Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Non-Candy Easter Basket Ideas

 Every year when Easter rolls around, I always feel a little bit hung over from the holiday season. One of my missions as a parent is to limit the amount of junk in our home, because after all, with four kids, it tends to add up quickly. I usually try to pick items and toys that I know will be used, and will not be found laying around in a random spot. I thought I would share my three mood boards for the kids which help me align what I am buying and maybe it will help you all too! 


Dot Markers  |  WetBrush  | Maileg Mouse  | Barbie
Flip Flops  | hair ties  | bathing suit  | toothbrush
earrings  |  sleep mask  | Welly bandaids

Football gloves  |  bathing suits  |  football cards  | xbox gift card


Saturday, February 27, 2021

Livi's Nursery

So, if you have followed me for awhile, you may have wondered where the heck I have been? Well, I got pregnant in July of 2018, and basically felt like garbage until our team green baby was born. That's a story for another day! Anyway, I thought I would share her nursery since it has been a fun year changing it from team green to team PINK as we welcomed another girl (which I am sure you guessed since the title of this post gives away her name)!

 
Crib: Babyletto
Rug: RugsUSA
Wall hanging: Pottery Barn Teen

 
Bright Eyed/Bushy Tailed: Opal + Olive
Changing Pad Cover: Etsy
Changing Pad Mat: Gathre
Curtains: HomeGoods

 
Hanging basket: World Market - in store only
Mirror: Wayfair (similar - mine is out of stock)

 
Pillow: Wayfair
Unicorn: Cuddle + Kind

Saturday, January 9, 2021

We All Start Somewhere

Something today was telling me to write how I was feeling. I have been reflecting a lot about how I ended up where I did and how some people I grew up with ended up on opposite sides of the political spectrum. I suppose that is how the story goes, though, right? We all start somewhere, and where we end up falling is up to us. 



There were a number of different things I can think about that have had a greater impact on my life than others, although most monumental moments have shaped me into the person, wife, mom, daughter, supervisor, etc. that I am today. I think you can say the initial foundation of my life began in the town in which I was born and where my parents were raised. This small upstate New York town, in the Mohawk Valley region, used to be the glove making capital of the world. This led to the growth of the city, once called Stump City due to all of the cutdown trees, but sadly this bustling, glove-making town, saw the hurt following the Great Depression. This was obviously way before my time. Both of my parents grew up in this small town, however they seemed to want to expand their lives and move away. They lived in Virginia for a period of time, before moving back to New York, prior to my birth. 

I lived the first 13 years of my life between three cities in upstate New York. The first monumental moment began during February of 2000 when my parents decided to take me and my brother to Colorado to visit my aunt and uncle. It was gorgeous weather and apparently allowed for my dad to golf in a short sleeve shirt in the middle of February. This was something that was appealing to him. From there, my parents both started the plan to move to Colorado. The idea of leaving the gloomy northeast for 300 days of sunshine was an easy sell for adults. As for me, I literally asked to move in with another family so I did not have to leave. One of my cheerleading coaches Sam, and her single mother, offered to allow me to stay with them so I could finish the season cheering with my team. Much to my surprise, this was met with rejection by my parents. At the time, I really wondered why they hated me so much that they wouldn't let me stay with one of my cheerleading coaches. My, my, how perspectives can change as you age. So, monumental moment number one was moving to Colorado during the heat of the summer in 2000. 


I don't think many people necessarily enjoy middle school anyway, but let me tell you, it sucked. My mom set up a "blind friendship date" with a neighbor named Delia. I still do not know the story behind this girl, but I know something was off and she wouldn't leave me alone. Like come in to my house, no knocking, and find me in my room, weird. I missed New York. This move led me to my aversion to change which I still battle to this day.

As I began to grow older, I found myself referring to being "from" Highlands Ranch, Colorado where I lived while I was in high school. I met some amazing people, many which I still keep in contact with to this day. High school was amazing. I cheered, I had some great friends, and even greater memories. One of which was not the night I snuck out with my friend Katie, got drunk, and then puked spaghettios in the bathroom sink when we got home. Talking to Katie's dad about that was a fun one, but definitely not my favorite. When I think about Highlands Ranch in terms of diversity, I think about how there is basically none. It is an upper - middle class white community, some may call it a "bubble" or "rich." My high school often had a "diversity" week where they would invite in different cultural groups to do performances for us to "introduce" different cultures. Thinking about this now makes me want to vomit. Thinking about my reaction to attending these events, makes me want to crawl up into a hole and never come out. I vividly remember asking my mom not to go "because I did not care about diversity." What a HORRIBLE thing to think. It does go to show that someone can grow, change, and move past an underdeveloped frontal lobe in which statements and choices clearly lack maturity. Monumental moment number two was my lack of wanting knowledge about other cultures than my #basicbitch culture from which I was currently in, Ugg-deep. 

Monumental moment number three involved a family that are literally the sweetest souls on this earth. I was invited to a University of Colorado football game my freshman year of college by my friend Amanda because her brother played there. One Saturday we drove up to Boulder, laughing hysterically when her dad barely ran a red light and made a comment that is "was just turning pink." Upon arriving in Boulder, I felt home. The mountains, the laid back lifestyle, and my god, the football game was electric. I loved everything about that and my focus became on getting grades that would allow me to get into CU Boulder. If you do not know about Boulder, it is a straight up hippy town, with lots of pot, and also very, very wealthy people. The Jon Benet Ramsey house looks like a dump and it is over a million dollars. Yes, this happened in Boulder, Colorado. 


Monumental moment four involved moving to Boulder. I had the real life dorm experience, and the real life "I am dirt poor" experience. My first roommate in Boulder had fifty foot yachts and went up and down the Hudson river over the summer and her mother owned a women's clothing line. She liked to smoke pot and have boys with dreads lay on my bed, I was not cool with that. Germs and stinky boys, ya know? I ended up moving dorms and moving in with my best friend, Heather. Luckily, her roommate, a wealthy Texan I think, liked my wealthy roommate and it was a match made in heaven. Moving in with Heather was such a sigh of relief. She was normal. She had to work for her money and we both lived off of dorm food and a giant bottle of Immodium. You know, dorm food does work on you, if you know what I mean. Heather spent every other weekend in California visiting her now husband and I spend a lot of time with my now husband. I was working at a restaurant while in college, still dirt poor, when a homeless man came into the restaurant. He did not have any money and asked if he could use the bathroom. One server in particular allowed him to do so and then invited him to sit in his section following his restroom needs. The cold, worn down man took him up on his offer. I watched intently as this server, a college student himself, told him to order whatever he had wanted on the menu and that he would buy it for him. The man had tears in his eyes. He ordered a soup (pea) and spaghetti with meatballs. Before leaving, the server packed him up this same order so he could have food for later as well. This moment changed me. I wanted to be in a position where I could advocate for others when they could not advocate for themselves. I would not be an echo chamber and support any narrative that didn't allow for change. I wanted to be able to give to others in some way, shape or form. What a saint that server was. In Boulder there were so many diverse people from one end of the money spectrum to the other. I fell on the poor end stealing an entire box full of coupon books from the student center so Berto and I could eat five dollar burritos and a drink from Qdoba basically every night. The man that used to pee in the river when walking home from house parties was also on our end of the spectrum, I think, and he always smelled of pee. Then there were girls having animals get into their expensive cars and calling to ask their daddy, not dad, to buy them a new car because of it (it was a Chipmunk, I think). Another girl did not know how to cook her own popcorn in a microwave with a popcorn button. There were all kinds there. I craved diversity after Boulder, and wanted to learn all I could about it. 

After two years in Boulder I moved down south of Denver again when my now husband graduated. Heather had moved on to California and I just didn't want to be there without her or Berto. Berto and I got an apartment together, continued to work at restaurants, and lived such care-free lives. My friend Mandy and I found ourselves in a Communication class at CU Denver with a Black professor. She had no issues calling anyone out on their shit, and she always called Mandy and I out for talking. She did make a comment about getting raped in Boulder as it was an unsafe town, which really rubbed us the wrong way, because truth be told, Denver was much scarier than Boulder ever was. Drunk frat boys aren't that scary. They are actually just stupid, but always a lot of fun. Monumental moment number five happened in this class. Junior year, diving into more diverse populations in Denver, the professor made a comment about understanding privilege. This was one of the first times I had discussed privilege, specifically white privilege. My major had changed from Political Science and Mathematics in Boulder to Sociology in Denver. I dove all in. Sexual Deviance, Racial Tensions in Society, Gender and Equality, and I loved every minute of it. Something about having a diverse classroom, with diverse professors, made learning about these topics more real. There were raw stories shared and I still admire those who shared them. Upon graduating, I knew this education was not enough. I immediately applied for graduate school and was accepted into the Counseling program. The process was tedious, essays, full day interviews, grades, and so on. But I get it now. That program nearly killed me physically, and killed my debt to income ratio. But what I learned was priceless. There were professors from all backgrounds, varying sexualities, and different ethnicities. I met some of the kindest and most intelligent people I have ever met in my life in this program. Think about it, you want your therapists to be open minded for all clients, so teaching open-mindedness is at the forefront. Teaching cultural competence and cultural integrity is high on the list because as a therapist, you may never know who will walk through your door. Some of the people that stand out to me that have impacted my life for the better are the people I met through grad school. Although the debt from grad school is my least favorite, I would do it ten times over to gain more knowledge and experience working and learning from people from all backgrounds. In fact, the photos in this blog post are from a friend from graduate school as she continues to capture images through her lens and often in some of the most magnificent ways. 

I see so many posts online about lib-tards, snowflakes, deplorables, and so on and so forth. I am literally so sad about the name calling. I was born in conservative upstate New York, which remains highly conservative today, and surrounded myself with people in Douglas County for most of my life where being a conservative runs deep through their veins, and have become friends with some people from other states who remain conservative. I, however, am not. Most time I feel like a square peg trying to fit in a round hole, and thats when I lean on the images shared from my friends from grad school. I hear people say "liberals try to make me feel bad about my beliefs" and if there is one thing I want everyone, including my kids, to know, NO ONE can make you feel a certain way. Only YOU can make yourself feel a certain way. So, if you are someone saying this, I think it is time to take a deep look internally and examine why you feel this way. There are foreign enemies of the United States that wanted the current president to be elected in 2016 for exactly this reason. We are ALL are letting those enemies win. We are more divided than ever. I have seen people say they would not lose friends over an election. Well, I am fine with that in all actuality. While I would love to pay less taxes, I will never let that get in the way of the social issues that are present in elections. Sandy Hook KILLED me. Little children were shot in their classrooms. In my children's school, the preschool and kindergarten classrooms are immediately to the left when entering the building. I continue to have anxiety about the vulnerability, despite security measures, of my children being in a similar path to the shooter at Sandy Hook. I want immigrant children to be afforded the same opportunities of other children in this country. I want children to be able to eat at school if their parents cannot afford it. I want abortion to remain legal because people will find a way to get one legally or not if they want one. I want more funding for public education and I want greener energy. But most of all, I want to surround myself with those that believe these things too. As a mother of half Mexican children, I do not want to surround myself with people that think a racist "leader" is good. That is an insult to my children and I do take it personally. I also question any leader that treats women with disrespect and mocks disabled people. If those things are okay with someone, that is not really a person I need to keep around. I GET IT - you want to pay less taxes. But at what cost? Allowing the Proud Boys to be proud? The cost of allowing foreign enemies laugh at the crumbling political environment in this country? At what point do we say enough is enough and admit that electing an unqualified, business man, was the downfall of the last four years? At what point do we say allowing someone with traits of an untreated mental illness run this country? 


Monumental moment number six. This is something that is a continued work in progress. I will not allow those that stand idly and allow the continued destruction of our country happen just because they do not want to admit that one can vote against party lines. Our kids' futures depending on choosing a leader that unifies, is qualified to run a country, and one that does not sell our souls to our enemies. We need to be better, do better, and we will be better. Together. 

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Salmon | Lime Cilantro Rice & Salad

Woah! It’s been a minute... did the last almost three years fly by in a flash? I mean, long story short, I had a baby in 2019, my husband left his career of ten years, and then we all became locked down and the food gods blessed us with some new killer recipes while all locked down! We’ve been cooking at home so much more because, as you can imagine, eating out with four kids is less than relaxing. Anyways, I’m trying to lose all of the baby weight and in doing so we are eating healthier so I thought I would share with you all what we as eating! 

Shopping list:
Salmon (I used filets that were 5 oz each) 
Lemons (2)
Salt
Pepper
Garlic
Butter
Olive oil 

Long grain rice
One lime
Olive oil 
Cilantro 

Lettuce
Avocado
Cucumber
Tomato
Sharp cheddar cheese (very light)
Croutons (very light) 
Sugar free dressing 



Salmon
Place salmon on parchment paper, add generous amounts of salt and pepper, combine 2 tbsp of olive oil, 1 tbsp of butter, one squeezed lemon, and two cloves of garlic to a bowl (melt in microwave) and poor over salmon. Cut up lemon and place slices on top of salmon. Bake at 400* for 15 min. Or until the meat temp is 145*. Remove and cover for three minutes. 

Rice (instant pot)
Two cups of long grain rice (not rinsed)
One Tbsp of olive oil
2.5 cups of water
Stir
High pressure for three minutes
Ten minute natural release
Quick release after natural release
Stir in 1 Tbsp of olive oil and 1/2 cup cilantro and nice from one lime 

Salad
Self explanatory! :) 

Enjoy! 

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Leila's Bedroom: pink & unicorns

About a year ago we got bunk beds for Aiden's room and Luke slowly trickled into sleeping in there every night. Now they never want to sleep alone because of how "afraid" they are. We have a monitor in their room to see them and hear what they talk about and their little conversations are so cute. They mostly consist of sports, things they like, and fart jokes. Oh, boys!

Well, the front of our house gets SO hot. Even with air conditioning the sun bakes it. So we decided to move Leila into Luke's old bedroom and switch things up.








It has been so nice not having our neighbors car wake her up, less heat, and a very bright big girl room!

Sources:
Paint: Benjamin Moore Wild Aster in Satin
Bed: Pottery Barn Kids
Unicorn stuffed animal: Pottery Barn Kids
Gold night stand: Target
Sheets: Pottery Barn Kids
Quilt: Target
Wall unicorn: Target
Lamp: HomeGoods
Frames: IKEA
Prints: Rifle Paper Co. 
Floral on blinds: Fancy Free Finery on Etsy
Swan book ends: HomeGoods
Rugs: RugsUSA



Sunday, July 8, 2018

c a l i f o r n i a | family vacation 2018

One of my favorite things to do when Berto and I first started dating was planning and going on adventures. We took many trips before we decided to have kids and knew that trips would be so much more fun when we had kids to take on our adventures. While they are certainly fun, they are also full of preparations, tears (by me and the kids, usually), and lots of bickering! There is nothing like sharing one hotel room with your family for five or so days straight!

This time we stayed at the Grand Hyatt in Newport Beach. The best part of this hotel was definitely the three pools. We only went to one because it had the slide, splash pad, ping pong, and giant connect four. Let's just say we drank a lot of pina coladas while the kids had such a good time swimming and playing! The worst part of this hotel was the room. It was much different than pictured online. As avid Hyatt hotel-goers, this was my least favorite Hyatt room. We will probably stay back at the Orange County Hyatt again, and skip this one, because of the rooms.


The first day we went to Huntington Beach with my bestie, her husband, and her three boys. We did not plan for the large Fourth of July parade that occurs right on PCH near downtown Huntington Beach. Parking was INSANE! We finally found a overpriced spot. Leila was loving the beach and playing in the waves and having the best time. Then, just like on America's Funniest Home Videos, she did a epic cartwheel fall and did not want anything to do with the ocean after that moment. I still wish I had it on camera! 


We stayed at the beach for the whole day before heading back to our room to get ready for the fourth of July festivities at Heather's house. She cooked amazing kabobs, salad, fruit, and cupcakes. Fourth of July with friends is so much more fun than battling the crowds at professional shows! 



The next day we spent at Newport Beach and it was crazy windy. There was lots of sand in our eyes and mouths and did not stay at the beach for very long. We ended the day going back to our pool, having dinner and drinks by the pool, and crashing! 





Leila slept in this amazing bed that we bought prior to leaving and it is PERFECT when traveling with a toddler. I did not love the sheet it came with, so I brought an old crib sheet of hers. Most nights, she was asleep before the boys even got out of the shower. Girlfriend is a good sleeper! 

The last evening we spent time in Venice Beach. Um, not my favorite place to go but pretty amazing for people watching. There are people from all different walks of life there. Homeless people, drug addicts, maybe pimps? It is a very interesting place. We did have some good ice cream and a beautiful sunset swim and played on the beach playground! 




The last day we spent at the pool most of the day before heading back to the room to get ready to head back to Los Angeles to catch our evening flight. It is always hard saying good bye to your best friend, but thankfully she will be visiting Colorado in a month, which makes things easier. 

What are your favorite places to visit in CA? Anything else we should do next time?









Sunday, June 24, 2018

Pink Hearth

When browsing through Pinterest I got a wild idea to switch up some of our decor. I ordered new PB Comfort slip covers in a light gray that should be here in a few weeks and wanted to design style to follow. I took my beautiful clock down and added some more contemporary art. I am loving how this looks and I love how bright and happy the pink is. Happy Sunday!