1) Pipes breaking /flu - We experienced another Tender Mercy this week. In the middle of the night before Monday morning I woke up with the chills, which quickly progressed to the stomach flu. I quickly became too exhausted to care for Calder when he'd wake up nurse, so Scott would bring Cal to me and put him back to bed after I fed him. Generally Calder goes immediately to sleep after eating at night, but this night he was fussy and unsettled most of the night, so Scott rocked him and soothed him for quite a while after each feeding. Scott brought Calder down to the basement playroom where they wouldn't disturb anyone, and Scott thought he heard the faucet running in the bathroom down there. When he went in to turn it off he was greeted instead by sheets of water flowing down the walls and puddles on the floor. A pipe had broken and the ceiling and walls were filling with water! He switched off the water main and cleaned up the standing water. So although there wasn't water flowing down the walls anymore, we were without water for the next 12 hours. Try not to think too much about how awful it is to have the flu without running water in the house, because it will totally gross you out.
Thankfully Scott caught the problem as early as he did! If I hadn't been sick, and Calder had a more normal night where he slept well, Scott would not have been pacing the house with Calder and heard the water. If he hadn't heard the water in the middle of the night it would have probably taken all day for me to notice it. Once the kids were up it would have been too loud to hear the water, and we probably wouldn't have gone down to the playroom again until after the boys were home from school that afternoon -- at least 10 hours after Scott discovered it. The damage was minimal, a plumber was (miraculously) available to come fix it that morning, and all while the homeowner was on vacation in Florida.
2) Valentines day at school - Joseph and Ian anticipated this Valentines day more than ever before. I found some printable cards online and put them together the night before. The boys desperately wanted to pour the Jelly Beans in by themselves, but since we were low on Jelly Beans (*ahem*, Scott) I needed to do the portions to conserve what we had left. They both had parties in class and loved passing out the Valentines to their friends and Tobelerone to their teachers. (When I asked Ian which teachers he wanted to include, he named about ten people, from the headmaster to the assistant gym teacher, to the front desk receptionist.) Fortunately their parties were on separate days so they could share the one red shirt they own. Joseph was thrilled that, as an all-day student in preschool, he got to take part in both the morning and afternoon parties!
3) Branch party - Our branch held an activity on Valentines day with an Italian dinner, loads of desserts, cookies to decorate and a message about love by Brother Haynie. There was a great turn out, and as always, our kids had a ball running around like wild animals.
4) I made Helen's hair into two braids this week and she absolutely loved it. She pointed her "braves" out to strangers at the grocery story, sangs songs about them in the car "I'm a big girl because I have two 'braves' in my hair today!", and admired them in the mirror every chance she got. She wore them three days in a row in different variations, and insisted I braid her hair for church today so she could show them to her friend Scarlett.
5) Slushy snow on Sunday -- We had freezing rain this morning, along with large pellets of hail. The wind was blowing so hard that the hail was really painful when it hit my bare legs and face. There were 12 inches of slush on the unplowed roads when we drove to church. The church parking lot was plowed during church, leaving a bank of snow behind the minivan. Scott couldn't get out until Bro. Haynie gave a push from the front end. Getting up our cul-de-sac also presented problems -- Scott said it took 10 minutes and approximately 1 million attempts to make it through the slush to our driveway. Fortunately I fared much better in the black car with four-wheel drive, although I took Columbus drive to bring the Cumby's home from church and the route that usually takes less than 10 minutes took nearly twenty in those conditions.
Our cul-de-sac with Scott's tracks -- notice how they are going sideways and every-which-way in an effort to make it up to our house!
6) When Scott arrived at church with the kids, the branch president had just discovered there was no bread for the Sacrament. Since we live the closest to the church building he asked Scott to run home and get some bread. Scott left the kids sitting in the pew with Krista Hancock (I was out picking up another family) and went home to find that we only had two slices and two heels, so he went to the Irving station and bought a loaf of bread. When I arrived at church a few minutes later and he told me all I had missed, I broke the news to him -- since I'd only brought in the cold items after a recent shopping trip, we had a loaf of bread in the trunk of the car he'd been driving the whole time!
8) Dinner with Mostafa and Missionaries -- During our first year in Newfoundland we fed the missionaries (generally one of two sets of Elders) every single Thursday. We've been out of the habit since moving last spring, but in an effort to get back into it we invited our friend Mostafa, a recent convert, and the Elders in Conception Bay South to dinner on Thursday. I made french dip sandwiches and some really nasty vegan short bread cookies with ganache. They were colored with beet juice, and looked and tasted horrible.
9) Ian lost his beloved "brown" tooth last Sunday! It has been loose for weeks, and for a few days he had been able to turn it sideways in his mouth and leave it that way. But after all the apple-eating, tying it to a doorknob, wiggling it while Scott knocked Ian's arm, and working it with his tongue for hours every night in bed, it finally came out at bedtime. (His teeth usually come out at bedtime -- its the ultimate stall technique.) The tooth was dead because I accidentally pushed Ian into our backyard fence in Texas during a game of octopus tag almost two years ago. The Tooth Fairy allowed Ian to keep his tooth in this case, because it was such a special tooth. Ian received a Toonie (worth two dollars Canadian) under his pillow. Not bad!
10) I have a disability when it comes to hanging pictures on the wall. If I can manage to buy a frame, I don't get around to printing a picture for it (which is ridiculous because I take so many pictures!) If I manage to buy a frame and put a picture in it, it will lean against the wall where I want to hang it for months or years as I debate whether it's the best spot, until we move, or someone breaks the glass and I have to start all over. But! This week I bought frames for some prints by the lovely Sarah Nielsen, and actually hung them! I love how they look hanging over Calders bassinet. Perhaps now Cal will recognize the Texas landscape when we ever make it back to the Lone Star state.
1 comments:
I'm so glad you are posting again! I love reading your updates. And, I have the same picture-hanging disability. :)
Post a Comment