Apr 7, 2009 | He Said, Overheard
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In Step
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Me: “You know, I don’t think our bedroom is all that girly.”
IZ: “Uh huh. . .”
Me: “In fact, I’d say it’s the most masculine it’s ever been.”
IZ: “Could be.”
Me: “You really are the King of Noncommittal language!”
IZ: “Perhaps.”
Me: “You think?”
IZ: . . .Â
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Seriously, folks, his spidey-sense is telling him this conversation is a trap. Â
Apr 6, 2009 | This Life

It’s been since September since we’ve been able to throw open windows and sleep in fresh air. It won’t last long, this much I know. Rain is always on the horizon. But for the moment, I’m enjoying open windows and fresh air and the smell of a room baked in sunlight.
I thought I’d take a few moments this afternoon to give you a peek into our “progress.”  I’ve been finishing the decor details this spring while I wait for the weather to warm up enough to tackle the tedious work of painting the trim. It’s slow work because I’m only adding things as I find them. We did invest in a few vintage Japanese side tables for the space. However, other than a new mattress and duvet cover, everything else is vintage or thrifted or used in some fashion. And finding those items doesn’t happen quickly.

  
We started redoing our bedroom 2 summers ago and after that initial rush, we seemed to stall out. We ran out of good weather to finish the paint job–then vacations came. Followed by hurricane force winds that meant a new roof. Before we knew it a year had passed and then commitments the following summer kept our attentions elsewhere. It seems to be the way we function here at Chez Wonder; everything is a work in progress. Old houses are fantastic for their intrinsic details. Until you have to paint those details. Is it any wonder that we find other things to keep us occupied? Â

  
However, I am determined to “finish” this space (is any space really ever done?) before the 2 year mark. I constantly form new methods to manage the madness.
“IZ, if we just painted one side of the room a day, we could knock this thing out in an a week.”
“IZ, you know, maybe when it warms up enough to paint, we should just set aside a few hours each afternoon. Start at say, 4 pm and paint until 5. Whatever we get done, we get done.”
“IZ, I’m convinced if we just start somewhere and do it little pieces at a time we’ll keep going. Momentum and all. That could work, right?”

  
I suspect IZ is tired of hearing sentences start with his name. It’s typically a good clue that I have plans which involve work for him. His response to this nagging persistence is to “Um hum” me. But trust me, dear friends, that only fuels my fire. He figures, if he’s noncommittal about it, that technically he hasn’t agreed to doing anything.  Ever the optimist, he’s hoping I’ll get distracted and forget.  You’d think he’d know, after living with me for all these many years, that’s it’s only a matter of time.
Note on paint: Per Keri’s request.  Pratt and Lambert: Apothecary Shop Blue Medium Light for the bed. The walls are Galt Dining Room Blue, but backed out at least 50%. (lighter). They are part of the Williamsburg collection. ~W
Note on linens: Per Tricia’s request. Duvet (‘Chinoiserie’Â Pottery Barn 2007), Quilt (‘Porcelain Blue’ Pottery Barn 2005) Floral Muslin Pillowcases (Vintage), Crochet Lace edged cotton sheet (Vintage), Sea Green Sham (Thrifted)Â
Apr 5, 2009 | Sunday Sermon

Boundary keeping can be beautiful.Â
Apr 4, 2009 | In Photos

IZ walking at Willapa Bay
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The sun came out today. Warm, golden, life-sustaining. We did what all solar powered people do—we went for a walk. We now find ourselves with batteries fully recharged and imaginations fully engaged. Spring is two weeks late, but she has finally arrived in this wind-battered world of grey. Â
Better late than never.Â
Apr 1, 2009 | Best of Etsy

You Told Me — Michele Maule
Hi there! It’s April Fool’s Day and do I have a surprise for you. It’s no joke: this week’s The Best of Etsy list is being featured on Indie Fixx! Â It’s a supersized list, crammed packed with my choices for your wall. Yes, you heard me. Your wall emailed me last week and complained about the poster print of the Eiffel Tower you have framed in plastic that she’s been “wearing” since 1995. It’s time for a new look! So, head over to Indie Fixx and take a peek. I’m betting you find something your wall will adore.Â
For those of you who are regular Evidently readers, I should be back later today with a new post. Assuming, of course, that I do not drown in this torrential rain. Now, I need to go find my Water Wings before I head out to the grocery store.Â
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Mar 29, 2009 | In Photos

Mar 27, 2009 | Boy Wonder, In Photos

Mar 25, 2009 | Best of Etsy

Sulu earrings. Susan truly is one of The Best of Etsy!Â
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Spring has arrived. Now, somebody tell the weather! This constant grey and rain has driven my motivation to Boca Raton. She left two weeks ago and I hear she’s having a grand old time sipping sweet things on a beach somewhere. Â I wish she would come home, because the laundry is piling up!
I know, I know, I’m always whinging about the weather. Shall we get on with it? I have a great list today–No theme, just a selection of really amazing Etsy finds I think you should see. So, here we go:
The Best of Etsy: The List Where Wende Stops Whining About the Weather for 15 Minutes.Â
First up, these make my heart weep in that really nice way. And then I start searching for babies to spoil. Oh my.Â
Tortillagirl rocks my world. And this bag will rock yours. Yes it will. Don’t argue, click!Â
$10 and free shipping. Worldwide! What are you waiting for? What am I waiting for?Â
Ok, so I know I said I wouldn’t talk about the weather in this list. So I won’t. But if the ___________ is too cold in your part of the world to wear your new Spring Dress. . . then pair it with this. See, I can do this!Â
I don’t  feature enough stuff for men, do I? This is super cool and on sale. I like a sale, don’t you?Â
Pssst. You. Yeah, you with the 8.5 size foot. Red Wedges. Vintage. I know, that never happens!Â
Tulips and lattes. I think it might just be a match made in heaven. Go see!Â
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Wow, and I have so much more to show you! However, you’re going to have to wait until next week to see it! Apparently, some of you are in full possession of your motivation and are making amazing things for spring! Speaking of next week—do I have a surprise for you. It’s going to be a super-sized list and . . . I can’t tell you the rest. But it’s really good!Â
Until then, enjoy the beginning of this new season.
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Mar 23, 2009 | This Life, Thrifty Goodness

In February of 2002, Iz and I moved onto a Seminary campus with our 5 year old son. It was a move made out of necessity and when I’m honest about it, out of desperation. Iz had no job and prospects in his field dissipated after 9/11.  He went from having three promising opportunities with interviews scheduled  on the 10th to being told the jobs just didn’t exist any more. We were bleeding money and our reserves were gone and we were beginning to question how we could stay together.
So, when the Vice President of Admissions personally called to ask if I’d consider her school, I wasn’t in a position to say no. It was actually cheaper for us to go to graduate school in Marin than to stay in our expensive apartment in Dublin. A point she was keen to make. And did she. I’d toured the campus the previous spring so I had some sense of the housing situation. I just had no idea when I agreed to apply that I was going to sink my tiny family into a hell hole.Â
You know that old addage, “Beggars can’t be choosers”? Well, that was us the winter of 2002.  We sold off what we could live without (we’re still replacing our entire music collection) and packed the remainder into storage. We said goodbye to our beloved cat (no cats allowed!) and our friends. We were being given the golden opportunity to live in 400 square feet—two rooms and a bath. As  beggars, we were supposed to be darn happy for the chance.Â
Part of me was relieved. Seminary, and this pit of an apartment, gave our family a chance to stay together. It was a well known fact that the Seminary would let you build up debt without calling it in. You could live “rent free” until you could pay it off. We had no intention of abusing that system (nor did we!) but the rents alone made sense for us to take the offer.  We were on the brink of financial ruin and we’d already contacted friends who could house us separately if need be. IZ would find work–the boy and I would wait it out with his god-mother in Arizona. To this day, I weep at the thought of it. Â
But part of me was devastated. We were moving into a filthy apartment that had no real kitchen! The “sink” was an RV sized thing that backed up when our upstairs neighbors decided to mop their floors. The oven was so tiny, I bought a kid’s play baking sheet so I could make scones and cookies–baked six at a time!  The non-working refrigerator still had a half gallon of rancid milk and the shelves had 3″ of grease build-up on the top of them that smelled faintly of curry mixed with chlorox. I don’t even want to discuss what was growing in the bathroom. And have you ever had to teach a bath loving 5 year old to take a shower? It’s a sad, sad affair, my friends. Wet and sad.  I’d never lived in such a dump and I was ashamed. When my child handed me a used razor blade he found on the floor and said, “Mom, this place is a pit.” I lost it. I sat down on the floor and openly wept. Â
Two months prior a dear friend sent me a care-package filled with goodies from L’Occitane. She seemed to sense that my nerves were fraying and I could use some pampering. At the time I didn’t appreciate it. My mind was on making rent not buying expensive soap. As I surveyed the contents I couldn’t help but wonder, “What do I need with linen water?” Seriously? She sent me linen spray?
Who uses linen spray? I don’t iron my sheets. Heck, they’re rarely even folded—instead, fetched just in time from the dryer to make their appearance on my bed. “What, sweetie? You were going to bed? Oh yeah, I left the sheets in the dryer, just a sec. . . ” Â I had no idea that linen spray would be my sanity in the coming months.Â
It didn’t take me long, looking at rotting milk and left over trash, to get angry. And when I get angry, I clean. So I did the only thing I knew how to do—I began to make that pit our home. Â
We’d decided that our child still needed a bedroom, so I deep cleaned that space for him. We set up his bed and unpacked his toys.  I lined shelves and scrubbed cupboards. We managed to move the dead refrigerator onto the “deck” and put our own in its place. I was so peeved I left the milk in it. Maintenance would eventually arrive to cart it off along with the rest of the trash left by the previous tenant.  IZ and I set up desks along one side of the front room. The other side had a tiny dining table and our futon/bed. I mounded our feather bed on top of the lumpy futon, made the bed with fresh sheets sprayed with the L’Occitane linen water that finally made sense. We fell into bed that first night with the knowledge we were together. It was 400 square feet of grime and misery. But our tiny child slept in his own room and we held hands in the night breathing in clean sheets.Â
For six months linen water would be my sanity. I would get up each morning, spray my sheets with this ridiculously expensive linen water and then head off to classes and work. It was such a small reminder that my life was not without some luxuries. And each night, I would fall exhausted into bed but transported to another place. On the scent of linen spray, I escaped the pressure of balancing a job 50 miles away, a child not coping with change, a husband overwhelmed with making this work, and the never ending pages waiting to be read. Linen spray, misted on sheets was an embodiment of a simple truth: we were all still together. And together, we were going to be OK.Â
That bottle of linen spray is long gone, accidently poured down the sink by a well meaning person during the next move. I no longer need it–but I still love using it. L’Occitane has long since discontinued the product—so, I make my own. Â I thought I’d tell you how beneath the fold. Because, you just never know when you might need a reminder that your life is not without some luxuries.Â
And take it from me: life seems better when you’re sleeping in sweet smelling sheets.
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Mar 22, 2009 | Sunday Sermon

I believe in left-overs.Â