Life Well Lived

There’s a group of bloggers livin’ it up and sharing stuff about their lives. They started with a life list link-up and have now moved on to a “life well lived” link-up, which involves making a list of things you’ve done (cool stuff, accomplishments, you know the drill). I’ve done some cool stuff, so I figured I’d play along.

Here’s the list of things I’ve done. (And if you read this blog with any regularity some of this will not be news to you. But some will. Trust me.)

I have:

Played a Muppets song at my wedding

Sat on a boat in the middle of the ocean with no land visible

Gone snowshoeing

Kissed the Blarney Stone

Dyed a blue streak in my hair

Blue streaks in hair

Sigh. I miss the blue.

Been published on Huffington Post

Lived and worked in Australia

Driven across the Australian outback with a group of truckers I had just met

Gone on two solo backpacking trips

Gone to the Olympics

At the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics

Driven halfway across Canada with my parents and siblings (when I was an adult)

Quit my job when I didn’t have another to go to because I knew I needed a change (twice)

Done a TEDx talk

Learned to read and write Russian

Had a C-section

With baby after C-section

My first baby

Had a natural birth

Sung a lullaby to a baby

Gone skinny dipping

Spent a weekend in Vegas

Completed a master’s degree

convocation photo

With my mama

Seen Lionel Richie in concert (What? I was, like, 9)

Worked as a telemarketer

Driven an ice cream truck for the summer

Confessed to embarrassing things on my blog

Trained a puppy

Wheaten Terrier puppy

Wasn’t he cute? (Yes, he does have eyes.)

Very painfully learned to drive a stick shift

Kept a major secret for 18 years (so far)

Lent someone money

Driven through a tunnel that’s 25 km (16 miles) long

Said “I love you” to someone

 

What would be on your list?

Life well lived button

 

A Modern Mom’s Approach to Laundry

laundry-in-crib

What? Don’t you store clean laundry in the crib? I’m telling you – this is the way to go. It saves all that tedious folding and putting away nonsense.

My Life in Numbers

I’m not normally a numbers girl, but something about portraying my life in numbers works for me. So – tra la, tra la – I’m joining Greta from GFunkified for My Life in Numbers:

2 – the number of children I have

1 – the number of times I’ve been in labour

1 – number of C-sections I’ve had

1 – number of VBACs I’ve had (wahoo!)

349 – the approximate number of pickles I ate during my first pregnancy

12 – the approximate number of pickles I ate during my second pregnancy

290 – the number of diapers we’ve changed since Ethan was born

129 – the approximate number of hours I’ve spent playing Lego with Connor

4 – the number of medications I was on during the worst of my PPD breakdown

1 – the number of medications I’m on now

16 – the number of years I’ve been addicted to sleeping with white noise

2 – the number of solo backpacking trips I’ve done

3 – the number of times I’ve attempted to jump out of an airplane

1 – the number of times I’ve actually jumped out of an airplane (the other times were thwarted by weather, not fear)

0 – the number of tattoos I have

3 – the number of piercings I have

1 – the number of piercings I used to have and no longer have because HolyMotherofGod it hurt and I had to get my dad to remove it so I didn’t have to go to the emergency room

2 – the number of schools I went to between kindergarten and Grade 12

48 – the number of people in my high school grad class

3 – the number of siblings I have

2 – the number of half-siblings I have

0 – the number of grandparents I have who are still alive

3 – the number of half-marathons I’ve run

2 – the number of degrees I have

3 – the number of languages I know

17 – the age I was when I first met my husband

14 – the number of years my husband and I have been together

8 – the number of years we’ve been married

1 – the number of dogs we have

1 – the number of fish we’ve owned (RIP Gilligan)

47 – the number of times a day I tell Connor to be gentle

27 – the number of times a day I wonder if my slightly antagonistic relationship with Connor is scarring him for life

22 – the number of months I’ve been blogging

12 – the number of months we’ve lived here (almost to the day)

32 – the number of days until my 39th birthday [Edit: my husband has informed me that I’m actually only 37. Huh.]

 

Looking Into My Crystal Ball

Evidently I’m somewhat psychic.

My mom has been sorting through stuff and has come across years’ worth of childhood memories. She scanned and sent me this one, because aside from the incredible colouring job (I stayed inside the lines, people!) it’s pretty accurate.

“When I grow up I will go and live in Calgary, Alberta. I will be a teacher and have one dog and a camper. I will have a big house and a big backyard. I will get married and have children. And I will have a pool with a diving board and a slide and we will get a computer. The End.”

Impressive, right? I was born in Calgary, but I have no idea why my elementary-school-aged self thought I would move back here. But she was right. And I’m married and have children and one dog (and a computer, obviously). I’m not a teacher (don’t have the patience for it) and I don’t have a camper (although I wouldn’t say no since that would mean slightly more civilized camping). We have a house with a backyard, and I’m sure my youthful self would have thought them both the stuff (and size) of dreams. No pool though, unless you count the inflatable one that still hangs over our deck.

But who knows? With this much accuracy, who’s to say the rest isn’t still my destiny?

The crystal ball has spoken.

Home Alone: Diary of an Anxious Mama

Rich and Connor were away last week, leaving me home alone for six days. SIX DAYS.

That’s six days of a quiet house all to myself. Six days of my definition of heaven. But it was also six days of anxiety, worrying about them as they drove 1,000 miles there and 1,000 miles back and five nights of talking myself down while listening to every little sound a quiet house makes.

Here’s what it was like.

Day 1

8:30 a.m.: Depart for work, leaving the husband with strict instructions to provide regular updates on their drive so I can avoid picturing them crashing on the highway. Cry.

10 a.m.: Check for text message from husband.

Noon: Get text message from husband. They’re still alive.

2 p.m., 3:13 p.m., 4:28 p.m.: Check phone to make sure haven’t missed a message.

5:30 p.m.: Get text message from husband. They’ve reached target destination for the night.

6 p.m.: Leaving work late because apparently I’m not properly prepared to take advantage of having the house to myself.

6:10 p.m. Another text message from husband. They’re driving on. Okay…will keep phone close by then.

6:50 p.m.: Arrive home. Dog starts barking his head off when I pull into driveway. With no boys in the house all day and having watched them depart with suitcases, I’m sure he thought he had been forever abandoned. Take barking to be a good sign though – probably no lurking murderers inside. Go into house. Dog greets me like his long-lost and much-mourned mother, then promptly goes outside to his man cave under the deck. And doesn’t come back in. I guess he didn’t miss me that much.

7 p.m.: Dinner time – usually a time I dread because the thought of eating at this time of night turns my stomach. But, left to my own devices, have stopped at grocery store on way home to stock up on stuff to make a big salad. Make big salad and relish the idea that no one else is here to steal all my baby corn.

8 p.m.: Another message from husband. They’re still driving. He must have gone insane.

8:30 p.m.: It’s getting dark – better walk the dog. Entice him in from his man cave and head out. Pass a cul-de-sac with a bunch of noisy kids enjoying the last of the evening’s light. Consider asking them to come and sleep on my living room floor so I’m not in the house alone overnight. Pass the house where small, yippy dog goes positively berserk every time we walk past. Do not consider asking berserk dog to sleep on living room floor.

8:45 p.m.: Dog is a little overexcited about this walk. His enthusiastic pulling on the leash causes fierce Braxton Hicks, but I figure at least his heavy breathing will scare away any potential stalkers and prevent me from having to attempt to waddle quickly down the street.

9:22 p.m.: Have retired upstairs to bed. Dog is standing by front door barking. I don’t have enough Xanax for this. (I don’t have any at all, actually. And I’ve never taken Xanax. But still…)

9:42 p.m.: Husband texts. They’ve made it to the ferry and will be at my parents’ tonight. Glad, at least, that I don’t have to worry about them driving tomorrow.

12:20 a.m.: Dog is barking again. This is going to be a long night.

1 a.m.: Husband texts again to say they caught last ferry and have arrived. Text back. He texts again to tell me I’m supposed to be sleeping. Stupid husband – how am I supposed to sleep with dog barking and phone beeping?

1:10 a.m.: Try anyway.

Day 2

7 a.m.: Haven’t slept much. Hit snooze button for an hour straight.

9 a.m.: Haul myself into work. Decide I’m being silly and resolve to suck it up tonight and just sleep.

6 p.m.: Arrive home from work. Dog doesn’t bark. Briefly wonder if this means he’s been silenced by an intruder; realize that’s unlikely. When I open the door and call him he gets slowly up from a chair in the living room where he’s been napping. Dumb dog.

9 p.m.: Summoning all rational thought, head to bed.

Day 3

7 a.m.: Success! Slept most of the night (aside from getting up to pee – damn pregnancy).

9 a.m.: Rear-ended on way to work. Great, that’s just what I need – to be worrying about a car accident while eight months pregnant.

9:33 a.m.: Continue on to work. Why is it that every car seems to be tailing too close?! Stupid drivers.

9:35 a.m.: Realize it’s probably not prudent to be driving on the freeway while constantly watching rearview mirror.

10:30 a.m.: At work. Talk to midwife, who assures me that minor fender bender means baby should be fine. Spend time trying to reassure anxious husband and mother.

5:37 p.m.: Leaving work. What is up with people coming up behind me and changing lanes quickly at the last minute? Life flashes before my eyes repeatedly during drive home. Really, really don’t need this.

9 p.m.: Go to bed early and try to reset. Thank god tomorrow’s Friday!

Day 4

10:15 p.m.: A bit of a wacky day at work. Happily ensconced in bed watching Downton Abbey for the 14th time. (Matthew is so yummy.)

Day 5

11 a.m.: Did well again last night – no ridiculous midnight panic attacks. See? I’ve got this. And I could get used to sleeping in… Too bad they’re coming home tomorrow.

10 p.m.: Quite a nice Saturday. Could definitely get used to this, especially because I’m not freaking out at every little noise anymore.

11:26 p.m.: What was that noise?!

1:14 a.m.: And that noise – what was that?!

2 a.m.: Dammit. Now I’m just awake. And hungry. But don’t want to go downstairs in the dark.

2:20 a.m.: After 20 minutes of agonizing, decide to go down and get some cereal already. Dog lying by back door. Let dog out, get cereal, let dog back in. Go back upstairs to bed. Dog follows.

2:49 a.m.: Enjoy having dog sleep with me, but kind of prefer him to be downstairs so he can be first line of defence against intruders. Besides, he’s taking up all the space on the bed.

3:01 a.m.: Oh well. Better try to sleep.

3:06 a.m.: Effing heartburn.

Day 5

10 a.m.: Wake up. Have survived five nights in house by myself.

11:13 a.m.: It’s too quiet around here. Glad boys are going to be home this afternoon.

Noon: Text from husband. They’re about three hours away.

12:01 p.m.: Oh god, am about to lose all this lovely peace and quiet.

12:02 p.m.: Accept ridiculousness of it all and take self out for ice cream.