Showing posts with label Karlie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karlie. Show all posts

DIY: Play Make-Up

I found this idea on the lovely and addicting world of Pinterest.

This project is super easy and will definitely make your little girl feel pretty special.

All you need is:
~ nail polish (I bought the cheap stuff from Wal-Mart)
~ empty make-up containers


  Clean out your make-up containers with warm water and soap and dry them completely.

  Slowly fill the containers with nail polish.  
As the nail polish dries, it shrinks down quite a bit so I filled it all the way to the top of the silver lining.

To ensure the polish dries level, make sure the containers are lying completely flat on a hard surface





And that's it!  You're done!  I  let Karlie's make-up dry for 3 days before I showed it to her.  This will give it time for the fumes to go away and will ensure the polish is completely dried.



"Motherhood is a Calling..."

I read this article after my friend Kelly posted it to Facebook and couldn't wait to share it.  But first a little bit of background of why it came with such perfect timing.

A couple days ago, I started a recorded episode of 19 Kids and Counting to watch while trying to fold laundry and while Karlie was playing.  And I specifically thought to myself, "Is this a bad idea when I'll probably get distracted and miss part of the episode?"


Three minutes into the episode, Jim Bob and Michelle were working together on writing their new book while some of their kids were playing around them.  Michelle said, "Schedules, and deadlines, that just is very difficult for a mother with children to think about.  That's not my realm of life that I'm normally in.  So the stress of all that makes me stay up late nights because my children are my priority."  Then they begin to talk about how it's interesting that they're writing a book about raising children, while raising children, and dealing with interruptions every 5 minutes.

Then Michelle says, "I wouldn't call it distractions.  They are what our job is.  The distraction is sitting down and trying to write a book.  That's the distraction."

Sigh.

I just called my precious daughter a distraction, when really, the television is the distraction.  If you take away the hours Karlie spends sleeping, I only get 8 hours a day with her.  Eight.  That's only 1/3 of every day.

I still cringe thinking back on it.  So with 26 minutes left in the episode, I rearranged my priorities, snapped out of my spoiled thinking, and turned the TV off.

Then I read this article that shined another light on the blessing of being a mommy:
(article taken from this site)

Motherhood Is a Calling (And Where Your Children Rank)



A few years ago, when I just had four children and when the oldest was still three, I loaded them all up to go on a walk. After the final sippy cup had found a place and we were ready to go, my two-year-old turned to me and said, “Wow! You have your hands full!”
She could have just as well said, “Don’t you know what causes that?” or “Are they all yours?!”
Everywhere you go, people want to talk about your children. Why you shouldn’t have had them, how you could have prevented them, and why they would never do what you have done. They want to make sure you know that you won’t be smiling anymore when they are teenagers. All this at the grocery store, in line, while your children listen.

A Rock Bottom Job?

The truth is that years ago, before this generation of mothers was even born, our society decided where children rank in the list of important things. When abortion was legalized, we wrote it into law.
Children rank way below college. Below world travel for sure. Below the ability to go out at night at your leisure. Below honing your body at the gym. Below any job you may have or hope to get. In fact, children rate below your desire to sit around and pick your toes, if that is what you want to do. Below everything. Children are the last thing you should ever spend your time doing.
If you grew up in this culture, it is very hard to get a biblical perspective on motherhood, to think like a free Christian woman about your life, your children. How much have we listened to partial truths and half lies? Do we believe that we want children because there is some biological urge, or the phantom “baby itch”? Are we really in this because of cute little clothes and photo opportunities? Is motherhood a rock bottom job for those who can’t do more, or those who are satisfied with drudgery? If so, what were we thinking?

It's Not a Hobby

Motherhood is not a hobby, it is a calling. You do not collect children because you find them cuter than stamps. It is not something to do if you can squeeze the time in. It is what God gave you time for.
Christian mothers carry their children in hostile territory. When you are in public with them, you are standing with, and defending, the objects of cultural dislike. You are publicly testifying that you value what God values, and that you refuse to value what the world values. You stand with the defenseless and in front of the needy. You represent everything that our culture hates, because you represent laying down your life for another—and laying down your life for another represents the gospel.
Our culture is simply afraid of death. Laying down your own life, in any way, is terrifying. Strangely, it is that fear that drives the abortion industry: fear that your dreams will die, that your future will die, that your freedom will die—and trying to escape that death by running into the arms of death.

Run to the Cross

But a Christian should have a different paradigm. We should run to to the cross. To death. So lay down your hopes. Lay down your future. Lay down your petty annoyances. Lay down your desire to be recognized. Lay down your fussiness at your children. Lay down your perfectly clean house. Lay down your grievances about the life you are living. Lay down the imaginary life you could have had by yourself. Let it go.
Death to yourself is not the end of the story. We, of all people, ought to know what follows death. The Christian life is resurrection life, life that cannot be contained by death, the kind of life that is only possible when you have been to the cross and back.
The Bible is clear about the value of children. Jesus loved them, and we are commanded to love them, to bring them up in the nurture of the Lord. We are to imitate God and take pleasure in our children.

The Question Is How

The question here is not whether you are representing the gospel, it is how you are representing it. Have you given your life to your children resentfully? Do you tally every thing you do for them like a loan shark tallies debts? Or do you give them life the way God gave it to us—freely?
It isn’t enough to pretend. You might fool a few people. That person in line at the store might believe you when you plaster on a fake smile, but your children won’t. They know exactly where they stand with you. They know the things that you rate above them. They know everything you resent and hold against them. They know that you faked a cheerful answer to that lady, only to whisper threats or bark at them in the car.
Children know the difference between a mother who is saving face to a stranger and a mother who defends their life and their worth with her smile, her love, and her absolute loyalty.

Hands Full of Good Things

When my little girl told me, “Your hands are full!” I was so thankful that she already knew what my answer would be. It was the same one that I always gave: “Yes they are—full of good things!”
Live the gospel in the things that no one sees. Sacrifice for your children in places that only they will know about. Put their value ahead of yours. Grow them up in the clean air of gospel living. Your testimony to the gospel in the little details of your life is more valuable to them than you can imagine. If you tell them the gospel, but live to yourself, they will never believe it. Give your life for theirs every day, joyfully. Lay down pettiness. Lay down fussiness. Lay down resentment about the dishes, about the laundry, about how no one knows how hard you work.
Stop clinging to yourself and cling to the cross. There is more joy and more life and more laughter on the other side of death than you can possibly carry alone.

Life With a Toddler

Today I was going to post a little sneak peek at our headboard that we started building this afternoon but I've decided to wait until it's completely finished.

Instead I want to share this little article that a friend shared on Facebook that made me laugh.

Now let me say this:
JP and I do not know what a frat party is like
However.
We certainly know what it's like living with a toddler.  Especially recently.  Karlie has certainly grown quite the little personality and makes us laugh several times a day.


Why having a toddler is
like being at a frat party

1. THERE ARE HALF-FULL, BRIGHTLY-COLORED PLASTIC CUPS ON THE FLOOR IN EVERY ROOM. THREE ARE IN THE BATHTUB.

2. THERE'S ALWAYS THAT ONE GIRL, 

BAWLING HER EYES OUT IN A CORNER.


3. IT'S BEST NOT TO ASSUME THAT THE PERSON CLOSEST TO YOU HAS ANY CONTROL OVER THEIR DIGESTIVE FUNCTION.


4. YOU SNEAK OFF TO THE BATHROOM KNOWING THAT AS SOON AS YOU SIT DOWN, SOMEONE'S GOING TO START BANGING ON THE DOOR.


5. PROBABLY 80% OF THE STAINS ON THE 

FURNITURE CONTAIN DNA.

6. YOU'VE GOT SOMEONE IN YOUR FACE AT 

3 A.M. LOOKING FOR A DRINK.

7. THERE'S DEFINITELY GOING TO BE A FIGHT.


8. YOU'RE NOT SURE WHETHER ANYTHING YOU'RE DOING IS RIGHT, YOU JUST HOPE IT WON'T GET YOU ARRESTED.


9. THERE ARE CRUMPLED-UP UNDERPANTS
 EVERYWHERE.

10. YOU WAKE UP WONDERING EXACTLY HOW AND WHEN THE PERSON IN BED WITH YOU GOT THERE.

11. YOU HAVE A TV THEME SONG STUCK IN YOUR HEAD, AND WHEN YOU START SINGING IT EVERYONE JOINS IN. 

12.
 SOMETIME IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT SOMEONE SLURS, "I WANT MY MOMMY." 

13.
 YOU ARE SUBJECTED TO THE SAME STORY 20 TIMES. 

14. YOU REALIZE YOU ARE THE ONE TELLING 
THE SAME STORY 20 TIMES. 

15. YOU LIE TO YOUR PARENTS ABOUT WHAT'S 
GOING ON AT YOUR PLACE.

16. AT LEAST ONE PERSON IS LYING ON THE FLOOR, EITHER FACE UP OR FACE DOWN, SINGING AT THE TOP OF THEIR LUNGS

17. OFTEN, FOR NO REASON, SOMEONE LAUGHS UNCONTROLLABLY FOR MINUTES ON END.

18. PEOPLE CAN'T CLIMB THE STAIRS 
WITHOUT USING THEIR HANDS.

19. NO ONE WALKS IN A STRAIGHT LINE 
AND THEY RANDOMLY FALL DOWN.

20.
 THERE ARE ALWAYS FIGHTS THAT NEED TO BE BROKEN UP. AND ARE IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWED BY "I LOVE YOU, BRO."

21. TRY AS YOU MIGHT, YOU CANNOT GET PEOPLE TO STOP DANCING ON THE FURNITURE.
(The picture's blurry, but she's dancing on her chair)

22. SPINNING AROUND AND FLAPPING YOUR 
ARMS COUNTS AS DANCING.

23. AT LEAST ONE PERSON WILL BE DANCING 
AROUND TO IMAGINARY MUSIC.

24. AT ANY TIME THERE IS A CHANCE OF SOMEONE RUNNING NUDE THROUGH THE HOUSE.

25. WHEN THE INSIDE GETS TOO BAD, JUST HEAD OUTSIDE!  

Bekvams for Books

In this post I mentioned some spice racks that would soon be book shelves for Karlie.  I had seen this idea floating around on different blogs and Pinterest and loved it.  Karlie is a little bookworm so more book storage was a must for her.  I bought three of the spice racks during our last trip to Ikea.  


A few coats of white paint and some little swirlies on the side are all these little spice racks needed to become cute little book shelves.  I used the same pink and green paint we used on her mural.



And Karlie's already got it figured out!

Karlie - 15 Months




Last time I posted an update on Karlie, she had just turned 1 year old.  On Monday she had her 15 month check-up and she is certainly growing!  She has consistently stayed in the 50th percentile for weight and has always been off the charts for height (>95%). Here are her measurements since birth:


~ Her bedtime is at 8:30 and she usually wakes up at 8.

~ She takes two 2-hour naps every day, once at 10:00am and again somewhere between 2:30-3pm

~ She sleeps with a blanket, a stuffed animal (usually "Dog"...who is really Lady, from Lady and the Tramp) and her pacifier (which I really hope to start breaking her of really soon)

~ Walking is now her only mode of transportation.  Sometimes it looks like she's practically running, but I'm in denial and won't admit that to myself.

~ She loves to go outside.  And when I say loves, I mean L-O-V-E-S going outside.  It's all she wants to do.  She knows what the word means so it became one of our "spell it so she won't know what we're saying" words.  I've seen many tantrums thrown during thunderstorms because I won't take her outside.



~ She also loves to put things away.  She dumps her shapes out of her shape-sorter just so she can put them all back in.

~ She is really learning how to understand and obey us.  A couple weeks ago, I caught her going through our bathroom drawers, playing with a bottle of pills (child-proof...don't worry) so I told her "Karlie, put that away."  She immediately put the bottle back in the drawer and pushed the drawer closed.  A little while later, I found her in our bedroom playing with the same pill bottle.  I looked at her again and said "Karlie, go put that away."  She walked into the bathroom, opened the drawer, put the pills inside, closed the drawer, and walked away.  It made me so proud.

~ She's the best dancer I know.

~ She loves to eat.  She prefers fruits and vegetables over french fries and corn dogs, but never turns down a bite of frozen yogurt.

~ She wears a size 4 shoe, size 4 diapers and size 12-18 months clothes.

~ She has 12 teeth! 4 top front, 4 bottom front (1 of which is still cutting through), and 4 molars (also still coming in)

~ She loves to give kisses but only gives hugs every now and then.

~ She is a go-to-bed champion.  When it's time for bed or for a nap, I just say, "Karlie, let's go night-night." and she walks down the hall, into her room, and stands in front of her crib.

~ She loves to see her daddy.  She can very easily pick him out of a crowd and goes nuts when she sees him.  As soon as he gets home and opens the door, she says "Da!!!" and takes off for the door.


"All children, except one, grow up..."

Shoulda listened to Peter Pan...

Our growin' girl's stats:

Birth - 6 lbs, 4 oz.
           21 inches


1 week - 6 lbs, 1 oz


2 weeks - 6 lbs, 9 oz


1 month - 8 lbs, 4 oz
                    22 1/4 inches


2 months - 10 lbs, 15 oz
                   24 1/2 inches


4 months - 14 lbs
                        26 inches


6 months - 16 lbs, 4 oz
                     28 1/4 inches


9 months - 17 lbs, 14 oz
                   28 1/2 inches


1 year - 21 lbs, 12 oz (50th percentile)
                31 1/2 inches (100th percentile)

Karlie - 12 Months

Apparently I blinked because all of the sudden my tiny 6 pound baby is now 1 year old!  Everyone tried to warn me, "Watch out.  You'll blink and she'll be sitting up, eating by herself, crawling, talking, graduating highschool."  What has two thumbs and now refuses to blink?  THIS girl!

Well, I say it but I don't mean it.  There's a book called If I Could Keep You Little and when I first started reading it, I wanted to cry, throw it on the floor, and step on it (did I mention I was in Target?).  But by the end of the book I was thinking "Fine. Fine!  You're right.  You're completely right."  One line from the book is "If I could keep you little, I'd keep you close to me.  But then I'd miss you growing into who you're meant to be!"  And that is what JP and I look forward to most.  Seeing what God has in store for our daughter.

Karlie is growing and developing every day.  Last night on the way home from church, we were going over words with her.  With some of her words, she has quite the little southern drawl.  Her list so far is:
~ ball (baaaawl)
~ dog (gog)
~ dada
~ mama
~ cat
~ book (buh)
~ bye (biii)
~ Papa (JP's dad)
~ Pa (Paaaw - my dad)
~ car (I actually think this one should be Kar because I think she's trying to say her own name.)
~ blue

We love hearing her little voice.  She's also started to sing.  We'll say, "Karlie, can you sing a song?"  Then she'll quiet her voice and raise the pitch a little and go "La la la, la la la, la la la."

She loves to dance.  If she's sitting, she just holds her arms out and twists her upper body.  If she's standing, she wiggles her booty and bends her knees over and over again and just bounces.  To any type of music...someone singing, a ringing cell phone, Anthony beatboxing, a commercial.  We don't usually allow her to play with our cell phones, but occasionally we'll hand her JP's phone and I'll call it just to see her dance.



Karlie also loves to give hugs.  Mostly to our dogs or her toys (her stuffed animals and balls mostly) but every now and then Mommy and Daddy luck out and get a Karlie-hug.


As for walking, she hasn't conquered this yet.  She's just started showing SOME interest.  A couple weeks ago if we tried to stand her up, her legs would just turn to jello.  Now she'll walk holding onto our fingers or she'll take lots of steps with her walker.  Any day though...I'm sure all I have to do is blink.



I've let blog updating slip alot but it's just because we've been busy doing things I want to post on here.  We've backsplashed our kitchen, built an outdoor room, and we're currently working on updating our bedroom (which so far includes painting our nightstands, getting rid of our bed and my dresser, and assembling a new bed from World Market).  I also have birthday party pictures to post.

Karlie - 10 Months

It's beginning to look alot like Christmas but I still have so much to be thankful for.  This year was our first Thanksgiving as a family of 3.  Karlie turned 10 months old the day before Thanksgiving.

Here she was at 2 months:


Again 5 months:


And now at 10 months:


I feel like Karlie is learning something new or doing something new every day.  She's trying to say words now. Although she sometimes doesn't say the first or last letter, she's definitely learning what certain things are and can now identify some things.

Her word list right now is:


~ book - She pronounces it "buh" but she always consistently says it whenever we hand her one of her board books or as she is crawling to get them.
~ dog - She pronounces this as "gog" but whenever one of our dogs come to her, she says it over and over again and pats their head or pulls on their ears (this mainly happens with Tex, our hound dog)
~ bye-bye - This one is a family favorite.  I can think of fewer things better than seeing her wave and shriek bye-bye.  Every now and then her timing is off.  Several times we've walked JP out to the car when he leaves for school and she won't start waving and saying "bye-bye" until the car has turned the corner.  Other times she just randomly waves and says bye-bye, usually in the buggy at the grocery store.
~ more - She's been a little more random with this one but she's said it several times while I'm making her lunch or dinner.  Always when food is close by!  We've been signing "more" with her for a while now so we think she's really catching on.

She's also doing this hilarious laugh/chuckle, especially when she's excited about something (usually food) that is guaranteed to make everyone in the room laugh.  I wish I could type something that would resemble the sound but I have no clue how.  So I guess I'll just have to try to get it on video.

Karlie - 9 Months

As of October 4, Karlie has been outside of me longer than she was inside of me.  It's weird to think that this time last year, I had only been feeling her little kicks for a couple of weeks.  Now I'm feeling her, but in different ways.  She loves to tug my hair, grab onto my arms with her tight little grip (which feels more like she's pinching me), and every now and then she uses me as a teether.  But the hugs, kisses, and little pats I get from her even everything out.



Here's the run-down since she's turned 9 months.
October 24 - 9 month birthday!
October 26 - She pulled up to standing by herself
November 1 - We began the weaning process.  Rough first few days but we made it through.
November 2 - Karlie began walking along furniture. ("cruising")
November 7 - She said "mama"
November 11 - We discovered her third tooth (which explained a short spell of food refusal and middle of the night wakings that we were confused about).  She also learned how to wave and say "bye-bye" (hopefully a video will follow soon)



Karlie is a wonderful little girl.  She naps twice a day for 2-3 hours and sleeps 10 hours at night.  I still nurse her first thing in the morning and right before bedtime.  We dropped her 2 middle-of-the-day nursings and substituted 1 bottle of formula right before her afternoon nap.  We went through 3 different types of formula before we found one that didn't make Karlie miserable.  The first two gave Karlie horrible tummy aches resulting in horrific diapers (with diaper rash) and severe vomiting.  After a very disappointing call to the lactation center, I finally spoke with a nurse at our pediatrician's office who gave me her personal advice (I think having 4 children definitely counts you as qualified) and the formula she recommended worked like a charm.  



Now that she know how to wave and say bye-bye, she knows no strangers.  While we're grocery shopping, people will slow down to smile at her and she will just grin and wave.  She's such a charmer.

She gets that from her daddy...along with those blue eyes.


Karlie - 8 months old!

 Our little Karlie-bean is 8 months old today!  Happy birthday sweet pea!

1 day old

4 months old

8 months old

My oh my, how time flies.  It seems like last week we were spending all our time on the floor, trying to teach her how to roll over.  These days, we're still on the floor, but this time we're encouraging the crawling process. 

Her 8-month birthday has proved to be a very exciting day.  Today we noticed her first tooth breaking through her poor little gums!  Once it's really coming through, I'll get a picture of it. 

She's still loving her big-girl food.  Since this list, we've added:
~ kiwi
~ cucumber
~ pluots

In an attempt to spice things up here on the blog, I'm going to start posting some DIY projects, maybe some housework progress/tips, and our new recipes that JP and I are adding to the ol' cooking notebook. 

First up, recipes for the grill, to go along with the hopefully upcoming cooler weather!

Karlie's Room

Well it only took us two and a half months after she was born to complete it, but the nursery is finished! 

Here are a couple of befores:




Here are some pictures from while we were working on it:







And here are the afters:
(I also have to brag on my mom.  She sewed the curtains, the crib skirt,
and is working on the bumber pads for the crib)