Winters Kids

Just a little update about what in the world we're doing these days…

Archive for June, 2009

Karli’s Top 20 Ways to Avoid Blogging

Thursday, June 25th, 2009
…and other reasons I haven’t posted a meaningful blog in a long long time…

#1) Have two small children. Attempt to keep them occupied at all times. Decide that you also want a semi-clean house. Commence attempting both feats at once.

#2) Register for a triathlon. Become committed to exercising. Realize that you can’t make it work during the day, so plan on going every morning at 6:00am. Realize this means you should actually get to bed before midnight most nights.

#3) Have your brother, who has lived with you for the past 11 months, move out. Help with this process.

#4) Reclaim the extra bedroom, and attempt to reorganize the entire house accordingly.

#5) Make sure this move coincides with daughter’s 4th birthday. If you can get it to overlap exactly, even better.

#6) The day after the move out, before everything is rearranged, invite some family members down to celebrate daughter’s birthday. Try to cook a meal while still moving and purging furniture, but if necessary, you can have dinner at Red Robin instead.

#7) Two days later, invite your mother-in-law AND your mother to come visit at the same time. If possible, have your mother bring her dog.

#8) Plan and execute a birthday party for daughter while both mothers are here. Make sure you invite 7 girls between the ages of 3 & 5. Have at least two drive in from out of town. Instead of hosting it at your house, do it across town… no less than 40 minutes away by car. Put at least six girls and ALL their car seats in your minivan for the trip over. Turn them loose in a kitchen to bake goodies and then eat the spoils. Drive them home and then drop each girl off at her own house, just to make the process longer.

#9) While mothers are visiting, make sure you plan other activities, such as dance class and Little Gym for them to observe.

#10) Three minutes before you are supposed to leave for Little Gym, have your toddler get into a craft box (which is sitting out because you still haven’t finished reorganizing your house before the company arrived) and get out Fuchsia Permanent Enamel paint. This works best if he can do this stealthily, because after all, there ARE three adults in the house to keep an eye on him.

#11) Have said toddler open the bottle of paint and spill it down his leg in the middle of the play room. When he realizes he’ll be in trouble, have him come looking for you, thereby tracking the fuchsia permanent enamel paint all through the hallway and then back into your bedroom.

#12) When you finally notice your toddler in all his fuchsia glory, grab him and carry him to the bathroom on the other end of the house. You can’t put him in your shower because he has a poopy diaper, so you have to take him to his bathtub. In the attempt to keep paint from getting on your clothes, make sure you touch as many surfaces in your house as possible, including (but not limited to) the walls, doorknobs and faucets. Leave paint on all of them. In the madness, forget to wipe it off right away, and let it dry for a permanent reminder of the occasion.

#13) Leave your mother at home to clean the carpets while you rush to Little Gym. Have her do one round of carpet cleaning with a barrage of carpet cleaner, club soda and a shampooer. Make sure not all of it comes out.

#14) Do a load of laundry with the rags that were used to clean up the paint. Add bleach. Spill some on your solid-colored blue shirt, creating an instant white spot and rendering the shirt unusable.

#15) On the day after your mothers leave, have a friend from out of town come stay with you for three days. Play and have fun, try to squeeze in some work outs. Stay up too late, but put off the organization project that is still in limbo.

#16) Reclaim your house and attempt to finish reorganizing. Decide you have so much stuff that you need to clean out your garage. Decide that a garage sale is in order. Schedule garage sale for the weekend after everyone has left.

#17) Instead of organizing a simple garage sale, invite your friends to come too. Now you not only get to fill your garage up with your junk, but everyone else’s too!

#18) Make sure you plan other activities in which you wouldn’t normally participate, and make sure they are scheduled for the same week as the garage sale. Include such activities as swim lessons, extra Little Gym classes, a dance recital and dress rehearsal (plan these the same days as the sale). Buy your husband tickets to a comedian he likes for Father’s Day, and make sure the performance is scheduled for the same day as the sale and the dance recital dress rehearsal.

#19) While preparing for garage sale, do extra loads of laundry. During one load, allow the cap of the laundry detergent to get knocked loose. During the spin cycle, let the vibrations of the machine knock the half-full Costco-sized bottle off the top of your machine and dump the contents on to the carpet and floor in front of your laundry closet. Don’t actually notice this until hours later when the detergent has seeped back under your machines so far that you’ll have to pull them both out to clean it up entirely.

#20) Since you have to open a new bottle of club soda to clean up the carpet, and you don’t want the rest of it to loose it’s fizz and become useless, decide that now would be a good time to do a second round of cleaning on the paint stains. Do this instead of preparing for the garage sale that’s tomorrow.

And as a special bonus for making it all the way to the end of this list:

The #1 Way to Avoid Preparing for a Garage Sale…

#1) Decide it has been way too long since you have blogged about your family, and spend the evening before the sale preparing a list of all the reasons you haven’t blogged lately. Priceless.

I’m Somebody’s Hero…

Friday, June 19th, 2009

…because today I cut open our rather full vacuum cleaner bag with
scissors and dug through all the lint to find the tiny pink Sleeping
Beauty slipper that had been eaten by said vacuum. I've never seen
such gratitude from my four year old in her short life, nor have I
seen her so willing to complete her chores. Praise the Lord for the
little things.

How were you a hero today?

WHO Declares Pandemic…Do Not Wait to Prepare…Do It Now

Friday, June 12th, 2009

I know there have been varying opinions about the swine flu and how seriously we should take it. Even though it isnt in the media as much now, the threat is not gone. Like most pandemics in history, the virus usually comes in three waves  The following is from a wonderful website at http://blog.totallyready.com. I really appreciate this website because the author is not an alarmist, but is really educated and presents all the facts, and gives simple ways to be prepared in case the worse should happen. It’s worth bookmarking her site. -Karli 

The original advisory opinion was requested by...

The World Health Organization has officially declared a world wide pandemic. We must take this seriously. The flu was expected to lessen with the summer months upon us. It has not. It is also growing in the southern hemisphere at a rapid rate.

“At this early stage, the pandemic can be characterized globally as being moderate in severity,” the WHO said in a statement to member nations, urging them not to take radical steps like closing their borders or restricting trade or travel.

Margaret Chan, director general of the WHO, stressed that flu pandemics are unpredictable. “The virus writes the rules,” she said. “This one like all influenza viruses can change the rules without rhyme or reason, at any time.”

On Wednesday, the WHO said 74 countries had reported nearly 27,737 cases of H1N1 flu, including 141 deaths.”

“Although we have not seen large numbers of severe cases in this country so far, things could possibly be very different in the fall, especially if things change in the Southern Hemisphere, and we need to start preparing now in order to be ready for a possible H1N1 immunization campaign starting in late September,” said U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

About half of the people in the USA who have died from the new H1N1 flu were young and healthy, which is more typical of H1N1 flu varieties than of other strains, says CDC spokesman Thomas Skinner”

http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-06-11-swine-flu-pandemic_N.htm?csp=usat.me

I have warned that the 1918 flu was very deadly to pregnant women. A second pregnant woman has died of complications of the flu. They were able to deliver her baby by c-section before her death and the baby is now in ICU.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31207627/

We must take this seriously. My pandemic ebook will be available this weekend and I will also issue a special edition of my newsletter for all subscribers. I am running out right now to get more information and do some research so check back later for more updates and information.