Monday, April 7, 2014
The Bookish Mum: Reading to Feed Your Soul and Intellect - A Series
Welcome to a little series where I hope we'll be able to explore why reading is important to mums, how to make time for reading books, and how to find books you'll love. I'm hoping to write a couple posts here and there that can be part a series that will help us all feel a little more encouraged in making time for ourselves through reading. Many people have asked me how I make time to read, and although this isn't groundbreaking I'm going to try and answer some questions and if you come up with more ask away!
First, let's talk about why reading books is still important for Mums.
In the midst of babies, toddlers, small children, and all that comes with them like the sleepless nights, the every day need for food at least three times a day, (or if you're two years old, 50 times per day), maintaining some level of household cleanliness, and maybe even getting out of the house every once in a while, there comes the question: How do you find time to read?!
We all know that motherhood completely changes every part of our lives. It changes our everyday to the point where we have to re-evaluate all our priorities. Discovering this new everyday mothering rhythm where we find that sweet spot of nurturing and loving our babies while taking care of ourselves can take awhile. It took me until after the birth of my first, second, and even third child, to figure out my mothering rhythm where I could make time everyday for things I enjoyed, like reading.
It's good to remind ourselves that when we become mothers we still remain ourselves. Our personalities, interests, passions, and hobbies are all still there but need to be refocused. Reading can help in pursuing our interests as well as continuing our love of learning but often gets sidetracked. But once we haven't read in a while it can be daunting to get back into the habit. Or we may have misplaced pressure from our reading days at college, or our previous profession. If we begin to look at reading as an opportunity in our days to feed both our soul and mind without the pressure of jobs, deadlines, and papers reading can become both easier and a source of personal renewal.
Reading really does feed our hearts and souls. We spend busy days and exhausting nights giving to our children. Books invite us to enter into someone else's story; to feel joy, sadness, excitement when our days feel remarkably alike. Our hearts grow through stories, we see humanity in a new light, and experiences in a way that which we could never imagine. Moving outside of ourselves in this way can bring us relief on the tough days.
It can be really difficult to find quiet and solitude in the everyday when we're raising small children. Another advantage in reading is the solitude and quiet is can give us in the midst of chaos. Spending even 15 minutes while babies nap, or while older kids are enjoying quiet time of their own, or an occasional dose of Dora, can refresh us in surprising ways. The concerted effort it takes to create quiet time for ourselves is so important for our peace of mind and sanity sometimes. The refreshing of our attitude is good not only for our souls but our kid's as well.
Another way of looking at the value of reading as a mum is thinking about how we're trying to raise our children. We want to encourage the growth of the whole child; his heart, his moral understanding, his manners, his physical well-being, and of course his mind. We see the natural curiosity of children as a beautiful gift that should always be welcomed and supported, we have the goal of raising life-long learners with a passion for wisdom, knowledge, and truth. Why then would we let our own minds flounder? It can become easy to coast through our days without the intellectual stimulation of the workplace, or ignore our interests and curiosities. Reading is an easy way to keep our need to learn alive and continue to pursue what interests us. There are always new books to read, new things to learn, and it can happen at home in the midst of our mothering lives.
We can't abandon our intellect when we become mothers just like we can't abandon other important aspects of life. We don't want to let how we look and feel about ourselves through fashion slide, or give up working out and fitness, so too we have to view our intellect as an integral part of ourselves. Just like it can take a little time to regain our confidence with style, or getting back in the groove of working out after having babies, we can get back on track when it comes to exercising our intellect.
Although we need to look at our intellects as a vital part of ourselves that need attention, I also don't want us to look at reading books as another thing to add to our already too long to-do lists. Reading should give us refreshment and add to our lives, not feel like drudgery or another chore. In the next instalment of this series I'll talk about concrete ways to sneak reading into our busy days and I hope we'll be able to share what works best for us bookish mums!
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Saturday, April 5, 2014
The Mysticism of St. Francis :: Weekends with G.K.C.
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With this quote we see the defining defence of St. Francis by G.K. in his biography of this great saint.
The common and almost universal impression people seem to have when it comes to St. Francis is that he was a good man who just loved everything in a very general way. He loved animals, he loved people, he loved the poor. And in those generalizations in our minds it seems as if this bland love had no roots or connections to theology or dogma; like so much common new age theories and philosophies that blur religious ideals without regard for concrete objective truth.
St. Francis however, like every other great saint, had a very deeply rooted love and devotion to the Truth. The Truth of Christ and his Church, one that was fully revealed and known to man in a very concrete way. The Truth which dispelled darkness and sought to bring light to all.
I like to think of not only St. Francis in light of this passage, but also in his fan Pope Francis who also is not a fan of blurred lines and muddy theology but a clear one which speaks to all.
Joining Sarah at Amongst Lovely Things for Weekends with Chesterton.
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Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Five Favourites - Book notes, movie notes, recipes
I am in a blogging slump my friends! It's official. I felt someone stick a fork in me and everything. But in efforts to cheer myself up...blogging....linkups!
1.
I found this mystery novel with a spunky 11 year old girl heroine a treat to read. I hope it's not just because of my deep love of a good detective novel, but this one felt fresh, clever, and charming all at once. I especially appreciated how it was free of any gimmicks, be they bad writing or controversial immorality stuck into the 1950's like a sore thumb like so many contemporary writers desperately glob into otherwise historically accurate books.
2.

A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love, Friendship, and the Things That Really Matter
A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love, Friendship, and the Things That Really Matter
I really wanted to love this one. As a devout Jane fan it wouldn't have taken much, and although I appreciated some of his insights, at other times I could not get over how pompously he thought of his own "discoveries" which seemed to me the stuff of high school boys. He errs HUGELY at time especially in regards to Sense and Sensibility. He also largely misses the point of Mansfield Park, like Haley talks about here. As a Northanger fan I feel he misses the bigger points there as well. But, if you're a Jane fan you've got to read it.
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty
Oh look, I'm watching and writing about movies that came out months ago! Come July, I'll hit you with shockers like "Whoa, Noah! I loved/hated that crazy/controversial/Biblically inaccurate movie!"
But I really enjoyed Walter Mitty. It's a visually beautiful movie, and I've been a Ben Stiller fan since the classic Zoolander. (My husband laughed when I listed that as a great Ben Stiller movie. Psshaa.) I like this take on the beauty of the common man, the importance of his work, his imagination/inner life, and it's lack of swearing is nice too.
4.
In my Lenten effort to eradicate frivolous snacking of the processed variety I've sunk to making my own mix of flavoured peanuts. I feel like this has to be hitting rock bottom. But here's my little recipe if you like chill/lime peanuts without scary stuff, I've modified it from so many recipes that I think they'd be offended if I mentioned them so I'll just list mine.
Combine 2 cups peanuts(un-roasted and unsalted) and 1 tsp salt, 1 TB olive oil, and the zest of one lime and bake in a 350 degree oven until you can smell the peanuts. Around 20 min. Remove from oven and while warm season peanuts with chili powder to your taste, start around 1 tsp, and cayenne if you're feeling adventurous. Then very quickly, while peanuts are still fairly hot pour the juice of one lime over them all and mix well. Once they're cool they taste good and lime-ish which is always an important thing for me. Also, if you've got better chili powder than the regular kind by all means try that out, and be careful of the salt you add depending on how much salt in in your chili powder mix.
It'd be really nice if I had an actual picture to post because this is a blog and all...maybe one day!
5.
Have you been watching The Walking Dead? If so, I hope you've also been reading Cari's recaps which are the greatest. Cari has done a wonderful job fleshing out themes in the midst of zombie flesh. I'm stillreally a bit traumatized by that season finale. This season was so much better than last, and I didn't spend every episode verbally wishing for some character's (*cough*Andrea*cough*) death so my husband enjoyed this season a lot more as well.
Have you been watching The Walking Dead? If so, I hope you've also been reading Cari's recaps which are the greatest. Cari has done a wonderful job fleshing out themes in the midst of zombie flesh. I'm still
I'm toying around the idea of doing some Mad Men recaps here since the next season starts in two short weeks! No one may read them because Mad Men is much more morally ambiguous for the Catholic viewer than The Walking Dead, but my I love that show so darn much and really just want to comment on all the outfits I probably won't care.
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Friday, March 28, 2014
Seven Quick Takes vol. 84
Back with some breathtaking takes of the seven type - visit Jen for the best!
It was a full week around here, if you consider birthdays and lack of sleep and chaos a definition of "full"!
Our sweet baby turned 1 on the Feast of the Annunciation so it was a very happy and fun-filled feast day for us all. It feels weird that a year can go by and yet feel like a blink of an eye but at the same time you can't remember life without that little one-year-old. I love the time bending paradox of parenthood.
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| She loved blowing out the candle. It was adorable. |
{two}
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| Almost a smile! |
The funny thing about a one year old's birthday is that the day is completely the same as any other day and they have no idea what the fuss is about. So Nora was celebrating with her equal parts of grumpy-ness mixed with happiness mixed with being completely tuckered out by 6:30. Who really needs to celebrate a one year old's birthday is the parents. We're the ones who've made it through that crucially important yet indescribably exhausting first year of getting someone through life. Needless to say, I made use of her excellent choice of days to be born to have a drink and several chocolate cupcakes.
{three}
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| All five together for the first time since Christmas...a small miracle in itself. |
In addition to the happiness of making it another year, when every birthday of every child passes I always feel a generous warmth of gratitude. Whenever I think that I've been given the responsibility of raising precious, wonderful souls it seems absolutely crazy. Does God really know what he's doing? But the reality of the situation is that his help is evident in big ways, everyday. But each birthday it washes over me just a bit more. So it's good there's 5 birthdays a year to reset my gratitude levels.
{four}
It was nice to have a birthday during this week as it reverted back to winter around here. Too cold to punt kids out of doors for any amount of time Wednesday, I felt the cold grayness of life surround me and instantly was back in the trauma of winter. I hadn't much sleep either because Nora decided waking up at least 5 times was necessary pre-birthday, so my attitude had so many reasons to plummet. But oh, what a plummet. I wish I could say I combatted it, but really, I just wrote Wednesday off as a blur of bad attitude/bad weather. Yesterday I went to confession, a drive, and now the forecast is supposed to pick up so that means my attitude will too, right?
{five}
The Fault in Our Stars
took me for a ride this week. I'm not sure if it quite lived up to the hype for me. I always try to read "Young Adult" novels with the mindset of a directionless teen, and by doing so one can see the themes the authors are trying to eek out. The themes they think they're so cleverly not disguising so teenagers don't think they're reading stuff with substance. This book's themes of death, love and eternity had bright spots but then quite a lot of murkiness. I just wonder if many teens who read it come away more or less convinced of the afterlife/love existing beyond our lifetimes.
But I'll admit I cried a plenty.
{six}
So you've heard about Gwen and Chris's "conscious uncoupling" right? I have no emotional skin in that celebrity couple game, as I think the marriage lasted longer than I expected because as soon as Gwen's "singing career" happened I thought Chris Martin must be slowly being tortured somewhere.
But here's the thing I find so terribly pretentious like most things Gwyneth -- the idea that by somehow changing the name of something, i.e. divorce, it changes the consequences of the action. Calling divorce something else do not change the fact that a marriage has failed and a family is now broken. A paradox of humanity is that we crave absolutes while believing them unachievable. Marriage is an absolute. We deny it all the time with divorce, cohabitation, same-sex marriage, but the absolute truth of it cannot be changed no matter how much we redefine it or mistreat it. I always find these attempts to change truths so sad, an attempt to change our own failures or own weaknesses into the ultimate good or absolute. I understand that human need to want to change to not admit our failures is a huge driving force. Paradox.
{seven}
In a Lenten effort to clean out my freezer's we've been having random meals all week by eating whatever I find and heating it up. It's been easy and I feel good getting around to this task I put off for months and months but this morning I found some frozen scones from who know's when, pulled them out took a bite and thought I had just eaten the deepest depths of the oldest, grossest, grimiest, freezer ever. My taste buds haven't yet recovered. I'm the casualty of my own good intentions. But now I know I should probably clean out the freezer more than every Lent.
Hope you all have a sunshine-y weekend!
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Tuesday, March 25, 2014
5 Ridiculous Spring Fashion Trends for Moms
Don't you just love Spring?
I love the change of wardrobe it brings full of colour and changes of fabrics from wools to cottons and of course the glorious feeling that is going out doors without a parka! But this spring I've noticed some disturbing fashion trends that I can't fathom getting on board with for a multitude of practical reasons. Here's my top 5 offenders:
1. White
White is big this spring, it's everywhere and it looks clean and fresh on all the models....but...
tell me how anyone with children under the age of 30 would wear jeans like these for more than 5 minutes without at least 5 stains?? I've got three boys aged 5 and under who if they saw me wearing these jeans, would make it their personal mission in life to find as much chocolate, dirt, blood, and peanut butter with which to touch my legs.
Sorry, trendy white.
tell me how anyone with children under the age of 30 would wear jeans like these for more than 5 minutes without at least 5 stains?? I've got three boys aged 5 and under who if they saw me wearing these jeans, would make it their personal mission in life to find as much chocolate, dirt, blood, and peanut butter with which to touch my legs.
Sorry, trendy white.
2. Overalls
I don't think anyone who has been pregnant finds these funny. Enough said.
3. Crop Tops
Boy, these are hilarious ammiright?
"Crop tops" -- that are supposed to bare skin between the "waist" and belly button.
These are as cool to a mom as the words "stomach flu" and "glitter".
4. Culottes
I've got 5 kids who I have a hard enough time keeping track of, and I'm fairly confident that I'd lose a couple kids in these pants several times a day.
5. "Mom Jeans"
via streetpeeper
Noooooo!! We've come so far Fashion, and yet now you're trying to look like those mothers who shunned fashion themselves?! It's some crazy/ironic/hipster idea that has gone horribly, horribly wrong.
Linking up with Hallie, even though these are on the Debbie Downer side of Five Faves...
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Wednesday, March 19, 2014
On Naming Homes
I've always wanted to name our home, but for some reason haven't.
It's a funny, odd little dream I have, very British in nature but I think one that seems like a worthwhile endeavour.
The reason we haven't come up with an official name is because I keep thinking as if this house is temporary - which is crazy. We've been here for seven years and it's the home we've made as a family. The only home our 5(!) children have every known. It's lived up to the definition of "home" so many times over that despite it's falling apart windows, draft-y doors, and lack of square footage it deserves a moniker that expresses it's importance in the history of our lives.
It's the importance of place too, which we always tend to forget as our modern lives feel so global and disconnected from physical locality in general. But place is important, no matter how much we want to feel integrated, worldy, or well-travelled, and it's worthy of a reminder every now and again. The place you build a home and live your life is of great importance to yourself as an individual, your family, your community and culture. It begins at home, the exact four walls you live within. If your four walls happen to be in suburbia and not a fashionable district of your dreams, or a fixer upper heavy on the fixing, or my nondescript modular in the middle of nowhere, it shouldn't be the actual building itself or it's address that make it worthy of a name but the lives it contains.
The romance of this notion plays a part in naming your home as well. It's a delightful romantic thing to do. Like in all the great books we read houses have names like "Green Gables", "Tara", "Longbourne", "Manderley" or "Mansfield Park" to name a few. They hold and represent a rich literary story that simultaneously creates a perfect picture in your mind. But why have we modern people who aren't characters in novels stopped? Why have we moved away from the romantic notion that our lives no matter how ordinary are still important stories and that our homes are part of the tales?
We'll see how long it takes us to come up with a fitting "Andulsia" or "Top Meadow" for our little home.
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Monday, March 17, 2014
New look around here!
Good Monday Morning and Happy St. Patrick's Day one and all!
I'm just popping in from pulling my kids off the walls from a green overload to share my new look around here. You know me and my complete lack of technological knowledge coupled with my dread of change makes for not much changing around the blog so I called in wonderful professional help. Danielle Burkleo, who has a gift for understanding my mumbo-jumbo, did a wonderful job and I think it turned out just how I pictured it in my mind palace.
That's my news, hopefully they'll be substance tomorrow!
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