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A Wildwood Story

“It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live.” -Dumbledore

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Everyday stories

Letter 17 {Puddles & Plans}

May 5, 2017 by Rachel

“The rain, rain, rain
Came down, down, down
In rushing, rising riv’lets…”

Dear Candace,

What a week. What a rainy, rainy week! Rivers, rising and falling. Highways and roads shut down, fields under water, businesses and homes helpless to withstand the deluge. I heard that in 9 days St. Louis received 2 months worth of rain. We are still drying off-quite literally! A little seepage and dampness occurred in our basement, but thankfully no standing water. I’ve got the fans running constantly. My heart goes out to those who lost homes and goods. Hosanna spent some time volunteering in Pacific, one area in which the flooding was especially bad, and it has been remarkable to see communities serve together during a difficult time.

As the rain came down, we settled into a routine of school here at home. Due to all the re-routed highway traffic near us, I stayed off the roads as much as possible. There were multiple cups off coffee and tea to be had, books to read, and office work to accomplish. With the near daily, constant rain and chill in the air, it felt like February! However, we’re getting back into the groove of spring again and I’ve been dreaming about pulling up our ancient, boring shrubbery and redoing the flower beds. I don’t love everything mid-century.

I am very illiterate when it comes to gardening. Once I cultivated a raised flower bed with all the solicitations of a nurse until I realized I was nurturing not hollyhocks, but cornstalks.

Tom’s vegetable garden is flourishing! We have a lovely mix of sweet salad greens picked fresh daily. Although, I hate washing lettuce. I know I shouldn’t say “hate” but I do feel strongly about cleaning greens. Perhaps because I’ve done so much of it in my life and am getting petulant? At this point I’m fine with a little dirt. Furthermore, I shall be rotating the children through the job of Washing of the Greens this spring.

Wash your clothes,

wash your greens,

and don’t forget to wash your face!

It’s my new song.

Happy May!

~Rachel

Letter 16 

Letter 18

 

Filed Under: Everyday stories, Home Life, Letters to Candace Tagged With: flooding, gardening, Letter, rain, spring

Letter 16 {Spring Exclamations}

April 28, 2017 by Rachel

Dear Candace,

Every spring when the Missouri hills dramatically debut with dressings of green, it feels like I’m seeing it again for the first time. The children are used to my exclamations of “Do you SEE this!? Do you SEE how much green there is now?!” when we are driving. It’s no exaggeration to say we live among the rocks and rills, hills and valleys that make this state beautiful. Two turns from my house and we’re among it all; a feast for the senses!

There is a church not far from us that I call “the church in the dell.” It is literally nestled in a valley with hills expanding upwards around it. It’s so green and picturesque right now that you have to wonder if it sprang from a fairy-tale.

I opened up the windows wider this week (for like 5 minutes when it wasn’t raining) to let in some of this gorgeously perfumed air, and very quickly everything was coated in a yellow pollen. Ah, yes. The other part of spring. So much dusting to do, so little time.

Today I worked with the boys cleaning and organizing in their bedroom. How to put this experience. Let’s just say I told them they would receive a daily parental inspection henceforth. I may have also thrown out phrases like “army beds” and “white glove dusting” and “do not forsake your mother’s teaching.” The boys swept, dusted, mopped, and thoroughly cleaned nearly everything. We still have some drawers to go through, but I already feel more emotionally stable. Three bags of trash are now gone, plus one box marked for Goodwill. Caleb’s snake, Mango, is doing quite well in his aquarium and Drew’s potted plants are thriving. There is hope in the world!

Let there be light in the darkness.

Love and green.

Rachel

Letter 15

Letter 17

Filed Under: Cleaning, Everyday stories, Home Life, Letters to Candace Tagged With: Letter, spring

Letter 15 {Things I’m Loving}

April 22, 2017 by Rachel

My Dear Candace,

This letter is a day late because, while I knew today was Saturday, I thought it was Friday. It completely made sense in my mind world until I sat down to write to you and everything slowly jelled together…Friday is not actually part of Saturday and did in fact end at 11:59pm the night before. These are hard realities to grasp sometimes.

Drew is watching an episode of The Andy Griffith Show right now and for the last 15 minutes all I’ve heard from the living room is the sound of a baby crying and Aunt Bea’s worried voice. I don’t recall this episode or have any clue what the story-line is. Now Aunt Bea AND the baby are crying and I’m about to join them from the exhaustion of it all. This is not my idea of “let’s relax a little before bedtime.” Listen to pretend TV show babies cry on a not-Friday-night after a busy day? Check!

In addition to my fascination with my new BFF coffeemaker, here are some things I’m loving this week:

The word “Epistolary.”

Music: Alice, by Bianca Ryan

Reading: Sixty Million Frenchmen Can’t Be Wrong: Why We Love France but Not the French

Food: The miracle of cooking brown rice in my instant pot! I’ve been using this recipe.

You should know about these things.

Happy Weekend!

Rachel

Letter 14

Letter 16

This letter contains affiliate links, which means if you make a purchase after clicking through one of my links, I will receive a {very small} commission at no extra cost to you. Thank you for supporting this blog! It means the world and a pile of letters to me.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Everyday stories, Letters to Candace Tagged With: Books, Instant pot, Letter, Reading

Letter 14 {Coffee Machine Fascination}

April 15, 2017 by Rachel

Dear Candace,

This week my new Ninja coffee machine arrived, and then the sunshine came right after so I think the two are related. My belated Christmas gift turned out just right! After trying to decide between 287 different types of espresso and fancy automatic machines, I finally did the blessedly simple thing and purchased my first ever programmable coffee maker. It’s not like I’m cheating on my beloved French Press. It’s just that there’s room in my heart for all the coffee things.

Did you know…with a few beep-beep-boo’s of the machine (add water + grounds + pick a setting) you can wake up to hot coffee at any hour you desire? I hear this phenomenon has taken the modern world by storm! It’s not at my bedside, true, nor does it play opera music but it is fantabulous nonetheless. The first night I tried to program it for next morning’s wake-up, I wasn’t fast enough the with delay start feature and kept making fresh coffee as a result. {The accidental coffee now sits in my fridge pretending to be a cold brew.}

Now that we are done with the kids’ intense school semester classes, a family wedding, music recital, and all strains of the flu, we’re back to our “homeschool lite.” I picture endless warm days ahead of coffee, books, and art museums. Kidding! I guess at some point I should also dust, get this house in shape, and accomplish yard work (hmmm). I’m also deeply considering all the educational options for next year. It’s a season of shifting lanes, for sure.

With my trusty Ninja by my side, I shall go forth and figure stuff out! Or at least, walk into the kitchen and pour myself a cup.

Raises coffee cup,

Rachel

Letter 13

Letter 15

This post contains affiliate links, which means if you make a purchase after clicking through one of my links, I will receive a {very small} commission at no extra cost to you. Thank you for supporting this blog! It means the world and a stack of letters to me.

Filed Under: Everyday stories, Letters to Candace Tagged With: Coffee, Coffee machine, Hygge

Letter 13 {Yellow vs Grey}

April 7, 2017 by Rachel

Dear  Candace,

Last weekend, a reunion with dear childhood friends. This weekend, my niece’s wedding and associated preparation and celebration with extended family. In-between, a horrid amount of laundry and enough high-school physical science homework to make me annoyed at Newton and all his stupid laws.

Let’s be British and talk about the weather. Rain, rain, hail, rain and wait for it…rain. You know what they say about April showers. Well if this May doesn’t put out that’s IT, I’m moving! Is that the puny vitamin D talking? No, that’s me. I do love a good thunderstorm and some nice, dark rainy days for book reading and baking and making of tea in a very hygge way but I eventually draw the line when coziness of the soul days turn to Jane Eyre style madness. {Teensy exaggeration.}

I’m sorry I can’t seem to get over this and whine to you about it. It’s my struggle. A mild one, as life struggles go. It’s very much a first-world problem and one that, as I watch the recent news, I’m grateful to have. Grateful to live through grey days in a small house with the people I love in a community that is safe and clean. Grateful all my needs are met, and so much more. Grateful that even in small ways I have opportunities to ease the true suffering of other humans made in the image of God. If struggling through grey days reminds me to be grateful, then I suppose it might be worth it.

Still dreaming of SoCal and sunshine, though.

My new, large, living room rug with the yellow gold and cream lightens up the room and makes me smile. There are flecks of grey woven through the design. The contrast gives the gold more depth, an extra richness and warmth.

Grey is one of my favorite colors, too,

Rachel

Letter 12

Letter 14

 

 

Filed Under: Everyday stories, Letters to Candace Tagged With: Grey, Letter, Rug, Yellow

Letter 12 {Vit. D Excuses}

March 31, 2017 by Rachel

Dear Candace,

It’s not far from midnight, but I’m settling in to write to you as quite an old lady. Here I am, tucked in bed, my glasses on the end of my nose, fluffy pillows at helpful angles. I left a dinner party early, while a couple of the girls were still finishing dessert. I just knew my energy levels were dropping, and with a 30 minute drive home I didn’t want to push myself. Since this is a reunion weekend with old friends, I get to see them all again!

Recently discovering that I’m quite deficient in vitamin D has given me justification for nearly everything.

“I can’t possibly do that; my vitamin D levels aren’t high enough.”

“I have to tuck myself into bed early with a hot cup of tea because my vitamin D levels said so.”

“I hope you understand I don’t have enough vitamin D to argue with you about this.”

I begin my special mega doses of vitamin D this week, just as the doctor ordered. I’m so looking forward to regaining some energy and not feeling like I must leave the party first when usually, I’d rather be one of the last. Yet here I am, tired and draggy and cyclically reading poetry like a vitamin D deficient person.

I can’t remember everything I was going to tell you because my low vitamin D took away my memory.

Oh! I’m nearly finished with taxes and that is a huge relief! It’s not my favorite thing to do. I have at least 580 things I’d rather not do ahead of taxes. It’s one of the worst, but it’s survivable.

Tomorrow is April Fool’s Day, and I won’t be playing any tricks or be taken by any (but if perchance I am it’s not my fault, it’s the vitamin D). My truth tomorrow and all of April is a happiness that spring is here to stay and the seasons fulfill their purpose…the earth is turning all greens again!

A bushel and a peck,

Rachel

Letter 11

Letter 13

Filed Under: Everyday stories, Letters to Candace Tagged With: Excuses, Letter, spring, Vit. D

Letter 11 {Awkwardness & Poetry}

March 24, 2017 by Rachel

Dear Candace,

There is an odd jumble of things I experienced this week, but I feel helpless in explaining them to you. I could talk about how, when asked by intelligent homeschooling moms, I couldn’t for the life of me recall which math book Caleb was in (Algebra? Pre-Algebra?), or what shoe size Drew required. Or there was the time I blindly drank out of my host’s cup at a dinner party, even after picking out my own vessel and beverage. She was very sweet and nice about it, not seeming to mind since we have shared food off each other’s plates before, but still. Drinking out of her straw was not the classiest thing I’ve done all week.

This has not been my classy week.

I discovered a lovely poem which you probably already have memorized, since you’re classy, but is new to me. When I read it aloud to Drew before his language arts lesson one day, he just looked at me stone-faced. He did not appear to appreciate my new favorite string of verses, or my passionate recitation. He is 10 and thinks farting is hilarious. I am 34 and drinking out of other adults’ cups. Suddenly we are sounding not so dissimilar. I digress-and here are the charming lines which somehow helped soothe all the oddities of this week:

The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd*
BY SIR WALTER RALEGH
If all the world and love were young,
And truth in every Shepherd’s tongue,
These pretty pleasures might me move,
To live with thee, and be thy love.
Time drives the flocks from field to fold,
When Rivers rage and Rocks grow cold,
And Philomel becometh dumb,
The rest complains of cares to come.
The flowers do fade, and wanton fields,
To wayward winter reckoning yields,
A honey tongue, a heart of gall,
Is fancy’s spring, but sorrow’s fall.
Thy gowns, thy shoes, thy beds of Roses,
Thy cap, thy kirtle, and thy posies
Soon break, soon wither, soon forgotten:
In folly ripe, in reason rotten.
Thy belt of straw and Ivy buds,
The Coral clasps and amber studs,
All these in me no means can move
To come to thee and be thy love.
 But could youth last, and love still breed,
Had joys no date, nor age no need,
Then these delights my mind might move
To live with thee, and be thy love.
♥
Not to be dramatic, but I think I’ll read The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd every day for the rest of my life,
Rachel
*This, after The Passionate Shepherd to His Love which you must also read
Letter 10
Letter 12

Filed Under: Everyday stories, Letters to Candace Tagged With: Awkwardness, Letter, Poetry, Reading

Letter 9 {Unicorn Ions, Sanity}

March 10, 2017 by Rachel

Dear Candace,

I’m sitting in front of my new sun lamp. The manual claims that using the light with the negative ionizer* will make me feel as if I’m at the beach on a blue sky day.

I mean. Those are some big claims. It’s terribly gray and cloudy outside, so now is as good a time as any to spend 30 minutes with an anti-depression light.

Along with my fancy new happy light device, I did end up purchasing a wake-light alarm, too. I found it on sale for $20 cheaper than the normal price! #bargainbabe

I thought perhaps it would help me wake easier as well as wean me from relying on my phone for an alarm. I’m trying to get my phone out of the bedroom completely in the evening.

I’ve busted all previous alarms, so part of waking up is trying to keep myself from slamming the thing to the floor. The light really makes a difference. In addition to helping my body out of it’s sleep cycle, when I turn the alarm off the light stays on which makes it easier to actually roll my booty OUT of bed instead of rolling over IN the bed.

I’m slowly getting back into exercising. As in-I started up again and then got massively ill and commenced laying around for days while preserving my winter body fat layers. My phrase for this year-”Do the Next Thing” aka “Just Keep Swimming” in the words of Dory-is an appropriate reminder to just pick up where I left off and keep forward motion.

My two youngest siblings spent the week with us while my parents vacationed in Florida. That meant a total of 5 children including two 14 year old males**  in the house. That meant dozens of muffins disappeared, a huge pot of chili snapped up, too many dirty socks to count, smelly shoes errywhere and really loud outside voices inside. To say nothing of the knives, BB guns, skateboards, and trampoline tricks that had me banning half of them and double-checking the fastest route to urgent care because WHEN I’M THE ONLY ADULT AROUND I’M SCARED.

Some of the spring trees are blooming around here! A vague shimmer of green buds can be seen in this wave of brown…

I will survive,

Rachel

*Negative Ions. Apparently these are found naturally in air, forests, waterfalls, the laughs of babies, and unicorns. Harmless and tasteless, they are said to lift one’s spirits. I know nothing about ions, but I’m putting my trust in them.

**For those who don’t know: my son. my brother. my sanity, oh my….

Letter 8

Letter 10

This letter contains affiliate links, which means if you make a purchase after clicking through one of my links, I will receive a {very small} commission at no extra cost to you. Thank you for supporting this blog! It means the world and a stack of letters to me.

Filed Under: Everyday stories, Letters to Candace Tagged With: Letter, sanity, sun lamp, unicorn ions

Letter 8 {Waffle Fries, Goals}

March 3, 2017 by Rachel

Dear Candace,

Something very big happened. I still can’t believe how blessed I am. I thought being within 30 minutes of IKEA was enough to make me content for the rest of my life, but this is like the cherry on top: A new Chick-fil-A opened a mere four miles from my home!

It’s located right next to our library, which is undergoing an enormous expansion and remodel. So when I’m in the library, I can look through the window directly at Chick-fil-A and think about how wonderful waffle fries and frosted lemonade is. And when I’m in Chick-fil-A I can gaze into the Library and think about which next true crime book I want to check out. It’s a perfect marriage.

If you come to visit I will take you there and if we want to be good, we can have a salad. The salads ARE yummy. I think with the accountability of a companion I could overcome the fries and just stick with a salad. I’m going to have to think this through.

Growing up in a small town, then living in rural Missouri through my teens and twenties makes this whole suburban experience a novelty I’m never tired of. I CAN WALK TO A STARBUCKS HALLELUJAH.

In contrast to this wonder in my life, I’ve been sick all week. You’d think I put “BE SICK” on my 2017 list of resolutions with how often it’s happened this year. I’m pretty much wasting away what little youth and beauty I have left. When company dropped by, they skirted around me very carefully, their eyes wide. And I HAD put on a little foundation and mascara, even.

Perhaps I should see my current circumstances as a gift. All this illness and melancholy probably means I’m about ready to write an epic, tragic love story. It will be so movingly written that even I, the stone-cold non-crier at the movie theater, will shed a tear when my powerful tale of love and loss is told onscreen. Aren’t some of the best things borne out of difficult times? If not a novel, surely these bouts of illness will at least produce a poem in the vein of John Keats. This could be the fever talking, but I doubt it.

Please make sure my book gets published should I die as soon as I finish the manuscript,

Rachel

 

Letter 7

Letter 9

This letter contains affiliate links, which means if you make a purchase after clicking through one of my links, I will receive a {very small} commission at no extra cost to you. Thank you for supporting this blog! It means the world and a stack of letters to me.

Filed Under: Everyday stories, Letters to Candace Tagged With: Books, IKEA, Letter, Reading, Starbucks

Letter 7 {Snakeskin Boa}

February 24, 2017 by Rachel

Dear Candace,

My recent weekend in Chicago reminded me that, due to my laziness in the exercise department, I have gotten very winter-weak. My legs are sore from all the walking I was ill-prepared for. I ate doughnuts and dumplings while in Chicago, which cheered me considerably, but something must be done about my muscles. They just WILL NOT tone themselves.

I’m writing this outside on the back deck at my patio table which sits out in all weather because a) nowhere to put it and b) if it survived the last 50 years I’m not about to coddle it now. It’s a 74 degree day in February! I decided to wear shorts today-even though it’s not sunny, the warmness is wonderful. It seemed a safe thing to do, since I’d be home all day and scandalizing no one but my children with the whiteness of my legs. I jumped on the trampoline with Drew for a few minutes. “Your toes are really white, Mom, whiter than mine.” I’m going to paint them soon.

Beside me on the table is a snakeskin. This weekend Caleb’s corn snake, Mango, shed his skin and the children are quite proud of the result. Caleb says it indicates how healthy his reptile is, how well he takes care of it, and is using this fact as leverage to wheedle for another snake. Drew picked up the intact shed to drape it lovingly around my neck. “No!” I exclaimed, extricating myself. “Always ask someone for permission before you drape a snakeskin around their neck.”

The things I catch myself saying in this household.

This is random, or maybe it’s the feeling of spring in the air, but I want to do something fabulous with my front porch. I don’t know what, or how, but it needs a makeover. The old, stained concrete floor is impossible to clean and a past experience with painting concrete makes me leery to paint it. Right now I have a couple rugs out, which help, but I’d love to completely redo this space. Having a covered porch on a small house feels like an extension of our living space which I want to capitalize on more.

This desire is probably also influenced by my reading of the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair and the work of the architects, landscapers, and designers who made such a remarkable event come together. I’d like to Grand Exposition my front porch.

Spring dreams,

Rachel

 

Letter 6

Letter 8

Filed Under: Everyday stories, Letters to Candace Tagged With: Letter

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Welcome! My name is Rachel...

I'm devoted to faith, family, travel, hospitality, finding new coffee shops, living with humor, and trying not to run into walls. Read More…

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