7 Quick Takes: Making the Plates Stop Spinning

7 Quick Takes

It’s Tuesday the 15th and I was trying to come up with a way to describe how I’m feeling right now and it came to me that I feel like one of those plate spinners you see at the carnival. These are going to be written between now and Thursday night at 9:59 p.m. (the minute before the link-up goes live) and some of them might be pretty long.

— 1 —

#LiveLikeRick My friend Rick Stilwell was killed in a car accident on Friday morning. I spent most of Friday afternoon in a ball of shock until the weeping hit and I needed to get out of the house. I ended up at Starbucks because of the free wi-fi… which was perfect because Rick was a Starbucks junkie before he went local. I had a lattΓ© in his honor and tried to blog and journal everything out of my brain.

Here's looking at you Rick...

His public memorial service was livestreamed this afternoon and I watched it balled under a comforter. There are now some praise and worship songs that I will not be able to listen to for a while because they were sung there and it was totally the way Rick would have wanted it. He was all about community and connecting people which is why the people there (and the 100 of us watching on UStream) knew him in so many different ways. They had some of his action figures on the podium which was also fitting because he posted lots of Instagram pics of them.

It’s been an interesting grieving process because in the 10 years I’ve known him we have:
-talked by phone twice
-IM’ed a bunch
-tweeted/emailed a bunch
-never met in person

Yes… we’ve never met in person but he was as much of a part of my life as if he had lived down the street from me. When my insurance company decided to not pay for anything related to my ovarian cyst, he sent me a small check (I think it was $50 or $100) which took care of the ER doctor’s bill. In 2003, he got me through the ELCA denying me candidacy. He told me that “regardless of what others say, your call is never revoked (romans 11:29). i pray you find the direction over/around this bump in the road. really appreciate your heart and sensitivity being displayed here?? as always, when dealing with denominational leaders, don??t sweat the petty stuff, and don??t pet the sweaty stuff.” I think he now knows that he was right and my call to ministry looks radically different than anything of which the ELCA could have conceived. In 2004, he read through me ranting and screaming in an entry, leaving me the comment “read it all ?? still here. many prayers, much love and hopefulness to you all the way up in the tundra??”. He then took an hour out of his weekend to call me and make sure I was OK. When Twitter came on the scene, he signed up immediately and when his wife got an account, they used it as their personal texting service, even tweeting each other while sitting in the same room and getting all mushy.

If you want to know more about him, do two things: watch the video of his public memorial service and read 1 John 1:3. Seriously, when I met Rick, his blog and AIM name were “rick1j13”.

— 2 —

The Far Above Rubies Project. I’m going to have a series of posts starting February 1st on verses from Proverbs 31. I’m looking for women bloggers from all across the spectrum of Christianity so if you’re interested, please comment and let me know.

— 3 —

Forty to Forever. Brett is going to be part of a fundraiser this Lent called Forty Days to Forever. The idea is to raise $500 for forty kids and families that are adopting. Kara’s Nico is also part of it. I’m trying to put together a gift basket for a giveaway and I’ve also done the applications to be part of it. Right now, I’m figuring out the social media aspect of publicizing it and inviting people. With what hit on Friday for me, I felt like my head was spinning this weekend. Go to the website to learn more. Meanwhile, click on Brett’s picture to go check out his profile.

Brett

— 4 —

Fundraising for Kaia. Putting together fundraising for Kaia has been interesting.

Miss Kaia

-I’m pondering a bottle challenge (filling up a juice or sports drink bottle with spare change) for April but I fear it would come too close to Easter and the Lenten challenge already going on for Brett and some of the other Reece’s Rainbow kids so I may aim it for August which is her birthday month.
-I’m crocheting 7×7″ squares of black and variegated yarns to put together into a “stained glass” blanket. My thought is that it will probably be auctioned off around November in time for Christmas shopping. I’ll have to come up with a Rafflecopter giveaway or something.
Mandi, bless her heart, has offered to help if I want to put together an auction. This might be a possibility as well.

— 5 —

Abnormal weather in California. I’m totally aware that the rest of the nation is howling with laughter at California because we’re whining about temperatures down in the 20’s in the morning and in the low 50’s during the day. (That was a Chinook winds day in Montana when I lived there.) There is some deserved ribbing of southern Californians because anything under 60F is scary. However, if you consider that one of our industries is citrus and this is a big time for it, you might understand why people are flipping out about the temperatures. In some cases (i.e. mandarins), a bit of a freeze is good because it increases sweetness but in other cases, orange grove owners are lighting bonfires to warm their fruit.

— 6 —

The bear child. Daniel lasted about 10 minutes at preschool today (Wednesday the 16th) before we were called to bring him home because of explosive diarrhea. He wasn’t running a temperature but something was definitely up because he felt hot to me. I ended up changing him into shorts because his pull-on pants were in the laundry shed and I was too cold lazy to go get them. He’ll be out of school on Thursday as well until we can get his lower GI back to normal. We’re doing the BRAT diet (bananas, rice, applesause, and toast) with him and it seems to be helping. He’s also extra cuddly because he’s not feeling well and I was actually kind of hoping he would go down for a nap in my lap today. No luck in that area but he woke up in his pack n’ play very grumpy so after a diaper change, he was tucked into the recliner with me under a comforter with his blankie (this child gives Linus a run for his money), a sippy cup with Pedialyte, and some Cheerios. God willing, he’ll be back to school on Friday.

— 7 —

Gun control. Most of my blog readers are too young to remember the 101 California Street shootings or maybe it didn’t register in your part of the country. A gunman burst into the Petit & Martin law firm and opened fire, killing 9 people and wounding 6. Among the dead were Jody Sposato, a young mother, and Michael Scully who shoved his wife under a desk and died shielding her with his body. The killing, at the time, was horrific and it inspired some legal and legislative measures that led to the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, H.R.3355, 103rd Congress (1994) which took effect in 1994. The Federal Assault Weapon ban was part of it and the whole thing expired on September 13, 2004 through a sunset provision. I remember being livid in 2004 that it wasn’t renewed/reauthorized/whatever the term because I remember watching the people streaming out of the building and people being wheeled out on gurneys on TV. That kind of thing makes an impression on a 13 year old. In doing research on this act so I could sound reasonably well-versed, I discovered that it was actually written by then-senator Joe Biden. Interesting how history repeats itself now that Vice President Biden was in charge of coming up with policies after the Sandy Hook shootings?

Lest someone decide to call me a “lib”/claim that I have a skewed understanding of the 2nd Amendment/claim I hate the NRA, I should point out that George H.W. Bush resigned from the NRA in 1995 because they were being lunatics. The NRA is engaging in fear-mongering of the worst nature and claiming that the regulations proposed by Biden mean that the administration wants to take our guns. They’re talking about arming teachers as a solution to preventing school shootings which is ludicrous. Why do I say this? Let’s look at a recent school shooting case that happened last week in Taft, California. Instead of breaking out a weapon and shooting the student that had entered the class with a shotgun and had already shot one student, teacher Ryan Heber talked the student shooter into putting the gun down. A situation that could have resulted in 3 deaths ended with nobody dead and only one student critically injured. That would not have happened had the teacher been armed and forced to fire.

I’m taking a rare political stand here and asking that people divorce their hatred of the administration and actually focus on what is being asked here. The banning of weapons that belong on a battlefield and the ammo to go with them is what is being proposed, not the seizure of the rifle someone uses to go deer hunting or the pistol used in target practice. I’m asking as a fellow American, a sister in Christ, and someone who almost lost her twin brother in a planned school shooting — please put aside your political biases and reject the fear-mongering of the NRA and let’s work to fix the gun laws in the land. I would be the first to protest if the administration does anything unduly rash.

— Bonus —

Flu shot and vaccinations in general. I know that some of my readers are anti-vax and there are times I have had to bite my tongue as people talk about the dangers of them, the use of stem cells from aborted babies used in some of them, etc. As someone who is immunosuppressed from asthma and an auto-immune disorder and as the mother of an immunosuppressed child, I am asking you to please get your flu shot. Yes, it’s only a 62% effectiveness but as Leah explains in her piece, it means you are 62% less likely to have severe complications. It is also beneficial in our society to have “herd” immunity which protects the elderly and people like me and Daniel. Because we vaccinate at a fairly high level, we don’t have diseases like polio, measles, or diptheria which ravage the Third World. If you don’t believe me, I’d be more than happy to direct you to an office of a company whose work is outsourced to India where it is quite probable that at least one person has a deformed limb from polio or who has had a family member die of a disease that we don’t think twice about here. I *know* at least two of these people.

So please, get your flu shot. I will thank you, Daniel will thank you, and Paula, whose daughter just got a liver transplant and is super-immunosuppressed, will thank you.

For more Quick Takes, visit Jen at ConversionDiary.Com. Say a prayer for her as well as she’s dealing with double pulmonary emboli while pregnant.

Regarding My Quick Takes on Being the 47% (V)

I’m picking this thread back up after a week or so off to take care of my sick toddler who then gave me his cold. Anyway, I wanted to do a post with tips on dealing with foodstamps, Medicaid, SSA, and similar programs.

[+] Keep all your necessary documents in one folder. It will help when you have to bring in birth certificates, marriage certificates, copies of social security cards, copies of driver’s licenses, copies of your lease/mortgage, utility bill, or whatever else they require.

[+] Never give them original documents if you’re just dropping paperwork off. Believe me, you will never see said documentation again because they will lose it, especially if this is a document that is completely essential for your taxes. Your bank can print out copies of statements for various accounts and you can make copies of paystubs. Make two copies of everything so that you have another copy to submit after they lose all your documentation for the first time.

[+] Get the name of the person you meet with or talk to each time. I know that when I was fighting with the SSA last year, I would talk to a different person each time because my assigned person never answered her phone. I kept track of everyone I talked to and the time I spoke to them because it was ammo I could use when I requested a supervisor.

[+] If you aren’t satisfied, ask for a supervisor. My never-fail trick for getting stuff done is to call my case worker and then her supervisor and then her supervisor’s supervisor, adding a new level of supervisor each time I call and get nowhere. I’ve even left messages on all these peoples’ answering services twice a day if necessary. It might take a few days but eventually, you will get enough people irritated with your messages that they will do whatever you want in order to get you to leave them alone. πŸ™‚

[+] In the process of making a nuisance of yourself, be polite to a fault. I’ve heard it said that if you haven’t been kicked out of your local SSA office, you aren’t trying hard enough. (This holds true for the Pomona office of the SSA.) Rather than ripping people a new one (which is totally understandable given the process and hoops one has to jump through), be insanely polite. Better yet, be passive-aggressively sweet when you leave voicemails telling people to get off their butts, when you explain that it has been two months and this is unacceptable, and when you explain that you have left messages on their supervisor’s voicemail telling them how incompetent said worker is. It makes it harder for them to say that you are being abusive and to make up excuses as to why they’re not playing ball.

[+] Remember that some of these workers are counting on you giving up before your benefits are approved. There are some genuinely wonderful social workers out there and I want to say that the majority of them really do give a crap about the people they help. The others, however, are of the opinion that the harder you make it, the less likely the person will make it through the gauntlet. As hard as it is to do, keep the pressure on your worker if they seem to be working against you. If you do indeed qualify for benefits, fight for them.

The thing that keeps me fighting and actually gives me hope is a talk given by a fellow pastor’s wife in Montana who works for the Department of Human Services in Great Falls. I think the best thing she said is that she explains to her clients that it could easily be her sitting in their chair. Her empathy struck me and it gives me faith when I have to deal with some form of social services.

OK… any other topics I should be covering with this? I’d love your feedback.

Regarding My Quick Takes on Being the 47% (II)

I’m writing this while waiting for Daniel to wake up from his nap and also waiting for Jon and my evil twin to finish grilling my dinner. πŸ™‚ Because of this, I’m saving Cari’s comment for tomorrow or Monday. Today, I wanted to talk about my experience with WIC because Cari references it in her comment.

My mother-in-law was one of the first women to go on WIC and I think it was with my husband (35) though I could be wrong — it could be with my sister-in-law (who is almost 30). Basically, it was created by Jimmy Carter as a way of helping a mother take care of her child. The idea was to remove a reason for the mother to abort her child so the checks are always in the name of the mother and not the boyfriend or father. You can apply when pregnant and the income threshold is 185% of the poverty level. The page with the list of state agencies is here.

I first applied in May 2010 when we were in southern California. I wish I’d been able to do a better search on which office was the closest because I ended up going to an office that was farther away from our apartment than I needed to. Also, I was usually the only white woman there which wasn’t a bad thing — just… not my usual experience. When I came in, I’d sign in and wait to be called. Daniel hated to sit still (he still hates it) so I’d stroller him around the office. They’d call me and measure him and then I’d see the nutritionist. Their chief nutritionist was a woman from Germany and I think she was so used to dealing with moms who knew nothing about nutrition and basic care of their children because she treated me like I was completely stupid. Daniel was severely underweight due to texture issues in his mouth (which is common with preemies who have been on ventilators) and she couldn’t understand why he wasn’t gaining weight. She would give me pamphlets on shakes made with ice cream that “kids like to eat” and I’d come back the next month to tell her that it didn’t work and that I couldn’t make him drink it. After my monthly (or so) fight with her, they’d print out checks for a month and make an appointment for me to come back.

When I went to the grocery store, I’d have a check with specified amounts of food on it like a gallon of milk, 16 oz. of whole grains, and 16 oz. of cheese. They give you a booklet that explains what you can and cannot use the checks for and when I first went to the WIC office, they showed me a video on what to do. When I’d check out, I’d separate the WIC items from the other things I was buying and the checkers would process the checks a certain way, making me show them my book to verify my signature. What they allow is different for pregnant women than it is for breastfeeding women (they’re big on breastfeeding) or for moms with kids of different ages.

When we moved up to northern California, it took awhile to get re-established with WIC because of Daniel’s hospital stay and the fact that my nutritionist in southern California was singularly unhelpful in giving me any idea of how to find my county office. The county office up here also is annoying when it comes to getting someone to answer the phone. Finally, I located it while I was out one day and made an appointment to come in with Daniel. That first appointment was just to get us set up in their system and they were completely chill with Daniel crawling around the room and getting into everything. The next month, I met with Nancy (one of the nutritionists) and she was just unbelievably wonderful. I had met with a pediatric nutritionist at UC Davis a few weeks earlier and Nancy wanted to hear everything they’d had to say. She helped me get things worked out to have WIC pay for a month of Pediasure while we worked through a home healthcare place to get Medicaid to pay and she even gave me some ideas on how to get him working on different textures.

The last year that I’ve dealt with WIC has been almost exactly like my appointment with Nancy — they’ve been patient about Daniel flipping out because he wants to get into things and after two appointments of Daniel tantruming, Nancy put something in the computer that allows me to come in without him as long as he stays within the bounds he needs to on the growth chart. They’ve altered checks to take out some of the milk because Daniel is on the Pediasure and also taken out the eggs because both Daniel and I are allergic to them. When I asked them why they weren’t forcing me to attend “class” like they did in southern California (a short lecture on stuff like introducing more vegetables and decreasing sugar in your child’s diet), they explained that Daniel was eating well and within good bounds on the growth chart so they weren’t going to make do that. At the appointment before Daniel started school, I asked about lunches and they gave me some ideas on what to pack that he might eat. It’s been like having my own personal nutritionists and it’s a complete change from my experience in southern California. The local office is walking distance from our parsonage and it’s clean and a place where I’d be OK with Daniel crawling on the floor. It’s cheerful-looking and the staff is wonderful. (They weren’t bad in southern California — it was just that nutritionist.)

I am an enthusiastic recommender of WIC because I honestly believe they do good things. Both offices I’ve dealt with have a social worker there some days to deal with things like food stamps, Medicaid, and other programs and I think they could also recommend a pediatrician to me if I needed one. Granted, there are experiences like the one I had in southern California but even that was at least somewhat helpful in that they still gave me the checks and it still helped out immensely with feeding all of us.

Anyone else have experience with WIC?

Regarding My Quick Takes on Being the 47% (I)

This is going to be a multi-part entry because there were a lot of comments that need to be addressed. I know that Cari’s comment needs to be its own post and it’s also early in the weekend so there may be other comments that need addressing.

The first thing I want to do is let you know what happened, what programs we’re still part of, and why.

2009: Daniel is born at 29.5 weeks. As we knew we’d be looking at a massive hospital bill for him, the NICU social worker advised us to file for SSI for him which would also make him eligible for Medicaid. Based on his birth weight (1 lb 15 oz.), he was also eligible for Social Security to write off whatever insurance did not cover of his NICU bill.

2010: We moved from Montana to California after Jon’s parish situation deteriorated. We went through our savings in about two months and ended up applying for WIC, food stamps, and Medicaid for the three of us. (We had lost Medicaid for Daniel when SSA discovered an error.) We were granted WIC but our caseworker screwed up on the food stamps and Medicaid. Jon eventually got a youth pastor position which helped a bit and started working for his parents. He also supply-preached and did funerals which also helped. (Funeral homes will frequently have pastors on-call in case a family doesn’t have a church but would like a religious funeral for their loved one.) In September, he was called to Metanoia as the interim pastor. Meanwhile, I applied for Healthy Families (California’s S-CHIP) and Medicaid for Daniel. Straight Medicaid was denied but they’d kick something in after something like $1300/month. Healthy Families was denied because you had to be without insurance for a specific period of time before you were eligible. (My mom, God bless her, paid our insurance premiums so that there would be no lapse in coverage — neither Daniel nor I could be without insurance and until last year, Daniel was uninsurable.) We also got hooked up with the Regional Center (California’s agency for developmental disabilities). In November, I reapplied for SSI for Daniel as his developmental delays qualified him.

2011: Jon was called to Metanoia full-time in January and we moved up to northern California in February. His income was still under the threshold for WIC so we transferred up here. A week and a half after moving up here, Daniel ended up in the hospital for three weeks. The hospital social workers hooked me up with California Childrens’ Services which required me to apply for Medicaid. We were granted Medicaid which would kick in after $500 in medical costs per month. Meanwhile, SSI chugged through and I had to go into the office in the town to the south of us and get that squared away. It took two months and learning how to harass the right people but Daniel finally got approved and we were granted retroactive SSI and retroactive Medicaid. California Childrens’ Services paid for his hematology appointments and his Lovenox while he still required shots and we got things transferred to the Regional Center up here who are the epitome of awesomeness. They covered physical/occupational/speech/infant program through Easter Seals and one independent contractor. Daniel’s clot (from his central line during his hospitalization in March) disappears and we’re able to be kicked out of the hematology practice and California Childrens’ Services.

2012: Daniel turns three which means that the local school district is now in charge of speech/occupational therapy. He is diagnosed with autism (thank you to the Regional Center for paying for the testing) and is in an ABA classroom. We’re still hooked up with the Regional Center and are trying to get an in-home program in place. We’re also still hooked up with WIC and will be until our income is higher than the threshold or until Daniel turns 5.

OK… onto addressing comments!

From Stacy (who, by the way, is a social worker and knows her stuff):

I get SO ANGRY when people talk about those who abuse the system. For every one person who is abusing it, I’m sure there are 100+ who aren’t. Not to mention that the system is set up for people to you know…. not really be able to get out of it! Sooo frustrating. On another note, our Medicaid/food stamp office is BEAUTIFUL. I’ve never seen anything like it but it makes me so happy that the people going there for help don’t have to feel like they need to go on antibacterials afterward.

Granted, I’m seriously mysophobic so the anti-bacterials are a given with me. However, part of the problem is that a number of programs are housed at the DPSS in Pomona and the DHHS in Sacramento and they’re both located in seriously urban areas so they get a lot of traffic. I think if I went at the moment they opened, it would be less nasty for me. (OK… I’ve actually done that with the DPSS and it was still nasty.) The WIC office I go to in northern California is beautiful and clean (and located within walking distance from me) so that’s actually a positive. The one in southern California was not bad but it was overused so it got yucky.

From Jen:

What??s sad/true is that you have to be somewhat well-educated/literate in English to be able to wade through the bureaucracy, including knowing where to get official documents, how to correctly fill out the forms, etc. My husband sees a lot of this in his line of work??with former incarcerated men trying to re-enter the community. They aren??t well educated, they don??t have certain common sense skills (like how to start looking for their birth certificate) and there??s little to no help in teaching them these types of things (that a lot of us take for granted), so it??s no wonder why many of them end up back in prison. Because it??s easier. The staff at the halfway houses and re-entry programs can only do so much to assist, but there??s not enough time, money, staff, etc. Vicious cycle.

Having done prison ministry, I can attest to this. A lot of the men I dealt with when I’d go into the local prison in Montana (a for-profit medium security prison housing inmates for the state of Montana) were from disadvantaged backgrounds so they were there after making some really bad decisions. I could totally see me going in and teaching a class in how to do all these things but I stopped going in after getting pregnant because of the potential to be taken hostage while in the prison. Granted, it’s not even the most intuitive process for those of us on the outside to do things like getting a copy of a marriage certificate because it requires knowing what county to contact and what’s needed to do so. I know it was really hard to get a copy of my birth certificate for a library card when I didn’t have a valid ID in Minnesota — I had to go to a parishioner who was a loan officer and had notary privileges to get stuff signed to make the request.

OK… heading to bed. Will write more tomorrow.

Because Friday Is Five Days Away…

I’m down in LA with my in-laws and need to purge my brain. As it isn’t Friday and I can’t do this in seven nice Quick Takes, I’ll do it my way.

[+] I’m going to be shot for saying this but Bad Catholic sounds like a teenager wrote it. Whaddaya know… Marc Barnes is 19! Shocker. I’m not saying that all his writing has grammar mistakes and sounds like bad text messages but the voice speaking sounds like the blogs I read of 16-18 year olds when I was in seminary. 1Flesh.Org sounds about the same. I’m not anti-NFP — I’m a huge fan of iuseNFP — but the 1Flesh.Org site sounds immature and simplistic when it’s not a simple issue in the slightest.

[+] Jon’s parents suprised him with tickets to Mary Poppins: The Musical yesterday. After the family cupcake brunch, we took Metro-Link to Union Station, took the subway to the Civic Center station, and then walked to the Ahmanson Theatre for it. The show was all manner of awesome — music, special effects, etc. were great. They had to fudge the story a bit to fit the musical but it was still pretty faithful to the Disney movie with things from the book thrown in. Afterwards, we had dinner at Buca di Beppo where I had some lovely calamari and enjoyed some of Jon’s pizza.

[+] The downside to yesterday: MY FEET!!! My nice shoes gave me serious blisters on my ankles and my small toes. I’d post pictures but the blisters on my toes have popped and are nasty-looking. (There are also some people who haven’t recovered from me posting pictures of my foot when I suffered an avulsion fracture in my ankle with a sprained foot.) I’m thinking I’ll be rocking some Old Navy flip-flops for at least a week when I get home.

7 Quick Takes: Camp Songs, Road Trips, and Speed Reading

7 Quick Takes

— 1 —

It’s Shark Week on Discovery Channel. Someone posted this video of “Baby Shark” in honor of Shark Week and as it’s a camp song and as a former camp counselor, I think these songs need to be shared. This video is from a Boy Scout camp in Connecticut and as usual, the Boy Scouts know how to do these songs well.

— 2 —

I think we need to add The Penguin Song for good measure. It’s another camp song that I learned from some members of my Bible study in college who learned it as YMCA camp counselors. I have memories of standing outside Marianne’s (an awesome ice cream parlor in Santa Cruz) singing it. I’m pretty sure it would have been banned in the Girl Scouts because it looks like you’re mocking people with mental disabilities.

— 3 —

OK… throwing a question out to my readers. What were your favorite camp songs? They can be from whatever camps you attended — Girl Scout, Boy Scout, church, CYO, whatever.

— 4 —

By the time you read this, I’ll be down in southern California with Jon, Daniel, and my in-laws. Jon’s birthday is Saturday and he wants to take a weekend off. Since he hasn’t actually had one in like… a year, we’re doing it! He has a few surprises waiting for him on this trip so hopefully it will be enjoyable for him.

— 5 —

I got a few books read on the way down. No, I wasn’t the one driving. I finished The Wurst Is Yet to Come by Mary Daheim, read The Fifty Shames of Earl Grey by Fanny Merkin (a.k.a Andrew Shaffer — it’s a parody of THAT OTHER BOOK, stop judging me!) before starting/finishing The Cinnamon Roll Murder by Joanne Fluke, and starting on Clergy Killers by G. Lloyd Rediger. Yes, I do read that fast.

— 6 —

My in-laws are the only people I know with more cats than me. I think the current count is 5 or 6? My mother-in-law is seriously deserving of the hashtag #crazycatlady that I bat around the Twitter. My sister-in-law has three chihuahuas but we don’t talk about it.

— 7 —

Why yes, I’m aware that I’m not #1 this week in posting my Quick Takes. I’ve been busy taking care of my kid and attempting to be social with my in-laws? Oh yes… also catching up on Twitter and Facebook because I didn’t get a chance to be online until tonight.

For more Quick Takes, visit Jen at ConversionDiary.Com.

The Simple Woman’s Daybook: August 13, 2012

Simple Woman's Daybook

FOR TODAY August 13, 2012

Outside my window… dark. It was triple digits for like the fifth day in a row and it’s apparently not going to get better. I am not amused.

I am thinking… that Alaska sounds good right now. One of my college friends is up there for a month while her husband is on sabbatical. I am jealous.

I am thankful… for Jon letting me go grab a bite to eat and some reading time.

In the kitchen… not wanting to think about the kitchen right now…

I am wearing… grey maternity shirt and running shorts.

I am creating… things with yarn.

I am going… to hopefully get some stuff done tomorrow.

I am wondering… what that beeping sound is. (It turned out to be my cell phone which was dying.)

I am reading… The Wurst Is Yet to Come by Mary Daheim.

I am hoping… things are cooler in southern California this weekend when we’re there.

I am looking forward to… seeing Jon’s family again.

Around the house… trying not to think about this.

One of my favorite things… cold liquids to drink on a bloody hot day.

A few plans for the rest of the week: cleaning, packing, errands, travel.

A peek into my day… Daniel investigating the sprinkler and wading pool my parents got him. What isn’t shown is him climbing in fully clothed to play in it any time he could sneak outside. πŸ™‚

Investigating his wading pool.

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