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The Big White Farmhouse

intentional living, little by little

Archives for September 2024

September 30, 2024

No.858: Last Week at the Farmhouse // Use It or Lose It

“Return from the fields” by Edouard Debat-Ponsan

This post contains affiliate links, which means I may receive a commission of any sale made at no extra cost to you.

For the past few days, I’ve been online, watching the devastating aftermath of Hurricane Helene.  So many people have lost everything and millions will be without electricity for weeks.  It’s so sad and heartbreaking.  In times like these, I can’t help but think that just because we have abundant technology at our fingertips doesn’t mean we shouldn’t learn “the old ways” too.  If this situation were to happen to us, would we know how to survive without our daily luxuries?

I once heard someone explain that if a skill is never taught, a society will completely forget how to do that skill within three generations.  And this doesn’t have to apply to nineteenth century habits…it could simply be remembering how people lived in the 1940’s (like Grandma Donna likes to practice)!  This is a silly but poignant example: we have a backup camera on our car, but do we remember how to reverse without it?

Below is my working list of skills I’d like to learn, strengthen or pass on to my children.  What would be on yours?

  • how to identify wild plants (which are poisonous and which are edible?)
  • how to identify scat (important to know what kind of wild animal you’re dealing with!)
  • basic carpentry and home repair
  • reading a paper map
  • sewing and mending clothing
  • simple car repair
  • how to grow food and then use or save that food intentionally (canning, drying, etc)
  • writing and reading in cursive

Hoping to document the abundance around me all year long!

Around here, abundance looks like…

+ a week of RAIN.  We were thankfully too far north to feel the worst effects of the hurricane, but it’s still been a lot to handle.  No flooding, but there is mush and mud everywhere.

+ completing the last broiler processing of the season.  Due to weather and scheduling conflicts, we decided to get it done all in one day (vs. our usual two) and took up the offer from a farmer friend to use his covered shelter and machines.  (This was huge because we usually process in our backyard and it’s just a mess right now – see above!)  It took a bit of logistical planning to bring over our birds and supplies, but we got it done!  175 birds makes for a long day, but I’m so thankful for a sunny day, my hard-working family and a full chicken freezer.

+ trying a three week on/one week off grocery shopping experiment.  I’ve been consistently going over my weekly budget (despite my best intentions!) so hoping this will help.  We’ll still need milk and possibly produce, but I’m hoping I can make our pantry stretch during that fourth week.

+ another week plodding along with the Weather the Storm Challenge.  This week, I:

  • used the weekly grocery store ad to buy apples, yogurt and tortillas on sale
  • purchased five items to put back for winter (pasta and pizza sauce)
  • made vanilla granola to eat with the yogurt above
  • sold eggs to friends
  • cooked dried pinto beans and used those to make refried beans
  • paid two bills by check to avoid the online convenience fees
  • made english muffin bread twice
  • restocked my “bag to hold all the bags” to remind myself to use them
  • made beef stew using my homemade beef broth and various veggies in the fridge
  • made elderberry syrup and froze into ice cubes (time to strengthen my immune system again)

+ selling four unneeded items for the Car Loan Payoff Plan: one shirt, a scarf and two books.  After shipping and fees, I made $7.46!  Reselling went on the back burner, so a really slow week.

Reading //

  • The Flavors of Faux History: Preparing for the Collapse of Knowledge from Peco and Ruth Gaskovski at School of the Unconformed // Another thoughtful post from the Gaskovskis and another book list to chip away at!
  • A Reflection on the Virtue of Perseverance from Rev. M. McDonnell at Saint Benedict Center // Great examples here.  I liked this story:

Timour, the celebrated Tartar warrior, after a series of the most brilliant victories, was at length conquered and made captive. Though confined in a prison, whose massive walls and thick iron bars discouraged every attempt to escape, he still strove at each chink and crevice to find some way of escape. At length weary and dispirited, he sat down in a corner of his gloomy prison and almost gave himself up to despair. While brooding over his sorrows, an ant with a piece of wood twice as large as itself attracted his attention; the insect seemed determined to ascend the perpendicular face of the wall and made several attempts to affect it. But after reaching a little elevation it came to the jutting angle of a stone and fell backward to the floor. But again, again and again the attempt was renewed; the prisoner watched the struggles of the insect, and in the interest he forgot his own condition. The ant persevered and at the sixteenth trial surmounted the obstacle. Timour sprang to his feet, exclaiming: “I will never despair, perseverance conquers!”

  • How We Built A-Frame Chicken Tractors To Protect Our Hens from Green Willow Homestead // Always planning and preparing for next year.

New Additions to The List // 

  • The Natural World of Winnie-The-Pooh: A Walk Through the Forest That Inspired the Hundred Acre Wood by Kathryn Aalto
  • Our Oriental Heritage by Will Durant (the first in an eleven-book series)
  • A Bitter Truth (Bess Crawford #3) by Charles Todd

Watching/Listening //

  • MASSIVE Meal Prep for a Senior! A New Mix & Match Menu to Stock Her Freezer with Easy Meals! from Dollar Tree Dinners // This got me thinking about ways I could stock my fridge and freezers too.
  • Fr. Tom Shepanzyk | The Effects of Communism from Christendom College // Excellent.
  • How To Reverse a Cavity at Home | Cure Tooth Decay from Dr. Ellie Phillips // This video randomly appeared on my Youtube recommendations…very interesting.

Loving //

  • Ghirardelli White Chocolate Caramel // An impulse buy from last week’s birthday shopping spree.  A yummy treat.
  • this idea for homemade vanilla extract // Now to find a source for vanilla beans!

September 27, 2024

No.857: What I Read in September 2024

This post contains affiliate links, which means I may receive a commission of any sale made at no extra cost to you.

#65. MRS. POLLIFAX ON SAFARI by Dorothy Gilman // ★★★☆☆
(amazon // bookshop // better world books)

Number five in the Mrs. Pollifax series!  This one took place on a Zambian safari and while it was enjoyable to read, I didn’t think it was as great as some of the earlier ones.  3.5 stars.

#66. THE EVERY by Dave Eggers // ★★★☆☆
(amazon // bookshop // better world books)

This is the sequel to The Circle and another book to check off the School of the Unconformed reading list.  The premise is that the Circle (a conglomeration of Facebook/Google/Twitter) merges with a company like Amazon and becomes a powerful monopoly that ultimately creates a surveillance state.  And man…this was bleak.  As someone who tries to fight back the Machine in little ways, I found the amount of human apathy really discouraging and yet accurate for most of real-life society.  3.5 stars.

#67. THE ILIAD AND THE ODYSSEY by Homer // ★★★☆☆
(amazon // bookshop // better world books)

I finally finished this mammoth book at over 700 pages!  Happy to have read both stories in full and happy to be move onto something new.

#68. THE ONE-IN-A-MILLION BOY by Monica Wood // ★★★☆☆
(amazon // bookshop // better world books)

After reading The Every, I was looking for something a little less heavy and this (kind-of?) fit the bill.  I love stories that share multi-generational friendships and while this book was centered around that, I just didn’t connect with the story like I had hoped.  Still worth reading – I gave it 3.5 stars.

#69. AN IMPARTIAL WITNESS by Charles Todd // ★★★☆☆
(amazon // bookshop // better world books)

I read the first book in this Bess Crawford mystery series last year and was excited to finally get my hands on book two.  It was an interesting story that kept me turning the pages, but wasn’t as great as the first one.  I still think I’ll continue on and look for book three.


MY 2024 UNREAD SHELF PROJECT

Unread Books as of January 1, 2024: 209
Books Finished in September: 5
Books Donated/Sold in September: -1
Books Added: +6
Unread Books Remaining: 208


September 23, 2024

No.856: Last Week at the Farmhouse // Be Not Afraid

“Peter Walks on Water” by Philipp Otto Runge (1806)

This post contains affiliate links, which means I may receive a commission of any sale made at no extra cost to you.

I knew it would happen eventually.  I’ve been burning that proverbial candle at both ends for awhile now and I finally hit the wall mid-week.  Thankfully, a two-day forced rest helped immensely and I was able to rally enough to celebrate birthdays by the weekend.

All that to say, I had planned to write about my thoughts from an article I read titled, “What Pope John Paul II can teach us about moving beyond fear” this week.  Being sick, that never came to fruition but I hope you’ll still read it and find encouragement like I did.

I plead with you–never, ever give up on hope, never doubt, never tire, and never become discouraged. Be not afraid. – JPII

Hoping to document the abundance around me all year long!

Around here, abundance looks like…

+ celebrating birthdays!  I have two children whose birthdays are five days apart and they wanted to celebrate together.  My husband and I took them on a “shopping spree” to a few stores and they found a handful of great treasures.  We finished up with lunch at Buffalo Wild Wings and then had cheesecake at home.  A great day.

+ continued diligence with my Weather the Storm Challenge.  I felt a little discouraged as this work feels somewhat inconsequential, but I know it’s building the virtues of perseverance and patience…so we keep going!  This week, I:

  • used the weekly grocery store ad to buy peaches, applesauce and shampoo on sale
  • purchased five canned goods to put back for winter (diced tomatoes – also on sale)
  • made cinnamon applesauce muffins using some of that applesauce above
  • sold eggs to friends
  • started air drying about a third of our laundry loads (which should save a tiny bit on our electricity bill)
  • used a spatula to get the last bit of peanut butter out of the jar
  • made english muffin bread twice
  • picked tomatoes from my dying plants to throw to the chickens
  • accepted two packs of fresh slider buns from my son’s work (delicious and free!)
  • made more chicken broth, using up the last of the celery/carrots/onion in the fridge
  • purchased next year’s birthday wrapping paper on clearance

+ selling fifteen unneeded items for the Car Loan Payoff Plan: six books, five pieces of clothing and four dyslexia workbooks.  After shipping and fees, I made $149.31!

Reading //

  • “Screen Sober” from Meredith Hinds at Still Today // “That said, ‘it is lawful to amuse yourself…’ but what are the limits? Discerning that means contemplating the difference between ‘doing the thing’ and ‘caring for it.’ And a helpful question to me in that line of thought is: are the stories I’m watching getting in the way of the stories I want to live?“
  • Finding The Seam: How Small Farmers Can Thrive from Lenny Wells at Front Porch Republic // “But one can still be a farmer and care for the land without relying solely on the business of farming to support a family. In fact, most of them do. As of 2022, around 84% of farm households have off-farm income. Some would call what I’ve described above as a hobby farmer. I don’t. The fact of the matter is that if the average person wants to farm nowadays, they need an off-farm income.”
  • The Hungry Years: A Narrative History of the Great Depression in America by T.H. Watkins // Really interesting so far.  One quote:

If the politicians and the pundits felt confused, others felt betrayed.  Perhaps the most fully deceived were those hostages to a middle-class dream gone bad – salesmen, promoters, businessmen, brokers, boosters, middle-management executives, Rotarians, Lions, Toastmasters.  They had all played by the rules, had joined enthusiastically in the great game of consumerism and limitless potential.  Now there was nothing to sell, nothing to boost, nothing to dream on.  “The kind of readjustment they are called upon to make is heroic,” Episcopal Bishop John Paul Jones observed in the pages of the Survey Graphic in 1933.  “Vast multitudes of them have lost financial security forever.  In bewilderment and bitterness they will seek a sign of hope, and no sign will be given.  Some will give up and end it all, but a great majority will go on living some kind of broken and frustrated lives.” (p.54)

New Additions to The List // 

  • The Overstory by Richard Powers

Watching/Listening //

  • How to Declutter your ENTIRE Home in 30 Days! from Clutterbug // Thinking about jumping in on this challenge soon.
  • I tried “Swedish Death Cleaning” and it CHANGED EVERYTHING! from That Awkward Mom

Loving //

  • this homeopathic cold medicine // My go-to when I’m going downhill.
  • this Vitamin C tea // A new product in my wellness arsenal – I liked it a lot!
  • the Megan Follows version of Anne of Green Gables // I bought this for my daughter and she loves it as much as I do.  SO good.

September 16, 2024

No.855: Last Week at the Farmhouse // Diligent Work at Home

“The Maid and the Magpie, A Cottage Interior at Shillington, Bedfordshire” by William Henry Hunt (1834)

This post contains affiliate links, which means I may receive a commission of any sale made at no extra cost to you.

Our home looks like a construction site right now.  As time allows, we’ve been working as a family to remove the wall texture in the living room and it’s been quite the project!  Furniture has been crammed into the middle of the room, lamps and artwork are hanging out in other spaces and watch your step!  Step stools and trash bags and putty knives of all sizes are everywhere.  We’ve done this kind of slow and steady work with the farm and even though we’re living in organized chaos, it is so fun and satisfying to have the same experience inside.

Doing the renovation ourselves brings me back to 2008ish and that period of the Great Recession.  I was a newly married, young mother of very young children.  As a family just starting out on one income, we didn’t have much money and I was so inspired by the surge of DIY projects and money-saving ideas on the internet.  Sadly, as the economy recovered, a rise in fast consumerism occurred and those do-it-yourself tutorials seemed to fade out of popularity.  And what a shame!  There’s something about doing diligent work yourself, learning new skills and trying new things, that just can’t be compared!  And that feeling of pride in a job well done?  Priceless.

Hoping to document the abundance around me all year long!

Around here, abundance looks like…

+ continuing on with the Weather the Storm Challenge.  (As a reminder, the goals of this challenge are to reduce debt, add to our food storage and save money.)  The biggest change I’m seeing may not be the vast amounts of money I’m saving (I wish!) but the confidence it is creating.  I’m constantly thinking of new things to try, new ways to stretch what we have.  It’s intoxicating and exciting!  Anyway, this week, I:

  • used the weekly grocery store ad to buy grapes, tuna, and panko on sale
  • used a coupon to try a new tikka masala sauce kit for free! (I saved $5.50)
  • purchased five canned goods to put back for winter (mixed vegetables for chicken pot pies)
  • sold eggs and chicken to friends
  • made beef bone broth for the first time
  • froze that broth into Souper Cubes (to stockpile for beef stew and french onion soup)
  • found a sweatshirt for my son in the hand-me-down bins
  • used up a free laundry detergent sample
  • made english muffin bread
  • learned from my son how to cut up a whole chicken into parts (he works at a farm and is a pro)
  • made chicken broth from those carcasses (I’m on a roll!)
  • listed a few items on ebay/Poshmark/Pango

+ selling eleven unneeded items for the Car Loan Payoff Plan: seven books, one textbook and three pieces of clothing.  After shipping and fees, I made $91.35!

Reading //

  • How Many People do we Need in Our Lives? from Edwin Leap at Life and Limb // “We all need connection. We need our own clans. Our own groups. Our own churches or synagogues, mosques or temples. We need deep relationship. These things can go a long way towards helping and comforting the lonely. They can make hard times better, hopelessness hopeful. They can protect against danger, hunger, disease and abuse by simply showing up and standing by those who are frail and powerless.”
  • No, you cannot have it all from Jim Dalrymple at Nuclear Meltdown // “…you can’t have it both ways. You can’t be a self-centered individualist right up until the moment you need people. By that time the trade-off is made, the deal is done.”
  • The Mother’s Gauntlet from Lane Scott at The American Mind // “One might object to the idea that homemaking requires an almost superhuman amount of self-governance. After all, isn’t it mostly about keeping the kids alive, fed, and your home kind of running on a basic level? That can’t be that hard. Yet it is precisely because the standards imposed externally are so low that the job can be so unsatisfying. The stay-at-home mom unconsciously applies her own standard, above and outside of the rest of society. Despite any protestations to the contrary, she knows her job demands more than subsistence. Her household has set aside the life of an entire adult, and all the income and aspirations she could have chased, so that she can raise the children. That sacrifice demands a thriving family, not a family that simply survives. The stakes are unbelievably high.”  Interesting thoughts here.
  • Forming Human Persons in a Digital Age from Shannon Donald at Nota Bene // “I sometimes wish I could roll back the clock and do things differently. I like to think I would have kept digital technology out of my children’s lives for much longer, and that I would have endeavored sooner to break free from my own digital chains. But we can only ever learn and move forward, striving to become a little more human every day.”
  • ‘Art Will Touch Lives’: An Aging Farmer Adds a New Dimension to his Ministry from Max Heine at Front Porch Republic // What a fascinating person.
  • the comments under Grandma Donna’s The Bumpy Budget post // I sometimes feel like I have more in common with older retirees than I do my own generation.  They tend to avoid debt and are more content to live within their means without all of the unnecessary luxuries.  To read about their struggles in this economy both buoys me (we’re not alone!) and leaves me so, so sad.  God help us all.

New Additions to The List // 

  • Coming Up for Air by George Orwell
  • Goodbye to All That by Robert Graves
  • None of This Is True by Lisa Jewell

Watching/Listening //

  • Millennial Stone Cleaner // I’ve been enjoying this Youtube channel.  This is the first video in a series where he restores and conserves an abandoned cemetery in Des Moines.

Loving //

  • You Can Draw in 30 Days // My daughter is going through this book in school and really likes it.
  • these “Save By Numbers” savings challenges // I just printed out the Donut Sloth.  If I can complete it, I’ll have saved $2,778!

September 9, 2024

No.854: Last Week at the Farmhouse // The Power of Silence

“Silence” by Wilhelm Kotarbinski

This post contains affiliate links, which means I may receive a commission of any sale made at no extra cost to you.

The painting above is a little blurry and the exact details are unclear (is that a woman?  is she in a cemetery?), but I felt the emotions evoked deep in my soul this week.  It’s that “fall on your face in front of Our Lord” exhaustion where you’ve clawed your way to the weekend!  Anyway, it is done, we survived and God’s mercies are new every morning.

I’ve been slowly reading The Power of Silence: Against the Dictatorship of Noise by Cardinal Robert Sarah and this piece of advice seemed timely for me:

The silence of everyday life is an indispensable condition for living with others.  Without the capacity for silence, man is incapable of hearing, loving, and understanding the people around him.  Charity is born of silence.  It proceeds from a silent heart that is able to hear, to listen, and to welcome.  Silence is a condition for otherness and a necessity if one is to understand himself.  Without silence, there is neither rest nor serenity nor interior life.  Silence is friendship and love, interior harmony and peace.  Silence and peace have one and the same heartbeat. (p.32-33)

Here’s to finding little pockets of silence in the midst of this loud and messy life.

Hoping to document the abundance around me all year long!

Around here, abundance looks like…

+ working together (multiple times) to get a silly pig back into her paddock.  I swear…with every turn of the season, pigs always decide to get a wild hair and run amok around the property!

+ learning a tip for keeping sweaters looking great.  I wish I had saved the Youtube video, but the woman basically shared how any sweater made with acrylic or nylon or polyester will quickly look worn out.  She said your best bet would be to look for 100% cotton or wool because they hold their shape longer and are less likely to pill or show wash wear.  Two of the three sweaters that I just purchased on ThredUp were 100% cotton, so I’m anxious to see if this tip holds true this winter.

+ completing more small tasks for the Weather the Storm Challenge and feeling more motivated than ever.  When we were getting gas one afternoon, we overheard the gas station owner warn that we could see another $1-$1.50/gal increase by the end of the year.  This would be pretty devastating financially for us (as we live in the country and my husband has quite a work commute) so I’m already thinking of ways to get ahead now in case the owner’s prediction comes true.  This week, I:

  • used the weekly grocery store ad to buy peaches, blueberries and russet potatoes on sale
  • purchased five canned goods to put back for winter (diced tomatoes and soup)
  • sold eggs to friends
  • counted up and wrapped change to deposit at the bank
  • fixed a small crack in my dustpan with duct tape
  • listed a few items on ebay/Poshmark/Pango
  • cooked two whole birds for dinner and then used the carcasses to make broth
  • froze that broth into Souper Cubes (creating a stockpile for winter soups and stews!)
  • added food scraps and toilet paper rolls to the compost pile
  • turned off the A/C and opened the windows

+ getting paint on the back hallway walls.  After a ridiculous amount of research, I decided to go with Benjamin Moore’s Simply White for the trim and Ballet White for the walls.  I had them color matched at Home Depot and spent most of Saturday getting to work.  The walls themselves aren’t perfect and I already know I need to re-sand a few places and repaint, but…progress!

+ selling seven unneeded items for the Car Loan Payoff Plan: seven books.  After shipping and fees, I made $15.84.  A slow week.

Reading //

  • How to begin a letter-writing habit from Shannon Hood at Of Permanent Things // “We are drowning in electronic communication–much of it is meaningless, and very little of it is of lasting value. None of it is tangible. I write letters because they embody all of the best aspects of communication. Letters are meaningful, intimate, private, tangible, and worth holding on to.”
  • It Pays To Be Cheap from Addison Del Mastro at The Deleted Scenes // Food for thought and the comments are great too.
  • The Prophets of Technocracy from Dr. Ben Reinhard at Hearth and Field // “I suspect that the difficulties encountered by educators can be replicated, with small modifications, in every profession and every state of life: rejecting, as far as we are able, the empty glamours of the technocratic age, asks more of us than we might suppose. It does not mean returning simply to the status quo ante of 2019, or 2010, or 1993, but a radical re-examination of what it means to be fully human. In pursuit of this, every moment, every action, every thought clawed back from the reign of the Machines is something to celebrate; every moment yielded to them should be an occasion of regret, if not outright repentance.”

New Additions to The List // 

  • The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales by Oliver Sacks

Watching/Listening //

  • Amazon Empire: The Rise and Reign of Jeff Bezos from Frontline PBS // An eerie documentary to watch as I read The Every by Dave Eggers.
  • Lectures 1-3 of George Orwell: A Sage for All Seasons on The Great Courses // Did you know George Orwell is actually a pseudonym?

Loving //

  • D’Aulaires’ Book of Greek Myths // I’m reading this with my little boys and we are all really enjoying the crazy stories.
  • this english muffin bread recipe // Makes two loaves and holds up to sandwich making.  I always omit the sugar and you can’t taste a difference.

P.S. Something seems to be wrong with my posts being delivered to email inboxes.  I’m looking into the situation and may have to find a new program.  So sorry for the inconvenience.

September 6, 2024

No.853: New Ideas for Mother Academia // Volume 3

“Philosopher with an Open Book” by Salomon Koninck (1645)

This post contains affiliate links, which means I may receive a commission of any sale made at no extra cost to you.

Welcome to another segment of New Ideas for Mother Academia!  The purpose of this series is to share five ideas for women to dig deeper into their continued education.  I especially like to seek out free resources because I want to prove that you can seek out wisdom without having to spend any money.  I hope you’ll share what you’ve been reading and learning too!

1 // A BIOLOGY REVIEW

If it’s been awhile since you’ve taken a science class, Getting Up To Speed In Biology from MIT may be a good fit for you!  The course introduction says that this course “will also be useful for anyone preparing to take an equivalent college-level introductory biology class elsewhere. It includes lecture videos, interactive exercises, problem sets, and one exam.”  This is the textbook, but you can usually find cheaper used copies on Better World Books or ebay.

2 // GREGORIAN CHANT

Learn Gregorian Chant with Laus in Ecclesia, translated by a monk of Clear Creek Abbey.  “Each of the 15 lessons teaches chant theory, assists with practical vocal or rhythmic exercises, and offers a written assignment.”  There is even a correspondence course!

3 // A DEEP DIVE INTO OUT OF THE SILENT PLANET

Dive deep into C.S. Lewis’ science fiction novel, Out of the Silent Planet!  As you read, you can follow along with commentary from The Literary Life Podcast’s three part series.

4 // FAERIE AND FANTASY

I was excited to discover this unique 14 week lecture series with Corey Olsen, the Tolkien Professor.  (I read his book, Exploring J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit”, early in 2024 and really enjoyed it.)  This goal of this course was to “explore[d] the medieval Faerie-story tradition and examine[d] the modern fairy-tale and fantasy genres that grew from it.”  Some of the required readings include:

  • “The Wife of Bath’s Tale,” from The Canterbury Tales
  • Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
  • Andrew Lang’s Fairy Books
  • The Princess and the Goblin
  • The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
  • Sabriel
5 // MATERNAL ATTACHMENT

How about dabbling in a little psychology?  In this five lecture series, “Dr. Emily Burdett…explores psychological theories of attachment as the close emotional bond formed between two individuals.”  Sounds intriguing.


PREVIOUS IDEAS

Paradise Lost, Memorizing the Presidents, Political Philosophy, Classical Architecture & Wind in the Willows

Nuclear War, Fulton Sheen, the Poetry of Early New England, Mensa Reading Lists & Shakespeare’s Philosophy

September 3, 2024

No.852: Plan With Me for September 2024

I’m trying something a little different for goal planning this school year.  My new motto: we are not machines, we don’t have infinite energy levels, we can only do so much!  Hopefully this new method will help me reduce my stress and prioritize the right things at the right times.

FIVE TOP PRIORITIES

These tasks tend to have deadlines or really should be completed this month.

  1. complete Confirmation and First Communion paperwork and drop off to the church office
  2. prepare for chicken processing in early October
  3. clean and vacuum out the cars
  4. mob seed the pastures with winter wheat
  5. prepare for September birthdays
FIVE “WOULD BE GREAT TO DO” TASKS

Examples of these tasks would be seasonal goals or things that just generally have less urgency.

  1. start cutting 2025 firewood
  2. brush out Samson outside at least once a week
  3. go apple picking
  4. track everything coming in and out of the house all month
  5. lock in 33 items of clothing for Oct/Nov/Dec Project 333
FIVE LITTLE STEPS TO GET AHEAD

This area is for big, overwhelming goals that can be broken down into bite-sized, attainable steps.

  1. debt reduction: earn $150+ to go toward the Car Loan Payoff Plan
  2. mother academia: read The Odyssey
  3. walls project: complete peg rail for the back hallway
  4. hard times prep: increase food storage with 5 extra things/wk
  5. farm: start pulling out the garden and prepping the beds for winter

September 2, 2024

No.851: Last Week at the Farmhouse // Ordinary Days

“A September Day” by George Henry (1935)

This post contains affiliate links, which means I may receive a commission of any sale made at no extra cost to you.

I’ve been really interested in current economic news lately, but this week I decided to turn off most of the noise.  I’ve got a handle on the problem now – I don’t need to beat a dead horse over and over again by scaring myself silly with worst case scenarios.  It’s time to get to work and carry on with my ordinary days!

And in a world where some new catastrophe happens almost daily, ordinary days at home seem like a privilege and a gift.  Some ordinary things from this week:  A slight chill in the air as we go out for morning chores, hinting at autumn hopefully just around the corner.  Homemade bread made on a regular rotation.  Refereeing sibling squabbles.  Stacks of freshly folded laundry.  Weeding my overgrown jungle of a garden.  A fun and productive school week.  Climbing into bed at the end of the day with a good book.

Hoping to document the abundance around me all year long!

Around here, abundance looks like…

+ creating a DIY Anne Shirley “boxed set” of books for my daughter.  A brand new set would have cost around $60 so I scoured the used book sites to cobble together a matching set for less than $25!

+ chipping away at tasks for the Weather the Storm Challenge and feeling happy with the results so far!  I keep telling myself that small steps eventually lead to something bigger, even if it doesn’t feel that way in the moment.  This week, I:

  • used the weekly grocery store ad to buy mandarin oranges, fresh mozzarella, and trash bags on sale
  • made multiple loaves of homemade bread
  • sold eggs to coworkers
  • made more granola (with a little less brown sugar this time…you couldn’t tell the difference)
  • listed a few items on ebay/Poshmark/Pango
  • logged into my local trash nothing group to see what was available (nothing useful yet)
  • picked up a special laundry detergent for my boys’ athletic wear to keep them fresh and in good shape (thanks for the tip, Torrie!)
  • re-instituted “Refrigerator Cleanout Night” once a week to use up all the random bits/leftovers
  • used up a container of instant coffee and a free shampoo sample
  • ordered a few sweaters and fall/winter dresses during a sale on ThredUp
  • saved the ThredUp tissue paper to reuse for my reselling orders
  • researched high yield savings accounts

+ being a team with my husband.  What a blessing to know that in times of feast or times of famine, we’re a united front against this crazy world.

+ trying out new curriculum and so far, so good!  I’d planned to write a separate post about this weeks ago, but time escapes me.  Instead, I’ll just list them here:

  • the Story of Civilization series, starting with Volume 1, The Ancient World
  • Memoria Press Geography II, which covers Sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, Oceania, & the Americas
  • IEW’s Fix-It! Grammar (we’re using the Robin Hood book)
  • Imitation in Writing’s Greek Myths and Fairy Tales
  • Logos Latin 1
  • a subscription to The Great Courses (a splurge, but took advantage of a “Buy Two Years for the Price of One” sale)

+ selling nineteen unneeded items for the Car Loan Payoff Plan: fifteen books, three pieces of clothing and a piece of homeschool curriculum.  After shipping and fees, I made $75.67!

Reading //

  • A Divine Comedy We Can Feel in the Pulse from Jason M. Baxter at First Things
  • Beatrice and the Siren from Kyle Janke at Memoria Press // “Should pleasure define our sense of beauty or should beauty define our sense of pleasure?”
  • Strength To Stay from Carla Galdo at Hearth and Field // “It’s not being strong to run away from the things you don’t feel like doing. Actually, it takes more strength to stay, to do what you’re supposed to do — especially if it’s small and insignificant, especially if you can think of a million other things you’d rather be doing.”
  • Capturing the Light of Christ: A Picture Study from Denise Trull at Theology of Home // I LOVED this.
  • Locusts from Haley Baumeister at Ekstasis // “even darkness is not dark to you, even locusts cannot ravage all, covered in that merciful radiance, we will never be put to shame”
  • Italy is a hotbed of volcanic activity from Devika Rao at The Week // Have you heard about this??

New Additions to The List // 

  • The Priest Is Not His Own by Fulton J. Sheen
  • Absent in the Spring by Mary Westmacott (really Agatha Christie!)
  • The Man in the Queue by Josephine Tey

Watching/Listening //

  • Planning and Storage when you only shop 6 times a year / every two months – Off Grid Australia from Our Small Footprint // Love listening to the different ways people shop/save money.
  • Tim O’Brien interview at National Endowment for the Arts // “So the goal of The Things They Carried is to- in large part, is to make readers feel something of what I felt all those years ago and after returning from the war, in a way that a 30 second clip on CNN can’t and doesn’t aspire to; the way a newspaper story is not going to make you feel what it is to be frustrated by never being able to find the enemy and man after man die and another man die and another man lose his legs and you can’t find anything to shoot back at. And you don’t believe in the war anyway. There’s a feeling of frustration and where’s God and why am I here? That goes beyond argumentation and it goes beyond nonfiction. It goes to our nightmares and our human both our human aspirations and our human fears.”
  • Mike Rowe & Scott Mann: No One Is Coming To Save You | The Way I Heard It // The conversation around storytelling was surprisingly and wonderfully similar to Tim O’Brien’s thoughts in the interview above.  So good.

Loving //

  • these sketch books // Great quality and they come in a pack of three.
  • glazed cinnamon scones // My daughter whipped these up – delicious!
  • the art of Fritz von Uhde // from the article above by Denise Trull: “He created several unique paintings where he placed Jesus physically, and quite naturally, within the domestic lives of poor and humble people. What would Jesus be doing if we could actually see him there among us?”
“The Mealtime Prayer” (1885) by Fritz von Uhde
“Woman, why are you crying” by Fritz von Uhde
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