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We’re Home!

It was a long trip (with no carsickness!), but the kids are already happily digging in the dirt in the back yard, a friend is running to TJ’s for me to pick up some milk and eggs, and Susie is currently pulling everything out of our play kitchen.  Now Derek and I just have to do a couple dozen loads of laundry and put a thousand things away, and things will be back to normal.

 

Watermelon

Hillsdale, with kids

Now that so many of our Hillsdale friends are back working at the College, it’s a reunion every time we get back to campus.  Last week, we got to stay with the Coles and Millers!  It’s so fun to see our kids playing together now–a second generation of Hillsdale friendships!

Eight Cole-Muller-Miller kids, in age order. Note that all the boys are taller than the next older girl.  And that the recalcitrant child in the middle, spoiling the effect of smiling faces, belongs to me.

How Do You Do It?

Seems like I’ve gotten this question a lot: “You have three kids, and you take care of them all day, every day? How do you do it?” I tend to say something generic, like that it gets easier with practice.  And it does!  I’ve made so many mistakes that I won’t make again.  But for the benefit of my friends who are just starting out, here are a few specific things that I’ve found helpful over the years.

  • Our family puts a big premium on sleep.  In our experience, well-rested parents have an easier time showing patience to their children and each other.  Well-rested children are less crabby and more likely to obey.  So our parenting style focuses on training our kids to be independent sleepers.  We have predictable naps and early bedtimes (6:30 pm for baby, 7:30 pm for big kids).  Everyone sleeps in his own bed.  We try to keep exceptions (skipped naps, staying out late) to a minimum, and we build in a recovery day afterwards.
  • As I’ve mentioned before, we function well with a predictable routine.  (This is not to be confused with the rigid scheduling of programs like Babywise.)  We have predictable mealtimes and naptimes, and I plan social outings and errands around them.  We can be flexible by an hour or so either direction, but we are always home in the afternoon for naps.  The girls always take a nap after lunch.  We have the same bedtime routine every night, and the kids pretty much go down without a fuss most nights.
  • I try to warn the kids when we’re going to have to shift gears.  At the park or a friend’s house, I try to tell them “5 more minutes” and “2 more minutes” so that they can wind down what they’re doing.  Sometimes they’ve wound down between the first and second warning and are actually ready to go before I’ve even said, “Time to go!”  So many of Tommy’s early tantrums happened because I suddenly announced that we had to leave.  We still have tantrums sometimes, but the warnings have cut them drastically.
  • We also build a lot of home time into our week.  Actually, this was a struggle this semester, when all my friend-making activities panned out and I found myself over-committed, but I’ll be dropping most of them for next year.  While my kids love trips to the park or play dates with friends, they also love spending an entire morning coloring with markers, setting up a city with matchbox cars, or digging a ditch in our back yard.  I think we’re able to stay home happily with very limited TV (once or twice a month unless someone is sick) because we have toys that are open-ended for imaginative play rather than a bunch of battery-operated contraptions that only do one thing.  And I admit that this is much easier in SoCal, where we play outside almost every day, than in PA, where I spent months reading countless books on snowy and rainy days.
  • I don’t do much of the house tidying.  From about 18 months on, I train the kids to pick up after themselves.  I’ve found that when it looks like a toy bomb has exploded in the living room, it helps to divide the cleaning-up into discrete tasks.  Usually I’ll give each of the big kids three specific tasks: “Tommy, your first task is to clean up the cars, then the second task is to clean up the blocks, then the third task is to clean up the trains.  Lizzie, your first task is to clean up the play kitchen, then your second task is to put the books back on the shelf, then your third task is to put the baby toys in a bin.”  If I stay in the room, folding towels or loading the dishwasher and monitoring progress (giving praise when a task is completed and encouragement when someone is lagging), this can usually be accomplished in 10-15 minutes.  (If I give the command and then leave to take a shower or compose a blog post, things can take considerably more time.) We generally do this twice a day when we’re home all day or just after dinner if we’ve been out.  If everyone completes their tasks quickly, we read books as a reward.  Since the kids do the tidying, that frees me up to get to sweeping and vacuuming.
  • But our house is not as neat and clean as it used to be.  When I just had Tommy, every book and toy was in place when not in use, the bathrooms were cleaned every week, and you could have eaten off my kitchen floor.  Susie still eats off the kitchen floor, but I don’t recommend it to others.  I have other priorities, and sometimes they include checking facebook to have a few minutes of adult interaction in the day!  After both the girls were born, I was extremely blessed with the gift of cleaning ladies.  My dream is to be able to afford a cleaning lady on a regular basis.  But until that happens, we muddle through with dusty baseboards and grimy windows.
  • I’ve lowered my expectations of what I can accomplish in a day or a week.  I have two designated laundry days and go grocery shopping once a week (with an occasional extra run out if we’re low in milk and eggs).  I don’t try to push the kids past their limit (1 hour or so) when running errands.  So I have to do more non-food shopping online in the evenings, and I save up secondary errands for the weekends, when Derek can stay home with the kids.  Basically, if I keep everyone fed and clothed, I call a day a success.
  • I have a well-stocked diaper bag that lives in the car.  It has extra changes of clothes, diapers, hand sanitizer, and a ton of other things we might need on an outing.  Because it stays in the car, I don’t have to remember to pack things or grab the bag every time we go out.
  • I bring snacks everywhere.  Hungry kids are cranky kids.  Cranky kids tend to lose it in the middle of a store and have to be carried out, screaming, under one arm.  A snack can buy me a couple minutes to get the cart unloaded and everyone buckled into the car.  So we pack red pepper slices, clementines, mini granola bars, or cheese sticks for most outings.  I also have a couple emergency snacks in the front console of the car and the bottom of the diaper bag and my purse for dire occasions.
  • I try to give the kids choices when I can.  The big kids dress themselves almost completely, and I’ve learned to just give them general instruction up front about what kind of clothing to wear (church/play clothes, long sleeves/short sleeves) and then let them come up with their own combinations.  Most of the time, it is not worth fighting about a specific outfit.  I save my energy for the clothes battles that matter–wearing appropriate shoes to ride bikes, or putting on a specific outfit for a photo shoot.  If we’re home, and I have the time, I’ll give them two or three options for breakfast or lunch.  I don’t really care if they eat oatmeal or toast, and they usually pick whatever I’m having, anyway.  On the other hand, I’m not a short order cook.  They must choose between options I’ve given them; at dinner, there is only one option, or they go hungry.
  • We color-code cups, dishes, water bottles, bags, etc.  I grew up color-coded (I was always yellow), and it cuts down on dirty dishes and fights over plates, gamepieces, and sleeping bags.  I’m a big fan of orbit name labels.
  • I shamelessly seek advice from more veteran moms.  Pretty much all of my best tricks of the trade were passed down to me by others.  Sometimes it is humbling to have to admit that you just don’t know what you’re doing in a certain situation, but a fellow mom probably knows exactly how exasperated you feel and isn’t going to judge you, anyway. =)

I think it’s important to note that what works for one family might not work for another.  I used to compare myself constantly to a friend whose husband was home for breakfast, lunch, and dinner every single day.  Obviously not all of her strategies were going to work for me back when Derek was working 12-15 hour days at the law firm!  I have friends who swear by babywearing, but I do not have the temperament or the back health for it.  One of my mentors, Amy Dennis, used to remind the young moms in our church that the Bible does not, in fact, lay out the one holy way to potty train, sleep train, or clean a house.

Also, while my life runs smoother when I do these things, there are still days when I let our house rules slide and start to feel overwhelmed and hopelessly behind and wonder how I’ll ever be able to stay afloat with another kid or two in the mix!  (I can guarantee that when we get back to California in a couple weeks, I’m going to have a few tear-filled days while we all re-adjust to home life.)  It’s important to admit that I’m not always going to have it all together, particularly in stressful seasons like Derek’s finals weeks, early pregnancy or other family illnesses, or re-entry from vacation.

So what survival lessons have the rest of you moms learned?

Hanging Out in Detroit

We’re having quite the time here in Detroit, halfway through our cross-country road trip!

Tommy is a big fan of Greenfield Village.

And the kids were excited to use the SuperSoaker from Uncle Matthew!

Elizabeth’s Fourth 3rd Birthday Party

Susanna still doesn’t have the cake thing figured out.

Reading with Andy

We love Nona!

Susanna at 13 months

Yep, Susie Q is no longer just “a one year old;” she’s 13 months old!  She’s actually been super clingy with me since I got back from Switzerland…maybe some abandonment issues after our week apart?  She is so different from her siblings.  As we’ve been going to the zoo and Greenfield Village and church this week, the big kids would always prefer to be carried or pushed in the stroller or at least hold someone’s hand.  Susie would prefer toddling on her own to riding in the stroller or Ergo.  And she does not want to hold anyone’s hand, thank you very much.  She wants freedom to roam.  I don’t know if this is a 13 month old development, or if I just haven’t given her the chance to roam until now.  She also has perfected her “I am displeased” scream, especially when riding in the car.  Fortunately, we only have about 2500 miles left to drive on this roadtrip…  We’re just so accustomed to constant cheerfulness and giggles from her that we don’t know what to do when she is cranky.

I wonder how much birth order is affecting her.  She is such a social girl, always wanting to be in the middle of the action.  Is it because she always has two built-in playmates to follow around?  Tommy has always been happy to sit by himself for hours, playing or reading by himself.  Susie can’t handle being alone for more than 30 seconds.  I’m considering moving her into the big kids’ room sooner rather than later for that very reason!  Also, Elizabeth is more social than Tommy but will still play with her own toys, particularly stuffed animals Lucy and Bunny.  Susie doesn’t play with toys; she plays with people.  Seriously.  Mom Muller was asking this week what Susie plays with at home, and I was at a loss.  She is very attached to her blankie at sleep times, but she doesn’t really care about stuffed animals, baby toys, or anything “age appropriate.”  She plays with cars if Tommy is playing with cars, she plays with measuring spoons with me in the kitchen if I’m cooking, and she plays with the tea set if her sister is having a tea party.  Other than that, I think she just wanders around the house, following us around all day.  I have to remind myself that at this age, the big kids weren’t walking yet, so they were forced to stay still and play with things more. Perhaps this explains why they had more chub at this age?

In any case, it’s so fun to have a kiddo with a totally new personality to figure out.  Even when she’s screaming for independence, I love my Susannie so much that I couldn’t imagine life without her!

Swiss Food Shots, Part One

My photography class last month supposedly prepared me to do a bit of food photography.  As you can see, though, I had so many different lighting situations that I felt like I was starting from scratch every time I took a manual picture of food.

I tried to photograph our plates every time we went out, but most of our meals were actually at Pepperdine House, where we had pretty normal breakfasts and lunches.  Taking pictures of oatmeal and salad just didn’t inspire me.  The first half the trip pictures are stuck on Derek’s computer at the moment, so here are some of the highlights from the last few days.

couscous with chopped peppers and shrimp

chicken and a sortof au gratin potato mound–it sounded fancier in French

chocolate truffle cake on a vanilla bean mousse

My only Italian meal, fresh pesto spaghetti

ice cream over molten chocolate cake

nothing says Swiss like dried meat cured with anise (and artistic crudités)

the most spectacular salad that had cumin and paprika in the dressing, with goat cheese and olive tampenade toast

creamiest swiss chard ever

beef–the sauce on the meat and vegetables was so good that Derek tried to convince me it was horse meat

grapefruit mouse cake

Last Day in Lausanne

We made it home to Columbia on Tuesday after 21 straight hours of travel, woke up yesterday at 4 am, and drove up to Detroit in time for dinner last night.  Other than Elizabeth getting carsick in Marshall, IL, and having to hang out for two hours at a McDonalds while Derek visited a laundromat and carwash, it was an okay drive.  We’re still feeling pretty jet lagged today.  But here are a few pictures of our last day in Lausanne…

We spent our last few francs getting meringues and chocolate.  This meringue place was to die for.

You can actually get a good sense from the above picture of how hilly Lausanne is–steep cobblestone streets go up and down everywhere.  And below is a piece of raspberry heaven.

And we finally made it down to Ouchy, where we saw one last Byronic landmark.

That’s Derek under the sign, to the left of the door.

Food and sign pictures to follow…

Geneva

On Sunday, we trained up to Geneva for a group tour day.  We walked around the Old Town, visited the Reformation Monument, St Peter’s Cathedral, and Reformation Museum.  Then Derek and I split off to go see the famous flower clock and walk along the lakeside.

 

Chateau de Chillon

On Saturday, we took a paddleboat ferry (the one below) across Lake Geneva to Chateau de Chillon, the castle made famous by Lord Byron’s “Prisoner of Chillon.”  The misty rain was rather Byronic, too.

The castle was a stronghold of the Savoys, complete with dungeons for political prisoners.  During the wars of the Reformation, a prisoner named Francois Bonivard was imprisoned here for his Protestant faith and for opposing the Savoy domination of the area.  When Lord Byron stumbled upon the story, centuries later, he took out the unromantic parts (like that Bonivard was released and went on to marry four times and die peacefully in his 70s) and wrote a harrowingly Romantic poem that made Chillon famous!  We read part of the poem in the dungeons, right by the pillar where Byron etched his name.

Our tour guide was hilariously abrupt, and we had to brave pouring rain to duck in and out of various rooms throughout the castle.

Fortunately, the rain slowed down a bit by the time we got to the top of the tower and looked down at the ramparts and the lake.

And just to be silly, after we walked into Montreux, we noticed a watch shop and a supermarket that shared a great name!

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