A Simpler Motherhood

Simple Birthday Gifts

November is a big birthday month around here.  My two bigs have birthdays a week apart and a grandpa and a grandma celebrate their birthdays in November.  Parties, presents, balloons, cake, the special birthday plate are all things signifying the passing of another year.  Every family does their own thing when it comes to birthdays.  We all have our little traditions, our ways of making the ones we love feel loved.

The past few years I have been working on simplifying our birthdays.  There are a few reasons for this quest.  First, I want the birthday kid to be the center of the celebration.  Each child gets one special day a year.  I want to make it count and cut the fluff the birthday kid could care less about.  Second, I want to enjoy the celebration as well.  In the past, I have fussed and fretted and been frazzled on birthday party day and I am trying to let go of that as much as possible.  I want to be in the moment and see the look of surprise when the perfect gift is opened or when the birthday kid sees the Lego cake for the first time.  And my last reason: I know simpler doesn’t have to mean less fun.  It can mean more family time, more giggles, more experiences together.

simple birthday gifts

Speaking of experiences…

Experiences is where we will hang out today.  Offering the birthday kid an experience with something new instead of another toy in the toy box is one way to simplify birthdays (and also make them super fun).  Experiences allow kids to participate in something instead of being a passive consumer.  And I think the most important advantage to gifting experiences is it allows multiple family members or friends to participate, creating not just special memories, but important and vital bonds.  Let’s talk simple birthday gifts.

Simple Birthday Gifts

Birthday Date

The first simple birthday gift is doable for those with little time and full calendars.  Take your kid on a birthday date.  We have been doing this the past few years and it has been a big highlight.  Choose something the birthday kid would really like to do and then do it!  It could be a museum, a playground, a movie, a fancy restaurant (Olive Garden seems to be fancy enough for our kids).  If your child is really young, you can plan the date or if your kid is older ask them for suggestions.  Since we have multiple kids in our family, we try and do the birthday date with both my husband and I, the birthday kid, and no siblings.  Grandma usually steps in to watch the others so the birthday date is super special.

Membership Gift

We are lucky enough to live semi-close to some incredible opportunities for kids.  Museums, gyms, the zoo, and theaters are just a drive away.  Gifting a membership to one of these experience driven places is a gift that can give over and over again all year long.  A membership to a museum means the birthday kid can visit and revisit a favorite exhibit.  You can even combine the birthday date and the membership gift and take the birthday kid to the new spot on date day.

Trip or Party?

This last simple birthday gift is a new one for us this year.  We asked our two bigs if they would rather have a big party or go to an indoor water park.  It was an easy decision and they both answered: water park.  (Duh?)  This year instead of hosting a big party, we will be packing swimsuits and driving a few hours to swim and maybe make a small detour to Legoland.  The money we would have spent on a party will be spent on making some fun family memories together.  The kids will still get a small party with extended family to blow out candles on a cake, but it will look a lot different than years past.  Giving older kids an option on how they want to spend their birthday seems reasonable and there is less of a chance for disappointment.  I am thinking I will love this one.

simple birthday gifts

Are there still gifts?

Some of you are asking if we still give our kids real, tangible, hold-in-your-hand gifts on birthdays.  And we absolutely do.  Each kid has items on their birthday list they will receive from us, grandparents, and extended family.  My top priority in choosing a simpler birthday celebration is making the birthday kid feel loved and valued and special on their day without becoming a crazy person.  And appropriate gifts are still a part of that.

These ideas may or may not work for your family, your kids, your lifestyle.  Pinterest Mom, YOU DO YOU!  However, if you’re feeling a bit frazzled around birthday time like me, maybe one of these ideas will help you, too.  I think we all should enjoy and savor birthdays, especially when we only get 18 of them with our kids in our home.

I would love to know if you have some simple birthday gift ideas for kids!

Book List for Fall and Winter

Whenever fall rolls around, I seem to have a bit more time on my hands.  Without the weeding, the trimming, the mowing, the minutes and hours add up.  A few months later when snow and boots and freezing temps are the norm, there is even more time to spend indoors snuggled up.  Reading is one way I enjoy the gift of time in fall and winter.  And a book list for these months just makes sense.

book list

This past summer I created a Summer Book List and it is one of the smartest things I have done as a reading mom.  It helped me avoid getting paralyzed with what to read next.  I simply went to the list and the list told me what to read next.  It took some upfront planning, but it was well worth the effort to always have something on my end table to get lost in.  Today I want to share some books on my list for the upcoming hibernation months.  Here we go:

Book List

Fiction

A Place for Us: A Novel

The Wildling Sisters

The Great Alone: A Novel

Anne of Green Gables

Emma

The Great Gatsby

Pilgrim’s Progress

The Bees

Nonfiction

Remember God

Cozy Minimalist Home

The Road Back to You: An Enneagram Journey to Self-Discovery

An Intentional Life

The Read Aloud Family

Slow

Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less

Deep Work

If you have any recommendations, I would love to hear them.  Winter is long and I’m not sure this list is long enough.

Getting Away with Girlfriends

Stomach pains extend from one side of my body to the other while my vision blurs from the tears streaming down my face.  My eardrums vibrate and it’s hard to catch my breath as my head falls back against the headrest of the car seat.

I am laughing: uncontrollably, fearlessly, freely.  I am in the car driving from Dallas to Waco with five friends after dining at one of those hipster places which boasted and delivered humble hospitality with a free glass of wine served at sunset.  I look to my left as my water drinking friend steers us in the right direction.  She gracefully laughs at the beautiful nonsense in the backseat while simultaneously keeping us safe.  Our conversation lands on dolphins then husbands and back to dolphins.  Our trip could have been over then and there and we would have grown closer and had stories to tell.

But it didn’t.  The next day we experienced the pride of Waco: Chip and Jo’s Silos.  And it was all ‘they’ say it is.  Lunch was had at the food trucks and then we stopped at Target, which felt like home, to pick up supplies.  After a winding trip down to Austin, we arrived at the ‘lake’ house planted about a mile from the lake.  We ate dinner and listened to music by the water as our server mocked us in the sweetest way.

Our final day was spent watching football and preparing for the climax: The Happy Hour with Jamie Ivey.  A Jesus loving podcaster we all adore puts on a party and we showed up for it.  And I’m so glad we did.  The night couldn’t have turned out better with the best seats in the barn, an immeasurable amount of laughing, drinks and dinner, listening, learning, and processing the ins and outs of this life; together.  We won’t discuss the next day because it was spent in the car, all 13 hours of it.  But, it was still full of good conversation, lots of laughs, and plenty of time to just be (in the car) together.

getting away with girlfriends

This getaway with girlfriends I described was not only fun, but life giving, inspiring, and I couldn’t help but love my friends even more.  Before the trip I knew girlfriends were important; but after…well, even more so.

I will hang my hat on this: Getting away with girlfriends is good,life-giving,and important.

I look at my time in Dallas, Waco, and Austin as investing in relationships and people who will carry me, encourage me, and love me through my marriage and my motherhood.  Those four days I took time to be present with the ones I choose to do life with week to week.

This isn’t my first girlfriends trip.  I have had some pretty great ones in the past and I hope to continue to travel and be with the friends I love.  But these trips don’t happen on their own.  They take time, planning, lots of preparation, and a husband or family rallying to make it come to fruition.

Saying Yes.

We started planning this trip six months ago after going to another event together.  And I found the first step is saying ‘yes’; saying ‘yes’ to the travel, the expense, the time, the hassle and hardship of being gone from family.  It’s probably the hardest part.

After getting past saying ‘yes’, the rest is planning, preparing and asking for a lot of favors.  And every single minute I spent on those things was worth it.  I know these words are making getting away with girlfriends seem easy, but I entirely understand that it is anything but.

getting away with girlfriends

Not every time I get away with girlfriends looks like driving in the car for 12 hours and attending a big ‘ol party.  Not even close.  Many times it looks like an afternoon at a friend’s home without distractions or an overnight stay in a hotel where we order take out (and sit in our comfy clothes and sip wine).  Other times it looks like a concert together or a baby shower.  Getting away with girlfriends doesn’t always equal four days away or even four hours away.

It merely entails intentionality, time, and a wee bit of sacrifice (on both my end and my husband’s end).  Somehow I hit the jackpot when it comes to the father of my children and the one I share this life with.

While the Instagram stories and Facebook albums show the highlights and the photo ops and the funny moments, they don’t show the deep conversation, the connection, and the feeling of purpose behind the planning and preparation.  The feeling deep in my core that I am where I am supposed to be…with these women a few states away from home.

If you’re feeling lonely or discouraged or sad or angry at what life is throwing at you, I encourage you to get away with some friends.  Maybe you go to a movie or just get coffee or…you go as far as to book a VRBO for the weekend to drink wine under cozy blankets alternating between football and Poldark on the screen.  Maybe you take a crazy road trip in a mini van and eat big cheeseburgers and Subway and drink QT iced tea and Starbucks lattes.

Whatever you do, do it with the ones who make you laugh until you cry and (almost) pee your pants.  #momlife Do it with the ones who make you think and rethink and rethink again your thoughts on hair products and online dating and the good and the hard of this life.  Do it with the ones who make you better, who challenge you, who cheer you on, who are in your corner.  Do it with the ones you love and love you back.

Get away with girlfriends.  It will be an investment worth saying ‘yes’ to.

Fall Bucket List

Everyone has their own perspective of what fall should look like.  Pumpkin patches, apple orchards, fall baking, playing in the leaves, pumpkin spice everything, spooky decorations and outings.  There is no one way or wrong way to do fall.

As I move towards living a more intentional life, bucket lists have become my go-to, especially when it comes to what our family wants to do each season.  Sometimes we check everything off the list and sometimes the list sits undone, but it helps us to think through what we want each season to look like.

This year, I kept it painlessly simple.  I let each family member choose something to put on the list. Five family members, five items on our bucket list.  In the past, we sat down and made a big ‘ol  long list, but this year I knew my momma capacity wasn’t too big, so we slimmed it way, way down.

It took us five minutes after dinner to discuss what we wanted to do this fall.  Each family member chose one thing and we all enjoyed having a voice and being part of the fun.  Since Jude, our youngest at 19 months, couldn’t really communicate what he wanted to do this fall, Luke and Lily spoke for him.  It was sweet because they said Jude would want to go to the zoo, which is pretty accurate.

Here is what our fall list looks like this year:

fall bucket list

Can you guess mine?  I’ll give you a hint: Baking is my jam in the fall. 

I think this list is doable.  And if not, that’s okay, too.  What is on your fall bucket list this year?

Favorite Fall Recipes

Friends, it’s fall.  Beautiful, glorious, cool and crisp fall. It’s my favorite season, by a landslide.  I love the apple picking, the pumpkin patching, the soup-ing, the baking, the crock potting and the opportunity to wear leggings every single day.  Today I want to share with you some favorite fall recipes.  Some are oldies, but goodies.  And some are on my list to attempt the next few months.  Hope you find something worth trying to get you in fall mode.

Side note: I’m throwing it back with this fall picture of Baby Lily.  Give me all the pumpkins and baby cheeks and matching headbands and leggings.

favorite fall recipes

Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Muffins

If you want to taste fall, bake these now.  I am not a big pumpkin spice latte fan, but I can eat at least four of these muffins right out of the oven.  If you don’t try any of the recipes listed here, please try these.  (And bring me one.)

Brown Butter Bourbon Pecan Chocolate Chunk Cookies

Let’s stick with baking.  These cookies look incredible.  Full disclosure, I have not made them, but these beauties are pinned because I can’t stop looking at their golden delciousness.  Those pecans!  We don’t normally have bourbon on hand, so I will probably substitute bourbon extract assuming I can find it.  These are on my fall bucket list.

Homemade Chicken Pot Pie

Guys, I used to cringe at this stuff.  The gravy and peas and carrots and chicken made me shutter.  However, I obviously didn’t know what I was missing.  Chicken pot pie is one of the most decadent meals invented and it all fits inside a pie pan.  This recipe calls for homemade pie crusts, but I have never made one of those in my life.  Pillsbury will do just fine.  Pot pie is a fan favorite at our house.

Easy 30 Minute Homemade White Chicken Chili

You heard that right.  Easy and on the table in 30 minutes.  This chili has a ton of flavor for not a lot of time.  I usually buy a rotisserie chicken ahead of time or will cook up some chicken in the crock pot during the day.  We eat this weekly in the fall and winter.

Easy, No Knead Bread

Last fall and winter I made bread as often as I could, usually on the weekends.  It was one of my favorite rhythms.  When spring came the bread making was something I let go.  But, fall is back and I plan on making this bread as often as I can.  It’s crusty and soft in the middle and the best part is you don’t have to spend a bunch of time kneading it.  Our October weekends will be full of this bread.

There you have it, some of my favorite fall recipes.  What are some recipes you pull out when fall rolls around?  Please share!

Fall Capsule Wardrobe

Fall is in the air and officially here this week.  Although I used to be a summer-loving girl, I have crossed over and fallen for fall.  This new season brings perfect days, cool cozy nights, and booties and sweaters.  Yes, please.

fall capsule wardrobe

This last year I have been experimenting with capsule wardrobes (click here to find my spring and summer capsules) and today I want to share my capsule wardrobe for this fall.  There are more items in it than usual because weather in the midwest can change drastically in a day.  One day I’m sweating in a tank top and shorts and the next I have on a cardigan and fuzzy socks.  There are some pieces that will be stored away after the warm weather has left us, but most pieces will stay until even after winter is here.

fall capsule wardrobe

Fall Capsule Wardrobe Breakdown

2 pairs of pants (1 denim, 1 black)

1 pair of shorts

2 pairs of leggings (1 athletic, 1 SPANX) All the praise hands for SPANX.

1 dress

6 tank tops

5 short sleeve tops

2 comfy athletic tops

5 quarter length or long sleeve tops

5 sweaters

1 hip length cardigan

1 kimono

2 sweatshirts

1 jean jacket

2 vests (not pictured)

This totals out to 36 pieces, a few more than my summer wardrobe.  I know I’ve said this before, but it’s not about the number.  It’s about having enough.  I enjoyed the challenge of my 7 Experiment back in June, but realized I like options and get a teensy bit crabby without them.  If you want to challenge yourself and try a smaller capsule wardrobe, check out Courtney Carver over at Project 333.

This fall I picked up a button down flannel shirt and a rose colored sweater to give myself some more choices the next few months.  I am still hunting for something to wear for family pictures in a few weeks, but if I don’t feel like shopping (which most of the time I don’t), I will simply wear something already in my closet.

I would love to know…are you trying out a capsule wardrobe this fall?  If so, check out this free printable to help you get started.

Hand Out Honey like a Five Year Old

It’s a rainy Monday morning, a reprieve from the heat of summer.  Dust rests on every surface of our daily living space as our contractor, James, moves wires and muds drywall.  My three babes dance and run and twirl around me as I gather our books for school.  We proceed through our morning routine with books, handwriting, singing and counting blocks.  We finish the morning by replacing nice clothes with old t-shirts, bare chests and paint at the counter.  The end results are an Egyptian necklace, a snake and a real baby with streaks of yellow paint across his belly.  James packs up his stuff to leave and Luke rushes to a kitchen cabinet.  He grabs a jar of honey he helped his Grandma bottle a few weeks back (in very limited supply).  He rushes over to me and whispers, “Can I give it to James?”

I nod and he meets James at the top of the stairs to hand him the bottle.  An explosive smile spreads across Luke’s face as James says “Thank you.”  An hour later a plumber has come to fix our water softener.  Twenty minutes in the guy looks at me with eyebrows raised and says,  “Got your hands full.”  Yep.  He does what he does and leaves us with a working machine.  As he walks down the steps, Luke rushes to the cabinet, grabs one of the few remaining jars of honey he helped Grandma bottle, and hands it to the repairman.  Just a week earlier, Luke handed a friend a jar of honey, unprompted, dwindling the reserve yet further.  I text my husband at naptime on that rainy Monday and said Luke is handing out honey like Oprah.

hand out honey like a five year old

If I’m being honest, there was part of me that wanted to say ‘No!’ when Luke asked if he could give James the honey.  I know there was a lot of sweat and hard work in those glass jars.  Luke worked hard, but so did his Grandma.  And that doesn’t even account that it’s some of the best honey I’ve ever tasted.  But, I said ‘yes’ when Luke asked.  I said yes, well, because I couldn’t say no to his bright eyes and heart.  If I would have, I would have missed the smile that spread across his face and the pride I saw in his eyes when he gave it away.  And Luke would have missed the opportunity to give something he made, something he was proud of.  I’m so glad I said yes.

My five year old knows how to give without restraint.  He doesn’t hold back, doesn’t feel the need to clutch things tight against his chest for fear of losing them.  He lives with his heart and hands wide open (at least when it comes to his honey).

It got me thinking about how I live.  Do I live with my heart and hands open?  When I put myself in Luke’s shoes, I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t have handed out honey to the two men working in our home, and it’s only honey.  I didn’t even help collect or bottle it, but it’s good honey and I wouldn’t have wanted to let it go.  I took it a step further, would I have offered those men jam I just made or lunch I just cooked for my kids?  Or even simpler, did I offer those men my smile, my listening kindness or a cold glass of water?  And after some reflection, I’m not sure I did.

It’s easy to go through life and do the things needing done and care for the ones needing care and love my people well.  It’s easy to go through the motions of breakfast and clean up and naptimes without concern for my plumber or mail carrier or barista.  Or, dare I say, sometimes even my husband.  But what if I took Luke’s approach to life?  What if we did?

What if we handed out honey like Oprah?

What if we smiled at strangers and gave away things that were meaningful to us?  What if we thought about our husbands before ourselves for a day or made the mail carrier some cookies?  What if we actually tipped the barista and looked into her eyes to say ‘thank you’?  What if we handed out honey, without constraint, with our hearts and hands wide open?

How would this simple, yet radical approach to interaction change our perspective of this world and the perspectives of others around us?  Could it make a difference?  I didn’t ask James or our plumber, Shawn, if that honey put an extra pep in their step, but I know it encouraged me, an onlooker in Luke’s kindness charade.  I know it softened my heart, gave me hope, and made my world a bit brighter on that rainy day.  I know it made me think about how I could be more open with the things I have to offer the world.

This isn’t a new concept, this being kind thing, but Luke and his honey reminded me even the smallest of us have something to give.  Recognizing the abundance of what I have relative to what I need is a perspective I am working at fostering.  (Simple isn’t always easy.)  Once I recognize the abundance, then I can move towards being grateful for the abundance and finding ways it can benefit others. Even when I don’t think I have anything to give with the homeschooling and the diapers and the three meals a day and the playdates, I do.  I have something to give.  And I want to stand next to my five year old and hand out honey with my heart wide open.

One Simple Thing in the Morning

The sun is just starting to crest over the hills in the east, painting the sky with pinks and reds and blues.  It’s quiet, peaceful even.  The wind is still and it seems as if the only other living things awake are the squirrels outside as they scamper across the grass and collect acorns fallen from the oak tree in our backyard.  My picture window is littered with fingerprints as I peer out into the new morning, finishing up a prayer.  I feel the weightiness and lightness of the day all at the same time.  A new day brings responsibilities, obstacles, and for me, teaching and caring for my three little ones.  A new day brings possibilities, joy, and thankfulness for another day to do life with the people I adore.  I feel all these things in the same moment and as I close my eyes to picture the day ahead, I feel calm and ready.

Morning routines or morning rituals are synonymous.  CEOs, entrepreneurs, writers, researchers, and moms are writing, researching, and discussing these concepts.  A morning routine is a list of tasks completed before the work day begins.  Sometimes it’s things needing to be done and sometimes it’s things wanting to be done.

morning routine

Many morning routines include showers, exercise, and drinking coffee.  Some include prayer,  journaling, or work related tasks.  What is important?  Where should a person begin?

When I first started a morning routine, I did the things needing to be done: showering, exercise, email, my devotion, getting things ready for the day.  All of these things are important and necessary.  However, I didn’t take into account things wanting to be done.  By me.  I didn’t think about what my heart needed before I began my day.  Today, I know I need to do something wanting done.  I need to do one simple thing in the morning for me.

Before my babes come to me with their sleepy eyes and requests for yogurt and Cheerios, I need to do something wanting done.

The change of just doing the required tasks to doing both the necessary and the unnecessary in the morning has changed my perspective on the day.  It has given me a sense of excitement in the morning as well as a feeling of fulfillment and peace when the time comes to wake my kids.

The thing I want to do changes from time to time.  For awhile reading was all I wanted to do in the morning, then it was writing, then it was catching up on blogs, then it was watering the garden, then it was extra time in prayer.  Now, it’s a mixture, but mostly writing and prayer.  The quiet in the morning permits me time to be present with God as I pray and even gives me a window of silence to listen and just be.  And my deep yearning to write is growing.   With less time to do it, the morning gives me fresh space to get my thoughts down.  My one simple thing in the morning ebbs and flows with the seasons and my preferences.

What is it you wish you could find time for?  I have found the morning to be the time for those things.  Yes, waking up is hard.  And if you still have little ones waking in the middle of the night, your one simple thing in the morning may need to wait for another season.  But, getting up to do the thing wanting done is worth it.  Worth the five, ten, thirty minutes less sleep.  It has brought me more joy than hitting snooze ever could.  And if you need help beginning, check out a few ways to ease into it.

What is your one simple thing wanting done in the morning?

Top 5 Books of Summer

“I declare after all there is no enjoyment like reading! How much sooner one tires of any thing than of a book! — When I have a house of my own, I shall be miserable if I have not an excellent library.” -Pride and Prejudice

It’s amazing how much time I discovered when I chose not to watch t.v.  Summer 2018 was my summer of reading.  I spent many evenings cuddled up on the couch with a library book draped across my lap, sometimes a glass of wine beside me.  It was a good summer, one I will look back on and think of Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy, Jonas and The Giver, and grumpy and endearing Ove.  The books I read and the characters I encountered entertained me, gave me hope, and challenged me.  Here are my Top 5 Books of Summer:

top 5 books of summer

A Man Called Ove

This novel written by Fredrick Backman was surprisingly emotional for me.  Backman tells the story of a grumpy old man who seems to try to make the lives of his neighbors unbearable.  As the story unfolds, I was annoyed with Ove and then I cared for him like a pseudo-Grandpa.  He was endearing and lovable and as Backman tells pieces of Ove’s backstory, it becomes clear why he has become this grumpy old man.  I didn’t think I would like it as much as I did, but it is a terrific read.  The movie starring Tom Hanks came out in 2016.

The Giver

A modern classic written in 1993, this book made me think deep thoughts and have a good cry.  I read it on our family road trip and I will always remember the VRBO couch I was sitting on when I read:

If he would have stayed, he would have starved in other ways.  He would have lived a life hungry for feelings, for color, for love.

Set in a seemingly utopian community where everyone has a place and a purpose and nothing bad ever happens, the main character, Jonas, is selected as the new Receiver of Memory where he meets The Giver.  As the story unfolds, Jonas discovers his community isn’t what it seems.

Rereading this book from my childhood was so good for my soul.  It’s a quick read and I was rooting for Jonas and Gabriel until the last page.

Firefly Lane

On our road trip I picked up this book at a used book store, knowing nothing but what the back of the book read.  I cried my way through this one on our 9 hour trip home from Michigan.

A fictitious novel, Firefly Lane tells the story of two best friends across a lifetime.  Kate and Tully meet in middle school and the tale of these two friends gets better as the years trickle on.  It reminded me of my own growing up years and made me a bit nostalgic.

If you don’t like to cry, don’t read this because it will happen.  Even with the blood shot eyes and mascara stains, it was still worth it.

Pride and Prejudice

This classic by Jane Austen has been read by everyone but me.  I started out my summer reading with this one and I believe it is what lighted the fire in me to read.  Although I had to think a little more with the language, the characters and storyline made this book incredibly worthwhile.

It was a bit complicated for me to keep everyone straight at first, but after a few chapters I started to put it all together.  Pride and Prejudice takes place in the early 1800s and is a heartwarming story of The Bennett family and their five unmarried daughters.  I’m not sure I could have loved the protagonist, Elizabeth Bennett, anymore.

I am eager to read more of Austen’s work and have Emma and Mansfield Park on my list.

Educated

I just finished this book and it’s fresh in my mind.  Tara Westover grew up in the mountains of Idaho with her survivalist parents.  A memoir written by Westover discusses her upbringing and how she went from not having any formal schooling before she went to college to having a PHD in history from Cambridge.  Parts of this story are heartbreaking and yet knowing how the story ends gave me hope throughout the book.  There are some religious pieces of Tara’s story, but she does an incredible job of navigating that road with respect.

I am a sucker for a good memoir because I love to hear people’s stories and this is right up there with The Glass Castle.

Fall and winter are coming and with it: time.  These seasons provide me more minutes to read with less to do outside and although I am a summer-lover, I welcome the change.  If you have any must reads, please let me know so I can add them to my list!

4 Ways to Ease into Routines

When August hits, school is on the brain.  It is the season of sharp pencils, squeaky tennis shoes, and getting back into routines.  It’s the second new year of the year.  Everyone is wanting to do all the things they didn’t do over the summer like meal plan and get up early, mostly because they have to and partly because it just feels good.  Exercise, meal prep, use the planner that hasn’t been touched in months, go to bed early.  These are all routines we maybe need, maybe want to get back into when the new school year approaches.

We homeschool and started a few weeks back.  We started early because I wanted us to have some flexibility during the year.  If we want to go on a trip in January or take a week off in March, it’s okay and we won’t be scrambling to finish up school in July.  We are mostly back into our school routines around here.

routines

Routines

Routines get us from point A to point B.  They make our days smoother, easier, and more manageable.  They allow us and our kids to know what is coming next.  Routines become automatic parts of our day and help us fight decision fatigue.

A routine is performed as part of a regular procedure rather than for a special reason (unlike a rhythm).

Dr. Steve Orma, a CBT clinical psychologist who specializes in treating insomnia, anxiety, and stress, says routines help with stress.  Orma states: Creating a set schedule for doing chores, work tasks, meetings, exercise, paying bills, and all the usual things can help with stress.  Once things you need to get done becomes your normal routine, it’s easier to accomplish everything, because it becomes habit.  And when these things become automatic, you free your mind for more important things.

Routines also help us do things well.  Most of us brush our teeth as a routine.  The more we do it, the better at it we get.  The same goes for routines with kids: the more they have a consistent morning routine of eating breakfast, getting dressed, and getting out the door or to the dining room table for school, the better they will become at that routine.

We (me) love routines in our home.  For us it takes awhile to get back into them and I have learned some things the past few weeks about moving from our easy breezy summer schedule to our school schedule.  Here are a few tips to get back into the routine of a new school year.

Choose a routine as a priority.

No one can do all the things all the time.  Greg McKeown, Author of Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less states, “To be precise, the word is priority—not priorities—and it originated in the 14th century from the Latin prior, meaning “first.” If something mattered the most it was a “priority.”

Priority originally meant one.  It was not intended to be plural.

Choose one routine you want to get in place this school year and focus on it.  Our main routine I wanted to get in place was our morning breakfast routine and beginning school routine.  I thought through what it would look like logistically: what time the kids needed to be up, what I wanted us all to accomplish before we started school, and how I wanted to begin our school day.  It was helpful for me to sit down and think through this before just beginning and letting it happen.  Our morning routine was all I focused on.  I didn’t implement a new meal planning strategy or figure out how to do lunch and naptime more efficiently.  I stuck with the morning and it has helped me tremendously.

Once you decide what routine is a priority, write down what you want it to look like.  Writing things like this down isn’t my favorite thing, but it always helps me visualize what I want to happen.  Decide what one routine is a priority, think through it, and get it on paper.

Start early and start small.

Many kids are already in school, but you preschool mommas may still have a week or so before the big day is here.  Try and start early if you can, a few days before.  One thing I started earlier than normal was getting dressed.  My kids would stay in their pajamas all day everyday if I let them.  I started having my two bigs get dressed in the mornings a few weeks back, 90% on their own.  They both still drag their feet a bit, but getting dressed was something I wanted us to get better at this year.  Don’t get me wrong, there will still be pajama days, but they will be a bit more special and not the norm.  And, guys, this is such a small thing.  I didn’t try and implement our entire morning routine at first, I just took a baby step and had them get dressed.

routines

Teach your kids.

Now that you know what routine you want to focus on, tell your kids.  Practice and talk them through it.  If kids don’t know the expectations, it’s hard to meet them.  Maybe you write it out or draw pictures on index cards or maybe you just walk them through it and have them practice a few times.  Let kids know what you expect them to do and allow them time to practice so you aren’t repeating yourself 100 times every morning.  (I’ve been there.)

Prepare.

The beginning of the school year is exciting, but can also be a little overwhelming.  Help yourself by preparing as much ahead of time as you can.  A few mini tips to prepare:

  1. Use your calendar and look ahead each week.  If you see next week is going to be a big one with open house, the first day of school, and soccer, try and prepare some dinners and lunches ahead of time so you’re not scrambling all week.  On our first day of school I prepped both lunch and dinner ahead of time so I could focus on school that first day.
  2. Set out clothes.  If we are going somewhere the next day, I set out Luke’s clothes the night before so all he has to do is get dressed.  This has been a huge time and sanity saver for me.  It’s one less decision to make on a full morning.
  3. Pack the night before. Instead of hunting for back packs in the morning, have them all ready to go each night.  Although we don’t have back packs to take with us, anytime we go on a play date or field trip, I try and pack the night before.  It eases my mind that I’m not forgetting anything and takes one thing off my list in the morning.
  4. Keep things easy those first few weeks. It’s overwhelming for everyone and it helps to give yourself and your people some grace.  Maybe that means eating out or picking up take out.  Maybe it means letting the dusting go or putting home projects on the back burner for awhile.  A whole bunch of grace is needed those first weeks back to school.

What are your tips for getting back into routines?  Please share!