Friday, December 23, 2011

Men and their Televisions


Men are so funny! I love my husband and the things I’ve learned about him in the four years we’ve been together (2 and a half as man and wife living in the same house) and I really enjoy sharing with you. I hope you find this as humorous as I did. 

My husband thinks that the TV (and anything attached to it) is his exclusively and that it’s only by his good grace that I get to use it. He’s never actually stated this but I’ve been noticing it all the more this holiday break. 

He plays his video games and watches things like “Top Shot,” and while I don’t really enjoy these activities they give him time in his “nothing box,” which I’ve heard guys need. All of this is fine with me as long as when I say “can we please watch something that we BOTH enjoy?” he is willing to change things up. 

We enjoy a good number of television programs together. We’ve got our schedule of shows to watch and I don’t usually veer too far off of our traditional path but earlier today, I stumbled upon a shocking revelation that actually made perfect sense.

I was wrapping a present (as I’m apt to do at Christmastime) and all of a sudden, Mr. V’s voice pierced my inner monologue.

“What are you doing saving all this stuff?”

“What are you talking about?” I asked?

“Love Actually, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, what is this stuff?”

“Stuff I want to watch later. I wanted to save A Christmas Carol, too, but it interfered with Gold Rush so I cancelled it.”

“YOU CANCELLED 'GOLD RUSH'?!?” he loudly exclaimed.

“No, I decided to cancel A Christmas Carol. I saved Gold Rush for you.”

“Oh, good! I was going to be upset!”

“Um, I’m going to need you to remember that the DVR is OURS and that I can save stuff, too.”

At this point, he relaxed and smiled. “You’re right,” he said. 

Phew! 

I tell you this with a sheepish grin on my face because as I went throughout my day, I realized that I’m pretty much the same way with the kitchen but that’s another blog for another day. I hope you’re enjoying some down time with your family. I’m loving mine!

Merry Christmas!

Mrs. V

Monday, December 19, 2011

Happy Holidays - Curiousity is a gift best left on the store shelf

Dear friends and readers,

Christmas is upon us and in just a few short hours or days, we will be surrounded by loved ones whom we haven't seen since last week, month, or year. For those of us who are married, it is already a fantastic juggling act with hoops set ablaze that we must jump through as we navigate the delicate waters of spending time with our families (all of them) and our friends without excluding or alienating any of them. It's as exhausting as it is joyous (and for some, all the more).

But it's also a time of trepidation for those of us who are childless. Friends, I cannot tell you how many people, on a nearly daily basis, ask me when Mr. V and I are planning on having children. For most people, "not yet" is sufficient. For my students, it is often a jumping off point for more commentary on how they'd like to see me with a baby bump before they graduate or how they'd like me to wait another year so that they aren't in my class anymore because pregnant women are moody (ironic that hormonal teenagers complain about moodiness, isn't it?) and they're absent for doctor's appointments and that means substitutes. They really don't like substitutes.

At Thanksgiving, I was asked by no fewer than 5 different people (relatives and friends) if we're planning for any additions. This is after I had two dear friends confess their heartache - they'd both suffered miscarriages earlier this year. Talk about a tear jerker! It was so hard to hear them tell their tales because my heart aches for them and for the friend who is childless, not by choice, but because she and her husband are struggling to conceive.

It also brought up some words from early Autumn which stung me as they were uttered one by one. A girl, a total stranger, asked me (in front of my mother-in-law, no less) if we were planning on Baby V anytime soon. When I said, "no, we're not," she asked me "Oh, are you still young?"  I laughed off her rude question but I felt those words all the more as I approached my birthday this year and every time I got on the scale since then. See, I'm underweight and that, in addition to each passing year, makes it more difficult to conceive.

I KNOW that my friends who are having trouble conceiving or have had trouble carrying to term don't need the question either. Our reproductive health is the business of  the woman and her husband. I don't really care how many of you want to babysit, to pinch little cheeks, to have grandchildren.  If you're not married to the woman in question, then it simply isn't any of your business. You are hurting more than you're helping, even though you may have had no intention of causing harm.

Please consider sparing a woman of this particular pain this Christmas. Let her enjoy the moments she has away from wondering if she'll ever have a baby of her own. For a woman who wants kids, the sight of children opening toys on Christmas day is enough of a reminder of her ticking biological clock.

Thank you for understanding!

Mrs. V

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Days 21-30

I know it looks like I abandoned my 30 Days of Thanks but I assure you that is not the case. Because we were traveling to Louisiana for Thanksgiving and a Wedding, I didn't have the opportunity to get onto my blog and post. I decided that finishing up on Facebook was the way to go. If I have time, I will post the last 10 days below. If not, know that I was thankful throughout, always found a reason to smile even in the midst of frustrations, and that I've continued on with a different sort of daily post because I decided that the positivity couldn't end at the close of November. I'm leaving 2011 better than I found it and hoping to inspire others to be a blessing to those around them, known or unknown.

Mrs. V

Sunday, November 20, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 20

I am so thankful for church potlucks, church family, and a short work week ahead!

Today's food was delicious and I have some pumpkin cheesecake in the fridge that I'm dying to try - after dinner tonight!

I am thankful for friends who are coming into town this week, friends who are mine because of my husband. I can't wait to catch up and relax!

Mrs. V

Saturday, November 19, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 19

I am so thankful to my friend, Mrs. B, for introducing me to Settlers of Catan so many years ago when I was visiting her in California. Because of that introduction, I could confidently play with my husband and his high school friends, with mutual friends we have through work, and with new friends from church.

Though I didn't win tonight, I did have a great time playing with Mr. and Mrs. K. They are a couple of fun people! And to top off a wonderful evening of Catan, Mrs. K gave me the option of having hot chocolate with little gingerbread marshmallow men. Yum! I have to admit, though, that I felt a little cannibalistic eating those men after drowning them in my beverage. Oh, well!

Great game + great friends = great night

And it was all made possible by Mrs. B and her Cali gal pals making the introduction. Just awesome. Thank you!

Mrs. V

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 18

Today, I am thankful for a husband who will put his jeans back on (slow down, he was wearing sweat pants) and take me to the grocery store! Normally that doesn't happen. At all. The grocery store is not somewhere he wants to be. On a Friday night. With no discernible plan as to what we're buying. It was fun!

I'm also thankful for naps after a long and frustrating week at work. It was incredible!

Happy weekend!

Mrs. V

Thursday, November 17, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 17

I am thankful for hot showers, early bedtimes, and a day to wear jeans while teaching teens about something that they've done before!

Showers are so relaxing and early bedtimes make me a happier person the next day. Jeans are comforting and a signal that the weekend is so very near. Teaching teenagers, while challenging in itself, is also more challenging when the students have never ever done the activity before. Literary analysis and interpretive response papers have cluttered my desk the past six weeks but now we are moving into familiar territory - poetry!

I had a significant dip in my grades this last six weeks and last night, at report card pick up, I finally realized why. The kids haven't done any of what I was requiring of them (by the way, the state and my district require me to require these assignments) ever before. No wonder they struggled so much! No wonder my headaches were throbbing on and off all day every day. Oh, glorious realization!

I expect that grades will pick up this third grading period. Yes, it is shorter. Yes, they've been benchmarked to death (with one final nail in the coffin yet to come), and yes, we were all at each others' throats with frustration BUT WE CAN DO POETRY!!! WE WILL ENJOY OUR LAST GRADING PERIOD OF THE SEMESTER!!!

Can't wait to get to class!

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 16

I am so thankful for fun friends and their laughter! Tonight, between school and report card pick up night, Mr. V and I went out to dinner with our friend, Mrs. K. It was a riot to laugh with Mrs. K again - it has been a while!

I'm also thankful for an opportunity to go to bed early tonight. I am contemplating skipping my favorite show in favor of an early bedtime. Since I may have to do this, please, no spoilers on FB about Revenge! I will be watching it Thursday when I get home and again over the weekend to make sure I didn't miss anything. That's right. I have found my inner Mrs. B and I now rewatch a show. She used to do this in college with Smallville. I finally understand. Of course, she loves Revenge now, too. Another thing to be thankful for - something to share with a friend!

Mrs. V

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 15

I am thankful for a roof over my head, a snuggie to warm me up, and a couch to sit on while I try to relax after a long day. True, I didn't have to really teach today because my students were taking a benchmark but goodness did the kiddos have a hard time with the writing prompt and gracious me, I had a hard time helping them understand it. I'm not even sure that I understand it! Plus, it is really difficult to watch people take a test all day. It's about as exciting as watching the grass grow. In the wintertime. During a drought.

BUT I get to come home and relax and unwind a bit tonight and that is definitely something to appreciate deeply.

Mrs. V

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 14

I know that I'm late with this again BUT yesterday was my actual birthday! I am so thankful for the sweet people who said "Happy Birthday," posted it on my wall, or emailed it to me at work or at home. What wonderful people.

My BIG thankful thing, though, is my students in my B3 class. All of the last two weeks, the kids have been talking about what they were planning to do for my birthday. Imagine my disappointment when my student, who has been talking about making a cookie cake for the class to celebrate, tells me Monday morning that since she knew that Mr. V had bought me one for my birthday party, she decided I didn't need another one. But I was so looking forward to celebrating with my kids!

Well, B3 had been asking me for my favorite color and favorite cookie and all sorts of other favorites in the weeks leading up to my birthday. On November 14th, however, it came to nothing. "We forgot. Sorry!" they said. Now, imagine my utter surprise when I open my door after lunch to find a camera in my face, another flashing behind it, and a big balloon marking the spot where many, many cookies lay! They spelled out "Happy 21st Birthday Mrs. V" and had cookies to represent peace, love, an ampersand, and happiness (that was a smiley face cookie). What incredibly sweet kids!

I am so blessed to have really great kids in my classes this year. Last year was a bit rough but this year I feel more appreciated by my students and LOVE that they show their appreciation in spite of the way I'm challenging them this year.

What an honor to serve these kids!

Sunday, November 13, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 13

As I sit here, reluctantly thinking about the poetry unit my students are about to start, I can't help but reflect upon the last year of my life.

I think that a lot of changes have been happening in me this past year, a lot of stirrings. I have experienced a world of growth as a person this year. I have learned how to better resolve conflicts, to value my friendships and my free time more, and to just let things go.

I think about this tonight because in a few hours I will officially be a year older than I am right now. I reflect upon the passing of time and how changed we all are with each year that goes by. I am constantly learning new things and really have come to appreciate being a constant work in progress. Yes, it is tiring and yes, it can be frustrating. But it keeps me going and fighting and living.

I am immensely thankful that God has chosen to give me another year of this crazy, amazing life. We are not promised tomorrow so live for today and be thankful that He has given you another one. Embrace the challenges and celebrate the moments that make you laugh or cry. This is what life is. Isn't it amazing?

Mrs. V

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 12 (the day after)

This is a day late because, well, my birthday party was last night and I spent all day getting ready. From cutting up fruit to serve later to a mani/pedi to a delightful haircut to the actual party, I had a wonderful (but busy) day. I love that my brother and my in-laws were able to come (bummed that my nephew was sad he wasn't invited) along with friends from so many different aspects of my life, past and present. I love my birthday parties because it is the one time during the year when I get to see all of my friends at the same time.

That said, what a blessing to have so many friends and family who love me and care about me so much that they would take time out of their busy schedules (and in some cases, travel an hour or more) to celebrate with me! I am so thankful that God has given me these people. What a great life to live!

I am also thankful for people who are supportive of my creative efforts and encourage me when I need it. It is truly an amazing thing to see. I love you guys!

I'll be posting again later in the day. It just wouldn't be 30 days of thanks without a post for the 12th - my birthday (which is really Monday) always gets in the way of these posts. So. . . I'm thankful that you, reader, are a forgiving person :)

Love,

Mrs. V

Friday, November 11, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 11

Today, I am thankful for my great grandfather's service in World War I, my grandfathers' service in World War I, my uncle's service in Vietnam, and my brother's service in Iraq and beyond. I am thankful for my in-laws who served.  I am thankful that God kept them safe while they were abroad and brought them home again. I'm also thankful for the families who sacrifice time with their military men and women. I know how hard it is to see an empty seat at the table this time of year, wonder where they are, and pray for their safety.

Happy Veteran's Day!

Mrs. V

Thursday, November 10, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 10

Today, I am thankful for my friend and neighbor, Mr. M. He is an audophile of the first degree. He will be helping me with a music project for this weekend and I am over the moon thrilled about it. Also, he and I have been working together as long as we've been teaching  - and closely, at that. We can share our frustrations with each other and strategically plan together.

He also came over a few days ago to help out with some of the odd jobs that I need help with since Mr. V is slightly out of commission. Just an all around great guy.

I'm so appreciative of all of my friends, not just Mr. M. You're all wonderfully diverse pieces of a beautiful quilt that keeps me warm on cold, dark days.

Mrs. V

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 9

Today, I am thankful for my PULSE kids. They are just truly joys to be around. Tonight's fundraiser was a hilarious evening well spent. I don't know if we made much money, but we did bank on laughs!

I'm also thankful for my students being amazing this year. There are still those kids you wonder about but on the whole, I have wonderful kiddos who are just completely decent human beings. It's really and truly a blessing not to be taken for granted.

Enjoy the end of your week! It's coming at you faster than you know.

Mrs. V

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 8

Today I am thankful for my brother. He and I have clearly grown up together and, though we have differing opinions on many topics and have approached life in different ways, we are cut from the same cloth and have similar values. He cares about me and, because he loves me, he loves my husband, too. He has been so incredible to call my husband before his surgery to wish him luck, get jokingly irritated when I neglected to update him post-surgery, and called tonight to ask Mr. V how he was doing. What a guy! I am truly blessed to have him in my life.

I'm also thankful for my grandmother's house getting sold. It has taken so much pressure off of me, my husband, my brother, and especially my father. Dad jokes around more now, the way he used to before so many things became a burden to him. He is still burdened (aren't we all) but this is one less for him. I am so thankful for the change I've seen in him since the sale.

Monday, November 7, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 7

Today I am thankful for. . . RUBRICS!

This may sound silly (okay, I know it sounds silly), but I am thrilled to have rubrics to help me grade the papers that my students turn in. It is a difficult thing, grading students' papers, and I never thought it would be so difficult. They are just so subjective! However, rubrics keep me consistent, evaluating the same criteria for each paper. It makes my job much, MUCH faster.

I am also thankful that God blessed me with such a sweet husband who is willing to celebrate birthday week! Today, he surprised me with breakfast in the morning and a trip to get pretzels at Auntie Anne's after school. I almost ruined that surprise by trying to hitch a ride home with a neighbor/coworker/friend who was leaving earlier than Mr. V had planned. Guess it's a good thing that Mr. M had a meeting come up and  he was ready to leave after Mr. V had finished his extra credit day.

It's shaping up to be a pretty special week! I love November!

Sunday, November 6, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 6

Today, I am thankful for my new church family. They are truly just wonderful people. After a long search, I finally feel as though we are among people who love the Lord and want to live in true community with each other. With our hectic, crazy lives (not saying yours isn't, but I know for sure mine is), it can be hard to find time for people and I know I've felt a little lonely since moving out to "the country."

Today at church, they were excited when we came through the door! We've missed a few times since Mr. V's injury and surgery so it is nice to know we were missed, too. After the lesson was over, one of the women from our Growth Group (which we've missed since school started) came over to talk and ask how Mr. V is doing post-surgery. She even apologized for not swinging by to see us when he was in Week 1 of Recovery (apology not necessary). So sweet!

I am so thankful that the Lord has led us here!

And a secondary thanks, I have to say, is for Dawn's Power Clean. I never saw an advertisement for this but goodness gracious, it does an amazing job unsticking stuck on stuff. There is minimal scrubbing involved! This has made my life post-op (for Mr. V) a lot more palatable because it cuts in half the time it takes to do the dishes (normally Mr. V's chore). Love it! So thankful for it!

It's the little things (haven't I said that before?), people! Keep looking for them!

Mrs. V

Saturday, November 5, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 5

Today, I am thankful for my husband's recovery process. It is hard on him to not be able to bend over or run or lift things. It's not easy on me to have to pick up the napkin that fell off his lap at lunch, lift the logs into and out of the cart and into and out of the car, or do both ends of the laundry and the cooking (he folds and has dish duty normally). It isn't easy picking up the extra slack in my household when I have two stacks of essays to grade and make up work to check. But this week, he is able to drive short distances. I may let him drive to work this week (he seems pretty determined even though it's technically 5 minutes outside of his drive range). He is still off of house and yard work duty, but he ran all sorts of errands with me today - Hobby Lobby, Tuesday Morning, Party City, Target, and lunch at Pei Wei. He even went into Home Depot solo to get something light.

I can't wait for him to pick up his end of the chores again, for him to check the pizza to see if it is done correctly, and to get out of bed without groaning. But for now, I'm so thankful that the surgery was successful and that he is progressing toward a full recovery!

Mrs. V

Friday, November 4, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 4

Today, I am thankful that I have been fortunate enough to be at the right place at the right time.

Tonight, I went to the football game. It was the last game and I wanted to see my kids play/perform. Plus, I needed to keep an eye on Mr. V. He likes to push his limits - always has, always will - in spite of the fact that he just had back surgery a week ago.

During half-time, toward the very end, a student comes running up to me to let me know that a classmate is really upset but she has been told to go away. My students are my babies so I ran up the steps, through the stands, down the steps, and, upon seeing the kiddo in question, called out to her. When she turned, she didn't look like herself at all. Part of it was the braids she had in her hair for the football game but the other part of it was something wild. I gave her a big hug, because she had been crying and sometimes, you just need a hug. I reassured her that she's a junior and she'll perform again. That's when she told me that her bus had been slow and she had to take another one. That one took her to the school. But we weren't at the school. We were at the football stadium five-to-seven minutes away by car. She had walked all the way. I'm sorry, did I say walked? I meant run. She ran from the school to the stadium. It took her 45 minutes to an hour to get to us. And she had forgotten her coat.

And she hadn't had anything to eat since breakfast. Thankfully, the drill team sponsor came up and found us and offered to buy her food. She refused it, feeling a little ill.  Everything so far worked out but I am so thankful that I could be there to give her the comforting hug that she needed at that moment. She clung on tight enough that I knew she has meant it these weeks I've known her when she has said that I'm like a parent to her.

I cannot tell you how often a kid at my school needs a parent to be there for them but doesn't have one who fits their needs (at that moment or at all). Being a teen is incredibly rough and some of my students have it hard. It is amazing the number of broken hearts God has sent my way this year. I am so thankful that he has chosen me to be His instrument, mending, comforting, encouraging. And I'm thankful that He gave me favor with the football people tonight because I'd otherwise have run off to Starbucks to do a bit of grading and I'd have missed out on being there for Miss T.

Keep on finding reasons to be thankful! It's only November 4th - we have miles to go before we sleep.

Mrs. V

Thursday, November 3, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 3

Oh, the things that I could say today! It has definitely been a long one. A really, really long one. But I am still here and I think it may be an early night for me. Once I finally eat my delicious tacos, that is.

Today, I am thankful that I have a job. Sometimes it frustrates me and sometimes the days are incredibly stressful but I have a job to go to and coworkers that are supportive and  understanding. That is not the case everywhere. I've experienced various work environments and know how bad things can get. Even on the days when I'd like to pull my hair out, I know I can look outside of my classroom and find someone who will make me smile.

It may be small, but it's incredibly important and I am so very thankful for the work that I am able to do, the people I work with, and the goals I work for.

Mrs. V

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 2

Today, I am thankful for:

The pasta dishes that Mr. and Mrs. K brought us - delicious! - and the brownies. Oh, wow, the brownies!

The advice that Mrs. K, studying to be a physical therapist, gave to Mr. V about getting out of bed without bending, lifting, or twisting. We're going to have to try that tomorrow! She also told Mr. V that his meds were making him feel better than he actually is and he really should take it slow. I'm so incredibly thankful that she said that because it's exactly what I've been trying to tell him to little effect!

I'm thankful for Mr. M who came by to lift a very heavy (to me) old lawn mower out of my car and ended up able to help me carry in the new fire pit that arrived on our doorstep today, one day ahead of schedule. And I'm thankful for Mrs. M who lent me her husband for some heavy lifting work.

I'm thankful that Mr. and Mrs. R came by a day early to drop off dinner for tomorrow night. After two pasta dishes in a row, I had secretly been craving tacos. Imagine my surprise when they actually brought in all of the fixings for tacos! Amazing!

I'm thankful for (and excited about) the cold front that we're about to experience. And because the cold is coming, I'm thankful for Mr. R, plumber extraodinaire, fixing our fireplace so we have a nice, warm fire when it is chilly.

I'm thankful for my friend, Miss H, who is celebrating a birthday today. May it not be the last one you can enjoy, in spite of what some may say. I fully intend to celebrate and enjoy each year of my life because we never know when it may be our last. I wish for all of my friends to worry less about the number of years in our lives and be more concerned with the life in our years.

Happy November!

Mrs. V

30 Days of Thanks 2011 - Day 1

It has been a couple of years since I first posted my 30 days of Thanks in honor of Thanksgiving. I have decided (albeit a bit late tonight) to go ahead with the project once more as I have tons to be thankful for.

For those of you who read my blog, my facebook, or just my face, you know that lately things have been a bit topsy turvy at the House of V. We're recovering from back surgery. Well, Mr. V is recovery from back surgery. I'm recovering from him having surgery AND trying to recover from his recovery (to be completed, I'm sure, within days of his completed recovery - and a spa treatment or two).

After Mr. V's surgery, he slept a little, ate a lot, and then lost his lunch. Well, dinner. He had just taken his pain pills and wanted to know if he could take more. I hadn't realized just how frazzled I was until I called Mr. T so I could talk to his wife, Dr. T. Dr. T had an early shift at the hospital the next morning but I didn't know it when I called. Mr. T handed the phone to his wife and I explained the situation. She broke the news to me - he would have to wait a bit longer, just until his next appropriate dose, to take his pain pills again to avoid the risk of overdose. She then handed the phone back to Mr. T and (I hope) went right back to sleep.

Having woken her up made me really upset. I felt awful for having woken her up on a Friday night to ask her about pain pills. I got choked up. Mr. T assured me it was fine, no worries on their end, but still I couldn't pull myself together. I hung up and sobbed softly. Which Mr. V found ridiculous. As did Dr. T (though she'd NEVER IN A MILLION YEARS SAY SO BECAUSE SHE IS AMAZINGLY SWEET) when she called to check up on the patient the next day.

So on Sunday, when a new church friend, Mrs. P, asked me if she could do anything, the only thing that has been in my head was "dinners." I told her dinners would be amazing when we went back to work because a) Mr. V isn't supposed to be at work yet but he is anyway; b) I am so far behind at work due to doctors' appointments and the surgery/recovery that it isn't even funny how much I have to catch up on; and c) Mr. V and I make up a team - I cook, he cleans. But he's relieved from household chore duty until further notice and I can't catch up and cook and clean. After tomorrow, I'm out of work clothes and I have to add laundry to my list of things to do. It just keeps piling on.

And it is so incredibly hard for me to ask for help when I need it. I have a stubborn pride that keeps me from reaching out for help even though I yearn to help others.

All this to say that I am so thankful for Mr. V's surgery going so well that he's regaining the ability to walk comfortably (not normally) bit by bit. I'm incredibly thankful that I have such a great friend in Mr. T and that he married an amazing, good hearted woman who has her MD and is used to calls in the middle of the night. And I'm so in awe of the servant hearts that are coming to take care of us this week. What abundant blessings I have!

Take care!

Mrs. V

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Laughter - it's not always the best medicine

Everybody loves to laugh, right? Not if you're Mr. V these days. Almost two weeks ago, he was playing Ultimate Frisbee with some of the high school kiddos he teaches and when he finally slowed down, he realized his back was hurting. By the time he got home, he was huffing and puffing just trying to walk around. Sitting down helped. He needed to get into the shower and get back up to the school for a parent meeting. I asked two friends who would be up there to help out and sent him with a pillow for his back. Or bottom. Whichever one would help him more.

When he got home from that meeting, he could barely stand up to get through the door. He tried to sit on the couch but that no longer helped. He hoped to recline but that didn't help, either. So he tried to find a position on the floor that would feel better. He couldn't lay in one place for longer than about 10 seconds (if even) before he shifted to try something else. I couldn't watch it so I called CareNow and started getting things together so we could go.

We went to CareNow and got in almost immediately. I should mention that at this point, Mr. V was on crutches. And I was considering a wheel chair. After ambling down the hallway, we got into the room, and after the nurses asked a few questions, the doc came in and said he wanted to do an X-ray. We already knew he'd want this. We also already knew it wouldn't do anything - which is what Mr. V told the doc. But he also told the doc if he thought that's what we needed to do, that's what we'd do. Upon returning from his X-ray, he lay back down and I tried to talk to him a little.

This was a mistake.

He told me, "Stop being so adorable," through a chuckle.

"How am I being adorable? I'm asking you a question!" My reply just brought on more laughing. And wincing. Turns out, laughter brings pain. I tried my best to stay silent because I had no idea what would make him laugh next and I can't stand to see him in pain.

The next day, Mr. V stayed home and called 20+ spine specialists. You see, Mr. V has had this pain before. And it was just the same. They tried physical therapy, chiropractic services, "wait and see," and steroid shots. They tried it all for a year and a half. None of it worked. Well, the steroid shots worked for about a week and then he was back to square one. I think that counts as "not working." He didn't want to go through it again. You know what happened when he called all of the doctors? The same thing. No one could see him until November. NOVEMBER! This was October 19th for crying out loud! November was just too far away.

His sister-in-law had a great idea, though. She works for a group in Southlake that specializes in spine care. "Spine" is in their name. We got an appointment for the following Monday. The doctor was really nice and they treated us really well when we went but they were certain that surgery wouldn't be necessary. We were set up for a nerve test because his right leg was numb. Driving home, we talked about our options. We had a card for a surgeon that came recommended by our sis-in-law. The plan was to call him after the nerve test, as recommended by the doctor we had just seen. But we were also going to let my dad still try to get us in with his spine surgeon, one that has been consistently recognized as the best in our area by D Magazine from 2000-2010. The fact that he has already successfully performed surgery for someone in our family and comes with all sorts of honors attached to his name made him the first phone call when Mr. V initially got hurt. Mr. V and I agreed that if my dad could get us in, we'd see him.

I got a call during school on Tuesday telling me that they had a last minute cancellation and therefore had a 1pm opening that day if we wanted to go. Of course, we jumped at the opportunity.

This doctor impressed us a ton. He knew, without asking, the symptoms that Mr. V was experiencing and added, without checking first, that he was probably experiencing some weakness in his right calf. Sure enough, his right calf was considerably smaller than his left. And that pretty much sealed the deal. The doctor told us that we could wait it out or just live with it if we wanted (um, no thank you!) and the weakness would never improve. He'd be limping forever. OR we could do surgery and get the pressure off of the nerve so that his leg would function normally again.

In the car on the way home, we decided to go for it. It's surgery that Mr. V had wanted from the beginning.

We weren't 10 minutes from the hospital and we called back to schedule ASAP. Friday at 11:30am.

Friday morning, we got up and got me breakfast. Then we met Mr. V's mom at the hospital. Let's fast foward to after the surgery, shall we? It took an hour longer than they had said. This didn't surprise me too much since my dad's surgery took longer and he didn't have the scar tissue that Mr. V had. But what did surprize me was hearing that his disc herniation wasn't nearly as fresh as we had thought. Well, it was and it wasn't. There was a part that had been herniated for a long time, a part that Mr. V had probably just gotten used to.  It was "baked" onto the nerve. BAKED! Good grief! Doc said he couldn't even move the nerve when he initially got in there. It was more difficult than they thought it would be - he had to shave off the old herniation. He got about 85% of the old herniation out of Mr. V's back. Any more than that and he would risk rupturing the dura, a sack that's filled with spinal fluid. The scar tissue already put Mr. V at a higher risk for spinal fluid leaks than with my dad's surgery. They got all of the new herniation because it was fresh and supple, like crab meat instead of leather (these are the doctor's actual comparisons).

We got to go home that day but goodness I wish I had video taped Mr. V as he was waking up. He was hilarious! He asked me once if he'd ever dance again (like that was something he did before the surgery) and, as I was coming back from grabbing some hot chocolate, I caught him asking his mom the same question followed closely by "did I tell that joke already?" Oh, and the jello. He was in LOVE with his jello and wanted to know if I'd gotten any yet. Just the cutest half-conscious man ever.

Our sweet, sweet friend, the gorgeous Miss F came all the way from Addison to bring us dinner and watch the Rangers lose it before heading all the way back to Grapevine. Mr. V was "sleeping it off" when she came and Miss F and I had gotten all caught up when Mr. V decided he wanted to eat. And boy, did he eat. And a few hours later, it all came up again :(

Sleeping was difficult - for some reason, his pills make him hiccup. And his hiccups shake the entire bed. He waited up until 2:30am to get rid of the hiccups last night.

Today, it is hard to get around and it has taken some time for us to figure out the comfortable chairs and positions. We'd say the surgery was a success, but his legs are weak from the surgery. He was supposed to be up walking around for most of the day and he was supposed to walk around every 30 minutes. We didn't read that until later but I took him to the grocery store with me and he did fairly well. But the laughing thing came up again (who knew that telling him I was watching him on my left when he seemed to be drifting toward the right for no apparent reason was funny) and he had to grab ahold of the freezer bin to steady himself so he wouldn't collapse. We were finally finished with our shopping and came upon a chair so I asked if he wanted to sit but the up and down really gets to him so onward we went to check out.

We are relaxing at home, enjoying some of the tv shows we missed last week when we were at various doctors' appointments this past week.

Thank you to Mr. and (especially) Dr. T in Cincinatti for helping us out with a late night call and the follow up call tonight, thank you to Miss F for the delicious meal that I would not have survived last night without. Thank you to my family for the love and support you continue to give - my brother woke up from a dead sleep (he has a 4am shift at work) to call Mr. V the night before his surgery to wish him luck, and my Aunt K has called and updated my other aunts. It has been unbelievable how you have welcomed Mr. V into our family, caring about him as you would any of us. Thank you to Mr. V's family (I count you as family, too) for calling and showing your support. Thank you to all of my friends out there in Facebook land and those from our new church. We are in awe of your dedication. I am overwhelmed by it all in a very good way. And thank you to our school family who have asked me about this entire process and continue to offer to help in any way they can. I love you all so much and think that I am so blessed to know you.

We are open to visitors as long as you can stand the interesting furniture arrangement that we've set up for Mr. V's convenience!

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Week 1 of the Great Meal Plan - it's a go!

This whole meal planning project has been enormous. I know that when it's all finished I will be a much, much happier person. Until that day (when my originals of everything are all printed out and sorted in a three ring binder), I will be a nutcase. I sat down on Thursday last week, my one day of sanity left between moving into/setting up my new classroom and the official back-to-work date set by my school district, to finish my weekly menus. I had already painstakingly typed up my own versions of recipes found in cookbooks along with the necessary ingredients for my weekly shopping lists for weeks 2, 4, and 1. Why that order? I have no idea. But they were finished and I was ready to type up weeks 3, 5, and 6.

Or so I thought.

My laptop gobbled up my recipes for Week 1 AND Week 4, particularly upsetting because Week 1 included, among no-brainer recipes for spaghetti and hamburgers, a detailed recipe for delicious Pulled Pork and a really long recipe with instructions for making pizza dough!

I was in a tizzy, to say the least. So I did what any logical girl would do. I started over. Now, I have, for the moment, skipped the recipes I know by heart. I will add them back later. But it was imperative that I get my grocery list together so that I could shop on Sunday.  The result was more than incredible.

I made a chart for my recipes that included several columns. One for each of the 3 stores near my home (so I can put aisle numbers in later - helpful when asking my hubby to run to the store for me), one for checking off when I actually have the item in my house at the moment (helpful in not having hubby upset that I bought things we already have), one for when I've put it in my cart at the store, and another for the Sale Price/Location when I have the time to check on those things beforehand. Today, I did not. But I did all of the above today before I ventured out to the store.

Since I had already determined my ingredients list, all that I needed to do was alphabetize and put them into my chart.  On my chart, I left room for a few extra items that we need around the house.

Following the sorting, I printed my list and went to the kitchen to check on what we already have. From my list of 23 ingredients, I only needed to buy 8. EIGHT!!! The hubster and I added 8 more before I left. I highlighted the 8 original items and their blanks so I'd be sure to check them off when I went. Highlighting gave me greater focus.



While there, I cut down greatly on impulse buys and focused instead on items on the list or items that would easily supplement our planned meals. I picked up some Capri Suns for our lunches this week and some peaches for our snacks. This means we're healthier and hopefully happier.



I also managed to cut down our grocery bill from $125 to $67 by buying the items I needed that were on sale instead of buying items just because they were on sale. Buying items just because they were on sale in the past led the V household to throw away items that weren't actually used.

I still haven't told you the BEST part, though! My actual in-store time was 30 minute. That includes having the butcher cut out the bone in my pork shoulder, the wait as the cashier rang up my items, and asking the customer service clerk about whether or not they have a store map/list of items by aisle (I was at Tom Thumb today - they don't have these at my store anymore)!

I am so happy knowing that now I have an entire week's worth of meals ready to go and can't wait to see how much easier my year is going to be now that I have a plan.

Happy eating, everybody!

Monday, August 8, 2011

Meal Planning, Phases 1 and 2 done!

Last (school) year, I didn't eat well. Getting married to a fast-food and TV dinner man kind of messed with my nightly routine of eating something that took a little longer to prepare. In addition, we moved further away from work leaving me exhausted at the end of the day, unwilling (most nights) to venture out to our neighborhood Tom Thumb. Also, being underfed or nourished left me too tired to properly deal with the challenges of teaching a more difficult group of teenagers than the ones by whom I was previously blessed AND it made me crankier than I like being. (By a show of hands, who, honestly, likes being cranky? Not me! Seriously!)
I had to take action. I am a firm believer that if you have a problem you aren't willing to go about solving or at least make an effort toward solving, you revoke your right to complain about it. So I decided that this summer, I'd come up with a 6 week meal plan that would rotate throughout the semester (maybe even the year) so we wouldn't get bored, we'd always be fed, and I'd have only one trip to the grocery store per week, making all of my necessary purchases at one time so I'd be ready to go Monday through Friday!

I broke my project into three distinct phases. Phase One included identifying all of our favorite recipes, asking friends for other recommendations, and typing up the titles of the recipes along with the ingredients I'd need to have on hand.  This was necessary as Phase Two involved comparing recipes for similar, perishable ingredients, matching them up and sorting them into weeks, determining how many times we can get leftovers out of each, and putting them into a sort of calendar. That calendar is below.



Now that the first two phases are complete, I'm onto Phase 3: Recipes and Shopping Lists by Week!

I am in the process of typing up all of the recipes I've collected tweaking them to fit our family of two, and adding the grocery lists beneath all of the recipes. Each recipe gets its own page in the file as does the grocery list. I'll be saving an additional, editable grocery list file which will include columns for where I should get it, extra spaces for other things we need (toothpaste, trash bags, popcorn) and, of course, the ability to cross through it for a week if I'm all set on items.

If I find that I have time or am exceptionally bored in my final days before I go back to school (yeah, right!), I'll make a master list of items I can get for all five weeks that won't go bad.

I know I didn't really leave room for us going out or anything fun. It doesn't happen a ton during the school year according to the way we've been doing things. I'm hoping that it will change this year with the new system and other changes I'm trying to make in my life. But in the event of something special going on or our date night happening (we don't have one set night, especially during high school football season when games are often on Thursday nights), we will not eat the leftovers that night. Maybe they'll be on my much simpler, soon-to-come lunch calendar instead!

Finally, I'd like to say that I am totally inspired by my friends who are going natural and making so many things on their own. I am hoping that once I get into a rhythm of dinner-making, I'll be able to do fantastic, healthier things like make my own jars of diced tomatoes. Until then, I am going to be proud of my accomplishment in planning for five weeks at a time. It has taken a lot of out of me and tested my sanity at times but I think that the rewards will far outweigh the frustrations and the result will be a healthier, happier me (and Mr. V)!

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Sometimes. . . sometimes I think he doesn't understand me

Mr. V and I had a lovely date night tonight. We went to dinner at In-N-Out and then to see Hoodwinked, Too in 3D at the Plano dollar theater. On our way home, I used my cell phone to check in on FB and see what was up.

Well, amid congratulations for my brother's job offer (so proud, by the way) and my former coworker announcing that she's opening a donut shop (at least, I think that's what she was announcing), I started thinking about how I have a bunch of friends who are starting something big in their lives. Miss H in Austin is working to get her all-natural cake mix off the ground and another sorority sister is launching an awesome photo booth business (Mrs. P, if you're reading, we're so excited about the launch party on Saturday!) and it just makes me think.

I want to do something fun and big. I just haven't figured out what it is I want to do. It's driving me a little crazy.

So, thinking out loud as we were pulling into the driveway at our home, I said, "I need a project. It's driving me nuts!"

Mr. V, ever the problem solver, said, "Well, why don't you get to cleaning up your room upstairs so you can do crafts or whatever. Or you can start going through your old high school stuff your dad sent over."

Discouraged but trying to stay calm in the situation I replied with, "Not exactly what I had in mind, but thanks for the suggestions."

We'll talk about it again tomorrow. I think he'll do better when he's not focused on getting some sleep. I hope!

Friday, May 13, 2011

Working with my husband

Mr. V and I work together. Lots of you know that we fell in love by the copy machine at our school. Okay, that's not true. We didn't fall in love there. But we did get engaged on the theater stage. And between Mr. V and me, we've taught students of all ages in the school. I taught Freshmen the last three years (making the oldest juniors and the youngest freshmen) and Seniors this year and Mr. V taught Sophomores and Juniors last year and Juniors this year. We figured we had our bases covered. In short, we're pretty well known at the school.

So imagine my surprise today when a girl didn't know exactly who I was.

I was sitting in the cafeteria trying my best to convince a young mother that dropping out of school was not only a bad idea for her but a bad example to set for her baby. Mr. V walked by and said something that I can't remember now but it caused a girl on my opposite side to start the following conversation:

Girl: Do you live together?
Me: Yes. We're married.
Girl: No! I thought you were just dating!
Me: Nope, we're married.
Girl: Since when?
Me: June 20, 2009
Girl: You're lying!

What? I most certainly am not! I haven't yet reached the age where I cannot remember my anniversary or gained the number of years in my marriage where it becomes difficult to pin down the date. I know I put on that white dress, walked down the aisle on my dad's arm, and said "I do" and I'm beyond sure that I said "I do" to Mr. V!

All in all, it was pretty funny. We did have to call Mr. V over to authenticate my story by reciting our wedding date to the girl so she could compare notes but I think she's satisfied now.

I guess not everyone realizes that we're not just together but that the togetherness is the 'til death do us part' variety. It does remind me that during state testing, I took a kid to the bathroom and had a brief chat with a fellow fish teacher who said that it wasn't until testing week that a kid realized I was Mr. Victor's wife, and that's just because I took him his snack as the break room was closing down and I didn't want him to go hungry. I wonder if the same last name made her think that we were brother and sister. Hmmmm. . .


Just another adventure in my life as Mrs. V! Hope you enjoyed reading the anecdote as much as I enjoyed living it!


Mrs. V

Monday, May 9, 2011

Riding Home - an excerpt from our daily commute together

Mr. V: Hey! There's a TURTLE in the middle of the road!
Me: Poor turtle!
Mr. V: He'd better get a move on!
Me: It's a turtle.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

What is it like to be married to Mr. V?

Some of my friends and coworkers will ask me what it's like to be married to Mr. V. I know, I know. Being married to the rock star social studies teacher my husband is seems so interesting, mysterious, exciting. I'm going to give you a glimpse into what my life is like a lot of the time.

Yesterday was Mr. V's birthday and, in typical birthday fashion, a family birthday dinner was scheduled. As we're sitting down at our table, the waiter, having been informed of Mr. V's birthday, wishes him a happy one. Mr. V, awesome man that he is, reveals that four incredible things happened on his birthday: (1) the fall of Saigon; (2) the Louisiana Purchase; (3) George Washington was inaugarated; and (4) Hitler killed himself. It's worth noting here that the fourth one is the one he's most excited about, at least in the telling of the story.

This leads the waiter to compliment him on his history knowledge. Mr. V acknowledges his status as a history teacher and another waiter comes over to give Mr. V a high-five. Turns out, he's a former student. Teachers have a random celebrity status that's hard to explain to outsiders. You wouldn't think it, but kids really enjoy seeing (most of) their teachers outside of school.

Anyway, I digress.

Tonight, we're watching The Celebrity Apprentice and we get the news that Obama wants to tell us that Osama Bin Laden has been killed. NBC news told us instead, but whatever. As we're watching this "breaking news" coverage, Mr. V says, "How awesome would it be if we're just hearing about it today but it actually happened yesterday? That would be so cool! Hitler kills himself AND Osama Bin Laden is killed ON MY BIRTHDAY!"

I have never heard of anyone being so excited about the deaths of horrid people happening on his birthday and I let Mr. V know it.  His response? "More reason to party!"

So that about sums it up. This is my life. It's a crazy, funny, twisty, turny one, but it's mine all mine. I know you're jealous. You have every reason to be :)

Happy first day of May to all and happy birthday to my dear friend, the fabulous Mrs. B, who is experiencing her first married bday today. Love you, girl!

Mrs. V

Saturday, January 8, 2011

You want me to cut my hair? Discrimination! Where's my lawyer?

Take a minute and read the following article about Greensburg Community Junior High School.

http://www.theindychannel.com/education/26352589/detail.html

Now that you're up to speed on the issue, let's chat a little. As most of you know, I'm an educator. I teach at the high school level. We have all sorts of rules that we ask people to follow in school. Don't have unnatural hair color in your hair. Shave before you come to school. No piercings anywhere for guys and none anywhere but the ears for girls. Make sure your tattoos aren't visible. Make sure you aren't showing your underwear - or lack of underwear - to the general public. Don't carry weapons on your person. You know, ridiculous stuff here.

I mean, isn't it a violation of my seniors' right to bear arms if they can't bring a gun to school? If my students can't demonstrate their gang affiliation to other students by the tattoos they have on their arms, isn't that denying them the right to express who they are?

I think these parents in Indiana need a reality check. When I was a cheer coach, everyone signed a page that said they had read the constitution and would abide by its principles. They had the constitution in their hands before they even tried out! Anyone who couldn't abide by it had the option of *gasp* NOT trying out for cheerleader! And there were things that smacked of the ridiculous in that 23 page document including (but in no way limited to) the color of nail polish they were allowed to wear with their uniform. Ultimately, it didn't affect their cheering ability but it was about being part of a team. AND they knew about it BEFORE THEY TRIED OUT so when I punished them for violating the constitution, they didn't have a leg to stand on.

High school basketball is a privilege, not a right. No one struggled through life just because they didn't play basketball. They have, however, struggled to hold down a job because they were never taught to comply with policy.

This sort of thing really rattles my cage because day after day, I see children who have no respect for authority, cannot comply with reasonable requests, and have clearly been placated in every aspect of their lives since they were conceived! I know my room is hot. I'm wearing a wool sweater and have been in here all day. You don't get to yell out in class that you're hot and are about to walk out of class. I am not required to let you go to the bathroom. Try the law - you'll find it's on my side.

In no way does telling them 'no' illicit a proper, respectful response. Teaching kids to "fight for your rights" is ridiculous in these cases, especially when they are related to TEAM sports. Only after they understand that you have to respect policies that are in place can you begin to respectfully argue your position. Claiming discrimination is ignorant; everyone on the team was required to follow the same rules.

These parents are teaching their child the wrong lesson here and in the process are draining the district's resources. I'm sure that teachers will have to be let go, forgo any raise, and/or be limited in their ability to obtain materials necessary to teach their classes. Way to be extremely selfish, parents. Another wonderful trait your child is going to grow up possessing.