If one of your New Years’ Resolutions had ANYTHING to do with budgeting your money, saving more or spending less you NEED to buy this book! Pocket Your Dollars My friend Carrie Rocha wrote it, I’ve read it and it’s great. The most surprising thing about the book is that Carrie hardly even talks about numbers. Pocket Your Dollars deals with the attitudes and mindsets that keep people from reaching their financial goals. I highly recommend it! Carrie used the principles in laid out in this book to get her family out of $50.000 dollars worth of debt in just two and a half years. You need it.
Nikki Knepper Proposed to Me on Twitter Cuz We Both Like Big Butts
First of all– HI! How are ya? How was Chrimuh? Happy New Year! Etc, etc. I peaced out of the blogosphere right before my 35th birthday (best one yet!) and spent lots and lots of quality time with the fam. We went to see the Farm People for a week, stayed up late, slept late and laughed until our sides hurt.
If you missed me while I was gone then you need to friend me on FB, follow me on Twitter and Instagram! Even when I take a vacation from blogging I’m still running my virtual mouth somewhere.
And on that note, I’m sure you want to know why the Queen of Cussin’, founder of Moms Who Drink and Swear, was so filled with love and adoration for me that she proposed to me on the Twitter.
Nikki and I are both gluten-free so on occasion we share recipes or products we like with each other. I was shopping at Walmart earlier this week when Nikki texted me about her lunch. Here’s what had happened:
I know you want to see the video. So here. You’re welcome. And I’m sorry. I really can’t believe Zeb lets me leave the house looking this sexy…
And she didn’t. She just tweeted me this late last night…
I said, “Yes.”
Laughter Heals the Soul
In times of great personal or worldwide tragedy, I find it impossible to be flippant about life and motherhood in particular. Last Friday our entire nation was sucker punched in Newtown, CT and the nation mourned. I was sitting in my favorite book store, working on a book proposal, when I first heard whispers of the tragedy. I clicked around on the Internet to find live coverage and sat at the table with tears streaming down my cheeks as the horror unfolded.
Like so many other parents across the country, my first instinct was to go get my kids from school— rational or irrational— all I could think about was making physical contact with my kids. But as I sat, silently weeping, I knew if I went to pick my kids up from school early they would ask why and more than anything in this world, I don’t want them to know this happened. I stayed in front of the computer, my work forgotten, thinking of the parents who were rushing to Sandy Hook Elementary with no one to pick up and my heart was crushed with grief.
I carried my 36-pound three-year-old to the car when I picked her up from school just to touch her, and didn’t scold her when she kicked the back of my seat while we waited in the carpool line to pick up her big sisters. That evening was the first night my husband was home from a business trip and the girls were thrilled to have everyone home.
I was in sensory overload as I watched my children play. My seven-year-old darted in and out of the kitchen, pausing to drag a step stool beside me at the stove. Emma wrapped her skinny little arms around me and gave me the longest hug of my life. I had to time to sniff her dirty, little girl, puppy-dog smell, fall apart in tears, choking back sobs and pull myself together before she let go, hopping off the stool with a kiss and a smile. I thought of her friends, her classroom, her teachers. My friends’ children. I thought about Sandy Hook and the community that is planning 28 funerals— it’s highly likely that everyone in that town lost someone they knew and loved.
On Saturday evening, I took my two oldest daughters to a wedding and I teared up again thinking of all that was lost for the children of Sandy Hook— no falling in love, no wedding plans, no happily ever after.
When I got home from the wedding, Sadie, my three-year-old was asleep in my bed. She was turned sideways with her feet resting on her Daddy’s back, her arms hanging off the edge of the bed. I attempted to move her to her bed but she awoke and cried, “I don’t want to sweep in my bed! It’s so scewwy in dere!” I shushed her and hushed her as mothers do and tried to reassure her, “It’s okay,” I whispered. “There is nothing to be afraid of.”
I closed my eyes and shook my head at the irony. I slid to the middle of the bed and tucked her up against me, scooting closer to my husband so that I was cocooned between the two of them and I prayed for Sandy Hook. I prayed for laughter and light in the midst of darkness. James Thurber said, “Every time is the right time for humor,” and while I have no intention of cracking jokes after such a travesty, this is what I prayed for these families: healing, hope, light and laughter.
It comes when we least expect it but when we need it the most— I call it snot bubble laughter. It’s the kind of absurd laughter that Sally Fields experiences in Steel Magnolias after losing her daughter. She screams at the graveside, “I’m so angry! I just want to HIT SOMETHING!” And Olympia Dukakis does the truly noble thing, she grabs Shirley MacLaine and yells, giving each word at least eight syllables, “Here! GO AHEAD! TAKE A WHACK AT OUISA!” One minute your heart is about to break from anguish, and in the next, something so absurd happens that you have to laugh, creating the perfect, yet, unfortunate environment for snot bubbles.
But that first laugh after a tragedy? It starts something. It starts to heal the soul.
So to the town of Newtown, CT, to the families of the Sandy Hook Elementary students, I hope that when you least expect it, laughter will force it’s way into your life, cracking the through the darkness, warming your soul and healing your broken hearts. I pray that some how, some way, you will all find the strength to carry on.
Please join my friends and me on Friday as we honor the Newtown victims and survivors in a Virtual Prayer Vigil.
Who Will You Marry?
I was getting ready to take Aubrey and Emma to a wedding. Sadie was in the bathtub while I got dressed.
Sadie: But Momma… Who will keep us??
Me: Daddy is staying here with you. Y’all are going to make popcorn and watch a movie.
I walked out of the room to grab my shoes as she yelled, “BUT WHO WILL YOU MARRY????”
Me: It’s not MY wedding you doof!
I thought you might need a giggle tonight. I did.
Sadie Said: A Random Assortment of Mind-Blowing Oddities
Sadie, my almost four-year-old, has been especially funny lately. I love it when kids realize they can be funny, and their complete and TOTAL randomness. Here are a few of Sadie’s most recent gems.
Sadie: MOMMA COME WIPE ME! I’M ALL DONE!
I walk into the bathroom and do my duty.
Sadie, hunched over the toilet, yells, “HALLELUJAH!”
Indeed.
—
In the carpool line to pick up Sadie’s big sisters on an early release day, my blood pressure was roughly 180/120 as ERVYBODY was acting like they had never driven cars before. Apparently I was getting loud about how ridiculous everyone was being because from the backseat I heard Sadie mutter under her breath, “Help us, Jesus.”
I smiled for a second and glanced in the rearview mirror thinking how sweet it sort of was that she was kind of sort of saying a prayer for us. That’swhen I saw her staring intently into “Brown Baby’s” eyes and consoling her. Shewas praying for herself AND HER DOLL. I wasn’t even part of the “us.”
—
Sadie and her middle sister, Emma, have all of a sudden become the best of friends. Sunday morning while I was putting my makeup on for church Sadie was standing beside me chattering away about a game she and Emma had made up.
Me: You and Emma are just best buddies, aren’t you?
Sadie: What day is it?
Me: Huh, what?
Sadie: WHAT. DAY. IS. IT?
Me: Sunday… why?
Sadie: Oh. Den no. We are justbuddies on Wednesday, Thursday, and Saturday.
—
As she brought me the book I’ve been reading, which is roughly 950 pages, she said sweetly, “Momma, I unbended all your pages for you and made dem nice and flat!”
“Oh. Thanks.”
—
Last night, fresh out of the tub Sadie said, “I’m soooo cwean and smoove, Momma!”
Me: I know you are! You smell so good!
Sadie poked her bare behind in my general vicinity and yells, “Smell my butt!” then cackles like a wild woman.
—
While I was cooking dinner one evening, Sadie climbed up on the kitchen counter with an insert from the newspaper. It was a sale paper full of toys. She flipped through it while she snacked on an apple then looked up at me with a completely straight face and said, “Momma, did you know boys have weenuses and gulls don’t. Dat would be weird if gulls had weenuses, huh, Momma?” Cuz dey don’t. Only boys have weenuses.”
I just smiled, nodded and tried not to let her see the fear in my eyes.
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