A Book a Week – An Abundance of Katherines

I chose An Abundance of Katherines because it was the only John Green book I haven’t read and I am a huge, huge fan of John Green. So far, he hasn’t written one book I didn’t love.

And so I was really looking forward to this one since it’s got great reviews on amazon, too. And I did like it. A lot. But i didn’t love it as much as I loved Alaska and Paper Towns. I even loved Will Grayson more than this one. Not sure exactly why. Maybe cause I didn’t connect with the characters as much or it didn’t feel as deep as some of his other books did to me.

Nevertheless I did like it a lot and I am really happy to have read it.

Asking For What You Want

We’re trying to train my little boy to use the bathroom. The school he’s going to attend next year requires it and he’s just not into it. Actually that would be an understatement. He clearly doesn’t like it. And in case I’m still not sure, he says:

“NO LIKE IT!”

and he will continue to say it until I give up. Bribery is not working. Nor is yelling or pleading or everything in between.

But I am trying not to be too worried about it. I know he’ll eventually get it. He’ll grow up, he’ll do his business in the bathroom, he’ll stop wearing diapers at some point. What I don’t want him to stop doing is speaking up for himself.

As he approaches the wonderful age of three, he’s becoming more and more vocal and more and more assertive. And while I do get tired of it sometimes, I also love that he speaks his mind. And I work hard not to shut him down.

I think somewhere along the way, we lose that voice. That ability to ask for what we want. Or say what we don’t. Maybe cause we believe we don’t deserve it. Or cause we heard “no” too many times. I am not sure what it is that kills it, but I hope hope hope that it doesn’t happen for my kids.

I can already see David doing it a bit. I can see the refrain. He knows he’ll get a refusal so he doesn’t even ask. (To be fair, it’s often for things like playing video games, skipping vegetables, or having more time to stay up, but still.) I try to explain to him that I will never be mad at him for asking. He just needs to be okay with getting a “no” if it’s not ok. But if he doesn’t ask, it’s as if the answer is always no anyway.

Years ago, I took a course and one of the things they taught was to “ask for what you want and take what you get.” I love that idea. It means I am asking for what I want but I am also not attached to the outcome. All I can do is ask. I don’t control the answer. Often times we ask in order to manipulate. We only ask if we know we’ll get a yes. And so, if we do get a “no” we get extra upset. Which is not fair to the other person either.

If you want to be able to ask more, you also need to be ok with getting “no” more often. So I think it’s good to get in the habit of being able to ask for what you want and then taking what you get. And I want both my kids to grow up learning to do that again and again.

Like everything else, I think it takes practice.

And I plan to practice along with them.

Daily Sketching – Week 53

Here are the sketches from last week:

Sunday:

Monday:

Tuesday:

Wednesday:

Thursday:

Friday:

Saturday:

that’s it for this week.


Daily Sketching is a weekly project for 2012. You can see a detailed post on my steps here.

Swept Away by Negativity

I was rereading Brené Brown’s book, The Gifts of Imperfection, this weekend. (We picked it for one of my book clubs and I’d read it when it just came out, so I wanted to have it fresh on my mind.)

One of my goals for 2012 is to be more mindful. I believe that this means different things for different people. As I was reading the book, there’s a section where Brené mentions Kristin Neff, another author I read and love. And she shares Kristin’s definition of mindfulness:

Taking a balanced approach to negative emotions so that feelings are neither suppressed nor exaggerated. We cannot ignore our pain and feel compassion for it at the same time. Mindfulness requires that we not “over-identify” with thoughts and feelings, so that we are caught up and swept away by negativity.

When I look at this definition, the part that jumps out at me is the “over-identify” part. I don’t tend to suppress feelings. At least not for too long. But I am exceptionally good at blowing them out of proportion. I definitely tend to get caught up and swept away by negativity.

Not only that, but I often feel like what makes me “worthy” is my usefulness. So when I mess up, I lose my entire sense of worth. I get into this place where I am beating myself up worse than anyone else and I spiral. And of course, that means I lose all sense of perspective and I can no longer see the truth.

When your vision is that skewed, it’s not possible to make decisions. It’s not possible to heal. It’s not even possible to function productively. Which, of course, makes me less useful. And then you know the rest of the cycle.

I’m learning more and more that mindfulness is about paying attention. Real close attention. To what is. And being able to separate the facts from perception. From the way we like to distort things. Good or bad. It’s about staying present and being aware.

Like the description implies, paying attention means you can’t ignore it. But that you also can’t exaggerate it, make it more than what is. Both of these are a way to separate what is from what we make it out to be. Avoiding the problem certainly won’t make it go away.

But neither will overdoing it. If I let myself over-identify and get into the hole of negativity, I just end up wallowing in self-pity and not actually being mindful of what’s going on inside. I’m not mindful of the real emotions these events bring up in me. The ways in which I react to messing up or feeling responsible.

I’ve been noticing lately, for example, that when there’s a problem to solve or a deadline to meet, I have a constant sense of something hanging over my head. Like I can’t breathe easy until the task is complete. The degree might vary depending on the source of the issue (like maybe I worry more for work than a scrappy assignment) but it seems to always be there. Even for my personal daily tasks. With each checkmark in my notebook, I feel a bigger sense of relief.

Which is a bit ridiculous of course. I have a job, husband, kids, and home. And personal commitments. And scrappy commitments. Things will come up. I always have something due. And if having something come up or having something due is going to put me on edge….well I better learn to just live there.

Alas. It’s not so comfortable there.

This is another form of exaggerating. I make the issues and deadlines out to be much bigger than they are so then they weigh on my mind. So now, I am trying to be more mindful. I try to examine issues that come up and see if they really are urgent. If so, it’s ok to change the schedule around and take care of things (like I had to for work today). And if not, they go on the schedule. For later. In plenty of time to meet the deadline, but not “drop everything and do it today” and not “run around like a chicken without a head till it’s done.”

I don’t know if it will work. And I don’t know if next time I mess up, I won’t over-identify. I’m working on separating my worthiness from my usefulness. And I know it’s going to take a bunch of time to undo years of believing a certain way.

But the first step is awareness, right?

It always comes back to that. Paying attention. Taking Note.

And trying to do a bit better each time.

Creative time is the best time

This layout was for Maya Road CHA Winter show.

Journaling Reads:
There are many things I like to do with you or watch you play. But my very favorite is definitely creative time. I love seeing you paint and draw and make your own creations. I love t see how focused you get while you create and come up with ideas. How you like color as much as I do. Maybe it’s cause I love creative time best for myself, too. But my hope is that as you grow up you will always hold on to that creative side and enjoy it.

Details:

David’s BoGM – Week 8

Here is the next spread from our book:

Left side is a penguin David traced last year that he loves. And the right side is about the first time he had Smarties (on Halloween) and how much he liked them.

More next time.


David’s Book of Good Memories is a bi-weekly project for 2012 with my seven-year-old son David. You can read more about it here.

Weekly Diary – April 7 2012

I am grateful to say that things are getting better. Slowly but steadily. And I am working hard to get back into my routines, keep my spirits up and move forward. The kids are doing great and so is Jake. I promise I will start writing more detailed weekly updates soon again but for now, keeping it short and sweet and letting the photos speak.

with that, here are some highlights from last week:

Nathaniel really likes me to take photos lately and will tell me to take a picture often.

and then pose for me.

paper airplanes are still big here. Making, coloring, and throwing them.

I love this shot but can’t really explain why.

i love how Nathaniel has to imitate all David does so now he gets his own Wii remote (without batteries) so he can “play” too.

happy face!

of course, he plays with airplanes too!

I was getting my hair done last Sunday night so Jake and David had their own “family night” playing monopoly.

Nathaniel had no school all week and despite a low grade fever all weeklong, he spent a lot of time drawing and then coming over to show me his drawings.

he’s showing me specific colors here. (or trying to.)

the high point of the week was the whoopie cushion Jake brought home.

There was much laughter.

and hours of enjoyment.

Nathaniel is also really picky about what he wears recently. He likes polo shirts with buttons and the pants with zippers and buttons. Nothing but fancy for my boy.

I got David a limited edition Lego Moleskine and he loves writing in it and drawing in it.

Since Jake was leaving town we took family shots early this week and I love getting one of just my boys. (Nathaniel had just woken up from his nap.)

and love tickle-time of course!

I played “What doesn’t kill you” this week a few times and this is what Nathaniel likes to do while he listens. Cracks me up.

David reading his school book. This one was about Alexander Graham Bell. He’s really into nonfiction and science and space lately.

And here’s Nathaniel sticking crayons into an empty thread spool. Yes, they got stuck in there, of course.

The boys colored on Thursday while I worked and Jake was gone. Mommy cannot tolerate noise so we do quieter activities when it’s just me around.

We turned the play table’s top yesterday so the kids could build a city. You can’t really see it here, I have to take another shot.

and just at bedtime, one of David’s top teeth finally fell off. Not the super-crooked one but the other one. Now he has two teeth missing on top and two on the bottom. Very soon the crooked one will fall too and he’ll have almost no front teeth, my boy!

and here we go. Here’s to hoping things still keep getting better.


Weekly Diary is a project for 2012. You can read more about it here.

Journey into Collage – Week 14

Page fourteen:

This is the last of the collages inspired by Body Restoration. This lesson was about writing a letter to our old self and then cutting it up and burying it and then letting her go. I did this exercise and it was incredibly powerful for me so I wanted to make sure to remember it. The collage elements are by Melody Ross.

more next week.


Journey into Collage is a project for 2012. You can read more about it here.

Year-Long Classes – Month Two

Since I completely got lost in my Savor Project tonight and forgot to type up a post, I figured I might as well catch up on posting these. I am all caught up in both classes but just haven’t had a chance to post the photos. So here is February.

I am taking two year-long classes at Big Picture Classes this year. I am pretty sure you must have heard of both. Even though these are not amazing, I still thought it would be fun to post my progress each month. If for no other reason than to record things.

Here are my OLW pages for February:

the pockets with photos page:

And then I used two blow up pages for the two sets of people who mean the most in my life. My kids:

and my husband:

and there we go. I actually typed up the journaling later and printed it on a transparency that I slipped into the sleeve but I love how it worked out.

And then here’s the Move More, Eat Well page for February:

And here we go. That’s where we are now. I will post a March update later this month.

Art Journaling – Fabriano Roma Set 18

Here are some more pages I did:

The full text reads: Spread your wings and soar high.

And here’s the next page:

The full text reads: take time to snuggle.

Well here we go. More coming next week.


I am creating multiple art journaling pages a week for now. You can read more about this project here. This set uses the Fabriano Roma papers.

Falling off and Getting back on Track

Now that I am healing a little more each day (not that I want to jinx it), I wanted to share a little bit about what I did with my schedule when things got a bit crazy and how I am recovering.

I’ve written about my notebooks and my schedule before and while both of them get tweaked and updated regularly, I still stick to most of what’s outlined there. I still use my notebooks and have daily, weekly, monthly plans that I follow regularly.

Before the chaos at work began, I was doing these:

  • daily exercise (2.5 miles a day for March)
  • daily journaling
  • daily sketching
  • daily reading to David
  • daily art/craft blogging
  • 5days/week strength exercises
  • 5days/week 5-minute meditation
  • 5days/week thoughts blogging
  • 2 art journal pages a week
  • 1 collage page a week
  • weekly savor project
  • weekly family shots
  • week-long photos of my kids and then weekend blog update with all of them
  • monthly assignments for OLW and MMEW
  • plus reading, scrappy assignments, manufacturer blog posts, etc.

I know this looks like a lot but I was able to manage it relatively well on my regular schedule. Each of these tasks takes a small amount of time and you can see on my schedule that I work on them early morning and late nights. And then catch up on the weekends.

But then I got the problem at work and started working pretty much around the clock. At first, I was still at home and tried to continue doing some of these (like sketching and strength exercises) but then things got harder. I started going in to work and coming home late enough to go right to sleep so I could wake up, make the lunches, get the kids off to school and go back into work. And I didn’t sleep or eat much during that time. So I made an executive decision to stop doing everything on my list except a few. Here are the exceptions and why I chose them:

I continued to run each morning. That’s my non-negotiable and I haven’t gone a day without it since October 2, 2010 and pretty much nothing is going to stand in my way. After about a week, I was feeling really weak and I was having a really hard time running the whole distance. At first, I lowered it to 2 miles but another week in, I decided I would run one mile each morning. This meant my exercise was done in 10 minutes and I had no excuse not to do it and I could still keep up the habit of doing it daily. Once I started working at home again, I went back up to 2.5 miles and now that we’re in April, I’m running 2.6 miles every morning.

We still took weekly family photos. Those photos make me happy and it’s one of the few things I couldn’t make up for later. Time passes and I wanted to make sure I got the photos. We generally do these on Friday afternoon but for the weeks where I was at work, we did them Saturday morning and I am very grateful I didn’t skip this tradition. I also did the weekend updates on the blog because I have family who comes to look at them and I didn’t want to have to miss it and then have to make up for it by going through 3-weeks’ worth of photos.

I also continued The Savor Project. I took it super-simple but I still did it. This is the kind of project that builds on itself and I didn’t want to skip if I didn’t have to. Since Jake and I were still taking photos, I had stories to tell. I just picked my stories, printed the photos and kept things really simple. I spent about 1-2 hours on the weekend on this project.

One of the things I gave up really reluctantly was sketching. I have come to truly cherish my sketching time and hadn’t missed a day since January 2 so I felt bad but once I was going in to work, I knew it had to go. But I did continue doing them during the weekend and whenever else I could. As soon as I was back at home, I picked it right back up. I really enjoy this project so much.

I continued the art/craft posts in the blog because most of them were already scheduled and I just had to add a few that I was already doing. It also meant that there were things to read each day for the people who’ve been kind enough to visit me regularly. I did give up the thoughts posts just cause I didn’t want to wing them and they take time to put together. Time I didn’t have.

Everything else was put on hold.

I don’t remember if I did any art during this time (besides the occasional sketching) but certainly nothing noteworthy. I stopped doing the strength exercises, meditation, journaling, reading to david, and all other odds and ends I spent my free time on. I didn’t surf at all. I replied to almost no emails and no comments. I canceled all appointments that were on my calendar. Whenever I did choose to take some downtime, I snuggled with family or read a book.

So there you go. I thought it might help to explain some of my thinking so that you can see examples of how to adjust your own schedule as a specific deadline puts pressure on your time. I basically held on to three categories of items: nonnegotiable, overwhelming joy and compounding.

Looking back, I think it would have been good to take the time to journal or meditate (or both) but I didn’t feel capable of either at the time. In fact, it took me another week after I was home to begin journaling again.

Once I was home, I still took it a bit easy. I gave myself three days to continue on the lighter schedule and then slowly added things back in. At this point, I am almost back to my full, regular schedule. Some days are still a struggle but I am much more forgiving on myself than I was before.

I hope this helps for any of you live relatively structured like I do and who struggle with occasional time crunches.

I also have two more notes:

1. Thank you so much for all your kind words over the last few weeks. I am touched beyond words. I appreciate every single word, advice, hug, sentiment more than you will ever know. Thank you for continuing to come visit and still leave comments. I promise I will start responding again and if you’ve left me a comment with a question that went unanswered, please please ask again so I can see it and reply.

2. I am putting together a little FAQ on sketching and one on art journaling. Do you have any questions you’d like me to answer?

The Savor Project – Week 12

And here’s the spread for week twelve (sorry photos are not great quality, haven’t figured out how to photograph these well still.):

here’s a closer up of the left side:

The first story here is about Nathaniel putting legos together following directions and then calling daddy for help. Then about David’s pink eye and my rough time at work.

And here’s the right side:

The first one is about the first time Nathaniel told me he loved me all on his own (not as a response to my saying i love him). The second one is about David’s front teeth that are all crooked and about to fall off. And then the last story is about Nathaniel and how good he is about finding joy in the smallest things.

Since I didn’t do so much art this week, like last week, I took some of our family photos and just added them along the bottom.

So there we go. So far, so good. Still enjoying this project a lot.

Happy Savoring.


The Savor Project was supposed to be a weekly project for 2012. You can read about my setup here.