Showing posts with label Steph. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steph. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Exercise

I have never been a runner. In fact, I always sort of prided myself on hating exercise.


At the beginning of this year, though, I felt a very strong push to be more physically well. I didn't make a New Year's resolution to work out every day, or anything like that (because that never works for me), but I started by seeing a chiropractor for the first time, getting some massage therapy, had some other stuff taken care of, and went to the dentist again (which I hadn't done in a couple years). I was motivated all around to get in better health. I was tired of having problems and not feeling great. I was tired of my back aching and pulling muscles when I would pick up the kids. Little by little I am figuring things out and setting goals and making plans. Each month it seems I have tackled something new, and I am seeing some great results and feeling better about my direction. I have even tried to get outside more, as much as possible! The kids and I go on long walks and just stay in the sunshine as much as we can. Rexburg winter really hit us hard this year. The cabin fever struggle is real.

Exercise was still in the back of my mind, and I had reached out to a friend who is a Beach Body coach and asked about her routine and joining 21-day fix. I wasn't worried about losing weight, but I knew that I wasn't in shape, and after having 2 kids I just felt squishy. I wanted to feel toned and physically fit so that I could keep up with my kids and myself. We talked about options, but we didn't have money in our budget to start a workout plan. I know that exercising really doesn't cost anything, but sometimes it's hard to be motivated. By yourself. In an apartment with toddlers.

Then in May I was informed that I had severe depression.
Does this look like the face you would expect for someone with depression? I didn't.
This is not something that I have taken lightly talking about, because I didn't want to seem that I was "just another person" talking about their depression or using it for attention. Believe me, it is not that at all. This wake up call was not something that I was expecting, but also wasn't completely surprising. I've always been a pretty introspective person, but this made me reconsider how I was approaching my life. This year had started off with me trying to take care of my body and help it run as naturally as possible, so I felt again this big push to tackle exercise.

I decided immediately to start working out like I hadn't done in years. At the peak of my life's physical shape (age 17-18) I was in marching band, spent the fall season as drum major, and had taken weight training. I really took my health for granted. After high school I stopped working out completely because I was working full-time (not that this is a good excuse) but I coasted on my petite build and great metabolism.

Off and on over the years I have exercised here and there, but never totally consistently. I found a great love for yoga, and I do ride my bike in the summer. (Believe me, pulling kids in a bike trailer is no easy task!) But I've just never caught the workout bug. I watched my friends doing Cross Fit and marathons, and just thought, "They are so inspiring! But that is not for me."

Now, exercising has become a great outlet. I have even woken up early to go running before Jon leaves for work, or before we go to the temple. Who is this girl??


Our apartment community has a great workout room, so I'm able to have some alone time in the morning while Jon is with the kids before work. I started by running for 30 minutes. I took it slow and ran a 15 minute mile. I'm pretty sure my fastest 2-mile time in high school was 16 minutes, so I realized that this was sort of pathetic, but the point was that I was doing it. The next day I did some weights. I combined my exercising with listening to some awesome Christian rock like Five Iron Frenzy, and it was amazing how the combination of working out to beat my depression combined with uplifting and positive music became an incredible spiritual experience.

When I beat my distance goals today by running 3 miles, I did a fist pump in the gym! It felt amazing :D Since I knew the record break was coming up, I put on Cake's "Going the Distance" for the last couple minutes of my run, and I felt pretty rad. ;)


Then I had this CRAZY idea that I could run a half-marathon. Let me tell you, running in a marathon is something that I never ever wanted to do. Ever. Not interested. I even own a book on "non-running". I am very serious about it. But I thought that maybe working toward something crazy that was totally not my natural inclination might be really good. So...

I have seen my friend Morgan Joyner run in the Tinkerbell half-marathon at Disneyland before and have loved her posts. It became a goal burned into my mind that I would do this. Because it was a sacrifice. Because working out had suddenly become my way to beat Satan. I was going to round house kick him in the face with this marathon. The ladies-themed marathon weekend in Disneyland happens every May, so I had exactly a year to reach this goal. I decided on the more realistic 10K (also because that race is on Saturday, vs the half-marathon run on Sunday). It's definitely happening!

I've been working out now for a couple months and seeing some great results! Of course it is hard to work out for a few weeks and not see the 6-pack I was expecting ;) haha, but seriously I'm already so pleased with how I feel about my body, realizing that this is a long term adjustment and a slow climbing health goal.

When I started:
Plank 30 seconds
5 lb weights
15 sit ups
Run 15 minute mile


Now:
Plank 2 min
12-15 lb weights
40 sit ups
Pilates/ab workouts
Run 9 minute mile
Longest distance so far: 3 miles!!!! (farthest I have ever run at one time)

I even rewarded myself with some "new" workout clothes from D.I. ;)


It's a long process, but I've been happy to get started, finding my comfort zone and pushing myself a little bit. The main goal has been consistency! I work out every day except Sunday, for at least 30 minutes. Usually I do stretches and warm ups with sit ups/abs and planking. Then I lift weights for at least 15 minutes every other day (mostly small sets to work on my arms/shoulders) and then I do the elliptical or treadmill for 15-30 minutes.

I have also found that certain music is way better for me to workout to than others. Relient K is a huge favorite. I also am still enjoying Five Iron Frenzy, but "The End is Near" has always been my favorite album of theirs (not live, prior to the double release combo of The End is Here-which is also good), so I find myself listening to it on repeat. Some days I sprinkle in a little non-religious music like Arcade Fire, Cake, or Coldplay, but I have found myself just so much more motivated when listening to songs that remind me of WHY I am doing this in the first place, that I just go back to Relient K the most (they have a good album spread on Spotify).

While that is probably more than you really wanted to know about my exercising experience, I just wanted to share in case it helps motivate someone else who has been in my position. I never loved seeing others post pictures of themselves at the gym everyday, but now I get it. I feel so pumped and I'm actually sad if I miss a day or two. It's been a huge milestone for me, and an enjoyable experience that I never thought I would have. I can't wait to see where I am next May in Disneyland!

Monday, April 18, 2016

Steph @ no particular milestone

Since I've been doing updates on everybody else recently, I thought it might be a good time to post one on myself! I don't usually ever talk about my own interests and growth on the blog, since I'm usually behind the scenes and just generally update on our family activities and such. :)


Right now I am 28 years and 8 months old, which is a rather un-exciting age. 28 has been good to me so far, but 29 is coming up really fast, and it feels weird to have gone through this decade so quickly. The years 10-19 seemed to take a lot longer than 20-29...

Just really loving my glasses! I'm becoming increasingly more blind in my old age.

For the past two years I have been a full-time student at BYUI, and it's been amazing! (But also a ton of work and really stressful.) Since reaching our goal this past month of becoming debt free, we re-evaluated the pros and cons of me being in school right now, and decided together that this is a good time to take that leap of faith and settle into me being a full-time mom. :) It's always been the goal, but when Kate and Edwin were babies I had a full-time job and Jon couldn't find consistent work. Once we moved out here to Idaho, things started falling into place, and once Jon had a couple semesters of adjunct teaching we were able to see that he can support us, and I need to trust that it's working! So as of this Spring semester I have officially withdrawn my enrollment from the school. I know we aren't 100% in the place we'd like to be yet (we still look forward to having one full-time job someday, maybe even with benefits!) but the point is that we have what we need. It's tight, but we are in a great ward, in a community that we never expected to love like we do, and we're planning for the most awesome family Summer that we've ever had, plus exciting adventures for next year. Things are good, and even though it took a few years longer than we originally planned, I don't want to miss this time while the kids are little and really need me at home the most.

Blacknose sheep from Aunt Michelle :D

mini-Jamba's with my pals!

I die!! <3 td="">

While being on break this past week, and facing my full-time mommyhood square in the face, I've had a lot of time to think more about myself and my likes, dislikes, interests, and goals. I'm working toward being more physically fit, and healthy overall, and I'm also embracing my bakerella side. I've made some sort of cake, cookie, or dessert almost every other day in the past two weeks!

SO MUCH YUM.

So here are just some things about me that I've thrown together:
-Oatmeal Raisin cookies are my all time favorite!
-I have a love affair with Panda Express. Which is about as legit Chinese as Taco Bell is legit Mexican, but I love them both. My favorite plate: orange chicken and honey walnut shrimp with fried rice on the side. In fact, Panda Express was the first thing I asked for after Edwin was born. Thanks to some amazing friends for delivering on that wish while I was in the hospital. <3 p="">-My favorite meal to go out to eat for is breakfast. I especially love egg scrambles or omelets with goat cheese. :) That, and large fancy muffins.
-I could pretty much live off of Mexican food for the rest of my life. Too bad most of it is covered in cheese :(
-One of my favorite things to window shop or browse for are accessories. I know I'm 10 years old, but I seriously love Claire's. The problem is that I swoon over costume jewelry, but then I never talk myself into actually wearing it. I find myself becoming ever increasingly conservative in my earrings and necklaces. I wear studs and posts of simple pearls or single stones most of the time. Although I love the look of rings on every finger, if I ever try to wear more than two rings at a time, I feel like my hands are drowning. ;)
-Current jewelry goals: getting a really good birthstone ring.
-I hate the word "Wanderlust". I deal with it, but honestly it's right up there with "moist".
-At church we are occasionally given positions to serve in, like as Sunday School teachers, or in leadership roles. Right now I am the first counselor in the Relief Society presidency, which is the organization for all adult women in our ward area (a ward is a group of families who all live in a close regional boundary area, and meet together as a congregation on Sundays). My job is to coordinate our Sunday meetings, so I take care of the lesson schedule, hold teacher training, and make sure the music is lined up each week. The BEST part of this calling is being able to serve the sisters in our ward and get to know them better. We have weekly presidency meetings, plan monthly activities, visit our sisters, and provide for their needs. The ward becomes your extended family. I only do a small part of this, and it is a huge group effort, but it's been one of the best callings I've ever had. :)
-I like to take selfies, but hardly ever post them. Also, I don't understand duck lips...
-I realized about a year ago that I have the makeup bag of a 7th grader, and I set out on a quest to learn what to actually wear and how to wear it. :) I started interviewing my friends via text message to find out what they use and why. I want to makeup like an adult with brushes and stuff! I began a journey of makeup confessions and experiments... only to find that I really didn't have the time or money to do so. haha! It's still a work in progress ;) But I feel like I'm on the right track to looking more like an almost 30-something and less like a high school freshman.


-I am also on a mission to find a fantastic red everyday lipstick. Recommendations would be appreciated.
-About 11 years ago I was an avid musician. I would play for hours every day. I always told myself that I wouldn't be that person who stopped and let music become something that "I used to do". I still have my flute, but I haven't touched it in months. When I do occasionally practice, the kids just cry at me and say it's too loud... haha! I still imagine that someday I will join a community orchestra or something. :)
-Dark chocolate is the only kind worth eating.
-I LOVE camping! It's always been my favorite kind of vacation.
-I've never been to Hawaii, but I would really really like to go someday. Maybe just one pampering resort vacation would be fun ;)
-My favorite book genre is memoir, and my favorite book series are Harry Potter and the Chronicles of Narnia. My favorite author is Roald Dahl, and I especially love his autobiographies. The book that made the biggest impact on me growing up was The Giver. I've read it so many times! -- no, I have not seen the movie. C.S. Lewis is also amazing, and I'd love to read everything he's ever penned. The list of books I would LIKE to read is unfortunately much longer than the list of books I have read. I used to read constantly, but now I think that the last time I read a book all the way through was about a year ago... and it was for school. Still I like to spend hours wandering bookstores, and have a hard time leaving without at least a few to add to our bookshelves :)
-While I love being a mom, it's also the hardest thing ever. And hard in ways that I never expected. Mostly it's just hard to never get a break. Or be able to pee alone. It's like every time I enter the bathroom the kids decide to sit on each other or break something. I have so much respect for moms.
-One thing that I really love, but would like to be TONS better at, is photography. It's a fun medium of art, but I would really like to actually take a class someday. That's always been a far off goal.
-If there is bread in the house, I WILL eat it without reservation. I cannot take a loaf of homemade bread out of the oven and not cut off a hot slice to eat with butter and honey. It is impossible to resist.
-One of the best traditions that Jon and I started over the years has been collecting mugs. We don't own any regular glasses, but every time I open the cupboard it makes me smile to see where we have been. Every mug holds a memory. :) The goal was to have these hanging on the wall to save cupboard space. Someday we will do that.
-I think spa style bathrooms are amazingly gorgeous. I'm a sucker for the white towels and natural light with candles and plants mixed in. I've been trying to get our family bathroom to move in this direction for years. This is my someday bathroom.



If you want to see other stuff I'm up to on a daily basis, or things that I like, follow my Instagram here or my Pinterest here. I'm REALLY into food. I would also really really like to make a Spring grapevine wreath for our door. So that's a current goal.

Thanks for reading my ramblings. :) More life adventures up ahead!

Monday, November 30, 2015

More than 27 dresses

So, as you may already know, I am a dress collector. Well, dresses and skirts. Basically, I love how classy and feminine they are. Plus they are more comfortable than pants.

Since I wear skirts and dresses at least a few times every week, I occasionally have co-students ask me why I'm dressed so fancy. Tuesdays at school are pretty common to see people in church dress, because we have a weekly devotional in the I-Center. But when I wear dresses and skirts on other days, people seem surprised.

I made a comment to a friend a few weeks back that I could probably wear a different skirt or dress every day of the month (haha), but then I actually counted how many dresses and skirts I own and accepted my own personal challenge. November 1st began the month of dresses:

Day 1
Shirt and Skirt: Target, Cardigan from H&M

Day 2
Skirt: thrifted (DI, Sacramento CA), Shirt: thrifted (EcoThrift, Orangevale CA)
These fantastic cozy grey boots ^^ that you will see in tons of the following pictures are Bearpaw boots, which were gifted to us by some amazing friends when we moved out to Idaho. I LIVE in them. 

Day 3
Skirt: handmade by Jon Alston, Boots: thrifted (DI Sacramento CA), Shirt: hand-me-down

Day 4
Dress from Nordstrom (has sleeves!) / Cardigan from JC Penney

Day 5
Skirt: hand-me-down (RMS 28th ward friend), Sweater: Target

Day 6
Dress: Charlotte Russe, Cardigan: H&M, Earrings: Charming Charlie's

Day 7
Skirt: Old Navy, Shirt: hand-me-down, Boots: thrifted (DI, Sacramento CA)

Day 8
Dress: handmade by me

Day 9
hand-me-downs (skirt, shirt, and cardigan from friends at SuiteAmerica and RMS 28th ward)

Day 10
Skirt: thrifted (DI Sacramento, CA), Shirt: H&M

Day 11
ruffle skirt: yard sale in Loomis CA ($2!)
Also, how old does Edwin look in this picture ^^ ??

 Day 12
Skirt: thrifted (DI, Sacramento CA) - fun fact; this is the same skirt I wore the day Jon and I got engaged in 2005.

Day 13
Polka dot dress: ModCloth (has sleeves!), shoes: Charlotte Russe

Day 14
Skirt: thrifted (DI, Sacramento CA), Shirt: thrifted (DI, Rexburg ID), owl necklace: Charming Charlie's

Day 15
Dress: JC Penney, Shoes: Charlotte Russe

Day 16
Skirt: from a wonderful little shop in Utah. I got it back in 2004!

Day 17
Dress: ModCloth (has sleeves!), Cardigan: JC Penney

Day 18
Anniversary day! Dress: thrifted (Roseville CA), Cardigan: gift from my mother-in-law a few Christmases ago

Day 19
Dress: ModCloth (has sleeves!), Boots: DSW (Roseville CA), Flowers: anniversary spoils from RMS 28th ward friends

Day 20
Dress and cardigan from Target


Day 21
Birthday dress 2014 sent to me by a friend - From ModCloth! (but I added the red ribbon)

Day 22
Dress from the same friend who shipped me that ModCloth beauty above ^^

Day 23
Shirt: from a friend in the RMS 28th ward, skirt: BEBE (thrifted)

Day 24
pic credit goes to Kate (HAHA!) Handmade birthday dress by Jon

Day 25
Dress is from Nordstrom, earrings from Charlotte Russe, and shirt from DownEast

Day 26 - Thanksgiving day!
Dress from Nordstrom - it has sleeves!
(Fun fact: this was also the dress I wore to my Senior homecoming dance with Jon in 2004)
Day 27
Ignore the weird face I'm making...
Dress is from a friend in the RMS 28th ward. Cardigan from H&M

Day 28
Dress: from the same friend who gave me the green sparkly dress. I love that it has sleeves! I layered up underneath because it is COLD in Idaho this week haha. Tights and tank top are from Target. Hat from Charlotte Russe

Day 29
Dress: JC Penney, Boots: DSW

Day 30!!
Dress: Charlotte Russe (Jon got it for me on my 19th birthday), Cardigan: Target

I was kind of proud of myself for having exactly enough dresses and skirts to make it through the month! Maybe I need to part with a few :'D Who needs pants anyway?

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Course Correction

"We need to do something with our lives."
Jon said this to me last week while we were browsing the Museum of Idaho. Basically what it comes down to is that we have spent the last 9 years of our marriage, and 11 years since we've known each other dreaming, talking about plans, coming up with ideas, and always saying SOMEDAY . . .

but that is no more.

In follow-up to our attempts at pursuing a Christmas Tree Farm



(more on that later), we started examining what we were really passionate about. In coming to school at BYU-Idaho I have learned a lot about myself. During Fall semester I was able to attend the Power 2 Become conference, and it made me critically aware of my goals and what I was passionate about.


 At first I thought, "Well I'm really not 'passionate' about anything. That's sort of why I came here to school; to figure out what I'm doing." But then it hit me very clearly and has not gone away since: and that is FAMILY.


The only thing in this world that I've ever come back to again and again that I never get tired of working on, or for, is FAMILY.

I should clarify that this does not always mean I LIKE my family (HAHA!) or that I never get frustrated or tired with them--I think that is 100% normal--but what it really means is that I've felt a distinct push toward family projects, goals, and life for a very long time.

In my patriarchal blessing there is specific mention of Family History work. It is the reason that I hoped to minor in Family History Research at BYU-I. Even right before coming out to school we had visited my Grandma Jean Bailey (who passed away just two weeks later)
 

and while visiting her and talking about stories of her and my dad's life, I told Jon that I wished I really could devote the time and spend all day writing their stories and help organize these memories for future generations. Jon said, "Why don't you major in Family History work?" -- and since BYU-I doesn't really have a genealogy major other than a certificate, we decided taking the classes for a minor might be better for me.

As a precursor to that idea, I have also always wanted to be a mom. I'm sure that many young women feel this way, but it sincerely has never felt to me like I would be fulfilled in life unless I was able to be the best mom and wife possible. I guess if I had a lifelong dream of anything, it would be that.

So taking a step back and examining my progress:
how am I achieving that goal?

Well, first, we got married and had kids, so that's a step in the right direction!



But secondly, I have always worked. I worked full time while pregnant with Kate, I worked full time the first year and a half of her life and while pregnant with Edwin, and then when Edwin was born I knew that I was going to go to school full time, so I only worked one day a week and the rest of the time was Etsy, caring for a newborn, and packing for our move to Idaho.

Thirdly, I've been going to school in Idaho.


I mean, you try to get any reading done while wrestling with this adorable face:

 
While I definitely feel like it was the right move for our family, and the spirit here has been incredible, and we have met amazing people, and I have learned a ton of things, and school is something I'm good at . . . I don't like who I am in school.

Maybe I should back up even more.

Here's a summary of the last 8 years:
-We moved to CA from Utah and Jon transferred from BYU to Sac State (We hated Utah, missed our families, and wanted to just make our lives more awesome. It was a great decision and probably saved our marriage. True story.)


-I worked for 4 years at a corporate housing company. This was my desk:


I was good at my job. And hated my life.

(We also had a guinea pig)


-At the same time we lived in an AMAZING ward and met lifelong friends. We got a dog, worked on a roadshow with the youth, went to youth conference, I served in YW and Primary. It was some of the greatest growing and learning of my entire life. LOVE Fair Oaks 5th!



 Also, we got a Margo:


-During this time Jon graduated with his Bachelor's degree and then his Master's.

(nevermind the lady photo-bombing)

All of our school time was full of changes and decisions. Jon changed his major many times before deciding on English and writing, because it was what he was PASSIONATE about and never got tired of doing. That is a much better way to spend life than just settling for a job that pays well but stresses you out and makes you wonder why you even bother waking up every day.
-On that note, with Jon's last year of Master's work coming up, we decided to have a baby (if you couldn't tell from the picture above). So I quit my stressful corporate job (even though I had just been promoted into a new position, and had flown across country for training in Washington DC. I loved my coworkers, but that job was eating my soul, and I tend to be a chronic work-a-holic, so I knew that I could not balance baby/family and working that much.)
-We decided to move in with Jon's parents while Jon graduated so that we wouldn't have to renew our lease. I figured within 6 months he would have a teaching job or be working as an editor somewhere and we would buy a house. Perfect.
-I quit my job without another option.
-Through a friend I was able to work at Beverly's. It was going to be my "fun job" while we had kids.
-I spent 3 years at Beverly's and we spent 2 years living with Jon's parents because Jon was never able to find something full time.




We were always torn between wanting to take care of our family and be independent, and also not wanting to sell our souls for crappy jobs. Jon wanted to be able to use his degree that he worked so hard for, and so he was picky about jobs to an extent. I supported him and hoped that he could support us so that I could spend time with the kids. Because that wasn't happening though, I kept working and waiting, and working and waiting...
-Finally Jon was told the campus he was teaching part time at would be closing. His job had an expiration date.
-I wasn't having great luck finding a new job because I was pregnant with Edwin, and I felt like this was all a lot of nonsense. I was tired of waiting around for something to happen and felt like we needed to try something new and different. So I applied for school at BYU-Idaho. Why not??
-I was accepted to school and Jon and I decided that we would see how the spring went while I had baby #2, and if nothing better came up for Jon, then we would move and try our luck in Idaho.
-The week after Kate's second birthday in August we moved and started completely over.

New jobs, new friends, new ward, new state, new school, new grocery stores, new everything.


Although it's been challenging, it has also been so immediately clear that we were supposed to be here. It was awesome and strange all at the same time. My professors were amazing. I learned more about our family and myself in just a few months than I ever expected.

So here's where it all came together:
At the same time that I loved school, I was stressed. As happens with me, I can't do anything below 1,000%. If my name is on it, I have to feel entirely good about it. I am OVERLY thorough and detailed to the point of annoyance. It makes me painstakingly slow at times, and I have to double and triple check everything. I demand perfection of myself. In EVERYTHING I do. As you can see, this is a problem when you're trying to go to school full time, be a mom full time, be a wife full time, cook meals every night, keep the house clean, have a fun social life with friends, and (oh yeah) get some sewing done and maybe sell a few things on etsy. (BAHAHAHA. HAHA. HAHA. Yeah right.)

I gave up on a lot. I stopped cleaning the house.


I didn't sew at all for 6 months. I pushed the kids aside to entertain themselves and fill coloring books because I just had to get assignments done.


Jon basically got no attention from me. Everything stopped except school.

But the kid's lives kept moving. Edwin was growing and Kate was learning and she needed a lot more stimulation for her toddler brain. I never felt good about sitting her in front of movies all day, and I couldn't really even if I wanted to because we don't own a TV. Basically I saw all these mommy things that I wanted to do, but I felt like there were other things I needed to get done first...

So there were two main problems:

1) On the outside it looks like I'm doing great. Jon seriously makes me look good.


I owe all of my school success to him. We would also never get out the door on time anywhere if it weren't for him. I could have never done school remotely well without him. I got straight A's last semester, because he did everything (bathing kids, going to work, taking care of the apartment) and I stayed up until 1am most nights doing homework. So on the inside I was a mess and cried a lot.

2) I was still putting off what was REALLY important. I guess it was coming down to "good, better, and best". I like school and I think it is important. I like working and taking care of my family and helping us earn money, and I think that is important. I like being a wife and a mother and doing awesome things for my family, and I think that is important. I like developing my talents, working on my music and sewing, and I think that is important. I like taking photos with Jon and we've always had fun with photography just being an artistic outlet, and I think having a hobby together is important.

But in the background we were (and ARE) still missing the point.
Behind everything that we're doing outwardly, we spend nights talking about our plans for the future, how SOMEDAY we'll have a house, and SOMEDAY we'll plant a garden, and SOMEDAY I'll be able to stay home with the kids, and we read books on how to achieve our dreams, and we talk about ideas that we want to try and things that we want to learn . . .

Yet here we are (almost at anniversary #10) and we're basically in the same position now as we were when we got married: poor, going to college, living in a Mormon-ville town, surrounded by a lot of people who seem to have a lot of direction and are getting jobs left and right and moving away while we are stuck with our ideas and a whole lot of spinning our wheels in the mud.

Let me just say that I KNOW not everyone knows what they're doing with their lives.
I KNOW that people still are figuring out what they want to be when they grow up when they are in their 40's or 50's (or even 60's!)
I KNOW that it's not like we will ever really have life figured out.
I KNOW that we have done good things. We are constantly getting a little closer, and a little closer, to our ideal lives. We sew, we cook, we camp, we have an adorable dog, we made two fantastic human babies, and we serve at church. We go to the temple regularly, and we enjoy the Earth. It's good stuff.

But there are big chunks missing.

Jon and I are not wallowers. When I see a problem, I like to fix it. I might not be very fast at it, but I don't like to let things just SIT. I'm all about a plan. I like to have an idea of where we are going and how we are going to get there. I always feel like, if you see a direction that you'd like your life to take, then you need to be moving with every effort to reach that goal, otherwise where is your conviction? If you truly believe in something, then why would you not live it?

I have spent years talking about my belief in FAMILY.

ermagersh it's so windy here... also Kate's face is fantastic.

I believe that it is what I am here for: to raise children and dedicate as much of myself as possible to being a successful human trainer, and helping cultivate little lives to be the best possible humans that the Alston family of Jon and Steph can offer, so that they will be informed, responsible, happy, and contributing members of society and to the world (and heck, the whole UNIVERSE.) I want our family to be HAPPY, and GREAT, and I want to build a house with my husband (and maybe even a treehouse!) and spend our lives around the people that we love the MOST. I don't want to settle for an "idea" or spend years trying to maybe make new friends, or sort of like a job that keeps me out of the home just because I feel an obligation.

What we need more of is desire and passion for the good and eternal.

The Lord has set us up for major earthly success. Although I always have felt that our goals and life pursuits are somewhat heading in the right direction, I've honestly just been tinkering around. We try things here--we have ideas there--we sort of do this--we move on to that.

I have never felt like a wishy-washy person, but in the recent year of trying to move with confidence in the direction that we truly want to see our lives going, it has made for some little messes. We've started in some directions, and then changed our minds. We've had a couple of ideas, and then taken a step back. And I think that's OK! But I want to be sure about our plans.

There is nothing worse than getting stuck and staying on a path by happenstance because you feel like that's just what you're "supposed" to do.

I have a quote hanging on the inside of our front door:


I believe this; and Jon and I together want our lives to follow this pattern.
There are only a few things that truly and really matter:
that we honor our covenants with God.
that we respect our marriage and family.
that we follow God's commandments and honor Jesus Christ.
that whatever we do is with an eternal perspective, and is what makes us fulfilled and happy, and not for temporal gain and praise of men.
that we achieve the dreams that are most important in our lives, and cut out the distractions that we'll look back on when we're 70 and realize weren't really that big a deal.

Can we recognize those things now and live life with minimal regret and time wasted? I believe we can.

Every year we get a little closer and our lives get a little better:
I quit a mind-numbingly wasteful job in exchange for less stress and more time with my family.
We had kids and enjoy the experience of raising children--at least 50% of the time ;)
When we have ideas we try them out. If they don't work, we own it and correct our steps.
We want to make clothes, we sew them.



We want to eat cake, we bake it.


We want to learn how to do something new, and we go for it! Life is all about growing and changing and becoming better.

We have divine and eternal potential. As dually spiritual and physical beings we have incredible opportunities to experience the world and find what our Heavenly Father wants for us, because our reach is limitless!

That all being said, let's go back to the museum . . .

Jon said to me that we needed to do something. Make changes. So we identified the 3 things that are most important to us.

Then we went to the temple and prayed about it.


The temple is such a reverent and glorious place to pray, study, and feel quiet inspiration from the Lord. It's not like I've ever seen angels there, or hear a voice directly telling me to do something extremely specific. But I do feel clarity. Nothing in the temple is rushed. There are no distractions. It is clean, and beautiful, and free of worldly pressures. It is truly the Lord's House, and every inch is dedicated to His purposes. Being there really feels like a bit of Heaven on Earth.

While we were there in the celestial room I felt distinctly that, "learning is eternal. You will have your whole life and eternity to learn, to grow, and to expand your knowledge. But your children only grow up once."



I've always waited to be a stay-at-home mom. And I've always felt like eventually I'd get there: "When Jon gets a full time job that is solid. When he's in his career field. When I'm done with school." (which in a huge part was because I felt like I really needed to provide for our family and that wasn't going to happen while I worked at a craft store.)

But if there is anything that I have learned here, it is that I CAN DO HARD THINGS. I never thought that stopping everything except taking care of my family would be a "hard thing", but it is the HARDEST. There have always been other good things that I have let sort of get in the way. I told Jon that it must be because this work is the most important. There are awesome things waiting to happen here, or else it wouldn't be so hard to commit and stop being distracted. Satan has a way of pulling us sneakily away from all the things that are really the most worth doing. It is an enticement to procrastinate and a competition for our time and claim for our affections.

President Ezra Taft Benson taught that we manifest our love for the Lord by our willingness to do the Lord’s will. He said: “I wish that every Latter-day Saint could say and mean it with all his heart: ‘I’ll go where you want me to go. I’ll say what you want me to say. I’ll be what you want me to be’ [LDS Hymns, no. 270]. If we could all do that, we would be assured of the maximum of happiness here and exaltation in the celestial kingdom of God hereafter.

And that most important thing in my life is FAMILY. It trumps everything else.



And if I truly believe that, then I need to put that faith into action and stop trying to figure out the "logical and world-prescribed" way of making that happen, and instead try the spiritual, leap-of-faith way of making that happen.

I have never truly 100% given my family my all--and nothing else. I'm being completely honest with myself here. There has ALWAYS been something else vying for my attention or taking up my time; school, jobs, photography, obligations to other people, businesses, a sense of duty... you name it.

Even this last semester when I was off track from classes I was busy with TA work. It was great! I loved it. What a cool experience to assist a professor.


I learned so much. But it was still a few hours of the day when I was telling Kate that I couldn't read to her because I had my own work to do, or I couldn't color with her because I needed to finish my projects. And then I'd get frustrated when she would highlight on my papers (because she just wants to help) or it's like during the semester when she would put stickers in my textbooks:



 I would get frazzled when the time came to interrupt my momentum of working for making dinner (you can't really skip a meal time with a toddler and one-year-old and hope they're ok with a microwaved Hot Pocket instead.)

Kids take time. Family needs time. They deserve ALL my time, and not just the sideways glances as I'm tuned into the computer and hoping that the watercolors stay on the page and not all over the table and floor. (Don't worry, most of this blog was typed while the entire family was napping.)


So we are making real, distinct, immediate, and direct changes. Every step is aligning our will with Heavenly Father's will, and working to be what Heavenly Father wants us to be, both as individuals and as a family.

The first big change was deferring this semester. I was all registered and set to start classes on April 20th for Spring semester, but I am putting them off. I keep my enrollment and standing at BYU-I and will pick up where I left off in Fall. It gives us a few more months to keep the momentum we've started with our family goals and the Etsy stores (which all would have come to a screeching halt if I started classes in a week.) And it also will give us a few months to actually try functioning in the way that we always said we wanted to: Jon working and writing as I stay home with the kids and run our household and teach our children in the most effective and positive way possible. No more distractions. No more ulterior priorities. We're cutting out what is unnecessary and focusing with more precision on the most important aspects of life: our FAMILY.

This is just step 1 of the major goals we identified. We feel really great about it as we were both kind of dreading me going back to school. I think this semester would have been better than the last. I have a more realistic idea now of what attempting 14 credits is like with two children under 3 at home. But is feeling the obligation of the fact that I was already registered a good enough reason to keep going when I know that there are sacrifices being made at home? Would it be good enough to stay at school because I feel like I have financial aid coming, and scholarships that are counting on me, and people that are watching what I do? Honestly, I don't think that those ideas are convincing enough to put off our individual family needs. We can find jobs other ways. We can earn money other ways. We can take time with school and I can take classes part time. I can take classes online. In fact, I don't HAVE to go to school at all. It was a good opportunity for our family at the time and we took it. I have no regrets about moving to Idaho at all.



When we get to the Summer, we'll re-evaluate. If this semester off goes well and we see our eternal direction flourishing and our family taking positive strides toward the best outcomes, then we will continue that way and keep moving on with our big life goals. And if we see that there is a healthy way to balance school, work, and family, then I will re-register and we'll keep moving from there.

Life is about exploring options. It is about learning, and growing, and all the while figuring out what matters most and how Heavenly Father wants you to spend your time, and who he wants you to spend your time with. It's worth changing your mind sometimes.

In the end Jon and I agreed that the praise of God on our labors is more important than any praise or expectation of men. Are WE happy with what we see in ourselves and the eternal direction of our family? In whatever way we see our lives going and possibly deviating from the path we want to be on, or dream of ending up on, it is worth the course correction to make that happen.


Our FAMILY is worth it.

To be continued . . .