Our life has definitely picked up speed, and the trick is to keep our hands on the wheel without making any abrupt changes or else the whole thing will crack apart and various odds and ends will go flying, indiscriminantly through the air to land who knows where.  Amazingly, we've made it through the first two weeks of the next 4 months of craziness, and I find myself in wonder because of the tenderness of God.
So many things have been gradually eased into place to make this phase of our life palatable, doable, workable and funable.  Like my crazy, cooking-once-a-month plan.  Started 2 1/2 years ago in PDX when I finally figured out what to do with all of those leftovers I kept having.  It would be impossible for us to cook meals every day with Tanner going to school from 7am til 5pm Monday and Wednesday, and me working from 9am till 9pm Tuesday and Thursday.  Or, my craze for plastic containers.  Started 3 years ago in an effort to store blankets.  Results seem to be that there's always a container for a toy.  And, just our lifestyle in general.  We'd rather go on a walk than go out to dinner.  Started in Vancouver when we caught the biking/walking craze.  Makes everything so much less expensive.  It also makes it very easy for us to function as a one car family.
And every adjustment was made for the fun of it, not because we HAD to or we NEEDED to be economical.  Or maybe we did, and we just didn't know it.  Regardless, the transitions have been so smooth and easy.  I often have people asking me, how can you handle it? or how can you be so chipper?
I really can't answer the question because I really don't know.  How do I handle the fact that in the last six weeks we haven't seen temperatures under 100 degrees?  How come I don't get homesick?  How do I stay so positive?
I guess the answer is that I really don't have anything to complain about.  Yes, finances are so tight that last week Georgie was the only one who got milk because we couldn't afford more, but starving is so much worse.  Yes, having a front door that won't open anymore because the house shifted AGAIN and it probably won't get fixed until next summer, maybe, is tough, but sleeping under the stars is so much worse.  Yes, it's so hot that the tar is melting on the road, but having a dirt road would be so much worse.  I guess it's all in the way you look at it.  I look at our life and can't believe how easy God has made it.
This week, things have cooled down quite a bit.  I'm pretty sure it is the fault of the hurricane that's hitting the east coast.  Our nights drop into the 70's and in the morning the air is cool and refreshing rather than stale and muggy.  But, I don't want you to think that it stays that way.  On the contrary, by the time 10:00am hits, we're back up into the 90's and ready for the splash pad.
Our typical Monday schedule is: up at 6:30am.  Make lunches, get Kate ready, get Daddy ready, eat breakfast, pull two sleepy kids out of bed, drop off Daddy, drop off Kate.  Relax until lunch.  Pick up Daddy.  Feed Daddy.  Take kids outside so Daddy can sleep or do homework.  Take Daddy to school again.  Pick up Kate.  Do homework.  Daddy comes home.  Do more homework.  Eat dinner.  Bath time.  Sleep.  Repeat for the rest of the week with the added caveat that Mommy goes to work for 12 hours at a whack.  Yikes!  Full swing and loving it!