early spring
the little house in the big woods
Or more accurately, the little tent in the lost forest…
Steve borrowed an outfitter’s tent from a friend and we set it up back in the woods a couple days ago. It’s fully equipped with a wood stove so it’s nice and toasty at night, or so I hear. Steve slept out there last night with one kid and is out there tonight with the other.
upgrades
Two upgrades to the firepit area:
Recently acquired by Steve, a free ginormous cable spool to be used as a table (possibly to be split into 2 tables with other legs/support):
Semi-trained guard/watch dog to protect against intruders (or make sure the kids get back from their trip to the house 😉 ):
bread & wine
I was really excited when I found out several weeks ago on Shauna Niequist’s website that I could get an advance reader copy of her new book Bread & Wine.
I had read her other books, Cold Tangerines and Bittersweet, within the last year and couldn’t remember relating to another author so strongly. I know part of it was the timing, being in a beautiful, relatively new place (after moving here a little over two years ago) combined with leaving a place where I had spent most of my adult life and experienced significant life change. The subtitles of those two books were kind of like a summary of what I was feeling: Celebrating the Extraordinary Nature of Everyday Life and Thoughts on Change, Grace, and Learning the Hard Way.
A little more of the backstory is that Shauna lived for several years in Grand Rapids and has spent a lifetime of summers in South Haven (both in the same general West MI/Lake Michigan ballpark where I now live). Also, the church I was a part of for many years before moving was one of many that followed in the footsteps of Willow Creek, the church that her parents started. I’ve read several books written by members of her family and church whose teaching I respect and whose leadership I am thankful for, all adding to the connection.
Now, Bread & Wine comes along at also a seemingly perfect time for me. The subtitle is A Love Letter to Life Around the Table with Recipes and is filled with the same kind of honest, real life stories as her previous books. While it is a book about food, it is about so much more. As Shauna writes in the introduction, “It’s the thing that connects us, that bears our traditions, our sense of home and family, our deepest memories, and, on a practical level, our ability to live and breathe each day. Food matters.”
Being able to read this book at this time fits in well with another book I’m reading called Real Love for Real Life: The Art and Work of Caring by Andi Ashworth about hospitality, as well as this teaching from Hugh Halter about the home being the basis for a missional life.
There is a chapter in the book where Shauna writes that our tears can “show us something about ourselves.” Basically if something makes us cry, it’s probably important to us. For her, one of those things was watching ordinary people cross the finish line of a marathon, so she became one of them! (And that made me cry!)
For me, something that just about brings tears to my eyes is reading the stories and recipes in the Penzeys Spices magazines/catalogs from ordinary people who share why they love cooking and sharing a meal with others. I have always been a picky eater and an introvert, so the idea of cooking and inviting others over to eat seems like an unlikely match for me, but I can’t think of anything that has inspired me more in the food department than their mottos “Love to Cook – Cook to Love” and “Love People. Cook them tasty food.” I have the bumper sticker of that second one on my fridge (though I don’t follow its advice as much as I want to).
Our “table” is more often a campfire out in the woods in the winter or our deck furniture in the summer because we want to take advantage of the outdoor space we have. I have plans in my head for a larger dining table for inside so that we can more often move the “party” indoors, too, but as Shauna points out a few times in her book, we should not let the size or condition of our house (or table in my case) stop us from inviting people in. “What people are craving isn’t perfection. People aren’t longing to be impressed; they’re longing to feel like they’re home.” And “…it isn’t about performance. You’ll miss the richest moments in life…if you’re too scared or too ashamed to open the door.” If this doesn’t speak directly to me, I don’t know what else could. That is how I lived at our old house. Now, I am trying more and hoping that people feel welcome here.
I want to find and get to know whoever “my people” will be, that group of close friends who know which cupboard you keep your glasses in and that you can call when you need help. For Shauna it’s her Cooking Club, for others it may be a small group from church, or a group joined together around some other interest.
There are a variety of recipes in the book from appetizers to main dishes to desserts. Can you say Dark Chocolate Sea Salted Toffee? Some recipes are gluten free (since her husband eats GF) and some are vegetarian. These helped me see that I can be more accomodating towards those who have dietary restrictions, either for medical reasons or by choice. Some of the others simply inspire me to eat healthier and to use the word “virtuous” more often (the toffee is not one of these, by the way 😉 ). All of them are tied directly to a story.
All in all, Bread & Wine is a great book about food, friendship, and love, all things I am hungry for more of in my life.
this kid
…who I wanted to freeze just before he lost his first tooth,
now has two missing teeth
and is, I just realized, only a few months away from turning seven (yes, 7!) years old
…who doesn’t like peanut butter, except if it’s crunchy (then only likes it a little), but will eat giant, garlic-stuffed olives like no big deal
…who likes fruity gum, not minty, and likes lots of sprinkles on his ice cream
…who daily surprises me with his super-smart, logical mind (like the time we approached a car accident at an intersection and I said “not a good place for an accident” and he said “well, no place is a good place for an accident”)
…who taught me what he learned at school about being a “bucket filler” instead of a “bucket dipper”
…is growing up right before my very eyes and I still can’t believe it.
not so long
Note: This had been sitting as a draft for a few weeks and I never got back to it until now when I logged in to start another post. Winter is seeming a bit longer after a few more feet of snow have fallen, and it is once again a white-out today, but it’ll be the end of February in another week. By this time last year, we were prepping to start seeds for the garden because there was no snow.
I used to think winter lasted forever, at least that’s what it felt like. It was a long season that you just had to endure while counting down the days ’til spring. This thinking had been ingrained in me while living in frozen tundra-type places like “da U.P.” and “Minnesota, eh” for most of the last 20 years. It’s just in these last 2 years that I’ve changed my mind. Winter’s not so long after all. Of course it’s easy to say this on a 54° day at the end of January, and the big lake definitely keeps it warmer here, but I’ve been thinking this even before today. Something seems wrong when the dirty ground is not covered in clean, white snow all winter. And doesn’t every winter need a good ol’ blizzard? Or maybe I’m just getting old and want to keep the “back in my day…” stories alive. Plus, as much as I love a warm day, I always wonder if we would take those perfect weather days for granted and stop noticing and appreciating them if we didn’t have the contrast.
It helps to look back and look forward to seeing the ground that we cannot yet see.
“Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” Hebrews 11:1
lake effect
It started snowing Sunday and pretty much hasn’t stopped. Natalie said it feels like we’re in a snowglobe. These are some pics taken over the last few days (click an image to view larger).
The BEHR Paint Store
“Hello, this is BEHR paint, stain and finish company, how can I help you?” That was me, Natalie, answering the unusable toy phone that Cale and I use for our pretend “BEHR” paint, stain, and finish store. This is how it got started…
As you probably know, BEHR is a real company of paint, stain and finish. They sell these things at Home Depot. That’s where our story begins. Cale, my mom and I were at The Home Depot, looking for paint colors for our basement. (I think my mom posted about our basement, right?) Anyway, we happened to come across, (while looking at the big paint stand with the paint color sample cards), a little booklet with the BEHR logo on the cover. (See what I’m holding in the picture above.) Cale and I unfolded them, and they appeared to have all the colors of paint BEHR sells!!
Very excited, Cale exclaims: “Mom! Can me and Natalie each take one of these book things home!? I think they’re free!” And then my mom said “Sure.” So then, Cale was happy. I grabbed one too. “They’ll be fun to look at,” I thought to myself. Little did I know that those booklets would create the “BEHR Paint, Stain and Finish Store.”
Let’s back up a little. Cale and I used to do this thing called “desk clerk.” It’s where Cale and I pretended to work for a Grand Haven Hospital. I was a secretary that answered a phone, and Cale worked at a computer. Pretend  people would “call in” to make an appointment with their pretend doctor. Then, I would answer the phone, and write all their info down in a notebook. Every appointment would be written in a different color pen. (See my pens and notebook above.) Cale would pretend to type all the patients’ info into the pretend computer to confirm the appointment.
Back to the paint store…
I had just finished playing a song on the piano when I had the idea. I had seen Cale looking at his booklet and suddenly an idea flew into my head! I shouted: “Cale! What if we used our paint books to have an office at the BEHR company!? It could be like our desk clerk game, but only with people ordering paint!” Cale thought it was a great idea. So, we got things set up, and have playing nicely ever since.
That’s pretty much the end of my story, but I have one more picture to show you…
  This is how people would call in and how I would answer and record everything:
Ring!! The phone rings. I answer. “Hello, this is BEHR paint, stain and finish company, how can I help you?” Then, I would put the person on speakerphone. I would get my pen of choice ready. I would ask the person: “What’s your name?” They would answer. I would ask them: “What color of paint do you want?” they would tell me the code number of the paint, or the actual name of the paint. For example, each color started with UL. UL22o-1 was our most popular color called “Caribe.” “Caribe” is a dark turquoise. All the code numbers and names of the paints were on the booklet. I would write their color name and code down. Next, I would ask the person how many gallons of the paint they want. (If you wanted 25 gallons of paint, it would cost you $40 dollars. The cost of the paint is $15 dollars more than the number of gallons you have.) I would write the number of gallons  and the cost of the paint down. Lastly, I would ask the person if they wanted to come to the BEHR building to pick up their paint, or have their paint sent to them. I would write down all the dates and times they say.
(Also, Cale could get sent an email on his computer from a costumer and tell me all the info to write down. We would go through a similar process to the one I just described to you.)
I really hope you liked my story about mine and Cale’s BEHR Paint, Stain and Finish Store. It took a long time to type all this. You know, if you ever want to order paint from BEHR, just call. If you hear: “Hello, this is BEHR paint, stain and finish company, how can I help you?”, you’ll know you called the right place. 🙂
Adventures in basement remodeling – part 1
This could technically be part 2 if you count the carpet removal/reinstall ordeal, but I’ll keep it as part 1.
The current status of the basement, a.k.a. what we’ve Steve’s been working on: Â
The demo is now 99.2% complete. The painted wall (walkout side) & windows are the only things left from before.
The wood stove will be on the left of this end, which is just about ready for mud & tape:
I have no clue what color paint to choose, which is next up after that. We’re finishing this end first so we can finally get the stove in place and burn some wood.
Here are the boxes of flooring & a preview of what the floor will look like (we later removed it so it wouldn’t get ruined):
We ordered the flooring online and it arrived on a truck too big to make it to our house, so we had to meet it at the road.
Here’s the tile for the hearth:
Hopefully more progress to come soon…
the letter s
Sunshine and a sprinkle of sparkly snow
(everything looks a little prettier now, even the cardinals)