Monday, December 27, 2021

On the third day of Christmas, my true love gave to me...

When I was little, the two saddest days on the calendar were September 4, and December 26.  The day after my birthday, and the day after Christmas: the most anti-climactic days imaginable.  Nothing sternly whispered, "It's over," like those two dates.  All those weeks of anticipation and preparation and upcoming celebration, and then, it's over.  Go back to school, go back to work, blah blah blah.  The decorations would come down and the long, boring school year (in September) or winter (in December) would begin.  

Perhaps that's why I'm never in a rush to take the Christmas decorations down.  Not that I have many up this year -- the vast majority of my Christmas decorations were destroyed in The Flood and haven't been replaced yet because I hate paying full price for things and I also hate shopping immediately after Christmas; go figure -- but I did hang a couple strings of lights, and set out some shiny things, and found one of my favorite Scentsy warmers that happens to be Christmas-themed.  Soon enough I'll take these things down and pack them away until next year.  But not until at least January 5, because that's the 12th day of Christmas.  In the past, I've kept the decorations up until the middle of January, because that's when the boy was born so why not keep the tree up until his birthday?  Alas, I didn't put a tree up this year, and the boy doesn't even live with us anymore.  I guess the bottom line is that I'll take my decorations down when I feel like it, and not a moment before.  :D

I have the day off today.  It's our Christmas holiday day, since the actual holiday fell on the weekend.  So yeah, I'm definitely not complaining about life or my job today 😍.  A day off without using PTO? Yes, please!  Of course, last night as I was falling asleep I had all these ideas of things to do: hit the basement floor with the carpet cleaner, set up my sewing machine, organize my craft supplies, go to the old house and pick up some more things to bring here (the end is in sight, at least for the stuff we have inside the house; don't ask about the barn or the garage for a while), go through the rest of my clothes and sort out what can be donated.  So what have I actually accomplished?  I slept until 9am, had banana bread for breakfast, parked my butt in my living room chair for a while, and played games on my phone, until about noon.  Then I started some laundry, swept the floors, unloaded the dishwasher and loaded it back up again, cleaned the air fryer, changed the bedding, took out some garbage, packed away some Christmas gift bags to reuse next year, and went through some more of my clothes to sort out what can be donated.  Apparently the roads are bad out there, so I decided to stop at the boy's house and pick up more stuff another day this week.  I had leftover egg bake for lunch.  Oh em gee, egg bake is the most perfect dish ever!!  Every time we have it, I think we should have it more often.  Yet I never do anything about that.  To quote Homer (Simpson), "Well, excuse me for having enormous flaws that I don't work on!"

Speaking of which, the last few days I have had incredible sewing cravings.  I just want to make something -- some curtains, a table runner, a queen-sized quilt for our bed, you know, something useful -- but I don't know what.  That's why one of my goals for today (last night when I was trying to fall asleep) was to set up my sewing machine and organize my stuff so I could actually make something again.  It's one of those cravings that feels like I should let it build up a little bit more, first, so that when I do attack the craft supplies, I will actually get things done instead of just poking around a little bit until I get bored. Know what I mean?  

But there is one enormous flaw that I have been working on, thankyouverymuch.  I've never been great at keeping up with housework.  I was the kid always getting yelled at to clean their room, so I can assure you this has been a lifelong struggle.  I love having a nice, clean, organized home, I just don't like doing the work to keep it that way.  I always used to joke that I was missing the gene that makes women (or men) instinctively want to keep things neat and tidy and presentable.  I've now come to realize that a lot of the struggle was probably due to depression.  There are lots of ties to depression and the state of my home, actually.  When it's nice and clean and organized, I feel like I have my shit together and am functioning more like a normal person, and life in general doesn't seem so overwhelming.  There are still moments, of course -- there will always be moments! -- but overall, knowing that I can keep my house clean gives me hope for the rest of my life, whatever other struggles I am currently up against.

So I'm beyond proud to admit that I've kept this house clean since we moved in, one month ago!  I know it's only a month, but it's a start.  It bothers me now when the hamper is full, or there are crumbs on the countertops, or dishes in the sink or even in the dishwasher.  It's so easy to keep up by doing a little bit every day, here and there, before I sit down and play games on my phone or watch TV or anything like that.  And waking up to a clean house is one of the best feelings on earth!  Especially on days like today when I get to plant my tired butt in my favorite chair and just veg out and not do anything until I feel like something needs to be done.  I worried that once we got real furniture, I'd be more inclined to sit on my butt and do nothing more often and the housework would start to slide again, but that hasn't been the case at all.  I even feel bad if I don't put the clean clothes away right after taking them out of the dryer.  CRAZINESS!

Speaking of which, I just let the dog out and realized the steps and sidewalk are still covered in snow.  I think I'll go out and take care of that now.  Then take care of the random tote of stuff that's in the kitchen.  And then? Who knows.  The world is my oyster! My nice, clean, organized oyster!

TTYL

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Closing in on week 4. I think.


Well, it's been almost an entire month in the new place.  It doesn't feel like a big, empty house anymore.  It looks and feels like a "recently moved into" house.  There are a few areas that are set up and nice and decorated, yet there are also random boxes and totes on the floor, and things that don't have homes yet.  The back of my Equinox right now has about five big bags of stuff to go to the Goodwill one of these days, and every week so far our garbage bin has been completely filled.  We have a nice mountain of cardboard waiting to be burned this spring, too.  

As overwhelming as the task of going through literally everything we own and finding new places for it (whether in our house, in the trash, or in the back of the 'Nox) (oh and occasionally but rarely, into someone else's house) can be, it does feel good to go through, take a mental inventory, and declutter.  It can help one discover a lot about oneself.

For instance: I have a lot of pens.  There, it's official.  Admitting the problem is the first step to solving the problem, right?!  I don't know when my pen addiction started.  I think I've had it forever.  I remember being in middle school junior high school and even late elementary school and being enamored with pens.  Pens with colorful inks, pens with scented inks, gel pens, funky-shaped pens.  I had a bracelet that was also a pen once.  And a pen shaped like a hip bone (wish I could find that now, I'd give it to my mom!).  And pens that looked like silverware, real life-sized forks and spoons and knives only they were pens.  These days, I'm way more into how pens write than how they look.  You know, being that I'm older and wiser and stuff...function means more than fashion.  

Do you want to know how many pens I've found during this move?  

When I was packing up the stuff from my old desk, the one drawer was like 95% pens. Perfectly good pens, but I didn't like the way most of them wrote, so they weren't in rotation.  As I envisioned myself putting all those pens into a box to bring them to a new place where they would likely sit and never be used, it occurred to me that I might have a problem.  (HA HA HA!  Nah, it occurred to me long before then. It also occurs to me every time I go out to eat and the person I'm with warns me not to steal the waitresses' pen.  For the record, I don't steal waitresses' pens; but I just might replace them with another pen from my collection. Except if it's a gel pen; it's not even funny to consider copping someone else's gel pen.)  I ended up leaving a handful of them for the boy (with his permission), taking a handful with, and *gulp* throwing away the rest.  Also, by a handful, I mean quantity-wise, 5 or fewer, not as many as I could scoop up in one hand.  BIG difference.

Now, don't start telling me that I shouldn't have thrown them away, I should've saved them and donated them somewhere.  I've done that, plenty of times.  I just didn't that time because I was on a mission to declutter, not to pass the clutter to someone else.

Besides, that was just one drawer! Just the tip of the iceberg, as they say.  A drop in the bucket.  

So, then I was unpacking things, namely tote bags and purses.  Going through and emptying them before I put them away, because I also have the undesirable habit of not unpacking purses or tote bags before I switch to different purses or tote bags.  (I don't have issues, I have subscriptions.)  Found more pens!  Most of them weren't worth keeping, but I did find the mother lode of Baldwin Area Medical Center pens.  It's funny, I could tell which era of my life I had used the particular tote bag or purse by the types of pens I found in them.  I found pens dating all the way back to nursing school.  So the BAMC pens were a nostalgic little find, and of course I couldn't throw them away because BAMC doesn't even exist anymore.  That makes them...COLLECTABLES!!  Alright, alright; I'm mostly kidding, but also not because those were some smooth-writing pens.  I kept a handful of them.  Actually, the "mother lode" was only a handful anyway. 

Right now, in a box next to my desk, waiting to be sorted and unpacked/tossed, is a box of random office things.  Including a gallon-sized bag of pens.  Not just a few pens; it's stuffed full of pens.

But wait!  There's more!  When I was on the Tote Bag and Purse Cleanout kick last week, I actually found a tote bag that was literally full of pens. Read that again: a TOTE BAG FULL OF PENS.  And not a small little tote bag, of course.  That is actually the point where I decided to be done going through tote bags for the time being.  So. Many. Pens.  It was too much to contemplate at that moment.  

I should just toss them, or donate them (I do prefer to donate them, and the hubby pointed out that he can never find a pen at church when he needs one, so...) but as I mentioned earlier, I love a good pen.  What if my new favorite pen is in that bag?!?  I have to look to be sure.  I'm down to one cup of pens on my desk, but I can always switch one of those pens out if I find one I like better.  

I. Do. Not. Need. More. Pens.

I. Do. NOT. Need. More. Pens. EVER!!

To answer the question I posed, about if you want to know how many pens I've found during this move, I have no idea.  A lot.  Too many.  It doesn't seem like it's going to be a problem at first, because pens are so small and fit in so many convenient places, and you can tell yourself they're practical things because there's always someone somewhere who needs a pen when they think they won't.

But when you have a freaking tote bag full of pens -- each one different and unique, it's not as if the whole tote was full of boxes or bags of pens like you'd buy them at the store -- you begin to realize that maybe you don't need to collect them like souvenirs from every place you go.  That just because a company is giving them away doesn't mean you need to take one.  Even if they look cool.  You know what?  The novelty pens write like crap, and I can say this from a lifetime's worth of experience. 

My favorite pen is the good ol' BIC Crystal, in blue. The ones you can get a whole package of for like $1.00 during back-to-school sales.  Best pens ever!!  The next runner-up is the BIC Round Stic.  They don't make 'em like they used to, but they're still a great pen.  Also in blue.  I'm not a fan of black ink.

Speaking of pens, I gotta get back to work. This has been another sneak peek into the craziness that is my mind.  Today's blog entry was sponsored by BIC, Pentel, and Uniball.  They just don't know it yet.

Friday, December 17, 2021

Everyone says I'm looking great, but it's hard to stand up, let alone to try and concentrate...


Today's title and pic are brought you by the letters B, N, and L.  

Which reminds me, we haven't been to any concerts lately.  As I mentioned in an earlier blog entry here, we secured tickets (and in some cases, airfare and hotel reservations) for three separate and much-anticipated concerts back in 2019.  Then 2020 happened, as you're likely well aware, and all three shows (actually it's four shows, but three different artists.  We have tickets for two shows by the same artist.  And the one concert is actually slated to have three bands, or was it four?  I'm not into mathing today.) were postponed until 2021.  

The point I'm trying to make is, we didn't go to any concerts in 2020.  

And in 2021, I think we just went to one concert. We saw Casting Crowns in concert at the MN State Fairgrounds -- and again, because sometimes technicalities are my thing, more specifically it was in the Midway parking lot.  It was a drive-in concert, because indoor venues hadn't opened back up yet.  It wasn't quite the same, because we were sitting in the car listening to the concert being broadcast on the radio (it was cold that night, so we didn't stand outside like a lot of people were) but it still counts as going to a concert.

For 2022, we will hopefully be able to finally use those tickets we bought back in 2019!  At least a few of them.  One of the tours was cancelled altogether and the tickets were refunded.  But now we have tickets to a concert that never happened!  That'll be worth something someday, right?!  😆  I've been to enough rock n' roll museums to know that unused tickets to concerts that were cancelled are worth their weight in gold. Um.  If they're rare, and by well-known artists, and all that.  I'm pretty sure no one else has tickets from concerts that were cancelled in 2020, so I'm golden.  Alright, so I won't quit my day job.  Yet. 

I remain hopeful for the two remaining tours that were rescheduled for 2021 then cancelled again and are now rescheduled for 2022.  Three shows, two tours, four (or was it five?) different bands total.  

I wish I would've saved all the tour books I bought at the first few concerts I went to, though.  I don't even know when they stopped doing tour books; it feels like I'm dating myself by even mentioning tour books.  Of course, this was way back when you couldn't take pictures at concerts without being all ninja-like and sneaking a camera in, and then afterward waiting for a week or whatever it was to get your film developed to see how (or if!) the photos turned out.  How did we survive back before digital photography?!  So much waiting.  Because one-hour photo developing was way out of my budget back then, I tell you what.  Not that I ever snuck a camera into any concerts, because I had a huge Fear of Getting Caught.  (Actually, it's more of a Fear of Disappointing People in Authority. Maybe I'll save that for a future blog topic.)  That's why I loved the tour books so much.  I loved photography as well; that's probably another reason why I didn't try to sneak my camera into concerts, because I didn't want to risk having my precious camera taken away.  They didn't exactly grow on trees, you know.  One more thing about film photography: I was always annoyed that the people developing the film would get to see how my pics turned out before I did.  That was so not fair!  Photography is an art, and what other artists have to let other people see their finished product before anyone else?!  Hmph.  So as you probably already know if you know me at all (or have perused my FB), I still enjoy photography.  The fact that I have a camera on my person at all times (that also happens to function as an internet-accessing device and, oh yeah, a phone) amuses me muchly.  And every now and then I take some halfway decent pics, too. 

I'll have to finish this later, after work.  Toodles!

(Nineteen hours later...)

...speaking of photography, I actually got out of bed at oh-stupid-o'clock this morning (translation: 4am) just to take a couple of pictures.  After which, I went right back to bed.  

I spent a good part of the night wondering why the backyard floodlight was on last night.  Our new house has some strange electrical quirks.  Not "strange" as in we should be worried that the house is going to short circuit and burn down (I hope!) but "strange" as in, this place has more light switches and electrical outlets than other house we've inhabited.  It probably has as many light switches as all our previous homes put together, and I'm only slightly exaggerating.  I think we have most of them figured out by now (closing in on week 3!) but the logic behind them is still a bit perplexing at times.

For instance, in our living room we have a switch that activates only the top input (probably not the right terminology, but dammit, I'm a nurse! Not an electrician!) on each of the outlets in that room.  Now, I'm familiar with the concept of having an outlet or two wired to the toggle switch, especially in rooms without ceiling lights, so that you can have a lamp plugged into that outlet and turn it on and off with the wall switch.  But I'd never heard of wiring only the top plug-in thingies of each outlet.  The first time I tried to vacuum the living room, I was disheartened thinking none of the outlets worked because I was only trying the top input thingie.  My hubby mentioned this to an electrician he works with and was informed that this was a popular trend in the early 2000's.  Who knew?!  

Another example is the three light switches that are next to the patio door in the dining room upstairs.  One switch turns on the chandelier above the dining room table -- that makes sense.  The next switch turns on the light outside, which probably has a specific name other than "decorative light next to the door".  That also makes sense.  The third switch turns on an outdoor flood light that's down on the lower level, and lights up the yard closest to the house.  Ummm...okay, but why wouldn't they have put that switch on the lower level instead?  It's a walkout basement on that side, and the basement is completely finished.  There's a switch down by the basement patio door that turns on the decorative light just outside that door.  I don't know, to each their own I guess.  

This is relevant, I promise. Because while I was trying to fall asleep, there was a bright light on our windows that was distracting me.  I figured I had accidentally turned that light switch on when I was turning the dining room lights off, or something.  (Actually it was more like "or something".  After the storm the night before last, our TV antenna wasn't working; and neither was the outside outlet on the top deck. This I know because I have a string of twinkling lights plugged in there and wrapped around part of the deck railing, and those lights weren't twinkling yesterday morning! It didn't seem like the two should be related, but it was an odd coincidence that those were the only two things not working after the storm and power outage.  Long story short, they were related. The antenna booster and the outside top deck outlet are both on the same GFCI outlet.) (And I totally did not just Google that to make sure I was using the term correctly.)  

So when I woke up at about 1am to empty my bladder, I peeked out the bedroom window.  The flood light wasn't on; the moon was just that bright.  See?

But that's not the shot I pulled my tired self out of bed to take, a few hours after I made that discovery.  No, I took this one while lying in bed.  

The one I actually got out of bed and made a half-awake effort to take looks more like this:

And it made me think of that line from "Twas the Night Before Christmas" that goes, "The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow, gave a luster of midday to objects below."

Of course, it's NOT the night before Christmas, but that's not in the specific line I have stuck in my head now, so it works.  

And, I totally didn't Google the words to make sure I had them right, either, which is good because I thought the moon was on the crest of the new-fallen snow, not the breast.  Wouldn't I have looked silly with that mistake!?

Then, after I took the above pics (and one more very similar to the second one, but in landscape orientation) I tried to go back to sleep but for some reason my brain decided we should try to remember as much of that poem as we could.  (Which, after looking at the poem in it's entirety this morning via Google, we didn't accomplish very well.)  Which then lead to me wondering why I would think I knew that poem well enough to recite it by heart, anyway?  We certainly didn't have the Christmas tradition I've only read about in fictional stories (and/or maybe the Little House books) where the family sits around the fireplace on Christmas Eve while the patriarch reads the poem to the eager listeners before sending them off to bed.  (Do people actually do that in real life?)  No, I remember reading it for myself when I was little.  Over and over and over and over, because I was young enough that things like "the moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow gave a luster of midday to objects below" sounded nice and poetic and beautiful, but I had no idea what they actually meant.  I mean, I knew what each word individually meant, and I got the general idea in context, but I didn't understand the image those words were painting until about 1am this morning. 

And on that note, it's about time for work to start.  Yes, I'm blogging before work today, because I didn't want to leave this entry unfinished. I hate it when that happens.

Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night!

Sunday, December 12, 2021

Just when things went right, doesn't mean they were always wrong...

Week 2, and the new place is starting to feel more like a home and less like a big, empty house.

I got in a mood last week and put twinkling Christmas lights up in the bay window. That definitely helped! I just positively adore Christmas lights.  It gets dark outside so early, it's nice to have a bit of light here and there.  And everything is so white and dormant outside, it's nice to have a bit of color and flashing, too.  Within reason.  I like lights around windows, maybe wound around railings, maybe around a tree or two outside.  I don't like the houses that have their roof lines outlined in lights and every window outlined in lights and light-up everything in their yards, and everything flashing and chasing and all that.  I like precisely placed strings of lights.  Precisely placed by ME, lol.  I can't explain it other than that.  I would have lights up all year round if I could, and sometimes I do (see also: the back deck at our old house).  

I think the kitchen is "done" meaning just about everything from the old house is moved over.  Things are pretty well organized and decorating is off to a good start.  The hubby and I cleaned the dishwasher last night -- I mean really cleaned it.  It was emitting a positively horrid odor every time I used it, so the hubby tore it apart and I cleaned this substance off of all the internal parts that can only be described as a slurry.  It reminded me of the episode of "How It's Made" (or maybe it was "Dirty Jobs (with Mike Rowe)" where they showed how bologna was made, and there was just this pink slurry of who-knows-what that the machines were churning out.  That is what the stuff that was stuck to the internal parts of the dishwasher was like, only worse because it wasn't pink, it was brown and grey and smelled horrid.  So hey, kids! Clean all the food off your dishes before you put them in the dishwasher, because those bits and pieces go somewhere

So, yeah, that was gross.  I have a pretty solid stomach for gross things (after all, I am a nurse and was a CNA before that!) so I was happy to clean it up, but I really wished I would've had gloves.  *cough* *gag*

Also in the "things you don't think about until you have to" department, we now have dining room furniture, too!  It really helps make the place look more like home.  And also, we're not hitting our heads on the chandelier above the table anymore, since there's a table under it. That's a nice bonus.  

We have living room furniture picked out, and most of it is supposed to be delivered later this week.  With all the horror stories about furniture orders being delayed until May or June, I was totally not enthused about furniture shopping.  One thing that turns me off about furniture shopping is the lack of immediate gratification; we spent hours and hours looking for just the right furniture (not even exaggerating, but that includes the time spent looking at stuff online to get an idea of what style we might like) and then we finally found it, but still have to wait for it to be delivered.  I don't do "waiting" very well, which I've read more than once is a sign of immaturity.  So be it, because that's how I am.

Anyway, as luck would have it, the living room set we both liked was mostly in stock.  The couch was the only thing delayed until March.  The loveseat, chair, and ottoman will be here in a few days, and I cannot WAIT!  It will be nice to actually use the living room as a living room!  And to have a soft, comfortable surface to chill on that's not the bed.  Don't get me wrong, our bed is super comfortable, too, but for sleeping and not for sitting on to watch TV.  

Speaking of TV, we have one of those in the living room now, too.  We were supposed to go pick up a thing to put it on...not an entertainment center, but more like a short credenza? IDK, I'm not good at proper furniture terminology.  But we found one we like about an hour away (thanks to FB Marketplace, which is also how we found our dining room set) and we were supposed to pick it up yesterday, but as you may already know, there was a big snowstorm here on Friday and we had to spend Saturday digging out instead.  Thankfully the seller is understanding and we rescheduled; but the hubby broke down today and set the TV up on a folding table.  

No, honestly! We only look like we're living in our first place.  We have nice furniture coming, it's just not here yet! 😁  In a week from now, this place will look completely different.  In a very good way!!

One thing I can't get enough of here yet is the view of the sunset.  I think I've posted half a dozen sunset pics on FB so far, but I can't help it! I'm a sucker for sunsets anyway, but this one is just amazing, the way the colors emerge from behind the trees when the sun sets down into the marsh.  It's breathtaking. It makes me feel like we're on vacation or something.  I can't believe it's in our own backyard.  See?


I know I'm biased, but I think it's gorgeous.  Especially now with the contrast of the white snow and the dark trees. 

On that note, I leave you.  Supper's ready!  And I want to make some banana bread after supper.  Having everything all nice and clean and organized makes me want to bake.  'Tis the season!

Later, gators.

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Welcome to my world!

 
 


I know y'all've just been dying to see pics of our new place.  Well, here you go! (Gosh, I love the internet, specifically Google Maps with Lot Lines, sometimes.) 

Here is our new (to us) home sweet home, all 7.87 acres of it. I generally just round that number up to 8, if anyone asks.  Ain't she a beaut?!  Trust me...we looked at a LOT of places this summer, and yes, she is a beaut.  😂 

So, do you see the tree line that runs approximately down the center of our land?  Where it's brown on one side (left/west) and green on the other (right/east)?  Yeah, I haven't even stepped foot on the westernmost part, anything past that tree line, yet.  I lovingly refer to everything beyond the trees as "The Back 4".  👍  That, my friends, is marshland.  Did you know that the basic difference between marshland and swamp is that swamps are predominantly forested?  So sayeth National Geographic.  Looking at the above pic, I definitely wouldn't call that "predominantly" forested.  Also, the area on the far left of the pic is the DNR*-owned Cylon Marshland Wildlife Area (CMWA).  I think the brownish areas on the northwestern and southwestern blocks of this Tetris map are also DNR land, but I'd have to go look at some other maps to be sure, and I don't feel like doing that right now.  

*That's "Department of Natural Resources", yo, not to be confused with "do not resuscitate".

My point is that the land behind our Back 4, and much of the land surrounding us, is public land.  At first, I was like...ewwww, "the public"!  I don't want them traipsing around behind my backyard, especially with guns!  But that was followed shortly by -- Cool!  We have access to hundreds of acres beyond our backyard!  According to the DNR website, the CMWA is 507 acres in all.  And we can use it all we want!  And we only have to maintain our little drop in the bucket!! 

I love living in the country.  I really do.  I always knew in my heart that I wouldn't live in the city all my life.  Weird, eh?  I was born and raised in the city, and by "in the city" I don't mean one of the neat outer suburbs with strategically-placed man-made green spaces, I mean The Inner City.  We had exactly one tree in our yard (and it's still there) and I used to pretend it was part of a forest.  Long before I realized I'm an introvert, I dreamed of living in a magical land where our neighbor's house wasn't two feet away and I could step outside and not feel like I had an audience, where we'd be surrounded by trees and have actual natural green space that wasn't planned out by the Parks Department, and trees that were free to grow as much as they wanted and not have to worry about being cut down when they got too big because their roots were disrupting the sidewalks.  17 years ago we made that dream come true when we moved to the little farm, and you know what?  You couldn't pay me to move back to the city.  I'd go nuts.  It's the place I was born, but it is NOT my home.  

And yes...one of my favorite stories when I was little was "Country Mouse, City Mouse".  LMAO

Anyway, there's your first glance at Chez Nous.  Unless you're friends with me on FB and have already seen some of the pics I've posted there, anyway.  Mostly those are pics from the online listing before we closed, with some random sunset pics thrown in for good measure. I've taken some "before" and "during" pics of some of the rooms that we're fixing up, but haven't posted them yet.  

Ooooh, that reminds me!  We're finally getting furniture!  I know nine days without furniture doesn't seem like a long time, but when you come home from a long day at work, or have spent the day moving and you're tired and just want to settle down onto a comfortable couch or cushy chair and chill in your living room for a while, nine days without a couch seems like forever.  (And the reason we don't have furniture yet is because we left most of it at the old house, because we're nice parents like that, and also because we wanted to get new furniture anyway.)  We picked out a couch, loveseat, chair, and ottoman this weekend and they will be delivered next week.  And, we also finally found a dining room set (table, chairs, hutch and buffet) that we agreed on; the hubby and the son are supposed to go pick those up tonight after work.  But, as too many well-laid plans made anytime between October and March are wont to do, those plans may be postponed tonight due to the weather.  It's cold here right now (I almost wrote "really freaking cold" but nah, it's still above zero so it hasn't reached "really freaking cold" stage yet) and ever-so-lightly snowing, and it may or may not get worse in the short-term, so...we shall see.  

Any and all plans made in the Midwest between October and March are subject to change due to weather, no questions asked.  We invented "always have a back-up plan". 

March might even be cutting it too soon. 

Alright.  Well, thanks again for reading my blog, I hope you enjoyed reading it as much as I enjoy writing it, but I kinda doubt that's possible.  Adios, amigos!  

Thursday, December 2, 2021

If you're looking for a sign...it's gone!

 

Our new place is feeling more like home every day.  Yesterday, the "for sale" sign at the end of the driveway disappeared!  They never did add the "SOLD" sign to it, so it didn't make any sense to me to take a picture.  Now, the real test is to come: will I be able to find my own driveway without the big blue and white sign pointing the way? Stay tuned...

In other news, my hubby finished painting the office, and got part of the desk assembled last night.  It's nice to have a real desk to work from again, instead of the bay window or the kitchen island.  I don't have my computer over here yet, just my laptop, but I can deal with one monitor for now.  It feels cozy already (and I mean that in a good way!).  I got the spy speaker, I mean Alexa, hooked up yesterday so now I have music in the house, too.  Everything's coming together, slowly but surely!

Max really wants us to get some living room furniture soon, though.  He thinks this 'laying on the floor like a dog' stuff is for the birds.  😆

(Also, don't feel bad for him. He gets to lay on our bed whenever he wants. Most of the house is carpeted, and the parts that aren't do have a couple of his favorite laying rugs strategically placed for his comfort, and honestly the disgruntled look in this pic is probably more from the fact that we were eating and not sharing as much as he thought we should.  He's very spoiled that way.)

Alright, I'm the one who wants us to get some living room furniture soon, and I'm just projecting onto the dog.  It's time to take ownership of my own feelings and shout from the roof tops, I AM WHO I AM AND IF YOU DON'T LIKE IT, TOO BAD!  Oh, and we also haven't had time to go furniture shopping lately between moving and working, and that also doesn't include the fact that I hate furniture shopping.  Well, I'm not a fan of shopping in general, but if I had to rank my least favorite types of shopping in order, "furniture" would be right up at the top of that list.  Maybe the very top. I don't feel like finessing that list right now.  So, my point being, the fact that I want to go furniture shopping is quite meaningful.  Even though we've found plenty of things to keep us busy around the house after supper, or during times when we would otherwise be settling our tired, old butts on the couch or chair and zoning out in front of the TV, it would be nice to have the option to settle our tired, old butts on a couch or chair and zone out in front of the TV for a while again.  

Plus, Max needs a place to nap.

And, our living room is just a big open area right now.  Well, we have an open-concept floorplan, so the kitchen/living room/dining room are all in one big area, and since we don't have dining room furniture yet either, the open-concept feels REALLY open.  The acoustics are awesome, though!  I'm not going to pretend that I don't sing my heart out in there when no one else is home. Or even when someone else is home. I am who I am and if you don't like it, too bad! XD

Alright. I don't want to sound like I'm complaining.  I'm really not complaining.  Just exaggerating my thoughts for entertainment's sake (that's what blogging is, right?!)  God has blessed us in so very many ways, and for that I am grateful beyond words.  Besides...not having a place to park my lazy butt after supper has helped me set a better habit of cleaning up the house every day instead of saving it all up for the weekends.  ;)

And on that note, I have to get back to work.  From my beautiful little home office in the middle of the woods and marsh, with my ever-faithful pupper wrapped up in his favorite blanket and snoring away in the corner behind me.  Not even kidding.  See for yourself: (sorry you have to click the link. I don't have time to figure out how to embed the video into this post.) CLICK HERE!

Toodles!