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I've started a new blog. Follow my crafting adventures on creativeirony.com.

Showing posts with label children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label children. Show all posts

Friday, March 13, 2015

My Kids Are Growing Up and Learning to Code!

It's pretty miraculous that I got my laptop back from my oldest two children so that I could write this post. They've discovered codecademy, and since we are currently taking a break from video games (the fighting, please save me from the fighting), they are eager to keep going with learning HTML. Xander is 12 and Maxton is 11 years old, and it makes my little web-designer/proud-mama heart do a small jig to see them learning.

How long before I can farm them out or have them take over my job on the sly? Two weeks or so?

Learn to code at http://www.codecademy.com/

Anyway, I'm even using codecademy to make sure my skills are more well-rounded. I highly recommend it (also, they don't know I'm saying this. Just my experience with the site, which I really like, and all the standard disclaimers).
I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Dealing with Those Pesky Sewing Patterns: Organizing Solution

This is Part 4 of my How I Organized My Entire House for $0.00 (Really!) series.
Part 1 (Intro) is here.
Part 2 (Simple Rules to Create Organization that Sustains Itself Plus Master Bath Organization) is here.
Part 3 (Inexpensive Organizing) is here.

Did you think I abandoned my organizing project? Oh no, I have not. I have only stared into the abyss that is my craft room, and it is not a short thing. It is a long, multi-part thing.

I started with my sewing patterns, which is what this post is about. I recently started crafting for a great company again, you know, on a professional basis, and that means lots of time in the craft room. And that place is scary. We don't have a garage, so storage is a rare and precious commodity at our house. Stuff that has no where to go ends up in the craft room. If a kid comes to me to ask where something goes, it's usually phrased this way, "Where does this go? The craft room?"

David has started calling it "the junk drawer." I know another crafter who calls hers "the room of requirement."

I have slowly started to change this. It was a major milestone when I could reach the closet--which by the way, is right next to the door.

I've also started changing my habits. I don't craft the same way I used to. I put things away as I go. It's a novel concept, I know, and more about how I made it easier to do later, but it does make my brain more clear. I spend a lot less time looking for the scissors (or other craft tool) that are somewhere on my table and clean-up afterward is so much easier.

But, I'm getting ahead of myself. Back to the patterns.

Sewing patterns organized by brand and number, and cataloged with photo on computer


I picked up a huge box of retro patterns at a garage sale a few Saturdays ago, and nearly doubled my pattern collection in one go. I desperately needed a way to look at what I had and also find what I had.

I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Hulk Birthday Party Invite

My oldest son is turning ten this week and he wants an Incredible Hulk birthday party. I'm not planning anything too elaborate, but I did make this birthday party invite last night (after my show: An Ideal Husband at the Echo Theatre--I'm Lady Basildon, a small but very, very fun part).

Here's to awesome super heroes and fun graphic design and birthday parties and theater and staying up way too late!

Graphic super hero birthday party invite The Incredible Hulk

I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Thursday, September 06, 2012

How I Organized My Entire House for Zero Dollars (Really!)


a blogger tells how she organized her house without spending any money

Maybe it's the kids going back to school, maybe it's just because I've reached my breaking point, or maybe it's because of no good reason, but the disorganization in my house has got to grow up and leave already. I am tired of it. I'm tired of not being able to find things. I'm tired of sighing when I see certain areas of my house. I'm just fed up.

When I've tried to organize my house before, it's gone like this (this may sound familiar to you--perhaps you have felt similarly?): I am motivated. I see beautiful pictures of organized spaces on Pinterest! Oooooo, so pretty. Wow, I want my house to look like that! I need containers! I need all the pretty containers! Must buy containers now! I need all the things! Wait, I have no money for containers! Sad face. I organize some things halfheartedly, maybe buy a few little pretty containers (I actually have about five times as many jars now, see picture above), but my money seems to have other priorities (new water heaters, piano lessons, um, thrift stores), and I think, sheesh, if I just had pretty containers, it would stay all pretty and organized and birds would sing outside my windows all day long and my children would never complain about doing their chores or putting away their toys and I would be soooo motivated to keep it nice. While it might be true that pretty spaces and pretty containers might keep me slightly more motivated, the problem is me.

I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Grace Lace Beret

I knit this Grace Lace Beret to escape the deep, dark abyss I feel into when I graduated from college in December. The name of this abyss is "what in the heck am I going to do with this degree and therefore the rest of my life besides being a wife and mother which is awesome and all but not the whole sum of my existence because I'd really like to do things in addition to being a good wife and mother because most days kids make me want to eat my fingernails and bend my brain into itself except when they are being totally adorable and drawing cute pictures of flamingos (see exhibit A)?" This question is much too large, even for my newly enlarged, degreed brain. So, I quite naturally fell to knitting to ease my mind of such weighty questions. I knit a lot in January. A lot.

Aubrey's artwork
 Exhibit A (Courtesy of Aubrey)

I knit it twice. Because I am a contradiction. I hate figuring out gauge. I would rather guess. I know enough about the way I knit and crochet to know that I have a very tight gauge. So, I guess. Educatedly.

Gray Grace Lace Beret slouchy knit hat

I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Tuesday, November 01, 2011

Halloween!

So, I stayed up sewing until 3:30 am on Sunday night. Maxton, really wanted to be Aang, from Avatar: The Last Airbender. I couldn't find any in the stores and for some reason, it didn't occur to me to check online until it was too late. This is cooler, because he's the cartoon Aang, not the live-action movie Aang.

So, of course, I didn't have a pattern, so this is hodge-podged together. The pants I based off a super easy pattern, then I added elastic around the bottom. The cape I sewed in one try, making up my own pattern, and same with the belt.

The collar took me four tries to get right (it's separate from the shirt). I'd never sewn anything like that, and I had to make my own pattern, so that was some serious trial and error. The shirt was a nightmare. The pattern I chose for the shirt was all wrong--the directions did not make any sense (or I was just not getting it, I'm going with the first because it makes me feel better), so I ended up just doing my own thing with it. But, it's done!
Aang from Avatar: The Last Airbender Halloween costume

I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Monday, July 25, 2011

More Photos from My Over-scheduled Summer


I'm going to have to reassess my evaluation of myself as a person who isn't very busy. This summer has been the most intense of my life. I have never tried to have so much fun in so little time. Note previous posts about Disneyland and Arches, plus all the little things, like a movie every week with my sister, craft day every week, hanging out with friends more, playing baseball for the older two boys, and then there are still four more majorish trips we have planned for this summer. Zion, Yellowstone, another family reunion and climbing Mt. Nebo. I swear, this is turning into a travel blog. Sorry, I swear I'll stop after the summer is over.

In the past few weeks, we went to David's family reunion. His parents and all their eight children, their spouses and then all the grandchildren gather every other summer--the only time we are all in the same spot. It's an event.

Some of my favorite pictures from the week:

Maxton playing the piano at the piano recital
Maxton playing the piano at the piano recital.

I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

In which I Go to Disneyland

I keep thinking about my blog and how much I want to update it. I keep doing 10 projects in steps and rotating them in such a way that I never finish one project. Ever. I have some really cool things to show you. Probably one or two more cycles through my rotation and I'll be exploding with things to show you.

In the meantime, we went on a trip to Disneyland last week or so. It was my kids' first trip. We didn't tell them we were going--which was so fun! We picked up the older two from school and left. It was literally snowing huge snowflakes as we left. In MAY! I was never so glad to leave.

I had a huge bag of activities for the kids to do in the car. Every 30 minutes (I brought a timer), they got something new out of the bag. I'll do a post with a list soon. It worked amazingly well. Almost no whining.

We decided to only go to Las Vegas the first day and stay overnight there (about a six hour drive). We drove with the kids down the strip and let them see all the cool hotels. We saw the volcano going and the fountains in front of the Bellagio. Nice timing.

Then, we woke up and drove the rest of the way to California. We went with my parents and my youngest brother, Ty, and we all rented a house. It was a great vacation--you know, all the regular vacation cliches. Which is why the rest of this post is going to be photos with a tiny bit of commentary.

Maxton waiting to leave the Las Vegas hotel.


 

The kids getting a bit restless now. We did eventually leave.


Griffin lying on the bed of nails at the Discovery Science Center.


I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

New Camera! New Camera!

My camera got here yesterday! This was a complicated operation. You see, I normally sit around my house all day, a lot of times in my pajamas, typing furiously on my computer and learning college type things online. Usually, the most taxing thing I'd have to do to get ready for a UPS delivery is get dressed before nine. However, yesterday, I was at my mom's house, helping my cousin make an adorable blanket for her little baby girl who is due soon. She came down from Logan, two hours away, and it was the only day she could come. The same day my camera was supposed to come, with a signature required for delivery.

Yeah.

Five months without a camera. The first weekday in what feels like months I'm not going to be home (this is a measure of how pathetic/college absorbed/unreliable my transportation/my life is--I don't think those slash marks strictly made grammatical sense). Camera going to be delivered. Panic.

Panic solved by David deciding he can work from home for the day.

Phew. So, here are a few of the first pictures I took with my new camera. It is seriously cool. It's a Canon 60D. I'm spoiled, spoiled, spoiled. No shots of Xander yet, but here are some of the younger three (the first few were taken at my mom's house).










Next up should be some craft and some home decor projects. . .
I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Trick Or Treat Bags

Posting again today!

I pulled out the kids' trick or treat bags and remembered that I never shared them last year. I was literally sewing them minutes before we were due out the door.

They came out a lot larger than I was picturing in my head. I was really worried they would be too small and it would be hard for people to get treats into the bags and I overestimated the seam allowances. So I kept adding inches. Then I got the first one sewed and realize it was huge, but I didn't want them to end up different sized and incite a riot.

At least they will last until the kids are too old for trick or treating. No pillow cases for my kids. Well, pillow cases are cool, so maybe they will abandon them at some point.

When we got them out today, Griffin was ticked that his was candy corn. He wanted something hard core like spider webs or skulls. Candy corn is sooooo baby. Tough cookies, darling. I have no (working) sewing machine, no fabric and no time to sew him a new one, so he could be happy about candy corn or have no bag (by the way, he picked out the fabric last year). He seems to have made peace with it, as he was just pretending to be the "Candy Corn Power Ranger" a minute ago.
The names I printed out--the font is Century Gothic (funny considering my video I posted today--really, I love that font), and then I traced it onto the fabric and embroidered it by hand, adding the little x's for the dots on the i's.

David picked out the zebra fabric. I'm telling you, the mad has an obsession with zebra print. You can see how I used the leftovers in this skirt here.
I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Tutorial: Funky Kids' Water Bottles

One of the things on my camping box list was water bottles for each of us. When I went to the dollar store, they had some really cute ones, but they only came in three colors. Of course, this is a problem. There is no way my kids are going to be ok with that kind of ambiguity.

I knew when I bought them that I was going to put their names or something on them as identification. I guess writing on them with a sharpie would have worked, but I had to have more fun than that.

So, my kids' water bottles went from this:

to this:

Wanna make your own? Read on, read on.

Supplies:
Water Bottle
Vinyl
Cricut if you are cutting your own  vinyl (you can also custom buy vinyl all over the place. try etsy for some really cute stuff)
Plastic Spray Paint
Painters' Tape
Transfer Tape/Masking Tape

Step One:
Clean your bottles.

Step Two:
Cut vinyl initials and symbols. I used my Cricut and the Hello Kitty and Indie Art cartridges. My kids all choose the symbol they wanted.

If your interested, I used the following settings to cut through the top layer of vinyl and not the backing (might vary from machine to machine, but this a good starting place). Blade Depth: 6, Speed: 4, Pressure: 2.

Step Three:
Cull the extra vinyl from your image. You are doing a positive image, so remove all the positive parts, and leave the extra.


My kids LOVED pretending their culled pieces were tattoos. I'm not so sure about the direction they are taking their lives. . .

Step Four:
Put your vinyl piece on a piece of transfer tape with the vinyl side down on the sticky part. Peel off the back of the vinyl so that the sticky parts are all exposed (if you bought your vinyl, it may come with the transfer tape already).

Step Five:
I did my vinyl application in two steps, with the monogram first and then the symbol underneath it. Line everything up, and burnish it. I used the handle of a pair of scissors to do mine. Peel off the transfer tape.

If I'm not making much sense to you, try this video from the Nth (with me and the very talented Jen Gallacher), and that might help a little with the whole vinyl transfer thing.

Step Six:
Tape up everything you don't want painted.

Step Seven:
Using spray paint made for plastics, give an even coat of paint and let dry.

Step Eight:
Remove tape and vinyl. Tada! My kids love theirs! I'm not certain I'm going to be able to make them stay in the camping box.

Linking Up Here:
Making


Mad Skillz

The Girl Creative

I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Back to normal conditions in the Henry Household

I’m pleased to report that my “bad” children are attempting reform.

Griffin has stopped speaking in one word sentences for the most part. He’s moved on to playing with light switches and messing up the electrical in my parents’ house. We are going to probably need to pay for an electrician to come and set it to rights. Our living room lights won’t turn off unless another, unrelated light switch is turned off. He’s getting the idea after quite a bit of discipline (he's grounded from light-switches) and for some reason, it hasn’t made me nuts like most of the other things he does, despite the potential fire hazard. I almost feel bad about that, like I should be more upset, but I guess it’s like Bill Cosby says, parents just want peace. And flipping light switches is blessedly quiet.

Aubrey has been sick and has been charmingly hoarse and without much energy, but not sick enough to be constantly cranky.

Xander has grudgingly conceded that I may be, at times, more intelligent than he is.

Maxton never was too bad, and so he’s continued being adorable and sweet.

Get this, on Saturday morning, David got them all cleaning and the floor of our house is all clear from obstructions, as long as you don’t count the bedrooms. I’m not, since having it this clean is a clear victory. They didn’t even whine about it too much.

They’ve been saying cute and funny things. For instance, Maxton was taking a bath this morning and was saying he didn’t have any way to get wet, meaning he needed a cup or water vessel of some sort in which to transfer the water from the tub to his various anatomical parts. Griffin, thinking he had obviously found a good solution, kindly suggested he use the water in the tub. I think I laughed for about five minutes about that one.

Aubrey and I stayed home from church on Sunday, because she has a raspy cough and a drippy nose. She was in bed when everyone left, but then got up (that girl really refuses to nap unless under extreme duress: she fell asleep in the car on Saturday after a good house hunting session and slept all through lunch in a booth at Zupas, but she was not happy about it when she woke up). She came in my bedroom with a melting bead creation of Maxton’s and said, “This is for Xander. . .but, my kids are gone,” and she said it so sweetly and with a little bit of a forlorn tone. Sometimes I worry about her having so many older brothers, but she seems to thrive on it for the most part.

All in all, I’m much more like my regular, happy-to-be-a-mom, aren’t-my-kids-so-cute? self than I was last week.

I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.

Monday, February 01, 2010

Bad, Children! Bad!

If we are friends on Facebook, I sincerely apologize to all of you for my dreary status updates over the past two weeks. I suspect someone might be injecting my children with one of the types of red dye said to cause hyperactivity, or perhaps secretly sprinkling crack on their breakfast cereal (I don’t know too much about crack, don’t you have to smoke it? No idea, nevertheless, the effects I’m describing are the same).

A few of my status updates (they got increasingly desperate):First off, let’s talk about clothing. Specifically blue jeans. Now, didn’t jeans come into being because of their supposed durability and fabulous wearing ability? Aren’t they riveted together, specifically because jeans are so tough and so macho that ordinary machine stitching just isn’t enough to keep them together? Why is it then, that my boys can destroy a pair of jeans in about three days? We are destroying pants in our house at an alarming rate. Perhaps they are making ritualistic sacrifices in their bedroom while I’m diligently doing my school work, and maybe eating the knees raw and sprinkled with salt? I’m not sure, but we don’t have any pairs of jeans left in our house without gaping holes. Let me show you what I mean.

The knees all look like this:

A pair, minutes away from death:

There is a sort of progression to these kinds of things.

STAGE 1: I notice that the knees are looking a bit battered.

STAGE 2: Then a little while later, there appears a small hole. Now, at this point, I really should patch them or something, but honestly, it’s such a pain to have them find a different pair of jeans to wear while I do the patching that this has never actually happened.

STAGE 3: Next, it gets a bit larger, but still very wearable, then it rips longer and they start to look very ragged and there are large quantities of knobby knees showing. The bad part is that I just let them keep wearing them, even though in this weather, they might as well be wearing shorts with all the large drafts of cold air they must be catching, and they look a little bit like their mother is well-meaning, but clearly blind, or else she would certainly catch a glimmer of the white light that is regularly reflected off of their knees.

STAGE 4: This is when I make them stop wearing the jeans. They rip them down from the knees, to their ankles, with the sides of the pant flapping a little and looking quite strange because the seam around the bottom of the pant is still, in fact, whole, but the rest is clearly breathed its last. I don’t know why they feel the need to rip their pants apart like that. It must be the sort of thing that causes one to pick a scab, even when it’s clearly not all the way healed. You know you shouldn’t, but it just feels too good to get rid of that itching wrongness.

I’m going to start making a habit of picking up a new pair of jeans each time I go grocery shopping. That is how frequently we are losing pants.

Now, all that is not too bad. I don’t understand how they can possibly wear out pants that quickly, but it doesn’t leave me a profound sense that my life has taken a wrong turn somewhere.

Let me describe to you a typical morning in my life in the last two weeks. Keep in mind, this all takes place in the first hour after I get out of bed.

I wake up, around 7:00. I do not want to get out of bed, because clearly, I’m going to have to spend the next forty minutes making four people do things they do not want to do and do it quickly. They are not going to cooperate. They are going to act like I’m sticking hot pokers into their eyes and bamboo shards under their fingernails. And after all of that is done, I still have 12 hours until they go to bed.

One child pokes his head into my room, “Can I have cereal now?” I hear this, but I don’t move, hoping they will go away or perhaps the jolly leprechaun will leap off of the box and pour my ungrateful and demanding people cereal. The child leaves. Enter child number 2. This is Aubriana, by far the most persistent. She comes up to my head and demands cereal. I tell her just a minute. I blink slowly. She demands two or three more times that I get out of bed. She finally leaves. Then Xander comes in, asks for cereal. I say just a minute. Really, I should get out of bed at this point, but I don’t. I still have some mental gearing up to do. Xander sits at the end of the bed, and as I try to come into consciousness, he counts out the minutes. He is perturbed that it has been three minutes since I said just a minute. I finally sit up. I have to face it. If I don’t get out of bed now, we will be late.

How can someone so cute, be so loud??

I go to the kitchen. I’m bombarded by children demanding their favorite kind of cereal. In my half-awake state, I cannot recall what Xander said he wants. I ask him, he rudely tells me, clearly implying I’m the stupidest person on the planet because I cannot remember that he wanted Cinnamon Toast Crunch. It might not be so bad, if Aubrey hadn’t repeated that she wanted marshmallow seven or eight times already, in the kind of projecting voice that all my children use at the table and in restaurants—it’s not exactly a yell, but certainly not a normal speaking voice. If they have aspirations to such, they would each make an excellently-voiced theater actor. They could save the theater a fortune on microphone equipment. I pour them all cereal. Complaints follow about the amount of cereal, the person they are sitting next to and the type of spoon they have been offered. Griffin tries to tell me he wanted a different kind, but I clearly remember he asked for rice crispies. I tell him to suck it up (in so many words), and he pouts, saying he won’t eat it then. I say, “Fine,” an answer he clearly doesn’t like. I try to eat my own cereal. One child finishes and asks to play on the computer. I say no.

I put on my clothes. I find clothes for Aubrey, chase her down (she is surprisingly fast) and change her diaper. She is loudly complaining and trying to get away the whole time. I finally get her clothes on. Another child comes up to me and asks if they can play on the computer. I say no. I ask the other children to get shoes and socks on. I find Aubrey’s socks and shoes. Xander asks me if he can play on my Touch. I say no. Aubrey doesn’t want to wear socks and she certainly doesn’t want to wear the shoes I’ve picked out (or rather, the only pair of shoes of which I could find both shoes). She runs away. I notice Griffin still isn’t wearing shoes or socks. I tell him to get them on, he reacts badly, whining and complaining that he doesn’t have socks. I tell him there are socks in his drawer. He doesn’t like that answer, as I have rudely and thoughtlessly taken away his excuse for not wearing socks or shoes.

Before school is not the time for computer, iPods or TV. The end.

I find my exercise things (phone, towel, headphones, iPod). I put them in a bag. I can’t find my water bottle. I know Aubrey has taken it, but I can’t find it. I look around. While I am doing this, two children come into my room and tell me they are hungry. They act like I didn’t just see them eat a massive bowl of cereal. I say no to further food at this time—more complaints. I tell children to get coats on. Griffin has his half-way on when he grunts and whines and shrugs his shoulder. He says one word, in a baby voice, “Coat.” This annoys me. I tell him I can’t hear him when he asks like that. “Say, ‘Mommy, will you help me with my coat please.’” He expands to, “Mommy, help coat.” I say, “Nope, still can’t hear you, say ‘Mommy, will you help me with my coat please?” He says, “Mommy, help me coat.” I say, “That was closer, but not quite it. Try again.” He finally says it. I help him.

I wrangle Aubrey’s shoes on. I find her coat. Aubrey is refusing to wear her coat. I tell her she has to wear it. Crying fit ensues. She refuses, grabs the coat and runs up the stairs. I let her go, because Maxton can’t find his coat. I help Maxton find his coat. I think we are finally ready to leave. I go up the stairs. I realize I forgot my exercise bag on the bottom stair. I go back down. Xander is staring at the TV. I turn it off and tell him to get his backpack. He says, “I know,” with the most obnoxious tone. I grab the exercise bag and go up the stairs again. I notice Griffin is not wearing any shoes, despite the fact that I remember telling him to get them on at least twice. I tell him to get his shoes on. This is the point when I can feel myself winding up, past endurance. There is a tightness in my chest and I can feel my cortisone levels exploding, in little bursts. I feel like my muscles would like to escape the confines of my skin or that the muscles in my neck would make a good meat tenderizer. I feel like beating my head against a wall would be soothing.

Aubrey is at the top of the stairs, crying because she wanted to be the one to open the door. I go up the stairs. I realize that I still don’t have the keys. I go down, get the keys. On the way out the door, I notice Xander still doesn’t have his backpack. I tell him to go get it, then I put the other kids in the car. Aubrey resists and is screaming because she wanted to do part of her seatbelt. I tell her she didn’t ask and I’m sorry, but she’s just going to have to live with it. I scrape the ice off the windows. Children are complaining it is cold. Griffin says the same word over and over again in his baby voice, “Cold. Cold.” I feel like finding whoever writes Max and Ruby and shooting them dead with a pistol, just to watch them die. I notice Xander still has not emerged. Go back into the house to find him, he is standing dumbly in front of the TV, which he has turned on. Still no backpack. I yell at him to turn off the TV and to get his butt outside right now. He starts in surprise (really, surprise? How could he forget we were about to leave for school?) and he insincerely apologizes. Everyone is finally in the car and in seatbelts, so I leave.

I pull up to my nephew’s house. As I leave the car to knock on the door, I hear the complaining and bickering even after I close the door. I get Hyrum into the car and start to school. Griffin pesters him the whole way. I tell him to knock it off, or he is going to spend 20 minutes in his room when we get home (a random number, since time is a concept still beyond his four years, but long enough that it will matter to him—too short and he ignores me entirely, deciding that he’ll take his punishment if it means he gets to do whatever he wants right now). He proceeds to scream and fight with Hyrum. I tell him he is going to his room when we get home. He screams and cries.

I turn up the music loudly, because I cannot take another second of this. He hates the music and is screaming for me to turn it down. I blithely ignore him, pettily happy that I’m bugging him (that is soooo bad, I’m a bad mom, but it’s the truth). I start singing as loudly and as badly as I can, “It’s MY LIFE! IT’S NOW OR NEVER! ‘CAUSE I AIN’T GONNA LIVE FOREVER. I JUST WANT TO LIVE WHILE I’M ALIVE.” The whole back of the car explodes in “Stop, turn it down, STOP!” Haha. It’s much better to be the pesterer than the pesteree. We make it to school—I’m not certain I would be more tired if I had just completed three marathons in a row directly after giving birth. I turn down the music. Hyrum and Xander leave. I start getting questions and whining from the back seat, wondering if they have to go to the gym daycare. At this point, I feel too exhausted to want to exercise, but I’m going to do it anyway, if only to get away from the people in the back seat for 40 minutes.

The rest of the day is filled with complaining, whining, requests for food and fighting. I know they are all bored. I know they all have cabin fever. I know they are not getting enough sleep at night. I know I’m not really organized enough (would it kill me to organize things the night before? From the way I act, apparently it would), but I cannot take another week like this past week.

Most of the time, I really love being a mom, but this week, I wonder if I was sane to choose this on purpose. I’m clinging to some wise words from my friend, Farah, who wrote on one of my status updates that “children are a blessing, but sometimes a blessing in disguise.” Yep, mine are doing their best to be incognito blessings.

(A small note, I wrote this last week and today is Monday. Knowing ahead of time that my children were going to be awful, I have made some small adjustments and they were much better today. I think part of it was reflecting on this post as we went through our routine. It is spot on for what they do, and thinking of it made me better able to laugh at them and at myself.)

I've started a new blog: Come follow my crafting adventures on my new blog. Find me at: creativeirony.com.