Home | Have Done’s and To Do’s

Owning a home is work. Like real WORK. And no, I’m not complaining about it – I actually really love it. But every night after work the last two weeks, Daniel and I have come home and immediately began our projects. I love that the house is coming together so quickly but I would also love a date night sometime soon (*Daniel, hint hint).

A collaborative list of everything we have accomplished this week:

  1. Cleaned and organized both closets; put the closet doors back up.
  2. Daniel finished all the blinds (kitchen, dining room, his music room, our room and the guest room).
  3. Cleaned out the garage and the basement – threw away all the random junk or leftover counter tops from when the seller redid the kitchen (I’m pretty sure our garbage men absolutely hate us because of the enormous pile we left for them last week and will be leaving again tomorrow – oops).
  4. Daniel hung the gallery wall (again) in the dining room (!!!)
  5. Unpacked all the leftover boxes and organized the misc items in the basement.
  6. Set up this BEAUTIFUL shoe cabinet that we picked up from IKEA after first service at church today.

What we have left to do:

  1. Figure out flooring and new counters for the kitchen.
  2. Redo the bathroom (at least flooring).
  3. Find the perfect rug for our bedroom (and maybe the guest room?).
  4. Decorate the living room. Somehow this has become the room with the least amount of work done since we moved in. We haven’t spent much time in this room since we’ve been really going-going-going after work. I foresee getting a lot done this week since the smaller projects are all done and we can relax a little after work.
  5. Take down the old entertainment center that’s taking up space in the garage – put out for our garbage men friends.

Re-Begin

I’m sitting here, typing from our house. Our H O U S E! We closed on Monday, May 6 – the best 25th birthday present I could have asked for. Since then, we have been over every day painting, wiping down, stripping wallpaper, vacuuming, sanding/staining floors. So much comes with owning a house (yes I knew that, yes I expected it)! I feel such a sense of peace and contentment now that we’re here. Now that the move is over, all of our belongings are in our home and knowing I get to live here and raise babies here. There is no moving in our future and that makes me very very thrilled.

I will be the first to tell you that I don’t do well with change. None of my family does – we hate it. I like my comfort, I like my routine. Moving into this house (while I already love it and look forward to nesting and making this home) has definitely put me in a little bit of a nervous state. A new neighborhood, a new route to work, new responsibilities. Now is as good a time as any and I am so thankful we were able to purchase this house before we bring little lives into the mix. I give major props to those lucky folks that move with children. Lord, bless it.

While yesterday was full of non-stop commotion from 7AM – 10PM, this morning we were able to make it to first service at church and then surprise Daniel’s mom for Mothers Day – all her kids celebrated with making her lunch, we brought her favorite drink, chocolate covered strawberries and pretty little roses. Next Saturday morning, we get to celebrate my mom with a family breakfast at Original Pancake House. I am secretly looking forward to the most – any excuse for chocolate chip pancakes is a good one for me.

Today, I am currently:

  1. Listening to Wildflowers by Tom Petty
  2. Drinking Pomegranate Lemonade
  3. Relaxing after celebrating Mothers Day
  4. Wishing for summer in this 53° WI weather
  5. Peeking over Daniel’s shoulder as he hangs the gallery wall (!!!)

The cutest keychain I bought here!

Winter Camping and the Journey Ahead

Last night, I somehow allowed Daniel to convince me to go camping with little to no prodding on his part.  Looking back, I am not exactly sure why I agreed so readily to camping with him the day of our first snowfall and winds at 20mph.  But I did.  And I lived to tell about it.  I don’t think I will go again any time soon but I am very glad for the experience and the ability to say that I did it! We were packed up and driving home around 9AM; on the drive, Daniel thanked me for coming with him to which I responded, “I know a good way to say thank you.”  He guessed Starbucks and right he was.  Nothing like a warm Starbies to make me feel all kinds of happy.  I’ll most likely take the rest of the day to recover (aka raise my body temperature from freezing, apply and then reapply Blue Tansy facial oil to my poor, sensitive wind burned face and do a whole lot of nothing) until Daniel’s niece’s birthday party at 4PM.

When Daniel and I got home, after long, hot showers, we relaxed on the couch with our coffee and dreamt about the future.  I was saying how much I love our little apartment, how cozy it is and how I feel so settled.  We talked about the upcoming holidays and I mentioned wanting a few more YoungLiving products to add to my collection.  I am all about ditching-and-switching but it has been a slow going process.  I told Daniel my goal for 2019 is to cut back on all the perfumes, lotions, candles that are adding toxins to the air/my skin and replace all with more natural products.  He suggested I research how to make these on my own and that actually made me feel giddy.  I love how he supports me and just knows that I would love to do that. Find all the organic, clean products, free of chemicals and hormone-disrupters and create all my own cleaning, beauty products.  I have already dubbed 2019 my year of wellness — physical, emotional and mental.

For physical wellness, I am really good at the starting part, not so much the follow-through-and-get-fit part.  I have a passion for running but soon lose that passion after about a month or so of carrying on the habit.  I have what I think is a “that’s good enough” mentality.  I do really well and as soon as it’s “good enough”, I quit.  Because why keep going when you’ve already reached good enough?  (Hey, I know it’s silly but I’m being honest. Don’t knock my vulnerability!).   I have also had a hard time in Wisconsin once Daylight Savings rolls around and the days grow shorter and seem to stay darker for all but five hours.  I need to keep my mind focused and energized with a game plan this winter and not fall back into the typical I Need A Vacation STAT slump. I’ve already started scratching down ideas in my little black notebook, so excited for this journey.  And now that I have spoken it into existence, I can’t back down.  I will use my 0 readers of this little blog as motivation to keep going.  (But really.)

Filled to Overflowing

It’s been a while since I’ve added to this little corner of mine — not much of significance has happened but many little intimate details have made October pass in what seems like the blink of an eye. I just said to Daniel tonight, “How is it that we’ve already figured out a marriage routine??”  Sundays are for meal prepping and doing laundry.  Tuesdays have remained date-night, eating out or cooking at home. Wednesday is his small-group, Thursday is mine.  It doesn’t feel as though we have been married long enough as to have made routines, while simultaneously, it feels as though this is the way it has always been. How can these two feelings co-exist?

Two weekends ago, I got little sleep and yet my cup felt full. Kenzie and I went to a women’s conference in IL where the action call was to live as new creations — the theme was “God makes All Things New”. While I already have this constant reminder tattooed on my left arm, it was inspiring to hear the four different speakers talk about how we can live new lives, redeemed in and through Christ, for Christ.  One of the organizations the Conference was donating monetary gifts as well as certain goods (underwear, tampons, bath towels, etc.) to was Refuge for Women — a “national faith-based organization providing a residential healing and recovery program for survivors of trafficking and sexual exploitation to receive safe housing, counseling, life and work skills development”.  This type of charity weighs heavy on my heart so the next morning after our second session, we enjoyed a quick bite at Panera and then made our way to the local store to pick up the donation items.  I only wish there was more I could have done…

The following Tuesday, we hosted Kenzie and J for dinner. This was our first time hosting dinner since being married and I was ecstatic.  I had taken the day off work to check off the post-wedding errands (i.e. pick up the marriage certificate, sit in line at the Social Security office, sit in line at the DMV, etc.) and I also took some time to prep the large pan of Baked Ziti for our guests (which we’re still talking about; it was that good).  Daniel was really looking forward to getting to know J since this was our first time spending time together two-on-two and I’d say it was a hit.  J brought Bulleit Bourbon which they sipped on the rocks like old men while Kenzie and I opted for a rosé.  We laughed so much my back hurt and I forgot it was Tuesday until I rolled into bed that night, heart full.

And then tonight. Daniel and I decided on a date night to good ol’ Olive Garden.  We talked about his overnight camping experience the previous night (tent, almost freezing temps, rain) — which he loved.  I enjoyed endless Zuppa Toscana, sipped my favorite cab wine and we left with rosy cheeks.  We stopped at Starbucks for seasonal drinks on the way home and may or may not have had another baby-talk thrown in.  Daniel would have liked to start a family… yesterday …while I have said we should wait five or so years.  If I’m being honest, my timeframe may be wavering slightly.

And because I am still not over our wedding photos… one of my favorites.

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We Do

October 6 began and ended just as any other day would but it truly was better than just any other day has been.  On October 6, I married my very best friend, standing alongside fourteen of our closest humans.  WHAT. A. DAY. Sometimes I still find myself caught off guard by the simple fact that I am a wife; almost every day, I have turned to Daniel and said, “How are we married?!”  I’m sure he is sick of my rhetorical question by now, but he politely rolls his eyes or shrugs his shoulders, offering a small smirk.  It is so surreal to me that all of our planning, all of our lists, all of our budgeting has already paid off in what was the most important day of my entire life.image3

The week leading up to the wedding had me at about a 10 from the moment I woke up Monday morning.  I took off work the last two days of the week to focus on all things wedding — nail appointments, errands and finalizing just about everything.  The constant stream of questions that were flooding my phone daily was enough to make me want to drop my iPhone from a twenty story building (insert “dramatic Bridezilla” comments here). Thursday morning, Daniel stopped over for a quick coffee before heading to the venue to wait for the tent delivery.  On his way out, he turned to me and held out his hand. “Give me your phone today.  I’ll answer any questions that come to you; you just enjoy the day with your mom.” (I’m not crying, you’re crying.)

Our day itself could not have gone smoother. Becca brought Einstein Bro.’s bagels to mom and dad’s early Saturday morning where I loaded the cream cheese onto my Asiago bagel and we all crammed around the kitchen island, mom and dad included.  We talked and laughed and sipped coffee, tangible excitement was in the air.  All the bridesmaids drove together, starting with a pitstop at Starbucks before arriving at the venue at 10AM. As we made the last turn down the final road before the venue, trees changing color lined both sides of the road, leaves covered the ground, the music stopped before (to my surprise) Daniel’s voice floated throughout the car.  Tears instantly welled in my eyes — he had written and recorded a song to surprise me with on our wedding day! Titled Waterfall, which is only fitting seeing as he proposed at LaSalle falls in upper Wisconsin.  Needless to say, I was a teary-eyed baby as we pulled up to our wedding venue; but I was also more excited and sure than even before of the commitment we were going to make to each other.

After we unloaded our many, many bags of goodies, makeup, clothes and hair styling tools, we popped champagne, toasted to MARRIAGE!, and prayed the rain away. (While the mist did stop just in time for our ceremony, we resorted to keeping the chairs under the tent which turned out looking (truly) better than I had hoped.). Felicia arrived around 11AM to start make-up and Elle was soon after around noon to begin hair.  I really cannot believe for all the stress I carried the weeks leading up to the wedding, how smoothly everything came together.  The ceremony began a little after 3:15PM but hey, my make-up wasn’t done! As long as the bride is causing the hold up, it’s acceptable for a wedding to start late… I definitely read that somewhere.  Anyway, I fully expected to be a wreck walking down the aisle, seeing family and loved ones surrounding us but as I tried to meet as many eyes as I could walking down in order to truly take in the moment, all I wanted to do was run down towards Daniel.  I was more excited than nervous!  We prayed, read personally written vows, Daniel kissed the bride and we were pronounced Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Kerlin!

The stress definitely caught up to me, though, and we stopped at Starbucks for mint tea on the way to the Port Hotel that night where we would be lodging for the next two nights.  The following morning, Daniel and I were up and dressed by 7AM, making our way to Walmart where we would proceed to spend over $40 on honey, Throat Coat tea, throat lozenges, Theraflu, etc., as well as a cozy pair of slippers for my blistered feet. (Said virus is still with me today, eight days later.) Daniel is such a good sport — never once did he act annoyed about my coughing or constant complaints.  Sunday night, we walked a block from the hotel to a restaurant called Pasta Shoppe where he saw on the menu they had French Onion Soup.  This did wonders for my throat and made me feel amazing for the whole twenty three minutes until my bowl was empty.  I am seeing more and more how thoughtful Daniel is, especially towards me.  He has an amazing heart, one that is sensitive but strong, caring and protective.  The majority of our time at the Port Hotel was spent sipping tea, resting in bed in the massive oversized robes or relaxing in the Jacuzzi.  We were spoiled.

On our way home after two days in Port Washington, I convinced Daniel to swing by IKEA (“It’s totally on the way…! Only a twenty-minute detour…!”) to pick up an identical bedside table to what he has on his side. We walked through the showrooms and fantasized about what our future kitchen and Man-Cave would look like until the store opened at 10AM and we were able to make a beeline for aisle 23, pick out the white-stained nightstand and continue home.  I told Daniel I was going to put a roast in the slow cooker with potatoes and carrots that we could eat for dinner to which he responded, “I love being married!”  I rolled my eyes and offered a little laugh while secretly jumping up and down inside, my cheeks turning a subtle pink.  My parents made dinner for us the following night and afterwards, my dad’s typical question, “Daniel, espresso?”  It was already late so I figured he would turn it down but he agreed, saying it was so he could stay up all night taking care of me.  At nights, I have to sleep perched high on two or three pillows and even then, sometimes my throat will betray me and a coughing fit will start.  I feel so bad waking Daniel up but he never seems to mind — he reaches out his hand to touch my arm or rub the small of my back and in these moments, my heart just about bursts.  This virus is kicking my butt but it is also bringing out the sweetest husband so can I really complain?

I don’t want to forget coming home to our cozy apartment, sunlight streaming in, the tree right outside our balcony golden yellow, the most beautiful fall shade.  I don’t want to forget Daniel being the happiest sick person — after coming down with the virus himself, instead of being annoyed, he reasoned with me, saying, “When we have kids, they’re going to be getting me sick all the time.”  I don’t want to forget Daniel losing his voice and still trying to sing, seeing which notes he can or can’t hit that day. I don’t want to forget that even though we have gone through about fourteen bottles of YoungLiving oil trying to purify the air, even though we have gone through three tissue boxes and a few rolls of toilet paper blowing our noses, even though our throats feel like tiny swords are poking through, even though I am feeling crabby and defeated because of this never-ending virus, we have each other.  And we have this love.  And truly, that is enough.

All photos in this post were taken by the wonderful Lindsey Cole.

New Beginnings

This past weekend consisted of a lot of loading and unloading, packing and cleaning, organizing and reorganizing… and only a little of sleep and downtime.  But it was all for good; Daniel and I hauled all of our belongings into a third-story apartment with little character but great potential (read, vaulted ceilings). The apartment is all. white. and I have been having so much fun finding a place for everything we own (and if I can’t, there’s the donation bag for Goodwill in the corner!)

The main excitement about this new place has less to do with the white walls (which I truly am extremely ecstatic about), and more to do with the fact that in 32 days, we will be living within the white walls together as husband and wife. Husband and wife. HUSBAND. AND. WIFE. What?!

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