6.22.2008
The June Show
5.21.2008
My Water Baby



5.20.2008
The Great Outdoors
I love how Storey can go from a crying mess to thoroughly at peace when we step outside. If we are outside and she is standing (on my lap) she can not be happier. I love how her head turns and tilts in all different directions and angles to see as much as she can. She is soaking it in. I think she could be a naturalist when she grows up.
Today while we were taking a walk, we met one of our neighbors down the street. Storey was in her stoller and the woman had to come down her sidewalk to take a peak. She peered into Storey's stroller and: "Ay, gordita!" I will add this name to our list: Miss Mae, Sweet Mae, Baby Mae, Sweetheart, Sweet tart, Love, Muffin Top, Maeflower, Tulip, Peanut, and Gordita.
5.12.2008
Hurricane
I cannot describe how sentimental I was about Mother's day. I don't think I have truly understood how special this day is until this year. I just felt so very honored and thank-full to be able to celebrate this day. I thought about all the mothers that have come before me and all the mothers that I shared this day with.

It was a beautiful day. Josh planned an early trip to the zoo, which I had been dying to do for some time. The weather was perfect; Storey was perfect. She started out in the stroller, but of course preferred our arms after a while. She loves to be close. I am convinced there is no happier place for her than in our arms. Josh carried her around in the sling as we walked around the zoo. It was so much fun, and I loved to watch Storey look at these animals for the very first time.

After the zoo, we grabbed some tacos from our favorite place here in town, took them home, and followed brunch up with a nap. It was all three of us napping in the bed. We hadn't done that since Storey was first born. It was sweet; it topped off my day.
That evening, we went to Josh's parents house and spent time with Debbie. Grandma carried Storey in her arms and loved on her the whole time we were there. I loved to just watch them together. I looked at Josh's mom and thought about what an amazing job she has done and continues to do. I have such beautiful models to follow right beside me.
5.01.2008
(Almost) summer time, and the livin' is (almost) easy




4.23.2008
Chacos on a Tuesday
While we were in line with our 2 items, I noticed a mother and her son in the cafe. This was the scene: a boy, about the age of 8, chowing down on a salad, intently listening to his mother, dressed in a pair of torn jeans, Chacos and a spaghetti-strapped camisole, while she read "The Story of the World" aloud. Josh and I have kept the conversation of homeschooling open. Josh is all for it, as he was a home-schooled child, but I have felt better making that decision later on. But the more I have fallen in love with being a mother and the more I am amazed at what Josh has learned as a child growing up with his mom as his teacher, the more open I have become to the idea. Standing in line at Whole Foods, I wanted to be that mom that can share a salad with her child in her favorite worn jeans in the middle of the week, taking the classroom to the cafe- or wherever it takes us.
Tonight was a good night. In between chopping vegetables for our dinner, Josh juggled the potatoes, and Storey and I danced together to the Gipsy Kings in the kitchen. She has definitely found her laugh. It melts her mom's heart.
4.22.2008
Happy Earth Day

To celebrate Earth Day on Saturday, Josh and I took Storey down to Woodlawn Lake to participate in the festivities. It was a great day- beautiful weather, beautiful friends, beautiful baby. Storey Mae was such a trooper. She had a great time, despite missing her morning nap. She was content people-watching, feeding in the park, taking a ride in her stroller (-even though the stroller became a cart for our free trees for a while), walking around in mom and dad's arms.

Good friends, Jon, Rachel, and Ethan Faunce and Uncle T.J joined us while we also met up with more good friends, the Everetts and the Menjivars.
I absolutely enjoyed being in the outdoors, good conversation with Uncle T.J and Josh, walking, connecting with our friends. But I could not help but be a little disappointed with Earth Day.

On our trek over to the Lake, we all could not help but notice trash piled up and polluting one end of the lake. It was disgusting. Meanwhile, less than half a mile away, we were supposed to be celebrating and advocating for a healthy, clean, sustainable natural environment. To add to my disappointment, there were vendors upon vendors handing out paper pamphlets and fliers, plastic utensils for the food and drinks. Then, when we looked to dispose of our trash, there were plenty of trashcans, but no recycling bins? I believe there was even a booth promoting recycling present at the festival!
No doubt there were plenty of positive things about Earth Day. There were a lot of really great organizations and individuals promoting good ideas and making the effort to educate and engage people. I just wish that our Earth Day had taken a more active role in not only evaluating the cost of the festival on the environment, but also utilizing all the people that gathered to clean up the park around them. If the festival would have organized a clean-up every 30 minutes or so, where everyone was involved in proactively helping the environment, I think it would have had a greater impact on not only people but also the Earth.
I have spent the morning trying to research the organization that put on San Antonio’s Earth Day. I hope to make some suggestions on how Earth Day can be more Earth-friendly next year.
The highlight of the day was meeting the Janssen family, the founders of the Live Lightly Tour. I had stumbled across her personal blogs just this last week and fell completely in love with this family. The wife, Sara, promotes green living, her spirituality, anti-consumerism, breastfeeding, holistic health, attachment parenting, and a commitment to a vegetarian and organic diet to the extreme. To me, this is what a modern-day hippy looks like (an idea I mean to flesh out in more detail). I know that if the Janssens lived in San Antonio, we could be good friends J.
Simple ways Josh and I do Green on a daily basis:
-Recycle. We have 2 bins: one for the items that the SA Environmental Services recycles and one for items that are not accepted. (*Plastics must be cleaned out, and water bottle caps must be removed)
-Re-use: We no longer purchase plastic bags for storing food. We simply wash out and re-use baggies. Same thing for shopping bags- we take our own bags into stores-- not only grocery stores, but retail too;
-Replace: Skip buying whatever paper products we can. Instead, we use cloth napkins and rags in place of paper towels
Switch out incandescent bulbs with fluorescent lighting to save energy and reduce greenhouse gases
-Compost: All raw foods and organic material can be thrown into a compost pile and made into organic soil!
-Hang-it: Hang light-weight items, towels, cloth diapers on a line outside to reduce energy
-Turn it off: This includes lights and appliances, as well as unplugging electronics, chargers and appliances when not in use (*Even though it may be turned off, simply having it plugged in still uses energy)
-Garden: Josh has created our own eco-system in our backyard complete with herbs, corn, potatoes, tomatoes, onion, garlic, peppers, pecan trees, and soon to come: fruit trees. We know exactly what we are eating, it is seasonal, pesticide-free, reduces cost of transporting goods to local grocer, we get our hands dirty on our land, and it saves money :)
-Organics: Josh and I have made a commitment to buy and eat everything organic as possible. Yes, we do enjoy a meal out once in a while, but anything that finds it's way into our cloth shopping bag is of the earth-- for a sustainable environment and society and a healthy body.