Truth in Advertising: Writing, homeschooling, and family life (on the road)
September 12, 2013 in Inspiration
I know it looks from my Facebook feed like life unfolds in one long stream of adventure around here…
…and it kinda does, I guess. Sometimes. We go a lot of neat places. We do a lot of unusual things. We’ve checked a few epic things off of the bucket list. We’re big on learning the hard way, the real way, the messy way, in person.
You should know there’s a whole lot of just “daily life” that happens for us too, on the road, or at “home” we still juggle work, school, community life, and the usual complement of wild cards thrown in. This week that included taking Ez to the local hospital for dental X-rays.
Just for fun, for those of you who are under the happy illusion that my life is postcard-esque, I thought I’d give you a quick run down of my day, today, real time, from 11:44 a.m, in my chair, right now. This is what it’s like to be me, on an absolutely average day (actually, a quiet day, because we’re not out doing anything “interesting” today.)
This is my day:
6:00 a.m. Wake up, notice that it’s not seven yet because there isn’t enough light coming in through the window. Snuggle down under the down comforter because the Bellarine Peninsula is still chilly and The Man is warm. Mentally start through the list in my head… then realize I’m wasting the quietest part of the day. I should get up and write
6:30-7:30 a.m. Write: a piece on visiting Merida for a website called Traveling With Kids, upload it, cuss over their annoying and glitchy geotagging feature, finally sort it out. Upload 9 photos, formatted specifically. One work task off the list before tea.
7:30 a.m.-8:00 a.m. Delete too many spam emails, answer four that matter
8:00-9:00 a.m.– Breakfast with the kids, tea, chatter about the morning news that people are finding through their various sources, hear the update on the friend dramas of various children, answer the same question about the boys’ SCUBA class tomorrow three separate time (to the same child). Start a load of laundry.
9:30 a.m.– Start an article for a new publisher. Get interrupted fifteen times. Most classically when Ez was quizzing me about something irrelevant to the day’s many tasks while I was simultaneously typing and answering him… I typed, “The Great Ocean Road is one of the world’s epic TOAD trips,” instead of road trips. This sent me off onto a mental rabbit trail about whether or not I could get high from licking a toad here (as I once heard) and whether or not it would be a good idea to try it out, and whether or not I could sell an article about that…. all the while I’m not writing… and Ez is giggling…. back on track… Edit Ezra’s writing piece with him. Give Elisha direction on his literature analysis paper. Discuss Piloting, Seamanship & Small Boat Handling by Chapman, with Gabe and our plans to spin that into a high school credit as an elective for him, starting now. Send Elisha into town with money for a corned beef and a two litre of milk. Listen to Ezra grumble about rewashing the plates from last night’s dishes, which he did not do effectively the first time.
10:00 a.m.-Video skype call with my 93 year old Gram, who happens to be visiting my parents, in Canada. This made me a little teary… to see here there, and be so far away. My mom’s new flooring and upholstery looks fantastic. The couch is not, in fact, purple, as my Dad reported last week. The kids showed off their hats, told stories and my Gram sat there looking like the queen of the world. I think she kinda thought it was magic. It certainly is magic for me, every single time. I love the internet. I miss my people.
10:30-11:00 a.m.– Finish the interrupted writing project. Discuss MLA format, thesis development, effective conclusions and how this particular conclusion was a cop out with Gabriel. He chuckled, knowing this fact. Hannah hollers from the other room, “Mom… thanks for telling us when things suck… it matters.” Indeed. My mother self is buoyed by this. I did not expect my teens to articulate that point any time soon. I’m a “tell you the truth” kind of mom, not a “sticky sweet” kind of mom. I’ve been known to quote the book Sh*t My Dad Says: “There’s (fill in the blank with an action… dishwashing, good writing, cleaning a toilet) and then there’s bullish*t! Guess which you’re doing!” It breaks the tension. Kids laugh. They dive back in and do a better job.
11:30 a.m.– Slam one corned beef into a pan then get interrupted by The Man who is laying face down on the kitchen floor, “Will you crack me before you get your hands dirty?” (Newsflash: they are already dirty, Sir.) Wash hands, do not succeed in cracking The Man’s back. He needs to go to a chiropractor, but has not admitted this to himself yet. Slam second corned beef into the pan. Remember that I have laundry (my bed sheets) in the washer… so I go hang them immediately before I forget. Slam third corned beef in the pan. I’m cooking for 19 tonight, did I mention that? Set them to boil. Make another pot of tea.
11:44 a.m. Sit down to write this post, thankful to Lois for sending me my favourite tea.
The remainder of my afternoon’s list includes:
- One more article to write for another editor
- Research related to our upcoming road trip
- Organizing the boys for the SCUBA classes tomorrow
- Finishing the dinner plans (roasted vegetables, a big salad and maybe some biscuits if I can pull it off!)
- My weekly Friday meeting over schooling with Gabe and Elisha (Ezra’s already had his… I forgot to write it in somewhere before 11:30 a.m.)
- Pushups. I have to put them on my to-do list or they just don’t happen. Sad but true.
- Web development. I’m building a new website. Stay tuned.
- Helping Gabe organize his plans for the boating course for the year
- At least one more pot of tea.
- Felting. Yes. This is what I really want to do with my afternoon. I’m working on Christmas presents. Shh. Don’t tell.
- Social Media work and another round of Email work somewhere around 9 o’clock tonight.
So there ya go: Truth in Advertising.
You’ve been wondering what a normal day looks like? That’s it.
So if you find typos in this piece, be gentle, I might be writing it while high on toad slime, with sticky corned beef fingers, a red pen tucked behind my ear and my Grandma on the other line.
What’s the juggling look like in your world?
Did you ever cook for 19 (!!) in the motor home in NZ?
We had corned beef last night-yummy; hope your new website is about education and how to do it! 😉
No Margaret, the most I cooked for in the camper was ten! 🙂 We took dinner over to a friend’s house tonight… not to worry, no house parties happening whilst you’re away!! 😉
Melanie… ha… no, my new website is definitely not about that. Have you checked out Uncommon Childhood? I’ve written quite a bit more about education on that one.
Holy cow, do we have parallel lives (minus three kids and a man for me)? Love getting this inside view of a day-in-the-life!
Superb corned beef it was too.
I love these kind of fly-on-the-wall posts.
My mornings look about the same.
Truth in advertising? Hahaha. All our Facebook friends see our check ins and pictures of interesting things. So I’m sure they think my life is totally awesome!!!
Truth number one: my husband works offshore and is gone for a month and then home for a month. In some ways, being “at home” in our home Rv park when he’s gone is just as nice as touring three states in a month when he’s home. We settle into our routines and I get much needed rest.
On the heels of that; truth number two: I’m in treatment for Lyme disease and I’m actually very sick. I’m getting better and better, but I’m still sick. Most people we know don’t have a clue. I stay at home if its a bad day. I don’t Facebook about the weird looks we got while in a museum because I’m young and in a wheelchair that day, because if I don’t, I’ll be walking like I’ve got Parkinson’s. those days are getting less and less, but they are still there. I don’t blog about the ineptitude of an emergency room in Alabama. All anyone knew that day was we were passing through on our way to the ozarks from Florida. We ended up not seeing memphis as we had originally planned because we had all spent a good portion of the night before in the ER.
Truth number three: my kids aren’t whatever you think they are. My daughter will plead not to have to go into yet another war museum (which we go to because the rest of us like them). My second child is currently on lockdown because he broke the same rule three times. Twice he was grounded and paroled early for good behavior. The third time, it’s hard time. No parole!!!
Three of my kids are in martial arts (two ar black belts and one will be shortly). And yes, they fight. Even though they are taught “self control and discipline”, at the end of the day, they are brothers.
No, my kids don’t love every subject they take. But that’s part of life. Doing things you don’t want to do. Homeschooling doesn’t magically make every subject fun.
And driving to all these wonderful places with four kids close in age is no fun either. We manage better than most because we travel and know how to keep everyone on a somewhat even keel. But we all have that one day that is pure hell. Last trip was back home from the Ozarks. 10 hours plus stops. It is what it is.
So there’s my little dirty secrets! Hahaha. We are just human. We choose to live how we do and don’t regret it. We also don’t judge people who never venture more than twenty miles from home. we take responsibility for our lives and what we do with the precious time we have. IE, when I got bit by a tick, I was teaching survival skills to kids and directing a community garden (either place it could’ve happened) and I was doing exactly what I wanted to be doing. It sucks getting sick at 30, but I don’t regret living my life instead of being afraid and never leaving my house. For every hard thing that comes our way, we learn and grow and become better than we were.
Wow! April… I had no idea… ((HUGS)) Lyme is nasty. I have several friends who’ve really, really suffered with it. I’m glad you’re getting the upper hand! Thanks for your candid replies! I do think it helps people to get to see the “inside” sometimes.
I am fairly sure you and I live in a different time continuum. And based on many of the comments / replies I get, my life looks like I am always on vacation.