Misheru

11/30/2007

Sugar and Spice and Everything Nice

Filed under: General, Wee Naughties — site admin @ 3:38 pm

I haven’t posted for a while because my life has been, um, somewhat…dramatic. Here’s the short version:

*I’m helping out a refugee family from Iraq (quote of the week on this: “But why would there be refugees in Iraq?”)

*Ben left the water on in the bathtub about 10 days ago and flooded our house. I am almost done with cleanup, with contractors coming tomorrow to fix the baseboards and restretch the carpet.

*I had 10 people here for Thanksgiving and volunteered to cook for Ben’s school. Can we say, overstretching oneself?

*I started WeightWatchers and I spend most of my online time obsessively checking whether or not I can eat more, and arguing with the search box at www.weightwatchers.com that tells me what I can and can’t eat. It goes like this…

Missy’s Query: Chocolate Cake?
Search Box Answer: NO! NO NO NO NO NO

Missy’s Query: Truffles?
Search Box Answer: NO! NO NO NO NO NO

And so on.

So, there you have it. On the up side, I’ve been tweaking my site and I’ve added some new ads and a popular posts section. Now you can actually find the about me page…what a concept.

Hope everyone in cyberspace had a Happy Turkey Day. And now to ask the search box: Pumpkin Spice Latte? I wonder what the answer will be…

11/21/2007

I couldn’t have said it better…

Filed under: General, Politics, Babies, Serious, Ben/Maya, Money — site admin @ 10:45 am

I like to read a blog called Get Rich Slowly. It’s part of a set of personal finance blogs (PF blogs) that I have feeds for and read every day in my quest to save money and become more responsible. This particular article is a guest post by someone named Amanda, who is a tech writer in Colorado, and I have enjoyed several of her articles. I have tried in many ways to explain the way my life has changed since having children, but I think she has said it better here.

Once upon a time, my husband and I made almost $100,000 a year, had a mortgage payment of $900 a month for a house in a nice neighborhood, drove two new cars, had two cell phones, a full cable package, nice computer, went to a fancy gym with a sauna, ate out all the time, etc. etc. etc. Once upon a time, I had infinite free time and remodeled our kitchen for $2000, increasing the value of our starter home by $12,000.

Then came kids.

. . .

Two and a half years later:

* We have one car.
* I ride my bike to work.
* I use the free gym at work.
* I use the free banking at work.
* We have only basic cable.
* We drink only water.
* I bring my lunch.
* Our family eats out only when it fits in our budget.

We pay cash for everything, we plan all of our purchases, and we, strangely, have far more cash saved than we ever did when we made significantly more. Even stranger, I am happier now, with my costly kids and leftover lunches, than I ever was burning through money.

11/18/2007

Quote of the Week

Filed under: General, Politics, Wee Naughties — site admin @ 11:40 am

From Jon Stewart:

“My nipples spell out G-O-P.” (Oct. 16, 2007)

11/14/2007

From my chaste, married friend

Filed under: General, Pictures/Video, Wee Naughties — site admin @ 11:08 am

Who attends a conservative, Christian university… Okay, maybe “chaste” is a relative term.

11/7/2007

Sleeping together

Filed under: General, Babies, Ben/Maya — site admin @ 4:49 pm

The issue of sleeping with your child or baby is one of those heated parental issues that are hard to explain to those outside the arena, so to speak. It is sort of like the feeding schedule issue, with breast-on-demand parents freaking out about eating-on-a-strict schedule parents, and vice versa. I once read a book where the author implied that children not fed on a strict schedule would grow up to be criminals. If only it were that easy; we could feed the baby every 3 hours on the dot, and beat the crap out of them in the interim. Get the formula just right and everything falls into place.

Unfortunately, no matter how much parents might insist that “x” is the absolute way to do things (or how much non-parents might say, “I would never do “x”…”), the truth is that, as parents, we generally end up doing what works for us at the time with that particular child. I have long been irritated by the Dr. Phils of this world, with some such “warning” for parents on the dangers of a seemingly innocuous act, such as trying to get our kid to eat spinach, with sobbing adults claiming they now weigh 300 pounds because of that damned spinach. Really? It wasn’t all the pizzas you’ve eaten since?

Anyway, before I go down that rabbit trail and do what I do best (offend people), I want to say that I was slightly amused to see this article in the Health section of the New York Times. (The New York Times: not as fair and balanced as Rush Limbaugh, according to a family member, but still decent.) It appears that most people end up sleeping in the same bed with their children from time to time, despite not wanting to admit it.

I am an unapologetic co-sleeper. I bought co-sleepers for both kids, and I swear by them. I could hardly bear it when Ben went to the room next to us, the one whose door opens directly into ours. The one I CAN SEE INTO FROM MY BED. Maybe I was a tiny bit overprotective, but I just knew he was going to stop breathing one night and I, in my exhaustion, would not notice now that at least 8 feet lay between us. And the world as I knew it would end.

So yeah, I did the co-sleeping thing with Ben. Maya, on the other hand, went to her bed earlier, maybe because she sleeps soundly through the night, and has since she was about 5 months old. I am well aware of how strange and wonderful that is, because that other child I have? He waited until he was about 3 years old to do the same thing.

I know that a lot of people disagree with co-sleeping, but I happen to be a snuggler, and one of the hardest things about watching my kids get bigger is that the bigger they are, the less they snuggle. I’m sure there is a precise mathematical formula for this, such as (age of child)(1/exposure to evil liberal media)=(no. of snuggling years). But however many they are, there aren’t enough for me.

Bill Cosby did a great routine about co-sleeping, wherein the 18-year-old high school student was still sleeping in the bed. “Hey,” he tells him. “Here’s 20 bucks. Go get a pizza or something.”

But this is the real deal: they grow up so fast. And soon Ben will think that I am the uncoolest person in the world. And when that happens…he’ll be the one to pretend he doesn’t like snuggling with mom.

But I know…no matter how old he gets…a mom snuggle is still the best snuggle in the world.

Since she was an infant, my daughter, now in the third grade, has shared my bed and my sleep. I certainly never expected to be a “co-sleeping” parent, but sharing a bed was simply easier when she was a baby still breast-feeding, and getting her out of the bed as she got older has been next to impossible.

In most of the world, sleeping next to your child is a necessity: families of limited means live in cramped quarters. But in the affluent West, the practice is widely frowned on, not just by grandparents and friends, but by the medical community at large.

Still, it is far more common than many people think. Nearly 13 percent of parents in the United States slept with their infants in 2000, up from 5.5 percent in 1993, according to a report last month in the journal Infant and Child Development. Countless children start the night in their own beds, only to wake up a few hours later and pad into their parents’ bedrooms, crawling into the bed or curling up nearby on the floor.

Ask parents if they sleep with their kids, and most will say no. But there is evidence that the prevalence of bed sharing is far greater than reported. Many parents are “closet co-sleepers,” fearful of disapproval if anyone finds out, notes James J. McKenna, professor of anthropology and director of the Mother-Baby Behavioral Sleep Laboratory at the University of Notre Dame.

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