What We Had For Dinner

What We Had For Dinner

I’ll start periodically sharing weeknight recipes on here in the hopes that you’ll share some of yours in return!  

Tonight, we had:

1.  Slow Cooker Chicken Teriyaki (served over Jasmine rice)

Image from CookingClassy.com

Boy, oh boy!  This was DEEEEEEEE-LISH-USSSS!  It was our first time trying this recipe, and I loved it for several reasons:

  • It’s a slow cooker recipe.  What’s not to love about throwing dinner together before it’s even lunchtime?
  • It made the house smell amazing all day long.
  • I had all of the ingredients on hand.
  • I love sauces, and this recipe made plenty of sauce.

We might add 1 more tablespoon of orange marmalade for next time since we liked the orange-iness.  Otherwise, I have absolutely no changes!

The Recipe (from CookingClassy.com):

Yield: 4-6 servings

Ingredients
  • 3 lbs boneless skinless chicken breasts
  • 3/4 cup low sodium soy sauce (regular would work too)
  • 1/4 cup + 2 Tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 1/3 cup packed light-brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup honey
  • 3 Tbsp orange marmalade
  • 1 tbsp finely grated fresh ginger
  • 2 cloves garlic, finely minced
  • 1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 1/2 Tbsp cold water
  • 1 1/2 Tbsp cornstarch
  • Cooked long grain white rice, for serving
  • Sesame seeds, for garnish (optional)
Directions
  • Place chicken in a slow cooker, set aside. In a mixing bowl, whisk together soy sauce, apple cider vinegar, light-brown sugar, honey, orange marmalade, ginger, garlic and pepper. Pour mixture over chicken in slow cooker, cover with lid and cook on low heat 5 – 6 hours. Remove chicken from slow cooker and shred. Strain sauce from slow cooker through a fine mesh strainer into a medium saucepan. In a small mixing bowl whisk together 1 1/2 Tbsp cold water and cornstarch. Pour cornstarch mixture into liquid in saucepan and heat mixture over medium high heat, stirring constantly, until mixture begins to gently boil. Allow mixture to gently boil about 20 seconds until thickened. Return chicken to slow cooker and pour teriyaki sauce from saucepan over chicken. Toss mixture gently to evenly coat. Serve warm over cooked rice garnished with optional sesame seeds and serve with diced fresh pineapple if desired.

2.  Roasted Broccoli Florets
While the Jasmine rice is simmering on the stove top…

  • 1 head of broccoli cut into florets
  • Place on baking sheet
  • Drizzle with olive oil
  • Sprinkle on some freshly ground pepper and sea salt
  • Stir it all together to evenly distribute the olive oil
  • Roast at 350 for 15 minutes (or until browned)
  • Sprinkle freshly grated Parmesan cheese 

3.  Sliced strawberries
I had a bunch already sliced up from Costco.  Yummy yummy!

What’s your easy weeknight dinner recipe?  Share away!

My Laundry System

My Laundry System

“Woman Plunges and Scrubs”

A mom friend told me that she is sick of the mountains of laundry, and she asked me to share my laundry system as well as any tips and tricks.  Here is my response:

Two years ago, I finally decided to create a system for tackling the laundry.   I used to do a marathon day of load after load of laundry.  I know that system works for some people, but it wasn’t working for me.  When laundry day rolled around, I dreaded the task because I knew it would take all day.  Often, I would put it off because it seemed so daunting, and the task grew even larger.  

Creating a laundry schedule and tackling a little bit each day (except Sunday!) works for me.  

Here’s my system:

Monday

  • Kid laundry
  • Philip’s and my casual clothes
  • Philip’s and my dress clothes

Tuesday

  • Children’s bedding
  • Our bedding

Wednesday

  • Whites
  • Towels
  • Bath mats

Thursday

  • Bibs/Dish towels
  • Cleaning rags

Friday/Saturday

  • Extra loads or special items like reds or blankets from the family room.

Sunday

  • NO LAUNDRY!!!  

A few tips I’ve learned along the way:

  • Whenever possible, treat stains immediately.  Different kinds of stains on different fabrics will need different treatments.  Here is a helpful stain chart from Better Homes and Gardens that you can download and print off for your laundry room.  Always treat the stain before washing to avoid setting the stain.  
  • Read clothing labels carefully to avoid shrinkage, discoloration, dying, etc. 
  • Unless you really like the color pink, ALWAYS wash red items (especially new ones!) separately.
  • Washing items on cold prevents you from having to separate brights and darks.  That would turn into so many loads of laundry, and I don’t have enough time to do that much laundry! 
  • Containing socks–especially itty bitty little baby socks:  Hang a mesh zipper bag (the kind you use to wash delicate items) on a skirt hanger next to the hamper.  Place socks in the bag instead of the hamper, and toss them in the hamper when the clothes are ready to be washed.  This way, all of your socks stay together, and you won’t end up losing one in a sleeve.
  • Bibs:  My kiddos are messy eaters, so we go through a few bibs a day.  At the end of the day, I rinse them out with soap and water.  Then, I hang them to dry from the wire shelving in the laundry room.  When the weekly washing day rolls around, I unsnap them from the wire shelf, and toss them in the wash with the dish towels from the week.
  • Hang items immediately from the dryer to limit ironi ng.  
  • Pleated skirts:  You can place bag clips (the kind you use on bags of chips) on the hem of a pleated skirt to avoid ironing.
  • Lint:  Empty the catcher often to maximize dryer efficiency and limit the risk of fire.  Thoroughly clean the lint out with a vacuum at least once a season.  Vacuum behind and under the machines as well.
  • If you use liquid softener, top off the softener distributor with water to avoid gunky softener build-up.
  • After each cycle, leave the washer’s lid open to allow for air circulation.
  • My laundry room hamper with three dividers on wheels makes separating clothes an easy job.
  • Separate clothes while waiting for the washer to fill.
  • You really can fold a fitted sheet
  • Bedding:  Keep 2 (or 3) sets for each bed on rotation.  Store the fitted sheet, bed sheet, and one pillow case inside of the other pillow case to create neat “packages” for your linen closet.  Blankets can be folded and placed in separate shelves.  
  • Give every item a home in closets and drawers to make putting laundry away easier.  
  • Clean out closets and drawers at least once a season.
  • Keep a “donate” and “mend” bin in your laundry room.
  • Immediately trash items that are beyond repair or cannot be donated.

What’s your laundry system?  Do you have any tips to share?  

My Christmas Planner

My Christmas Planner

In March, I created a Boucher Family Binder to serve as our family’s central information hub.  Since creating that binder, life is much more organized and less stressful around here.  To learn more about the forms and information contained in the binder, click on the link.

Much of the formatting I used for my family binder came from ideas in the book House Works: How to Live Clean, Green, and Organized at Home and the author’s website OrganizedHome.com

When I created the family binder in March, I read about making a Christmas planner notebook to keep Christmas organized.  I finally decided to tackle the project this week, and I am so thrilled I did!

I purchased a 1″ red D-ring binder at Walmart with clear pockets so that I could insert some scrapbook papers and stickers from JoAnn’s to make it a little more festive.
 

With a lot of brainstorming, I came up with all of the different categories I wanted to include in our family Christmas planner.  I printed off a Table of Contents on some white cardstock and put labels on some plain white dividers.

Some of the forms are adaptations from OrganizedHome.com, others are directly from the site, and others are uniquely my own.  

1.  Budget
I created categories (gifts, charitable giving, decorations/lighting/home, food/entertaining, Christmas card/supplies) to keep the financial end of things organized and in balance.  My hope is that this form will keep the Christmas season financially on-track!  We’ll see if I prefer the paper and pen method or want to put it on Excel next year.

2.  Master Gift List
I created this form with spots for your spouse, children, and non-family gift recipients to keep track of what you bought, where you got it, whether you already purchased it or had it delivered, whether you wrapped it, how much it cost, and your running total of how much you spent.

Our family does an adult gift exchange, and the grandchildren exchange a book.  I created a separate form for future years with names to cut out for the draw and a fillable list of the gift givers and gift recipients.  (My version has the family member’s names filled in.) 


3.  Stocking Stuffers
Philip and I are still playing around with the idea of starting a tradition with the stockings to make it a little simpler.  We might fill them with winter jammies and a book each year to be opened, worn, and read on Christmas Eve.  That way, there’s no need to buy a bunch of little things for each family member!  

For now, I created this form to keep track of all of the little stuffers for each family member to make sure that everyone gets roughly the same amount.

4.  Room-By-Room Décor
To make “decking the halls” and un-decking the halls after the Christmas season less stressful, I created this category and form.  It’s a room-by-room guide of what décor I have, where I place it, and where it’s stored.  My brilliant husband suggested taking photos of each room and the different arrangements and keeping the photo album in my “Christmas Planner” folder on the computer.  

 
5.  Menus/Recipes
Here’s the central hub for the go-to and favorite brunch, dinner, goodies, and other Christmas-related recipes.  I’m in the process of compiling these items, so I don’t actually have the forms yet.  I will separate the items by category and include the hard copies of recipes or the websites where they can be found.  I know I will be glad to have all of the recipes finally compiled in one spot!  No more searching for “that one cookie recipe!”

6.  Our Holiday Traditions
This is the place to list and describe the different things your family does that makes Christmas uniquely yours.  For our family, this section includes things like:  how we use the Advent Wreath and Jesse Tree, visiting an area parish’s local living Nativity, celebrating St. Nick’s day (December 6th), Bernie (Our Catholic Elf on the Shelf), gift exchange, baking goodies for neighbors, singing “Happy Birthday” and eating birthday cake for Jesus, visiting the botanical garden poinsettia display, etc.

7.  Advent Wreath
Philip gave me a beautiful Advent wreath with candles for my birthday (November 26th) last year.  We decided to put the Advent wreath on the kitchen table this year, and we’re using Lisa Hendey’s O Radiant Dawn: 5-Minute Prayers Around the Advent Wreath to lead our prayers after dinner.    

I also collected and printed off copies of the Christmas songs we sing around the Advent wreath as a family.

8.  Jesse Tree 
I printed off the corresponding Scripture verses (Revised Standard Version) and reflections to read as we place each of the 25 ornaments on our brand new Jesse Tree.  (More to come on that another time!)

9.  Ornament Journal
If you’re like me, you struggle to keep straight who gave who which ornament, and you want to remember those little details when you unwrap the treasures that go on your tree.  This is a central hub to record information about those ornaments to (hopefully!) be passed down to future generations.

10.  Holiday Favorites
This form, directly from
OrganizedHome.com, is a place to keep track of favorite Christmastime movies, books, music, and a wish list.


11.  Recipes to Try
When I find a recipe I might want to try next year from a magazine, I tear it out and put it in here.  If I see a recipe on Pinterest or somewhere else online, I’ll jot down a description of the item and the website where I found it.  If this section gets big enough, I’ll categorize the items.

12.  Craft Projects
The place to put fun craft ideas to make with your family.  My Christmas Pinterest page is bringing me all kinds of inspiration.  I’ll list the winners in this section!

13.  Entertaining
This is the place to include things like: buffet layout ideas, bar set-up, music playlist names/Pandora stations, Christmas Minute to Win It games, menus, etc.

14.  Christmas Card
We made a Christmas card and included a letter for the past few years.  With all of the chaos of this last month, we didn’t get around to making a card or writing a letter, so we sadly won’t be sending one this year.  Maybe I’ll still write a letter and post it on my blog. 

This section of the planner is the place where I’ll archive old letters/cards, store favorites from friends and family, keep the list of recipients, and record prices and shopping information for cards and stationery.

15.  Post-Holiday Debriefing
Perhaps this is the teacher in me that wants to evaluate how things went, but I’m excited about the Christmas debriefing form.  This form, directly from OrganizedHome.com, is the place to “record the highs and lows of the season just past.  Stored in your Christmas planner, it’ll guide you toward more satisfying, less stressful holidays next year!”  It includes questions to get you thinking about what worked, what didn’t, and what you can do to make next year more enjoyable for you and your entire family.


That’s it–for now!  As I use the Christmas planner and celebrate the Christmas season with our family, I’m sure I’ll learn that some things in the planner need revision or that we need to add more categories. 

Is there anything you think my Christmas planner is missing?  Please suggest additional categories or any revisions.

I created a Google docs page for anyone interested in using my forms.  You can access all of the forms here and print them off for your own use.  

I hope they help to make your Christmas season more organized and give you time to focus on what really matters–growing in holiness and sharing Christ’s love alongside your loved ones as you prepare for Christ’s birth.  I hope that you and your family have a blessed Advent and Christmas

Rethinking My To-Do List

Rethinking My To-Do List

When I was in teachers college, several of my professors told me, “Good teachers borrow, and great teachers steal.”  Now that I’m at home,  I’m learning that women far wiser and far ________er (fill in the blank with several other adjectives), have been perfecting the art of homemaking before I came on the scene.  Instead of reinventing the wheel, I’m learning to steal from the best and adapt their advice for our family.

I’m currently reading Graced and Gifted: Biblical Wisdom for the Homemaker’s Heart by Kimberly Hahn.  It’s a great nuts and bolts book on living out the vocation of motherhood with the work ethic of Martha and the loving heart of Mary. 

While getting back into our “regular” routine around here, I’m learning to rethink how I go about my day.  I am a notorious list maker, and I loved making my “daily do-it list.”  The trouble was, I rarely accomplished most items on the list for the day, and by lunchtime, I was so frustrated by my inability to accomplish that day’s goals.  My inability to check off most items boiled down to poor planning, poor time management, and unrealistic expectations.  

Here’s how I used to make my daily do-it lists:  I separated the items into AM and PM and ranked them in the order I hoped to accomplish them.  If I didn’t complete the AM items by lunch time, I tried working on them in the PM, but I became so discouraged by naptime that I either (1) didn’t allow myself a break and trudged on through to dinnertime, or (2) gave myself a “break” that often turned into an hour-long Pinterest session.  On the days when I trudged on through to dinnertime, I was irritable and impatient.  On the days when I indulged on a ridiculously long “break” during naptime, I felt even worse afterward.

Fortunately, wise women like Kimberly Hahn are able to help young mamas like myself get back on track and figure out how to order our days in a practical way.  She has some fantastic tips in a chapter on time management in Graced and Gifted that I encourage you to read on your own.  I’ll summarize the main points that are helping me to order my days.

Start Your Day in Prayer
Kimberly recommends rising before your family to start your day in prayer.  Rise before the children so that you are able to collect your thoughts, greet our Lord in prayer, and gain insight into what His will is for your day.  When we wake with our children, we are in fire-drill mode, putting out fires at every turn.  Rising before the children and beginning the day in prayer changes the start of the day for the entire family.  

Starting the day with prayer is essential.  Kimberly Hahn says,

Placing our trust in the Lord at the outset of the day helps us to set the plans for the day and yet allow for flexibility.  We can start the day on Plan A and feel as if we are on Plan E by breakfast!  I remind myself daily, There is all the time I need today to do God’s will today.  Prayer is an essential part of that reminder.  We are not coming to God and telling him our agenda: rather we are coming to share our hearts and hear his.

As mothers, we live in what Kimberly Hahn calls an “apostolate of interruption.”  It’s a humbling vocation when we realize that we aren’t able to get everything accomplished that we want to everyday precisely because of these interruptions.  When she encounters these interruptions, Kimberly Hahn tries to think of Christ himself asking her to perform whatever favor being asked.  After all, our lives as wives and mothers uniquely allows us to build up the Body of Christ in our ability to serve others.  We might as well start viewing those in our sphere as Christ himself to embolden us to live out this mission. 

Plan for the Week Ahead

Set aside some time Sunday night to look at the calendar, plan for upcoming events, and assign tasks to different days.  Philip and I adopted this practice Sunday night and had a mini “family meeting.”  We pulled out the calendar, made sure we had everything written down, discussed tasks we would like the other to complete, troubleshooted scheduling problems, and looked ahead to the following weeks to see if there were any events (i.e., hosting Thanksgiving) that we needed to start preparing for.  

Plan for Each Day
Since our “family meeting” Sunday night, I spend about 15 minutes each evening creating the following day’s to-do list.  I gather the calendar (which we are in the process of putting exclusively onto the computer and syncing with our phones), my small tablet notebook, a pen, and my journal.  I tear off the previous day’s list and add items that I did not complete, delegate, or eliminate.  I adopted Kimberly Hahn’s practice she learned in spiritual direction with Father Michael Scanlan.  I list each item that I would like to complete.  Across the top of the page, I write the following:

A means Act today; B means Best if I could do it today; C means Could do it this week if possible; D means Delegate it to someone else; and E means Eliminate it.

I review my list and assign each task a letter, A-E, to the left of the margin.  If I have more than one item with the same letter, I assign numbers after the letter (i.e., A1, A2).  If I assign a task to delegate to Philip, I mention it to him and ask him which day he will be working on that item.  This helps me to stop thinking about the task because I delegated it, Philip chooses a day to work on it, and I know that he will be working on that item when he comes home from work, s
o I can adjust accordingly to give him the time he needs in the evening. 

I started using this system Sunday night, and it is working so well for me.  I am much more practical about what I am able to accomplish each day, I am better at delegating tasks when necessary, and I am spending much more time playing with the children than doing things around the house.  I feel more energized, my housekeeping schedule helps to maintain order, and all members of the family are happy in the balance of an ordered home.   

Bring Your To-Do List to Prayer
During your prayer time, review your to-do list.  Ask God to reveal what His will is for your day and to help you eliminate, delegate, and better prioritize the items on your list.  I quoted this line from Kimberly Hahn already above, and I’m going to quote it again because I need to tattoo it to my forehead:  “I remind myself daily, There is all the time I need today to do God’s will today.”  By taking my to-do list to prayer, God gives me greater insight into what I really need to be doing with the gift of time that he gives me and what I should be doing with it.  I may not be checking off as many items these days, but my time is much better spent doing God’s will than mine.  

Adjust for “Changes in the Seasons of Life”
In full disclosure, I’m not rising before the children–yet.  I hope to be there in a few more weeks once I am back to 100% physically and the kids are waking up a little later after they (in theory) adjust to Daylight Savings Time.  Philip is on a more flexible rotation this month, so he’s been able to get the children changed and fed before he leaves for work, and after he leaves, I make myself some breakfast and spend 10-15 minutes in quiet prayer with my to-do list while the children play quietly in the family room.  It’s not a perfect system, but it’s working for now, and I’m letting myself off the hook since this is what Kimberly Hahn calls a “change in the seasons of life.”

It seems like such a no-brainer, but I had to triple-star the margin of the book when Kimberly Hahn reminded me that it’s an impossible task to finish everything every night.  To emphasize this point, she reminded me that even “Jesus yielded his will to his Father.  He accepted the limitations of his human body, which needed food and sleep.  He trusted his Father’s timing, and so must we.”

How Do You Order Your Day?

That’s what’s working for this mama these days.  I’d love to hear what works for you!  Please share in the comment box.  

How’s your prayer life?  Are you starting your days in prayer?  What materials (if any) do you bring to your prayer time?  What tools do you use to keep order in your home?  Do you have an electronic calendar or planner with special software?  Do you have a housekeeping schedule?   

Thriving at Home During Ordinary Time

Thriving at Home During Ordinary Time

I asked friends to send me blog topic suggestions since I was in a writing rut.  A friend sent me this:

“Write about the struggles of being a mom, a stay at home mom. We…meaning I, have been having a rough week of it and as sad as it sounds, would like to hear that I am not the only one that struggles with being at home all day with (insert number) kids who seem bent on doing nothing but fight and scream at each other and destroy every last bit of patience you have.”

Instantly, I remembered a post from my favorite blogger, Simcha Fisher, on this very topic.  She called it, “Escape from Babyland.”  (Forgive me for including such a long excerpt, but Simcha is too good to only share a sentence or two!)

What’s the one thing frazzled young moms always hear?  “These years go by so quickly — enjoy it while you can!”  Which is sort of like getting a severe sunburn and hearing, “Summer will be gone before you know it — enjoy it while you can!”

Oh, settle down.  I’m not really saying that spending time with your nice little baby is a blistering agony.  As the proud owner of a schnoogily, schnoogily little baby girl who has two pearly little teeth and the cutiest, wootiest style of scooty crawling that any baby in the history of ever has ever invented because she is brilliant, believe me when I say that there is nothing nicer than babies. It’s true:  Babies do grow up incredibly quickly, and the special joy of the baby years melts away like fog in the midmorning sun.  I’m not looking forward to the day when my kids will be gone.

Still, there is only so much joy a person can stand. I can remember, for instance, having three children, all in diapers.  When my  husband came home in the evening, and I would feel confused, unsure of how to deal with something that wasn’t a bottom.  I knew he had many wonderful qualities, but my favorite thing about him was that he could pour his own juice.  All day, every day, everything was up to me, me, me, and even though I loved my work, it was unrelenting.

In short, I was stuck in Babyland.  Babyland is a wonderful place, where all the voices are squeaky, all the clothes are adorable, love and affection flows freely, and where mothers often go to lose their minds entirely, and would trade their immortal soul for five minutes of adult conversation and an uninterrupted cup of coffee.

So when I see a young mom struggling wearily through the day, I don’t tell her, “These days go by so quickly,” even though this is true.  What I say is, “The years go by quickly — but the days sure are long, aren’t they?”  And then I say,  “Don’t worry — you won’t always be stuck in Babyland.”

As a family, we have plenty of anniversaries, birthdays, memorials, and other traditions to celebrate together.  In between those special celebrations, there’s plenty of the ordinary, too–especially the long days in Babyland.  

This got me to thinking about the changing seasons, winter looming ahead, the upcoming holidays, and the liturgical calendar.  Just like our family calendars, the Church’s liturgical calendar also has plenty of Ordinary Time.  The Church doesn’t call this time “Ordinary” because it’s somehow humdrum or boring.  I can’t possibly explain the meaning of Ordinary Time better than Catholic Culture, so I’ll just copy and paste their summary:

Ordinary Time, meaning ordered or numbered time, is celebrated in two segments: from the Monday following the Baptism of Our Lord up to Ash Wednesday; and from Pentecost Monday to the First Sunday of Advent. This makes it the largest season of the Liturgical Year.

In vestments usually green, the color of hope and growth, the Church counts the thirty-three or thirty-four Sundays of Ordinary Time, inviting her children to meditate upon the whole mystery of Christ – his life, miracles and teachings – in the light of his Resurrection.


If the faithful are to mature in the spiritual life and increase in faith, they must descend the great mountain peaks of Easter and Christmas in order to “pasture” in the vast verdant meadows of tempus per annum, or Ordinary Time.


Sunday by Sunday, the Pilgrim Church marks her journey through the tempus per annum as she processes through time toward eternity. 

Check out the 2012 Liturgical Calendar below.  The purple is Advent and Lent, yellow is Christmas and Easter, and do you see all of that green?  That, my friends, is Ordinary Time. 

In between the feasting and fasting, Mother Church gives us a chance to live out the Truths of the Faith in the Ordinary.   Ordinary Time is our opportunity to follow along on the path of obedience as disciples of Christ.  There is so much to learn, practice, and implement in our daily lives.  The word disciple came to us from other words meaning “pupil, student, follower,” “to learn,” “to grasp,” “to accept.”  If we’re going to be disciples, we need to be a pupil willing to learn, grasp, and accept what it is that God asks of us on a daily basis–especially in the ordinary.

For the average stay-at-home mom, there’s plenty of ordinary, and a lot of our days are cyclical.  In fact, in my less than grace-filled moments I’ve complained th
at some days I feel like Sisyphus, pushing that boulder up the hill only to have it come rolling back down, or like a hamster on a spinning wheel.  

Make a meal, serve a meal, clean up a meal.  Repeat.  

Wash clothes, dry clothes, fold clothes, put away clothes, wear clothes.  Repeat.  

I’m sitting here, thinking about all of the things I do over and over again on a daily, weekly, and monthly basis.  It would be mind-numbing and depressing if I believed what the world told me about my job.  The world wants me to believe that I’m wasting my brain, I’m acting like a slave, I’m unfulfilled, and that I’m not supposed to be happy at home.  At the right event, I might even be tempted to believe all of that when I consider the questions people ask when they find out I stay at home. 

“What do you do all day?”
“Don’t you miss work?
“How can you stand it?!”
“What do you do to keep your mind from going to mush?” 

Couple those negative voices and outside pressures to hate being at home with, say, a family bout of the stomach flu, a child’s decision to go on a hunger strike, a broken furnace, and a beloved family heirloom memento being smashed to smithereens by a toddler, and the temptation to say, “What in the world am I doing?!” can seem overwhelming.    

Fortunately, the ample ordinary time at home forces me to face my vices head-on and, hopefully, do something to combat them.  I don’t necessarily smile with every dirty diaper or swipe of the dust rag, but the ordinary days provide me with countless opportunities to make an essential choice:  Will I choose to give my life in service of those I love, or will I resist self-sacrifice and give in to my vices? 

I’ve noticed a pattern.  When I’m keeping my priorities straight (God, husband, children, extended family, everyone and everything else), it’s a lot easier to resist my vices, and I’m much more productive.  When I abandon my prayer time because I’m “too busy,” don’t spend quality time with Philip, or focus on the housework more than the children, I’m unhappier, the days don’t have direction, and the pity parties happen on an hourly basis.  Those are the days when I give in to the temptation to throw my hands in the air and say, “I give up!”

Two months ago, I had what should have been one of those “I give up!” days.  Philip was in the midst of his month of working night shifts, and after three weeks, it had lost its novelty.  It had been an especially long day, and I was tired.  Just as I had put the babies down for bed and sat down on the couch, Philip called to check in.  I started to tell him that it had been a long day, that we missed him, but that it was going alright, when I heard Walt make a strange noise.  I told Philip that I would call him back and opened the nursery door to discover that Walt had thrown up.

The poor baby was covered from head to toe, as were his crib, sheets, blankets, and surrounding wall and furniture.  I gave him a bath, cleaned the wall, crib, and carpet, changed his sheets, rocked him back to sleep, and washed his bedding.  

As I came upstairs from starting the wash, I heard Walt getting sick again.  I opened the door and took a deep breath as I turned on the lamp to take in the scene.  It was deja vu.  Walt and his surroundings looked just as they had forty-five minutes before.

I picked up my poor, sweet baby and let myself cry for one minute.  Then, from seemingly out of nowhere, I heard myself say, “Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, I place my trust in You.  Blessed Mother, please help me!  Make me patient, gentle, and loving.”  Of course, that prayer didn’t come out of nowhere.  Despite it being a stressful month, I had been keeping my priority of relationships straight, and my prayer life was strong.  I know the Holy Spirit was helping me in that moment to make that choice that I make countless times everyday:  Will I choose to give my life in service of those I love, or will I resist self-sacrifice and give in to my vices?  With some extra grace, I was able to pray and make the right choice instead of saying, “I give up!” and throwing myself a pity party.   

I was even able to laugh when I realized the washing machine was still filling from the first load, so I had time to throw in the second set of dirty bedding and pajamas!  Now THAT is looking on the bright side! 

I don’t share that story as a pat-on-the-back moment.  I know it wasn’t me that got me through that night.  I share that story because I believe it illustrates that we need only ask God for the graces to get through the “I give up!” moments that fill the ordinary days (and nights!).  He’s our Loving Father, and He wants us to come to Him in our time of need instead of being prideful enough to think that we can handle it all on our own.  

When we maintain the proper order of relationships, take the days in stride, keep our sense of humor, and reach out to our husbands, family, and friends to lovingly correct us when we’ve gone offtrack, the ordinary days are full of “my cup runneth over” joy instead of “how am I going to get through this day?!” despair.  We don’t have to love every moment or drop to our knees in thanksgiving for every opportunity of redemptive suffering, but we do need to figure out whether our presence is lovingly advancing our family’s mission or if we are derailing it with doomy gloomy negativity and self-absorption.  

It’s good to admit when you’re going through a difficult phase and do something about it–ask for help, ask for honest input, and, when necessary, seek out spiritual direction or professional counseling.  What’s not okay is living each day as a martyr, building up resentment, not communicating with others about problems, just getting through the day.  

God didn’t give us His Son so that we could get through the day.  Jesus “came so that they might have life and have it more abundantly” (John 10:10).  Just as the liturgical color of Ordinary Time is green, the color of life and growth,
our ordinary days should be marked by daily growth and advancement of our mission as disciples.      

Easy Pinterest Art Project

Easy Pinterest Art Project

I found the inspiration for our Pinterest art project here.  Here’s a picture of the original:

 

We liked the original idea, but we wanted square canvases and cleaner lines that didn’t allow the paint to bleed.  Thanks to the Jo-Anns Labor Day Sale, we got the canvases, spray paint, and painter’s tape at 40% off.  This would prove to be an even sweeter deal when we made a mistake and had to buy another canvas.  (Fortunately, I had another coupon to get the 4th canvas at 40% off as well!)

The supplies:   



Here is the blank wall that we wanted to fill.

 Canvases with blue painter’s tape.  We tested one canvas at a time.  Unfortunately, the blue painter’s tape allowed the spray paint to bleed underneath because it bubbled.
Although it was thicker than I wanted, we switched to the green painter’s tape.  It stuck much better than the blue and survived two coats of spray paint for even color.  Make sure the tape wraps completely around the sides as well.
 Removing the tape
Let the spray paint dry at least 24 hours.  Make sure to remove the very top strip of tape, one at a time.

Removing the tape on our green canvas.
Finished product up on the walls

 Hooray for a fun, successful, inexpensive art project!

Pin It on Pinterest