Everyday Is Special Spring Flower Arrangment

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It has taken me over 10 years of living in the Northeast to accept that Easter does not mean we get to wear sundresses.

When I was a little girl, we always had Easter at my glamour-granny’s home in Palm Springs, where everyday life felt like a special party.  Even everyday breakfast - where she would preside over the dining room table set with crystal glasses and beautiful turquoise china wearing her flowing house-gown-robe.  Toast with butter and the most amazing boysenberry jam were served with silver from the elegant tea-cart pulled up next to her seat at the head of the table. I learned to like V-8 vegetable juice, just so I could drink out of the delicate crystal glasses it was served in.  I have those goblets in my cupboard today and love them probably a little too much.  They remind me of the beautiful way of living that my glamour-granny cultivated every day.  I try to capture that “everyday special” nuance when I think about the way I want to feel about my life and home.

Little things – like using crystal goblets, eating yummy jam, and wearing cute shoes – can make the everyday feel special.  I wish I wasn’t like this, but the things that surround me and what I wear really does affect my mood. We may not be able to wear sundresses tomorrow, but I am determined to wear something other than clogs and boots.  Around here, there is still snow on the ground in places, but the daffodils and croci are starting to pop up anyway and I am way overdue for cute shoe season.

Another thing that makes the “everyday” feel a little special are flowers.  I made the arrangement of tulips above to bring as a hostess gift for Easter dinner tomorrow.  I love pink and orange together!

You can easily make it yourself:

1. Put some baby carrots in the bottom of a vase.

2. Bundle your tulips together so the heads are even and cut the stems to a height about twice as tall as your vase.

3. Wrap them with a rubber band, set them in the vase.

4. Pack it with more carrots and add water.

Even though it is too cold for sundresses and we are having a casual dinner with neighbors, I will be making Easter baskets for my tweens and teens, wearing my cute shoes, and bringing flowers to my friend’s home.  These things are not necessary, and maybe some would say they are a waste of time and superficial, but they are the small ways I can make my life feel special and give my kids a taste of the “everyday special” feeling my glamour-granny gave me.

Favorite Things Friday: Authentic Personal Style

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I loved working at Nike and Polo Ralph Lauren and learned so much from the interesting and incredibly stylish people I had the pleasure of working with in both companies, but I have to confess that I felt a lot of pressure to fit in.

At Nike Design, I worked with professional athletes and incredibly cool, funky people who wore vintage, designer, or edgy clothing, custom eye-glasses, and really great shoes. I fit in as best as I could and tried not be intimidated.

At Ralph Lauren, everyone dressed as if they were from very old, very wealthy families. It was as if everyone just came to work because they needed a diversion from riding horses and reading in their wood-paneled library all day, wearing houndstooth plaid jackets and crocodile loafers. In reality, Ralph was probably the only person who actually lived this way.

Those years at Nike and Ralph Lauren, were all about paying attention, learning about details, fabrics and clothing styles, and figuring out how the elements that appealed to me could be incorporated into my own unique look.  It has taken me a long time to get comfortable with my own personal style, and there are still plenty of days when I feel unsure about how I look, but I keep exploring to find that sweet spot where I feel comfortable and special at the same time.

I have learned that style is not about choosing a designer look to emulate. Personal style is about putting together a lifestyle, a home, and a wardrobe that works for you and makes you feel good. It is the picture you create when you pick the way you live, the possessions you choose to have in your home, and the clothing you wear. It is the way people think of you and how you position your “personal brand” – whether you mean to or not. Personal style is the one thing that we have total control over and one of the most important tools we have for connecting with other people. Authentic personal style comes from being brave enough to be the most and the best YOU that you can be in every way.

Do you think about your personal style?  What do you wear to feel the most “you”?

This Is What The Snow Storm Looked Like At My House

I love the state-mandated downtime of a New England snow emergency!  Yesterday, we watched the storm build and hung out in our pajamas all day. Last night, I read and watched movies in front of the fire. This morning, I woke up late to a storm still raging.

Now that it is over, things have gotten a little busy around here…

We couldn’t get out this way (I am so glad I fixed the screen!)…

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…and we could barely get out this way…

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…but Luna really needed to get out, so she dove right in…

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…and went for a swim on the snow!

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She watched the neighborhood shovel out of the storm…

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…and enjoyed the tunnels I made to get to the places I needed to go….

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…like the chicken coop, which got a little extra insulation!

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The Accidental Happy Family

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Yesterday, due to 1) a rare black hole in the sports schedule universe, and 2) compulsory down-time resulting from “natural consequences” of poor behavior choices the previous week, we had a free day. Granted, there is always something to do and even doing nothing is actually doing something, so there is really no such thing as empty time, but yesterday our schedule was oddly open and I wanted to take advantage of the opportunity to do something.

Feeling a little raw from being a tough-love mom during the previous week (see #2 above), I suggested that my three kids and I go out for a special lunch of pizza and bowling at the Flatbread Company in Somerville and then head over to Lyndell’s in Cambridge to get coffee (for me, of course) and some of the best cookies on earth (for the kids, but I was also planning to eat one, just to show my willingness to sacrifice my own health to join in the family fun).

From the wailing and whining and impassioned protests, you would have thought that I had said, “hey kids, let’s go out for succotash and then take in a four-hour Italian opera.” What’s a mom to do? Other than get really mad and insist that everyone “shape up” so we can go have some damn family time. And then yell and lecture about how ungrateful they all are. This did not get the desired result.

Seeing the futility of the situation, I called the whole thing off and went to my room for some focused pouting. I put away clothes and felt sorry for myself. I cried a little, thinking about how I dutifully do all of the things that have to get done for our family and never get to just have fun with my kids. And I thought about how they will never give their dad a hard time like this because his attention is a more scarce commodity, which makes me sad for them and jealous of him at the same time. It feels bad to think about all of this, but I take comfort because it is familiar. I know how to do disappointment better than I know how to do happy family.

When I live in the “now,” I can fill it up with all kinds of projects and driving and work and tennis and coffee and driving. It is sometimes easy to forget that the time with my kids is short, because well, it isn’t always fun (see #2 above). When I do pick my head up and look around, I panic that every day we do not go out for pizza and bowling and cookies, is a lost opportunity to make happy family memories. Memories that will make them laugh and reminisce together as adults. Memories of what a great mom I was which will make them pick a really high quality nursing home and visit me frequently when I am old. It is hard to know how to accomplish this since I didn’t grow up with that kind of family feeling. I want it now – for myself and for my kids – so much and I keep grasping for what I think it might look like and spend too much time worrying that I am not getting it right.

Then the beau comes along, with his sweet bald head and penchant for simplifying complicated things, and says, “maybe they just want to be at home, instead of do stuff with you, because they already have that feeling.”

And I realize that he could be right. (Again, dang it.) I guess my homebody kids might want to be here, snuggled in on a Saturday with their pj’s on all day, because, to them, home feels like a safe place to get away from it all. Maybe they can ignore me because they trust that I will always here. Maybe they interrupt me to tell me seemingly unimportant things (especially if I am working) because they do need me. And maybe jumping on each other and teasing makes them feel connected. Maybe they can experiment with bad behavior choices because they know, without a doubt, that I will always love them no matter what. Maybe they don’t want to go do anything with me because just being together in our house gives them the feeling I have been blindly grasping for. And I wonder if I will ever get better at seeing that I already belong to the family I have always wanted.

My Best Friend, Hydraulic Cement

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If it were not for my best friend, hydraulic cement, I would have had a flood in my basement a couple of days ago during the Big Storm.

Luckily, I was down in the basement (where I keep the worms) looking for some old photos to use in a post, when I noticed the stream of water making its way across the floor. It was coming from some weak mortar between the cinderblocks in the walls of my basement.

I have had this problem before in another place, so I was prepared this time. This time, I didn’t have to yell at my children to keep bailing while I went out in the pouring rain to buy submersible pumps and bags of frozen mulch and drain pipe extensions and hydraulic cement. This time, all I had to do was yell at my children and find my hydraulic cement.

Hydraulic cement is meant for plugging active leaks. Every time I have used it, it seems like it is not going to work. I follow the instructions (as best as I can in the middle of a crisis) and make a ball of the cement in the consistency they recommend and try to stuff it into the leak, but it just turns all silty and watery in my hand. It is a little like trying to stuff wet sand into a running faucet.

I ruined a perfectly good manicure working with this stuff for what seemed like hours yesterday. In actuality, it was only an hour or so of trying to stop the leak-that-was-not-stopping-and-might-be-impossible-to-fix-with-this-stupid-cement-that-isn’t-working-and-and-and-I-hate-my-stupid-house-and-there-is-no-alternative-because-if-I-don’t-keep-trying-my-basement-will-flood-like-it-did-before-and-everything-will-get-ruined-and-moldy-and-gross-and-I-will-have-an-even-bigger-mess-to-clean-up-so-I-may-as-well-keep-trying-even-though-I-want-to-move-to-a-brand-new-good-house-right-now-and-I-am-going-to-cry-any-minute – - and I got frustrated and had to start yelling at my children. As soon as I started yelling, it worked. Miraculously. I think maybe next time, I will start yelling at my children sooner.

Tips for using hydraulic cement are:

1. Have some on hand. When you need it, you need it now.

2. If the leak is running fast, stuff a piece of sponge up in the leak with a screw driver to slow it down a little.

3. Use a thickly folded paper towel to push the little ball of cement into the leak. This seemed to absorb the water and keep the cement from running through my fingers.

4. Yell sooner than later.

Disaster was averted by my best friend, hydraulic cement. I don’t know why it works, but it eventually does. You should have some.

What do you keep on hand for emergencies?