Here We Go Again!

Many of you already know this, but our big kids - Wyatt and Anna - are just one year apart.  Well, one year and two weeks, to be exact.  I've asked Doc about this many times.  "How in the world could you have two kids so close together in age?  That's like having a baby while your baby is still a baby!"

And he always kindly tells me that while it wasn't necessarily their plan to have a second child so quickly, it was most definitely God's plan for them.  Can't argue with that.

Except that I usually still add, "Well I'd love for us to have kids close together in age, just not that close."

But, you know...

...history tends to repeat itself.

So here we go again!

Big Sis 1

Oh hey, one more thing: be sure to check the date this was posted, mkay? :)

3 Kids, 2 Rooms

Many of you know my friend Emily, and that she just recently welcomed a precious set of twins to her family.  They joined their two and half year old sister, Alice, and all three of them are just the cutest things ever!

Well, back in December before those twins made their debut, my mom and I spent a little bit of time helping Emily get rooms ready for her growing family.  At the time, Alice was still sleeping in her crib, but that crib was needed in the nursery so it was time to make the switch to a big girl bed.  Emily thought it would be a good time to give Alice's room a mini makeover and you know I jumped at the opportunity to help!  Em had already scheduled for the two rooms to be painted, and then she asked if me and/or my mom would be willing to sew some curtains to hang in them.  I'm pretty sure she was just going to leave it at that (she was busy chasing after a toddler while being very pregnant with twins, afterall) but Mom and I decided to do just a little bit more.  Not a whole lot, just a few extra touches here and there.

Emily and her husband, Andrew, were leaving to go out of town for a few days, so I told her to leave me a key so we could come in and do some work.  We brought Dad with us the first night we went over so he could hang the curtain rods.  We rounded the corner to Alice's room and were met with something like this:

Woah, boy.  We had some work to do.

I gave Dad a chair to stand on and told him to get to work on the curtain rods while Mom and I got busy organizing.  See that blue table and lamp with the yellow shade in the picture above?  Those were supposed to be Alice's bedside table and lamp.  Except that Emily had chosen a pale pink and orange color scheme, so I just couldn't in my right mind leave those the way they were.  I threw the table in the back of the car and thought at the very least that a coat of white spray paint would help.

I'll spare you the play-by-play details, but here's the gist of what we did in Alice's room: added the curtains (Emily had already purchased the fabric), made a matching bed skirt, corralled all her toys onto a book shelf, painted the bedside table and added a new lamp.  Alice also inherited a new dresser (painted by her grandmother) since the changing table was also moving to the nursery.  Her headboard was painted to match the dresser.

Now, normally I am 100% opposed to furniture blocking a window, but in Alice's room it just made the most sense.  Actually, there was a much cuter arrangement, but it left no floor space for playing.  And every toddler needs some floor space to play on, right?  So the dresser was pushed in front of the window.  Luckily, Emily said the blinds were always kept closed anyway.

Since Alice had just transitioned from the crib, the bed rails were a necessity.  I'm sure the bed will look better once she doesn't need them anymore!  And you can see the table that got spray painted white and a new lamp I added.

Like I said, Mom made a bed skirt to match the curtains.  We just couldn't let Alice have a bed frame with no skirt to hide it!

Here is where all the toys landed - on a shelf in the corner.  It'd probably look better painted white or pink like the dresser.  Maybe if I'm feeling it up for it I'll steal it from Emily one day and give it a makeover.

That was it for Alice's room.  We really didn't do much and I hate that we couldn't do more.  I know Emily has since added some cute art to the walls along with adding a cute bean bag that Santa brought Alice.  I'm always on the lookout for the perfect rug (at the perfect price!) to add; I think it could make a huge difference in the feel of the room!

Across the hall is the new nursery.  Boy/Girl twins obviously make decorating the room a little trickier, but Emily picked the perfect neutral color scheme: grey and yellow.  Like Alice, they have an oddly shaped room so furniture placement is tough.  The best layout, we decided, was to have both cribs coming out from the wall with the changing table in between them.  Hopefully this is a practical set up too!

Emily already had the cute alphabet that's hanging on the wall above the cribs.  In fact, it was hanging up at the baby shower she hosted for me.  I love the way it looks above the cribs!

Emily never decided on bedding (I probably drove her crazy bugging her about it!) so Mom and I finally just took action and bought fabric for the crib skirts.  (It's grey with white dandelions.)  Thank goodness Mom knows her way around the sewing machine!  Since the sheets were just white, we jazzed them up a little by adding the twins' monograms to them.

  

We were at Target one day and saw a pack of receiving blankets that were grey and yellow, and being suckers for all things that match, you know we had to buy them.

If you're wondering where the yellow in this grey-and-yellow room is, trust me...it's there.  I LOVE the chevron curtains that Emily chose.  I think they look great against the grey walls!

There was also a wooden bookshelf in this room that I stole and painted yellow.  Of course, then I couldn't find anything to actually sit on it when I brought it back over, but I'm sure Emily has since found plenty of things to put on it.  The frame above the bookshelf is one we made out of a piece of coordinating scrap fabric.  I know for sure that a picture of the twins has already been added to it.

The last thing we added to the nursery were these two white shelves.  I knew Emily had received these cute little shoes as a shower gift, and since I love Katie's shelf full of shoes so much, I thought the twins needed the same thing for their nursery.

Again, we didn't do much, but I think it at least helped take some of the stress off Emily when it came to getting everything ready for the babies.  I know several of you had asked about these pictures waaay back when we did it, so I apologize for taking so long to get them posted!!

Puerto Rico

As I've mentioned a couple times, Doc and I recently traveled to Puerto Rico to celebrate my thirtieth birthday.  It was SO nice!!  We have also been to St. Lucia and Jamaica and I'd say between the three of them, Puerto Rico is the one I'd come back to over and over again.  We were lucky enough to have beautiful weather the whole time we were there. I decided not to pack my big, bulky camera so this vacation recap is coming from iPhone photos.  We got our vacation started off right with margaritas on the plane!

Our room wasn't quite ready when we first arrived, so we headed out to explore the grounds.  We stayed at the Ritz in San Juan and it was right on the beach.  This was our first peak at the beach; we were so excited to be there!

We spent the first afternoon scoping out the place and grabbing some food.  We hung out at the pool (which was huge and gorgeous but I didn't get a picture of it) until it was time for dinner.  In the lobby of our hotel was also a [smoke free] casino which we visited every night after dinner.  Doc likes to play craps and I like to sit at the black jack table.  Thankfully, we made money over the weekend instead of losing it all!

Our first full day (my actual birthday) was spent camped out on the beach, which was good and bad.  Good because the weather was beautiful and it was so nice to just relax, read, and enjoy the beautiful view.  Bad because we are apparently not very good at applying our sunscreen very evenly and we ended up with some nice splotchy sunburns.  I spent about 48 hours thinking the right sides of my legs might burst into flames at any given moment.

There was a grill right off the beach where we were able to grab lunch each day.  This was the view from our table one day.

For my official birthday dinner, we dined at Il Mulino New York, an Italian restaurant that was located in our hotel.  It was delicious!

Since we were nice and crispy, we opted to skip the beach on day two and head into the old town of San Juan to do some exploring.  I took a selfie in the elevator on our way out.

We only had one thing on the agenda for the whole trip and it was to go eat at Cafeteria Mallorca.  So many of Doc's coworkers had told us we had to go there and luckily we were able to find it as soon as the cab dropped us off in the city.

The restaurant was packed but we were able to quickly claim a two-seater table.

I may have panicked a little when I realized most of the menu was in Spanish.  Good thing we already knew what we were supposed to eat there.

This little place is famous for their mallorca with ham and cheese so we ordered up two of them.  Oh my gosh...deeeelisious!!!  It's ham and cheese on a bread that's very light and kinda sweet in flavor and topped with powdered sugar.  I thought it might be similar to a Monte Cristo sandwich but it tastes very different.  It's not heavy and filling at all; it's the perfect amount.  We also ordered two fresh frozen lemonades which were equally as tasty.  Not too frozen, not too liquid.  Not too tart, not too sweet.  Just perfect.

We spent the bulk of the afternoon wandering around the town.  San Juan is sorta like New Orleans, except much more squished together.  Lots of rows of stores laid out on a grid, but you couldn't really tell what was in each store until you were right in front of the door.  Not much window shopping.

These two pictures were taken when we came up to an intersection.  I took one looking right and one looking left.  Straight ahead looked similar too so it was hard to decide which way to go!

You can kinda see in the picture above that at the end of that street was the ocean.  We walked there to enjoy the view.

We didn't have reservations at any of the restaurants for that night, so we ate dinner at the bar in the lobby of the Ritz.  There were a few items from several of the restaurants that you could order from there so it was pretty good.

The next day - our last one there - was spent just like the first one, only instead of sunbathing we huddled under the umbrella.  I was still nursing my sunburns and did not want to make them worse!

We had dinner that evening at BLT Steak, which is another New York restaurant I think.  It's a good thing we ate there last because I probably would've wanted to go back every single night.  It was so good!

And that was about the extent of our vacation.  We had to check out at 11:00 the next morning so we slept in and then packed up and got ready to go.  I already told you about our awful trip home, so we'll just skip that now and leave this vacation on a good note.  It really was an excellent vacation and I can't wait to go back!  Maybe for my birthday again next year, hubby?  Anyone wanna come with us?

Candy Butterfly

Friends, I've got a quick and easy craft project for you and hopefully I've given you enough time to do it before Easter on Sunday.  I was able to whip up about 15 of these cute candy butterflies last night in about thirty minutes.  

The idea came from Pinterest, of course, but when I clicked on the picture to take me to the original source, I found the instructions weren't in English.  So I had to figure it out on my own.  Wasn't hard though.

First, I gathered my supplies.  If you're a crafter at all, there's a good chance you could have most, if not all, of these on hand already.  Cute scrapbook paper (I used less than a fourth of a piece), clear bags (found mine at JoAnn's; they're Wilton brand), googly eyes, pipe cleaners, glue stick, clothespins.  Not pictured is the candy.  I used M&Ms but any small colorful candy would work.

The first thing I did was flip my scrapbook paper over and trace around the edge of a clothespin.  You can see I just lined it up in the corner and traced the remaining two edges.

I figured it'd be easiest to go ahead and cut a long strip to the right width, so I grabbed a ruler and took my line down further.  After cutting out the first strip (from the clothespin I had traced), I used it as a pattern to cut all the others.  I was not a perfectionist about straight cuts at all and you can't tell.

I found the easiest way to stick the paper to the clothespin was to rub the glue stick onto the clothespin and then stick the paper on top, as opposed to trying to rub the glue stick onto the tiny piece of paper (it just crumbled up when I did that).

The next step was adding the googly eyes.  I wasn't sure if the glue stick was going to be strong enough to hold them on, but turns out it was.  I just swiped the end of the clothespin with the glue stick and stuck them down.  Make sure it's the end that open and closes.

Here are my googly eyed clothespins dressed and ready for wings!

Next, I took my bag and filled it with candy.  It was trial and error before I figured out about the right amount to add.  Oh, I did try ziploc bags and they do work, but they make much floppier wings and they take a lot more candy to fill up.  These Wilton bags were perfect.

This is the part I wasn't sure about from just looking at the picture on Pinterest.  Not sure how they did it, but all I did was lay my bag of candy down flat and fold the top edge over.  The bag was pretty much folded in half.

Then I parted my sea of M&Ms down the center.

After that, it was just a matter of clipping that middle section of the bag with the clothespin.  It's a tight snug fit which keeps the bag good and closed.

The finishing touch is definitely the antennae.  I cut my pipe cleaners in half first so they wouldn't be too long.  Then I folded it in half and curved the edges around a little bit.

Finally, I clipped the antennae into the mouth of the clothespin.  Done!

I think they turned out really cute!  (Cuter than some I've seen on Pinterest even!)  I made blue, yellow, and pink antennae.

One last look at the finished product (sorry for the iPhone pics).

I made these for my niece and nephews, but then decided to make more so I could give them to my coworkers.  They were a hit!  Hey, adults like candy in cute packages too.

If you're looking for a little something to hand out to your kids' classmates or Sunday school class or whatever, these are perfect.  (If they can have candy, that is.)  And they take no time at all!  (If you live near me and need some bags, give me a call.  I bought a package of 100 and have plenty left over.)  Obviously I chose to do these for Easter but I think the great thing about this craft is that, with different colored candy, scrapbook paper, and pipe cleaners, it can be done any time of year!

Delayed

"Ladies and gentlemen, this is the captain speaking.  We've learned that there's bad weather in Atlanta right now so we're just going to hang out in the air for a little bit to see if it'll pass by." We were 3.5 hours in on our 4 hour flight.  I looked over at Doc with worry in my eyes.

"They better not keep me from getting to my baby girl."

It had been five days since I'd seen her.  Five looong days.  Good days, but still heart wrenching to hear about all her new tricks - sitting up, holding her bottle, humming -  and not be able to see them in person.  I missed her and had been counting down til she was back in my arms.  It would be later in the evening, her bedtime, but she was going to stay up late to welcome us home.

Thirty minutes passed.

"Folks, this is the captain speaking again.  The Atlanta airport has been closed due to weather.  We have been diverted to Jacksonville, Florida.  We are going to continue on to Florida and I should have us on the ground within the next thirty minutes."

I turned to Doc.  "What does that mean?  In Jacksonville, will we just get on another flight straight to Memphis so we can go home?"

A seasoned flyer, he already knew what we were in for.  We were sitting on a Delta plane headed to an airport without a Delta hub, along with who knows how many other diverted planes.  "There's not a direct flight home from there," he said.

We landed quickly in Jacksonville.  We were fourth in line of the 8 flights diverted there.  But with no gate for our large plane available, there was nothing to do but park on the tarmac.  Doc pulled out a pack of cards from his backpack and we began to play gin rummy.  Anything to pass the time. 

An hour and a half into our wait, the flight attendants asked if there were any passengers that had Jacksonville, FL as their final destination and, if so, would they like to get off the plane if possible.  The thought hadn't even crossed my mind.

"Oh my gosh, there are people who were getting off here.  Why are they stuck sitting here with us??"

"There are no stairs for anyone to get out," Doc told me.  Good point.  I guess they couldn't just jump off.

Another hour passed.  The captain came back on the overhead speaker to tell us we were next in line for the fuel truck and the stairs.  That was a good sign.  We knew we needed fuel before we could leave again, whenever that would be. 

When the stairs arrived, the Jacksonville, FL passengers were able to get off.  Their luggage had to stay.

We were originally supposed to land in Atlanta at 6:25pm.  Shortly after 9:30pm, the pilot told us we were cleared to get ready for takeoff.  Finally!

When diverted to Jacksonville, it took us about 30 minutes to get there from Atlanta.  Because of the bad weather, we had to go the long way back...around all the storms and then back to the airport from the opposite side of Atlanta.  This would be a longer flight, the pilot told us.

As we approached Atlanta, we heard the all too familiar ding of the pilot's speaker coming back on.  "Folks, unfortunately we've arrived in Atlanta at the same time as all the other planes that are returning.  We're going to have to wait up here until we're cleared to land."

I looked out my window and could see the other planes in a single file line like kindergartners headed to the cafeteria.  I tapped Doc, "Look how many planes are out there!"

The flight attendants had run the drink service once during the original flight and that was it.  Doc and I had each had one drink and a tiny bag of peanuts.  Hunger and restlessness were setting in.  I was so relieved to hear the plane wheels touch down on the runway.  We'd made it to Atlanta!

And then the speaker came back on.

"Well, guys, to add to the excitement of the day, we don't have a gate to pull up to so we're going to be sitting here for a while."

Doc was frustrated.  "I don't understand why he doesn't have any sense of urgency at all!"  I tried to be the positive one.  "Well, at least he got us here safe!  And we're here now!  Now we can get on our other plane and go home!"

I knew I had already missed my chance to see my baby girl that night.  Now I was counting on being the first person she saw when she woke up the next morning. 

After an hour of sitting and waiting, we finally pulled up to a gate.  Total time in seats 23 A and B: eleven hours.

We walked off the flight to an airport full of disgruntled passengers.  It was after midnight and nobody wanted to be there.  We rushed to the flight board and I tried to stop to read as Doc continued walking.  "Hey," I yelled after him.  "Don't we need to look to see when our next flight is?"

"It's not on there," he replied.  "It's been cancelled."

Oh.  I'd heard many horror stories of cancelled flights and sleeping in airports, niether of which had ever happened to me.  This did not look good.

By the time I caught up to Doc he was already in a line to get our flight rebooked.  I glanced to the front of the line and estimated at least 80 people in front of us and only one person working the desk.  This really did not look good. 

"Can we get it rebooked online?"  I asked him.  He looked down at his phone.  Dead.  We'd used up all the juice during our 11 hour flight and now it wouldn't even turn on.  I dismissed the "20% Power Remaining" warning on mine and handed it over.  "Here, use mine."

I pulled a charging cord out of our carry on and took his phone to find some power.  People were on the outlets like bugs on a light coated in sugar.  I finally found an open plug-in.  Something green had been spilled on the floor right under in, so I carefully reached over to plug in my cord and then stood with my arm stretched out over the mess to hold the phone.

I could see Doc and watched as he kept making calls.  I couldn't tell if he was getting good news or not.  Finally I gave up, unplugged, and went to check in with him.

"Were you able to get through?" 

"I got a call back scheduled, who knows how long that will take.  I tried to log in  to my account and it kept picking up the ambient background noise.  Now I'm locked out."

UGH.  I saw an open space on a charging station and told him I was going to try to get power on his phone.  There was a man sleeping in the chair between me and the plug-in.  I carefully tried to climb over him, but he opened his eyes about the time I was mid-straddle.

"Sorry.  I just need to plug in my phone."

I sat in the middle of three sleeping passengers and one cuddling couple while holding my charging phone.  This was awful.  A few minutes passed before I saw Doc waving me to come over.  I hesitantly unplugged his phone and climbed back out with a look on my face that told him he better have a good idea because I'm not climbing back into this spot again.

"I think we should go out past security to the main ticket desk and just try to rebook there.  The hotels they're using are already full."

It felt like a good plan so we took off.  Planes were still unboarding so crowds of people were heading in the same direction as us; Atlanta residents who had made it home, I assume.  The tram was no longer running so we were going to have to make it to the front of the airport on foot.  It became a game for me; every person passed was one less that could possibly get ahead of us in line.  I told Doc to "Keep up!"

We made it to the front lobby huffing and puffing and skidded up the Delta counter just as another group was leaving.  "Can I help you?"  "We need to rebook our flight."  The lady smiled politely and pointed across the room.  "You'll need to get in line there."

More than 200 people had already had this same idea.  We were screwed.  It would take hours to get through that line and even if we did, there was no confirmation that we'd get on the first flight out to Memphis.  I was through trying to be the positive one.

"We could rent a car," Doc said.  It was an idea he'd mentioned earlier that I'd dismissed.  Unless we wanted to spend the night and the whole next day hanging out in the Atlanta airport, it sounded like the only good idea left. 

We ran across the room and out the doors.  There was the taxi line.  Where were the rental cars??  Doc guessed they were downstairs.

"Give me your phone, I'm going to try to call and see if we can get one," he said.  I looked down at my phone.  10% power remaining.  I handed it over and returned to my outlet search.  I needed as much juice as I could get in his phone because it still wasn't turning on.

After a few more minutes of charging, he came back to get me.  "Come on, let's go downstairs."  We raced through the airport again, this time to a tram that was still running and hopped on.  Destination: rental cars.

We ran passed Hertz, Rent-A-Car, and others.  Where were we going?  Doc finally turned into the line at Alamo.  Two others were waiting in front of us when the lady at the counter looked past the customer she was helping to announce to us in line, "I'm sorry.  If you don't have a reservation, we're out of cars."

The two people in front of us hung their heads and left.  The counter lady and I both turned our heads to Doc at the same time. "We have a reservation."  The sweetest words I heard all night.

It was 2:15am when we closed the doors to our rental car.  With 2 dead cell phones, growling stomachs, and a six hour drive ahead of us, we were finally getting to leave Atlanta!

Before getting too far into the drive, we tried to stop at a McDonalds.  I was dreaming of a cheeseburger.  I walked up the door.  Locked.  Closed.  We crossed the parking lot to a gas station for snacks, drinks, and a bathroom break.  Two seconds inside the doors and we remembered it was 2:30am and we were in Atlanta.  "We've got to get out of here," I whispered to Doc while trying to avoid making eye contact with the four guys hanging out in the corner.  He paid as fast as he could and we ran out - bathrooms be damned!  The side of the road would be just fine if it came to that.

Ten more miles down the road and we found another gas station, this time with decent bathrooms and a dual phone charger.  We didn't care how much it cost, we weren't leaving without it! 

With only one other stop for another bathroom break and to switch drivers, we made excellent timing.  We pulled into our driveway at 7:20am (gained an hour in the time change) and could see our butterball little girl waving from the kitchen window (along with her Lala and Poppa). 

I didn't even care that I wasn't the first person she saw when she woke up.  I scooped her into my arms and kissed her a million times!!!  She was all I needed.  Who cares if I didn't have any luggage...