• How to Stay Connected After the Kids Move Out

    How to Stay Connected After the Kids Move Out

    One challenge of empty nest parenting is how to stay connected after the kids move out. I spent years preparing them to live independently, but now I miss the mundane intimacy we shared while they were under my roof. We try to be intentional about planning family dinners, game nights, and movie dates. We video

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Archives

  • A Conundrum in My Kitchen

    A Conundrum in My Kitchen

    A full fridge means leftovers are at critical mass There’s a conundrum in my kitchen. While most people grocery shop when their refrigerator is empty, I have to shop when mine is full. It took me awhile to identify the reason. In my house, a full fridge does not mean there are food choices in

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  • Memories Hide Within the Clutter

    Memories Hide Within the Clutter

    Why do we keep the stuff we keep?   I alternately wage war and make peace with the clutter in my house. Occasionally my tolerance of “stuff” reaches critical mass and I go on a rampage against it. In those moods I’m determined to minimalize, simplify, de-acquire. But my clutter is sneaky. It knows how

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  • The Huge Boss, the Small Boss, and Dogs That Don’t Listen

    The Huge Boss, the Small Boss, and Dogs That Don’t Listen

    Some days, I just want to be the huge boss   Our family roles have been defined since my son’s preschool days. According to his 4-year-old reckoning, Dad is the huge boss and I am the small boss. Since this pronouncement happened over 20 years ago, I can only guess at the criteria my son

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  • Things That Go Ring in the Night

    Things That Go Ring in the Night

    Video doorbells don’t always see everything   Fearless, I’m not. In fact, sometimes I’m a downright sissy. Not that I haven’t done brave things. After all, I birthed two children without so much as a Tylenol. And I’m not afraid of the dark, but sometimes I’m afraid in the dark. I don’t like things that

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  • Food is Love and Cookbooks are Sacrilegious

    Lessons from an Italian Grandmother My Italian grandmother taught me that food is love. She lived ten minutes from us growing up and never came over empty-handed, so my siblings and I were the recipients of an awful lot of love. And it was all from scratch. I don’t know if cooking from scratch is

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  • Turning Outlaws into In-Laws

    Turning Outlaws into In-Laws

    Saying “I do” doesn’t immediately make you family.   Turning outlaws into in-laws isn’t easy, because marrying into a family and joining a family are two different things. Marriage is a moment, but joining is a journey. I’ve witnessed this phenomenon in our own family as the nieces and nephews begin to tie the knot.

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  • Learning to Paint in the Blank Spots

    Learning to Paint in the Blank Spots

    Lessons gleaned from preschoolers learning to paint “This is Ben,” said the teacher. “He is learning to paint in the blank spots on the page.”   I looked at the paint-smocked preschooler, who stood in front of the easel holding a color-laden brush. In the center of his paper was a cloud of at least

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  • Failure to Negotiate

    Too Chicken to Haggle Over Chickens The root of most marital arguments is failure to communicate. In my marriage, it’s failure to negotiate. That’s because I married a man with the soul of a horse trader, while I possess the heart of a chicken. He relishes negotiating the numbers, but I abhor haggling. Our most

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  • Sweating the Small Stuff

    Sometimes it’s the little things that get you I’ve always thought of myself as a flexible person, one who goes with the flow, and doesn’t sweat the small stuff. Apparently, I am delusional. Because some small stuff really does make me sweat.   Here’s the list of my top five: #1 – Unmade beds With

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