today. Patrick is at camp this week and I'm knee deep in reorganizing my entire household. So, we're going for the staggered start strategy:-)

DSC_0113

***
I am thinking... 
that sometimes a change  is as good as a rest. At least that's what I'm hanging my hat on this August-- 'cause rest ain't happenin' here.
***

In the Garden...
The basil and the roses are big and beautiful. The petunias are finally figuring it out. They're pretty, but it's a too little, too late kind of thing. This is what I'd hoped for; next year I"m going to consult Kimberlee before I plant a single thing.

 Around the House

We are moving rooms and shaking things up. So far, Paddy's room and the "new little girls's room" are completed. The sunroom has taken on our learning cabinets and baskets and the pantry now holds manipulatives. You can be assured of pictures throughout the week as we document our progress.

***
Sarah Anne this week...

She said "DaDa!" And she meant it. We know this because she said it again and again and again, looking for Mike, and then affirming that she found him. I'm not jealous. Not one bit. She's my ninth baby. They all do this, except for Katie. She said, "ball" first. Can't blame her for that--she was schlepping all over the country watching ball games.

Poor Michael. Sarah Annie won't let him hold her. He's so sad and he clearly feels a bit like a stranger in his house after being away all summer. We're working on it

In other news, Sarah Annie sort of leans like she might think about crawling sometime. I've noticed that plenty of babies born after she was are already up and going. I'm reminding myself of last winter, when I watched those babies smile and worried so very much about my own little girl. Eventually, her eyes focused, she could see, and she rewarded our imperfect patience with the most delicious dimples in the world.

She'll crawl; she'll walk; she'll run.

And it will be beautiful.

Sarah will do, what Sarah will do when Sarah is ready to do it. She'll do it in her own time.

We're all singing the tune.

DSC_0116

***
I am reading  ...
not blogs. I'm not going to read blogs until I finish this house project and nail down the first draft of the book Danielle and I are writing. There's some motivation to stay focused:-)

***
I am hoping and praying ...
for my precious aunt who has been diagnosed with cancer. We are watching and waiting through the very trying time of testing and decisions.
 
***
 
On Keeping Home ...

I am investing in my home this week, truly digging in and creating spaces that reflect and support the family we are and the life we want to live here.

DSC_0158

***
One of my favorite things ...
summer from the top of a swing

***
A Few Plans For The Rest Of The Week:
Paddy has soccer camp. Michael will be home all week for the first time this summer. We're going to keep on keeping on with the home reorganization.

***

Picture thoughts 

DSC_0163

Love the Park! 
   

Be sure to visit Peggy for links to more daybooks.