Minimalist Challenge – Day 6

Check out Day 6 HERE! 

Screen Shot 2017-11-17 at 11.35.11 AM

World Prematurity Day 

My Social media is flooded today, I have already shed tears and it’s so early. And I wouldn’t want it any other way. The stories shared mean that there is a community of support out there! 

Today is the day I honour those tiny babies who have fought and won, remember those who have fought and lost, and know that so many more are in the middle of their own battle. The stories of hope and those of sorrow all remind me that a child born prematurely will come in to this world fighting. I am so lucky to know and love many of these children and their brave families who endured what I can’t even begin to imagine were some of the worst moments of their lives. The strength and determination I know in many of the moms and dads facing this uphill battle is the most heroing. 

I can’t begin to imagine the deep emotional roller coaster families go thru. Because I myself did not face this battle, I don’t want to minimalize the pain and turmoil a family faces when another devistating diagnosis is delivered, the joy and excitement when another millstone is achieved. 

But I do want to honour those tiny fighters and their amazing families who are with them by their side for the fight and say how lucky I am to know such amazing families! 

Try

I was competitive, I am competitive, so is my husband (even more than me – I have to admit) and so I have had to find some balance when cheering my kids on from the sidelines. It’s exciting to me that they are learning new things and learning from someone else. But it’s tough not to get in there and encourage them too enthusiastically!

It has been an experience watching as a parent, to push the right amount for my children to do their best. I have thought long and hard about the message I want my children to hear from me as they learn new things and decide where their passion lies.

I know for sure that I am not a believer in the “we are all winners” message. To each their own and kudos to you if you employ this point of view in your own parenting – my readers know I have always been a believer that parents should do what works for them when raising their little humans and that we don’t have to see eye to eye on every matter, so this isn’t meant as judgment, only my opinion, which of course is allowed here!

Personally, I believe that the “we are all winners” message instills a false sense of success early in life and creates feelings of entitlement. This not only creates difficulties in the now but also for later years; when that same child who never learned to lose is trying to land that dream job and they aren’t chosen for the position, they will be devastated, they wont know how to cope with this loss because they never had to learn the skill by losing the basketball game in junior high.

I grew up knowing that if I didn’t put the work in I wouldn’t get the result I wanted. And I wanted to win. I wouldn’t be standing on the podium receiving a medal if I didn’t work my butt off prior to the competition; it was as simple as that. So later in life when I didn’t work hard on that paper in my first college class and choose instead to party with my new friends, it reflected in the form of grades, I was disappointed yes; but I was disappointed in my self not the institution for not “handing me a better grade” and choose (eventually – lets be real how many of us really learned after the first bad grade!) to work harder and do better.

So I have chose a message for my children, which puts them in charge of the outcome, and how they view accountability of that outcome. One that puts the responsibility on them to do the best they can.

You don’t have to be the best, but you do have to try.

I feel like the message of try is greater than the message of win. We are human and we innately want to win its built into us, we don’t all want to win the same thing, but we all have something we want in life and a drive to get there. It is important to me that if my children set out to do something, they try.

I will be proud and I will encourage my children to be proud of themselves if they have tried their best and worked their hardest regardless of the outcome. They might not stand on the top of every podium, come home with top marks in every class, or land every job they apply for because none of that is realistic. There are always brick walls. Randy Pausch said it best.

brick

Try is a realistic message to teach my children, motivation to work hard, and try hard, to learn and grow, and to be proud of the accomplishments and goals they have achieved, because it wont be handed to them, they will earn what they desire only with perseverance, dedication, and motivation. That is the message I want to teach my children, they can truly be anything they want in life as long as they have try.

Minimalist Challenge – Day 5

Check out the Day 5 video HERE! Screen Shot 2017-11-16 at 7.29.17 PM

Minimalist Challenge – Day 4

Check out Day 4 HERE!

Screen Shot 2017-11-15 at 1.19.55 PM

Minimalist Challenge – Day 3

Check out Day 3 Here!

 

Screen Shot 2017-11-14 at 10.47.33 AM

Minimalist Challenge – Day 2

Hey everyone, check out day 2 HERE!Screen Shot 2017-11-13 at 10.06.28 AM

Minimalist Challenge – Here We Go!

Screen Shot 2017-11-11 at 2.02.03 PM

This is the Minimalist Challenge by Livin’ the Country Life. I was invited a while back to be a part of a Facebook group doing the challenge, and to be frank it was terrifying then to think about the process of actually getting rid of things. So this got me to thinking that perhaps there was something there…

Maybe I should be looking at the idea of riding my life of things that I am no longer using, things I don’t need any more, and junk that not only do I not need but others likely don’t either. I often see something and think, “I’ll use this later, I should just put it downstairs and then when I need it ill have it.” Well this has lead to not much room left downstairs and other things that don’t make it to the basement get “organized” and then “reorganized” again and again in the space they exist in, never to actually be used! It has been a vicious cycle so I have hope that if I actually remove these things from my home in the form of garbage or donation that my living spaces will become less cluttered!

 

So here we go! Wish me luck and feel free to join me on my journey by posting comments here and over on my vlog letting me know how the process is going for you! OR if you have done this before and have tips let me know that too! I am expecting difficulty along the way but am optimistic.

*Disclaimer, the videos on my Vlog are a couple days delayed from filming day to post day because I wanted to allow for editing time (three little ones and all their activities leave me with some days where I just don’t have time to edit and post)

Screen Shot 2017-11-11 at 2.02.30 PM

Welcome to Day one of the minimalist challenge  by Livin’ the Country Life.  The weather is getting cooler and so what better time to do some purging of things I don’t need anymore. You can follow along day-by-day over on my Vlog. I’ll post here too along the way to let you how the process is going. I am excited to get started and start to rid my house and life of clutter. I know I have more than enough stuff to get rid of. But I also know I have some pretty serious hoarding tendencies, as you will notice in my first video. So this challenge will get me going on the bigger issue of letting go of things and I hope it will allow me to live a less cluttered life!

Stay tuned for more!

Winter has Arrived!

Snow is here.

I guess pumpkin spice season is done and its time for another change in the season.

Fall has been beautiful and I didn’t want it to end. I didn’t want to see the snowfall and the wind blow. But my children have brought a new light to the snowy season. They have reminded me as I look out the window and pout that soon there will be enough to build a snow man, and sliding down the slide in the snow is so much fun! They have reminded me that snow is “fun” and so I look forward to a warmer less blustery day where we can head out and enjoy the white fluffy stuff!

For now though I’ll stay toasty curled up with my lap top writing and drinking coffee! While I listen to the kids play nicely (for a minute or two).Processed with MOLDIV

“Cherish These Moments, They don’t Last Forever”

What mom hasn’t heard this sentiment?

How about…

“They grow up so fast, you’ll be wishing for these days again.”

Thanks! I know they’ll grow up, and I know how fast time goes. I am well aware of how fast life moves.

Where I live I am well aware that we move faster than other parts of the world. I have visited some beautiful places where life just moves slower, is calmer and everyone stops to literally smell the flowers. Not here, here we are multi-tasking workaholics with little time to stop let alone smell that flower. I try to sit and enjoy the moments, and in some respects I do; I love it out on our little farm, it does feel slower than the city and it is quieter. But quick is just how we do things here, it’s part of our culture, and us. It’s not a negative, I enjoy my time visiting places that move slower, it’s relaxing and the pressures of the “go” life literally fade away, but I like home.

I love that we are productive, we get things done; we are efficient and accomplish so many astonishing things. Personally what we (ourselves, friends and family) have done on our small farm in the short time we have lived here is extraordinary. What we as a committee achieve every year for the Teepee Creek Stampede Association is exceptional. As a community how we can pull  together when a family is in need is awe-inspiring. And what we as a community can fundraise for charities like the Huntington’s Society of Canada Peace Country Chapter, or the Ronald McDonald House and many others is unbelievable. So I’m okay to take a vacation on the slow side, but I want to come back and live where we get stuff done!

So to the lady reminding me how quick life moves while I plead with my children to “hurry up”  – I know.

I think it bugs me so much because she had only seen me in a fleeting moment encouraging with “enthusiasm” my three year old twins to get there top buckles done up in their car seats because we need to leave the store parking lot. She sees my exacerbated encouragement, I see my twins taking another 10 minutes buckling their seat-belts up because “they can do it.” She didn’t see me take them to skating lessons earlier this morning so didn’t see me cherish the moment and cringe when they fell for the billionth time on the hard cold ice surface, then smile with pride as they picked themselves up again and kept on trying. She didn’t see me take them grocery shopping where I cherished the moment and we talked about all the healthy foods and what food does for our bodies, where Morgan happily reminded me that “food is energy to play.” She missed the moment where they picked out a gift and card and wrapping paper for the birthday party they are going to, together, without arguing about what to get their cousin and friend. You missed out on the trip to the play place where they ate lunch and I cherished the moment as they burned off some energy after having been stuck in a grocery cart. She didn’t see me watch and enjoy seeing them make new friends, talk to other kids and ask their names. She missed all those parts of our day up until that point, where for a moment in time this mom was ready to get home, get out of town, and just get moving and so in an exhausted tone asked them to hurry up.

We as parents can’t be on 100% of the time.

We as parents already know how quick life goes.

Threenagers are tough and the attitude that goes with the age is not something I wish to stop and “smell” I’m good remembering the funny songs they make up, watching them grow and learn new things, the way they share with each other and other kids, their manners and polite behaviours, and every day I am in awe of their development in every way. But I promise I won’t look back and wish I’d have savoured the “I can buckle it myself mom” with a three year olds attitude, and I’m okay with that!

This mom knows that life is quick, but I also know that I enjoy my time, I savour moments, I write, and I videotape and I am involved in all that my children do.

So instead of wishing for these days again I probably will be too busy cherishing the moments of life when they are older, you know the dating, and driving, and being… teenagers…ahhhhh someone hand me a sedative!