Monday's Food for Thought

Monday’s Food for Thought: The Power of Being Vulnerable

This insightful TED talk, recently shared by my friend Kat, presents us with MUCH food for thought on this lovely Monday morning.  If you have 20 minutes over your lunch break, or while someone is napping, I highly recommend you check it out.  For some of you what Dr. Brene Brown shares is like second nature to you already.  For some of you, it might be something you are learning to do and you can relate to the hardship mentioned…and for some of you it might be a completely foreign concept.  As a graduate wife, I have realized just how truly powerful the act of being ‘vulnerable’ is and how, in my opinion, I don’t think we can survive without it.  I hope the below talk really leaves you with much stirring in your heart, as it did for me.  Lots to chew on…

-Does true courage mean admitting we are imperfect?

-The actual meaning of courage is to share one’s heart.

-Is being truly vulnerable beautiful?

-When we try to numb emotions and run from being vulnerable, do we numb true joy, love, peace as well?

-M.C.

Friday Funnies

Friday Funnies: Academic Autocorrect

Beauty and the Budget

Decorating Tips from a Military Wife: Part II

                                                                  –written by Megan, a military wife soon to be a graduate wife

Welcome back! You can find Part 1 of Megan’s post here.

6. Clean the hardware of your doors, windows, and cabinets, or if that’s too labor intensive just replace them!  The easiest thing would be to replace handles with handles and knobs with knobs because the boring holes would be the same.  If you are in a rental, just make sure to save the old ones to re-replace before you move out.

Source: http://manhattan-nest.com/2011/11/03/black-doors/

7.  Take down any boring old lighting fixture and replace it with a funky, beautiful one of your own!  This is a little more complicated than some projects but is a lot easier than you’d imagine.  If it makes you too nervous you can always call a professional (or your dad.)

8. Definitely shop places like Goodwill, Salvation Army, and thrifts shops.  Be sure not to take furniture and accessories that you see at face value.  A $20 side table that’s pretty fugly now could be gorgeous with a can of Chinese red spray paint.  And if it doesn’t fit into the next place you move into or your tastes change, you won’t be heartbroken to get rid of it because you didn’t spend an arm and a leg on it!  Besides its fun to hear people’s reactions when you told them “Oh yeah I spent $17 dollars on that fabulous chair!” Whaaaattt??

9. Want instant coziness in your space?  Add a rug!  Seriously, you’ll be amazed at how much it can change a space.  Personally I’d ignore all those silly rules about how many sofa legs need to be on the rug, if it makes you happy go for it!  Also, if you have wall-to-wall carpet, don’t be afraid to put a rug on top of that!  Layering rugs is super popular right now and is an easy way to bring texture and color into a space.   One more thing, don’t shy away from using a real rug in the bathroom or kitchen.  In these two rooms, which typically have a lot of “hardscaping” (cabinets, counters, appliances) a rug will make the space feel much more warm and inviting.  I promise you, unless you have a few truly rambunctious rugrats (God bless you), a real rug will hold up to the normal wear and tear that bathrooms and kitchen have to endure.

10. This last one is more of a mental tip but its something that I constantly find myself having to do.  Step away from the blogs, Pinterest, and HGTV.  These are great resources and really allow you to focus in on what you really like but they can also intensely stress you out.  I worry about the state of my home plenty of the time, but I can assure you that your friends don’t care that your dishtowels don’t match or that your curtains aren’t silk.  And as my friend told me, if they do care about these things then they aren’t your friends in the first place.   They say, “Love the one you’re with!”  And its true, one day you’ll move and have totally new design dilemmas to solve.  In the meantime embrace the perfect imperfection of your home now.  It’s where all the good stuff in life happens, whether or not it is perfectly decorated!

Inspiration

Love is…

So, I wanted to be all clever and write a lovely little post on love.  I started to do just that and  I recalled a beautiful poem by Marjorie Holmes  and realized she says it much more eloquently than I ever could.  I think many of us grad wives could easily add in another few stanzas saying something about…romance enticing us with riches and full time jobs and love promising commitment and encouragement even through the rough graduate school journey.

I hope these words speak truth and encouragement to you as we seek to remember what love really is all about.

Happy Valentines!

-M.C.

Romance is flying.

Love is safe landing.

Romance is seeking perfection.

Love is forgiving faults.

Romance is fleeting.

Love is long.

Romance is the anguish of waiting for the phone to ring to bring you words of endearment.

Love is the anguish of waiting for a call that will assure you that someone else is happy and safe.

Romance is eager-striving always to appear attractive to each other.

Love is two people who finds beauty in each other-no matter how they look.

Romance is dancing in the moonlight, gazing deep into desired eyes.

Love says, “You’re tired, honey.  I’ll get up this time.” As you stumble through the darkness to warm a bottle or comfort a frightened child.

Romance is flattering attention.

Love is genuine thoughtfulness.

Romance is suspense, anticipation, surprise.

Love is tenderness, constancy, being cherished.

Romance is delicious.

Love nourishes.

Romance can’t last.

Love can’t help it.

Monday's Food for Thought

Monday’s Food for Thought: Why French Parents Are Superior

Once upon a time, I was an expert in parenting. Of course, this was actually before I became a parent.

When our son was born, most of my parenting opinions went out the window. I found most parenting books to be annoying. I am very visual, so I learned best from watcing our friends with older children navigate the world of parenthood. I watched the way they interacted with their children. Some of the ideas they’ve had have helped us in raising our son; and other ideas haven’t worked at all. I’m learning that each parent truly has to listen to their own child and figure out what works best for them.

Last week, this little gem of an article showed up in the WSJ. My husband sent it to me, and I laughed outloud at the title. (Namely, because my husband is half-French). After reading the article, it sparked quite a lively conversation in our home about our parenting style, if it worked for our son, and what we could be doing better.

What do you think, GW readers? Do you think the author was right? Would love to hear your thoughts.

-Mandy

Beauty and the Budget

Beauty and the Budget: Valentine DIY

Happy early Valentines Day!  If you are like me, you take every chance you get to celebrate something and V-day should be no exception.  Mandy is not so much a fan :), but I am hoping to rope her into some fun V-day crafting with these amazingly simple, inexpensive (and almost free) DIY Valentines crafts I gathered online.  I have family visiting right now (yahoo!) and sadly didn’t have the time to share a few of my own, but the below are pretty fab to say the least.

 Let’s face it, we are graduate wives, we support, love, and sacrifice a lot during the year so let’s celebrate this season that honors all those things we are learning how to do best.   Treat yourself to a box of chocolates and have fun making some of these goodies for those you love.  Enjoy!

I am kind of into the “You light my fire” theme for some reason…and came across these two little beauties.  Super special and sweet. (for tutorials and sources click here & here)

Seriously….I couldn’t resist this.  Where oh where do our grad school spouses spend most of their days?  Bingo…love note library cards.  Genius. (for tutorials and source click  here )

I mean let’s be honest, who doesn’t wish we still said ‘da bomb’  (This is a great deal, fun to make and just think of how to put the leftover massage oil to work!) (for tutorials and source click  here)

Last but most definitely not least.  Yes, please!  It took me about two seconds to realize I must do this adorable little gift as soon as possible.  If you don’t have photoshop or a scanner, just make a small framed print of your actual thumbprints.  (I hope my hubs doesn’t see this because this is what I am making for him!) (for tutorials and source click  here)

So if even if none of these DIY gems enticed you into celebrating, at least try out one of these fun treats on Feb. 14th.  Yummm! (for ice-cream sandwich recipe click here)

Beauty and the Budget

Decorating Tips from a Military Wife: Part I

-written by Megan, a military wife that will soon be a graduate wife

I couldn’t tell you how or when I first stumbled upon the Graduate Wife blog but I do distinctly remember finding myself able to relate to a lot of the experiences that I read about here, and I’m not even a graduate wife, I’m a military wife!  Well I’m a soon to be graduate wife but that’s a whole other story!  Each role requires tough personal sacrifices, long separations from the one person who you can’t bear to be separated from, and both include frequent moves where sometimes your new pad is less than stellar.

Staying in the present and decorating for your current home is always tough when you know that it is only temporary.  Everyone wants to make smart decisions about their home décor, but its hard not to worry if what you purchase now will fit into the next place.  In addition to that mindbender, many times in this gypsy lifestyle the best option is to rent rather than buy, which we all know places limitations on how much you can do.  As a military wife who has moved three times in four years and formerly employed as an interior decorator here are a few decorating tips!

1.     Paint, paint, paint!  Definitely ask your Landlord if this is allowed, but I promise you that nothing will have a greater visual impact per dollar spent then a few gallons of paint does.  Paint walls, paint doors, paint baseboards!

Sources: http://andwhatalicesaw.tumblr.com/post/16458386971, http://intermissionthoughts.blogspot.com/2011/04/pink-door.html, http://pinterest.com/pin/31243791134483467/, http://addicted2decorating.com/colorful-painted-interior-doors.html, http://homeautodesign.com/2011/10/kelly-green-interior/color-spotlight-kelly-green-door/, http://everydayartpics.wordpress.com/2011/04/06/interior-sliding-barn-doors/, http://www.creamylife.com/interior-design/6505/color-your-front-door.html, http://burrsandberries.com/2011/03/color-inspiration-smokey-green-and-black/

2.     Keep main pieces of furniture and window treatments conservative but have loads of fun mixing and matching patterns and colors with everything else.  If you are worried about curtains lengths (like I tend to be) just realize that hems can always be let out, topper treatments improvised to add height, and an oversized horizontal banding in a lovely coordinating fabric can always be added to the bottom.  Even in my very colorful home I stuck to leather furniture and grey drapes in the living room and an espresso bedroom set with white curtains in the bedroom.   But this doesn’t mean that EVERYTHING needs to be brown, black, or white; go bold with color!  Pillows, rugs, blankets, art, tchotchkes, these are all the perfect opportunity to liven up a space!

Same furniture, two different looks:

3.     Be very picky about what you buy at places such as Ross, Marshalls, TJ Maxx, or any other store like that.  Look for items that can serve double duty.  An apothecary jar can be used to hold flowers in the spring and Christmas tree ornaments during the holidays.  A basket can hold firewood when it’s winter and dog toys when it’s warmer.  Look for things that might work in any number of rooms of your house.  Maybe a pretty lamp would look nice on your foyer table, but in the next apartment you use it in your bedroom.

4.     Don’t be afraid to put holes in the walls.  Multiple holes even, because we all know it takes at least four tries until you get the picture hung juuuusttt right.  After painting this follows as the number two tip at making your house feel like a home.  Get creative with your art, it doesn’t have to be expensive, but in my experience a frame and mat can make even the most humble of art look gallery worthy!

5.     Houseplants make any space feel more alive and its healthy for you and your home.  ‘Nuff said!  Just make sure that what you bring home isn’t poisonous to Mister Dog or Madame Cat!

Sources: http://ii-ne-kore.blogspot.com/2011/03/good-for-soul.html, http://twoellie.com/two-ellie/2011/5/31/and-george.html, http://www.marthastewart.com/274714/houseplants#/235741, http://pinterest.com/pin/201254677067708510/, http://www.designsponge.com/2011/12/sneak-peek-josh-diana-of-casa-de-perrin.html#more-123175, http://haus-therapy.tumblr.com/post/6526331806/floor-plant-envy, http://www.grahamandgreen.co.uk/?source=cj, http://knightmovesblog.blogspot.com/2012/01/houseplants-and-their-containers.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+KnightMoves+%28Knight+Moves%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Come back next week for Part II!

Wednesday's Weekly Tip

Wednesday’s Weekly Tip: Travel on a budget

So, here it is: we slowly started gathering loads of helpful tips for the ‘graduate wife journey’ from readers or from other great sources online.  We started thinking …. what should we do with all this helpful stuff?  It seemed like a lot to cram into a few postings here and there, so we opted for a weekly (or close to it) tips post.

Tada!

Wednesday’s Weekly Tip is debuting.  If you have any good tips for anything from living on a budget, sharing the graduate journey with your spouse, to great sites to buy/DIY kids toys or even something as random as how to get out a hard stain, please share!  We have gathered quite a few already and would love to feature something from you.  So here goes.  Happy Tip Day!

You will remember our amazing friend and former graduate wife, Katherine, from her post here on TGW a while back.  Please join us as we take a visit to her blog for our first installation of Wednesday’s Weekly Tip for a fabulous little bit on: How to Travel on a Budget.  (yahoo!)

Expectations · Inspiration · Moving

What I wish I had known… {part III}

-Written by Mandy & Julia

Today we are featuring the third post on the series: “What I wish I had known” going into my graduate wife journey.  Please see the first post here, and the second post here.

Moving:

  •      Pick and choose carefully when packing those boxes.

o      Consider the climate carefully and realistically. If you’re moving to the UK like we did, you might as well leave behind those flip-flops, bathing suits, shorts and sundresses. This girl paid to move all those things, only to end up stuffing them in a suitcase headed back to the US for the holidays.

o      Pack lightly. Are you really going to need all those t-shirts? Could you purchase Tupperware more cheaply than moving it? Sure that crystal vase is nice, but really?

o      On the other hand, I wish I had brought our wedding album and that quilt that has been in the family for three generations. Those extra special items will bring comfort when homesickness hits.

  • Don’t put off the paperwork.

o      If you need residence permits or visas, know the requirements and get started early. Unless you want to be like us, running through the streets of downtown Chicago during the two hour time slot you have before your friend’s wedding in order to get a same day passport.

  • Brace yourself for the (extra) cost.

o      There are layers and layers of fees and unexpected costs, from setting up Internet to paying for a TV license (what? a license to watch TV?). Make room for this in your budget.

o      A furnished flat/apartment could come without a kitchen table. You’ll probably need some extra cash for that trip to Ikea or Walmart [insert local substitute here].

o      When you’ve first arrived and you’re exhausted, emotionally and physically, it may be worth grabbing a taxi and throwing your grand plan of walking the last mile and a half to your new apartment out the window instead.

  • Investigate your destination city.

o      Don’t settle on a mover or a bank or a grocery store until you ask for others’ experiences, even if they are strangers on the Internet (You’ve struck gold if your destination city happens to be featured on The Graduate Wife’s survival guide section.).

o      Don’t be afraid to ask questions, as your elementary school teacher once told you. Seriously, others have gone before you. Seek them out and get some help settling.

Dealing with Internal Battles:

We came here for the purpose of my husband’s education, and that education came at a cost for both of us, and for our family and friends back home. I had wholeheartedly agreed to this new adventure prior to our coming, and I plunged into the job-hunt and life-making once we landed in Scotland (okay, so I cried for the first couple days).

What felt romantic and adventurous while still living in the US, however, quickly became hard. Figuring out a new culture, going through the process of student teaching in Scotland and again in England (since my American credential didn’t transfer) and enduring a climate that happens to have really hard, dark, wet winters were some of the challenges. Add to that the fact that we moved from Scotland to England to Germany and back to England within three years, and I was tired. Really tired. And my emotional trap was to blame my husband, as if the challenges surrounding the decision to study abroad were his doing. It hasn’t been easy to work through my misplaced anger when enduring a particularly tough season.

The best advice I can give is to turn off the DVD player and start talking. Work through it, regardless of how hard the conversation is. Otherwise, the bitterness is at risk of festering and creating resentment. My companion on this journey is my husband, the one who was by my side through every move and bad day at work and hard winter – we must work hard to protect and enrich our alliance. Without his companionship, I simply could not do this another day.

Simplifying your life:

My brother once asked me if it was true that European and British residents rode bicycles to work and often wore the same outfit twice in one week. Emphatically, I said “yes, and it’s awesome” (okay, maybe a slightly smug exaggeration, but still).

Six years living here, and we may have a tinge of this beautiful outlook on material possessions: you don’t need much to live comfortably. Of course, this outlook is not confined to Europe. Anyone on a student budget can tell you that saving money wherever you can breeds simplicity. This is refreshing, and it is conveniently conducive to the student lifestyle.

So, grab a bike and wear that ten-year-old pair of jeans without a second thought, and do it every single day.

Holding on to your own dreams:

So if you are the one putting your husband or wife through school, it may be the case that a dream of your own has been put on hold. For me, I’d like to go back to school. My husband’s doctorate and six years later, this dream has not been realized.

I’ve come, however, to understand that waiting to pursue one’s dreams doesn’t have to mean that they diminish, ‘dry up’ or even ‘explode’ as Langston Hughes famously penned. Rather, the waiting has refined my goal, changed its direction and enriched its beauty. The dream deferred can turn into an aging wine rather than a raisin in the sun. And in this space of waiting, I’ve seen other aspirations blossom and flourish: having children and starting a family, establishing traditions of our own, getting to know another culture.

If you could pass along any lessons learned in your own graduate wife journey, what would they be, and why?

Monday's Food for Thought

Monday’s Food for Thought: The Upside of Dyslexia

When I graduated from college, I had the opportunity to work for a couple of years in a private school specializing in dyslexia. The school taught children unique ways to read and deal with their disability. A lot of those students have gone on to be very successful entrepreneurs, doctors, lawyers, teachers, etc.

I was very excited to see this article in the New York Times, an op-ed piece on looking at new ways to look at dyslexia. And, as the article states: it should be looked at not just as an impediment, but as an advantage, especially in certain artistic and scientific fields.

With several members of my family suffering from varying degrees of dyslexia, I’ve watched them learn to live with their disability, and in return, they’ve inspired me. If you suffer from dyslexia, or know someone who does, I hope this article encourages you.

-Mandy