Saturday, December 21, 2013

Hark The Herald Angels Sing....2013 Version!

I've recently fallen in love with a new version of the traditional Christmas carol, "Hark The Herald Angels Sing." I think we sang this version at church two years ago and I've thought about it off and on ever since but could never remember the new part that I like so much. I heard it on the radio a few weeks ago and thanks to Google, typed in some of the words and found it online. Mark Maher is the one who put out this version and I just love the part that's been added to it.


HARK THE HERALD ANGELS SING Lyrics
Matt Maher
Hark the herald angels sing
“Glory to the newborn King!
Peace on earth and mercy mild
God and sinners reconciled”
Joyful, all ye nations rise
Join the triumph of the skies
With the angelic host proclaim:
“Christ is born in Bethlehem”
Hark! The herald angels sing
“Glory to the newborn King!”
Christ by highest heav’n adored
Christ the everlasting Lord!
Late in time behold Him come
Offspring of a Virgin’s womb
Veiled in flesh the Godhead see
Hail the incarnate Deity
Pleased as man with man to dwell
Jesus, our Emmanuel
Hark! The herald angels sing
“Glory to the newborn King!”
And the angels, they sing
And the heavens, they ring
Won’t you raise up your voice
To the Son of the King
Singing “Glory to God
and peace on the earth!”
Sing it out now
Song of the King
Hail the heav’n-born Prince of Peace!
Hail the Son of Righteousness!
Light and life to all He brings
Ris’n with healing in His wings
Mild He lays His glory by
Born that man no more may die
Born to raise the sons of earth
Born to give them second birth
Hark! The herald angels sing
“Glory to the newborn King!”
And the angels, they sing
And the heavens, they ring
Won’t you raise up your voice
To the Son of the King
Singing “Glory to God
and peace on the earth!”
Sing it out now
Song of the King

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Annual Christmas Ornaments

When Ross and I were engaged we started a Christmas tradition with Christmas ornaments. We decided that each year we would get an ornament for our tree that summed up or represented something big in our lives from that year. We both liked this idea and just this afternoon I picked up our ornament for 2013. I have a picture below of the ornaments we have so far.

 

 

2009:  Top left, engagement ring for our engagement that year.
2010:  Top right, bride and groom for our wedding.
2011:  Bottom left, a Hawaiian snowman for our trip to Hawaii for our first anniversary. Now, we did a lot of traveling that year and other things, too, but Hawaii was such a great time we decided to make this our 2011 ornament.
2012:  Bottom middle, expecting ornament for being pregnant with Lucy!
2013:  Bottom right, a house that in the middle says "Sold 2013" and my house address and Ross' house address on the top. Now, by far the biggest thing that happened in our life this year was Lucy being born, but we'll have "baby's first Christmas" ornaments, so figured this house ornament would be a good reminder of this year, too.

I look forward to continuing this tradition each year. It will be fun to look back in 10, 20, 30 years from now and remember each year by way of our ornaments.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Christmas Potpourri

Last year I came across a stovetop potpourri recipe on Pinterest that is just perfect for the Christmas season. You can find the original blog post here.

Here's the recipe:

1 whole orange
1/2 c cranberries
1 Tbsp whole cloves
3 cinnamon sticks
 
Quarter the orange and place the orange (or just the orange peel) along with the other ingredients in a small saucepan. Fill the pan with water. Place the pan on the smallest burner on the lowest setting. Refill with water as needed. Enjoy!
 

This is a really great recipe that smells up the house so nicely. It makes a great gift, too. Last year and this year I got all the ingredients together, along with a recipe card, and put them in a little bag to give as gifts. I've enjoyed having this burning in my house the past week. It smells so yummy! Hope you can enjoy it, too. 

Saturday, December 14, 2013

5 Years!

As of last Sunday, December 8, 2013, Ross and I have been dating for 5 years! I like to celebrate special days like this and I think Ross does, too. He suggested to me that we ask my parents to babysit Lucy for us after church on Sunday so we could go out and have an uninterrupted breakfast. We did just that and it was a nice time! We tried out a breakfast place we'd been talking about for a while and it was nice not having to worry about Lucy for a few hours. My parents enjoyed having breakfast with their friends and Lucy so it was a win-win all the way around! You can read about how Ross and I started dating here.



Friday, November 29, 2013

Hush Little Baby Don't Say a Word

Are you familiar with the lullaby, "Hush Little Baby?" There are lots of different versions to this song, but according to Wikipedia :) what I have below is the most common version:

Hush, little baby, don't say a word,
Mama's gonna buy you a mockingbird.

And if that mockingbird won't sing,
Mama's gonna buy you a diamond ring.

And if that diamond ring turns brass,
Mama's gonna buy you a looking glass.

And if that looking glass gets broke,
Mama's gonna buy you a billy goat,

And if that billy goat don't pull,
Mama's gonna buy you a cart and bull.

And if that cart and bull turn over,
Mama's gonna buy you a dog named Rover.

And if that dog named Rover won't bark,
Mama's gonna buy you a horse and cart.

And if that horse and cart fall down,
You'll still be the sweetest little baby in town
 
I really like the tune to this song and the swing that Lucy spent a lot of time in from months 2-5 plays this song, so I've become very familiar with it. I wasn't quite sure of the lyrics so looked them up and realized they are very out dated! I decided to make up my own updated, personalized version of this song for Lucy. It's a work in progress, but here's what I have so far:
 
 
Hush little Lucy, don't you cry
Mommy's gonna rock you till your teardrops dry.
 
And when your teardrops are no more,
Mommy's gonna play with you on the floor.
 
And when your floor playtime is done,
Mommy's gonna take you along for a run.
 
And on that run you'll get to see
The flowers and the birds and the sky and the trees.
 
To be continued.....
 
I'm stuck on how to finish the song. I'd like to add a few more verses, so will keep on thinking!


Saturday, November 23, 2013

Family Pictures

We had Wiseman family pictures taken the first weekend in November and Ward/Herndon/Wiseman family pictures taken the third weekend in November. I haven't gotten the Wiseman pictures yet, but here are a few of the Ward/Herndon/Wiseman pictures. You can view more of them here.




Thursday, November 7, 2013

Pumpkin Butts

Last weekend we went up to Kansas City for family pictures with the Wisemans. We got all sorts of great poses with everyone, individual families, babies, grandkids...I'm really excited to see the pictures. I love pictures!

After the pictures Jennifer and I decided to dress Haddie and Lucy up as pumpkins for a photo opp. Wanda, our mother-in-law, had sent us an email with a picture like this on it asking if we wanted to do this shot...as a joke. Jennifer and I thought it would be fun so we got some paint and painted our babies butts to look like pumpkins! Oh it was so much fun. I'm so glad we did this! The girls were crying the whole time, but we were quick and got our picture!

Haddie on the right, Lucy on the left.

My sweet little pumpkin butt.

Lucy Lee Wiseman :)

The picture below is so funny to me. This was taken right after Lucy peed on the porch! I love the expression on her face!

 
Then it was bath time after pictures! This was so fun to me - love having this picture and memory. Two cousins, two weeks apart!
 

Friday, October 25, 2013

We Have Some Hunting To Do

Today Ross and I went to lunch together and halfway through lunch he said, "we have some hunting to do tonight." I didn't know what he was referring to and figured he meant we needed to do some searching online to find a product or something at a lower price.

I don't really remember how the rest of the conversation went, but I quickly realized what we needed to hunt for: the mouth guard that he wears overnight to protect his teeth due to grinding them. This is the funniest thing to me! He's worn the mouth guard for quite a while and he said that every now and then he loses it over night. In bed. While sleeping! He doesn't know if it falls out or if he takes it out, but just wakes up with it not in his mouth.

About a month ago or so he lost the mouth guard in our bed and we had to really search for it...searched the nightstand, under the bed, in the sheets, in the pillowcase... but did not find it. I finally found it on my side of the bed in the bedspread. We had the best laugh about this!

So tonight before we go to bed, we will spend some time hunting for Ross' mouth guard.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Baby Food

For the past six weeks or so we've been feeding Lucy solid foods. Solid foods meaning pureed foods. We started with rice cereal mixed with breast milk and then slowly started adding in other foods. We bought some baby food and tried bananas first, which she did not like at all. I don't blame her because the looked and smelled gross! They were even pink which was surprising to me because bananas are not pink. I realized it was probably the preservatives that changed the color.

I did not start out planning to make her food and am not against canned food at all, but after talking to some friends who make their own baby food and my sister-in-law who is making my niece's food, I became more interested in making the food. I looked up a few websites and checked out a book from the library to read more about this process. I found that it didn't seem to be that hard to do so decided to give it a try. I started with pears and actually enjoyed making them. It really wasn't hard at all. I peeled and sliced the pears and put them in a pot with about 1/2 cup water and let them simmer for 20-30 minutes until they were pretty tender. I let them cool and then pureed them in my blender and they were ready to go. (I didn't buy the Baby Bullet. I'm sure it's great, but my Ninja blender works very well.)

The homemade food only keeps for three days in the refrigerator due to not having preservatives, so I had to freeze some of the pears. From my research I found that ice cube trays work really well for freezing. Each cube is about one ounce, making it very easy to portion out as needed. I froze the pears for about 24 hours and popped them out of the trays, just like ice cubes, when they were ready and stored them in a freezer bag. Defrosting them is an easy process, too. I simply take out the number of cubes I need and pop them in the microwave or set them out at room temperature for a few hours and they're ready to eat. So far I've made pears, green beans, peas, sweet potatoes, bananas, carrots, plums, and peaches. Lucy has liked most of what we've given her. She wasn't so much into the green beans, but we mixed them with a little sweet potato and she ate them okay. She really likes the sweet potatoes!

Today I'm going to try an avocado. I've read that babies really like this, so I hope Lucy does, too. I feel really good about feeding Lucy this fresh food and plan to continue the process until she's eating table foods...or until I get tired of making it! But really, it isn't that hard. It does take more time, but if I make a few different foods at once it's not too bad at all.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Wedding Showers vs Baby Showers

A few weeks ago I attended two showers on the same day: a wedding shower and a baby shower. They both began at the same time and I wanted to go to both of them so I had to split my time. I went to the wedding shower first and stayed there for a little over an hour and then left to go to the baby shower. Luckily both places were within a mile of each other and both were maybe two miles away from my house so it made it easy to get to each.

The wedding shower was for a girl from our church. She and her fiancé go to our home fellowship group and we have enjoyed getting to know her. The shower was so nice and feminine...each lady at the shower was in a dress or dressy capris. The tables were decorated with pretty tablecloths and candles. The food table looked so inviting and the dessert table, which was full of cupcakes, was so pretty and decorated so nicely. The presents, which came in beautifully designed white bags, were displayed next to the desserts adding to the décor of the room. The room was quiet with light music playing in the background and dim lighting...just a very nice, sophisticated, feminine setting. Chicken salad and a vegetable salad were served for lunch and it was very tasty. After we ate, we were invited to select a cupcake and Ashley began opening her presents. I only saw a few presents opened because I had to leave, but she got some very nice dishes, serving platters, serving bowls, towels, everything you would expect to receive at a wedding shower.

The baby shower was held a tea room located in a large antique flea market in Springfield. When I arrived everyone had just finished their lunch and was starting on dessert. I laughed to myself once I sat down and looked around at the setting - although this baby shower was very nice, it was just SO different from the shower I had just come from! It was a more causal atmosphere, most everyone was in jeans or capris (nice but definitely not fancy), there weren't any decorations except for a few "welcome baby" balloons, and kids. That was probably the biggest difference to me - the kids at the baby shower! There were lots of little kids and babies there and, as you would expect, most were rowdy and loud. Such a different atmosphere than the wedding shower!

It was just funny to me the difference in the two. Both were very nice in their own respect, just completely different. Like two different worlds that day. And some day Ashley, the bride having the wedding shower, will be the mommy-to-be having the baby shower!

Monday, October 7, 2013

MOPs

I am now officially a member of MOPS - Mothers of Preschoolers. Taken from their website, MOPS is...

...a grassroots movement that believes moms are world influencers.
 
We also believe that incubating hearts and giving just-because-hugs can change the course of history. That’s why we connect moms all over the world to a community of women, in their own neighborhoods, who meet together to laugh, cry and embrace the journey of motherhood. MOPS groups are rallying women to be more honest, to feel more equipped and to find our identity by journeying along side one another.
 
We are moms, and we believe that better moms make a better world.

My sister was involved with MOPS when her boys were little and I have lots of friends who are involved in it, too. I'd always planned on joining MOPS when I was "eligible" and that happened on April 28 of this year!

There are several groups that meet around Springfield at various churches (you don't have to be a member of that church to attend) and I decided to join the group that meets at Central Assembly of God, next to my old workplace. I could have joined the group where my friends go, but decided it would be good for me to join my own group. You know, forcing me to meet new people and make new friends instead of staying in my own little clique.

So far I've enjoyed it. We meet the first and third Tuesday of each month from 9:30am-11:30am. Childcare is provided and they encourage you to use the childcare in order to have a break from taking care of your kiddos and to enjoy the meeting a little more. Each person is assigned to a table for the entire year (September-May) so you get to know those people on a more personal level.
The meetings are structured (which I really like) with a schedule of brunch/fellowship time, announcements, an activity/video/speaker/something along those lines, and then discussion time before ending promptly at 11:30am. Each table takes a turn providing brunch throughout the year.

It is a really well-run machine. There's a minimal fee each year which covers childcare costs and supplies for any craft activities we might do. This past Tuesday we watched a video about comparing ourselves to other moms and families and then had a discussion about it at our table. It was a really enjoyable morning and I look forward to the next meeting.



Friday, October 4, 2013

Lucy's Baby Book

Yesterday I completed a task I've been thinking about for probably 10 months now:  I completed everything I could up to this point in Lucy's baby book. I'm so proud of this! My mother-in-law bought the baby book for me last Christmas and since then working on the book has always been in the back of my mind. I have heard so many mothers say that they wish they would have kept up with the book when their baby was little and decided I was going to keep up with Lucy's.

I saved lots of items from pregnancy, her birth, her first five months, and other miscellaneous things that I though would be good for her baby book in a tub and last week got serious about putting her book together. It was kind of overwhelming at first, but once I got into it, it was fun. I found that the book didn't have enough pages for my pictures, so I got some scrapbook paper that matched the theme of the book and simply made my own pages. This made completing the book a whole lot easier for me.

I am so happy to have this done, for now at least! The book goes through age 5, so I'll continue adding to it as the months and years go by. I feel like a big weight has been lifted and honestly I kind of feel a little lost now knowing I don't have it to work on! But, I'm sure I'll find something else to occupy my "spare" time, though!

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Being A Mom Means.......

Being a Mom means tons of things. Some of these things I have already experienced, some I have yet to experience. We got one of these experiences on video a few weeks ago that is just too funny not to share. We were having a great time playing with Lucy, but she had just a little too much fun...too much fun that resulted in a lovely new hair treatment for me consisting of regurgitated breast milk. Yummy. :)

Check out the video here:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ovxxW33SVs

Thursday, September 19, 2013

2013 = Change

This year has been the year of change for Ross and me:
  • We had a baby and became parents and a family of three.
I could totally stop there with how things have changed for us because that alone is a huge change! But, there is more:
  • We sold Ross' house.
  • I quit my job to become a stay-at-home-mom.
  • We sold my house.
I know this is just a list of 4 items, but these are HUGE items and all of them happened in such a short amount of time! I'm not a real big fan of change, but have certainly gotten better at it over the years. The biggest and best change in our life this year was having Lucy. She is just such a joy to us. She is really "coming alive" now and developing a personality at five months old.

I think we are now done with the big changes like what's mentioned above. Now we are experiencing little changes, sometimes on a daily basis and these all revolve around Lucy. For example:
  • She's starting to roll over from her back to her stomach and can keep rolling until she rolls into something that stops her. We have to be more aware of her surroundings now, making sure she can't get into anything that could hurt her.
  • We're starting to feed her baby food and boy does this ever change things! For the past month we've kind of just been dabbling with the food, feeding her once a day, sometimes skipping a day or two. Last weekend my Dad asked how the feeding was going. I told him that we hadn't fed her the cereal in a few days (I'm still nursing her) because we just didn't have time one night and the other night didn't feel like going through the cereal process. He kind of laughed and said something about when that's all she eats is "real" food, what are we going to do when we don't feel like feeding her. This kind of hit home with me, making me realize that some day soon we will have to feed her, no matter how we feel and will have to make time for it.
  • Lucy has found her voice and is really into squealing now. It's very cute and funny to us, but we are both well aware of the fact that it's not so cute to the couple out at a restaurant for a dinner date who gets seated next to the booth with a loud, squealing baby. :) We're kind of having to rethink some of the places we eat and the times we go out to eat to not disturb too many people with her squealing. Her squealing (which we really do love) changes church, too. Up until now she's been in church with us, but now we'll need to put her in the nursery or one of us will need to sit in the lobby with her, so as to not distract people during church.
I'm sure there's many, many more changes I could write about and so many more will come our way in the future. Sometimes the change is a bit overwhelming, but I certainly wouldn't trade my new life for anything. I love my little family and I love my Lucy Girl so, so much!

Thursday, September 12, 2013

1227 East Linwood

Eight years ago on Friday, August 19, 2005, I closed on my very first house. I was so proud of my house and took great care in fixing it up and making it "mine."

While in college I lived in the dorms and my senior year I moved into an apartment with a friend for one year. After that I moved into a house with three girlfriends for one year and then another apartment by myself for three years before buying my house. I remember in April 2005 I decided I wanted to buy a house. I was 26 at that time and had always figured I'd be married by then and have bought a house with my husband. There was no prince charming in sight at that time, so I decided why not go ahead and buy a house.

I knew I wanted an older house that had character and charm to it, and I wanted it in a certain area in Springfield. I contact a realtor friend of my parents, Sandy Schmidly, and we started working together to find the perfect house for me. I gathered all the paperwork to submit for loan preapproval and once that went through, we were good to go! Sandy took me around looking at houses and I actually put an offer on a house before finding the house I ended up buying. The seller did not accept my offer and I am so thankful that they didn't! This house seemed like it would be perfect, but in the end my house was the absolute best for me!

I remember the night we looked at my house for the first time. It was a Wednesday night and there were actually 3-4 other people looking at it at the same time we were. It was perfect! It was in a great location and neighborhood, had one bedroom and an office, had a basement, hardwood floors, built in 1940, had a nice backyard, a carport and detached one-car garage, a fireplace...lots of things I wanted and lots of things that were like perks to me. I think the main things I wanted were this particular area in Springfield, hardwood floors, and a garage.

I loved it so much that I called my parents to come over and look at it. They were at church that night so came over when they were done, maybe around 8 or so. They liked it, too, so I decided to make an offer on the house.

Sandy wrote up the paperwork that night and brought it to me to sign at work the next day. She submitted it around 9 that morning and I just had to sit and wait for the call from her to tell me if they'd accepted my offer or not. That was the longest day of waiting! I didn't hear from her until 5pm that afternoon and was so super excited to hear that the seller had accepted my offer! I was on my way to officially being a homeowner!

We went through the buying/selling process and finally closed on the house on August 19. I remember signing and signing and signing my name and then going over to my very own house that evening after closing. Oh it was fun! My parents came over and we had pizza in my family room. I didn't actually move in until the next weekend because I had the hardwood floors refinished that week and it just worked better to wait.

I lived in my house from August 27, 2005-April 17, 2010, when I moved into Ross' house after getting married. So many memories were made in that house! Good times with friends and family, parties, sitting in my office having "the talk" with Ross that officially began our dating relationship....oh so, so many memories in that little house! And, I certainly can't forget all the work I did or had done to it:  refinished the hardwood floors, my dad put in an automatic garage door opener, ceiling fans, tearing down all the wallpaper and repainting each room in the house, painting the outside of the house (all by myself), getting grass to grow in the backyard and updating the landscaping in the front, putting in a flowerbed along the garage with my mom, a new roof, a new HVAC system, new windows, and so many things I haven't listed. I should mention, though, that a lot of the upgrades would not have been possible without my Dad! I should really think of it as much of his house as mine for all the work he did to it over the years!

After Ross and I got married I moved into his house and we rented my house out. The market wasn't very good at the time and we knew we wouldn't make anything if we tried to sell it, so we rented it for three years. We had a good renter who took care of the house like he owned it.

Those three years of renting the house were good for me - it gave me time to "break up," so to say, with my house! I think it would have been hard to sell it right away after getting married. I just put so much love into that house that I needed time to get over it!

It's funny how time can help you get over things and also change your perspective. When I lived there the house was perfect for me. Sure it was small and things were old, but I loved it. Earlier this summer after our renter moved out, we went over to make sure everything was left in good condition. I remember thinking how small and old the house was! The bathroom was so super small to me, as was the kitchen and kitchen sink! I'm just so used to the space we have in our house now that my little house just seemed so small!

We put my house up for sale in July and had a contract on it after about 4 weeks. We had to do some work to get it ready to sell, but everything paid off. It sold for more than I bought it for eight years ago, and we made a little money off of it. We didn't make anything near what I put into it, but that's okay. The guy who bought it was looking for an older house like this and will hopefully love it as much as I have.

Good-bye little 1227 East Linwood house. You were so good to me and I will miss you!

Here's a link to the house pictures I have posted on Facebook.

The new home owner! Friday, August 19, 2005

My house after painting it, September 2006.

My house after moving out in April 2010.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Cinnamon Rolls

I love cinnamon rolls and have found a very good and easy recipe for them, courtesy of The Pioneer Woman. I made some yesterday and they turned out to be my best batch yet. I wish I could share some with you!

Here's a link to the recipe: http://thepioneerwoman.com/cooking/2007/06/cinammon_rolls_/

The link above is great because it has step-by-step instructions with pictures showing you what everything should look like. But if you just want the recipe, I've copied it below from the link above. I usually half the recipe and can get about 20 cinnamon rolls. They are so yummy!

Ingredients

  • 1 quart Whole Milk
  • 1 cup Vegetable Oil
  • 1 cup Sugar
  • 2 packages Active Dry Yeast, 0.25 Ounce Packets
  • 8 cups (Plus 1 Cup Extra, Reserved) All-purpose Flour
  • 1 teaspoon (heaping) Baking Powder
  • 1 teaspoon (scant) Baking Soda
  • 1 Tablespoon (heaping) Salt
  • Plenty Of Melted Butter
  • 2 cups Sugar
  • Generous Sprinkling Of Cinnamon
  • _____
  • MAPLE FROSTING:
  • 1 bag Powdered Sugar
  • 2 teaspoons Maple Flavoring
  • 1/2 cup Milk
  • 1/4 cup Melted Butter
  • 1/4 cup Brewed Coffee
  • 1/8 teaspoon Salt

Preparation Instructions

For the dough, heat the milk, vegetable oil, and sugar in a medium saucepan over medium heat to just below a boil. Set aside and cool to warm. Sprinkle the yeast on top and let it sit on the milk for 1 minute.
Add 8 cups of the flour. Stir until just combined, then cover with a clean kitchen towel, and set aside in a relatively warm place for 1 hour. After 1 hour, remove the towel and add the baking powder, baking soda, salt, and the remaining 1 cup flour. Stir thoroughly to combine. Use the dough right away, or place in a mixing bowl and refrigerate for up to 3 days, punching down the dough if it rises to the top of the bowl. (Note: dough is easier to work with if it’s been chilled for at least an hour or so beforehand.)
Preheat the oven to 375°F.
To assemble the rolls, remove half the dough from the pan/bowl. On a floured baking surface, roll the dough into a large rectangle, about 30 x 10 inches. The dough should be rolled very thin.
To make the filling, pour 3/4 cup to 1 cup of the melted butter over the surface of the dough. Use your fingers to spread the butter evenly. Generously sprinkle half of the ground cinnamon and 1 cup of the sugar over the butter. Don’t be afraid to drizzle on more butter or more sugar! Gooey is the goal.
Now, beginning at the end farthest from you, roll the rectangle tightly towards you. Use both hands and work slowly, being careful to keep the roll tight. Don’t worry if the filling oozes as you work; that just means the rolls are going to be divine. When you reach the end, pinch the seam together and flip the roll so that the seam is face down. When you’re finished, you’ll wind up with one long buttery, cinnamony, sugary, gooey log.
Slip a cutting board underneath the roll and with a sharp knife, make 1/2-inch slices. One “log “will produce 20 to 25 rolls. Pour a couple of teaspoons of melted butter into disposable foil cake pans and swirl to coat. Place the sliced rolls in the pans, being careful not to overcrowd. (Each pan will hold 7 to 9 rolls.)
Repeat the rolling/sugar/butter process with the other half of the dough and more pans. Preheat the oven to 375°F. Cover all the pans with a kitchen towel and set aside to rise on the countertop for at least 20 minutes before baking. Remove the towel and bake for 15 to 18 minutes, until golden brown. Don’t allow the rolls to become overly brown.
While the rolls are baking, make the maple icing: In a large bowl, whisk together the powdered sugar, milk, butter, coffee, and salt. Splash in the maple flavoring. Whisk until very smooth. Taste and add in more maple, sugar, butter, or other ingredients as needed until the icing reaches the desired consistency. The icing should be somewhat thick but still very pourable.
Remove pans from the oven. Immediately drizzle icing over the top. Be sure to get it all around the edges and over the top. As they sit, the rolls will absorb some of the icing’s moisture and flavor. They only get better with time… not that they last for more than a few seconds. Make them for a friend today! It’ll seal the relationship for life. I promise.
Posted by on June 1 2007

Thursday, August 29, 2013

A Whole New World

I quit my job after having Lucy four months ago and am now a stay-at-home-mom. You can read about it here. My days are usually spent at home with Lucy, sitting on the floor and playing with her and trying different things to keep her attention until nap time. Sometimes we go out and run errands or just go shopping to look at things. I usually go in the mornings because it works better for us and we mainly go to the grocery store, Walmart, or Target. Lately I've noticed that all of these places have something in common: the shoppers mostly consist of moms with babies and kids that are too young to go to school.

Just this morning I went to Target and it seems like every person I saw was a mom pushing a stroller around the store or pushing a cart with a baby carrier in it. I even ran into one of my friends who had a baby two months after Lucy was born. She is a teacher so is not usually out at that time either, and we discussed how all the moms are out now! When I was working, I would work extra time during the day on Monday-Thursday so I could leave work early on Friday. Friday afternoons were when I did most of my shopping and the people I would see out from 2pm-4pm were definitely not moms with kids!

Being a stay-at-home-mom certainly has opened me up to new experiences and a whole new world! Some of them big, some of them little and probably silly like this, but it's my life now. And I love it!

Friday, August 23, 2013

Black and White

Who knew wearing black and white could be so cute?!








Wednesday, August 21, 2013

August 21, 2009

Ross and I got engaged four years ago today, an absolutely perfect day! Our proposal was so wonderful! I remember it like it was yesterday - getting my dinner invitation in the mail, getting ready for dinner, eating dinner together, driving to the park, walking to the bench, reading "Our Book Of Love," Ross getting down on one knee and proposing, saying yes and hugging and crying, him putting the ring on my finger, celebrating with sparkling grape juice, taking pictures, calling our family and friends.... Oh all of it was just absolutely perfect!

Thanks for asking me to marry you, Ross. I love you!

 You can see our engagement night pictures here.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

The College Class of 2017

I've taken this from a friend's blog. He posts about it every year and I though you might enjoy reading it!

Since 1998, Ron Nief and Tom McBride of Beloit College in Wisconsin have prepared their annual Mindset List. It provides a look at the cultural touchstones of this year’s class of incoming freshmen to our colleges and universities – the class of 2017. Most of these students were born in 1995, so the list helps us to see is how much the world has changed since then.

When the Class of 2017 arrives on campus this fall, these digital natives will already be well-connected to each other. They are more likely to have borrowed money for college than their Boomer parents were, and while their parents foresee four years of school, the students are pretty sure it will be longer than that.  Members of this year’s first year class, most of them born in 1995, will search for the academic majors reported to lead to good-paying jobs, and most of them will take a few courses taught at a distant university by a professor they will never meet.

The use of smart phones in class may indicate they are reading the assignment they should have read last night, or they may be recording every minute of their college experience…or they may be texting the person next to them. If they are admirers of Steve Jobs and Bill Gates, they may wonder whether a college degree is all it’s cracked up to be, even as their dreams are tempered by the reality that tech geniuses come along about as often as Halley’s Comet, which they will not glimpse until they reach what we currently consider “retirement age.”

Though they have never had the chicken pox, they are glad to have access to health insurance for a few more years. They will study hard, learn a good deal more, teach their professors quite a lot, and realize eventually that they will soon be in power. After all, by the time they hit their thirties, four out of ten voters will be of their generation. Whatever their employers may think of them, politicians will be paying close attention.

Each August since 1998, Beloit College has released the Beloit College Mindset List, providing a look at the cultural touchstones that shape the lives of students entering college this fall. Prepared by Beloit’s former Public Affairs Director Ron Nief and Keefer Professor of the Humanities Tom McBride, the list was originally created as a reminder to faculty to be aware of dated references. It quickly became an internationally monitored catalog of the changing worldview of each new college generation. Mindset List websites at themindsetlist.com and beloit.edu, as well as the Mediasite webcast and their Facebook page receive more than a million visits annually.

The Mindset List for the Class of 2017
For this generation of entering college students, born in 1995, Dean Martin, Mickey Mantle, and Jerry Garcia have always been dead.
1. Eminem and LL Cool J could show up at parents’ weekend.
2. They are the sharing generation, having shown tendencies to share everything, including possessions, no matter how personal.
3. GM means food that is Genetically Modified.
4. As they started to crawl, so did the news across the bottom of the television screen.
5. “Dude” has never had a negative tone.
6. As their parents held them as infants, they may have wondered whether it was the baby or Windows 95 that had them more excited.
7. As kids they may well have seen Chicken Run but probably never got chicken pox.
8. Having a chat has seldom involved talking.
9. Gaga has never been baby talk.
10. They could always get rid of their outdated toys on eBay.
11. They have known only two presidents.
12. Their TV screens keep getting smaller as their parents’ screens grow ever larger.
13. PayPal has replaced a pen pal as a best friend on line.
14. Rites of passage have more to do with having their own cell phone and Skype accounts than with getting a driver’s license and car.
15. The U.S. has always been trying to figure out which side to back in Middle East conflicts.
16. A tablet is no longer something you take in the morning.
17. Threatening to shut down the government during Federal budget negotiations has always been an anticipated tactic.
18. Growing up with the family dog, one of them has worn an electronic collar, while the other has toted an electronic lifeline.
19. Plasma has never been just a bodily fluid.
20. The Pentagon and Congress have always been shocked, absolutely shocked, by reports of sexual harassment and assault in the military.
21. Spray paint has never been legally sold in Chicago.
22. Captain Janeway has always taken the USS Voyager where no woman or man has ever gone before.
23. While they've grown up with a World Trade Organization, they have never known an Interstate Commerce Commission.
24. Courts have always been ordering computer network wiretaps.
25. Planes have never landed at Stapleton Airport in Denver.
26. Jurassic Park has always had rides and snack bars, not free-range triceratops and velociraptors.
27. Thanks to Megan's Law and Amber Alerts, parents have always had community support in keeping children safe.
28. With GPS, they have never needed directions to get someplace, just an address.
29. Java has never been just a cup of coffee.
30. Americans and Russians have always cooperated better in orbit than on earth.
31. Olympic fever has always erupted every two years.
32. Their parents have always bemoaned the passing of precocious little Calvin and sarcastic stuffy Hobbes.
33. In their first 18 years, they have watched the rise and fall of Tiger Woods and Alex Rodriquez.
34. Yahoo has always been looking over its shoulder for the rise of "Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle.”
35. Congress has always been burdened by the requirement that they comply with the anti-discrimination and safety laws they passed for everybody else to follow.
36. The U.S. has always imposed economic sanctions against Iran.
37. The Celestine Prophecy has always been bringing forth a new age of spiritual insights.
38. Smokers in California have always been searching for their special areas, which have been harder to find each year.
39. They aren’t surprised to learn that the position of Top Spook at the CIA is an equal opportunity post.
40. They have never attended a concert in a smoke-filled arena.
41. As they slept safely in their cribs, the Oklahoma City bomber and the Unabomber were doing their deadly work.
42. There has never been a national maximum speed on U.S. highways.
43. Don Shula has always been a fine steak house.
44. Their favorite feature films have always been largely, if not totally, computer generated.
45. They have never really needed to go to their friend’s house so they could study together.
46. They have never seen the Bruins at Boston Garden, the Trailblazers at Memorial Coliseum, the Supersonics in Key Arena, or the Canucks at the Pacific Coliseum.
47. Dayton, Ohio, has always been critical to international peace accords.
48. Kevin Bacon has always maintained six degrees of separation in the cinematic universe.
49. They may have been introduced to video games with a new Sony PlayStation left in their cribs by their moms.
50. A Wiki has always been a cooperative web application rather than a shuttle bus in Hawaii.
51. The Canadian Football League Stallions have always sung Alouette in Montreal after bidding adieu to Baltimore.
52. They have always been able to plug into USB ports
53. Olestra has always had consumers worried about side effects.
54. Washington, D.C., tour buses have never been able to drive in front of the White House.
55. Being selected by Oprah’s Book Club has always read “success.”
56. There has never been a Barings Bank in England.
57. Their parents’ car CD player is soooooo ancient and embarrassing.
58. New York’s Times Square has always had a splash of the Magic Kingdom in it.
59. Bill Maher has always been politically incorrect.
60. They have always known that there are “five hundred, twenty five thousand, six hundred minutes" in a year.


http://www.beloit.edu/mindset/2017/

Monday, August 19, 2013

Our New Chair

Over the weekend we purchased a new chair for our kitchen table:
 
 
 
We bought Lucy a high chair! She's almost ready for solid foods, but is now still just nursing for her food. We decided to get the high chair now to have it and to start getting her used to it. I had planned on keeping it by one of the windows, not at the table like it is in the picture. That was a bit crowded, though, so just removed the matching chair and scooted the high chair up to the table. I think it will work out very well for us! The high chair is easily adjustable so can go higher if needed. I hope Lucy likes it!

Friday, August 16, 2013

One Year Ago Today

I'm a big dates person in that most of the time I can remember what I was doing one year ago today, five years ago today, ten years ago today, etc. I've been able to do this since junior high. Sometimes it's kind of annoying because I remember things I don't want to. Other times, though, it's really fun, like today. One year ago today, August 16, Ross and I found out we were going to have a baby! It has been so much fun to me this week thinking back to this time last year. The few days we spent wondering if the symptoms I was experiencing actually was pregnancy or something else.

I had gone on a "girl-cation" to the beach at Biloxi, MS, with three girlfriends the weekend before and I remember that while sitting on the beach one of my friends asked if we were thinking about having kids. I told her we were and that we were looking forward to it. Little did I know that I was actually pregnant during that conversation!

That week I was really tired, I had to go to the bathroom overnight (which never happened to me), my period was late (which it had been starting a day or two early the previous months), and a few other things that made me think I was pregnant. Ross and I talked about it a lot and we were excited, but a little nervous, too! We wanted to have kids, but neither of us thought it would happen so fast. We really only "tried" (which I hate that expression..trying to get pregnant) for about three months. We both thought it would take a year, just because.

We didn't want to take a bunch of pregnancy tests, so wanted to wait a few days after the signs showed up. We talked about when to take a test and decided to take it Friday morning because the morning is the best time to take the test and that would give more time for my period to start. Well, Thursday afternoon we were texting about it and decided to just take a test that night after work.

I remember it all so well! I got home and went in to talk to Ross in his office. We were both a little nervous, but realized we had to do it sooner or later! I changed my clothes and got the test and started the process in the downstairs bathroom. When I was done I put the stick, face down, in the sink. We were going to let it sit for a few minutes. I remember being so excited and smiling when I put it in the sink because I saw a positive line starting to form! I didn't tell Ross that, just waited until we both looked at it. After waiting a few minutes we looked at the stick and it was POSITIVE! We were pregnant!

We were both so excited, nervous, scared, happy, about every emotion possible probably! I started laughing and I think we both cried a little. Ross was excited but had a very overwhelmed and nervous look on his face! We spent the next hour sitting on the couch just talking about being pregnant. We were both surprised that it happened so fast! We decided to go out to dinner and ended up at Houlihans. During dinner we made plans on how to tell our family and friends. Oh such fun times to think back on! Read more about it and see picture here!

Now it's just amazing to me that one year has passed and we have a 3 1/2 month old beautiful baby girl who we love so much. It's just crazy how many changes can occur in just one year!


















Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Did You Ever Think You Would Have So Much Fun?

I hear myself asking Ross this question a lot lately:

Did you ever think you would have so much fun...
     ...watching a baby take a bath?
     ...taking a walk with a baby?
     ...playing with a baby?
     ...watching a baby sleep?

And the list could go on and on. It's amazing to both of us how we are having so much fun with Lucy! Neither of us have ever been "baby people." I never played house or with babies very much when growing up. I was more interested in playing school (which you can read about here) when growing up. I never even had a babysitting job.

Neither one of us had "baby fever" when we got married. Our plan was to wait 2-3 years before having kids so we could enjoy our married life and do a lot of traveling. We both wanted kids and talked about it off and on over our first 2 years of marriage and decided we'd start trying to get pregnant in the spring of 2012. The more we talked about kids, the more excited we got about that part of our life, but I don't think either of us imagined how exciting it would end up being! Sure, the first month was rough - lack of sleep, crying, make that screaming baby that we had no idea how to console, lack of sleep, being nervous handling such a tiny little thing, and did I mention a lack of sleep?

It has been so much fun to watch Lucy grow and learn new things these last 3 months. She has gone from 8 pounds to about 14 and has discovered her hands and feet, she can sit in her bumbo chair really well, she's almost ready to roll over, she is "talking" to us, she loves to splash in her bath, and I could go on and on. It's amazing how we just have so much fun watching her. We do love her so!



Sunday, August 4, 2013

Mail....Again!

You know I like to send and receive mail and last week I received a very special piece of mail in my mailbox:
 
 
Ross sent me a card in the mail. I love this! He could have saved a stamp and just put it in our mailbox, or left it inside for me somewhere, but I love the fact that he actually mailed it. Thank you, Ross! You do know me so well!

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Accomplishment

I've felt a great sense of accomplishment with several things over the years...getting a 97% on my U.S. Constitution test in the eighth grade, getting the "Golden Glove" award in high school softball, graduating third in my high school class, making the honor roll my senior year of college, graduating with my Master's of Business Administration degree, buying my own house and fixing it up so nicely, marrying Ross, having Lucy....all of those things have brought a great sense of accomplishment to my life.

Now having Lucy I have a whole new set of ways to feel accomplished. One of those ways is successfully doing outings with her. Today I met some friends at the park for a "play date." We walked the trail for a while and Lucy was so good. I fed her before we left home and put her in the stroller when we got to the park. She was awake for a little while but then fell asleep for about an hour. She woke up and needed to be changed and was in a pretty good mood (no screaming!).

After the park we went to a restaurant to meet some friends from my old work. She got a little fussy on me because it was lunchtime. I started feeding her a bottle and then realized she needed to be changed. So I changed her and then finished feeding her and all was well. She sat in her car seat while we finished eating and was just so good!

Lucy immediately fell asleep when I put her back in the car seat to leave. Since she was sleeping I decided to run an errand, of which she slept the entire time until I got home!

I am so proud of Lucy and kind of proud of myself, too, for adjusting so well to this new life. Today I certainly do feel accomplished!

Monday, July 8, 2013

Shut Out

One morning last week I came downstairs to find this:
 
 
The doors to Ross' office closed! 
 
I'm sure to you it's no big deal to you, but to me it was kind of startling. He never closes those doors and I felt totally shut out! But, it's okay and even good that he closed them. Ross works from home so he does work in his office in the mornings and makes all of his calls to schedule out his day. Now that we have a baby and I'm home in the mornings he needs to keep out the noise that we make.
 

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Gardening

We planted a raised garden bed in May 2011 and have been enjoying keeping up with it each year. You can read about the history of our garden here.

Last year we talked about adding another raised bed in our backyard, but that just didn't happen this year! We were kind of busy in March and April getting ready for Lucy! Perhaps we can do that next year. We did manage to get some potatoes and lettuce planted this year. It is so much fun to just walk out to the backyard and cut our own lettuce for dinner. The potatoes aren't quite ready yet (or at least I haven't really checked to see if they are ready) but we are looking forward to them.

We are very excited to have finally raspberries this year! We planted the raspberry plant in 2011 but didn't get any berries until this year. Ross has picked some and they taste pretty good. I kind of even like them and I'm not a raspberry fan at all.