Me, recycled.

(image credit)

A couple people suggested that I re-post my own interview –about me– here on my own blog (Thanks, Allison, for making me answer the questions in the first place).  So I did.  Down there below.  In the meantime, are you enjoying Find-A-Friend Friday?  I think the questions are good questions to really get to know someone, but maybe it gets a little boring to read the exact same interview every week?  Anyway, if you have any suggestions for good interview questions, toss them into the comments below and I’ll try to rotate a few different things for variety’s sake.

Hello there, I’m Stephanie.  I’m (gasp) 38 years old and a mother of three.  That age may shock some of my readers because my children are young (8, 6, 4), but hey, what can I say?  I was a late bloomer.  I’m married to Matt, who is the best thing that ever happened to me. . . . except for the part where he went to law school for 4 years and made us move to Utah when he was done.  (That wasn’t totally his fault though, but I give him a hard time because it wouldn’t be right/wise to tease God about it.)  I’m a stay-at-home mom who spends my time hopping from one glamorous task to the next– you know, like laundry, grocery shopping, scraping boogers off the walls, packing school lunches etc. — and I go back-and-forth between the opinion that I never get anything done and the realization that I accomplish quite a lot.  I’m learning motherhood day by day and I’m surprised over and over by how much miracle is wrapped up in the dreary details.

I claim Atlanta, Georgia as my home, but I actually also grew up in Illinois, North Carolina, Missouri, and Indiana.  I graduated from high school in Georgia and my parents have been there ever since, so for all intents and purposes, it’s home.  I am the oldest of four children and my siblings are still my good friends.  In my pre-motherhood life, I got my masters degree in Spanish Teaching and taught Spanish classes at the high school and university levels.  I served a mission in Argentina, and I still have a deep love for the Hispanic language and culture.  In the summers, I teach at EFY (just a couple sessions a year), but that’s in English.  In my eleven years of married life, we’ve moved from Utah to North Carolina to Minnesota and back to Utah.  It’s been a little crazy, but I would not trade the good friends we’ve made along the way for anything . . . except maybe an all-expense paid trip to everywhere cool I want to go, especially if I could take my friends with me.

1.     What’s your favorite part of motherhood?

I love the quiet moments.  (I’m convinced that old people can’t hear because their children were so loud for so long.)  I love hand-holding, real conversation with questions and answers, and one-on-one time with my children.  I love to read them books.  I love to see something I’ve taught them come alive in the way they act or speak.  I love the anticipation of who they will become.

2.     What part of motherhood would you subcontract out if you could?

Bedtime.  I would pay someone to get them all the way ready for bed and tucked in, so I could just step in and do the fun hug/kiss/scriptures/bedtime story part when they’re already tired and tucked in and snuggly and warm.  That’s not all, though. I would also subcontract out putting away laundry, unloading the dishwasher, getting all the right things into the right backpacks in time, and cleaning the floor around the toilet in my boys’ bathroom.

3.     Name 2 or 3 items on your “bucket list.”  (Some things you’d like to do before you die.)

Oh, gosh.  My bucket list is huge.  I’m going to pretend that when I read that question, it asked for 23 items.  Visit all the Spanish-speaking countries in the world (5 or 6 down, about 25 to go),  write a book, publish a real article in the Ensign, serve missions (plural) with Matt, finally finish my Protecting Innocence Project website, take a one-on-one trip with each of my children, actually read all the books on my “to-read” list on Goodreads.com, paint and decorate and buy furniture and “finish” decorating my house, finally label all my digital photos and print books for my children of their childhood, get my Ph.D. and maybe someday be a professor, know the scriptures so well that they’re just “in” me . . . .  Mostly I want to discover what God wants me to do with my life, and then just do it the best that I can.

4.     Brag for a minute.  Do it.  What are a few things that you’re pretty good at?

I’ve been told that I’m a good teacher/speaker and a good writer.  I think I’m just a good communicator.  I also think I’m a good and loyal friend.  I have lots of great ideas for projects, but I’m not always great at following through.  It’s kind of joke with people who know me well, but I make lots of signs to hang up around the house with reminders and quotes and goals and chores and stuff like that.  I have a good memory for some things, mostly people’s names and their stories, plus the scriptures or general conference talks.  It’s pretty easy for me to draw on those things in conversation or teaching.  I also think I have a knack for making people laugh, which has been really helpful in otherwise awkward or tense situations.

5.     What are you loving lately?

Reading, going out to lunch with old girlfriends and also meeting new people, wearing boots a lot so I don’t have to shave my legs, the view of the temple out my front window, the view of the mountains out my back window, my Kindle, MyJobChart.com and the new fire in my children’s bones about doing chores, scouring travel websites for great deals and planning fantasy vacations (that I never really take), this song, and the hope that I’ll get my husband back after the Bar exam next week.

6.     Do you have a favorite scripture or quote?  Why?

Favorite scripture:  Proverbs 3:5-6.  “Trust in the Lord with all thy heart and lean not on thine own understanding.  Acknowledge Him in all thy ways and he shall direct thy paths.”  Because it works.  And he does direct your paths.  My favorite hymn (that goes along with this scripture) is “Be Still, My Soul,” especially this part:  “Be still my soul, thy God doth undertake to guide thy future as He has the past…”

Favorite quote:  This is a tough one because I have a million.  Here are two that I find myself thinking of or falling back on a lot.

1.  Because I am not patient:

“Throughout scripture we encounter the need for us to remember that the Lord has His own timetable for unfolding things; it will not always accord with our schedules or our wants. When, in our extremities, we urgently call for a divine response, there may be, instead, a divine delay. This is not because God, at the moment, is inattentive or loves us less than perfectly. Rather, it is because we are being asked, at the moment, to endure more for the welfare of our souls. The blessed meek understand that God loves them even when they may not be able to explain the meaning of what is happening to them or around them.” Neal A. Maxwell”

2. Because this guides my philosophy about teaching children and youth:

“President (J. Reuben) Clark described youth as “hungry for things of the Spirit [and] eager to learn the gospel.” He said: “They want it straight, undiluted. They want to know … about our beliefs; they want to gain testimonies of their truth. They are not now doubters but inquirers, seekers after truth.”  President Clark continued: “You do not have to sneak up behind this spiritually experienced youth and whisper religion in [their] ears; you can come right out, face to face, and talk with [them]. … You can bring these truths to [them] openly. … There is no need for gradual approaches.”   Since then I have taught young people in the same way that I teach adults.” — President Boyd K. Packer, April 2009

7.     What do you gravitate toward during your unscheduled time?

A lot of times it’s the Internet–blogging, emailing friends, working on projects.  I struggle a little to find a good balance for that because I want to have other healthy outlets too.  I just started the process of writing a book and I’m trying to make more time for that.  After the kids are in bed asleep, I like to read books or watch shows on my DVR while I fold laundry.  I like to make phone calls and check up on friends.

8.     Tell us some of your best mom-tricks  (things you’ve figured out that work well for you).

Once I give my child an answer, I don’t back down, no matter how much they complain or try to make a scene (unless I realize that I’m wrong.) I don’t make threats without following through; If I tell them we’ll leave a place if they don’t improve their behavior, I actually leave.  I apologize to my children when I make a mistake.  The very best mom-trick I can think of is teaching them the scriptures because you can draw on them often in conversation, both to correct and to praise behavior.

9.     What’s something you don’t usually want people to know about you, but that they need to know if they’re going to be your friend?

I love to talk to people, and I have to admit that when I’m in an excited conversation, I have some habits I’m not proud of, namely:  interrupting, talking too loud, and sometimes even talking with my mouth full.  (Good grief, Stephanie, can’t you just wait long enough to chew?) I cannot multi-task well when children are involved– I either have to ignore them completely to accomplish the task at hand, or do it haphazardly with a large measure of distraction.  When I talk on the phone, I literally pace back and forth and back and forth in and out of rooms in my house.  I have no idea why.  I also complain a little bit too much about silly things, and I admit sometimes it’s just for dramatic, comedic effect.  (I’m a teensy bit sarcastic.)  And if you’re going to be my friend, you need to know that I have a low tolerance for casual, blatant disobedience, especially when it’s laughed off or shrugged away.  I guess that makes me judgmental.  I’m working on that.

10. If you were in charge of a girls’ night out, what kind of activity would you love to plan?

Well, that’s easy.  See here.

11. Friends are great for venting.  What’s been frustrating you lately?

(Deep breath.) My oldest boy has started to be sassy with me and I do. not. like. it.  I’ve been frustrated with the schools since our move, and I’m still trying to figure out the right thing to do about that.  I never feel like I get enough sleep, which is ironically hampered by also feeling like I don’t get enough “free time.”  My daughter (age 4) has had several medical issues, including a recent surgery, and I was just made aware that she has another (unrelated) potential health concern.  I’m feeling a little anxious about that.  I’ve been frustrated in a tired way while Matt’s been studying for the Bar and I’ve been kind of single-parenting.  (This is the part where you real single moms are allowed to roll your eyes.)  I’m still trying to figure out why I had to move to Utah and what that means for me.  It’s been a hard adjustment, and it hasn’t been easy to form new friendships.  And, the hours from 4:30 – 8 p.m. every day are basically a non-stop exercise in frustration.  How’s that for a long answer?  See?  I told you I complain too much.

12. What parts of your testimony are you the most sure of?

I am absolutely certain that Jesus Christ lives, that He is my Savior, and that he knows me and loves me.  I know that God blesses us far beyond what we deserve, especially when we’re trying.  I know that the teachings of living prophets are scripture; they guide me, strengthen me, and protect me.  I know my Heavenly Father can do more with my life than I can.  And I know that obedience brings power.

 

My blog is Diapers and Divinity(Duh.  You’re here.) Like the title hints, I write to explore the miracles and the mundane that are juxtaposed in the journey of motherhood.  I try to look for the divine in all the dreary details, and when I can’t see it, I try to laugh about it.

GCBC Week 22: Avoiding Sin and Addictions

This week we will study two general conference talks,

“Avoiding the Trap of Sin”
by Elder Jairo Mazzagardi

“We must be alert because small choices can bring great consequences . . . What may appear to be of little importance . . . will make us lose sensitivity little by little, allowing us to do worse things.”

and

“O That Cunning Plan of The Evil One”
by Elder M. Russell Ballard

“If anyone who is addicted has a desire to overcome, then there is a way to spiritual freedom—a way to escape from bondage—a way that is proven. . . . The formula for having our heart, our body, our mind, and our spirit transformed is found in the scriptures.”

What did you learn and/or understand better from these two talks?  What do you think the speakers are asking us to do?

Please share your thoughts in the comments below.

(If this is your first time to General Conference Book Club, click here to learn more about it.)

Find-A-Friend Friday: Meet Jaime

This week we’re meeting a friend who is new to all of us.  Jaime has kind of been one of those hiding-in-the-shadows readers, so I’m glad she made an appearance for this new feature. 🙂  I hope you enjoy meeting this talented lady as much as I did.  Here’s Jaime:
Hi, I’m Jaime, nice to “meet” you. I am thrilled that Stephanie chose me as the friend to feature this Friday. I have been following her blog for a few months now and love what I have read here so far. I hope I can live up to what she has created here.

I am a 34 year old stay at home mother to 3 amazing little men. I have been married to my best friend for a little over 13 years now. I love him more every passing year. We live in Alberta, Canada. It really is not snow covered all year long here…but it has been pretty snowy this year! (and no, I don’t have a dog sled or dog team…although that would ROCK!)

I am the oldest of 5 children. Three boys followed me out, and my sister came along 12 years after me. I was always more motherly than sisterly, and I still haven’t grown out of that. I went to “Ricks College” when it still was Ricks. I was teased and told that I would gain an “MRS” degree, but I told everyone I was actually going to learn…crazy I know! I obtained my associates degree in Landscape Horticultural Management and returned home single, but stayed that way for only a week! I met and married my dh 51/2 months after completing college! After we had our three little men we were inspired to start adoption proceedings. We are in the matching stages now and can hardly wait to meet the children the Lord has ready for us. We are also in the process of selling our house and moving to a farm. We would love to be totally self sustaining. This has been a dream of ours for many years, hopefully it comes to pass soon.

1. What’s your favorite part of motherhood?

My favorite part of motherhood really is being a part of my amazing little men’s lives. We homeschool so I get to help in lots of areas of their development. I get to be a part of so much of their lives and really hope that I can be the mother they need. One Sunday I was sitting in church and our stake president stopped to say hi and shake our hands. He said, “Wow Mom, you have three future priesthood holders with you.” This really struck me and I have tried to always be worthy of raising these amazing little men.

2. What part of motherhood would you subcontract out if you could?

Humm…folding laundry. I love to wash and dry it, but that folding thing, not a fan! I also hate dishes. I thank my dh everyday for my dishwasher. 🙂 My dh is also wonderful and does the yucky ones that don’t fit in the dishwasher.

3. Name 2 or 3 items on your “bucket list.” (Some things you’d like to do before you die.)

I have always wanted to travel to the “old world”. It would be wonderful to just tour all the little countries there for a year at least.

Earning my red seal would be wonderful.

I would also love to be part of my boys gaining a testimony of our Savior.

4. Brag for a minute. Do it. What are a few things that you’re pretty good at?

Well, I love the kitchen and think I do a pretty good job in there. I particularly love dessert as my hips can attest. 🙂

I also love to play with my cameras. Growing up I always wanted to be artistic, and until I bought my own camera I didn’t know I had talent in that area. I love to see things a little different through the viewfinder.

5. What are you loving lately?

Lists!

I am a big fan of lists. As we went through our adoption proceedings I found out that “structure” (as my lists were called) was a GOOD thing! Who knew?!

I love finding new ways to teach that work better. Each of my boys are different learners so I am loving the fact that I can find new things each time I need to change my methods.
I love this blogging world. I have “met” so many wonderful women and new friends this past year or so.

6. Do you have a favorite scripture or quote? Why?

I have a passion for preparedness. This is one of the quotes that inspires me in all I do. There are so many ways to prepare for the Second Coming of the Lord, and I look forward each day to doing a little bit more.

“As we live the commandments of God, we can look forward with joyful anticipation to the second coming of the Lord Jesus Christ and know that through our efforts we are worth, with our loved ones, to dwell in His presence for all eternity. Surely nothing is too hard to gain this great goal. We cannot let down for a moment. We must prove, every day or our lives, that we are willing to do the will of the Lord – to spread the restored gospel, to bear testimony to the world, to share the gospel with others.” (The teachings of Ezra Taft Benson [1988], 341).
I often fear for my children in this day of “instant gratification”. We try so hard to instill in them a great work ethic and hope that the values we teach them will be beneficial.

In our day, many children grow up with distorted values because we as parents overindulge them. Whether you are well-to-do or, like most of us, of more modest means, we as parents often attempt to provide children with almost everything they want thus taking away from them the blessing of anticipating, of longing for something they do not have. One of the most important things we can teach our children is to deny themselves. Instant gratification generally makes for weak people. How many truly great individuals do you know who never had to struggle? ~Joe J. Christensen, “Greed, Selfishness, and Overindulgence,” Ensign, May 1999

7. What do you gravitate toward during your unscheduled time?

Unscheduled time? What’s that?! Just kidding.

I love to read. I am currently loving YA books. I also enjoy taking “photography field trips”. Just me and my camera. (and sometimes my Dad and oldest little man) I love to create in the kitchen. When I have a break, playing with different ingredients to make something new is amazing.

8. Tell us some of your best mom-tricks (things you’ve figured out that work well for you).

Taking a break.

For a long time I honestly thought that I needed to always be on a schedule. Now I know that sometimes all we need is a break. Our favorite break time is to take school outside. When the weather is nicer, we love to hike in the coulee behind our home. Sometimes our break is just trying something new. Just because something worked for one child, it won’t necessarily work for all of them. (believe it or not, this was a hard lesson to learn)

9. What’s something you don’t usually want people to know about you, but that they need to know if they’re going to be your friend?

I don’t do well in crowds. I grew up shy and have struggled with it for many years. As a result I often come across as mean or intimidating. I just like to sit back and watch. I take a while to “warm up” to people, but I really do want to get to know you. (Internet is wonderful for me in this way!)

I also am a very “active” listener. I interrupt when I am excited. I also tell long rambling stories. My dh is a wonderful story teller, but not I, I have way too much detail and I love to talk.

10. If you were in charge of a girls’ night out, what kind of activity would you love to plan?

I love to just go out and visit. Eating good food is also a plus! If I can work Starbucks White Hot Chocolate in there somehow, it would be perfect! 🙂

11. Friends are great for venting. What’s been frustrating you lately?

Having patience. I need to learn that everything happens on the Lords time, but doing that is so tricky. There are a few things we are in the middle of, we have done all we can, the rest is up to the Lord, but waiting is really hard for me. When a decision is made, I like to move forward and do. Living in a state of uncertainty is frustrating for me. (it has to follow my list!)

12. What parts of your testimony are you the most sure of?

I am a daughter of God. He knows and loves me. He cares about me and watches me. The church is true. We have a living prophet who receives revelation for our day, specific for us. The priesthood power is real. It can be used on our behalf and is a real blessing. Families can be together for all Eternity if we live worthy. The temple is the house of the Lord.

Tell us about your blog:

I blog at Welcome to the Madness (rovinroberts.blogspot.com). I blog about a little of everything. I started blogging as a way to journal about my life for my family and friends. It has evolved to be a bit more, but the roots are still there. I use the things we do in our life, as it says just under my title, “…a little crafting, a little photography, a little homeschooling, a little family, a little fun, a little bunch of boys, a little faith, a little bit of crazy…all mixed up to create this…” I am pretty random, so pretty much everything goes. I just hope that those who come to my little space in blogland will feel comfortable and feel like they have made a friend.

Thanks, Jaime.  It’s been a pleasure to get to know you.

En boca cerrada, no entran moscas.

(photo credit)

Translation: In a shut mouth, flies cannot get in.
Interpretation: Sometimes silence is the best option.

Even though my mind has been really busy, none of it has seemed very blog-worthy, and no one wants to bore others on purpose.  So here’s a brief report of the happenings around here lately:

  • Matt is on his way home right now from finishing day two of the Bar exam.  It was hard.  He feels nervous.  I gave him a hard time about “You’d better pass or I’m getting a nanny and going to Hawaii for two weeks to recover,” (because I’ve been single-parenting for so long while he’s done law school and studied for the test, and because I’m so supportive like that), but I know he really did his best and we just have to wait for fate to play itself out.  I really am proud of him, regardless of the outcome.
  • When it’s a school holiday and you are trying to keep your children under control so your husband can study, might I suggest driving an hour and a half to an indoor swimming place and letting them swim for FIVE hours?  They will be so tired that they can’t even speak on the way home and then you simply have to tuck them into bed on arrival.  Plus you get to sit in a chair and read books while you “supervise” them.  (I fully admit that I have entered a new stage of life where my children are big enough to need minimal supervision.  This would have never been possible in the last 8 years.  I acknowledge the new-found blessing, and I embrace it.)
  • I have been using MyJobChart.com for a few weeks and it has worked so well with my kids.  I just want to mention how much it warmed my heart when Grant — the child I have been butting heads with lately– spent his very first hard-earned job points on “Mom time.”  I still can’t believe it.
  • Have you ever noticed that even though you complain a lot about something and even have small-scale tantrums about it, as soon as you make it a matter of prayer, progress is made, and then you feel like an idiot for complaining so much in the first place?  Cases in point:  1.  Boo hoo, poor me, I’m new and it’s hard to make friends. –> More people than I ever imagined signed up for my girls’ night out and made me feel like a rock star, plus some little doors cracked open and I’ve felt some positive opportunities for new friendships.  2.  I’m annoyed with the school situation here. I wish I could find some better options for my boys. –> I got a phone call saying that they had both (literally) won the lottery and were accepted into a well-reputed charter school.  3.  I feel a little “underwhelmed in the kingdom.”  I miss teaching. –>  I got an invitation to substitute for an Institute class at BYU and some random emails with loose invitations for possible speaking assignments.  Common ingredient in all three “solutions”: prayer.
  • I think I might have been marked in the pre-existence as “the one who will always have library fines.” I’m just faithful at fulfilling my destiny, that’s all.
  • I am so sick of filling out medical history forms.  Shouldn’t there be some big database out there for that?  Kind of like ancestry.com, except it’s more like diseasesofyourancestors.com.  I should really market that.
  • Clark just came into the room singing about how happy he is.  When I asked him why, he replied, “Grant said he’s going to run away because he hates me.”  I’m so proud of the loving family I’ve raised. *shaking head*

See?  Sometimes silence is the best option.