I saw this at Joyful Days, and wow, does it ever hit home! Hilarious but apt.
If you came to my house…
I saw this fun meme at My 3 Boys and I
If you came to my house…
You would see:
If you came to the front door, a very small porch area and an outer door in need of paint, and the inner door with this…
However, if you came to the side door you’d see roses and hydrangea in bloom just now.
We’d probably feed you:
a chicken and potatoes and carrots crock pot recipe that I often make for company and something with chocolate for dessert.
And offer you this to drink:
oh, we have a wide assortment of juices, tea, colas, and, of course, water. Which would you prefer?
We’d undoubtedly ask if you’d read:
Amy Carmichael, Isobel Kuhn, or Elisabeth Elliot, the Bible.
We’d want to play this music for you:
Possibly Jesse’s latest recital piece if we are talking about an instrument; if recorded music, if I have any on while company is here, it is without words so as not to compete with conversation. My two favorite instrumental recordings are guitar CDs Hear My Prayer by Matthew Burtner and Sun of My Soul by Brian Pinner and David Chapman. Or maybe any of the Eine Kleine Kaffeemusik CDs
We’d want to tell you the latest about:
Jim and Jeremy’s trip to Brazil.
We’d probably suggest a game of:
Apples to Apples or Ticket to Ride or Wii bowling.
We might show off:
I don’t like to think of it as showing off, but often people ask to see the house.
We might get on the computer and show you:
Pictures! 🙂
If it was a long enough visit, we might watch:
A DVD, though we don’t own too many — a few Austen-esque chick flicks, most of the Pixar films, the LOTR series.
What would a visit to your house be like?
I hope it would be relaxed and enjoyable.
Let me know if you do this one, too — I’d love to come visit. 🙂
Comings and goings
I mentioned a while back that various ones of us were going to be traveling throughout the summer.
Jim and Jeremy just got back from Brazil, and Jason left Friday to spend the summer in CA counseling at a Christian camp. Jesse and I were alone most of the weekend — it felt so strange! I didn’t mention it while they were gone — didn’t want any cyberstalkers to know!
Jim and Jeremy left Monday and just got back Sunday. Jim’s company had a conference, and Jim invited Jeremy to go along: if Jeremy could pay his own airfare, everything else was pretty much covered. Jim has traveled internationally once before but this was Jeremy’s first time.
Jim’s passport got pickpocketed at one point, but thankfully just a short time later someone came along with it. Whether the pickpocket was after his wallet and dropped the passport when he realized that’s what he had, or whether someone actually took the passport hoping to get a reward for bringing it back. we don’t know, but I am thankful his wallet wasn’t taken and that the passport was returned before they had the headache of dealing with the logistics of that.
Jim’s cell phone was supposed to have an international plan, but his cell phone wouldn’t work there. However, we were able to talk through Skype — somehow he used it on his computer to call the house for just a few cents a minute whereas the phone call would have been $2 a minute. Once he called through Jason’s Internet tablet and we actually got to see each other while talking (and I am glad I don’t have to understand these devices to use them). So we pretty much got to talk every day.
This is Jason’s fourth summer going to CA, and you’d think we’d be used to it by now. With all the discussion and preparation for going, it didn’t really hit me until I walked him out to his car, then I got teary but held off crying til after he left.
He was flying out of Charlotte way early Sat. morning, so we decided, instead of getting up at 3 in the morning and having that drive with little leeway if something happened with the car or whatever on the way and being groggy behind the wheel, he should drive there Fri. night and stay in a hotel using Jim’s points (something like frequent flyer miles, but for hotel usage). Jim and Jeremy were flying into the same airport, so the car would stay at the airport for a little more than a day til they got there.
All of the gadgets we have access to (and we are a gadget family) like GPS devices and cell phones and directions from the computer do help a lot in sending a child off, but it is still not easy. My mind was tumbling with last minute reminders and instructions as Jason was leaving and I finally had to tell myself to just stop. We had already talked about everything, and going over it all again would just add to the nervousness. Part of letting them grow up is letting them take responsibilities and deal with the ups and downs of everything involved.
I am happy to say everyone’s travel plans went well and everyone arrived at their destinations with relative ease. Traveling is draining even as quickly and relatively easily as it is these days compared to what it used to be.
Everything went well at home, too — no broken appliances or cars or anything else that a wife can dread happening while a husband is away. Laundry, dishes, recycling, and getting ready for church are all a lot easier with just two! Meals aren’t — I tend to just go with simple stuff when there are just two or three of us at home. But with the empty nest looming in the next several years, I need to brush up on that. I do get Cooking For Two magazine — I should probably put those recipes in a separate file for quick reference.
And it’s odd to discover that one can enjoy quiet and solitude and still be lonely at the same time. Nights are the hardest — aside from safety issues, Mother Hen likes to know everyone is safely tucked in at night and there is an unsettled feeling when everyone’s not there. I supposed I’ll have to get used to that in the coming years. But I won’t think about that now. 🙂
“I Remember Laura” blogathon, week 2: Buttons
Miss Sandy of Quill Cottage is hosting an “I Remember Laura” blogathon on Mondays through the month of June in memory of Laura Ingalls Wilder, author if the “Little House” series of books. There will also be an art swap going on each week in connection with the theme: Click on the picture for more information.
Also throughout the month (I believe on Wednesdays) she will be sharing parts of an interview with Laura Ingalls Gunn of Decor to Adore, a descendant of Laura Ingalls Wilder. Part I of that very interesting interview is here.
This week we will be sharing button collections, button identification and care, as well as button stories. Did you have a favorite dress with special buttons? Did you play in your grandmothers button box? There are many descriptions of the buttons used on clothing in the Little House books, from the plain and serviceable ones for the work shirts Laura made button holes for, the bright and beautiful like the ones that looked like berries on Ma’s dress that she wore to the sugaring off party, to the fabric covered ones for Laura’s best brown dress. Tell us about your button tales!
I don’t remember for sure if my grandmother had a button box: she may have. Somewhere and somehow I developed a love for beauitful and unique buttons, and I seem to have a vague memory of sifting through a collection of them. Though I haven’t sewn clothes in a while, one of my favorite parts of the planning process was shopping for buttons.
Long time readers will probably be getting tired of this picture, but this is my all-time favorite craft I have ever done with buttons, inspired by this one and this one.
I love the vintage look, even though the buttons aren’t vintage: Michael’s sells packets of vintage-looking buttons as well as other kinds. To make it, I googled “heart shape” to find a pattern, cut the pattern out of a lightweight cardboard (which I think was white: if it hadn’t been, I would have painted it white). Then I glued the flat and plain buttons on the base and added the more decorative ones on top. I didn’t make the plaque below it: I just wanted to show the area where the wreath hung. But it is an idea that could be used to showcase special buttons.
Here is another little button craft: a Christmas ornament, made the same way.
Here are some soft trees for which I used buttons, inspired by this one and this one (pattern is at this one as well):
This was a tray I used as a decoration around Valentine’s Day which includes many heart-shaped buttons.

Here are parts of my button collection.
Some in that one are more like charms or jewelry pieces, but they work well in crafting.
In addition, a while back I had a post about various button crafts here: I would add to that this button board I just recently saw here. There is also a Flickr group of Button Wreaths and Button Wreaths, Trees, Balls and Flowers as well as Soft Trees. They are all feasts for the eyes, imagination, and creative juices!
He who would valiant be
These all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth. Hebrews 11:13
He who would valiant be ’gainst all disaster,
Let him in constancy follow the Master.
There’s no discouragement shall make him once relent
His first avowed intent to be a pilgrim.Who so beset him round with dismal stories
Do but themselves confound—his strength the more is.
No foes shall stay his might; though he with giants fight,
He will make good his right to be a pilgrim.Since, Lord, Thou dost defend us with Thy Spirit,
We know we at the end, shall life inherit.
Then fancies flee away! I’ll fear not what men say,
I’ll labor night and day to be a pilgrim.~ John Bunyan
Dearly beloved, I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul; Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles: that, whereas they speak against you as evildoers, they may by your good works, which they shall behold, glorify God in the day of visitation. I Peter 2:11-12.
Book Review: Sisterchicks Go Brit!
Sisterchicks Go Brit! is the seventh in the Sisterchicks series by Robin Jones Gunn. A “sisterchick” is defined as “A friend who shares the deepest wonders of your heart, loves you like a sister, and provides a reality check when you’re being a brat.”
This series is a lot of fun and very easy to get into, yet it is hard to call it a “light” read because of the lessons, spiritual and otherwise, that the friends learn. Each book has a different pair of friends in different stages of life going off on an adventure, deepening their friendship, learning about themselves, each other, another country, and their relationship with the Lord.
The friends/sisterchicks in this book are mid-life moms Liz and Kellie who end up in England, where Liz has been wanting to visit since she was a teen-ager. In one sense the landmarks and customs were a little more familiar to me: I have never been in England, but of course I have heard and read more about it than other countries.
In a sense this book didn’t seem quite as “fun” to me as compared to the others, but it has been a long time since I read the last one, so I am not sure whether my memory is faulty. But perhaps it is just that I struggle with some of the same things Liz does and would have had a much harder time when things didn’t go according to plan or when glitches came up than she did. I “know” on one level that God is in control and in charge of all such things, but when I seek Him in the planning stages I tend to think that everything will go according to plan…and, of course, it doesn’t, then I get tense and nervous. I appreciated the reminder and the example to learn to just entrust the Lord with the schedule and the events and everything that happens in connection with them, knowing that He is in control and can handle everything that comes up — and that He might have an interesting detour I never would have thought of.
I appreciated the emphasis, too, that “midlife” doesn’t mean your dreams and your work are ready for the shelf, but it can be a time of exploring and expanding on them.
I do recommend the Sisterchicks series. Let me know if you have read this one or any of them and what you think.
Saturday Photo Scavenger Hunt: Bad Hair
Theme: Bad hair | Become a Photo Hunter
Thankfully the category didn’t say it had to be our own bad hair! 😀
Most of our scruffy hair pictures come from Christmas mornings.
This is more like a bad facial hair day. 🙂 From a skit Jason was in at camp:
No comment….
And this is poor Susie, actually on her way to good hair, but looking pretty bedraggled…and generally unimpressed with the process.
You can find more Photo Hunt pictures at TN Chick‘s on Saturday morning or on Technorati Friday nights by searching for “photo hunt.”
Show and Tell Friday: Sewing Decorations
Kelli at There’s No Place Like Home hosts “Show and Tell Friday” asking “Do you have a something special to share with us? It could be a trinket from grade school, a piece of jewelry, an antique find. Your show and tell can be old or new. Use your imagination and dig through those old boxes in your closet if you have to! Feel free to share pictures and if there’s a story behind your special something, that’s even better! If you would like to join in, all you have to do is post your “Show and Tell” on your blog, copy the post link, come over here and add it to Mr. Linky. Guidelines are here.
This week I wanted to show some of my decorations and other things related to sewing. Some day I hope to have a combination sewing/craft/guest room where these will go, but for now they are scattered throughout the house.
I don’t know if you can tell from the picture, but this has kind of a 3-D effect with the spools, buttons, and machine being raised.
My mom gave me this. It’s supposed to hold spools of thread but I didn’t want them to get dusty. I think it is cute, though.
This is a little miniature from Boyd’s Bears that my husband gave me.
This is a little removable tray inside the box.
This is what it says inside the lid of the box. 🙂
This is another little Boyd’s Bear box, also from my husband.
This is not a decoration in itself, though some day I may prop this on a shelf in said sewing room.
It holds stationery:
These are some little tins I got very cheaply at Wal-Mart. They open like old-fashioned lunch boxes used to.
I showed this in an earlier S&T about cross-stitched gifts. My sister made this for me. It is a Paula Vaughn design. The calligraphy is from Doorposts.
You can see more Show and Tells at Kelli’s.
Happy Friday!
Donut day!
I saw at Notes in the Key of Life and Money Saving Mom that June 6 is National Donut Day and to celebrate, Krispy Kreme is giving away a free donut to customers. Can’t beat that! Krispy Kreme is one of my weaknesses, especially when the “Hot Donuts Now” sign is on. It’s a veritable magnet. Thankfully it is off our beaten path, so I don’t go by there often. I wonder how long the lines will be tomorrow?
If you can’t have real donuts, Skip To My Lou shows how to make adorable felt ones here. I don’t think I could have those in the house, though — they’d have me drooling for the real ones!
Happy Donut Day!
Thursday Thirteen: Am I the only one who…
1. Likes to shop without help? To me the ideal sales person is one who is close by if you do need help but who doesn’t “hover” or hound you. I realize some may stay close by if they’re watching out for shoplifters. But I hate it when I have my nose in a book and someone comes by to say, “Can I help you find anything?” (Um, no, I found it, thanks.), or if I am met at every corner by someone asking to help me, or if I am trying to make a decision they really can’t help me with, or … well you get the idea. I admit, though, I’d rather have that problem than no help at all.
2. Mutes almost all commercials? I just can’t stand the noise and commotion. They’re usually louder than the show I was watching and usually obnoxious.
3. Doesn’t like slide shows on blogs or web sites? Please, don’t be offended if you use them. I can understand not wanting to take up so much space with a lot of pictures. But I hate sitting and waiting for the next picture to show up. I’d rather see them all at once and then click on the ones that I want to see more of. I’ve seen some slide shows with a “View all pictures” button, and that helps — I click on that and get a quick overview.
4. Doesn’t like instant messaging? I hate being in the middle of reading or writing or thinking and having a window pop up. It feels rude not to acknowledge it, so I just disabled it.
5. Cringes at public proposals? I’ve told my boys they’d better be pretty sure of the answer if they’re going to ask in such a way! But personally I think privacy at such a time is more meaningful. Unless someone really likes being put on the spot.
6. Doesn’t like online articles that just have a couple of paragraphs on the page and therefore take several pages? The prevailing wisdom is that Internet readers like things in short snatches, but I’d rather have the whole thing on one page than have to click over several times.
7. Doesn’t like messy hairstyles?
8. Thinks that there’s not much interesting on the summer TV schedule?
9. Doesn’t unpack my suitcase in hotels? Or even at other people’s homes? I will hang up dresses or things that need the wrinkles to fall out, but the things that stay folded I’d rather just leave in the suitcase.
10. Wishes those who have the right of way would just go ahead and take it most times? We certainly need more thoughtfulness on the roads, but sometimes some dear person is trying to be polite by letting someone else go when they have the right of way, but by the time that’s figured out and signaled and understood, it has taken much more time and effort than if the original person had just gone when they were supposed to.
11. Doesn’t like PowerPoint presentations where text comes up one letter at a time? Get on with it already.
I am sounding awfully impatient, aren’t I? I guess I’d rather use my time in better ways — or, if I am going to waste it, I want to waste it on my own terms. 🙂
12. Thinks pointy-toe shoes are silly?
13. Puts soft drinks in the freezer? Not til they’re frozen solid, but just until they’re slushy. Soooo good!!
You can find more Thursday Thirteens here.























