My “Personal” Collection

I don’t think my client’s intend to steal from me.

They’re in a hurry, the kids are screaming–they don’t notice that one of the kids has a toy up his sleeve.

Little Jenny has her bucket of personal toys. Mom checked to make sure she’s carrying the bucket out, but didn’t notice that Little Jenny had stashed all my sorting shapes inside.

I don’t make too big a deal of it.

Life happens.

I take the sorting lid off the bucket and now I have my own bucket, devoid of shapes to sort.

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Likewise, I don’t intend to steal from my clients.

They’re in a hurry, the kids are screaming, I’ve got ten minutes to chart on all four before we close down the office–I didn’t notice that Little Johnny left behind his toy car.

By the time I find the toy the next morning when I’m tidying up my office before new clients, I can’t say for certain whose toy it was–and the client is long gone.

I don’t make too big a deal of it.

Life happens.

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I collect the detritus in a corner of my desk.

So far, I have

  • 3 matchbox cars
  • 1 teething toy
  • 1 flip phone without a back
  • 1 gray and pink burp cloth

They nestle carefully in the shape sorting lid from my bucket, reminding me that sometimes you lose things and sometimes you gain things–but, generally, life happens.


Recap (6/8/2013)

Books added to my TBR list:

  • Equal of the Sun by Anita Amirrezvani (reviewed by Elizabeth of 5M4B)
    What looks like a fascinated fictionalized glimpse into the court intrigues of a sixteenth-century shah–through the eyes of the eunuch of a powerful (and power-hungry) princess. This sounds like a whole lot of fun.
  • Glimpses of Grace by Gloria Furman (reviewed by Lisa of Lisa Writes)
    Actually, I didn’t just add this to my TBR list–I rushed to Amazon.com and bought myself a copy. When it arrived the next day, I skipped washing dishes over lunch to read the first chapter. I need this look at the gospel in the midst of ordinary homemaking.
  • Where’d You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple (reviewed by Jen E at Momma Blogs A Lot)
    An epistolary novel about a woman who runs away after her daughter wins a family vacation to Antarctica and a school fundraiser goes wrong. Jen E says:

    “I found myself relating to Bernadette a lot, which was a little bit scary for awhile there, but it also kept me rooting for her and her family. This is a great look at mental illnesses both perceived, ignored and real – and a story that shows the complexities of families, marriage, neighborhoods & the world.”

Recipes Tried:

  • Sweet Potato and Spinach Curry (from Serious Eats)
    The dish itself is vegetarian, but I added some beef and served it with quinoa. It combines two of the most spectacular “super-foods” and turns them from sides into a fantastic meal. This recipe produced a delicious sweet and spicy curry that I’ll definitely be trying again (although I’ll probably try either decreasing the cinnamon a smidge or increasing the other ingredients just a bit–it seemed just a little sweet to Daniel and I.)

Stuff I’ve Read:

  • If Dependence is the Objective, Weakness is an Advantage (Vitamin Z, quoting JD Greear)
    This is great–and great comfort for me as I endure a season of great emotional weakness:

    “God loves to use the weak because he loves to show off His power. That’s why he so often works by revealing our weakness, not showcasing our strength. He does not want to put our talents on display, because although that might impress people, it will not help them. So he chooses the weak to shame the strong, the simple to confound the wise, and sometimes he humbles the strong—so that our boast would not be in our strength, but in Christ as our righteousness, strength, provider, and security.

    The greater your weakness, the greater the chance for God to display His power.”

  • Challies asks if he’ll still delight in God’s sovereignty if…
    In a nice complement to Greear’s post above, Challies asks himself a series of questions regarding the strength of his belief in and delight in God’s sovereignty–when the story isn’t about someone else, but about himself.

    “Jonah, will you love my sovereignty even when you don’t see it as good? Or will you trust my sovereignty only when it gives you what you would have chosen anyway?

    Will you still rejoice in my sovereignty if I decree that you will be like her, if I call you to be the next Joni Eareckson Tada? Or are you quite certain that you can best glorify me by serving with an unbroken body?

    Will my sovereignty still be good if your neck is bent to the sword?

    Will you still declare your joy in my sovereignty if I sovereignly decree something that painful, something that shameful, for you or for someone you love?”

    A stunning and thought-provoking post.


Recap (6/1/2013)

Help Wanted:

Stuff I’ve Read:

  • The Most Important Type of Church (linked to by Lisa Notes)
    My husband and I have been asking ourselves what the most important aspect of the church is. What is the primary function or functions of the church? While mulling over these questions, I ran across this blog post. The author concludes:

    “The Bible doesn’t call us the Body of the Holy Spirit or the Body of the Word. We are called the Body of Christ and if we know that the the Bible is God’s very words and the Holy Spirit is the indwelling of Christ in us, well then it seems that Jesus should and must come first.

    A church relying mostly on the Bible or mostly the Spirit, or teaching only tenants of Christ, but not living them out, is broken, lop-sided, and lacking.

    The more I have begun to grasp the necessity to cling to the Person of Jesus and seek Him and His headship over everything else, the more I have felt a part of the church…the more I have felt whole as a member within His body.

    The church where Christ is head is best. Everything else is just secondary.”

    Of course, how that practically plays out within a church body is somewhat difficult to quantify.

  • The Indulgence Box
    Tim Challies writes about the difference between the view of justification typified by the indulgence box and the view of justification Martin Luther was developing from his reading of Scripture:

    “Indulgences came to typify the widening gulf between the church’s teaching on justification and Luther’s new and growing understanding.

    Its significance is found far more in what it represents than it what it actually is. The pennies that slid through the slot and into the coffer represented a gospel of salvation by works, a gospel foreign to the Bible, a false gospel. Luther had recovered the great doctrine of justification by grace alone through faith alone, and there would be no place for indulgences and no place for meritorious good works.”

    The entire article is worth reading.

Books added to my TBR list:

  • The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield (reviewed by Susan at Girls in White Dresses)
    I’m pretty sure I had this one on my list already, but Susan’s review convinced me to bump it up to the top again. Her conclusions?

    “So many threads to this story — twins who are separated, a gothic mansion, a fire, tragic accidents, plots twists (most of which I didn’t see coming; I love that in a story!), and more.

    Read this if you like a well-written, good story. Thirteenth Tale delivers!”


Rabbit Trails and Fertility Data

One of the many reasons I love my husband…

When I assert that I doubt white fertility rates reach replacement level anywhere in the developing world, he challenges me to a race to determine if this is true in the US.

For those of you uncertain about the concept of “replacement rate”, this is the number of children a woman would have to have to keep the population stable. In most developed countries, this rate is about 2.1

Daniel beat me (finding this CDC dataset), but the challenge led us to making an excel spreadsheet to evaluate which states, if any, were reaching the replacement rate (irrespective of race).

Our results showed that nine states and four US territories have fertility levels at or above the replacement rate.

Oklahoma came in closest to the replacement rate, with 2.105 children born for every woman of childbearing age. Nebraska, Hawaii, Kansas, and Texas were next up, with approximately 2.15 children born for every woman. Idahoan and South Dakotan women had about 2.25 children each; while Alaskan women have 2.35 children each. Utah tops the count, with 2.45 children per woman.

I don’t find this information particularly surprising. In general, states that exceed the replacement rate are conservative, Bible-belt or Mormon states with a heavy emphasis on “family values”.

More interesting to me was the knowledge that Northern Marianas, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and American Samoa have very high fertility rates. In fact, the last three on the list have the highest fertility rates in America, ranging from 2.49 to 3.11.

Why is this, I wonder? Could this be evidence supporting my assertion that developed countries tend to have fertility levels below replacement rate while developing countries (and maybe developing territories too?) have fertility rates above the replacement rate? Could this support my assertion that white fertility rates (especially in developed countries) are less likely to reach replacement rate than those of other races and ethnicities?

I’m just going to have to see if I can find some kind of data on the fertility rates of different nations around the globe.

Well, wouldn’t you know…the CIA keeps record of such things and the
CIA list of fertility rates can be found on Wikipedia.

Of the 34 countries listed by the CIA as “developed countries”, only four meet the replacement rate: Israel (2.67), Faroe Islands (2.4), South Africa (2.28) and Turkey (2.13). Of these, South Africa’s black peoples exceed the replacement rate, while their white peoples have a total fertility rate of only 1.4-1.8 (per table A3 in this report from Statistics South Africa). Both Israel and Turkey are difficult to classify racially, since their residents often have white-toned skin but claim a variety of ethnic backgrounds. Only the Faroe Islands is undeniably white.

Additionally, of the 117 nations listed in the CIA Factbook as having fertility rates of above the replacement rate for developed nations (note that replacement rate is higher in less developed countries where mortality is higher), only four can potentially be called “White”. Three of the four are from the “developed country” list: the aforementioned Israel (2.67) Faroe Islands (2.4), and Turkey (2.13). Kazakhstan (2.41) is a newcomer to the mix, being composed primarily of Turkish ethnicities but with a substantial population that could be called “white”.

So my original claim (that I doubt there are any countries in the developing world where white fertility rates reach the replacement rate) is not true. The Faroe Islands almost certainly has white fertility rates above the replacement rate.

On the other hand, my underlying premise does appear to be true. Overwhelmingly, the developed world has fertility rates below the replacement rate–and primarily white nations are exceedingly unlikely to have fertility rates above the replacement rate.

So there you have it. Rabbit trails I’ve taken tracking fertility data.


Telling the World (Part 2)

This is the next installment in a rather long series about how Daniel and I met–and have become engaged. Click on the “Our Story” tag for context.

My Bible study friends weren’t the only people who were incredulous that Daniel and I were engaged.

Anna reports showing up (late) to worship practice the morning after our announcement and having the entire worship team asking for the scoop.

“Rebekah is engaged?” our pastor asked. “I didn’t know she was dating anyone.”

(In my defense, his wife knew I was dating someone; as did at least two of his elders. It wasn’t like it was a secret.)

Consensus was that they all needed to meet this guy, check him out.

Anna let them know the good news. He would be visiting that very morning.

After teaching the Sunday School lesson and getting the children into their small groups with their small group leaders, I left a little early and went out to find Daniel. We strolled, hand in hand, through the church building and towards the sanctuary. As we passed the visitor welcome center, my pastor interrupted his conversation “Hey, Rebekah, good to see you today. Engaged, I hear?”

I affirmed that this was true, introduced Daniel quickly and left Pastor Justin to his conversation. But as we walked away, Justin informed Daniel that he (Justin) would be talking to him (Daniel) later.

Later didn’t end up being after the next service as I’d expected.

Instead, Justin mounted the stage to give the morning’s announcements–and opened with “Sometimes, in the course of this life, two people decide that instead of walking separately, they’re going to join their lives together and walk the rest of this life together as a married couple. If you are in the congregation today and have made that decision in the past week, could you please stand up?”

Groan.

Daniel and I stood to applause.

At which point Justin came off the stage and towards us, microphone in hand.

“Now it doesn’t take a rocket scientist,” he said, “to figure out that Rebekah is one of the most eligible young women in our congregation. We’ll be very sad to see her go.”

Turning now to Daniel, he asked him to introduce himself and tell what he did for a living.

Daniel did so, but didn’t quite give the answer Justin was looking for, so Justin supplied it himself: “So you could almost say you’re a rocket scientist?”

Ermm…not quite, but we’d let him keep his punchline.

His next question for Daniel had us looking back and forth to decide who would answer and how. “How did you propose?” he asked.

Thankfully Daniel, not liking how he’d automatically contradicted me when I started telling the story to my family the day before, had helped us get on the same page as to the story we’d be telling the world.

I gave the short version. “Well, Daniel didn’t so much ‘propose’ as we mutually decided to get married during a conversation this past week.”

Justin wasn’t content with this answer, so he asked Daniel for more detail.

Daniel gave the long version (although still shorter than my long version.)

And, if anyone was in doubt of the veracity of my Facebook status change, they were now convinced. Thanks to a ten minute in-church interview, they now knew that Rebekah Menter was indeed engaged–and knew exactly how it had happened.


Book Review: “The Contraception Guidebook” by William Cutrer and Sandra Glahn

Subtitled “Options, Risks, and Answers for Christian Couples”, Cutrer and Glahn’s The Contraception Guidebook attempts to provide “medically reliable, Biblically sound” information regarding contraception for Christian couples. In my opinion, this book not only attempts but succeeds at providing medically reliable, Biblically sound information.

The first section of the book provides background for contraception. In chapter two, we review a brief history of contraception through the ages (oh boy, women used to put some really disgusting things in their vagina) and take a look at some of the modern contraception myths (for instance, that a woman can’t get pregnant while she’s on her period.) In chapter three, the authors discuss the purpose of sex from a Biblical standpoint. It is important to note that the authors do NOT discuss the quiver-full type argument (that children are a blessing and that conception should never be prevented) in this section. Instead, the authors save this discussion for the very last section of the book, when they discuss the theological implications of family planning, especially in light of the command/blessing to “be fruitful and multiply” and the clear Scriptural teaching that “children are a blessing from the Lord”. The fourth chapter of the book, and the final chapter in the first section, discusses the basic functioning of the male and female reproductive systems.

While I appreciated the overall content of the first and last sections of the book, I probably would have preferred to have had them laid out in a different manner. My preference would have been to have all the theological implications of contraception (the purpose of sex, the theological implications of family planning, and the sanctity of human life) combined at the beginning of the book before discussing methods of contraception. Instead, the authors seem to assume that their readers are in favor of the idea of contraception, even though they might be confused about appropriate methods of contraception. Only in the last section of the book do they address questions of the appropriateness of family planning at all.

I also have to say that, while I generally agree with the authors’ conclusions regarding the theological appropriateness of family planning (versus taking a Quiver-full type approach), I do not feel that this book is particularly useful to those who are wrestling with that question. The real strength of this book is in the second section, which deals with methods of contraception.

The second section gets into the nitty-gritty of contraception options, discussing Natural Family Planning, a variety of barrier methods, spermicides, hormonal methods, and sterilization techniques. The authors carefully address what each option includes, what the mechanism of action for each method is, as well as any ethical considerations. The authors are clearly opposed to abortion (as they ought to be)–and they carefully evaluate each method for any potential abortifacient effect.

This was probably the most interesting section for me (and probably the section most readers are looking for). I appreciated how comprehensive the authors are, discussing not just broad groups of birth control methods, but getting into the details of each. For example, in Natural Family Planning (NFP), the authors address withdrawal (not an effective form of contraception), the calendar method, breastfeeding as contraception, the ovulation method, the sympto-thermal method, monitoring cervical changes, hormone tests, and saliva tests. I use natural family planning as an example not because it is promoted as the best method of contraception (the authors don’t appear to have any strong biases towards any particular form of contraceptive, apart from being strictly opposed to abortifacients), but because it is a form of birth control that I haven’t seen covered a lot in other literature.

I have done quite a bit of reading on birth control methods in the past–first because I was a student health aide, then because I was interested in pretty much anything to do with women’s health (I wanted to be a midwife, once upon a time), but also as Daniel and I were preparing for marriage. But in all my reading, I have rarely, if ever, seen a balanced look at NFP. Almost everything I’ve read has basically said “Natural Family Planning uses various methods to predict ovulation and works by avoiding intercourse during times of peak fertility. NFP requires a lot of work and isn’t always very accurate.”

This book, on the other hand, carefully addresses the techniques behind different methods of predicting ovulation–and gives the relative effectiveness of each. It turns out that NFP can be a highly effective form of birth control given enough information (that is, enough information about one’s own cycle).

Honestly, I really wish I’d read this book before I got married. If I had, I might have more seriously considered NFP combined with a barrier method from the beginning–and started collecting data (basal body temperature, cervical changes, mucous changes) to make our predictions more effective. As it is, we’re having to be pretty conservative (in other words, using condoms or a diaphragm most of the time) because we can’t pinpoint my ovulation very closely from the currently available data.

I’m glad that this book is very thorough regarding the different methods of contraception, addressing the pros and cons of each, including the relative effectiveness of different methods. For this reason, I highly recommend this book to couples who are trying to decide which method of contraception to use or who want to evaluate their current contraceptive use in light of the sanctity of life.


Rating:4 Stars
Category:Christian Living/Medical
Synopsis:An in-depth look at contraceptive choices from a pro-family, pro-life perspective.
Recommendation: An excellent choice for couples trying to weigh their contraceptive options (the most thorough treatment of the subject that I’ve ever read.)


Telling the World (Part 1)

This is the next installment in a rather long series about how Daniel and I met–and have become engaged. Click on the “Our Story” tag for context.

Telling the world that we were engaged took time.

We told our parents on Thursday–Daniel told his by e-mail (since his dad was in a foreign country and didn’t have reliable phone service), I told mine over Skype.

Daniel’s dad wrote us back a quick e-mail giving his blessing, which Daniel’s mother quickly replied to with her own.

We met my parents Friday night so Daniel could officially ask my dad’s blessing. It was a bit awkward since our decision was already made. We weren’t asking for permission–we didn’t need permission. (A sentiment, by the way, that my dad has expressed on several occasions.) Instead, we were doing the Fiddler on the Roof thing (with none of the undertones of defiance). “We’re not asking for your permission, we’re asking for your blessing”.

Blessing given, we were ready to tell the rest of our families.

Saturday morning, we met Daniel’s sisters and mother for breakfast–my first time meeting my future mother-in-law and the older of my sisters-in-law. Then we went shopping for a ring.

We’d been talking a bit about our story, about how Daniel didn’t propose, about how we just decided (mutually) to get married instead of having a schmancy and elaborate proposal. On our way back from ring shopping, Daniel got down on one ring, in jest, and asked “Rebekah, will you marry me?” I answered with something cheeky, I’m sure, because I remember him telling me that I was forgetting the script. I was supposed to say “Yes, I’ll marry you.” Duly chastised, I said the prescribed words.

Which is why, when we told my siblings at our family lunch that day and when they asked how Daniel had proposed, I replied “He got down on one knee, asked me to marry him, and I said yes.”

Daniel immediately contradicted me, always honest and not wanting to give the wrong impression. The story came out, how he hadn’t proposed, how we’d just decided–on Tuesday.

“You mean you were engaged on Wednesday?” Anna asked. “You made me a liar!”

Yes, I did. I told her. I was sorry, but I didn’t see any way around it. (Thankfully, she forgave me :-) )

We had Grace take some photos of us that we could call engagement photos–which we posted to Facebook along with our changed relationship status later that afternoon.

Later, I’d realize that my order of telling was out of order. In all the secrecy of the first few days, I’d skipped a vital group who ought to have heard from me personally.

The Bible study gals I hadn’t told that first night because I hadn’t told my parents yet?

Ruth learned when a friend she was going to a movie with saw it on Facebook.

Incredulous, she texted Beth, almost certain it was a joke.

Beth’s response was “No… She wouldn’t have gotten engaged without telling me.”

Except I did.

Oops.

Thankfully, they also forgave.


Babies in Abundance

So, you all know that one of my nieces is Little Miss Menter.

And you all know that Little Miss’s Little Sis was born just a couple month ago.

Well, I am happy to announce that we now have a third Little Menter.

Little Master Menter was born tonight, just before June 1st Okinawa time.

Welcome Little Master!

:-)


A (Second) Naming Exercise

In my first naming exercise, I suggested using a thesaurus as a baby-naming tool. This remains a great source for unique, incomprehensible, and unpronounceable names–but I’ve learned even more naming tricks in my tenure at WIC.

One popular choice is to take a common name and switch one or more letters to make it an uncommon name.

I’ll use some of my cousin’s names as examples.

Eric becomes Aric
Sarah becomes Barah
Joel becomes Coel
Jennifer becomes Dennifer
Adam becomes Edam
Tabitha becomes Fabitha
Kyle becomes Gyle
Susannah becomes Husannah
Elizabeth becomes IyLizabeth
Christine becomes Jistine
Joseph becomes Koseph
Joanna becomes Loanna
Caroline becomes Maraline
Lauren becomes Nauren
Aaron becomes Oh’ron
Naomi becomes Paomi
Caleb becomes Qualeb
Donna becomes Ronna
Daniel becomes Saniel
James becomes Tames
Anthony becomes Untony
Luke becomes Vuke
*Note that W has been skipped because I can’t countenance lisping a name, even for an exercise*
Brett becomes Xett
Paul becomes Yaul
Benjamin becomes Zenjamin

Of course, this is only switching up the first letter of the name. Multitudes of additional combinations can be made by trading out one or more of the middle or ending letters. For example, Jane can become Hael by changing the J to an H (Hane), switching the e and the n (Haen) and then switching the N to an L.

The possibilities are endless.


Please note that all names (except those of my cousins) are fictionalized. Any resemblance with actual WIC client names is entirely accidental. :-)

Also note that this is not a complete listing of my cousins. Exclusions were made to keep the number at 25. My apologies to those whose names I have not butchered.


Nightstand (May 2013)

I really expected I would be on time with this Nightstand post. After all, I’d have the whole Memorial Day weekend to work on it since I’d have Monday off and no family in town to barbecue with.

What I hadn’t expected was that Daniel and I would lead a team from our church down to Moore, Oklahoma on Sunday to help out with relief efforts.

Between preparing, going, and recovering, that took half of my weekend–and I still had the normal stuff to do (help some friends move, sewing with a friend, grocery shopping, getting the compost into my garden finally).

Thus, a hastily written and photo-free nightstand post. My apologies.

This month, I read:

  • Fledgling and Painter and Ugly by Robert Blake
    When I moved, I decided I’d revise my “Read Every Book” plan to say that once I’d “closed” a category at one library, I was done with that category and wouldn’t have to catch up any unread books from that category at the next library. Which meant that I was already done with picture books through author last name BLAKE, Q. I had read all but two of the Wichita Public Library’s books by Robert Blake–and read these last two in the last month to finish up all the BLAKE picture books.
  • The Contraception Guidebook: Options, Risks, and Answers for Christian Couples by William Cutrer
    This was an excellent review of the available contraceptives from a pro-life, pro-family (although still pro-contraceptive) viewpoint. I intend to review this in more depth at some point soon here, but my intentions sometimes end up going awry.
  • A Year of Biblical Womanhood by Rachel Held Evans (reviewed here)
    One of those uber-controversial Christian books that I waited to read until most of the buzz died down. I found that I enjoyed Evans’ experiences trying to follow the Bible’s directives to women as literally as possible–but agreed with many of her critics that her Biblical interpretations are suspect and her treatment of the complementarian movement often unfair. Check out my review for details–and a fair number of quotes.
  • Not Your Mother’s Slow Cooker Recipes for Two by Beth Hensperger
    There were quite a few interesting recipes in this one–and I liked the three recipes I tried (Red Curry Chicken braised in Coconut Milk, Pork Chops with Turnips and Apples, and Vegetable Chili con Carne). I did find that the recipes made more than just two servings–but that might have been related to my propensity for using larger vegetables than recipes call for (is it just me, or do Midwestern vegetables grow larger than recipe-sized vegetables? Whenever recipes say “1 medium onion or 1/2 cup chopped onion” I end up with a cup of chopped onion from what I thought was a medium onion.)
  • Let’s Play Doctor by Mark Leyner and Billy Goldberg
    I enjoyed the random medical/physiological information found in Leyner and Goldberg’s Why do Men have nipples? and Why do Men fall Asleep after Sex? (In my memory, neither are actually as sex focused as they sound). So, when I saw Let’s Play Doctor at my new local library, I grabbed it. I was less than enthused. There was some information to be found here, but it was mostly silliness in the form of ridiculous multiple choice questions the reader is supposed to answer in their quest to get a fake medical degree from the “Why Do Men Have Nipples School of Medicine”. Worth Skipping.
  • A History of the World in 6 Glasses by Tom Standage (reviewed here)
    Standage tells the history of the world–through the lens of six beverages that dominated the world stage during different ages: beer, wine, spirits, coffee, tea, and Coca-Cola. I thoroughly enjoyed this topical history of the world.
  • The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
    I’m leading the Reading to Know Book Club‘s discussion of this title in October–which is still a ways off, but considering how slowly I’ve been reading lately, I decided to start early. I chose to read without taking notes this first time around–but I’ll probably be re-reading and making notes in September. It’s not too early for you to start thinking about joining us in October too!
  • Sidetracked Home Executives: From Pigpen to Paradise by Pam Young and Peggy Jones
    I enjoyed reading this and think the general concept is pretty good (although there’s no way I have time to do certain chores as frequently as they recommend.) I’ve adapted their 3×5 card file system to my to-do app on my phone–but am implementing on a step-wise basis. I’m still unpacking and rearranging our home–so I’m not quite ready to start thinking about things like regularly cleaning the mini-blinds or the ceiling fan. But someday–and when that day comes, I’ve got everything in my phone ready to implement.

Currently in progress:

  • The 5:30 Challenge: 5 ingredients, 30 minutes, dinner on the table by Jeanne Besser
  • While the Clock Ticked by Franklin Dixon
  • The Thyroid Sourcebook for Women by Sara Rosenthal

Don’t forget to drop by 5 Minutes 4 Books to see what others are reading this month!

What's on Your Nightstand?