House update #19: 15 more days!

T-15 days! Scheduling movers, storage unit delivery, window shades installation, landscaping, internet and alarm service, insurance, inspections, change of address, etc.

Somehow everything is converging at once. Mr. B is squeezing in time to figure out the internet, coordinate the media wiring, and work on home insurance quotes just as his “stressful-is-an-understatement” sales quarter ends. I have been working on getting my new Mussar course prepared to start at the end of the month, beginning the planning and publicity for the school book fair and meeting with my successor to train her, researching and touring various public and private middle schools, and spending time here and there at the house answering questions. Then we have the Jewish High Holidays thrown in there for good measure. It seems like much more is happening than even all that!

These photos are from September 26 through yesterday. Seeing all my long-ago selections come to fruition is very exciting!

INDOORS

Thursday 9/26: discussed gutters, downspouts, USB-C outlet placement, shower door glass and handles, mirrors
Craft room barn doors
Playroom shelving
Media room armrests (cushion being made for in between) that will have cup holders and outlets
Monday 9/30: Countertops going in!!!
Countertops!!!
Master bath countertops and sinks
Floor stain choice
Recipe
Shower doors are in
Installing the vent blower
Planning hanging chair design with carpenter
Master closet ceiling
Loft shelving
Bathtub program
I can’t tell you how much I love this!
Powder bath sink and fixture placement
More tile
Mr. B’s office ceiling is navy
The mud room ceiling matches the cabinetry
Master closet mirror

OUTDOORS

Front

There has been LOTS of activity
Unfortunately, the “new” driveway is gone – new support going in to make it wider
Sunday 9/29: Painting facia – yellow becomes “Urban Bronze”
Transformation is amazing!
Front yard tree roots gone
Driveway form in progress
Wider driveway form
Beginning to form front concrete walkway. Those rickety steps are on their last days.
12/7: cement in process
Personalized!
pouring front walkway
Forming front steps

Backyard

Marked where pool deck will be torn out and replaced
Blue lines on grass indicate new patio shape
We had to drain the pool and powerwash it
Cleaning out the pool pipes – that guy is covered head to toe except for his eyes
Tuesday 10/1: painting garage trim to match
Filling pool
The pool is blue! Cool deck is gone.
Line for back patio
Rebar
Fire pit area
Installing gutters
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September books

I’m not sure what happened to the month! I have been busy and my mind has been elsewhere, I guess. This month I have for you a couple of parenting books, which were quite informative but also stressed me out, two fluff novels, and two serious yet enjoyable reads.

I have the VERY BEST news to share with you: my October book report will be late. How is that good? BECAUSE WE ARE MOVING INTO OUR NEW HOME WITHIN THE MONTH!! How about we plan to do one large review for October, November, and December? So much will be happening in those three months that I hope I can get any reading in.

In addition to these books, I’m reading a few with my daughter that we are enjoying: The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Riddle of Ages by Trenton Lee Stewart and The Magic Misfits: The Minor Third by Neil Patrick Harris, both of which I’m thrilled that Sweet Girl was excited to read the very day they were published, and Out of My Mind by Sharon M. Draper and Blood on the River: James Town, 1607 by Elisa Carbone, both of which she is reading for school and I’m keeping pace so we can discuss them. #motheroftheyear

Please also share what you are reading lately!

The Unbreakables: A Novel by Lisa Barr

This one is a quick read and a good story, but completely unbelievable and full of clichés. Kind of a soap opera of a book. Cheating husband, friend, and daughter. Pregnancy scare. Various affairs. Please.

One good aspect: the main character is a sculptor and I resonated with her need to create.

“The exactness, the knowing, comes from years of practice. Never mind that I’ve been in hibernation. I then grab a finer-toothed chisel to model the form, removing the stone and debris quickly and efficiently. I inhale the familiar powdery scent of the dust particles and I’m intoxicated. Using the rasp with its sharklike tiny teeth, I grind it into the stone with my entire body. Sculpting is not about technique; it’s about losing your ego, refining, and flowing with the demands of the stone.”

Mrs. Lincoln’s Dressmaker: A Novel by Jennifer Chiaverini

A peek into the time of the Civil War as seen through an upright and loyal seamstress who was a great friend to Mary Lincoln. Chiaverini always helps make history come alive for me.

“As the girls, eyes shining, assured their mother that they did indeed see, Elizabeth gazed at the dark, proud, eager faces of the colored soldiers and felt her throat constricting with emotion. Their splendid uniforms, the rousing music, the bold and steady marching, the cheering crowd—in that glorious moment it seemed to Elizabeth that there might be no limit to what the people of her race could accomplish in the years to come, unhindered by slavery, when peace reigned over a nation united once again.”

Untangled: Guiding Teenage Girls Through the Seven Transitions into Adulthood by Lisa Damour

This is a handbook into the teenage brain! First of all, I can’t believe I’m at a point where it’s time to read this. My daughter has definitely started behaving inconsistently and attempting to separate from childhood. Second, I am stunned at how much developmental ground a teenager covers. So much of teenage behavior is normal and is even evidence of forward progress.

Damour describes the 7 patterns of teenage development. These developmental strands make plain the specific achievements that transform girls into thriving adults. Even better, every chapter ends with a “When to Worry” section. She addresses such topics as the importance of her tribe, how to respond to eye-rolling, how to help with normal anxiety, and how to maintain a connection.

“Knowing that you can serve as a reliable, safe base allows your daughter to venture out into the world; having the strength to stay in place when your daughter clings to and rejects you in short order usually requires the loving support of adult allies.”

The Price of Privilege: How Parental Pressure and Material Advantage Are Creating a Generation of Disconnected and Unhappy Kids by Madeline Levine PhD

This is a fascinating book. Levine’s premise is that if we understand our children’s capacities and challenges at different stages of development, we will be better parents and better able to encourage their healthy sense of self. Unfortunately, there have been rising numbers of depression, anxiety disorders, and substance abuse in adolescents, especially in affluent communities, ones that seem to emphasize “individualism, perfection, accomplishment, competition, and materialism, while giving short shrift to more prosocial values such as cooperation, altruism, and philanthropy.”

First Levine explains how overprotective, intrusive parenting can diminish a child’s sense of efficacy and autonomy. Of course a child would become hesitant to be active in the world or try new challenges if the parent portrays it as dangerous. Many teens in the book’s case studies complain of being too “pressured, misunderstood, anxious, angry, sad, and empty.”

One of the most interesting aspect to me is that these teens don’t seem to know themselves very well. “They lack practical skills for navigating out in the world; they can be easily frustrated or impulsive; their parents are typically in a frenzy of worry and overinvolvement.” It can be well-intentioned but damaging nonetheless.

“Internal motivation is the generator that propels children to figure out their particular interests, abilities, and passions. Internal motivation is not tied to rewards; it is what drives kids to engage in activities that are satisfying for their own sake. It is the basis of all true learning. They need to see that their parents value effort, curiosity, and intellectual courage.”

I’ve vowed to sit back more and enjoy my daughter’s interests, the ones she pursues regardless of our thoughts or ideas. If we support those, who knows where they may lead. If anything, it’s helping her to develop her sense of self.

“Adolescents need tremendous support as they go about the task of figuring out their identities, their future selves. Too often what they get is intrusion. Intrusion and support are two fundamentally different processes: support is about the needs of the child, intrusion is about the needs of the parent.”

Parents help their children develop self-management skills by setting limits, modeling self-control, and being clear about the value of tolerating frustration, delaying gratification, and controlling impulses.”

This (below) has been something I’ve been working on for awhile now. I think we are both making large strides in self-management.

“Parents who have difficulty tolerating their child’s distress, who are quick to step in and take over, hamper their child’s ability to continue climbing. Kids who have not had repeated experiences of finding ways to manage frustration may give the appearance of moving forward, but they have not accumulated the necessary self-management skills of self-control, perseverance, frustration tolerance, and anxiety management that will allow them to address the more complex challenges they will encounter as they climb higher.

We Love Anderson Cooper: Short Stories by R.L. Maizes

This is a profound and deeply touching group of stories focused on the point of view of the outsider. I was stunned at how much each story got under my skin. Highly recommend.

Confronting Hate: The Untold Story of the Rabbi Who Stood Up for Human Rights, Racial Justice, and Religious Reconciliation by Deborah Hart Strober and Gerald S. Strober

Rabbi Tanenbaum brought about much social and political change in his many roles as writer, publisher, religious leader, and public advocate, but most especially as director of the American Jewish Committee’s Department of Interreligious Affairs after he realized that his true calling lay in ecumenical outreach. He worked tirelessly, bringing together people of diverse beliefs, addressing anti-Semitism in Christian education, Soviet Jewry, and even learned from and worked alongside Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel. In fact, he was the person who introduced Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Rabbi Heschel at the beginning of the Civil Rights movement! Rabbi Tanenbaum lived his life with actions that showed his strong sense of responsibility for correcting injustice everywhere.

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House update #18: the countdown begins

Today it is only 29 days!
What are the chances? This is what we call our house because we live on Paisley Street.
Cast stone installed
Metal roof installed
Porch floor tile going in
Fire pit delivery
Firepit blocked by dumpster!
Hood structure in place in kitchen
Painting underway
Laundry room
Met with outdoor kitchen installer
We moved all the lighting upstairs from garage…
… because we were afraid of this! OMG. Houston and flash floods.
Wood flooring installed… still to be stained
This is what is under the floors
Railing and posts
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Our greatest teachers

This past weekend, we went to a dedication ceremony for the new elementary school. All the kids got to sign a huge beam that will be incorporated somehow into the design. Our principal spoke beautifully of this being the third school year of our displacement, mentioning all that we have risen above and how we’ve come together even more than before as a community.

Several moments of the ceremony brought tears to my eyes. It hadn’t even occurred to me to bring tissues because Sweet Girl is in her final year of elementary school and won’t even be going to this new school. So why did it touch me so much?

It is still so personal.

Deep breaths. I’ve been overwhelmed the past few days, a little panicked about all the responsibility on my shoulders. I have even doubted myself and my ability to juggle so much. To spare you the details, I’ll just say that there is a lot going on.

I need to give myself permission to choose the quality of my days over the quantity of how much gets done.

Still, we deal with the temporary. Temporary digs, not all our usual gear, extra steps for every little thing, lots of traffic. I go to the house at least once a day to see something new or confirm a paint color or answer questions. I still make dinners and we eat together to discuss our day. Some time very soon, we can start an official countdown of how many apartment dinners we have left!

I can’t speak for everyone who has sustained losses from a natural disaster, but for me, there is a sense of groundlessness that I’m rather ready to be finished with. As the house comes together with paint, countertops, and flooring over the next couple of weeks, I think it will start to feel like it’s truly almost finished.

Difficult situations, tragedies, illnesses, losses of any kind are part of life. I think each experience we go through makes us that much more strong and resilient. Nothing should be taken personally.

My deepest wisdom knows that a few more weeks is worth the wait to go home again, but man is it hard to wait! This new house is just about everything we could want (within reason) and we have put countless hours of thought into every little aspect. It will honor us as a family and as individuals, creating spaces for work, hobbies, and relaxation.

I envision game nights, dinners with friends, and family holidays… lots of togetherness. I also am so excited to be able to set up my office and art room and have dedicated permanent space.

We each have things we need to learn. One thing this experience has taught me is to travel lightly and to be satisfied with less, and to know that I’ll be ok. This is big for a person who used to pack for an overnight at a friend’s house with half of my bedroom. I guess I thought possessions were the key to security.

Yesterday was the first time in Y E A R S that we ran out of paper towels! And my first thought wasn’t annoyance but the thought, “less to pack!”

The house was originally expected to be finished back in March. Then it became September. And that would have been ideal. I am now learning how to let go of expectations, plan ahead for volunteer commitments, and how to talk myself down from tension and anxiety. I don’t want to spend any time feeling powerless. There is so much to do!

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Scared busy!

I’m anticipating several big events to coincide in the next 2 months and I’m really trying not to panic.  I aim to enjoy every single day, not wish it were December!

Priority #1: Our home is going to be finished sometime mid-October, which means packing our apartment, moving and all that entails, unpacking and settling in.  I wish I had more time to dedicate to this.  I’ve been spending many hours a day on house tasks, whether it be meetings with subcontractors and the builder or planning organizational hardware to install in the kitchen.  Because I won’t have the time when we move in to dedicate to nesting, I am doing as much as I can in advance, buying drawer liners, planning what will go where, ordering shades for windows, anticipating needs.

Priority #2: BookFair! Planning has already begun… 10 weeks until the big event. Committee meetings, publicity in various forms, organizing teachers and schedules, coordinating parent volunteers, etc. This year I am transitioning everything to someone else so I’ll be spending time training her.

Priority #3: The middle school search.  In Houston, we have choices, which you’d think would be a good thing, but it ends up overwhelming many parents and kids.  Beginning in a couple of weeks, the online application opens where we can apply for auditions and rank our top choices.  We will be touring schools with Sweet Girl every Thursday afternoon until we find a few that we’re convinced she would be comfortable at.  Some specialize in performing arts, some in language. Maybe some kids know they want to be an astronomer 15 years from now (how?) and so they apply to various science-heavy programs, but for us, it’s mainly about small class size and feeling that it’s a good fit for her.

Priority #4: My new Mussar group begins toward the end of October, and I’m guessing I won’t be able to host the entire thing at my house like I’d hoped.  I’m not too worried about this, but I will need to spend a few administrative hours getting everyone organized and set up for the course. Right now, my training group continues to meet and I’m trying to recruit some more participants. Would anyone like to join us via distance learning?

Priority “everything else:” SG’s school work and projects, Girl Scouts, Astros games (yay!), daily life.

Just thinking about the time between mid-October to Thanksgiving makes me stress. One day at a time, right? I will know that after the Book Fair, life will settle down and I can spend time organizing and unpacking, making my art room my happy place, and reassessing.  I hope to then spend time with friends and family and catch up with myself.

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House update #17: moving really quickly now!

As soon as the cabinets are finished being installed, we’ll be moving on to paint and countertops and flooring. Looking at mid-October as finish date.

Porch tile

Planning plants and pavers

Paint prep

Furnishings

Ordered this sectional…
… in this fabric
Ordering shades, cushions, fabrics, etc.
Trying to keep pieces and colors flowing nicely

Shopping for Mr. B’s office desk, Kitchen sideboard, Backyard fire pit, SG chair, outdoor furniture, cabinet organizers, area rug…

Cabinets

Finished missing accent tile in Master shower
Air conditioning is ON!!! OMG so much better.
Cast stone delivered. Powder Room sink installed.

Master Closet

Veneer

Master Bath wood door

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