We should have brought sweats, because the marine layer never lifted today!

I have so many little matters to tell you of, that I cannot wait any longer before I begin to put them down.
Mar 17th, 2017 by ECM
We should have brought sweats, because the marine layer never lifted today!

Mar 16th, 2017 by ECM
When the Arguello family moved to Washington in December, we were devastated at the loss of such beloved friends. But they’re back in town for a wedding this weekend, so we got to hang out with them all afternoon, went out for dinner, and talked and talked and talked. *happy sigh*



Our silly California kids decided it was too cold at Sharky’s. Suddenly they were playing queens and made Carlos their king. =)
Mar 15th, 2017 by ECM
We just met the Walkers a few weeks ago, but our four hit it off with their four so quickly that we’ve squeezed in several play dates before they decided to move back East. We will miss them, but it was encouraging to see how quickly we can make homeschooling friends – – hopefully a good sign for this fall!

Mar 14th, 2017 by ECM
I love our writing curriculum, which gives the kids a taste of all sorts of great literature and whets their appetite for more! The girls are cuddled up listening to Little Women after today’s Writing With Ease lesson. I love my little women!


Mar 13th, 2017 by ECM
In case you didn’t see Derek’s facebook announcement, we’re moving to Iowa for the fall! Derek accepted a one semester visiting position at University of Iowa Law School in Iowa City, where he’ll be teaching Election Law and Federal Courts. Cue “The Music Man” references (actually, I showed the kids a scene this morning and realized they’re going to expect a rural town from a hundred years ago…maybe that wasn’t a good call). We’ll be four hours from my parents, four hours from Chicago, and 8 hours from Royal Oak. The prospect of being within driving distance of all the grandparents is amazing.
So this opportunity came up pretty suddenly (though there had been potential for a while), and we had a week to decide. The big factors were the prestige of the school (Iowa is a much higher ranked law school than Pepperdine), the chance to serve God somewhere other than the (sortof-)Christian ghetto that is Pepperdine, the proximity to our families, a mixed bag of changes here at Pepperdine, the compliment that Iowa is actively pursuing Derek, and, of course, the fact that my ideal place to raise a family is a small, midwestern university town versus the fact that we’re finally settled and fairly content here in Malibu, we’re so close to being done with our foster certification process here in LA County, and the fact that we love, love, love Pacific Crossroads Church.
Since it’s only for a semester, the biggest hang-up for me was the fostering thing. If we leave in August, we can’t take a long-term placement, and even the allegedly short-term ones are never guaranteed–we could be told someone was going to be with us for two weeks, only to have him for two years. So our timeline with fostering would have to be adjusted. We thought we’d have a child by now. We are ready! We’ve done everything (and are just waiting on the agency to do their thing). We’ve childproofed our home, gotten TB tests, attended hours of training, and reorganized our rooms so that there’s a designated foster kids’ room. We have a support network lined up, I had front-loaded our school year so that we could adjust to craziness this spring, the kids are on board, and our church has actually declared that the LA County Foster system is our corporate congregational focus for the year. I even met an amazing new friend who works here at Pepperdine and wants to come alongside a foster family and help us succeed, even willing to do training with our agency to best help us. I mean, it seems like now is the time to do this all, right? Except that my knee is still healing slowly (and I still have biweekly physical therapy 45 minutes away), and the foster agency has been taking their sweet time to certify us.
I sought a lot of counsel on the fostering side of things from several seasoned foster mom friends, and their responses surprised and encouraged me. Devin pointed out that sometimes God calls us to obey all the way up to the point of sacrifice, then tells us He has a different plan (like with Abraham being willing to sacrifice Isaac). The LA foster system is so corrupt and horrible, and maybe in His mercy, He’s not going to have us go all in with foster-adopting *this* year, after all. (Respite care is still a huge need–with 34847 kids in the system, there will always be more foster parents who need a break than respite homes able to provide it.) She also challenged me on the identity thing–it’s so easy to become proud that you’re doing this great, hard thing for God, and maybe going to Iowa and being a welcoming Christian family opening our home to law students for a semester is not as cool-sounding as fostering, but it could be just as needed, albeit in a totally different way. I talked to Nicole about the really hard part of living in Malibu and having to drive 1-2 hours one way to do visits with bio parents, and how it’s okay to get certified somewhere, move somewhere else, move again, and get re-certified, foster, and adopt your forever kids. There’s no one right timeline for foster care. And Regan, who is spearheading the orphan care initiative at church, has been talking in our Sunday meetings about all the ways families can be involved–Safe Families, respite, mentoring, etc–and now that we’ve gone through the training, we have a good knowledge base to look into those other options, as well.
And today I found out that our agency branch in LA County is transferring us over to the Ventura County branch. We’re about an hour’s drive from either office in good traffic, but it could be 2+ hours into LA in bad traffic, and if a social worker needs to be coming to us at least once a week, it’s much better to have the girl living in TO drive down than some poor soul from LA sitting in traffic. So that will complicate things. Maybe we’ll foster a Ventura kid, after all. If we have an LA County kid but a Ventura County agency social worker, we’ll have to make absolutely sure WE stay on top of the different rules and regulations. It is doable, and we definitely are still going to proceed, but it is more complicated.
The funniest part of this decision is southern Californians looking at us sideways and asking politely, “Um, do you…want…to move to Iowa?” It’s hilarious how they can’t imagine why we’d want to leave, even for a mere five months. They just don’t get the appeal of the Midwest!
Mar 10th, 2017 by ECM
Guess who taught herself how to ride her bike without training wheels last night? Lately, Susie has been tearing around the pad on her bike (with training wheels), and she decided she didn’t need four wheels anymore. So we pumped up the tires on Elizabeth’s old bike, I held the seat and ran behind her across the pad, and within 30 seconds, Q was taking off on just two wheels! She kindof forgot how to stop, so we did have a bunch of crashes into things (luckily no mean neighbors’ cars), and she still needs a bit of a boost to get started, but at the rate she’s going, those problems will be fixed by tonight… I love this milestone!
Mar 9th, 2017 by ECM
We started piano lessons with the big three kids this semester, and while there have been some tears, I am so glad we are doing it. Annaleise is a Pepperdine music major who comes to our house, which is all I could handle this spring. It is fun to see that all the kids inherited their Grandpa Willett’s musical genes!

Mar 7th, 2017 by ECM
Unless your three year old starts copying letters on her own.

Mar 5th, 2017 by ECM
I always wanted a sister with whom to trade doing hairstyles. Now Elizabeth has taken over Sunday morning hair duty! Doing the “California Brush” on Susie.

Mar 4th, 2017 by ECM
The kids are getting more adept at housework. We still struggle with attitude, but we are making progress!
