Monday, March 17, 2014

MARCH: Chocolate-Peanut Butter Éclair Dessert

So in 2014, I decided to make one Pinterest Recipe per month. This month I am making Chocolate-Peanut Butter Éclair Dessert. What's different this time is that rather than finding the recipe on Pinterest first, I am adding it to Pinterest!  

One of my fellow nurses brought this in to work during Nurse's Appreciation Week last year. It was unbelievably good! You can't go wrong with PB and chocolate! I begged her for the recipe since I was unable to find one on Pinterest that I thought was close.

This is my first time making it. I am taking it to my small group Bible study tomorrow night because I'm afraid I'd eat it all myself.

CHOCOLATE PEANUT BUTTER ÉCLAIR DESSERT


Cool Whip forgotten in the photo.
INGREDIENTS:

1 box Graham Crackers (you'll use most of a box)
1 large box Vanilla Pudding (5.1 oz) prepared (with milk)
1 container Chocolate Frosting
½ cup Peanut Butter (add more for more flavor)
1 container original Cool Whip




DIRECTIONS:

  1. In food processor or mixer, mix together pudding (already prepared), cool whip and peanut butter.
  2. Place one layer of graham crackers on bottom and sides of 9x13 in baking dish.
  3. Pour 1/3 of the pudding-PB mix over crackers and spread evenly.
  4. Repeat layering of graham crackers and pudding mix with last layer being graham crackers (I had total 4 layers of graham crackers and 3 layers pudding mix).
  5. Heat icing container up in microwave for a few seconds until it is melted and pour over graham crackers. I did 15 sec x 3 times being careful not to burn it. I was able to pour directly out of the container over the crackers smoothing with a spatula.
  6. Place in fridge and allow to cool. Tends to taste better after several hours of chilling so that graham crackers have time to get soft.





Wednesday, February 26, 2014

February Pinterest Project(s)

Well, February isn't quite over yet, but seeing as I will be working the last few nights of February, I know for certain I will not get a February Pinterest Project completed. Sigh. And to be honest, I never really figured out what I wanted to do (although I have a whole list of things to attempt) and didn't have the supplies ready (fabric chosen/purchased). I think I just procrastinated and then got busy these last two weeks of February. Plus, I recently joined a small group with my church that meets on one of my nights off, which I didn't factor into my planning in February.  And my other excuse is that February's a short month. Not that that really would really have made a difference. ha ha.

So my goals is to complete TWO Pinterest Projects in March. Hopefully one in early March and one the later half. We shall see.

But I did manage to do a Pinterest Recipe for February. I've discovered recently that a number of my favorite foods contain carregeenan. It's a food additive (for dairy thickening) derived from seaweed that has scientists concerned about links to gastrointestinal diseases and possibly cancer. Where is it showing up? My favorite cottage cheese, ice cream and hot cocoa mix.

So this month, I decided to check out some DIY hot cocoa recipes on Pinterest after trying Whole Food's 365 organic hot cocoa mix and hating it (didn't like the vanilla flavoring). Trouble was that so many DIY mixes called for instant coffee creamer which, of course, contains carregeenan. Whole Foods doesn't even carry instant coffee creamer because they can't approve of the ingredients!!!

image from kitchenmeetsgirl.com/
So I made THIS recipe from kitchenmeetsgirl.com. Okay flavor, but the cocoa powder makes it a little chalky going down. I'm still tinkering with it, like adding more powdered milk/sugar.

But since I attempted making my own, my mom found some hot cocoa mix at our nearby Cheese Shoppe, which is a local family-owned Amish-style bulk foods store. It was expensive, but thankfully did not list carregeenan on the label. The texture/flavor is better than the mix I made, but when it cools off just a little it gets a weird film on the top--possibly because this DRY mix uses coconut oil as a thickner??

So only one for two on my February Pinterest goals. But hopefully I'll do three for two next month. :)  Until then.




Tuesday, January 21, 2014

January Pinterest Project | Scrub Pants

I've been a nurse for about 19 months. And I've FINALLY gotten around to making some adjustments to my scrubs to make them a bit more user-friendly.

You see, I have virtually no diversity in my scrubs. Some nurses have HUNDREDS of scrub tops that they've collected over the years. Solids, prints, holiday themes, you name it. When it was time for me to branch away from my nursing school scrubs, I wanted to wear solid colored scrubs. I wanted the tops and bottoms to be the same color. All black, or all pink, or all blue.

I started looking for scrub tops I liked. I struggled. I'm petite and am definitely not flat chested. I didn't want my scrub top to hang long and I didn't want it tight either. So I found a top that I liked made by Cherokee. It's a mock wrap style (#4800). What I liked is that it's only 23.5 inches long. Other styles are much longer. It was the shortest scrub top that I could find. Score. I own nine different colors and there are plenty more colors I could buy, if I wanted.

When I looked for the coordinating scrub pants, I bought a couple that I thought would work, but eventually was unhappy after about a month of wearing them. The fabric was kinda rough and the drawstring waistband seemed to get loose over the course of my shift and I feared being one of those nurses bearing her butt crack to the patient, their family and my peers. I can't stand seeing professional nurses showing off crack. So no go. Those three pairs are hanging in my storage closet never to be worn again. Not sure why I'm holding on to them.

So it was back to shopping for scrub pants. Unfortunately, I couldn't find matching scrub pants to coordinate with the various colors of my tops for the solid top to bottom look, so I decided to go with black bottoms (or navy) and colored tops.

I was at Super Shoes and discovered they carried petite scrub bottoms by Peaches. I fell in love!  The reason I love them is for the waistband. They are still a drawstring style but have a ribbed knit waistband that is very soft and comfortable and there's NO butt crack during those inevitable squatting moments of nursing. They are awesome!  Plus they come in Petite and so no hemming! Yay!

Anywhoo... I love these pants, but over the past 18 months I have found some downsides. First off, there was no scissor hook. The scissor hook holds your scissors, which means you don't have to put them in your pocket.  I avoided the whole scissor-in-my-pocket thing by attaching a retractable badge holder around one of the scissor handles and clipped them to my side pocket. When needed, I just grab my scissors and pull to whatever I'm cutting...and when done they retract back. I've never lost a pair of scissors!  But I found that I didn't like that my scissors banged against my leg as I walked down the hall.

Secondly, the side pockets (near knees) on these scrub pants are pretty big. They are about 7" deep and 6" wide. Not only do I have to bend over to reach into the bottom of my side pockets, but my penlight and markers end up laying sideways at the bottom. Sometimes I found bruises on my thighs where my markers had pressed in while I was sitting down. Ugh.

So I decided that it was time to fix these minor inconveniences. So here's what I did:

#1. Scissor loop added. Now, mind you, these are not my nursing scissors! I just tucked my sewing scissors in so you'd see how the loop worked. My medical scissors are much smaller. I will still continue to use the retractable badge holder clipped to the pocket above, but now my scissors won't bang my leg as I walk down the hall or get tangled up with IV tubing!  Many scrubs already have this loop attached, but again, I liked the waistband on these scrubs more than I wanted a scissor loop...and it was NOT hard at all to attach the loop.  For those of you who know me, you already know I have a love for plaids and tartans. You can pretty much tell that from my blog design. hehe.  Anywhoooo, I found some scrap plaid fabric that I kept when I converted a plaid flat sheet to a fitted sheet. I used a piece of scrap that was already hemmed on one side, cut up 6 little loops and made it a bit more tidy and tacked the loop on to my scrub pants with just straight stitches on either side. I attached the loop just above the right side pocket (I'm right-handed) at a position that worked with the retractable ID holder length. Very customized. 

The plaid loop is fun (for me), but could also be mistaken for a brand label (about the same size).  I decided to just attempt this on one pair of scrub pants at first so that I could try it out at work to make sure I had it positioned right and that it would work how I expected. I'm THRILLED. I love the plaid and it's nice to not have my scissor banging on my leg or catching on various things! YAY!

#2. Pocket modified. My highlighter, dry-erase marker, permanent marker and pen light are kept in my left side pocket (near knee). I don't need them as often, as say a writing pen--which is kept in my scrub top pockets.  First, I raised the bottom of the pocket to a more appropriate level by straight stitching a horizontal stitch from one side of the pocket to the other based on the height of my pens. Second, in order to keep the pens upright in the pocket, I sewed a vertical stitch up the middle of the pocket thus dividing the pocket into two smaller pockets. No genius here folks...just common sense.

I'm so glad that I went ahead and got this Pinterest Project done at the beginning of the year and didn't wait any longer! I LOVE my modifications! YAY!


Tuesday, January 14, 2014

2014 Goals

Hard to believe that we are almost half way through the first month of 2014. Yeesh-- that was fast!

This year I've created quite a list of goals to accomplish. Some are very specific, some not so much. I know the goals that are specific are much more likely to be accomplished than the not specific ones. For some goals, I simply didn't know what I wanted to accomplish, but felt a general need for a direction change or some resolution. I have my goals printed both at my bedside, but also on my bathroom mirror. This provides me with a semi-daily review. I'm hoping that those areas that have less than specific goals or direction, will at least be considered and not forgotten and perhaps as the year progresses, more specifics can be applied and perhaps they can be areas of focus for 2015.

I have goals that are general in nature or rather to be honored all year or to simply be accomplished at some point during 2014. Then I have monthly and weekly goals, some of which support my general or yearly goals. I have created a chart with goals broken down in to those three time frames. But I have also assigned categories and benefits to each goal (to remind me and help keep me motivated), along with thoughts for implementation. If you care to see specifics you can click on image below.

So here are my goals for this year. And because I'm posting them here, I'll have a record come the end of the year of what my goals were...and maybe making them public will help with accountability and motivation.
















Interestingly, I have not included any employment, career or job goals.  Those too, are bumping around in my head and unspecific, but even if I had specific goals, I'm not sure it would be wise to post those publicly.

I'm going to go through each goal and make general comments.
  1. No fast food (alone) -- This is mostly to cut calories, encourage healthier meals, force myself to cook more and to hopefully help me work on my savings goal. However, if getting together with friends means eating out...that's cool... just no eating out alone!
  2. No soda -- I've done this before. I love soda, but I know the chemicals (diet) aren't good for me. Plus I'm hoping I will start drinking more water. My only exception here is if I get GI sick and need gingerale. But it's been YEARS since I've been nauseous.
  3. Trade Smart University Classes -- These are classes about the stock market. My dad is a BIG fan of theirs and he's been encouraging me for the past couple years to be more intentional about my retirement. And because I know very little about investments and stock market stuff, he recommended I consider taking their classes. Periodically they offer their Level 1 course (8 online webinars) on a scholarship basis (for free). They started a new scholarship session on January 6 that is much more flexible (necessary for my ever-changing work schedule), so I jumped on it (still available as of today 1/14/14). They offered all three Levels of their Foundations of Stocks & Options for a discounted price (Buy 1, get 2 free) which I decided to do. I'll have lifetime access to video recordings of those courses AND will be able to access unlimited Live Webinars for one full year for the courses I've purchases!  I've completed 2/8 webinars and it's good stuff!
  4. Save $15K -- This is very feasible, but will require diligence on my part! I am likely going to need to buy a new-to-me car in the next year or so. My 18-year-old Honda wagon runs reliably, but with 241K miles on it, it is definitely aging and I no longer drive out of state with it. I have mixed feelings about getting a new car. I don't want a car payment, so my goal is to pay cash, but that's a LOT of money to part with all at once! There are things about my car that drive me crazy which don't affect it's reliability or driveability (door locks, paint job, etc...) which I'd be glad to be done with, but it seems silly to get rid of a car that runs reliably. I've considered getting a paint job, but it would cost probably more than my care is worth! Haha!  I'm seriously considering giving it to my niece/nephew who will be driving in the next couple years. Not sure if I really want to insure two cars until then (if I buy a new one before then), and I'm not sure that my niece/nephew will be entirely happy about driving around a station wagon that needs a paint job. But really, WHO turns away a FREE car? Thankfully my current car situation does not require that I make any quick decisions. So for now, I'm just saving my money...
  5. Read through the Bible in a year -- I've never read through the entire Bible before, and think it's time for me to do this. I've found The Daily Bible (NIV) in Kindle format which divides up the daily readings into dated selections--which is helpful in keeping on schedule. Plus I think reading the Bible in chronological order sounds really helpful. I've started reading the Kindle sample which goes from January 1-23. I wanted to make sure that I liked this format and would actually use it BEFORE I paid $9.99 for it. So far so good-- I'm enjoying it!
  6. Increase MJH contribution % -- This refers to increasing my retirement contribution at work to the maximum so that I can benefit from employer matching contributions. Wish I had done this when I started. Better late than never, right?
  7. Host Pinterest Potluck x2 -- I think it would be so much fun to invite friends to a potluck, where all the food brought/contributed has to come from each person's Pinterest food board! A great way to break out of making tried and true and favorite potluck dishes and also a change to taste test some new recipes! Thought is to create a Pinterest Board for each potluck where the guests post what they will be bringing!  Thoughts are to organize two this year. A spring/summer and a fall potluck. My 500 square foot apartment is not ideal for hosting, so I'm thinking maybe doing it a local park/picnic shelter.
  8. Camping Trip -- I was given an old tent a few years ago which I haven't used yet. Maybe I might combine this with my...
  9. Birthday Party/Celebration -- I'm turning 40 this year--which certainly needs to be celebrated so that I don't go all over-the-hill-depressed! My cousin is getting married the same weekend as my birthday, so unfortunately the party can't fall on my actual birthday. If I don't combine camping and my birthday together, I'm thinking it would be fun to do an adult scavenger hunt!
  10. Decrease TV/movie watching -- This is one of the goals that I'm not very specific about. I rarely watch live TV anymore and mostly watch my favorite TV programs online. In reality I don't really know how much I'm watching and initially I just need to document the time that I currently spend watching TV/movies and then make a plan (kinda like counting calories so you know what you need to cut out). I usually watch 60-90 minutes of TV programs while I'm getting ready for work (that's three days a week). I'm considering whether I might just limit my TV watching to work days and put strict restrictions on my days off.
  11. Explore Changing Churches -- Another very unspecific "goal". There's been a lot of change in the past few years at my church, some of which I think is good and some of which I don't particularly care for--but admittedly aren't wrong. Definitely a preference/style issue-- which I personal think is a wrong issue for considering a change. But considering my spiritual growth has lagged, I feel a change might do me good. A LOT of people have left my church over the past few years, likely related to these changes and it's made me sad that some long-time members and church officers have left. I love my church and it would be hard to leave, but honestly I've struggled since I left my staff position there in 2010. The tough part is that there's no particular church that I really want to visit or consider. And a frustrating aspect of visiting other churches in this community is that I will undoubtedly bump into former church members. While it's nice to bump into familiar faces, I generally find that often those folks will assume that I'm unhappy at X church and have decided to leave, which is not necessarily true. And these same former members are often eager to share their reasons for leaving and their unhappiness. I'm sorry, but I simply do not want to bond with you over reasons to leave X church. It's not always that way, but that's what I'm wary of. There is one particular church, that is very close to my apartment, where many folks have landed, which makes me curious...but the wariness of running into former church members definitely dampens that curiosity. Another aspect that I need to consider is that working two Saturday nights a month definitely makes it difficult to feel connected at church. Even joining a small group, which would help with the connectedness aspect, is tough with my ever changing work schedule. Certainly this is going to be bathed in prayer!
  12. Dating -- This is probably the least specific goal. And I'm not really sure what I mean by it. Sure I'd like to be dating more, but my efforts in 2013 didn't really yield good results. Dated a guy for three months, who turned out to be a HUGE disappointment. Looking back, it's good that it didn't work out, as there were red flags that I was discovering. And if I'm honest, I didn't cry but a day after we broke up, mostly for the way he broke up and that he turned out to be a putz instead of the man he pretended to be. I was more upset over the end of the relationship, rather than upset at the actual loss of HIM. Telling. I think that every date I've had in the past few years has come from guys met on dating websites. At this point I'm so OVER online dating. Plan is to let my current subscriptions/memberships end (end of January and early February). I will still have one site that I've paid for through fall of 2014. Sigh. I would just like to meet a genuine Christian man who has never been married, who has no kids, and where there is a mutual attraction. It shouldn't be so hard!! Sigh.
  13. Journal Entry +1/week -- This past year I wasn't very consistent in journaling. I think putting my feelings, thoughts and emotions on paper more consistently will be helpful.
  14. Bible Reading Daily -- This is a smaller daily goal to help reach my annual goal of reading through Bible in a year (see above). Plus I just want to be in the Word on a more consistent basis.
  15. Gym 2x/week and Walk 2x/week -- Basically, my goal is to exercise every day that I'm not working... for a minimum of 4 days/week. I need the sunshine, so right now I'm walking outdoors in 40 degree temps. If it's expected to be colder or rainy, I alter my schedule accordingly or I will resort to going to the gym. I'm not sure what I will do in the summer months when it's so unbearably hot/humid.
  16. Pinterest Project/month -- Last year I was fairly successful as I completed a project 10 out of 12 months. I really enjoyed finding something creative to do, so decided to carry this over again this year. I'd also like to post each project here on my blog and possibly even go back and post the projects from last year.
  17. Pinterest Recipe/month -- Since I'm not going to be eating out as much this year, I will need to find some new recipes to keep things interesting!  Plus I have a Pinterest board full of recipes that I've pinned that I have yet to try!  Excited to have some new favorites at the end of the year. I might just have to break down and buy the Crockpot I've been eyeing. I also have an unlisted goal of using up the canned and packaged foods in my cupboard that have been there for over a year. Tonight I made my January dish -- Quinoa and Black Beans -- and it was very good!  I haven't decided if I will attempt to post these here on my blog or not. If so, my food photography skills will need some work.
  18. Lose 3-4 lbs/month -- This is safe weight loss and feasible! With increased exercise efforts and eliminated fast food, the weight might come off even faster. But I'm definitely going to need to make a concerted effort to limit portion sizes, snacks and keep things healthy (yay for new recipes!).
So that's my list of goals for this year. Most are feasible and realistic and hopefully the less specific "goals" will see some progress or at least get further thought. Maybe I will do a monthly or quarterly "Where Am I At?" report for all my goals. I tend to be an all or nothing kinda gal and if I get behind, it's hard for me to jump back in again when I've lost momentum. So far I've been utilizing a blank 3x5 card with my weekly and daily goals to help keep me on track... so right now I'm 100%! YAY!  Just another week and I will have hit the 21 day mark--which we all know is how you make something a habit!

Saturday, January 4, 2014

My First Gingerbread House

I've never before attempted a gingerbread house and last Christmas (2012) I was inspired by my friend Betty. She and her family have been making them for years! She told me to contact her the next November. So just before Thanksgiving of this year, Betty and her husband Bob taught me the basics of making a gingerbread house! She shared her recipes, books and provided lots and lots of tips and creative decorating ideas. Betty told me to keep track of the hours I spent on it... but I kept forgetting. It was a fun and creative and GREAT smelling project that I worked on from before Thanksgiving until the week before Christmas. I did get some decorating ideas from Pinterest, so this was also my December Pinterest Project.






Side/back view














Close up chimney. Used Trident Gum. 
View of side yard with firewood pile.

Close up of pile of firewood (cinnamon sticks).
Footprints in the snow from door to firewood.

Monday, November 4, 2013

It was a Pinterest Inspired 50th Anniversary Party!

Saturday was my parent's 50th Anniversary and I utilized Pinterest to the max for the anniversary party that my three sisters and I organized. Below are photos of what we did, along with the Pinterest links that inspired. My area of contribution was designing the invitation and figuring out decorations.

First we used this fun photo for our invitations:


















I spent a lot of time looking for an online invitation/website service that would allow using our own photo image and have control over the invitation text (font, size, etc). We ended up using RSVPHQ.com and were fairly happy with the service. We could see who had opened the email, who had opened the web invite and the RSVP results were customizable. There's a number of subscription/purchase options. We paid about $22 because we planned to email more than 100 people. Other online services had lovely templates (RSVPHQ does not), but the space for text was quite limited/restrictive or had terribly small print--which is not idea for my parent's generation.

Many, many people said they loved the photo-- we did too, which is why we used it!

Pinterest is full of ideas for anniversary party ideas You can just search varieties of "50th Wedding Anniversary" and you'll find lots of pins and/or boards that you can pin or follow.

At my parent's 40th anniversary party (held in their home), my older sister modeled my mom's wedding dress, wrinkles and all. My younger sister even modeled the bridesmaid dress that my aunt had saved from all those years ago.

Wedding Dress
This year, Pinterest inspired the idea of again having my mom's dress on display. I unsuccessfully posted on Facebook that I was looking to borrow a dress form. I was running out of hope until about a month ago, when one of my mom's neighbors had a dress form for sale at their yard sale. I told them, if it doesn't sell, we'd love to borrow it or rent it. Unfortunately it sold, but another neighbor found out that we wanted to borrow one and she offered her antique one. So below is a picture of my mom's 50 year old wedding dress on that form. My mom sewed her own dress and at least one or more of her bridesmaids' dresses. It's held up well for not having been professionally preserved.
 We found some neutral colored fabric to cover up the dress form which was a dark brown. The form was a little thicker around the waist (it was not adjustable) and a little smaller in the bust line, but we made it work!  Because the room was very white (floors, walls, ceiling), we found a carpet mat at the church to help add a little contrast under the dress. Here's one of the Pinterest links that inspired me. People seemed to enjoy seeing it. We also put a picture of my mom in her dress on the table adjacent to the dress.


Memory Table


I also made a gigantic 50 out of four sheets of posterboard on which I stuck photos of my parents (and pics of them with children and grandchildren). I would recommend using form-core instead, as the posterboard had a mind of it's own and my dad had to add fishing line to keep the '5' from sagging funny. We hung each number with string and used three removable 3M hooks each (afterwards four came off fine, two pulled off paint from wall). It took a LOT of photos to cover these large numbers, but it turned out well as it had a nice big effect on the large blank wall. It was a lot of work to engineer and affix the photos. Also, we did not want to use original photos, so we scanned and printed photos to use for this. Here is the Pinterest Pin that inspired me (we even incorporated the balloons). It's hard to tell here, but there are white Christmas lights under the Memory Table that shine through the ivory table cloths. Yes, that was Pinterest inspired as well.

Those same photos on the big 50 were also put into a looping slideshow on my laptop and run through my flat screen TV (Pinterest link here). On the table we also had misc. family photos of our family and wedding photos of my parents, their wedding album and the scrapbook from their 40th wedding anniversary party. 50 years ago two family friends painted (watercolor) scenes on to their actual wedding invitation and gave them to my parents for wedding gifts, and those were already framed, so we displayed those. Plus I put some gold colored candies in dishes on this table.

I really wanted there to be several focus areas so that the guests weren't all clustered in one area of the room. We knew ahead of time that the main focus areas would be 1) wherever my parents where, 2) the memory/photo table, and 3) the dessert/beverage table.

50 Fun Facts

We were expecting about 70 people, some of whom did not know any of the other guests. I knew there might be some who would enjoy themselves more (and feel less awkward) if we gave them something to DO. So when I saw some Pinterest Pins (here and here and here) for 50 Fun Facts, I knew I wanted to attempt it... not only as something for guests to do... but also as a fun way to share interesting or silly information about my parents, our family or 1963.

We started with the first six Fun Facts at the memory table (see above photo) and then hung them - in order- on the walls of the Fellowship Hall. The room was so big and so white, that having these little black/white cards on the walls helped to define the room a bit better and utilize the space. The guests said they REALLY enjoyed walking around and reading the numbered fact cards. As my sisters and I bumped into guests during the party, they'd often mention that they enjoyed going around and reading the cards. Some even mentioned that it gave them something to talk about with other guests. Coming up with 50 facts that were relevant, mostly truthful and coordinated with a numbers 1-50 was not easy. The first thirty went fairly quickly, but then it took some creativity! I'd guess that it took me over a month to gather data, with long-distance help from my sisters, subtly questioning my parents about details--who were a little confused initially as to what we were doing... but we finally nailed down the final three around 11pm the night before the party. We were stuck on numbers 38, 42 and 44. We had to fudge a little bit. :)  I will give examples at the bottom of this post of some of ours.

Dessert Table
My older sister was responsible for planning and coordinating details for the dessert table. We had decided during the planning conference calls (between sisters) that we'd do a cake and punch reception since it would make things a lot less stressful the day of the party and keep costs low. Plus that's exactly the type of reception that my parent's had 50 years ago!  My mom requested lemon pound cake (my dad's favorite) and that we serve the same punch they had at their reception. A lady at my mom's church made the wedding cake. We also had dishes with nuts and those pastel buttercreme mints, which is what my parents had at their original wedding reception. We served coffee in insulated carafes so that the table didn't need to be near an outlet.

We used texture gold table cloths that my mom already owned (easily found at Target/Walmart at Thanksgiving/Christmas time) and then used the family punch bowl that my mom had given to her church awhile back. We ripped up some ivy from my mom's yard--as that what was done 50 years ago--and placed it on the dessert table. And as you can see in the above photo, we placed a wedding photo of my parents with their cake. At their 40th anniversary party we used the original topper from their wedding cake, but for their 50th, we decided to go with a flower topper which turned out quite nice and added a nice bit of color to the table!  (Be sure to note the 50 Fun Facts on the wall.)


And here's the happy couple! They don't look like they've been married 50 years do they? They've been vegans for over 10 years, so we think that's what keeps them looking so young!

I wish I had thought to move their wedding picture so that it was included in this picture.
Here's a couple of my sisters, my mom and my nieces working on the dessert table before the party started.








This is where the guys were during the final prep. This probably kept them sane and on their best behavior. ;)  Notice that the table in the background is littered with pizza boxes and drinks. This was probably the stroke of genius of the entire day. Our family in notoriously late, so in order to make sure everyone, including my parents, were at the church ON TIME for the party we decided to have a pizza lunch AT the church an hour and a half before the party was scheduled to start. This allowed for any last minute preparations/decorations, food prep to be done at the same time we were eating lunch.

My niece modeling with the punch. It was so good. The punch was a mix of cider, tea, pineapple juice, miscellaneous spices and Sprite (and probably other stuff, I never saw the recipe)!










Here's my sister and I trying to figure out how to cut the cake. (I'm in the orange sweater). The down side to having a wedding cake at an open house reception is that you kinda have to start tearing the cake apart the moment that guests start to arrive. We had an open house type of party, so that people felt free to come/go when they needed to. This meant there was no actual program or anything to organize.





My first cake-cutting endeavor. It stressed me out, so I turned over my knife to my sister's guy friend, who did a much better job! ha!



**I should note here, that each of the four daughters is wearing a gold/mustard colored name tag. My mom asked that the girls wear name tags and designate our birth order. And because no one wants to be labeled "#2 daughter" the sisters came up with an additional descriptor for our name tags just for fun. Here they are:

Laure,  First Daughter, "Best all-around"
Donna,  Second Daughter, "The Favorite"
Joy, Third Daughter, "Most Anticipated"
Rachel, Fourth Final Daughter, "We FINALLY got it right!"

The space wasn't ideal for candid photos. The space was so white and light, that the cameras couldn't decide if flash was needed or not. Candids were often blurry.  My sisters and I were busy greeting people and making sure the dessert table was in good order, that taking pictures was often an afterthought. Most of the pictures here were taken at the very beginning of the party with my camera, so there aren't as many guests in the shots. We did have a great turn-out! My aunt took pictures during second half of the party but I haven't seen any of those yet. I might add those in later if she has better or more detailed photos. We did have a photographer from my parents church take more formal group photos towards the end (he wasn't able to come until the last half hour of the party). We had hoped for some outdoor photos but it was simply too windy.


 Because adult sisters are still sisters. This is my "They Finally Got it Right!" sister.

My dad and my uncle.
This is my "Best All-Around" sister talking to my mom's Maid of Honor and my mom's sister.

I have three sisters, and somehow "The Favorite" wasn't in any of these pictures. It might be she was the one taking pictures with my camera??? If I could do one thing differently, I think it would have been to be more conscientious about having a non-family member take some photos. We didn't want the expense of hiring anyone, but these days there are so many people with fancy cameras, that we surely could have asked a friend to come and take photographs.

Afterwards we encouraged out of town guests (majority family members) to join us for an early dinner at the buffet restaurant that was less than a 1/4 mile from the church. That gave us more time with family and we didn't have to worry about figuring out meal preparation at my parent's house. Then afterwards we all went directly back to the church and cleaned up. My brother-in-laws and nephews swept the floors and reset the room with tables and chairs according to how the church wanted it left.

Consensus from everyone is that things went really well, looked great, and was enjoyable.  Guests kept commenting that mom my was just beaming and she obviously was enjoying every moment! That's exactly what we wanted! 


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Okay, here's a sampling of our 50 Fun Facts:

3 - Number of Virginia cities they've lived in as a married couple
4 - Number of daughters
6 - Average US household income in 1963 (in thousands)
7 - Number of cats and dogs owned in the past 50 years
8 - Month when J & V were engaged (August 23, 1963)
10 - Number of different mailing addresses as a married couple
16 - Age of oldest granchild, Z----.
17 - Year of marriage when they kept their Christmas tree up for an entire year
23 - Age of V when she married Jess
24 - Number of years J was in school
30 - Years of marriage when they sent their youngest child off to college.
39 - Age of third daughter, Joy (we did this for all children, grandchildren)
42 -  Number of hair appliances J has repaired in past 50 years
43 - Number of years V has planted a vegetable garden
44 - Number of tomato cages V uses annually in her garden
50- YEARS! or 600 months or 2,609 weeks or 18,263 days or ... hours... minutes


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This year I decided to attempt one Pinterest Project per month. I've been fairly successful. This Anniversary Party easily covered my October and November Projects! :)  I'm hoping to go back at some point and document my 2013 Pinterest-Inspired Projects. But that will need to be another day.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Six Months In

Just realized I've been WORKING as a nurse for six months. Crazy, how time flies!

The most common question that I've gotten over the past six months is "So are you loving nursing?" It's a really tough question, 1) because the asker really wants to believe that I do and 2) I really want to say yes, but I can't.  I'm too new and too inexperienced to say I love it. I usually reply "I have good days and I have bad days." I think I'll start to enjoy it more when I stop feeling anxious before my first shift. First shifts of the week are always hard because I'm getting all new patients. Day 2 and 3, I'm a bit more relaxed because I've already cared for several of my patients for at least one night and know their routines and behaviors.

Night shift isn't so bad. It's the sleeping during the day part. haha!  Actually MOST of the time I get at least five-six hours after my shifts, but after a particularly hard shift, I often can't sleep more than a few hours because I wake up and my mind starts thinking about work and it's hard to go back to sleep. It's those times that I wish I had some good sleeping meds. Ambien\helps me get to sleep, not stay asleep (when I actually take it!).  But honestly, I have no desire to work day shift at a hospital. On dayshift, the number of people on the unit seems to double at times with doctors, physical therapy, respiratory therapy, case management,administration, pharmacists, and of course, family and visitors! Plus patients often are coming and going from tests and procedures or are discharged or admitted. Night shift is generally much calmer! Don't get me wrong, it can still be busy-- there are nights when I don't get to sit down (except for my 30 minute lunch). What I like is that the night shift nurses really help each other out. Our busy times wax and wane, so as available, we can help each other out. I'm so new that I still ask a ton of questions or need help with something something I've not done before or done only a couple times (blood warmer, feeding pump, wound care, etc...) and it would be hard on day shift to get help. I'm not sure how new nurses cope on day-shift. Perhaps they just learn faster because they see more and are forced to figure it out. But I'm not wired for it - at least in the hospital environment. Certainly I'd prefer to work when the majority work and to sleep when the majority sleeps, but for now night shift is where I need to be (and it pays more). When life circumstances change (like going back to school), I'll have to rethink things, and maybe by then I'll be ready to move into a different type of nursing that will be more accomodating to a personal life. Twelve hours shifts are tough too, but I DO love that I only work three days a week!

I've been a complete slacker getting to the gym. After completing my three work days, I'm usually so exhausted and it's tough to get motivated to leave the house. Previously I found that I was most successful in getting to the gym when I went right before or right after work or school. But on the days that I'm working I don't want to go to the gym after my shift b/c I'm dead tired and just want to go to bed. And if I go to the gym before my shift, then I will end up not getting enough sleep. So that leaves my days off...and I don't have a regular routine for those days. Maybe that's what I need to figure out.

My goal this year is to do one creative project a month. So far I'm ahead. My January project was Pinterest inspired. When I was in Liberia, I saved a few bottle caps from the soft drinks. Liberia has it's own Coca-Cola bottling company, so all the caps have the price in Liberian dollars on them. Anyways, I turned them into refrigerator magnets by gluing craft magnets inside. I love them. Then the same weekend, I made what I hoped was going to be a case/tote for my new laptop which is super thin...but the tote is HUGE and was actually designed to hold a sleeve (from same pattern package) for the laptop. So I have this nice, new homemade tote and still nothing to hold/protect my laptop! Oh well, at least I don't need to carry my laptop to work or school these days. Guess I should pay more attention to actual dimensions than to what the photo on the pattern package looks like! Ha! So I guess my next creative project should be to make the sleeve and HOPE that it works, but the tote was soooo much work that I'm a little worn out and might have to push the sleeve to spring.  Other things I want to sew this year include: seatbelt covers, hairbandsflat sheet into fitted sheet, and maybe another totebag. Not sure about after that. Perhaps I'll re-learn to crochet. I did a little in highschool, but I've forgotten anything I learned. I tried knitting and that was a disaster. Perhaps I could try it again, but it's hard to get psyched up when "casting on" defeated me the first time.

Well, I probably should be thinking about going to bed as I'm back to work tomorrow. Somehow I was scheduled for four days in a row. Can't remember if I've worked four in a row before. This past week I worked two shifts and they were pretty miserable/crazy. So I'm hoping this weekend is much calmer!