I Take a Bubble Bath Every Night

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 (Image by Stockphotos, courtesy of FreeDigitalPhotos.net)

My coworkers are unanimously amazed that I take a bubble bath every night.

I mentioned it one day months ago, and I still hear them talking about it. One was wondering what she might give me for my birthday. “Well, she takes a bath every night, you know,” said another. “Oh, that’s right!” the first one answered excitedly, probably having visions of exotic bath products.

Also, the other day, I heard one comment, “I can’t believe Kim shaves her legs every night.” “What?!” said a second one. “Who does?” and when she was told it was me, she stared at me, incredulously. “Every night? There’s no way.”

I am surprised that they find it so amazing. I suspect they imagine me in a garden tub with candles and a flute of champagne, when really my bath is simply a part of my routine, no different than brushing my teeth. I fill the tub, toss in some bubble bath, and get in. If I’m reading an actual book I might take it into the bathroom with me and read a few pages while I soak. (One of the disadvantages of Kindle is that I’m afraid to read it in the tub in case I might drop it, so I read in the tub less often now.) Even including shaving, the whole process probably takes fifteen minutes—maybe a little longer if it’s a chilly night and the hot water is feeling especially good to my muscles. I like to go to bed clean in consideration of my husband, but also I simply enjoy my bath. I’ve taken them for as long as I can remember.

When I’ve asked my friends why it shocks them so, they’ll generally say, “How do you have time? Who has time for that every night?” I just cock my head and look at them, puzzled. I once read a book called Open House, by Elizabeth Berg. The narrator expresses curiosity about the lives of her neighbors, and wishes she could somehow magically crack open the roofs of their houses to peer inside and check out their lives. I think of that when my friends say they don’t have time for a bath. Granted, they simply might not care to take one, but to not have time? I wonder what it is they’re doing at 9 or 10 PM.

They’re not working. Cooking and cleaning seem unlikely at that hour. A few of them may be doing their college homework. But mostly I would guess they are shopping, doing errands they didn’t get to over the weekend, or coming home late from some sort of kids’ or church activity. See, this is why my children never did a great deal of extracurricular stuff. This is why I myself am not a “joiner,” and am probably gossiped about for my continuous absence at “ladies’ craft night” and various other activities at my church. My husband and I –both of us, and I’m very glad to be united in this matter—simply demand some “down time,” and will consider no other way of life. We work, we maintain an orderly home, stocked with groceries and clean laundry, we go to church on Sundays, and THEN—we expect some rest and relaxation. Period. 

When our son was younger, a buddy of his joined a Little League team. The two kids were in after-school care together, so we would run into his parents and speak to them most days. It seemed that this ball team had practice virtually every night of the week, and then games on Saturdays. I was more amazed by this than my friends are about my bath! Every night of the week? Seriously? And then to have the family’s whole Saturday dominated by the preparation for the game, the traveling to it and the playing of it? Thankfully our son was never interested in this kind of thing. But it seems to me that children are usually pushed into such activities by their parents when they’re barely past the potty-training stage. They’re too young to even know what baseball and gymnastics are, much less ask to participate. So parents, I have to wonder, why do you take on so much? Why do you over-schedule yourself and your family so?

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 (Image by Stockphotos, courtesy of FreeDigitalPhotos.net)

My son usually gets home from school just a few minutes before I get home from work. Once I change clothes, sometimes I plop down in his room to visit, or sometimes he comes to mine. We talk about whatever presents itself. One day last week, I told him the whole story of the day he was born. On another day, I asked him what he was reading in his English class and we discussed that. Eventually he’ll say he’s hungry and I might go ahead and fix him something to eat if he can’t hold out until dinnertime. But the point is, nobody’s in a hurry. Nobody’s nagging anybody to get ready to go somewhere. No major tasks are hanging over my head because we routinely take care of shopping and cleaning.  It’s 5 o’clock, and we’re pretty tired, but it’s okay because our day is mostly done. I care for the pets, tidy things up and look around the kitchen to see what I might fix for dinner, which I assure you is nothing complicated. Usually I light the candles in the living room, and then we’re just hanging out, waiting for Daddy to come home and join us. Our family is in for the night.

This Week Around Here

Yesterday, I suddenly realized I’d only written one post for the upcoming week. Nothing’s worse than writing under pressure and trying to develop a fairly lame idea into something worth reading, so instead I’m going to cheat and do a more personal and photo-oriented post.

First of all, in case you don’t read this whole thing, I want to tell you that I have finally gotten around to reading a book I’ve been noticing for several years: Kisses from Katie.

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Not many years ago, Katie Davis was a normal teenage girl from Brentwood, TN, who had a passionate desire to serve the poor. While other girls were applying to colleges, she was diligently searching for a place to volunteer. She wound up spending Christmas break of her senior year at an orphanage in Uganda (after having to beg her mother to accompany her). The experience changed her life. Though her parents were not in favor and her friends thought she had gone off the deep end, she chose Uganda over college, and moved there as soon as she finished high school, planning to teach kindergarten in an orphanage. Since then she has adopted fourteen little girls and founded Amazima Ministries, an organization that assists multitudes of destitute people. She has done all this, she says, because Jesus does not SUGGEST that we help the poor and the orphaned and widowed, he COMMANDS it. Katie believes that she cannot in good conscience do any less than she is doing, and what she’s doing is giving every ounce of herself, day in and day out. She is astonishing and you should read about her. Buy the book, or maybe you’d just like to visit blog.amazima.org to see a short video of Katie telling you about her own story.

Wow…after that I’m kind of embarrassed to even tell you what I’ve been up to. :-(

But OK, here goes. My in-laws are scheduled to come visit us next week.inlaws

They are very dear to us and we look forward to seeing them. One added benefit of their visits is that we always get a little excited and start sprucing up our home. It took me  awhile to get interested in decorating this apartment because I felt so displaced at first…plus I didn’t know how long we’d live here…plus after owning my last three homes, I felt keenly that this place wasn’t mine. But eventually it has begun to feel like home, and really we’re in no hurry to find any different housing, so we’ve been decorating.

My first order of business was to convince my husband to move several oddball, manly, framed posters that he had hung in goofy places when we first got here…when I was not myself. I’d rather banish them to some subterranean man cave that we do not currently have, but since that was not an option, we put them all on one bare wall in our dining area. It’s not ideal, but at least now I have one wall of goofiness instead of several rooms of it.

So, on our newly naked bedroom walls, we have put this:

BR walls Both the giant mirror ( which will surely decapitate us both if it ever falls), and the colorful metal birds are new. One morning I caught my cat perched on that black chair, tail switching, ready to jump up and eat one. I’m not sure if she could actually recognize them as representations of birds, but she sure seemed to!

The Kiss

I can’t manage to capture a good shot of this due to reflections, but this painting is The Kiss by Gustav Klimt. You will often see it displayed horizontally, as though the subjects were lying down. I admit it looks just as well that way, if not better, but we hung it vertically because that’s correct and because we’re all fancy and cultured like that. ;-) Oh and because we needed a picture that was taller than it was wide. (Hey…if you like this painting, I’ll put a link at the bottom of the post. You could order it from Art.com which is what we did.)

Then it was on to the living room, where there had been a blank spot over our TV for three years. We wanted something NOT rectangular,  and we hoped to find some kind of metal wall art, but we wound up with another giant mirror.     It was marked down because the paint was scratched, but that worked out fine for us because we didn’t like the color anyway. (It was originally silver, now it’s gold.)LR mirror The minute we hung it, I suddenly remembered a decorating rule that says when you hang a mirror in your home, you need to consider what it will reflect. That’s the problem, because in this case it only reflects more blank white wall. Oh well. I’m not in love with it, but it’s better than nothing.

One last picture…this is my coworker and friend Christina wearing a Lilla Rose hair clip! Christina's hair

I’m just getting started as a Lilla Rose consultant but I’m pleased that my friends have been excited to try the clips (and order some!) You can click the link in my sidebar to go to my Lilla Rose independent consultant site if you would like to look at more clips and try them for yourself.  www.lillarose.biz/sweetwaterandbitter

Excuse my shameless plugs, and have a great week! :-)

Buy at Art.com
The Kiss, c.1907
Buy From Art.com

My Laundry Area Makeover

Since our move to Florida in 2011, our family has lived in an apartment. While I have not done many projects here because we’ve never been sure how long we’d stay, one thing that I really couldn’t tolerate was our junky, cluttered laundry area.

BEFORE:

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All that stuff on the top shelf made me crazy, and the stuff on the dryer bothered me as well. So…. just a few changes brought us to this:

AFTER:

IMG_0251 We rigged a curtain rod to hang down from the ceiling. It doesn’t go all the way over to the opposite wall…the water heater hides over there. But it covers the part that most anybody would ever see. (Curtain from Wal-Mart.)

IMG_0253The two lined baskets came from Michael’s, and my biggest score was the FRAMED laundry room prints from Hobby Lobby. They were just a few bucks each, marked down from $40! The fact that I found this stuff at different places but in coordinating colors was just a bonus! :-) Now my laundry area is neat and put-together, without having to make any expensive permanent changes.

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