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Project Runway….I’m addicted!

Project Runway inspired fabric sold at www.equilter.com

I know I’m really behind in this subject because I’ve seen it discussed on other blogs, months ago. But I will mention it all the same even though it makes me look like I’m just not with it. I just discovered Project Runway about 2 months ago and I absolutely love it! (After reading all the hooha about it, I was nosey and just had to check it out),

I’m no fashionista, so I don’t watch it for the clothing aspect, but the part of this show that strikes my fancy is the creative element. I absolutely love the challenge aspect and watching the designers put something together out of nothing and with limited time and resources. It’s addictive, and I know my husband won’t admit it, but it’s growing on him, too.

Since I’m a cloth doll designer by trade, I keep thinking it would be fun to have a ‘Project Dolly’ night(for lack of a better name at this moment at midnight when I’m writing this) with my cloth/primitive doll making friends. We could think up a ‘challenge’ and force ourselves to come up with a new design given the parameters of the challenge. I just might have to run this past my girlfriends.

If you haven’t already seen this show, I highly recommend you tune in. It’s on the cable channel Bravo every Wednesday 9/8Central. I’m warning you-you WILL become addicted to it! You just might find yourself itching for your own creative ‘challenge’.

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I got an award!

Well, thank you Tammy Burks from Skip to My Ewe! I love your blog, too! What a sweet award to be bestowed upon me…..and now it’s time for me to pass the baton to someone who’s blog I also enjoy reading so much…..and the winner is:

Modern Eve

Check out her blog and see how cool she is!
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Sweating my AZZ off-(I hope!)


This brunette is thin. Why’s she workin’ so hard? This is now my machine of choice, and for the record, I’m blond and big (ger than her!).

Over the last week or so, I’ve started getting really pissed. I’m sick of the metabolism I was born with. What the heck? The scale is not going down, people. In fact, when I went to the gym yesterday, they almost had to call an ambulance for me because I nearly had a heart attack when I stepped on the scale. The numbers went up. OMFG.

So. Battle plan is now in force. I’m not going to bitch about it anymore-I’m going to take action. I realize that calories in/calories out is the formula for weightloss in a nutshell, and admittedly, I haven’t been paying too much attention to it. I’ve been eating too many carbs-particularily bread. This is all going to stop. I’ve decided to cut my eating considerably and eat much more healthy than I already am. That, paired with going to the gym much more often than I have been should do it. If not, I’m going to collapse in a corner and suck my thumb, inconsolably.

I can’t afford a personal trainer, but I do need encouragement. I’m hoping that if I post my elliptical time you’ll all write me a comment of encouragement to help keep me going. This exercise thing is not my favorite thing to do, by a long shot, and I find myself trying to talk myself into going, instead of just doing it. I’m am such a pain in my big, fat, azz.

This morning, armed with my IPod Nano and a water bottle, I mounted the elliptical and kept going for a whole 35 minutes. And, I have to admit, I could have gone longer, but I decided not to push it. After all, I have to go back tomorrow. I am so encouraged by my ability to go this long. You don’t understand, but, back in December, the elliptical was my nemesis. I just couldn’t do it. It ripped the crap out of my thigh muscles and I always felt defeated by it. I’d glare with envy at people I’d see who were up there pumping away for wayyyy too long. I hated those folks. But one day, I decided to hell with it, this thing wasn’t going to intimidate me any longer. I was going to own it. And I have.

I’m working my muscles with the machines and I am starting to see a real difference in my arms. I’ve also been working my leg/thigh muscles over the last six months by using the bike at the gym and the leg machines. I can do this elliptical thing now without pain to my muscles and that is a feat in itself. This could also explain my slight weight gain. If I understand it right, muscles weigh more than fat, so I am getting heavier but leaner. (That still doesn’t work for me. This number’s gotta go.)

Will keep you all posted if I have any remarkable body changes. I know you’re all sitting on the edge of your seats, and will be checking my blog daily for updates. Right. This girl’s no fool. But, if you would check on B&B once and a while and give me your typed thumbs up, I’d be forever grateful.

By the way, Even Flow is a GREAT song to do the elliptical to. There is nothing better than closing my eyes and rockin’ to the beat of a good song while I conquer my nemesis and my fat. It is really enjoyable. There’s nothing like endorphins paired with oxygen and Pearl Jam.
35 MINUTES!

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Some Flea Market Treasures




I have an outdoor flea market about 2 minutes from my house, and I never go there. I don’t know why, but I just never do-maybe it has something to do with having a houseful of my mother-in-laws stuff to sift though, or it could just be that I didn’t have the urge to shop for treasures. Recently, my step dad told me he goes to this flea market every Sunday and suddenly I found myself piping up saying, “Ooh, pick me up and I’ll go with you!” Huh? Yep, that’s what I said, and yesterday was the second week in a row I’ve gone. It’s actually really great! It’s not too big that it’s overwhelming and not so small that it doesn’t make it worth going. Maybe next Sunday, I’ll snap some photos of it when I go so you all can see it.

Here’s a few of the items I scored. I am very selective and I don’t buy all kinds of junk. I’m always eyeing for the perfect item that makes it worth going.

A week ago Sunday I scored the brand new, still wrapped in plastic The Great American Pin Up book. This is absolutely fantastic! I have been collecting photos online by many of these pinup artists, and this book outlines all of them and most of each artist’s work in full color. Its an absolute treat to page through. That book cost me $20, and the guy selling it wouldn’t be haggled with, so I snatched it anyway without a discount. I also found, lying in a pile of used clothes, a genuine, (not a knockoff) Kate Spade wool plaid purse. It was in pretty good shape, but it had a few moth holes, but for $4, who cares? It’s a KATE SPADE!

Yesterday, I found two books, the Sewing Vintage Stlye book by Country Living ($2) and Stitch and Bitch Nation ($1) Who can beat that?

Being someone who goes weak in the knees at the sight of good quality wicker, I just had to have this foot rest that came complete with cushion. The woman saw me eyeing it, and I asked how much? She said $20, but you can have it for $18! Hello? I’ll take it!

Now my cats have a classy place to snooze and I have a new addition of wicker to add to my home.

I wonder what treasures await me next week?
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The dubiousness I feel…

My daughter, 6 years ago…(only two more left before she, too, is off to college.)

One of my own, at a moment when the need for forgivness is strongest…

My last baby, happy and well loved, despite his mother’s imperfections.

Lately it is overwhelming. I just sent my son Scott off to college yesterday and with that comes the stark realization that I’m pretty much done with him in terms of raising him. When my kids leave the nest for college, a multitude of emotions come crashing down as the sadness simultaneously sets in. It’s the end of an era, and I can’t go back. I find myself second guessing my life with him-Did I do enough with him? Did we spend as much time with him as we could? Could we have gone on more vacations or taken them on more outings than we did? Did I love him enough? Did we, did I, could we have-it goes on and on. The mental anguish is exhausting.

A friend I haven’t heard from all summer emailed me this morning, relating to me that she read on my blog that Scott had gone away to school. She revealed to me that she was grief stricken that her 20 year old daughter moved out to live with two girlfriends in the city. She has a job and plans to attend UIC in Chicago. She said every time she walks past her daughter’s empty room she wells up with tears and she finds her self constantly sad. She keeps asking those familiar questions over and over like how she didn’t feel lately like she saw her daughter enough and how she worried if she hugged her enough, or had spent enough time with her over the last few years. She is going through exactly what I am right now. She was relieved to hear that I, too, am suffering from a similiar lack of self confidience when it comes to evaluating how well I did up to this point in bringing my kids up.

When I think about my life over the last 20 years being my childrens’ mother, I am hard on myself. I tried. So hard. But I know damn well I could have done better. I did stay home with them, and never went to work. That was a very fortunate thing and I’m thankful to my husband for allowing us that. I was home with them every day. What I wasn’t was a player. My husband was the one who loved to get down on the floor and wrestle with the kids and take them out and play ball with them. He was very involved in that aspect, which was good, because he picked up the slack where I left off. He, on the other hand wasn’t crazy about babies, even though they were his little bundles of joy. He loved them, of course, don’t get me wrong, but he was never like, “Hey, pass the babe down so I can cuddle him for a few minutes.” That was my job…I was their first experience feeling love. I cuddled them, kissed them, breastfed them, and held them when they were sick while they slept, and did everything else mothers do for their children. I feel wonderful about that. I suppose, looking back now, between my husband and I and with what we were willing to do, my kids had a good balance.

I know some parents who are constantly taking their kids on outings, be it the zoo, museums, picnics, or some other trendy place. We didn’t do that as much- hardly at all, really. We took a yearly vacation, and a few other trips interspersed throughout the years, but we didn’t do carnivals, or spend money at game zones, or other places like that. With 5 kids, that kind of thing would be devistating to the wallet. I know of many people who’s parents never took them on any vacations and did a lot less with their kids than we did, and they turned out fine…wonderful, actually. Does it really matter if kids are taken places often vs only occasionally? I don’t know. My guess is probably not, but hey, I’m the one here having dubious feelings about my accomplishments as a mother. So someone out there, please tell me. I was never really good at teaching them things, although I did have some little successes peppered in. My husband and mother in law were usually the ones teaching them things. I tended to be impatient and honestly, I sometimes didn’t know how to deal with them when they would fight because I never had siblings so I didn’t know how to work it out. I toughed through it and did what I hoped was right and helped them learn how to deal with each other and still love one another.

When I peek in on some of these parenting blogs I become intimidated, and at the same time I’m in awe of the things these women do with their kids-I’m amazed at their photos of beautiful art projects they create, the sweet handmade little skirts twirling for the cameras, the pictures are so beautiful, and the kids seem so happy and perfect. Is this how it really is? These women seem like Earth Mothers and it makes me feel like somehow I blew it. They cook with the kids and seem to have the patience of a saint. It makes me feel like I didn’t do something right. I know, it’s crazy, but I can’t help how I feel. I suppose there is no sense in lamenting over the past since my kids have made it through those tender stages of their life, in one piece and surprisingly happy.

Although I had an art degree, my attempts at doing art projects with my small children almost always ended in a mess. My green as grass notions of how I’d be as a parent seemed so Utopian before I had children. I imagined my kids would sit around an art table, eager and well behaved and itching to get started. In my fantasies, my kids would create for hours and turn out fabulous pieces, dying to begin again. Wow, was I in for a surprise. When the kids were finally here, my attempts at ‘art time’ would typically turn out to be a disaster. The kids would begin laughing and carrying on and eventually the paint would end up on the floor or flicked from their brush onto eachother’s faces from across the table. My patience was not 100%, and I would end up feeling frustrated and angry with them. I’d end the project in disgust, and send them off with their tails between their legs. I felt like crap and they didn’t feel much better. Actually, no, they were probably laughing at me for thinking I could pull it off. If I did a project with them that ended up a behaviorial success, the kids usually walked away bored, and not really up for making that same art a second time. After numerous attempts, my bubble burst of wanting to experience art with my children, and I began to dread it. That dread turned into avoidance and made me feel horrible. As a result, I gave up trying. Sadly, teaching my kids art was one of the activities I looked forward to the most when picturing myself as a mother. I failed miserably.

The one thing I think I can safely say is I succeeded in loving them. I loved them to death. I was there for them. I did the best I could given my life experience and innate ability to take care of them. They were happy, healthy and adored. When I made mistakes disciplining them and I realized it, I got down on my knees at bedtime and hugged them and with tears in my eyes I apologized to them and asked them to forgive mommy. I was so sorry. I wanted them to know I valued them so much that I was willing to ask them for their forgiveness. I wanted to teach them to forgive others if someone had wronged them and was sorry for it. What better example than to see their mom admit she had made a mistake. In my heart, I believe it makes a kid feel like he’s a worthy person when someone says ‘I’m sorry’ to them. I know first hand about this. When I was a little girl, on numerous occasions, I was blamed for naughty things other kids did and I got the punishment. I was sometimes slapped, but almost always yelled at. When the truth was known, and it turned out being some other kid, not me who misbehaved, I was never apologized to by my parents. I was told I was just a kid and they didn’t have to apologize to me. That made me feel like I was worthless. I vowed I’d never do that to my kids-and I never have.

Now that I think about it, that asking for forgiveness from my children is what has carried me through to this point. It’s helped me absolve myself from feeling inadequate for not having done everything right.

So now, when I think back at yesterday when I kissed my son good-bye after dropping him off at school and sensed his sadness, then saw the tears welling up in his eyes, I knew, yes, this kid loves me. He loves us. And all that other stuff I have been obsessing about from the past doesn’t really matter. I felt a blanket of calm come over me and suddenly, I knew everything would be okay. My life of mothering him culminated at this point and I think I can confidently say I did something right, despite my imperfections and mistakes. He’s such a sweet, good, human being.

So, how do these SouleMama’s and other wonderful earthy moms do it? I’d love to know their secret. Hopefully, I will find it out someday, soon enough before my grandchildren come into the picture. If I can figure it out, I just might be the coolest grandma in town-and my kids will love me even more for loving their children just as I had loved them. Only then, possibly, I’ll be able to experience my Utopian art college dream of perfect art lessons with well behaved little kids who just can’t get enough.

For now, I will cut myself some slack for second guessing my mothering. I think I may have most of it worked out now, at least, for 2 more years when my dear, only daughter is ready to leave the nest to go away to college. Then it’ll be time for blog writing, self-therapy and forgiveness, once again.