Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Planking Harry

Harry is having a big explosion of development.

He started saying "Dada" last week:



Instead of rocking on his knees to learn how to crawl, Harry is doing a baby version of planking.  He lifts up his torso, smiles, and then it happens.  He makes some scary gutteral noises like the olympic weight lifters as he lifts everything off of the ground except for his hands and toes.  I love everything about it.

Check me out, Ma.

Taking a breather.  Oh, you liked that, Ma?  Ok, let's do it again.  Here I go...

Feel the burn!  Look how red his face gets! 

OK, I'll do it one more time.

No pain, no gain, Ma.

Just using my focal object for inspiration.  
After his morning workout, he started learning how to rock back and forth on his knees.  We just might have a crawler by moving time!

Thursday, March 13, 2014

The 5th "P" in Our Rule of Life: Provider

The adage that it's easier to do something everyday than occasionally is definitely true for me when it comes to blogging.  Onward with the Boucher Family Rule of Life!

If you have no idea what I'm writing about, I decided as part of my Lenten mission to create a Boucher Family Rule of Life based on Holly Pierlot's A Mother's Rule of Life.  In previous posts in this series, I've written about:

Today, I'm resuming the series with the 5th "P": Provider. 

Today's "P" focuses on providing for the material needs of our family and being good stewards of our finances.  Today is all about giving our provider role the proper, regular attention it needs so that we can focus on the rest of our other "P"s: prayer, person, partner, and parent.  

"In God We Trust"

Yesterday, I mentioned Holly Pierlot's metaphor that parents mirror the work of God during creation in many ways (providing for the material needs of our family, creating a mini-paradise for them, etc.).  One of the ways we mirror God's work during creation is through our work and stewardship of the resources God gives us.  It is essential that we recognize a few things:
  • Work is GOOD!  God asked Adam to till the garden before the fall.  Work is good for us.
  • What we have belongs to God, so:
    •  we better take good care of it
    •  we better give God what He's asking
So, what does all of that mean?  Let's focus on a few key areas:

Our Home
We need to maintain it, improve it, and make it a "little paradise" for our families.  However, a "little paradise" has nothing to do with keeping up with the Joneses.  We need to be prudent, aware of our financial resources, and use some creativity to develop our own skills in creating a haven for our families.  If whatever we have belongs to God, then we can transform our attitude toward homework when we realize that we're doing it for the Big Guy and serving our families to reveal God's love.  Practically, Holly Pierlot gives some suggestions in making your home a "mini-paradise."

  • Do a "room by room analysis"
  • Decide:  What is the purpose of each room?  What does each room need for that purpose?
    • Place items in the places where they will be used
    • What do I need to remove?
    • What needs to be repaired?  (Remember to prioritize and budget)
    • What improvements would I like to make?
  • Housework
    • What housework needs to be done in each room?
    • How often does each task need to happen? (Daily, weekly, monthly, seasonally?)
    • Who is going to do the work?  (Delegate, teaching everyone that working is part of being good stewards)
    • When can I schedule these chores into our day?
    • Create a "home-and-property analysis" to discuss with Philip (the needs in and outside of the home including: lawn, garage, garden, repairs, purchases, future projects)

What does being a good steward look like?

  • Take good care of what we already have (proper maintenance, giving everything a "home," learn to repair things ourselves)
  • Budget, budget, budget 
    • How much money do we have?  
    • Where is it going?  
    • What's a want?  
    • What's a need?  
    • Are we tithing?  Are we giving God what belongs to Him?  Do we think it's "our" money?
    • What debt do we have?  
    • What bills do we have?
    • Are we saving?
    • How are we wasting money?  (Groceries, eating out, etc.)
    • How are we helping others?
  • Schedule time to:
    • File receipts
    • Record expenses
    • Review the budget
    • Plan future purchases
    • Review the payment schedules of any bills and debt
    • Revisit our savings and emergency fund
Are we taking it to prayer?
  • Pray that God to release us from the temptation toward materialism and jealousy
  • Pray for wisdom in creating & maintaining a budget
  • Pray for clear communication, goals, and teamwork between Philip and I in our finances
  • Pray for a transformed heart when it comes to the work we do 
  • Pray for peace and trust when we are in want
  • Pray for generosity when we are not in want
  • Pray for thanksgiving at all times
  • Pray for faith that God will not be outdone in generosity when we give Him what belongs to Him
Questions for you
  • What do you do when you're struggling to find value in your work?
  • Have you ever done a "room by room analysis" of your home?  Do you feel like each room has a specific purpose?  Is each room set up do accomplish that purpose?  What changes do you need to make?
  • Do you have the housework schedule in your head, or do you have the schedule written out somewhere?  Do you struggle to delegate tasks because you think they won't be accomplished properly?  Are you teaching your children to be good stewards through their participation in housework?
  • How are you taking care of what you already have?
  • Do you have a family budget?  Who handles the finances?  Is one of you "in the dark" in this area?  Have you considered having a regular meeting to check in?  Do you have a regular time to organize this area so that the monthly bills, taxes, etc. do not become an excessive burden?
  • How can you take this area of your life to prayer?

*     *     *

Now that I've tackled all "5 'P's," it's time to start sharing how I'm drawing up our Family Rule of Life. Chapter 8 of A Mother's Rule of Life is all about pulling your rule together.  This will involve: 
  • creating daily time frames
  • prayer time
  • chore time
  • meal prep/eating/clean-up
  • laundry
  • daily constants
  • filling time between meals
  • routinizing everything
  • organizing weekly & seasonal schedules
  • discerning through prayer when to add or remove something from the schedule
I look forward to hearing your answers to my discussion questions and getting feedback on Our Family Rule as I share it.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

The 4th "P" in Our Rule of Life: Parent

Whew, it's been waaaaaaaaaaaaaay longer than I intended to return to the 5 P's of our family's rule of life.  It turns out selling a home with three small children is no small feat!  The good news is that St. Joseph is THE MAN, and he has already proven himself a powerful intercessor for our family.  Please join us as we pray the Novena to St. Joseph!  (We're on Day 3 to culminate on his feast day next Wednesday, but you can pray these prayers anytime.)

In case you've missed my previous posts in this series, I decided as part of my Lenten mission to create a Boucher Family Rule of Life.  It's based off of Holly Pierlot's book A Mother's Rule of Life.  In previous posts in this series, I wrote about:

Today, I'm tackling the 4th "P": Parent.
 
As a former high school Spanish teacher, I can tell you what a difference it makes when parents take their role as primary educators of their children seriously.  It was easy to identify children who came from homes where their parents led as primary educators instead of passing the buck along to the teachers at school.  

Regardless of whether or not God calls me to homeschool at any time, I will always be my children's primary educator.  Holly Pierlot calls a mother's role as a primary educator to her children the "mission of motherhood."  That means I need to give this whole stay-at-home mom gig the dignity it deserves--even if the world doesn't.  I need to take seriously the impact day-to-day living in this domestic church has on all of the members of our family.  I need to take seriously the impact our children's witness will have in our local community and larger society as they leave the four walls of our home.  

Now, in the midst of the diapers, dirty dishes, and mountains of laundry, I need to recognize how irreplaceable my presence is to my children.  It's not just my job to watch them like some kind of glorified babysitter.  I'm supposed to be helping to form them.  In A Mother's Rule of Life, Holly Pierlot talks about coming to the realization that "parents image God's work at creation."  

From the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, the Creation of Adam.
Holly expands the metaphor, describing the parallels between the work that God performed back in Genesis with Adam and Eve and the work that we perform as parents:
  • Provide food and shelter
  • Create a paradise (our homes are to be a "mini-paradise," "a place of beauty and peace and harmony"
  • Be in close communication
  • Infuse them with knowledge for their survival (temporally and eternally) and equip them to be good stewards of creation
  • Teach them the value of work and delegate responsibility
  • Govern, lead, and discipline
  • Forgive children for trespasses, "cover their sins with love," but teach them "the just consequences of their actions"
After looking at all of those responsibilities we have as parents, especially as mothers, it's hard to view our work as ordinary and meaningless.  I love, love, love Holly's definition of what it means to provide our children with a Catholic education.  She says that parenting "is a call to form persons.  We're called to bring God to our children's spirits, truth to their minds, health to their bodies, skill to their hands, beauty and creativity to their hearts, and in all this, virtue to their wills and sanctity to their souls."  Dang.  Re-read that.  Pope Pius XI had another way of saying that.  He said, "Education consists essentially in preparing man for what he must be, and for what he must do here below, in order to attain the sublime end for which he was created."  Ultimately, both Holly Pierlot and Pope Pius XI are saying that our homes need to be domestic churches where we propel our children along the path to sainthood.  

That goal became very real for Philip and I when we miscarried our baby, Thérèse, at 12 weeks.  We entrust her to God's mercy and believe that she is in heaven (and, therefore, a saint).  We frequently ask her for her intercession.  Being separated from Therese further inspires us to get every member of our family to heaven.

That all sounds fine and dandy, but let's "get down to brass tacks" and talk about how to make that goal happen practically.  To help our kiddos get an "ST" in front of their names, I re-read the section on parenting in Holly Pierlot's A Mother's Rule of Life.  Here are a few areas I considered and used to create a saint-making action plan:

Open up the channel of grace to God
  • Attend daily Mass at least once a week in addition to Sunday Mass
  • Monthly confession for everyone that's old enough (put it on the calendar!)
  • Family prayer time (morning, mid-day, after dinner & bedtime prayer together)
  • Access to sacramentals and prayer aids (Holy water, Rosaries, Bibles, lives of the saints, etc.)
  • Pray for the children (ask for their intentions, spontaneously offer prayer throughout the day, and pray with Philip for the children before bed)
  • Dedicate formal & informal teaching times to talk about & celebrate the saint of the day, virtues, current events in the Church, parts of the Mass, feast days, baptismal anniversaries (start with "Circle Time" in the morning and build from there)
Consider if I'm Being a Channel of God's Love
  • Model the behaviors I'm asking of other members of the family.  Am I revealing God's love to them in the way I treat them? (Examine this during my weekly Examination of Conscience)
  • Be available and treat my children as my vocation instead of an obstacle to it - stop whatever I'm doing, make eye contact, listen, and respond with love
  • Treat my children as the unique children of God that they are (identify their strengths & weaknesses, encourage them, and help them in whatever appropriate ways possible)
  • Do what's best for them (food, sleep, appropriate chores, playtime, surprise activities for refreshment) 
Discipline
  • Maintain the children's free will like God does.  Teach them to accept negative consequences instead of trying to bend their wills.  
  • Consider if the child's behavior is an isolated act or a habit of disobedience.  (If it's habitual behavior, consider the root cause, and work to find a solution.)
Consistency
  • Make sure what I'm asking is reasonable & justified, and take the time to enforce it
Create Opportunities for Them to Exercise Freedom Within a Framework
  • Allow them to make choices (clothing, menu planning, recreation activities, etc.)
  • Help weigh the options (what's good & what's not)
  • Discuss potential consequences
  • Let them make the decision and face the consequences
Find a Place for Everything
  • Maintain outer order in the home to create inner order for everyone
  • Teach the children where things go
  • Take the time to enforce that things need to be put back "home" instead of doing it myself
Find a Time for Everything
  • Hygiene
  • Exercise
  • God time (prayer, Mass, confession, etc.)
  • Learning (formal & informal learning, homework)
  • Recreation (sports, hobbies, friends)
  • Meals (including preparation & clean-up)
  • Cleaning
  • Laundry
  • Sleep & rest
  • Set aside time to teach the components of the routine
Set the Family Up for Success to Start the Routine
  • Create, print, & laminate charts for various tasks around the home to teach the children (bathroom, getting dressed, laundry, meal clean-up, etc.)
  • Make time to teach to reduce frustration for everyone
  • Observe the children working and revise when necessary
    • Re-teach and model
    • Adjust expectations
    • Provide motivation (creating a reward system to implement by the end of Lent)
    • Teach the importance of hard work
    • Teach about redemptive suffering (and enter into it with them!)
    • Suggest ways to make the work easier
    • Change the time of day they are performing the task
    • Allow them to choose tasks
    • Read stories of saints that exhibit determination or hard work
    • Use logical consequences
    • Remove privileges
  • Make sure everyone is getting the grace they need to perform their duties

A few questions for you:
  • Specifically, how do you open up the channels of grace to God for every member of your family?
  • How do you hold yourself accountable to be a channel of God's love?
  • Are you and your husband on the same team in the discipline department?  What changes need to happen?  How can you be more consistent?  
  • What are you doing (small or big) to gradually develop your children's inner moral compass?
  • Are there problem areas or "hot spots" that regularly collect clutter in your home?  The kitchen counter or dining room table?  Can you set a goal to find a home for the items on those surfaces during Lent?  Do you have too many things and need to live more simply?
  • Are you building time into your schedule to do everything that needs to be done?  Do you include time for things like meal preparation or clean-up?  How can you limit the feelings of frustration or being rushed?
  • How have you taught your other family members to maintain a routine?  Do you have any tips to share?
  • What did I forget?  I've only been a parent for 4 years, so I know I still have a lot to learn!  Share away, please and thank you!  
*     *     *

In the next posts in this series, I will write about:
  • The 5th "P": Provider
  • What Our Family Rule looks like, and where I am with putting it together

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Small Success Thursday #9

Here are a few of our small successes from this week:

It's March, so that means we have 4 more months of residency!  Yahoo!!!

I successfully completed Jen Fulwiler's "7 Posts, 7 Days" challenge.

In the midst of the craziness with the house yesterday, we made it to Mass and remembered to fast & abstain.  

Jane loves feeding Harry and fed him all of his peas yesterday.  Sweet big sister offered to play with Harry while I cleaned up his chair.  Harry loves it when Janie blows raspberries on his tummy!


So much cuteness has happened this morning!  I'm calling it a success that there's so much love around this house today.  

As we were loading up to take Jane to preschool, Jane and Walt decided to sing Harry a lullaby in his carseat.  I love Harry's big grin as his big sibs sing to him.



While I was cleaning the breakfast dishes, Walt ran into the kitchen and squeezed my leg.  "Thanks for being my girl, Mama.  I love you."  I don't know where he picked up the phrase "my girl," but this mama is loving it.  

Before we pulled into the school parking lot, Walt turned to Janie and said, "I'm gonna miss you, Janie!"  Without skipping a beat, she said, "I'm gonna miss YOOOOOOOOOOU, Walt!"  

We've had a lot of interest in the house since we listed on Monday, and we just *might* be done with showings.  I like to say that "it ain't over til it's over" with the house stuff, and I probably won't be breathing easy until we're pulling away in the moving van, but, for now, things are looking good.  Please pray all continues to go well as both parties dot our "i"s an cross our "t"s, have the inspection, and near the closing date.  If I can get a little greedy with my prayer requests, please also pray that we find a home in Lincoln within our new parish boundaries.  Unfortunately, there isn't much on the market right now, so we're hoping a home will come on the market very soon.  Way to go, prayer warriors!  

Your turn!  What are your small successes from this week?  Head on over to CatholicMom to read other small successes and share your own triumphs.  If you're using social media, use the hashtag #SmallSuccess. 


Monday, March 3, 2014

The House is Officially On the Market!

Yay!  Our house is officially on the market as of today!  

We had two scheduled showings this late afternoon/early evening.  Unfortunately, one had to cancel due to a family emergency (and I pray that everything is okay!).  We're hoping the steady stream of interest will continue this week and that we'll see an offer soon.  Hopefully no one will want to have a showing during nap time!

Monty decided he wasn't up for evacuating our house during showings because he gets carsick.  Instead, he's staying in our basement living area in his cage.  He left a note for all of our visitors, and he's hoping that they'll give him a treat for being such a good boy.

Here's his sign:


For a little fun, I'd love for you to place your bets on how many days our home will be on the market.  Wise guys that want to upset me with guesses like 366 days need not participate!  Philip guesses 8 days, and I'm going to guess 23 days so that I don't get my hopes up TOO high.  What's your guess?

Philip's mom is so thoughtful!  She sent us a St. Joseph statue and holy card.  Jane placed the statue in her and Walt's room, and she is so proud that he's on their dresser.  

St. Joseph, pray for us!

Sunday, March 2, 2014

The 3rd "P" in Our Rule of Life: Partner

If you have no idea what I'm writing about, I decided to create our own Boucher Family Rule of Life as part of my Lenten mission.  It's modeled after Holly Pierlot's A Mother's Rule of Life.  In previous posts in this series, I've written about:

I'm resuming the series today with the 3rd "P": Partner.

I love how our photographer captured this older couple walking toward us as we walked around downtown on our wedding day.  I call it foreshadowing!


When it comes to marriage, I keep coming back to these 2 quotes to help me form our Family Rule:
  • "Marriage is meant to enable us to fulfill a mission--in this instance, a mission of service and love toward our spouse." - Holly Pierlot, A Mother's Rule of Life
  • Love is "availability, acceptance, and help." - Blessed Pope John Paul II 
Keeping those two things in mind, Philip and I agree that these things need to be top priorities:
  • Setting apart time each night to just be with each other and "check in"after the kids are in bed - give each other our complete attention, make our words  
  • Regular date nights (we swap babysitting with another couple so that we have at least one date night per month without having to pay for a sitter)
  • At-home date night (Our at-home date night jar helps for inspiration!)
  • Perform tiny acts of love whenever possible - make Philip's coffee, make Philip's lunch when he's not eating hospital food next year (with a love note!), clean up after Philip or help finish an incomplete task without nagging or pointing out fault, fill up the car, prepare healthy snacks, suggest we see the action film instead of the rom-com on date night, etc.
  • Work on my own faults and behaviors before trying to change his
  • Keep the lines of communication open by "keeping short accounts" and checking in regularly, take a "time out" if we're getting upset, choose our moments wisely, and no piling on previous hurts
  • Couple prayer time before bed and sharing a holy hour (alternate who goes each week)
  • Pray for one another during our individual prayer time and ask the other person to pray for specific intentions
  • Remove obstacles to intimacy and regularly check in with each other (NFP helps us to make sure that this is a regular topic of conversation)
  • Regularly answer Holly Pierlot's questions during my weekly journaling & examination of conscience:
    • Are you taking full responsibility with your husband in all spheres of your marriage?
    • Is there any area you're shirking?
    • Is there any part of your marriage in which you're being controlling?
    • How can you change?
Questions for you:
  • What did I forget on the topic of marriage?
  • How do you keep the spark alive between yourself and your spouse?
  • How do you date on a budget?
  • What do you do to model healthy conflict resolution in front of your children?  (We recently created some rules for ourselves in this area!)
  • Do you have the habit of picking out your spouse's faults on a regular basis?  Do you do so in front of your children?
  • In what specific ways can you change?  How can you take on full responsibility or stop shirking in some areas?  Do you need to learn how to let go?
*     *     *

This is my 7th of 7 posts in Jen Fulwiler's "7 Days, 7 Posts" challenge.  Come on over, join in the funk link-up, and read some great blogs!

Saturday, March 1, 2014

The 2nd "P" in Our Rule of Life: Person

If you have no idea what I'm writing about, I decided to create our own Boucher Family Rule of Life as part of my lenten mission.  It's modeled after Holly Pierlot's A Mother's Rule of Life.  In previous posts on this topic, I have written about:


(Note: When I said I'd tackle 1 P each day for the next 5 days,  I should have said, "I'll tackle 1 P at my earliest convenience because we're putting our house on the market.")

Today, I'm looking at the 2nd "P" in a Rule of Life: Person.

The 2nd "P," Person, is an essential part of our Rule of Life.  Examining the Person isn't about naval gazing; it's a humbling moment to examine ourselves (good and bad) in order to make the necessary changes to become what God intends us to be.  In the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve's reason and intellect were in complete communion with God's will for them.  This gave them complete independence because they were free of attachments to sin.  Have you ever heard the phrase, "sin makes you stupid"?  When I live in patterns of sin, I find myself in bondage to them.  When sins become habitual, it's easier to reason them away or blindly give in to temptation, and it becomes harder and harder to break free.  Examining my weaknesses and tendencies to sin with the intention to change is so liberating!  

Holly Pierlot quoted her university professor, Fr. Tom Daley, as saying that "freedom is taking responsibility for who you are to become."  If I want to live out our family's mission statement to be a domestic church where saints are made, I need to take responsibility for taking the necessary steps to become who God wants me to be.  In order to do that, I need to take a holistic approach to ensure that every area of my personhood is in balance.

So, I examined a few areas:

Psychological and Emotional Health
In her section on Person, Holly Pierlot suggests asking yourself a few questions to determine why you react the way you do.  

  • Why do I feel this way?
  • Why is this bothering me?
  • Where have I encountered this before in my life?
  • What does this make me think of?
These simple questions helped me to realize that I respond to the world around me because of the accumulation of past experiences.  Taking a moment to think about these questions, especially when I find my anger surfacing, is extremely helpful.  Usually, my anger is tied to a previous hurt unrelated to the moment at hand.  This exercise taught me that I need to work on processing my emotions more than simply relegating them to the back of my mind because it's easier to ignore them.

In addition to thinking about these questions, I am going to start journaling regularly.  I am going to start a weekly thorough examination of conscience.  This will help me to uncover habits of sin and hopefully help me to break those cycles.  Recognizing these chinks in my spiritual armor and asking God to strengthen me where I am weak is a good place to start.

I'd love to find a spiritual director after we move to help me further identify and work on overcoming habits of sin.  

Rest
This is me without enough sleep:



I earned the nickname "Kindergarten Catherine" when I attended all day kindergarten while still desperately needing a nap.   It was probably the longest year of my mother's life!  I'm 29, and my family still teases me about this!  I need my sleep.  For this mama, that means 7-8 hours of sleep to be fully functioning.  Philip and I have a new rule that we must be in bed by 9:30, and lights go out at 10.  This ensures that I'm rested enough to rise before the children at 5:30 for prayer and exercise.  

Aside from getting adequate rest at night, Holly Pierlot wrote about having a "Mother's Sabbath."  For her, a Mother's Sabbath is her regular time away for "rest, solitude, and restoration with God."  She takes one Saturday away every other week to go to Adoration, confession, run errands, read, etc.  She reasons that even Jesus took time away to pray and that we all need to get away in order to recharge.  In our family, a few hours on a Saturday once a month would be divine!  Since Philip is away from home all week, he doesn't have the same desire I do to get out of the house, and he wants to be a homebody most weekends.  Having this regular opportunity to get out by myself would do me some good.  I see myself going to confession, spending time in Adoration, running a few errands, reading at a coffee shop, and working on my blog.  I haven't had a Mother's Sabbath yet, but I doubt I'll have trouble making it up as I go!   

In addition to my Mother's Sabbath, I need time to rest with my gal pals without our kiddos.  Philip and I think that having some girl time (aside from my Bible study and parish mothers group) two times a month is a healthy amount.  (Likewise, he is supposed to schedule regular outings for himself with his buddies.)

Nutrition
I'm still using the Paprika app to organize my recipes and plan our weekly menu.  Having a plan in place reduces the amount that we're eating out and helps us to eat more nutritiously.  I build in healthy snacks throughout the week.  I need to work on prepping the snacks ahead of time (cut up fruits and vegetables) so that I can access them more easily than the less healthy options.  Simply having a list of nutritious snack ideas helps, too. 

Exercise
I haven't been able to get my regular exercise in because we've had a constantly shifting schedule during the day with Baby Harry.  Now that he's 6 months and has a relatively regular schedule with sleeping and eating, I'm finally ready to say that I have time to exercise at a regular time.  I've decided it makes the most sense for me to exercise after my morning prayers before I make breakfast for the kids.  If they wake up during this time, they can have quiet reading time until I'm done with my 30 Day Shred DVD.  They love acting like my personal trainers with cheerleading or even joining in next to me, so maybe this will turn into a family activity!  

Medication
I am so grateful to my Catholic OBGYN and nurse practitioner for helping to treat my hormone irregularities.  Through using the Creighton Model and doing a simple blood draw, we were able to identify a progesterone deficiency.  Supplementing my progesterone levels helped me to maintain a healthy pregnancy when I was pregnant with Harry.  Assuming my progesterone levels remain low in the future, I will be able to get supplements earlier to greatly limit my risk of miscarriage.  During the post-partum phase, my nurse practitioner was able to identify post-partum depression and successfully treat me with progesterone therapy.  As my body gets back into the swing of things with a cycle, I am going to be on the lookout for PMS as progesterone therapy can limit those symptoms as well.  I think Philip would appreciate that, too!

Hygiene and Grooming
With exercising in the morning, I'm still trying to figure out the best time to shower.  When do you exercise and shower?  I don't think I'll ever be a shower in the evening kinda gal.  I never feel clean that way.  I think I need to move my wake-up call to 5:00 in order to get it all done without interruption.  We'll see how my first week goes.  Right now, I'm thinking things will look like this:

  • 5:30 Wake up and get dressed to exercise
  • 5:40-6:00 Eat breakfast and morning prayer (Daily Readings, Gospel reflection, Morning Offering)
  • 6:00 30 Day Shred DVD
  • 6:30 Shower (kids have quiet reading time if they're awake)
  • 7:00 Breakfast with kids

Blogging
30 minutes during the kids' nap time 

A few questions for you on the 2nd "P" of Person:

  • How do you work on overcoming areas or habits of sin?  Do you journal?
  • What about rest?  What kind of sleep are you getting lately?  Do you have something resembling a Mother's Sabbath?  What would your time away look like?
  • How do you plan your weekly menu for your crew?  Do you have any tips or recipes you'd like to share?
  • All of us are busy, but how do you find time to exercise?  Do you have a program you love?  Do you have any advice for a mama with little ones?
  • Is there something you're eating or a nutrition supplement that's helping you to feel better?  Have you identified any areas of concern in your health?
  • When do you fit in your grooming needs?  I'd love any tips or advice in this area since it's tough to get ready AND exercise with the little ones!
  • Blogger friends, how do you organize and fit in time to blog?  Do you do something to help you organize your thoughts?  I feel like my method is to pre-write it all in my head the day before and "brain dump" whenever I get a free chunk of time!
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This is my 6th of 7 posts in Jen Fulwiler's "7 Days, 7 Posts" challenge.  Come on over, join in the fun link-up, and read some great blogs!