Thursday, November 30, 2017

Thursday Things vol.2

Welcome to Thursday Things! Where I post some pretty sweet stuff that I'm super excited about, and that I think you need in your life.  I can't do this every single Thursday, because country living messes with my consumerism endeavors. But a few times a month you can expect some glorious life-bettering gems riiiiight here in this awesome blog. ;) 

Manuka Honey
I'm really liking this medicinal honey for my kids. You can read about the benefits here. Trader Joe's was the cheapest I found it. Last week my 6 year old had tonsillitis and they were super red and swollen. He said he couldn't swallow and didn't want to eat. I kept giving him a teaspoon of this honey throughout the day (about 4 times), sometimes putting it into hot licorice tea for him. After two days of this his throat was all better!  This honey is UMF 10 but if you want the top medical grade honey you'll need to buy it elsewhere to get UMF 20. 


Silk n' Flash Pro

I love this thing so much. At-home laser hair removal for the win! My husband bought it for me two years ago but I only used it for one year so far - I was too afraid to use it while pregnant. I don't know if it could actually harm a fetus but out of paranoia I still abstained. It's an ironic little tool, because it takes time to use but it also saves me on shaving time. I am happy to report that I can now go a few weeks without having to shave at all. Showers are quick!


Jeans for my boys with double layering on the knees!!



Ive written before about how wild my boys are. When I first found out I was having a second boy I remember thinking how convenient it would be clothing-wise. So many hand-me-downs will happen I thought. They'll be cheap to dress, so that's fun. 
I was wrong because my oldest blows through his clothes like a tornado through Kansas. He's so active that there are holes all over every pair of pants. He will also wear through the soles of every pair of shoes we buy no matter how expensive we buy. I can't really fix the shoe problem, but I feel like I outsmarted his maniac energetic clothes-ruining-powers with this find. Other than church pants, these are the one pair I've been able to pass down to his brother in a loooong time! 
What mom doesn't want pants for her son with double-fabric on her boy's knees? What boy doesn't want lightening bolts on his knees? It's a win for all. These are H&M Skinny jeans. I'd like to note that you can't find them online and have to go to the store for these. 


This perfect post-partum shirt...


That's me at 8 months pregnant - tryin stuff on. Forgive the terrible lighting, I'm inside the dressing room at Victoria's Secret. I bought this tunic in two colors because it worked for pregnancy and also it turns out its great for the two-shirt breastfeeding method since the sides are partially open. 


Chocolate Coffee

It goes right in your coffee pot just like when you make coffee. I bought this for later in the day when I don't want much caffeine. It also has way more antioxidants than coffee. This would make a great unique gift, and it's
 Just plain cozy to sip on during the winter months!

Monday, November 20, 2017

Best Easy Pumpkin Cheescake



Give thanks this year with this super easy rich cheesecake, where the ingredients are pretty much a blender dump. I needed this cheesecake to be short in the prep-time since I did it during my two-year old's nap-time, and I wanted to use the second half of her nap to get a nap in myself. 

I LOVE how it turned out. And all of my little ones were savoring their mouthfuls of yumminess. Be warned that it does need to sit in the fridge for 8 hours or overnight before serving.


Let it be known that Aldi's has this cute cheap springform cake pan right now that I was pretty excited to find! And now onto the cake...

Ingredients: 

3 eggs, room temp
2 8 oz. packages cream-cheese, room temp
1 15 oz. can of pumpkin
3/4 c. granulated truvia sugar
liquid stevia, to taste
1/4 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. vanilla extract
1 tbsp pumpkin pie spice
1/2 tbsp cinnamon

Directions for the cheesecake filling...

Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. Fill a 9x13 in. pan with water and put it in the oven while it heats for a bit. A water-bath is in this cheesecake's future. 
Whisk the 3 eggs together and set aside.
Dump the rest of ingredients into the blender (pumpkin first).
Add the eggs. 
Taste the batter and sweeten with liquid stevia in the amount that you like.
Now you have delicious batter to pour into a prepared crust!

Bake the entire cake for 1 1/2 hours. If your oven is hotter than the average, bake at 120 degrees. You don't want it too hot. 

Into the water bath you go.
Directions for the crust... 

Any crust will do, so feel free to use any recipe for it. 
For this part I didn't really write anything down due to simplicity. All I did was throw into a bowl: oat flour, a bit of granulated truvia, sprinkle of salt and lots of cinnamon. I cut in cold butter and a few tbsp of cold water and massaged this all together until I got a thick dough of crust-batter consistency. 

I then picked it up and spread it into my springform cake pan, making it go up the sides just a bit.  

Bake this for 10 minutes to set it. Now it's ready for the batter!




All done and sitting on my stove-top.

Ready to stick into the fridge for a long time!

Happy Thanksgiving!

Sunday, November 19, 2017

Untamed Boys, and The School System



My boy is brilliant and you can all SUCK IT! 

'K so I didn't exactly say that in the parent/teacher meeting. But I wanted to, so badly.
My boys are 5 and 6 years old. They have always been super wild. More so the oldest.  Before I go on about the meeting, let me explain:

From the day he was born he was...intense.  That kid came barreling out of me after exactly/only seven months in the womb."Buckwheat" as daddy loves to call him. He didn't have time for things like gestation. He is charismatic and wild. As a baby he was miserable until he was mobile...constant crying, like three hours on end despite so much zantac.

Frequent tantrums and more-than-normal mischeif as a (basically ferrel) toddler. He was so great - just ALL BOY.  This child was always excited, usually either very happy or wildly tantruming. Just insane amounts of energy...  Into everything, totally obstinate, wildly loving.  At three years old I remember him saying "mommy, pray to Jesus for my energy to go away." They say he was suppose to grow out of any preemie issues years ago, but his tantrums continued as he grew. They would last for hours and it didn't seem normal.

I was a young first-time mom so I knew I didn't know much about parenting but still, all the other moms who had boys seemed to have a different situation. Their boys had tantrums not nearly as often and maybe for like a half hour.  And they had half the energy of my son. For his total lack of focus, I wondered how the hell could this child tantrum this long?

I used to be at social functions with my husband and say "You see these other boys? It's like they're all drugged! Seriously, what drugs are they on?" because their energy levels were all nothing like what I was around all day with my son.  All other boys seemed totally mild and I fully admit feeling a sort of an exhausted jealousy at the relaxed lives of these other moms.  The constant useless advice on how to control him was also exhausting. Everyone had a remedy from dietary changes to chiropractic, we have done it all.

I have loved and contended with him now for six years, and he is still the most ridiculously headstrong and enthusiastic person I know.  See that's the great thing about him though.  The thing is, Elijah feels things intensely. He is actually very willing to please, it's just hard for him to have much self-control (at all).  But this kid has the most tender sweetness I've ever seen in a child. A raging extravert, he is also a total party wherever he goes.  He's this brauny and huge-for-his-age kid (despite a 3 pound birthweight).  He reminds me of a school mascot and star-football player rolled into one.



His childhood has been extremely difficult for me. How can I put this kindly - I love my rough tousled boy, but If Elijah is in the mix, wherever I am feels like being in/at the zoo - because he is immediately exhausting.  When I would take him to the gym childcare and to church, I usually heard bad reports, or they'd just plain kick him out for the day. It's been a hard road for me to navigate. I won't even discuss the insane amounts of judgment I've gotten from other adults.

Enter, the school system.

He went to kindergarten last year at a good country school and was always the trouble-maker in the class. "Out of 21 kids in the class, he is the most difficult one" - is exactly what his teacher told me. His younger brother is also trouble, though he doesn't have the insane energy and expert trouble-making skills as his big brother.  He acts like a runner's up though for sure. These two live in a world of fierce competition and friction with each other.

This year it began not two weeks into the school year! There I was in September, already exhausted all the time in the ninth month of my 4th pregnancy and dealing with Hadassah's terrible two's. And I was starting to get the negative reports from the bus driver and the school not just about Elijah but now about his brother too!

I'll give an example: one day The boys' ran down our long dirt driveway, both with paper incident reports flapping in their hands from the bus. These read in a nutshell that no one could find my 5 year old, who was later discovered army-crawling back and forth underneath each seat, while my 6 year old was literally jumping over students from seat to seat. They had each hit or kicked someone.... name-calling, etc.  I was upset about the report but not shocked in the least.  "Most of my time is spent telling them to sit back down or be quiet." The bus driver had written. "They are separated, but continue to taunt each other from across the isles."


"The boys are out of hand, daily" I was told in an email.  They are both good at school-work, but rambunctious and aggressive. So two weeks into the school year, the principle wanted a meeting with Brandon and I, plus the boys' two teachers, oh and a social worker. Yay.

I thought What are we doing wrong? Here they have a loving home, with parents who love each other, healthy home-cooked family meals each night, a big charming country yard, bedtime stories, lots of quality bonding time with their father. We give consistent discipline... physical affection... My college degree is in child psychology for crying out loud! What the hell, man? Why are my boys like this? Why are they the ones who always stick out as difficult? Why???

You can imagine the stress.

I was in prodromal labor for 3 long weeks.  So we kept having to put the meeting off, never knowing if the constant contractions were going to be real labor. Then a few days after the baby was born, Brandon and I hauled our new crew of four in to meet with a slew of disgruntled faculty. I came armed with toys, diapers and snacks and loaded down like a pack-mule.

They wanted to know what could be going on at home since both boys are aggressive toward other children, very hyperactive, and lack focus.  "We're trying to figure out if it's within their control or not." The principle was a gentle kind man who I immediately liked. But it didn't change the fact that I could tell I was among a type of people who would just never understand the type of boys I had.

At one point I faced the boys' two teachers (and present social worker) - who are all female - "No offense but you're all a bunch of women, and you'll never understand certain boys. I get it, I don't relate to these boys either, but I do at least understand who they are.  The school system is much better on girls because it's almost geared more toward a little girl's nature. I feel my boys are being treated like bad girls. But my belief is there's nothing wrong with them. They want to please, they have good hearts, and they're both smart.... they just need way, waaaay more activity. They're bored to tears."

You should have seen one of the teacher's eyes get huge, and then a legit glare right through me.  It must've been insulting to hear.  Sorry, but I needed to stand up for my boys.  All summer long I had them at the YMCA summer day-camp off and on for certain weeks. The days were long, from 9am to 6pm.  However - I received only glowing reports!

Staff actually took me aside to say, "I just want to let you know what a JOY Elijah is to work with. He is always the life of the party, and the most enthusiastic participant in all the games." And why? Because the camp was running them all day long in high activity games.

Well public school is definitely different, and maybe not so conducive to boys who were born wild.
One teacher then replied to me that they do get recess, but these two boys are often the only ones in the room/bus who are the problem.  I said "Well then it's genetic. Brandon was so crazy when he was little that his teachers pressured his mom to put him on Ritalin. As an adult He has to work with his hands and is quite successful doing so."

I myself was tested and diagnosed with ADD as a teen and given medication for it. You're dealing with the product of the two of us... sorry about that. I really am. We'd love to help you any way we can." From there we all made steps towards further dealing with the boys in the future.

The bad behavior didn't stop though. At the principle's request I took them to see our pediatrician for the behavior problems.  Don't think I didn't know what was up. The school wanted my boys medicated. Over my dead body. But I knew I still better play thier game to some degree.

So there I was last week in a room the size of a walk-in-closet with all four kids melting down simultaneously, while the doc and I exchanged sentences by yelling over my very loud brood. I'm here on a formality, yelled I. Then I explained the situation. The school wants my boys diagnosed and medicated. The doctor is actually the dad of a kid who goes to my boy's school, and well-respected by the faculty. I told him what they are like at school, Elijah in particular, and handed him some half-crumpled paper incident reports while I nursed my baby.

A few days later Brandon and I went to the boys' parent/teacher conferences. The teacher leaned forward with interest to hear what the doctor said (social worker by her side). I told them that after much questioning and analyzing of Elijah, The doctor said he is totally fine. You should have seen the social worker's face just fall. "I wouldn't even have him tested." Said the doctor.  "I mean, he'll likely come out with ADHD - many kids will. But that's not his problem... have you thought of a charter school? What he needs is a different environment. See, public school is great for many and most kids. But for a few kids it's the wrong place. Elijah just needs way more physical activity. They both do. And vitamin D. It's probly good that your moving to Florida."

Elijah's teacher did not like hearing this, you can imagine. She told us, "It's just, you'd be surprised by what medication can do. I've seen kids with problem behavior who once they're medicated - it's like they're a totally different kid! They're MUCH better behaved and able to do thier school work."

"I'm sure they are totally different kids." I replied....

"We know he's a lot to handle. I dealt with it all summer long and I deal with it every day. But we love him the way he is. And this is something he will grow out of. I think he will become an amazing adult."


The thing is, there is nothing wrong with my son. He may be a wild boy but he is MY wild boy. And yes, he IS different, I will never deny that. It's like he was born a little warrior, or with extra testosterone or something. I don't know what it is, but I am convinced that his upbringing must be undertaken carefully because he is going to be a powerful force in whatever direction he shoots off to.

If you are a mother of a boy like this, take heart and be strong. Advocate for your son. Don't let anyone scare you and don't let up. You were made to be his mother for a reason. On my bathroom mirror is a note to remind me that I was chosen for this. I hope this post encourages some tired desperate mom to hang in there. I really believe in our wild boys.