Showing posts with label birthday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birthday. Show all posts
January 12, 2015

It's Casper's first birthday today, yay! And in honor of that, I'm sharing his birth story for the first time, yay! And I didn't keep it short, so get cozy and settle in for storytime. It's a good one. (Yay!)

It was a cold Saturday morning in January and we needed groceries. We piled into the car and picked up where we left off with our well-established car ride conversation: baby names. We asked each other if we were leaning more toward boy or girl today (we could both picture it going either way) and confirmed our top name choices for each gender, still leaving room for last-minute changes, because we never like to close that door. A new name could hit at any moment. That’s how we roll. 

Since we only make the trek to the city grocery stores every couple weeks, I was pretty sure this would be the last trip with only one little in the backseat. My due date was the next day, but because Hadley was born 8 days past her due date, I wasn’t planning on labor starting any time soon. Maybe by the middle of next week or something. Anyway, knowing this would probably be my last chance at a coffee from Caribou for awhile I decided, “I’m definitely getting one today. Dairy and all. I’m celebrating.” Inside the store, as I grabbed my cup from the coffee counter, a couple of ladies noticed my belly and asked when I was due. “Tomorrow!” I answered triumphantly. I was dying for someone to ask me that question today because it made the baby's coming feel so real and imminent. I walked the aisles of the store and saw people going about their oh-so-regular Saturdays and that made me feel good. Little did they all know, I was due in a matter of hours. I liked waddling around with my coffee and my 9-month belly zipped up tight inside my winter coat, carrying my little on the brink of having a baby secret.


We made the 45 minute drive home, put away the groceries, and spent the rest of the day hanging out, doing the normal nap time routine for Hadley, picking up the house, and I think I may have baked some cookies. Ever since we finished up Christmas-ing my mind had switched over into baby mode. I routinely walked around the house, moving things from one room to another, grabbing onesies or blankets to stash somewhere handy. We were planning another home birth, so I had brought a basket of newborn things and my big exercise ball up to our bedroom. I also had a hospital bag packed, in case we decided to go in. I never gave the date a second thought as we went about the day, but when it was time for bed Grant and I joked about tomorrow being "the day.” Neither of us ever expected anything to really happen. And we certainly didn’t anticipate that we only had a few hours of sleep ahead of us.

I woke up at 2:45 am (Sunday, January 12 — the due date) and sat up in bed. My water had broken. Ok. My water broke. Right? That’s what this is? Already this labor was looking very different from Hadley’s (my water didn’t break until she was being born). I sat in disbelief for a second or two and woke Grant to let him know what I thought had just happened. As I waited for any contractions to start, I thought about how I had basically spent the whole day nesting yesterday, naively thinking we still had a week to wait. Everything we needed to do to get ready to have a baby was done. What a gift! The Lord gave us such a peaceful day of prep. Looking back, I'm so glad that only He knows how the labor timeline is going to play out- I would have been nervous and anxious if I had known how little time we had. 

I got up to go to the bathroom and wrap my head around my water breaking. I mean, that's like how labor starts in the movies! I never thought I'd have that dramatic kick-off experience, but here it is! When I came back to bed, we thought we better try and get a little more sleep if we could. Of course, that was not happening. Both of us were awake and the contractions started like clockwork. I am a terrible sleep-through-contractions girl. They were already coming about every 5-10 minutes, but they were not very long or strong. Those sensations... they're very convincing. You know them in a moment. You know what they're up to. Even though they aren't at all easy, they somehow feel natural, like something you have to accept. I think that's why labor pain is so different for me than any other pain- it's not a hurt to try to staunch or an injury being inflicted on me- there's nothing to fight. You just have to bear it. 

We finally came around to the idea that the birth was probably going to happen today (which was so strange for us since Hadley’s labor was stretched out over several days) so we got out of bed and Grant started filling up the birth pool and getting other things ready. I wasn’t sure what to do with myself, but so many girls talk about a hot shower feeling good during labor, so I opted for that. The contractions weren’t strong enough for me to really need relief yet, and probably were only lasting 30-45 seconds, but I hopped in the shower anyway. And since things weren’t feeling too bad yet, I went ahead and got myself all ready for the day. I wanted to stay busy, and I'm a pro at passing time with the blowdryer. I put my earrings in and thought about how funny it would be to keep them in all through labor and maybe I’d still be wearing them while holding my new baby. (I was.) Crazy, I thought. And crazy that earrings are part of the thought life during labor. Anyway, hair dried, earrings and contacts in, warm clothes on, I carried on with the business of contracting.


At 6:45 am we called our midwife to let her know what was up. We had a little chat and she said she’d be over in a couple hours. I was calm because labor was feeling very familiar and predictable. I had been nervous that my second labor would be more swift and powerful, so I was glad that things seemed to be shuffling along pretty slowly. I sat on the big exercise ball next to our bed and used a contraction timer app to keep track, bouncing through them as they came. Things were steady in the sense that I knew this wouldn’t fade away into false labor, but also sporadic when it came to frequency and duration. Grant sat in our bed and typed away at his laptop, making notes for a substitute teacher. He was planning to take a week off to be at home with us, so he hurriedly got things ready for his class. We knew that Hadley would be waking up soon, so Grant called his parents to ask if she could spend the day with them, because it looked like we'd be busy the rest of the day (wink, wink). They are always so ready to help, and we were so grateful. After Hadley got up, Grant got her dressed and packed a bag, and Grandpa came to pick her up right away. 

Erika arrived at 9:00 am and checked me over. Everything looked good, contractions were still happening regularly, but laboring had become less intense as the morning went on. I felt a little discouraged and aimless. Like I had lost sight of the end. The hardest part of labor for me is not knowing the timeline- not knowing how much longer I have to bear the weight of the work and make my strength last. Erika told us the baby was a bit posterior and it’s normal to see the pattern of labor be sporadic like mine until the baby gets turned around. She asked me where I was feeling most of the cramping and tightening when I was having a contraction and I told her it was mostly in the front part of my belly. I answered eagerly because I knew right away that was something to be encouraged about. And I was looking for encouragement! She said that was good and that my body was doing exactly what it should be doing. I’m guessing I would have been having more back pain if the baby had been truly posterior. She mentioned a few things to try to help the baby move into position and told us that once things are all lined up, they probably won’t slow down- the end could come quickly. I was feeling strangely sleepy, so I decided to get back in bed and lay on my left side to help the baby turn and try to rest at the same time. Grant used this window of time to make a quick trip to his school to finish preparations for a substitute teacher. 

By the time Grant got back (maybe 11:00), I was up and bouncing on the ball again, feeling more awake and contractions were coming steadily 5-10 minutes apart and lasting about 45 seconds. I switched back and forth between kneeling low on the ground, resting my arms up on the ball (letting gravity help the baby turn) and sitting on top of the ball. I read through the handful of promise cards that I had picked for such a time as this. The verse I was clinging to more than any other was Isaiah 41:10 - "Do not be afraid, for I am with you. Do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with the right hand of my righteousness." These were the words that I could still summon to my mind, even in the deepest parts of labor. Or at least the first 9 of them. As John Piper says, "When my mind is in neutral, the hum of the gears is the sound of Isaiah 41:10." That is how I felt that day. I'm so thankful to the Lord for giving me His powerful promise to call to mind when I needed it most.


During the 11 o'clock hour, I felt my mind fill with enthusiasm for the goal. No longer feeling bereft or stuck, I wanted to keep working toward the harder parts ahead. And I was glad I had a chance to feel like this before being engulfed in the mental fog of late labor. Erika checked the baby’s heart rate and position regularly and I was so encouraged because contractions were getting longer and closer, and the baby was moving! I could feel the spine that had been nestled into my side gradually work its way toward the middle of my belly. Around noon, I felt things intensify and my adrenaline kicking in. My legs always get so shaky when I get to this point. (my fingers are starting to get shaky and my teeth a little chattery just remembering this part!) It was around this time that I remembered something that I wanted to do differently with this baby: I went into Hadley’s birth with an empty stomach and low energy and felt so weak for days afterwards. Birth really does take a stockpile of strength. So I tried to get in as much nourishment as I could take in between contractions. I drank coconut kefir and ate a couple clementines and some scrambled eggs that Grant brought upstairs for me. I talked with Erika and Grant when contractions weren’t bothering me. I started to need more coping methods during the peak points of the pain- my main one was pulling on Grant’s arm as hard as I could. The ball was still my best friend, too. I bounced and pulled, bounced and pulled. I wasn’t timing things anymore. I was absorbed in the work. Just doing what needed to be done. 

I remember looking around our bedroom and getting the sense that Erika was watching me very carefully now. She was not talking, but she was gauging me and worked quickly making preparations around the room. Clearly, she could see I had switched over into the last stages. Erika doesn't check dilation unless there is a reason to, in order to prevent infection, so I wasn't sure how "close" I was, but it was at that point that I realized, I can get in the pool! I like to save that until I really really need it, like when I feel overwhelmed, but it hit me that I'm probably at that point. In fact, I may not even have that much left. Whoa. I told Grant and Erika I thought I was ready for the pool and by 1:00, I was in. The water was soothing, especially to my shaky legs. It didn't take away the pain, but it helped me relax and feel more capable and in control. I felt excited about getting to this benchmark and was waiting to be convinced by the power of contractions about far along we were. I was hopeful that the end was near, but still had no idea how much longer it might be. I sat by the side of the pool, in the exact same spot I had claimed when laboring with Hadley, laying my head on the wall and holding Grant’s hand. I was quiet. My mind was blank except for the work I was doing. Moving around (rocking, bouncing) and praying Isaiah 41:10 throughout contractions was still my go-to coping mechanism. Only half an hour later, I felt the switch from regular contractions to pushing contractions. For me, these feelings are less desperate. They're effective. From that point on, I could feel the baby moving down with each contraction/push. Erika kept checking the baby and me regularly and things looked good- very close. Grant kept praying over me and letting me pull on his arm. I pushed for quite awhile apparently, but it didn't feel like a long time to me at all. It felt like seriously strenuous work, but without the sense of dire urgency that you see on tv. Because there wasn't anyone telling me, "push!", there was no rush. It felt purposeful, slow, and steady, which was what I wanted.

At 2:47 pm (exactly 12 hours after my water broke), our Casper was born! Grant pulled him up to me and we held him in the pool for awhile. He was a perfect peachy pink from the moment he came out. He was never bluish or purplish. His eyes were very alert and he was calm. He didn’t have much hair, but the little bit he had was blond. He was so adorably round- faced and just the right size, with a the cutest nose and full, rosy lips! I have so many sweet memories of our first week with him. Sleepy, cozy, quiet, snowy. We sat for hours, camped on the couch, just admiring his newness and perfection, passing him back and forth and nestling his tiny body on big pillows. Casper Job. Our little winter baby. Our son. We are so glad you're here and so thankful to the Lord! We love you.



June 23, 2014

-- Here are a few pics from Hadley's very first summer at camp. 
(she moved out to camp when she was 8 days old and we were there through her first 2 months!)-- 


Awww! Remember when she looked like that? My sweet, energetic, imaginative girl is 3 years old now! She had a birthday last Monday. Her gifts this year were some new puzzles and a balance bike!

I can hardly make the connection between these precious pics of a tiny human I was just getting to know and the little girl-lady Hadley is today. We know every nook and cranny of her 3 year old character now. She's an enthusiastic greeter (shaking hands with everyone at church) with her own language and a huge imagination. She loves to run up and say hi to everyone she sees while shouting their name, whether they really exist or not. (Mom! Dad! Grandma! Mickey! Sophia! Tinkerbell!) She always acts like it has been ages since she has seen you. She's also a skilled actress and doer of puzzles. She's got a great memory and a deep love for her baby brother, wearing sunglasses, chips and salsa or guacamole, and fruit of all kinds. This summer she's a busy little camp-wanderer and just discovered somersaults and Sophia the First. A few of her numerous interests are books, capital letters, mail boxes, traffic lights and stop signs, animals, gardens, all kinds of produce at the grocery store, balls, babies, flowers, lotion, and anything at a desk or in a kitchen. Some of her current catch phrases are:

"Booyah!"
"Pixie dust, away!"
"Mom? I need... hmm... let me think..."
"Ohh, so nice!"
"Chap-oss!" (Casper)
"Uh-oh, I gotta go potty."
"I so much!" (I missed you so much!)
"Mom, can I have have apple ee peanut bubba?" 
"Sing Jesus Wuve Me So"

She's the best! I love her.

April 24, 2014

As I start out on a new year, I’m loving these radical thoughts: 

If death were the end of the matter, what makes sense is middle-class moderation to maximize earthly pleasures. But it's not! Does the hope of the resurrection shape my life? Do I make decisions on the basis of gain in this world or gain in the next? Do I take risks for love’s sake that can only be explained as wise if there is a resurrection? — paraphrased from the Solid Joys app

I'm guilty of putting comfort as my priority so terribly often. I want my life to be more than this. More than maximizing earthly pleasures. I'm praying that my deepest delight will be found in Him- in loving Him, keeping His commands, and living like Jesus did.



Some birthday pics with my babies! Ohhh, their little faces. This is true life. And I love it. I'm keeping these forever and ever!

And a couple pics from the night time celebration with Daddy and cake and presents. Grant had class that night, but we still snuck in a quick candle-lighting before the kids went to bed. (Not pictured is the ice cream I ate after the kids were asleep.) And Hadley sang Happy Birthday to me all by herself!

April 22, 2014

I'm writing this on the eve of my birthday, because I'm not sure if there will be time to stop and jot it down tomorrow. The night before my birthday I like to straighten the house, empty the kitchen sink, fold my clothes neatly, and generally do all the things. I think it's my attempt at a "perfect" day- where all the work is done the night before. :) Birthdays just make me want to get all my affairs in order. Speaking of which, I want to record where I'm at in life right now. A real diary entry. I like to do this every year and always hope I can think of things that I will look back on and laugh about someday. 

  • Right now I'm at the computer desk with a jar of almond butter and a banana. 
  • I'm wearing yoga pants and a zip-up hoodie because that's my uniform.
  • My hair is in a pony tail and it's the longest it's ever been! No bangs, and not really any layers. My toe nails are blue.
  • I just got done trimming Grant's neck and now he's finishing the rest of his haircut.
  • It's 8:49 and my son (3 months) and daughter (2.8 years) are sleeping. They are my job and my joy. Somedays, it's easy to forget one or the other.
  • I'm listening to a playlist that's a mix of Andy McKee, Nat King Cole, and the soundtrack from the movie Sabrina, but I've really been loving John Mayer's older albums lately.
  • Our computer is humming at the moment because we're importing a bunch of old home videos from my childhood.
  • Signs of aging: I went to Target and only shopped the kids' clothes. I take magnesium, talk about retirement funds and life insurance with my husband, and I need new bath towels. 
  • My birthday requests this year: coconut milk ice cream and a pair of jeans that fit me. Also, there will probably be a big bowl of guacamole while watching a movie with my favorite guy. 
  • Plans for the near future: buy/borrow a baby carrier, go to the dentist, hang some stuff on our walls (finally!), and support Grant through his upcoming eye surgery and the busy month of May. 
  • In the past year I think I've gotten better at: thawing meat in time for dinner. 
  • In the next year I want to get better at: trusting Him, not getting angry, not judging, world geography.
  • I feel rich when: the fridge is loaded with avocados, my husband is home and his evening is free, the silverware drawer is full of clean forks and spoons, the promises of God are proven faithful in our life.
  • Guilty pleasures: long showers, good typography, negative space, uninterrupted time to do creative things, British dramas, the dark chocolate lover's bar from Trader Joe's, Parks and Recreation, word games, coconut oil on everything, the Oscars. 
  • This is the latest picture of me. (Half of me, that is.) Casper and I took a nap together (which never happens) and I woke up first!
  • I'm currently reading 7 by Jen Hatmaker and loving it. I'm ready to start recycling and purging our house. 
  • I've started keeping a quote book and it's filling up fast. There's a lot of John Piper in it already. 
  • We don't have cable this year. And it's been great. How did we have time for it before?
  • I'm making this maple mustard chicken and these roasted Brussels sprouts for my birthday dinner.
  • We still only have one car -- the same car! It's been a blessing. 
  • About Time is my favorite recently-seen movie. 
  • We are planning on living and working at Camp Shetek again this summer! Actually, Grant will be the only one "on staff" this year, and I'll be full-time mom and wifey. 
  • And lastly, but certainly the most powerful thing to note: Jesus. He is keeping me, teaching me, loving me. He has been made more real to me in this year. I love Him better than I did before, because I see that I need Him more, and more and more. Everyday, I need Him more. Jesus, keep on making me grow up in You. Let this be a year of Your glory.   

Jeremiah 32:38-41 And they shall be my people, and I will be their God. I will give them one heart and one way, that they may fear me forever, for their own good and the good of their children after them. I will make with them an everlasting covenant, that I will not turn away from doing good to them. And I will put the fear of me in their hearts, that they may not turn from me. I will rejoice in doing them good, and I will plant them in this land in faithfulness, with all my heart and all my soul.


Happy, happy birthday to my twin sister Haley! She is my first friend and one of the greatest gifts in my life. I love every thing about this girl and am so grateful I get to do life with her.

January 15, 2014



Hello, everybody! I cannot believe that I'm back already with our baby news. I was so sure my due date would come and go without anything to report! But the Lord's timing is perfect. It's a boy! Meet Casper. He arrived at our house on Sunday afternoon, January 12th (the due date!) and both of us are doing so great. Praise Jesus! You guys, he is amazing. I'll give another update soon, but basically the news for the next while is going to be that I'm on the couch cuddling my son. In the meantime, hugs all around and I've got some recipe posts all pre-written and ready to go for you! Back soon!
September 27, 2013
As we were getting ready to head upstairs for bed I realized it: it was the blog's anniversary this week. 
I've been blogging for 5 years now. 
1, 039 posts! 

So, today I sat down and took a commemorative selfie at the dear old desk where it all happens. (out of sight: my round 25-week baby tummy) I always blog at the desk. It's the only place that feels right. I wonder how many mornings and mugs have been spent and sipped at the desk in this 5-year blog span. How much typing and photo editing have I done during those mornings? (and sometimes nights?) Whatever the amount- it's been a fun privilege. 5 years together, little blog! It's no big deal, but it is a big deal. Because it made me stop and ask myself, "Has it been worth the hours I've put in?" 
And my answer is yes. 

The past 5 years have been a season in my life when I could blog, so I did. And it has helped me embrace God's plans for my life, the spiritual and material gifts that He has given to me, and the purpose for which I was created: to reflect the beauty and the wonder of His ways. It has been a tool for creating relationships and opportunities that I wouldn't have otherwise. It's also been a practical place to store family memories and my recipes (I honestly do pull up my blog recipes on the iPad when I'm making dinner). And it certainly has helped me avoid an idle mind. I hope that the blog lives on for as long as it gives glory to the One who made me. 
"For from Him and through Him and to Him are all things."
Romans 11:36

And now is when I get to reminisce about all the life that has happened outside the Blogger "Compose" box and all the good that has come from within it. It all started on September 25, 2008. Isn't it nice that with a blog, you can go back to an actual day and time when it began? There is a concrete starting point- an opening day. You can read all about my opening day right here. That was a big feeling. I had no idea where it was going or how long it would last. I remember the first few weeks being very preoccupied with comments and site traffic. Comments were like gold (and let's face it- they still are) and I always hoped, with each time I pressed "Publish" that this post would strike gold. I woke up each morning and had no idea what I was going to blog about that day. I've loved that about my blog- it has stayed super spontaneous and unscheduled. It's sincere, in that whatever I post about on a certain day, is truly what I'm most anxious to talk to someone about. Speaking of which, I came across this quote from C.S. Lewis which so perfectly captures why I like to blog so much:

   I think we delight to praise what we enjoy because the praise not merely expresses but completes the enjoyment; it is its appointed consummation. It is not out of compliment that lovers keep on telling one another how beautiful they are; the delight is incomplete till it is expressed.

There it is! I praise what I enjoy because the delight is incomplete until it is expressed in praise. In essence, until I tell someone else about it... or blog about it. If I wasn't allowed to speak about what I value and celebrate, what I love and praise and admire, my joy could not be full. If I wasn't able to tell you guys about my new-found recipes, my delight in them wouldn't be completely full.  (thoughts originating from John Piper's daily devotional app)

So thank you guys, for simply being there to hear me praise the things I'm loving from day to day. You help make my joy full. So many of you guys have been here from the very start! You might remember some of these things that have happened since the blog began...

I learned how to keep house as a newlywed in our first apartment.
I adapted to living in a small town. Over time.
I realized how much I love cooking/baking, and made my first apple pie.
We bought a house.
We bought some stocks.
We bought a dslr camera and I got really interested in taking pictures of food.
I started eating a lot better and getting way less picky.
I ran my first 5K.
We went to a Vikings game- my first ever NFL experience.
I got to sell postcards with my dear friend Marta.
I fell in love with real food and we completely changed the way we buy groceries/eat.
I got pregnant with our first baby.
I got a job doing freelance blogging for a food company.
I took my little sister's senior pictures.
Grant got his master's degree.
We went to Disney World.
I talked a lot how much I love Elisabeth Elliot, food, and having music wherever I go.
I did a ton of baking.
I gave birth to our little girl at home.
We spent 5 summers at Camp Shetek.
We experienced like 38 Minnesota blizzards.
I learned how to nurse a baby/toddler.
I did the GAPS diet, Grant did a form of the GAPS diet, and we both got a lot of healing.
I got really into probiotics and coconut oil and bone broth and magnesium oil.
We started making our own sauerkraut, pickles, and kombucha.
I read a lot of good books. (Unbroken, The Hunger Games, The Shaping of a Christian Family, etc.)
Both of my sisters got married.
I opened up my own tiny online shop.
I did some more baking.
I got pregnant with our second baby.
We got rid of cable.
We went to our nation's capital and I got my first Metro experience.
I discovered almond butter.
I designed blog headers and custom prints for some of you guys!
We bought 3 different Apple computers and an iPad.
I sold hundreds of sets of 50 Promises to nearly every state in the USA.
Grant started more schooling to get his principal's license.
I've made 800 or so lists, about anything and everything.
And I made friends with all of you guys!!!!
And I've re-connected with old friends rom elementary school, from high school, from camp, from growing up in Nebraska, from when I lived in Texas!
And I did some more baking.
And a lot more stuff that doesn't make it onto the blog because... we keep a lot of family stuff just in our family. :)

Thanks for an awesome 5 years, you guys!!!
I'll be back at this desk next week. See you then! Have a great weekend!
April 22, 2013

I woke up early and excited this morning, of course, because today is my birthday! And I want to wish a very happy birthday to my awesome twin sister, Haley! It still blows me away that we were in the womb together. Insane.

The night before my birthday I like to straighten the house, empty the kitchen sink, fold my clothes neatly, and generally do all the things. So I did that last night. I think it's my attempt at a "perfect" day- where all the work is done the night before. :) Birthdays just make me want to get all my affairs in order. Anyway, now that I'm sitting here at the desk, things are in order, and it's the morning of my birthday, I just want it to last and last. But since that won't happen, I'm going to record what's going on and where I'm at in life right now. A real diary entry. I hope I can think of things that I will laugh about someday.


  • My hair is longish, layered, and no bangs. My nails are a minty turquoise color, and so are my toenails. 
  • Signs of aging: I wear inserts in my tennis shoes. I take supplements and get lots of sleep. I weigh less than I did in high school. I look different than my wedding pictures. And I've forgotten almost all of my foreign language vocab/grammar. (See also: what I did with an afternoon off and what I may use my birthday money on. Found below.)
  • This week I have been wondering about getting bangs again. I've been showing Grant pictures of possibilities. 
  • I have my slippers and black leggings on. Which has been my daily wear this entire winter. 
  • My day started out with a reading a devotional with Grant in bed, texting my twin, then rescuing a soaked toddler from her crib and popping her in the tub, then a phone call from Mom and Grandma.
  • I ate a birthday breakfast of orangey pancakes and eggs.
  • We're going to be living and working at Camp Shetek again this summer! Praise the Lord!
  • I recently bought some clothes on Instagram, my first ever #closetsale purchases.
  • There's more school on the horizon for Grant!
  • We're refinancing our house on Thursday. We still only have one car and we still have stock in Apple. 
  • My little shop has been fun, fun. It's still going strong! We just had to re-order more 50 Promises. And I'm daydreaming up a new set of memory cards for the future. 
  • It's snowing!!! It has never snowed on my birthday before! They're predicting 4 inches today and 2 more inches tonight!
  • Possibly spending some birthday money on... a 5 lb. bag of sprouted rolled oats, magnesium oil, a good maxi skirt, or new sunglasses. I'm part foodie, part old lady, and part twenty-something with a soft spot for Target. 
  • I just had to get my 3rd drivers' license since moving to Minnesota 5 years ago. 
  • Hadley is so cool. She has the heartiest laugh you've ever heard from someone her size. She knows almost all the letters of the alphabet. She likes to say "Is that a DUCK?!" Right now she is playing with an animal sounds app on the iPad. 
  • We're "going out" to celebrate my birthday this weekend, since it is going to be snowy tonight and any restaurant worth going to is far, far away. (Plus, it's a school night.)
  • When we get to the city this weekend, we'll probably do some thrifting, eat some coconut fried bananas at The Brazilian Grill, and see a movie. 
  • I'm debating between making tacos or curry for my b-day dinner tonight, also trying to decide between birthday cake or cookies. 
  • Grant gave me the afternoon off this past Saturday as part of my birthday gift. I used the time to clean the bathrooms, dust for cobwebs, soak in the tub, paint my nails, make cookies, and practice the piano. I like a good mix of work and play. (It's amazing how fast you can be when you're the only one in your house. I was racing up and down steps and flying through my to-do list.) 
  • I cannot wait to go out to the mailbox today.
  • The Lord is teaching me. About loving Him best. About nibbling at the table of the world. About taking refuge in Him and what it means to "fear" Him. About today's mercies being for today's troubles. And most of all, about how He keeps us from the "pit", in our case this has meant a place of complacency, pride, and self-reliance that would lead to a wasted life.
  • It's been a great year; the Lord has saved us greatly. And I only hope that I can love Him better than all of His good gifts to me throughout my life. 


(It was so bright out!) 

P.S. Because it's my birthday, and because I love you guys, and because I think designing blog headers is super fun, and because we're still snowed inside.... Blog Headers are going ON SALE! This week, a custom blog header is only $15. Yay! $15 for a custom blog banner designed specially for you, by me, where I provide at least 3 design options for you to choose from. Email me if you're interested! summer.harms@gmail or use the contact form in my shop.


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about this blog

Hello, I'm Summer. A people-loving introvert whose hope and life is in Jesus. His promises are my passion and my ministry is homelife. This blog is a place for me to write about everyday things. Especially food. My favorite thing to do is sit around a table, lingering over a long meal with good conversation. I live with my husband and our 2 littles. We like blizzards, thrifting, grammar, guacamole, cheerful hearts, nice manners, good movies, and making simple, real, nutrient-dense food.

"If Christ be anything, He must be everything."
-C.H. Spurgeon

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