On Temperature Control

One of the best things about living in the new house is how unbelievably temperate it is in here. This house is always exactly whatever temperature we tell it to be.

The first three* houses Zack and I lived in were all, uh, a wee bit drafty. The first one was at the camp where we used to work, and that house was basically a double-wide with a sliding glass door. Not temperate. The second house was built in 1922 and the windows were literally falling out of the window panes. I used two rolls of duct tape just to prevent rain from coming inside during thunderstorms. After that house, we moved into a “newer” place, built in 1941, that had a brick exterior and 150% better insulation.

Unfortunately, 150% better than The Worst EVAR is still pretty terrible. Zack and I started out sleeping in the back bedroom of the house, but had to swap bedrooms to sleep in the “warmer room” during our first winter we were there, just so that I could crawl into bed at night and not spend the first hour shivering. But even in the warmer room, Zack still got annoyed at the outrageous amount of clothing I wore to bed in the winter.  Apparently, he doesn’t think it’s sexy to sleep ski bibs.

Anyway, the ski bib thing’s not a problem anymore. In fact, the only problem I have now is that I’m going to have to re-think our bedding because we’re currently more suited for an Eskimo-type situation than our current brand-new-house-with-insulation-and-a-fully-operational-thermostat situation.

*That’s 3 houses in 5 years of marriage; we are getting very good at packing and unpacking, and we can sometimes even assemble furniture while in the same room together and not want to kill each other, just so long as neither one of us has low blood sugar. Our #1 marriage rule is this: Thou shalt not assemble furniture together when thouest art hangry.

A Catch-Up Post

A fun way to break in the brand new oven at your brand new house is by using an over-sized dish towel to pull your steak fries out of the oven, and then, in the process, setting that dish towel on fire. Don’t worry, though. Because my brand new faucet for my brand new kitchen sink has a pretty impressive spray range. I took care of it*.
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Zack heard Scout growling the other day and thought that someone was trying to break into the house. She barks at people when they come over, and she barks at squirrels and stuff in the backyard, but she never growls. She growled for so long that Zack was able to shoot a little video of it to show me.

So, there’s a pond in our new neighborhood, and that pond has ducks. Scout was growling at one of the ducks, who was across the street, in one of the neighbor’s yards. You could see it on one part of the video; it was scarcely bigger than a period at the end of a sentence. But Scout could see it, and boy, was she ever pissed.
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Zack and I decided to sign up for a run/race at the end of April to motivate me (us?) to get back into the swing of exercising on a regular basis. We’re going to go for the gusto and register for the 10K. Wish me luck, but don’t wish me good sense, otherwise I would surely back out while I still have the chance.
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I’ve slowly started to make the medication adjustments that the doctor suggested that I make. I don’t feel a whole lot happier but I do feel more stable. I explained that concept to Zack earlier by saying, “You know how sometimes we’d go to dinner and have the best time, and then on the way home I would start crying, and then I would go straight to bed? I don’t feel like that anymore.” So that’s good news(?). It’s hard to think about things in terms of emotional stability as opposed to just happy vs. unhappy. I don’t feel better because I don’t feel happier, but stable is better than unstable, so I’ll count that as a win. So far, the biggest side-effects that I have from detoxing off of Medication #1 are jacked-up sense of spacial awareness (running into walls, trying to set things down on the counter but totally missing and dropping them on the floor, etc.) and feeling like everything is happening in slow motion. Neither of these are surprising to me; I expected them both. The side-effects just leave me wishing that psych meds weren’t so miserable to adjust.
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Pictures of the house forthcoming. Zack and I have been enjoying settling into the new house. It’s perhaps a little bit obvious or redundant to say this, but we have such a sense of ownership about this place — like we’ve never had before with any of the places that we’ve rented. It’s been fun to celebrate being in this house that we’ve dreamed of for so many years while we do normally-mundane things like decide where to store the dish towels.
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*Just kidding. I mean, I really did catch the rag on fire, but I was able to put it out with a couple of frantic waves and “OH SHIT”s. Problem solved.

Scenes from Life: Gnome Decor

Zack: What are we going to put in the Virgin Mary Display Alcove?
Sarah: You mean the display shelf when you walk into the house?
Zack: Yeah.
Sarah: I don’t know. I was thinking we’d hang Jenn’s Birch Tree painting.
Zack: It’s not wide enough for that.
Sarah: Seriously? The painting’s not that big!
Zack: No, for real. It’s like, this big.
Sarah: Why, what do you want to put there?
Zack: I was thinking about The Gnome.
Sarah: Old Man Martin?
Zack: Yeah. But he needs to be all one color.
Sarah: We could paint him all white.
Zack: I was thinking silver.
Sarah: I like white better.
Zack: <to the tune of “Silver Bells”>”Silver Gnome! Silver Gnome! It’s moving time in our new home! Silver Gnome! Silver Gnome! Soon it will be moving dayyyyy!”
Sarah: Okay, fine. Silver is fine.
Zack: It’d be even cooler if we could get it to have a mirrored shine. Like chrome.
Sarah: Chrome Gnome?
Zack: I DIDN’T EVEN THINK OF THAT! IT’S SETTLED! CHROME GNOME IT IS!
Sarah: Okay.
Zack: Seriously?!
Sarah: Seriously. Let’s do it.

Old Man Martin, Before

Under Contract

I’ve been dreaming about owning my own house for so long.

For years, I’ve been waiting to buy the things I want to buy and decorate the way I want to decorate, because I knew that we’d eventually buy a house. And it’s so much easier to have a house before you decorate, you know? Decorating before you buy a house is like buying an outfit to match your shoes. (Don’t get me wrong — sometimes it works to go shoes first, especially if they are really great shoes, but it’s usually easier the other way around.)

As of today, we are have officially entered into a contract to buy a home. Because the act of home purchasing is far more complicated than any normal (non-real estate educated) human cares to understand, just know that being under contract doesn’t mean that we own the house yet. There are still approximately 4,039 more steps left before we have keys in our hands and a mortgage to pay. Nevertheless, I feel that now since we’re under contract, I can be cautiously optimistic about the outcome of this pending deal. Okay, fine. I’m just optimistic. I have no caution. You all know that.

And you know what not-really-all-that-cautious optimism means, right? It means that I’m mentally decorating the house. And by “mentally,” I mean that I’m decorating the house on my pinterest.

A butcher’s guide to dinosaur cuts.

This tree trunk print would be cool enough in and of itself, but the fact that it’s comprised of a billion little animals makes it umpteen times cooler.

World map, as dictated by airplane flight patterns. I love this for a thousand reasons, including (but not limited to) the simplicity; the fact that the boarders of each country aren’t really there, but are only implied; and the fact that it reminds me of Zack’s dad, who is a pilot. I like it enough that I don’t even begrudge it for reminding me of Geometry class.

I’m not saying it’s Hoarders bad, but I have work to do.

There was no food to eat in the house tonight, so I was forced to have an ice cream sandwich and a Simply Limeaid margarita (double, don’t judge) for dinner. I drank the margarita out of an oversized mason jar. I chased my dinner with a sleeve of semi-stale overly-crumbly off-brand while wheat crackers. I’d tell you to feel sorry for me, but the truth is, I am still just out of whack from Christmas + vacation + home buying. And I think it is a general Internet rule that you are not allowed to complain about life disruptions that occur as a result of something awesome like a vacation.

Right? That’s totally a rule?

Anyway, tomorrow I’m'a get all domestical up in this joint. I must restore order to my life. Also, I must survey the current status of The Things We Own because it’s looking more and more like we are T-minus 1 month to moving, and that means this month I am going to show the bulk-trash pick-up guys a pile the likes of which they haven’t seen since the last natural disaster, ya heard!?

Watch out to-do list. I’m coming for you.

On Cutting Your Husband, And Being Kind Of Okay With It

It becomes really apparent that nursing has soaked into your bones when your initial reaction to slicing your husband’s arm open is, “AWESOME! I HAVE STERI-STRIPS IN THE BATHROOM!”

Let’s go back a bit.

A million years ago, I broke a window in our office. I don’t remember how long it’s actually been, but I do think that this is at least the second winter that we’ve gone through while that window has been broken. I was just sitting at the computer desk with my feet propped up on the window sill when my toes, which apparently are harnessing the power of The Hulk, shattered a huge chunk of the window. Zack came running into the room to see how hurt I was, as he is very used to finding me in pain, screaming things like, “I DIDN’T REALIZE THE HANDLE OF THE PAN I JUST PULLED OUT OF THE OVEN WOULD BE HOT, TOO!!!”

I was lucky to walk away from the whole incident with my skin intact, but my pride was not. Breaking any kind of glass provides a very special kind of guilt that sends me back to my childhood. I broke a lot of dishes when I was little. I’m still a little traumatized. (To all of you who are thinking, “when you were little? How many wine glasses have you broke since you have been married?!” to you, I say, (1) shut up. (2) 24? and (3) seriously, shut up.)

Zack and I said that we were going to fix the broken window soon, but we had to have a temporary fix to cover the giant hole in the window. We cut up a Honey Nut Cheerios box and taped it to what was left of the window to keep the rain and the wind out until we could actually fix it. That was at least 18 months ago. At least.

Over a year ago, I was outside watering the lawn when I noticed that one of our living room windows had a top-to-bottom crack in it. I immediately felt relief. Zack and I were even finally! 1 to 1!

A few weeks ago, there appeared a crack in the bathroom window. I don’t know if it was Zack or me that caused that crack. I have a cute little curtain that I made hanging in our shower because, well, we have a clear glass window in our shower. That part is self-explanatory, I think. We both have a bad habit of rapping on the window to get Scout to stop barking at birds or squirrels or whatever she’s decided to bark about at that particular moment in time. Either of us could have broken the window while we were beating it to get her to shut up, but we wouldn’t have noticed because of the awesome curtain that I made myself. (Did I mention that I made the curtain? I’m super crafty and awesome and if you focus on that you might forget that I’ve broken at least 5 wine glasses since the start of December. Shut up.)

Today, I was beating on the bathroom window to get Scout’s attention when the broken part finally gave way and it became very apparent that today was the day that we would finally fix the broken windows.

Two trips to the hardware store later, Zack and I were finally ready to start fixing the windows. We tackled the bathroom window first. There we were: me, standing in the tub, he, propped up against the dirtiest grill in the world, finally doing the home repairs that we didn’t do any earlier because that’s just how we renters roll, ya heard? We had chisels and wire brushes and shop vacs. Hell, we even broke out his Dremmel tool at one point. Zack and I, we are serious home repair connoisseurs, my friends. We didn’t know what we were doing exactly but we had a pretty good idea and that was enough to get us through the first window.

I approached the first window with a sense of respect. I know enough about emergency medicine to know that broken glass is responsible for some of the most gnarly cuts that the ER staff ever sees. Zack and I were both wearing leather gloves and calculating each ginger move before we made it. Our cautiousness paid off. We survived the first window with no cuts. I did manage to scratch my armpit with the corner of the new glass (don’t ask, I couldn’t explain if I tried), but no dermis was harmed in the replacing of the first window. Epidermis be damned; You are inconsequential, anyway!

It was the second window where we got into trouble. And by ‘we.’ I mean ‘me.’ Because Zack approaches life with the kind of reserved suspicion with which I approached Window #1. I, however, reserve that kind of attitude for things that I think might kill me, and even then, I only give it that respect on the first round. After that, I’m like, “HAH! I HAVE CONQUERED YOU, IDIOT THING I USED TO RESPECT KIND OF. BUT NEVER MORE! I AM THE LORD OF YOU!”

And that’s basically what I was thinking when I popped out a huge chunk of window #2 and sent it flying in Zack’s direction. I was like, “Oh, oops.” He said, “Whelp, that’s a cut.” He was so confident that I had sliced him open. I thought to myself, “PSH. It’s not even bleeding. You’re not cut. I’m a nurse, I think I would know.” Then blood started to pour out of his forearm and I was like, “Oh, damn, you’re right.”

Nurse Reflex #1 kicked in immediately. I reached through the glass window-turned-guillotine and grabbed his forearm, using my fingers to spread the cut wide open. Assessment is the first step of the nursing process. If I didn’t know how bad it was, I wouldn’t have known what to do next. Nevermind the fact that I had caused the situation, I immediately felt a sense of success. Who cares that I’d neglected the first rule of nursing, which is to PREVENT problems before they happen by encouraging safety. That mattered not! What mattered was that my initial reaction to disaster was not to tuck tail and run! It was to rush headlong toward the gushing blood in order that I might adequately assess the situation and create a PLAN.

Nurse reflex #2 followed. Whereas a normal human might react to slicing their husbands arm open with a statement such as, “Holy crap, I’m so sorry, are you okay, does it hurt?”, no apologies were made for my actions. (Well, not at that moment, anyway.) Instead, I yelled in a manner that one might expect from a kid who has just spotted an ice cream truck around the corner. I screamed in delight in the way one might expect Zack will squeal with glee when he shoots his very first home intruder. I yelled, “AWESOME! I HAVE STERI-STRIPS IN THE BATHROOM!”

You see, a nurse’s scrub pockets are a wealth of supplies. At any given time, if you took a whole gaggle of nurses off of the floor and collected the items from their pockets, my guess is, you would have enough supplies to deal with a moderate-sized tragedy (at the very least). We nurses work very long 12-hour shifts and are very tired by the time that end-of-shift report comes around. This results in many, many days when I arrive home to find that I still have pockets stuffed full of alcohol swabs and tape. After those supplies leave the hospital with me, they can’t go back. (Germs, you know.) So I’ve taken to collecting these supplies in an increasingly large pile of random first-aid tidbits that I could use in the case of an emergency. I was so ready for an emergency. I was just waiting for an emergency.

It didn’t strike me that I’d never actually steri-stripped anyone’s wound until after I’d cleaned and prepped Zack’s arm for application. So there I was, for the second time of the day, facing a situation where I didn’t know exactly what I was doing, but I had a pretty good idea and that was enough to get us through my first steri-stripping experience. Next time I steri-strip someone, I’m going to be all, “HAH! I HAVE CONQUERED YOU, IDIOT THING I USED TO RESPECT KIND OF. BUT NEVER MORE! I AM THE LORD OF YOU!”

I hope that patient has a sense of humor.

Black Friday Part II

Zack and I slept in this morning. We finally crawled out of bed at 10:30 and drove to Target just in case they had the TV of our dreams. We were in and out of there in less than 10 minutes with our ideal TV for cheap. $200.00 less than cheap, actually. (And by that, I mean $200 less than we were expecting to spend.) Score.

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And we didn’t even have to wait in line! Double score!

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P.S. For the record, it should be noted that I found some cute, functional, and cheap chimineas today, but Zack said he didn’t want one. So, I think the Garden Ridge cover has been blown. He totally just wanted to go in there. It had nothing to do with chiminea hunting.