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The Big White Farmhouse

intentional living, little by little

May 4, 2020

No.393: Our Extraordinary Ordinary Life // COVID-19 Lockdown Week 7

HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE SEVENTH WEEK OF COVID-19 LOCKDOWN

Week seven.

We finished our last week of schoolwork for the 2019-2020 school year!  M was so ready to be done that he even requested to complete his standardized testing early.  Rising eighth grader in the house!  I can’t believe it.

I splurged on a new 1,000 piece puzzle that I knew one of my boys would love.  It is a Thomas Kinkade painting of DC comic book characters and is beautiful, but SO hard as a puzzle.  We can only figure out a handful of pieces at a time before giving up in frustration.  This will take awhile.

Sourdough experiment of the week: Cheddar and Dill (minus the dill because I didn’t have any)

The garden centers local to us have been swarmed with business, which is great!  Unfortunately for me, the waiting list is weeks long at this point, so I went looking online and was still successful: I found ferns and lemongrass (which gets me closer to completing 100LT #32 & #33), blueberry bushes, some tomato and pepper seedlings and even a few apple trees!  This isn’t exactly how I pictured gathering the plants needed for my new garden, but I’m rolling with it.

On Thursday, we surprised the kids by going to get dinner at the Chickfila drive through.  This was the first time the kids and I have left the property in 61 days!  I can’t even believe it as I type that.  They were thrilled to be in the car again, although some felt a bit of motion sickness.  Even though it was just a quick trip to town, it was so surreal seeing most people in masks and gloves.

Biggest accomplishment: we started working on garden fence construction!  The was our first time digging post holes and mixing concrete, which was nerve-wracking but exhilarating!  I can’t explain how exciting it is to see my little pencil drawings come to life.  I’m so thankful.

May 1, 2020

No.392: 2020 Gratitude // 18

A new series for 2020: if I record 20 things every week, I’ll have over 1,000 items by December 31.  
That’s a lot to be grateful for.

warm sunshine on pale limbs
planting the first vegetables in the garden
a not consistent, but semi-improved Internet connection
texts from my cousin and my aunt
the beautiful novena to St. Joseph that I’ve been praying this week
listening to P’s vocabulary explode
trying a new cheddar sourdough loaf
being inspired by There’s No Such Thing as Bad Weather
going on a nature walk with my daughter
my husband
lists upon lists that keep all my jumbled thoughts/ideas on paper and out of my brain
drinking hot coffee in silence before any of the kids wake up
the smell of rain
how the kids got right to work after new art supplies arrived in the mail
a clean (and empty!) kitchen sink
the satisfaction that comes with tidying up
watching the sunrise through my bedroom window
goldfinches and sparrows and cardinals and phoebes
a successful last week of schoolwork
hitting publish on my 1,120th blog post

April 30, 2020

No.391: My Latest Reads // April 2020

This post contains affiliate links.

P.S. I highly recommend Book Outlet!  Use my link to receive $10 off your first order of $25 or more.

#25. MORALITY FOR BEAUTIFUL GIRLS by Alexander McCall Smith || ★★★☆☆

“If people knew this,” she said, “if they knew that we were all from the same family, would they be kinder to one another, do you think?” Mma Makutsi put down the magazine. “I’m sure they would,” she said. “If they knew that, then they would find it very difficult to do unkind things to others. They might even want to help them a bit more.” (5%)

You simply could not help everybody; but you could at least help those who came into your life. That principle allowed you to deal with the suffering you saw. That was your suffering. Other people would have to deal with the suffering that they, in their turn, came across. (50%)

This is the third book in the No.1 Ladies Detective Agency series.  With everything going on in the world, I needed a lighter read and who better than Mme. Precious Ramotswe?  


#26. CHARACTERS OF THE PASSION: LESSONS ON FAITH AND TRUST by Fulton J. Sheen || ★★★★☆
My plan was to read this little book slowly throughout Holy Week, but I tore through it in two days!  I just love Fulton Sheen’s writing and this one was so, so good.  The chapter on Peter was beautiful and almost made me cry.

#27. INTO THE WATER by Paula Hawkins || ★★☆☆☆
After struggling through and eventually putting down a detailed non-fiction book about WWII, I decided I need a change of pace.  I grabbed this thriller from the library since I had liked Hawkin’s The Girl on the Train.  Unfortunately, I didn’t have nearly the same reading experience.  There were a lot of characters and since I was reading on my Kindle, it was almost impossible to keep flipping back and forth.  Just okay for me.

#28. THE ROSIE PROJECT by Graeme Simsion || ★★★★☆
Another light read.  I loved Don, the quirky main character who most likely had undiagnosed Asperger’s.

#29. THE HOUSE ON MANGO STREET by Sandra Cisneros || ★★★☆☆
“Told in a series of vignettes – sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes deeply joyous – it is the story of a young Latina girl growing up in Chicago, inventing for herself who and what she will become.”
(This was my 1984 pick for my 20th Century Reading Challenge too.)

#30. THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows || ★★★★☆

That’s what I love about reading: one tiny thing will interest you in a book, and that tiny thing will lead you onto another book, and another bit there will lead you onto a third book. It’s geometrically progressive—all with no end in sight, and for no other reason than sheer enjoyment. (5%)

In every nook, I find little things that tell me about her. She was a noticer, Sidney, like me, for all the shelves are lined with shells, bird feathers, dried sea grasses, pebbles, eggshells, and the skeleton of something that might be a bat. They’re just bits that were lying on the ground, that anyone else would step over or on, but she saw they were beautiful and brought them home. (57%)

I’m probably the last person on the planet who hasn’t read this one!  Such a charming story and the fact that it was totally told in letters was a fun change of pace.  3.5 stars, rounded up.

#31. THE ROSIE EFFECT by Graeme Simsion || ★★☆☆☆
This is the sequel to The Rosie Project and I had high hopes that it would be just as enjoyable.  But it just…wasn’t.  Disappointing.

#32. THE APARTMENT by K. L. Slater || ★★★☆☆
This thriller is about a struggling single mother who gets an opportunity to live in “a shockingly affordable flat in a fashionable area of London.”  And as the lesson goes, if it sounds too good to be true, it usually is.  I liked that the story was a fast-paced page turner, but I found the whole thing to be a little unbelievable.  I figured out whodunit pretty early on as well.
(Thank you to Netgalley for the opportunity to read this book.  The Apartment was just released on April 28, 2020.)

_________________________


MY READING IN NUMBERS FOR 2020
Books Read: 32
Pages Read: 9,373
Fiction: 20  //  Non-Fiction: 12
Kindle Books: 15  //  Paper Books: 17
20th Century in Books Challenge: 24/100
Original 2020 books “to-read” total on Goodreads: 414 // Current “to-read” total: 411
_________________________


April 29, 2020

No.390: 52 Weeks, 52 Letters Project // Weeks #14-17

This post contains affiliate links.


One of my big goals for 2020 is to send at least one piece of snail mail out every week.  Keeping track of my progress here on the blog will help keep me accountable and I’ll also get to share with you some small stationery businesses.  Maybe it will even encourage you to join in on the fun!

WEEK 14 (Mar 30-Apr 5)


A new baby was born!  I sent my congratulations in this adorable card from Yeppie Paper.  I also got to use one of my new stamps – how fun are these?!

WEEK 15 (Apr 6-12)


Lots and lots of Easter mail!  The Alleluia cards are from Gratia Design Co., Some Bunny Loves You cards are from Happy Dappy Bits, and the cute bunny one with the bracelet was a Meri Meri card that I picked up at Homegoods before all the craziness started.

WEEK 16 (Apr 13-19)


Birthday card week!  The cake card from Love Light Paper was sent to my sister-in-law.  It’s belated (I have a loose filing system for my cards and hers slipped into the wrong week!) but I’m sending it anyway.  The other two birthday cards were for my mom and my sister and both are from Yeppie Paper.  

WEEK 17 (Apr 20-26)


I sent a letter to a blog reader (hi Joy!) and had so much fun sharing a few of my favorite spring things: birds, books and flowers.  I mean, is there anything better?  The envelope is a free printable from Naomi Loves.  Her snail mail newsletter is wonderful.

CURRENT SNAIL MAIL TOTAL: 45
P.S. Need a little sunshine in your mailbox?  Sign up here to get on the list!

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The 10 Year Reading Plan for the Great Books of the Western World

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