Thursday, January 31, 2008

where in the world is...

This is a fun game to test your knowledge of geography. I tried to embed it on my blog but it's too big for my space, so just follow this link to take the Traveler IQ test.

I didn't make it past the third level. Let's see how well you know your world (Darin - this one's for you). Let us know how you score!

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

liar liar pants on fire

Brenden has a "friend" named Adam S. Adam was in Brenden's Kindergarten class when we moved to Utah half way through the year. Brenden started talking about Adam from the beginning and was anxious to be his friend. For some reason, Adam decided to exploit Brenden's obsession with monster trucks, and told Brenden his Dad was the driver of Monster Mutt - Brenden's favorite truck. He said he keeps it in his garage and other people aren't allowed to see it, but he drives it and goes to the shows and does tricks and everything. Brenden came home so excited and reported this news to us and Scott and I both tried to gently convince him that Adam was trying to trick him and this just wasn't true. We even looked it up online and showed him who the real driver is. But he was convinced and brought it up a lot and told many people about the kid in his class who's dad drove a real monster truck.

I haven't heard any more about this in about a year so I thought the whole thing had dropped. But today (2 years later) Brenden and Oliver were watching one of their Monster Truck videos - I think it was the 2006 finals in Las Vegas. There was a move where Monster Mutt did a jump and a wheel broke off and Brenden says to Oliver, "That crash right there is why Adam S.'s dad stopped driving Monster Mutt."

Isn't it sad? Why is he so gullable? Why is Adam so mean as to keep it up all these years?

you can blame the writers strike

I guess it's because of the strike that there's no good tv on these days, so we've been watching more movies than usual. This weekend we saw Rescue Dawn. It was just ok. It's a true story, so that's always nice to learn about something historical. But there weren't really any lovable characters who you could root for. I mean of course you root for the main guy because he's the main guy, but he's weird. And he eats worms and there are leaches and torture and mud. Plus, military movies are especially hard for telling people apart. So I give it a "just ok" rating (and I think Scott agrees - for the male perspective).

Then last night we attempted to watch Pirates of the Caribbean 3. I don't really know why we even tried. It was one of those movie watching sessions motivated purely by the chance to mail it back to netflix. We never saw the second one, although the first one was ok. But within the first 10 mintues we were lost and it was boring and dumb. I fell asleep and Scott watched the rest in fast forward. So this one gets a "don't bother" rating. (but at least we get to send it back today and that is really exciting!)

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Just like my little sis

We have been so inspired by the Earnests international dinner tradition, that we decided to try one of our own. Here is the Wiley version (aka leftovers & random odds & ends night):
Pictured you will find food representing the following countries:

France: Quiche and Baguette picked up today from Eliane's French Bakery in Orem
Italy: leftover Nicolitalia Pizza & various Williams Sonoma dipping oils for the baguette
China: Costco frozen pot stickers (as recommended by Ie Li)
America: Oliver's frozen pizza he had for breakfast and warmed up for lunch and again for dinner (frozen pizza can't hardly be classified as Italian food!)

If any of you would like my recipes, errr, I mean reheat or pick-up directions, just let me know.

Corporate speak

I was listening in on another boring conference call and got a kick out of this new corporate term I learned today:

Ideate: verb (pronounced like "create") To generate ideas or brainstorm. As in "we need to have a meeting where we can ideate on some new concepts for marketing"

Ideation: noun The act of ideating. As in "After the ideation, we will select the best course of action."


I don't know if it's a real word or not, but I think it sounds pretty stupid.

Monday, January 28, 2008

monkey see monkey do

Tonight for our family activity we decided to check out rock climbing at The Quarry. I'm always looking for good physical activities for the kids (in case you somehow got the impression that we just sit around and watch movies), and especially indoor activities for the winter. Turns out the boys are natural little climbing monkeys. Brenden made it all the way to the top several times. Seems like he's built well for it - agile and strong and slightly on the small side.

Oliver was quite apprehensive at first and only went up a couple feet but by the end he challenged himself to go about half way up. He was nervous and I said "I think you can do it, Oliver" and he said "I know, I think I can too." Of course coming down is the funnest part - swinging and pushing against the wall like a real action hero.














We left June with a friend and I acted as belay (the one at the bottom controlling the rope) which was a little nerve wracking. They taught me how to tie the knots and hold my hands, then had me sign a bunch of forms releasing them of any liability, and then we were on our own. We had a great time. It was fun to discover. Maybe we'll become Monday night regulars. (**As an extra bonus for us, they are next door to Coldstone!)

Sunday, January 27, 2008

August Rush & Juno - more movie reviews

So this weekend has been a marathon of stake conference activities (setup chairs, usher, clean up, priesthood training mtg, adult mtg, general session, more chairs to setup) but in between it all Scott found time to take the boys to the miniature train show at Thanksgiving Point. He said the Lego train was really cool but the rest was a little underwhelming with too many booths for buying stuff.

I decided while they were gone that June and I should do something fun too, so we went and saw August Rush at the dollar theater. My first impression was it was a bit cheesy and I was glad Scott wasn't there with me since he can't handle the cheese. But by the end I was on board and really enjoyed it. I like the concept of music in the universe connecting us and of course the idea of mother-child love conquering all.

After the adult session on Saturday night, we decided to take advantage of having a babysitter and Scott and I went to see Juno. We've been wanting to see it for a while and liked the idea of supporting a movie promoting adoption. Although it portrayed a couple somewhat questionable moral choices and some risque conversation, it was clever and cute and entertaining. Scott thought it was a little Gilmore Girls-esque in it's fast-paced clever dialog.

So there you go. A couple upbeat and light hearted happy-ish shows to add to your netflix list (although most of you are probably way ahead of us in movie-going in which case feel free to add your commentaries here).

Friday, January 25, 2008

Pretending I still live in California

A year ago for Valentine's Day, Scott surprised me with a Meyer Lemon tree. In the bitter months of winter I had been nostalgic about California weather and in particular about our lemon trees. I had researched and found this variety that was supposed to grow well indoors. (***As a side note, this got added to my list of things I discovered first and then showed up in the big chain catalogs - lemon trees were in William Sonoma catalog the month after I got mine, also my dining room chandelier from ebay and my entry hall light from Mexico ended up in Pottery Barn catalog and my New England Sea Bag ended up in Restoration Hardware catalog - I think they must have some spyware in my house.)

It has yet to produce any actual yellow lemons. There have been plenty of flowers and mini green fruit but none have matured to the point of being able to make lemonade - afterall the whole point of having a lemon tree. Over the summer it really thrived out on the front porch - getting plenty of water and sun. It grew 3 pretty large fruit and then I had to bring it in for the winter. Now it seems to be a bit stagnant - still seems plenty alive but the fruit are not getting any bigger or turning yellow. Every day I examine it. I look at the new growth, I look at the old fruit, I check the soil. I finally put a light on it this week to hopefully help it through the greyness of winter. I just want so badly for it to do well. This is sort of a dumb thing to blog about, but it is a part of my [obviously very exciting] life so I thought I'd share and chronicle the developments.

Grow little tree! Grow! You can do it! Just one cup of lemonade is all we ask for!

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Boeing 787 Dreamliner, by Brenden

In case you've been looking for Brenden for the past week, he's been heads down (that's corporate speak) in the family room building legos. At 6am when he wakes up; 3:30pm as soon as he's home from school; 8:00pm when it's time for bed, asking "please can I just finish one more step?" He has an amazing attention span and ability to focus and follow the instructions. This is a set Santa brought him for Christmas. It's a model of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner. It has 1200 pieces and about 150 steps and is rated for kids ages 10-15. Very occasionally he'll ask for a little help, but for the most part he has done it all on his own. Due to June's current vacuum-esque tendencies, he's had to move his operation off the floor and onto the couch. That was a conflict and has taken some convincing ("No, I can't just keep her away, Brenden") but has worked out.



So, drum roll please........

Here it is. Complete.


Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Dairy Queen workers no more













After our visit to the Springville Dairy Queen last weekend, and the scare that, based on their hair styles, our boys were just a Used t-shirt away from employment with the misfits there, we decided it was high time for a clean up. We headed to super cuts and took some before & after shots.












Oliver was especially proud of his faux-hawk

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Don't mess up my piles!

Scott had to learn very early in our relationship that I am quite particular about my piles when folding laundry. He thought it was a joke at first and funny to mess with me, but learned soon that it is not funny and the piles must be respected. I appreciate that he's now helping the kids learn the lesson and telling them "don't mess up mom's piles" for me.

Sledding on our day off

Yesterday on our day off of school we decided to join the rest of Provo and go sledding at Rock Canyon park. We stayed on the inside of the bowl this time, so as to avoid the emergency room. We enjoyed the company of both crazy freshman who brought plastic bags and mattresses, and a large latino fiesta who did it up in style with hot chocolate and donuts under the pavillion. The boys are strong enough to go up and down on their own now, so June and I enjoyed watching from the top.

Utah Valley from the top of Rock Canyon Park

The long walk back up

Oliver eyeing the run - scouting out the best jumps

Brenden full-speed ahead

The kids were willing to pause just a moment for a pose

Although June has braved several of the slides at 7-Peaks, we didn't make her go down the hill on a sled this time (mostly because Mom didn't really want to)

All tuckered out

Monday, January 21, 2008

For those of us in Utah...


I stumbled upon this blog lately and I'm loving it. They search out and report every day about cool stuff in Utah - shops, restaurants, artists, etc. I found it when they reviewed Soel Boutique in Provo, so that immediately gave it credibility to me!
Your Heart Out

p.s. Rachel - check out the post about Mini's cupcakes in Salt Lake.

p.p.s. Also, this place in Orem looks delicious!

p.p.p.s. Also, can you think of where I could put these great french alphabet cards in my house?

Movie Review - Once

Scott and I watched the movie Once on Saturday. We both really enjoyed it. It was another good couple movie -- plenty of good music and studio shots for Scott, and a nice story line and characters for me. It is rated 'R' but there is notably no sex and the R is for a few uses of the 'f' word -- but not too much (plus everyone speaks with a thick Irish accent so half the time you can't really understand what they're saying anyway). We enjoyed it so much, we even watched the bonus materials - which we usually never do. It was cool to hear about how they were basically making up the details of the story line as they filmed, and how low-budget it was and the background of the actors. Plus it was helpful to me that the main character was our friend Paul Jacobsen, so that helped me tell him apart from the other actors. We loved the style and the acting and the music. We highly recommend it.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Success (well almost)

Three hours ago I was on track to having all the kids in bed by 8pm and was composing this post in my head. I felt like the day was a success and wanted to write about it since that doesn't often happen. Well the boys went to bed just fine but June's been having a hard time. That's been wearing me down, and I'm not feeling so successful anymore. But I shouldn't let that stop me from being grateful for the things that did go well today. So let's call it a *mostly* successful day.

First, thank you to Scott for letting me sleep in. He took over the morning duties and let me sleep until 9am! What a treat. Too bad for him he forgot Brenden didn't have school today (on account of "human rights day" since "martin luther king, jr. day" isn't pc anymore) and he could have slept in too. But thanks anyways.

At the outset, the day looked a little scary. Right now at work, we're in the too-many-meetings period of the software development cycle. I hate meetings. It is not what I do best. It's hard to really participate over the phone -- especially when I'm distracted and multitasking. Plus they always have to be during business hours, and that doesn't work well for me. So today we had a meeting scheduled from 10:30 to 1pm -- 2 1/2 hours -- and one that I was actually supposed to listen closely to and participate in. During that time, Brenden's home from school, and I'm supposed to get Oliver ready for and dropped off to school at noon, and Brenden ready for and dropped off to go snowboarding at noon. And of course juggle June.

So I told Oliver he could invite a friend over, thinking if the stars and moods aligned and everyone got along, it'd help keep him entertained so I could focus better. When I called the other mom to set it up, she did what you always hope they'll do but rarely actually do - she said "how about we have Oliver over here instead." Woohoo. Then Brenden went to a friends house so it was just June and me. I managed to put dinner in the crock pot, get June down for a nap and slipped in a shower during the first 10 minutes of small talk in the meeting. So that was good.

Brenden came home and I helped him get his snow clothes on. Scott and I made a conscious decision that if we're going to raise kids in Provo, at least they have to learn how to ski (or snowboard). So we signed Brenden up for the Wasatch Ski Club -- a group that takes the kids every other Friday on buses from school up to Sundance for the afternoon. Lessons and lift tickets are included and they have a good rental deal with BYU so it ends up being a pretty good package. Brenden got a ride with a friend and I took Oliver up to school. Then back home for some more quiet time. The meeting went smoothly and afterwards I managed to get the beds made (woohoo).

We picked Brenden up at 5:30pm and I was thrilled to see him come off the bus with a smile on his face. He said "that was so fun" and "i can't wait to do it again" which means it was a success! I was nervous about how 4 adults would handle 100 elementary school kids without losing any gloves or goggles but somehow they managed. They were divided by skill into groups of 4 for lessons and he said they never got cold or upset and he learned how to do an 'S' turn. Success! Then for the hour of free time at the end I'd packed him a lunch and expected he'd hang out in the lodge -- which his friend Chandler did. But Brenden found another friend and the two of them (both 2nd grader beginner snowboarders) decided to go up the lift ALONE and do one more run. And they did it! He was excited to report they got down in less than an hour and he was early to get on the bus! Success! I'm so proud of him for being a good sport and willing participant. I have no idea if he's technically learning anything or doing it right, but he's enjoying it which is the most important part.


Brenden with his friend Chandler after snowboarding & skiing

So then we went home and enjoyed our dinner. I have to call that another success since I'm not a great or often even willing cook but we really enjoyed our homemade chili tonight. (Thanks to many of you for the recipe suggestions. I went with a combination.)


To top it off, the final success of the evening was that June managed to defy the principles of gravity yet again and did not fall out of her high chair. Woohoo. (Annee notice June "embracing the leggings" as you suggested. I have to admit I think it's a great solution.)


Wednesday, January 16, 2008

boys


It's snowing again today, but Brenden's not going to let snow, ice and freezing temps keep him from trying out the new bike ramp Santa brought them for Christmas. They set it up in the basement, and although you can't go very fast and can only use the small bike, he says "it's awesome."



On another note, you just have to love this adorable head of curly hair (even when he does say such unthinkable things sometimes).

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

good morning

so last night, after returning from work quite hungry, Sarah was kind enough to make me cream of chicken soup - from scratch. this seemed entirely too much work, as she and the kids had already had dinner - not cream of chicken soup - and frankly, im pretty ok with just a frozen pizza or a grilled cheese sandwich, both of which I'm quite able to prepare. nonetheless, i was appreciative and looking forward to dinner.


once the meal was completed however, the chef, upon tasting said soup, exclaimed "hmmmm, not exactly what i was expecting." "is it good?" i asked, "not really" she replied. at this point, my friend the frozen pizza had a good chuckle to himself, and I was in a bit of a quandary. but after some spices and who knows what else was added, i must say that my fears were assuaged, and i enjoyed a wonderful homemade meal while watching dave and, unfortunately, conan (he really needs his writers back).


well, once 12:30 rolled around i was more than ready for bed; sarah, not so much. she had to work, and settled into the living room, while i counted sheep.


2am i awoke to no sarah.


3:30am no sarah.


4:20am june wakes up, sarah returns.


now, i will admit to 1. feeling guilty that sarah had to stay up so late and work, and 2. being ever so slightly mad because i was absolutely sure that she finished work at 1:30am, and spent the rest of the night changing the background, or the fonts or something on this here blog.


long story short (well maybe not short), she's still asleep, blog unchanged. So to repent for my mistrust, i have decided to take over the blog posting duties for the day.


so you get a peak into morning at the wiley home, and this really is what happens EVERY morning!



brenden wakes up between 5:30 am and 7:30am, turns on every single light in the house, and proceeds to play xbox games. today's choice - monster jam.


his view

oliver plays with puzzles or legos. today he is working on a lego front loader.


and j-bug crawls to this particular shelf, and pulls off all of these books, every day. (don't expect sarah to call her j-bug, she doesnt like it. she also doesnt really care for "the bug," "little bug," or "lowercase j," which are the only names i ever really call june by).

Monday, January 14, 2008

Mom, you don't really need that

So I have a bit of a shopping problem. I can't resist finding a bargain. My main weaknesses are the Gap and Gymboree sale racks and Target (anything at target is a good deal, right?!). So that paired with my scatter-brained-multi-tasking-thorough&methodical tendencies makes for an unbearable experience for my boys doing errands with me. The only way I can convince them to go shopping with me is to tell them exactly what I'm looking for and promise not to look at anything else.

So a while ago when we were at home I was explaining to the boys about how I tend to buy things I don't really need when I go out, so sometimes I try to just stay home more. Now when we shop, they are my little internal conscience telling me, "Mom, you don't really need that" when they see me wandering. It's actually worked a few times as I look at them and say "you're right" and put my stack down and leave. Other times it's rather annoying.

On one such trip on Friday, I was at Target with Oliver and saw the adorable baby girl swim suits on display. There is a foot of snow outside, so I'm not sure why they have their suits out now, but nonetheless, I remembered that June doesn't really have a suit right now so I would be completely justified in getting one. So I did. It is adorable. I can't find a picture of the one I got on their site, but here is the other one I was debating. The one I got is this same style but it's light pink with tiny white hearts all over. So cute. Everyone thought it was weird that I got it, but that's ok. I knew one day when it warmed up I'd be glad.

So Friday night we went to dinner with some friends, and my friend Laura told me about this great indoor pool in Lehi they had gone to. On Saturday Scott had to work and we were facing a boring day with nothing to do, so I decided to take the kids swimming. NOW AREN'T WE ALL GLAD JUNE HAD A NEW SWIMSUIT TO WEAR?! We had a great time. This pool was incredible. Great setup for infants, toddlers, medium kids, big kids, and adults. It was huge and warm and clean. They had slides and toys and a lazy river and a giant bucket the size of a car that fills up with water and dumps it periodically on whoever happens to be standing under it. Too bad I didn't have my camera. It looked odd as we wore suits and flip flops out of the car through the snow into the pool. And being out of the habbit I forgot important things like towels and my flip flops (turns out uggs don't make the best pool shoes).

So we're standing in the private family dressing room (another great aspect of the aquatic center) and talking about how cute June was in her new suit and what chubby legs she has. I get the kids dressed first so I can send them out while I get dressed, so I'm standing there in just my suit for a while. Oliver looks at me at his eye level and laughs and says, "Mom, you have chubby legs too."

Thursday, January 10, 2008

It is done

Farewell Christmas. It's been fun. Thanks for the good times.

We will miss the bells ringing when the back door opens, the glow of the lights on the tree, the perfect excuse to bake more and exercise less, all the fun visitors we had (Brunts, Earnests, Wileys/Saliamonases), Uncle Dick's toffee, parties, cards, goodie plates, peppermint shakes, and egg nog.

We will not miss reaching behind the piano to turn on/off the snow village lights, the 24-hour flu, last minute shopping, and the constant guilty thoughts that "if only these kids weren't around then I could really make Christmas great for them."

(OK, Scott, now I've done my part to pack up the boxes, so you can do your part and flex your big strong muscles to carry them downstairs.)

Winter


This is what we woke up to yesterday. It was beautiful. It kept going most of the day and left us with about 8 inches of fresh snow at our house. It did present a few problems on the roads, though. Scott got stuck on the way to work and had to get a push from some guy. And when I was driving Oliver to school we passed a mom we know from the neighborhood and her 2 young boys (4 & 5) walking to school since they couldn't get their car out of their garage. I admired her determination. At that point I would have called it a personal snow day for sure!

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Consider the format changes the post for today

I'm going to try to not be discouraged by how much time I've spent today learning how to customize the format of our blog. I'm sure it's a one-time investment and won't be any indication of how much time I'll spend every day (because that just wouldn't work at all). So no new real post today, but enjoy the new look.

p.s. Some of you might recognize that the background print is indeed the wallpaper in our powder room.


p.p.s. Our beloved dishwasher is broken and the repair guy can't come until Monday. What the heck are we supposed to do until then?! I've gotten so lazy I don't pre-rinse the dishes at all or even wash pots & pans by hand anymore -- just do multiple loads in the dishwasher every day. I don't even know if I remember how to wash dishes by hand! They are piling up and it's not good. I'd better go buy some paper products to get us through.

fuzzy bear

This is the perfect outfit for a baby to wear on a late night winter jammie ride...
to go to blockbuster to get this...

Scott & I both enjoyed it. It had the right balance of western shoot-'em-up and human drama for a good couples movie. It was, however, an especially hard one for those of us who have a hard time telling people apart in movies. If you're one of us, be sure to watch with someone understanding and helpful who doesn't mind answering all the "who's that guy?" interruptions.