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Category Archives: Motherhood

A Mother and A Woman

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For the last three years I have shied away from a mother’s day post because I have a lot of wonderful things to say about my mom and stepmother and a couple of other really powerful women that have shaped my life, and I want to acknowledge the group of women that I mother our collective brood with, and I want to wax poetic about the experience, but I’m not sure that I know how to go about reconciling that I feel that the mothers in my life are so deserving of recognition while I myself am still shaking my head in disbelief that I’ve been entrusted with a child’s life.

This blog is largely dedicated to my experience as a parent. From that lens it seems that I’m pretty much all-in with the whole mama gig, and don’t get me wrong, I am, but there’s so much about being a mother that feels, for lack of a better term, like make-believe to me. I still have days or moments when I feel like an outsider looking in at the snow globe of our lives and it seems surreal and and foggy and oddly fragile. In part I think that this feeling is born out of the whole my-heart-is-now-walking-outside-my-body phenomenon that every parent is all too familiar with, and in part I think that having a child is the inevitable and somewhat clichéd crossroads moment that everyone can tell you over and over about, but you can’t really appreciate the magnitude of the choice until you actually make it.

Down one path you see a life that is blissfully and appropriately self-centered. All the shops lining its trail flash signs that invite you to do whatever the hell you want with your life, sleep till noon, go back to school, spend all your money on a glass tile backsplash, book a flight for tomorrow on a moment’s notice, stay out, stay up, stay in, write books, live in a glass castle, indulge, indulge, indulge. Down the other path, you see a life that is boisterous and self-centered in a completely different way. The signs are more subtle, inviting you to step in here to have your heart explode with joy when your child giggles for the first time, look at a tiny face and see your husband’s smile, see the sunrise 5 days a week, let a tiny person decorate your kitchen with flour, settle down, anchor yourself with roots, indulge, indulge, indulge.

I’ve been feeling these things for only a couple of years now, so I’m about as far off from being an expert on this as one can be, but I think the point that I’ve arrived at is that two women have taken permanent residence in my being. One is a woman who is a mother and she is soft and attempting to make peace with stretch marks and she is joy-filled and emotional and honestly spends the majority of her time thinking about the child that she has and his future, and the child that she wants and their future. She consumes herself with reading about ways to honor the magnitude of trust that’s been placed in her hands, and reaches out to other mothers for guidance and acceptance and communion, she cries out of pride and fear and frustration. She’s grateful for early mornings and date nights in and the excuse of needing to be home for nap time. She’s unapologetic about all of the ways that she changed, all of the ways that her priorities have shifted, all of the ways that her resolve has morphed.

The other woman is the one that longs for a lot of things. There’s not another way to say it. She has opinions and gigantic ideas and she wants to over indulge and spend her life on a dance floor spinning and laughing. She’s anxious to always be feeling something new, to be recognized for being more that a long shadow behind a set of small footprints, to spend her time making out in backseats, and hunting down books, and learning how to finally make beautiful things in a meaningful way. She thinks about work and making a name for herself and saying, see that? I did that, and sure, I’ll be right over, no problem.

Until recently, I couldn’t really articulate this, but in an indistinct way I felt these two sides of myself in constant tension with one another. Not because I felt that one side was superior to the other (quite the opposite) but just that there was discord. It wasn’t harmonious, you chose one path or the other, there was no turning back. Thinking about Mother’s Day, and my anxiety about having a spotlight shined on a part of my life that I secretly feel guilty about not being 100% about 100% of the time, has made me think that I probably just need to lighten up a little. My two ‘lives’ are not mutually exclusive. I am a woman and I am a mother and I am a wife and I am an individual. My guess is that almost every single woman–parent–out there feels this on some sort of spectrum. We wouldn’t trade our lives with our families for anything, and we desperately want not just everyone else, but our own eyes to still see us as those awesome independent women that once ruled our worlds. We’re both. Two for the price of one.

The last thing that I’ll to this is that I sense the finality of it. We will have our youngest child move out, move on one day, and although my heart will still be in permanent residence in someone else’s shoes, and although I’ll still be thinking about their future and their well being and all of that, but my time being mine will be the rule and no longer the exception. I will suddenly be able to sleep in and stay out and say yes, I’ll be right there, and I can take classes and read books and learn to make beautiful things. I see that door on the horizon, and here again I feel a strange little dual ping in my heart. I can’t wait. I hope they’ll never leave us.

Perhaps the metaphor of turning our hearts over to our children is even more apt than I’ve realized…we’re not making a choice, we’re creating a song: they put the baby in our arms and one becomes two, a single note becomes a harmony.

Coupla Things

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Hi!

I know, I know–it’s been forever, we should do lunch, the kids are getting so big, etc etc…but, I’ve got many blog things on my mind and thought that we better get back to it.

1. Asher Walton. This kid is just…he’s doing so much. We were at the park this weekend and Drew and I couldn’t stop talking about how something has changed again in the last few weeks and suddenly his toddler body is looking more like a boy’s body. He loves to climb on anything and is especially good at hanging from stuff (see picture below) and he’s using all kinds of words that aren’t overly surprising, but it catches us off guard that he’s able to put so much together. I offered him oatmeal for breakfast last week and he said quite clearly, “no, I had oatmeal for breakfast yesterday. I will have cereal today.”

Oh.

He does a lot of things that make him seem like a two-year-old and I have to constantly remind him to say please and ask him not to do that and please don’t touch that and blah blah blah, but more and more I find that we just talk. I ask him about his day and he tells me about it. This has to be one of the most rewarding phenomenons of raising a child. A word to the wise though…don’t ask Asher (or any of this little buddies) to keep any secrets for you–if he knows it, he’ll share it. We’re having a little issue with him talking on his mat during nap at school (who on earth could he have inherited this habit from?) so every day when we pick him up we will ask if he talked on his mat. He always tells the truth, and the unapologetic response is so funny.

“Asher, did you talk on your mat at naptime today?”
“Yes! Yes I did talk on my mat today!” >>unbridled enthusiasm<<
“Baby, you know that you’re not supposed to talk on your mat.”
“Why?”
“Because it’s disruptive to the other children. That means they can’t sleep when you talk”
“OH! OK!”>>as if it’s the first time he’s ever heard this<<

So much truth. If only we were all governed internally like the toddler nation–what a world it would be.

2. New Interests and Old Interests. Asher loves airplanes first and foremost. Whether or not this will stick as a life-long love obviously remains to be seen, but if Asher had to pick a spouse right now, I’m pretty sure that he would ask if it would be cool to marry a jet engine. That being said, he’s also getting really excited about animals. For the first time in his short 36 months of life, when given the chance to pick out his own toy at the store last week, instead of reaching for an airplane or digger, he walked out with two whales which he named Beepo and Geeko. He’s also loving dinosaurs and nightly we read the deeply moving and intellectually stimulating tome, Dinosaurs Dig. I don’t want to blow the plot for all of you, but it’s basically about a bunch of dinosaurs who work with diggers. It was written by someone who has probably become a millionaire.

3. Young Love. These kids…I mean–it’s just a lot. And it’s cute overload whenever Asher is with any of his little buddies. There’s the occasional outburst of frustration, but mostly we see a lot of playing and hugging and telling each other things. It’s the best form of entertainment that I know, and is even better for the other parents that we get to share it with. We have good friends.

Also of note? We will often go to a local greasy spoon type diner for breakfast on Saturday mornings (known largely as the Pancake Store in the Walton house) and Asher proudly tells the waitress that he would like pancakes and milk. Then, as any true connoisseur would, he enjoys his pancakes with ketchup. You read that correctly. He does not do this when we make pancakes for him at home, but as soon as the plate lands in front of him at the restaurant, the kid reaches for the ketchup. We do not question this because we do not choose that battle. Mmmmmmm. Ketchup and pancakes.

4. Louie is growing like a weed still (still!) and at 9 months is better behaved than many puppies, but still very much a puppy. Drew takes him on a near daily run which helps curb a little of his four-legged enthusiasm, but we’re pretty sure that he’d be up for a marathon if there was a human taker around. He’s dominant trait is his sweetness, he’s an incredibly cuddly and sincere little guy, and does amazingly well with Asher.

For our part, Drew and I have been kind of burning the candle at both ends and moving at mach 12. We are hoping to have some very exciting news about a ‘new’ house in the coming weeks which has been dominating a lot of our free time and brain energy, and in the meantime we’re both plugging away at work and play, and feeling incredibly grateful for the warm weather and seemingly longer days. I’ll be back with more soon–

I Wanna See Dat Easter Bunny

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Dying Easter eggs is such a an awesome thing. Eggs are already a nearly perfect natural creation, a perfect source of protein, a gentle and evocative sloping shape, a pale rainbow of delicate colors that call to mind all that is strong and clever in nature. I’m sorry, but I’m something of an egg fanatic (although I intend to only keep about 5 chickens one day, not the 180ish that my father tended) and while I’m luke warm about chickens, I’m so thankful for the eggs that they produce that I’m willing to make peace with the bird-brained birds.

Quick aside? My dad, a seasoned farmer, has always said that the two places you never want to fall down and stay down are the chicken house and the pig pen, as both creatures will make quick work of anything in their path. Keep that in mind next time you need to dump a body, ok? The evidence will be gone-zo. Just something to keep in mind. Aren’t you happy you stopped by to read today?

So wait, where was I? Yes! Easter! Let’s see if I can recover from that aside with a couple of pictures of our boy coloring his first eggs:

We went for the traditional solid colors because Asher has the attention span of a two-year-old and I think there’s something incredibly charming about simply dyed eggs. The bulldozer had to help because, you know, bulldozers are pretty helpful like that. After we dyed the last egg, Asher said very affirmatively, “Ok! You tell dat Easter Bunny to c’mon now? I wanna see dat Easter Bunny!” and then I laughed a lot and tried to explain that it would be a couple of days. (We dyed our eggs last night because we’re going to NC for Easter this weekend.)

Ok, so let’s just go for broke and do another quick aside since I’m already talking about funny things that Asher says. The other night I was putting on his pajama pants and he looked up at me and said very seriously, “Dose jambo pants good for me”. When I asked him why, he said, “Dose other dinosaur [footed] jambos not good for me. Dey hurt my wittle toes-ies!” with a look of such concerned sincerity while nodding  appreciatively about the foot-less pants that I was putting him in. Apparently he’s outgrown his dino pajamas and they’ve been hurting his wittle toes-ies! Do you think the council will be taking this into account as they prepare the Mother Of  The Year nominations?

That was the last aside, I promise.

So we also had a little impromptu egg hunt for Asher and his little buddy Austin last week to try to give them a leg up on the competition this coming weekend. (I kid, I kid…at least I do. The egg hunt is Asher’s first ‘competitive’ event, we’ll see how Drew “The Coach” Walton conducts himself on the field this weekend.)

They had a serious case of the cutes.

We told them to close their eyes while we hid the eggs, and this happened.

The boys wanted to use ALL the baskets.

Louie did as good of a job watching as a gigantic six-month-old puppy can be expected to. What he lacks in calm, he makes up for with his photogenic ways:

And while Austin’s little sister Cassidy wasn’t quite ready to participate in the hunt this year, something tells me that this little miss is going to be a formidable opponent for these boys one day soon.

So that pretty much covers it…we’ve discussed one of nature’s finest creations, dumping bodies, the funny things kids say, and holidays as a contact sport. That’s what it’s all about!

Happy Easter!

Isms

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Asher is spouting off all kinds of Asher-isms right now and if I don’t start writing them down, it’s all going to be lost in the same foggy part of my brain the records where I park my car and what day of the week it is and all that.

Here are a couple of our favorite recent ones that don’t involve too much talk about bodies or potties, both of which are hot topics when you’re two and don’t know what it means to cringe just yet:

  • Instead of saying sunscreen, Asher asks for his sunscream.
  • After our dog Grace passed away, Asher was curious about where she was, and we explained that she had died and didn’t live in her body anymore. Drew then said that Grace now lived in Heaven. These days, if you ask Asher where Grace is, he responds gravely, She’s with Kevin. 
  • When something tastes sour or spicy, Asher will take a bite and then squeeze his eyes shut while shaking his head and declare that it’s too tasty! It’s too tasty! This is especially funny if this happen with a lemon because he says w’s for l’s right now so it sounds like, Dose womens are too tasty!
  • If his stomach isn’t feeling well, Asher says, my belly too tight! He also tells us this when he’s on the potty. If you know Drew, you know that he thinks this is very funny.
  • Even though he knows how to say these words correctly, he still asks for nulkie (milk) every day and eats uotneal for breakfast, because that’s what he calls them.
  • Words that sound similar to one another just get doubled up. For instance instead of taking our backpack to the Downtown mall, we take our PackPack to the TownTown Mall.
  • If he feels that we’re not including him in the conversation well enough, he will say, why you talkin bout dat? Talk to Asher! Let’s talk about Asher! which is a trait that I’m just certain he gets from Drew. What?

  • Asher already has fixated on pretty girls and makes no secret about it. The other night our babysitter was over and Drew was changing Asher into his jambos for bed. Asher peeked out at her and then looked at Drew and said with wide eyes, I want her to change me!! Drew was laughing so hard he could hardly get the little man dressed.
  • Whenever we’re getting ready to go anywhere new right now, he’ll look at us very seriously and ask in a concerned tone, They gonna have toys there? as if he’s steeling himself for the possibility that all of his suspicions are about to be confirmed and we are indeed going to go somewhere. very. boring.
  • You can ask him to do the most menial task, and he’ll respond with extreme affirmative enthusiasm. This morning I said, Hey buds, let’s go to your room and get your shoes and he responded, OK!! LET’S DOOOOOOOO IIIIIIIIT! as if there was and ice cream man waiting in his room for us. If only I could get him to stand around and encourage me with folding laundry…his cheery spirit is an impressive motivator.

There are many, many more, but these have been some of our favorites lately. Asher, like all of the children we know, is so much his own little soul. He just moves through the world with a certainty that is inspiring and hysterical, humbling and charming. It’s fun to want to race home to be with him at the end of the day just to hear what he has to say about things, his take on the world is refreshing and funny, and definitely makes up for all of the tantrum-y twos that we’re navigating right now. Love our boy.

So Much to Say…

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And so many pictures to say it with. I have a lot of catching up to do! Spring is springing, I’m freaking out about it, windows are open, doors are wide, things are turning green…if the seasons cause mood swings, may I please welcome you to mania.

But first! Some pictures of the last weeks of winter, of life with the Waltons. Here are some literal snapshots of what we’ve been up to:

Seeing some music…

Blind Pilot

Looking for Spring out frosty windows…

Asher, Mabel, and Louie

Making a lot of breakfasts…

Going to the park and you know, just wearing a hat like Papa…

Looking for the perfect sunset…

Seeing best friends from college and taking a long drink from the well of joy that comes from being with them…

We had to hide in the stairwell under threat of a tornado while in Kentucky. Hilarity, terror, it's all the same.

Hanging out and looking sassy in our jambos (One Walton looks a little sassier in his jambos than the others…)

Enjoying the wonder of waking up to the last snow of the year (and incidentally, pretty much the only significant snow of the year)

Asher's not much for playing in the snow, he just likes to stand around and eat it.

Noting that Louie that might actually be growing before our eyes…

Finding hearts in peppers…

Raging (a fire) on Saturday nights…

And just generally basking in the hum of trying to keep up with the life that we’re living.

Maybe it’s my spring induced mania, but we’re happy right now. We’ve got our hills to climb just like everyone else, but I am trying hard to remember to honor the abundance in our lives by continuing to find ways to say thank you for it, and in saying thank you, I feel happiness.

Oh Spring. You, you, you. You are just too much. Welcome back old friend, let’s roll down the windows and let our hair blow around and get caught up, shall we?

More fun with Children

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It’s Valentine’s day which means that the internet is swamped with words about love and un-love and grumbles and cheers–wait, maybe every day is Valentine’s Day on the internet?–but we’re mostly all cheese around these parts. I know, I know, the shock is overwhelming.

The thing is, all of this stuff, the holidays, the festivals, the stuff that we learned to roll our eyes about at some point, it’s all SO much more fun when there’s a kid to share it with. This morning we woke up and smothered Asher with kisses and told him that he was our Valentine and let him have a little chocolate before breakfast and it was just so much more fun than the average Tuesday morning. Asher is really excited about giving out the Valentine’s that he made to his friends today and I’m really excited about being able to come to his classroom with my mom this afternoon and just be in his world for a little while. If that’s not the definition of celebrating a day about love, I don’t know what is.

We typically make things for each other for these kinds of holidays to make it more reflective of what we want it to be about. Last year Drew gave me a a gorgeous painting that he did of a heart (of the anatomical variety) blooming into a flower. I gave him a little collage/shrine box made with some of his words to me. This year I can’t tell you what we’re getting and giving, but I can tell you that I stitched together a little red felt heart with an A on it to slip into Asher’s pocket. He’s obsessed with the letter A (can’t say that I disagree, it is a pretty awesome letter) and runs around pointing out all of the A’s that he sees, so this morning he was very happy to point to the A on the heart because “A is for Asher!”.

I get it. I get why Valentine’s Day (or as our cousin Daniel aptly called it–Singles Awareness Day) is an easy target for cynicism. But I also get that I am going to be an old lady one day, closer to the end of my life than the middle or the beginning, and I am almost certain that the only potential for regret that I might have in those days will be wishing that I told the people that I loved how deeply I cared for them more often. Having a day to reflect on this doesn’t seem like such a bad idea at all, now does it?

Here’s to thinking about all of the ways that love and un-love and deep love and lustful love and compassionate love and empathetic love and graceful love and ugly love and motherly love and self love and so many other loves has changed our lives. xoxoxo

 

Friends

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I just got email from a friend that was so so so awesome. She was encouraging and supportive and understanding and it really just made my day, so I wanted to first share that by way of reminder to myself and others to reach out, and secondly share something that she wrote that actually made me nod my head and say YES! out loud as I was reading it.

Regarding the juggling act that is being a working mom, she wrote:

The age these magical little people are — it really is emotionally challenging, in good ways and sometimes in exhausting ways, and all that love can take a toll on a mom.  Truly.  I’ve never loved so much so hard and it’s like being shot out of a cannon some days.

It’s like being shot out of a cannon some days. A M E N. I deeply resonate with that feeling and I have been thinking about it all day. I do feel like I’m hurdling into space at an unimaginable pace most days, acutely aware of all that I’m not getting accomplished as I’m zooming steadily forward. To possibly beat this analogy to death, I can’t help but smile when I realize that I’m the one that agreed to getting in the cannon in the first place. Ready? Aim. Fire!

This morning I was reminded yet again that I am not alone as I continue to push on, and more importantly, I am not the only one that is trying to make it all happen. A simple but necessary sentiment. Presumably we’re all doing the best that we can and I am just so thankful for the reminder that we’re all in this thing together. I am also thankful for all of the brilliant and inspiring women in my life, near and far, young and not-so-young. With any luck you all feel this way, but I genuinely believe that I know some of the most interesting and incredible women on the good green earth.

Thank goodness for friends. Thank goodness, thank goodness, thank goodness.

The P Word

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And now for the writing of the mother.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the difference between feeling proud of Asher and taking pride in him. (Which is an interesting turn of phrase, isn’t it? Taking pride?)

Pride is one of those things that we get a lot of conflicting information about. It probably gained the most notoriety when it landed on the list of 7 deadly sins, but these days pride is to be worked toward. Women’s pop culture mandates being proud of who you are or how you walk or the way that you’re aging or how you got those snow chains on your tires or some other somesuch. I have zero expertise for what I’m about to say here, so take it up with your personal anthropologist before you call Dr Phil on me, but my sense is that all of this discussion about learning how to take pride in flower arranging is backlash from centuries of not taking enough pride in our accomplishments, and we all understand why. No wants to be bragged to, and once you’re hip to that you hope not to be the braggart. It seems though that there is a difference between the kind of pride that we can feel guilty of when we’re splashing around what makes us awesome and the kind of pride that we feel when we look at our children and our knees buckle.

I’m bringing all of this up because I want to talk about being proud of Asher, but not in the context of his accomplishments, more in the context of the inexplicable and overwhelming feeling that will occasionally sneak up on me as I’m watching him just exist in such a sure and content way. The feeling is so strange because I’m certainly not proud of anything that I’ve done in that moment, I’m not proud in a measurable way, it’s more like I’m sucking in air trying to get a handle of feeling gratitude and awe and humanity and yes, pride, that I feel as it tumbles around in my brain and heart knowing that I’m standing as witness to something, or more importantly, someone.

Drew and I have been joking for a while that Asher is going to cut us off after his first kindergarten play because we will drown all of the other parents with our awful ocean of tears. It’s a really weird phenomenon, but ever since bringing this son sun into the world, we have become completely worthless in the face of anything that moves us. (For those of you that have watched me try to talk about Lady GaGa and her Born This Way commitment, you know what I’m talking about.) My instinct is to profusely apologize to everyone for being such a sap and make an immense amount of fun of us for not having a better handle on our proud weepies, but I guess the truth is that I would rather Asher see us choke up occasionally because of who he is than ever wonder for even a second if we are anything less than his biggest champions. And yes, yes, we promise to get a handle on things before you debut as the Thanksgiving Turkey in your school play, but cut us some slack if we do a little internal freak out when we see you up there.

I’m of the school of thought that children rise to the standard that is set for them and then pay that forward by setting higher standards for themselves. My sister-in-law Ashley wrote about taking delight in our children, and I got so excited reading her words and thinking about all of the times ahead of us that we are going to have the wind knocked out of us because we’re so thankful to be in some random moment with our kids. It also made me think that the optimal way that we feel pride in our lives is not when we go seeking out recognition, but when we are affirmed and recognized by the people whose opinions we regard in the highest way. For at least a little while longer, Drew and I are those people in Asher’s life, and that’s what I’ve been thinking about with this discussion of pride.

Becoming a mother and having the opportunity watch life from the ground up is a weird and wild and messy ride, but at the end of the day, it’s also a mirror. Some of what I’ve seen reflected back over the last couple of years has been empowering and some of it has been a wake-up call, and a lot of it has been humbling, but it’s also been an expression of joy in a way that would potentially have escaped me if we hadn’t been tasked with raising this little boy into a man. I think if anything, maybe that’s how I can make sense of calling it pride…we’re getting older and loosening our grip on a sense of time, but then we look at Asher and he anchors us right here. We can tell a difference between before and after, then and now, because we are watching him grow and change and it’s slowly dawning on us that he’s pulling us along for that ride too.

I am so proud of you, Asher Walton. So proud.

More Peace Making Walks

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We walked in the snow last weekend. It wasn’t sticking so it was kind of like walking through really fancy rain, but we enjoyed it nonetheless.

A note about Asher and train tracks:

Asher is the Safety Police in our family. He was very concerned, as he always is, about Drew and I walking on the train tracks. We have to stand at the side and look both ways about 10 times to determine that there is no train coming, and then he warns us repeatedly that a train might be coming. When it occurs to him, he is also this way about the street and we can generally (but not always) disuade him from doing things with the severe warning that It’s Not Safe or, You Might Bonk Your Head.

And now a note about my feelings about Asher and train tracks and other safety concerns:

YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS.

That is all.

Scenes

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Lately:

And my current favorite:

I’m feeling a little cabin fever despite the fact that we’ve been outside more this winter than any winter in recent history. I actually think it’s because of that–I’m so acutely aware of how cold it is all the time because we’re in it. Maybe there’s a little hint of delicious in that, but mostly it just makes me think about how badly I can’t wait to walk out the door barefoot and bare shouldered and relaxed. My zen exercise of the winter is trying not tense up when I open the door. Folks, I’m failing.

But these pictures remind me what treasures come from being cooped up and I think daily about how thankful I am for all the warmth that’s in our lives–I’m not kidding about that one. A down coat, a hot bath, thick walls, 15 kinds of tea, bourbon neat, friends to crowd in, anything at all bubbling on the stove, the fuzziest dog around to sit on my feet…who am I to complain about winter?

Please, please remind me of this. As the great state of Wisconsin so proudly declares: cold nose, warm heart.

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