Sparks and Butterflies...

But aside from that, she's still completely normal

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Shameful Plugging

January 7, 2009 By Michele 1 Comment

The Bloggies are currently in the nomination phase.  I have nominated my own darn self in the Lifetime Achievement category.  Why?  Because I’ve been blogging since “online diaries” in 1995.  And my archives here go back to 2000 – I’m a DINOSAUR in the blogging world and I want my cookie.

Please also nominate Blog Nosh Magazine…  Our editors, and our editor-in-chief, work very very hard.  I nominated it in the Best Group Blog category.

You have to pick three for your nomination to count, so pick someone else (you perhaps?)

And another thing!

The Weblog Awards are in their voting phase.  Blog Nosh is nominated in the Best New Blog category; and Blissfully Domestic is Nominated in the Best Parenting Blog category.  You can vote once per day…  Please vote because you love me!

And just a smidge more…

I published a post on Blissfully Domestic on Occupational Therapy.  And over on Blog Nosh I edited a post on living your life with purpose.

And I think that’s all I needed to update you on.  I don’t schmooze too often…  How’d I do?

Encouraging

December 18, 2008 By Michele 3 Comments

I recently left a comment on someone’s post – about feminism no less – which I’m not linking as I’ll just get comments on that person’s post, which totally isn’t the point.  The point is – All of a sudden I was leaving a ranty comment about how I’m a failure at this WAHM mom stuff, and nothing’s getting done, and I’m busy all day and totally exhausted, and yet you can’t see that I’ve done a thing.  Not one of my most stellar moments.  However, I noticed that most the comments after were partially towards the poster’s entry, and then they would turn to me.  There they were encouraging me on someone else’s blog.  And you know what?  It helped.  It really really helped.

In other news, I may have just landed my first client for Vineyard Virtual Services.  Contracts haven’t been signed yet – but WAHOO!

Impressions on Being Home

December 10, 2008 By Michele 1 Comment

So, I’ve been home a couple weeks now.  Three?  I don’t know, the days go by so fast.

The first thing that comes to mind is, I’m exhausted.  I was exhausted before.  But this time, I’m not stressed out too, so that’s good.  I am going to bed earlier and earlier.  My work day ends after cleaning up dinner.  And I’m just wiped.

I’m having trouble with timing.  There are things I want to do online, with the house, and with my business, and I’m having real trouble putting it all together.  Just when I get into a groove – Stop!  Have to pick up a kid.  Another groove – Stop!  Have to pick up the other kid.  Believe it or not, I’m going to be putting together a spreadsheet today in 15 minute increments, and placing blocks of time of doing certain things.  It sounds anal, but I really need to get some kind of plan in place.

But the height of excitement came when I went to Target.  At 11am.  On a weekday.  It Was Awesome.

The house is still a mess, but the dishes are always done and the laundry is on a schedule and caught up, so I really have made progress.  I used to have to do laundry all day long on the weekends, and even then it usually stayed in the baskets with me rummaging around in them to find the kids’ clothes, and mine.  And then Sunday I would spend doing all the dishes we used in a week.

It’s been a pretty big transition.  But it’s ok.  Our budget needs some more tweaking.  But I’m working on it.

That’s where my head’s at these days.

Dissappointment

December 6, 2008 By Michele 2 Comments

I hate being a grown-up.  I really do.

Blissdom ’09 is coming.  In February.  Considering I write for Blissfully Domestic (shut up.  I do.  I just have writer’s block.) You’d think it would be a good idea that I go.  You’d think that since I’m an editor for Blog Nosh Magazine, and Megan’s speaking, that it would be a good idea that I go.  You’d think that since I have started my own business, it would be a good idea that I go.

But it’s in Nashville.  So, flying, hotel, some food, and the conference itself, brings the cost to a little less than $1,000.  I kinda have the money.  I mean, between the money I got from leaving my job, and the Christmas fund (if I get nothing), maybe.  But I’m sort of saving for Poe’s teeth getting fixed.

I hate this.  Not to mention the kid care arranging, since my husband has to work that Friday.  I don’t know what to do.

A Bit of a Rant

November 17, 2008 By Michele 1 Comment

Today is Monday.  Which means all I have to do is get the kids up and ready and out the door on time for school.  Then I get to come home and do whatever I want.  You see, this week is my vacation, before I start really concentrating on home stuff.  Which would be awesome.

Unless you come down with a major cold.

Yesterday’s allergies turned out to not be allergies, and instead, an actual full blown cold.  Can you feel the joy?

But – yesterday’s plumbing debacle has been fixed thanks to my father’s plumbing snake.

I’m running into a lot of disbelief about my coming home.  It’s funny – it changes.  For example, my mother feels the need to blab my business to all of her friends.  “Well, you know, she pays $1300 a month in childcare, and that’s just rediculous.”  I told her that they don’t need to know that, and the answer of “She’s home with her children” is enough.  But since SHE’S sketchy about this whole thing, I don’t expect that will happen anytime soon, as she needs to convince herself.  So I thought I’d list some reasons.

Non-secular: I believe the Bible teaches about the parents teaching the kids, and training them in the way that they should go.  In all things in life, be in education, spiritual, and the basics of living in today’s world.  I cannot do that while not being home 11 hours a day.  I believe the Bible teaches that the wife is to create a “home” and life – the hub of it all working.  I believe that the Bible teaches that while we cleave to our husbands, we care for our extended families and parents.  I cleaved to my husband, but my parents are now reaching the age in which I have to be more “there” in their care.

Secular: Mom’s right.  I paid $1300 a month in order to maintain a job and be away from home 11 hours a day.  Until this point in Poe’s career, I made more money, and I had the health insurance.  I was the main breadwinner, and not being that was not an option.  That’s not the case anymore.  In addition, quite frankly, during the course of this job, my migraines got worse, and I developed a small hernia, GERD, and two small ulcers.  I do not believe that this is a coincidence.  I juggled my job, my marriage, my kids, my parents (all the typical relational stuff) in addition to juggling kids’ illnesses, my own illnesses, my husband’s illnesses, my mother nearly dying several times in the last couple of years, my brother’s suicide, my birth mother’s death, school conferences, IEP conferences, pediatrician appointments, dental appointments, cardiologist appointments, school plays, and being the editor of the school newspaper.

Bottom line?  I’m simplifying.  I’m creating the life that I want.  I’m 33 years old and wasn’t living the life that I wanted to live.  I am not an imbecile.  I know money is a reality.  But reality is also the fact that my kids and husband and parents need me.  That’s my reality.

I’m hoping this is it.  I’m hoping that now that it’s done, people will stop trying to make me justify my actions.  Actions speak louder than words, and my actions are saying a couple things.  My actions say I’m DONE.  My actions say that I am not a woman who can handle it “all.”  My actions say that I love my family more than my supposed “career.”  Yes, I was told that I loved my career more than my family at one point.  DUDE!  I was an assistant!  What career?  I did it!  I left!  and now I get to live my life, instead of subsisting weekend to weekend.

Do I think all women should be home with their families?  Actually, yes.  Yes I do.  I think that’s the ideal.  I really think the woman, the wife, the mother is the hub of all that happens in the home.  Do I think all women can?  Hell no!  I certainly couldn’t for the last ten years.  Are we suddenly independently wealthy?  Hell no!  We’re going to need to cut some things out of our life to actually make it.  That’s why I’ve started my business.  I want to be able to put money away for other things, such as retirement, vacations, and savings for the kids.

Let’s bottom line it.  I am not an idiot for leaving my job.  I wish people would stop trying to make me feel as though I am.  And also?  I need to forgive myself for not attaining it “all” as I was taught to have.  I was taught to go to school, and have a career, and have a career and a family.  To be a success first, and then have a family.  All you need is an education and a good career.  The family thing sort of happens on the sidelines – a side dish to your life of having it all.  It’s an illusion.  “All” gave me ulcers.

Do I worry?  You BET I worry.  Poe could get hit by a bus tomorrow, and then where will I be?  But when I brought that up?  All he said was, “Michele, if I get hit by a bus tomorrow, you know what you’ll do?  You’ll do what you have to do.  So let’s live now.”  I love that man.

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Wife. Mother. Daughter. Business owner. Please send coffee.

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