Showing posts with label dream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dream. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

What if...

this baby is NOT a girl.

penis or no penis?? (sorry if this picture is crude to you. i find it hilarious!! my favorite wall art in all of midland :)


Because, you know, we don't know for sure. We just know that at our 15 week sonogram the tech told us she thought she saw "girl parts". Well that was enough for me :)

I remember laying there with the jelly on my belly (warm surprisingly...on movies they always squirm because it's cold) and giggling because of course it would be a girl...we had only picked out boy names!

So when I got home that afternoon (Joseph was unable to go because of class for work so both our mommas went with us. Awesome experience to share with them!) we began discussing names. The old name we liked before was Matilda Joe, but Joseph declared he didn't like that name anymore. We really argued for almost a week before one day Joseph said "why don't we just call her Charley". I was hesitant at first, but then the more I thought about it, the more I LOVED it!! :)

Originally Charley had been one of the two boy names we had picked out, and so if this little baby does decide to grow a penis, then he will be called Charley Thatcher instead of Charley Cate. It's as simple as that.

As far as nursery planning goes, I really want to use gender neutral things throughout so that we can reuse all our big ticket items for the subsequent babies we have in the future. Of course if Charley Girl is born she will inherit my antique Snow Whites that were my mother's, and if Charley Boy is born then he will inherit his daddy's boy stuff :)

So if the gender changes I will be sure to let you know. But for right now, I deeply feel connected to this little baby and my bet is that it's a little girl :)

15 weeks (about)

16 weeks

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Pairing Passion With Career

Lately I feel as if I don't fit in anywhere in the world as far as an occupation goes. Some days I feel I can teach, while others I think that kids are insanely disgusto. Either way, I've felt a strong draw as of late in the direction of creating my own small sewing business. Don't get me wrong, I'm no seamstress and I honestly couldn't tell you the difference between particular stitches unless I google it, however, I can maneuver a sewing machine and have some sort of spunk and creativity that I'm now referring to as my pet project: "The North Room."

The name "The North Room" derives from the bulk of my childhood and well into adolescence as a place of common comfort and normality that dwells in the home of my Grandma Ruby. She is an exquisite fox of a woman, elegant as most call her, and a crafty "witch-like", warm woman who helped raise my sister and me. In her lighthouse decorated, wall-to-wall cluttered smoky home you will find what everyone in our family refers to as the North Room. Behind the double sliding doors one would normally find housing a utility room, you enter upon an array of a mini Hobby Lobby; every crafter's dream. Rows upon rows of dust covered crusted paints and eager high-end bristled paint brushes. A fabric selection as vast as your local JO-ANN's with the smell of fifty years of unfiltered smokes singing the threads. An antique and incredibly mechanically advanced sewing machine. Satin flowers lining the back wall. Notions galore. Craft and design books. An old un-tuned piano which still are accessorized by my yellowing self-teaching stickers, E, G, B, D, F,...F, A, C, E. And of course, the Christmas tree that generally sits upon festive and lively aloe-vera plants that stays up all year long, year after year, displaying the bare and fatally old electric candlesticks that bring warmth to the room even if the tree is droopy.


The truly magical thing about The North Room at Grandma Ruby's house is that of all my memories from childhood, these are the most vibrant, loved, and truly defining memories that helped craft me into who I am today. Rather than watch TV (don't get me wrong, Arsenio Hall and the birth of The Simpsons), Stephanie and I often were indulged into some fantastic fantasy that we created for ourselves. By playing school, office, or house, we could craft some of the arts Grandma Ruby taught us. We had art class in "school". We did cross-stitch during "house". And quite often in real life when school projects came around, mine were some of the most fantastic. It could be frustrating at times, yes, because Grandma Ruby would often take over creatively, but the glitter and glitz that these simple butcher paper projects possessed always wowed my teachers and classmates.

These crafty skills I have acquired over time from Grandma Ruby (and my mom too) now leave me in a place where I truly want to create something quite unique for women everywhere. I used to cringe at the idea of stay at home moms, and now I desire that occupation more than anything in the world. Not just to take "morning naps" and "afternoon naps" and not work, but to be close to my kids and teach them these wonderful things Grandma Ruby taught me. So maybe, just possibly, in my fairy-tale life that I am living so lovingly, I am destined to have my North Room dream come true and create sewing crafts and art for moms all around who don't necessarily drool over the baby blues and pastel pinks of the Babies-R-Us aisle, rather, prefer something different with a flair for rock, cuteness, and something the Baptist pew-seat-warmers would refer to as "controversial".


Thus, please stay tuned for more updates on this trying process of a fairly idle woman trying to make a small business for herself for the sole goal of becoming a stay at home mommy.

Cheers to moms and Grandma Ruby's everywhere!















Above, Grandma Ruby and me. Christmas 2008.