Working Mom: Part-time
Our situation:
I grew up with a working mom (full-time), and I always knew that I would do the same. I've known since I was a teenager that I wanted to teach special education students and never changed my mind. To this day, I've never desired to be a stay-at-home mom but there was a significant change in my mindset once I got pregnant.
At some point during my pregnancy, the idea of working part-time popped into my head. I run the finances in our family, so logically speaking I just never thought we could afford it. I didn't even mention it to my husband for a while because I knew it was impossible. My husband is a state employee, after all, not a CEO! :) I started crunching numbers though, and thinking of different scenarios where we could make it work. I felt like we could make it month by month with a little pinching here and there, but I was mostly concerned about paying our mortgage in the summer of 2010. (I get 10 paychecks a year, no paycheck in the summer). This was a HUGE problem obviously, but I prayed about it and felt like the Lord was telling me to trust him. I've never done anything without a concrete plan. Taking this risk was a big deal. My husband was 100% supportive, I resigned from my full-time position, and right after giving birth in May 2009, I was in search of a part-time job to start in August with the 09/10 school year.
I went for an interview when Ethan was 6 weeks old. The principal told me she'd get back to me in two weeks (yikes... I needed a job nailed down!), but ended up calling me 3 hours later and offering me the job!! This was major confirmation that we had made a good decision. The school year started and very quickly we realized the Lord was filling in ALL the gaps in our budget... more on that later.
We are amazingly blessed that my mom lives nearby and can keep Ethan while I'm at work. Obviously, I trust her more than anyone in the world, and I think going back to work would have been a little harder if he were going to daycare. When my maternity leave was over and I headed back to work, it was such an easy transition because I didn't have to worry about him one bit. My paycheck allows us the opportunity to pay my mom for keeping him, so that is really nice!
As far as logistics go, this is how our weekdays work: My mom drops my baby sister off at high school near my house then comes over here. I go to work and am gone for about 5 hours (4 hour work day plus travel time). I get home in time to eat lunch and spend the rest of the day with Ethan. The schedule is a DREAM come true.
How we make it work:
- I feel like I get the best of both worlds... the working world and the stay-at-home mom world. I never get exhausted at work, never over-worked, never stressed about work. Part of this is because I'm only there for 4 hours a day, and part of it is because I'm really good at filing away "work stuff" in my brain once I walk out the door and never think about it again until I walk into work the next morning. This is really important. I NEVER do work at home, I never mix work into my home life. Work is a separate world. And on top of that, I never get exasperated with Ethan. I don't feel guilty one bit that I enjoy a couple hours away from him so that when I'm come home from work I have a fresh attitude, and an excitement to hang out with him. We have a blast together!
- A little bit more on the logistics of our day: Luckily Ethan has always been an easy schedule baby, so that makes things easier. I get up 45 minutes before him, shower, get completely dressed, make up, hair, everything. He wakes up, I feed him, I play with him while I eat my own breakfast, and we kind of just cuddle and play until my mom gets here and I leave for work. (This time of the day is precious to me). When I get home from work, I eat lunch, and we play for just a little while. Then he goes down for his afternoon nap and I get some "me" time. (I run a small photography business on the side as well as manage the website and print materials for a charity event, so that's what I usually work on during nap). We run our errands when he gets up from nap. We take some cheerios and a sippy cup with us so we can multi-task errands with afternoon snack! He's an on-the-go baby and happily rides in shopping carts. We're home in time to think about cooking dinner, and then my husband gets home and we enjoy our evening together. My husband puts Ethan to bed every single night so that's when I run around the house picking things up and putting things in order. When my husband comes down from bedtime we are DONE with chores/distractions/etc and we hang out together. I love our day.
How God has provided:
- People decided to start paying me for photography. I didn't even know I was good at photography. Not kidding. Requests just kept pouring in starting EXACTLY when I got my first part-time paycheck, so I took the "hint" and ran with it! My photography money is what we needed for cushion money... to make sure we can still treat ourselves to a date every now and then and buy gifts for friends when we want to.
- We sold a lot of junk we didn't need on craigslist, had yard sales, and saved everywhere we could. By November of 2009, we had all the money we needed to pay the mortgage in the summer of 2010. That was our biggest worry, and only a couple months into the school year it was taken care of already!
- Another big worry we had was that our cars are pieces of junk! :) There was no available money for big repairs, or a new car payment. One of them bit the dust a couple months ago, and I was worried about what we would do. Well, someone offered us a very nice FREE used car this month. I am not exaggerating when I tell you that it came from the LEAST expected person I could have ever imagined in my wildest dreams. Someone we have a terrible relationship with, and someone I struggle to love and forgive and accept in my life. I felt like the Lord was literally pointing at me and proving how powerful he is and how unfathomable his plans are.
- My paycheck isn't just a few extra bucks that mostly cover childcare. It is a major part of our livelihood. It currently pays our entire mortgage, pays my mom for watching Ethan, and there's a tiny bit leftover. And I'm just a public school teacher! Working part time would probably not be worth it if I only brought home a few hundred dollars a month. Since I've been in the school system for a few years, even half of my teaching paycheck is enough to make or break us.
Overall:
There have been many times this year that we squeaked by. Like in January when we felt the after-effects of the Christmas season with gifts and traveling. Phew! That was a stretch, but we made it! And we've even taken on some home improvement projects. Time and time again in this one short year, God has filled in ALL of our budget gaps, and we give all the credit to Him! Things are going so well that I'm going to continue working part-time in the years to come. I'm looking forward to all the quality time I get with my own kids, the fact that I can still make a difference in the lives of my special ed students, the fact that I contribute to our bank account by doing something I love, and having holidays and summers off with my kids! I could not be happier with our lifestyle, and if you had asked me a couple years ago, I thought it would never even be possible!
Feel free to comment if you have questions!
Rewind to Life as a Working Mom
What I can say is that it is definitely one of the hardest things I've ever done! So many things make it difficult and it is so easy to have "mommy guilt" over leaving your little one. I think I called home to check on Will every day (sometimes more than once) for his first year of life. Actually, it helped me pump more milk if I talked about him and got an update before heading to pump! That's another post though...
The only encouragement I can offer about "mommy guilt" is that if you are seeking the Lord and his will for your life and your family - then you are right where you need to be. It was my plan that I would leave teaching at the end of the 06-07 school year to stay home. In January of 2007 I had to submit a form to my school declaring my intent for the next year and after praying about it, I did NOT have a peace about staying home. I wanted to, but I just didn't feel the Lord leading me to stay home then no matter how long it had been MY plan. The following year, it came time for the same form and this time I was 100% certain that it was time for me to stay home. Pray that the Lord would give you a peace about where you are best serving your family.
I was truly blessed during my time as a working Mom to have GREAT people caring for my son. My husband stayed home one day a week to watch Will and do schoolwork. We called these "Dad days" and he was also able to do chores for me as well. My mother-in-law also watched Will one day a week and we had a sitter for the rest of the week. She and her husband are now like Will's (and Adeline's) third set of grandparents. He still sees them weekly and they love him like their own.
The only practical tip that I have to offer is to prepare everything the night before!! Pack lunches, diaper bags, school bags, my breastpump...EVERYTHING. I was not very good at this, but the days I did do it all ahead of time were SO much easier. I had time to get up, get ready, spend time with the Lord, pray with my husband and still get out the door on time.
Starting Solids and Weaning
I first wrote about this topic a little over two years ago. I don't want to recreate the wheel and think the advice I wrote there is still what I'd say today. Since I've been able to breastfeed my children, I've found figuring out when to introduce solids to be challenging (since I wanted their primary nutrition to be breastmilk the first year). With Lydia, I felt pressure from everyone - family back home and friends where we live - to feed her, and feed her early. Even when I started trying to feed her (around 7 1/2 months), though, she never really cared much for it until pretty close to a year. I went back and re-read my advice when I was thinking of starting solids with the boys and then decided to wait a little longer (they just seemed so small!!. . .well, they were, but, little did I know, one was also READY).
I started solids with the boys at 8 1/2 months. The only reason really that I started solids was that they had increased the number of times they were nursing a day from 6 to anywhere between 8-10 each. While I do love nursing, I also vividly remember several occasions where I just felt like a cow. Since by adjusted age they were still under 7 months and they really didn't show other readiness signs, I really didn't think introducing food would solve my problem. But, in stark contrast from Lydia, Luke loved food from the first time the spoon hit his mouth. (James was more like Lydia and it took a couple more months for him to start eating.) The second neat thing happened (in addition to me no longer having to nurse so much) was their growth curve shot straight up. While my boys are small (they are 13 months old and 17.5 pounds for example) they had always followed THEIR growth curve, which is really all that matters. But when I introduced food their chart almost went straight up!
Other advice I had written to myself with Lydia was not to make batches of baby food to freeze. Rather, do simple things I could mash easily and try to give her what we're eating. This was very hard to do with the boys. Pretty early on, they started eating a large quantity. And, James had a gag reflex (this is totally undiagnosed but I do think he had some low muscle tone issues) and his food had to be the consistency of yogurt if he was going to eat it - definitely not as simple as mashing it with a fork. And Luke really liked food this consistency as well. About this time, my brother sent me the most thoughtful gift anyone's ever gotten me - a BEABA Babycook. (I will talk about this more on our featured products week coming up next month.) Suffice it to say, it has made cooking for my boys SO.MUCH.EASIER.
So, here's a couple more links and thoughts. I found this baby food book and have thoroughly enjoyed it: Simply Natural Baby Food by Cathe Olson.
I am, again, SO thankful I gave my children cultured dairy (plain, whole milk yogurt/kefir/buttermilk) early on so they would develop a love for this nutritious food. All of my children love plain yogurt and kefir.
I like Dr. Jack Newman's article on introducing solids although one point he says is just to let your child try whatever is on your plate. Of course, you all know me with nutrition. . . I agree, as long as it's healthy :).
Happy feeding babies!
Preschool Websites
I've had a lot of people ask lately which websites I'm getting a lot of my ideas from, so I thought I'd quickly do a separate post with a lot of links. Here they are:
Children's Learning Activities - great list of preschool resources
This Week. . .
7 - 8:30 a.m. - Nurse the boys, make breakfast, pack Lydia's lunch, change diapers, get all kids dressed, hair fixed, me dressed and ready, eat breakfast, coats and shoes on everyone, and make our way downstairs to our car somewhere on the street so I can get the stroller out and kids loaded to take Lydia to preschool.
8:30 - 10:30 - Drop Lydia off, then make my way to the corniche where I can take the boys for a walk (to keep my sanity!). I've been putting one in the stroller (which is yet another reason I love my Phil & Ted's - it can always be a single stroller. . . I just don't attach the doubler kit) and carrying the other in the Ergo. After a brisk 45 minute walk, where the boys typically nap, we come home and they are happy to get to play with their toys for a few minutes while I jump in the shower. I nurse them again and read books, build towers, do puzzles, etc. until their language teacher arrives at 10:30.
10:30 - 1:00 - I've been using this time to pack. . . well really to go through everything and decide what needs to be tossed, shredded, saved, packed, stored, sold, or given away. Then I box the stuff up, and, mingled with this I attempt to cook, do dishes, and respond to any pressing emails.
1:15 - 5:15 - The boys and I head downstairs to get the stroller from the car (where I keep it since I can't lug it and the boys up two flights of stairs to get it in our flat. . . with no elevator). It's a little challenging though since I can only hold one baby in the sling while I set up the stroller. I usually just set the other in the backseat of the car, close the door, and hope he doesn't get into anything. . .or fall off the seat. . . while I'm setting up the stroller! We walk to pick up Lydia, sometimes stop on the way back for fruits and veggies or other groceries that I don't have delivered, sometimes she plays in the sandbox while the boys hangout in the stroller, or, usually, we just return home. Lydia typically has a snack and I grab a bite for lunch. The kids and I play together throughout the afternoon. At some point I nurse the boys and they will usually take a nap (although usually not at the same time). I will fold clothes, maybe do some dinner prep, we will Skype with daddy, read books, do puzzles, color, or sometimes I'll take them on an outing if there's things I need (like a light bulb or to have a dress repaired). I'm really thankful the kids love, and ask, to ride in the stroller because it is my arms here - I couldn't hold all 3 and maneuver around otherwise! We may visit with national friends during this time, either in their home or ours. I also use this time to bathe the kids. . .although that's usually about every three days and do laundry.
5:30 - 7:00 p.m. - Dinner, clean up, food prep for the morning (things like soaking oatmeal or beans, starting stock, cutting carrots for juice the next morning, etc.)
7:00 - 8:00 - Get on pj's, brush teeth, read Bible stories and other books, play a little more (usually chase or hide 'n seek), pick up toys. With Josh gone, I've been putting in a video for Lydia while I nurse the boys - the two she's wanted to watch lately are a praise and worship kids music video or Prayer Bears - both absolutely precious and are so special to watch with her! I get the boys down and then tuck her in.
8:15 - 11:00 - My time. . . and I don't even know where it goes! But, the days seem so intense doing it all without Josh that I just like the house quiet. I read, get on the computer, do any remaining kitchen stuff, oh, and of course, deal with which ever kids wakes up that evening and needs more mommy time. I may talk on the phone, and, many nights, I've crashed by 9:45 or 10.
Well, I would love to have included pics - the kids are absolutely precious. . . oh, and the boys started walking while Josh is gone! - but, I have no way to load them onto the computer since he has all the equipment (including our computer) with him. So, I hope haven't bored you too much with a day in our life. . .
Our Basic Routine
I am not a morning person at all, but I do really like to get up at get mostly ready for the day before my kids wake up. So, I take a shower around 7:30 and am usually mostly ready by the time they get up around 8 or shortly after. I get the kids dressed and we make all the beds before heading downstairs for breakfast. I like having us all totally ready for the day before eating breakfast because then the kids can start playing immediately after they eat and I don't have to interrupt them to get them to go back upstairs to get ready. We usually only have cold cereal once a week or so (usually Sundays because I need a little extra time to get everyone ready). On other days I make toast (Meredith's favorite!) or oatmeal or one of our favorite breakfast recipes. I really like the Baked French Toast and Oatmeal Cake recipes because I can prepare them the night before and just pop them in the oven before taking my shower. They are ready when I am and then the kids and I have a hot breakfast!
Baked French Toast:
10 slices of bread (wholegrain)
1 1/2 cups of milk
4 eggs (or more, I usually use 5)
1/3 cup of honey
1 tsp vanilla
1 tsp cinnamon
Grease 9x13 pan and put one layer of bread in the bottom. Mix liquids and spices and pour half of it over the bread. Put down one more layer of bread and finish with the wet ingredients. Refridgerate covered overnight. Bake 350 degrees for 40 minutes. Serve with maple syrup and butter.
Oatmeal Cake:
1/2 stick melted butter
1 1/2 cups buttermilk
2 cups flour
2 cups oats
Combine the above and allow to soak overnight or at least 8 hours.
In the morning, add:
3/4 cup honey
2 eggs
1 tsp sea salt
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup dried cherries or other dried fruit
Pour into a greased 9x9 pan and bake for about 40 minutes.
The kids play while I wash dishes and finish any little chores that have cropped up in my morning. Writing all of this down sounds really simple, but in reality it takes a long time! We are rarely finished with all of this morning stuff until around 9:30 or 10 am! I'm stunned that it takes 2 hours to make beds, eat breakfast and clean up but it really does! On days where we have play groups or the kids music class (both begin at 9:30) I usually can't wash the dishes before we go (we don't have a dishwasher or hot water in our tap living overseas and washing up oatmeal bowls takes time!).
After this morning routine we do one of two things. Either we head to out for play groups/ kid activities or grocery shopping/errand running, or we stay home. If we stay home and I have cleaning to do, then the kids play while I clean up. I clean the bathrooms on mondays and they usually just play with their toys while I do this. We only have one bathroom and it doesn't take that long. If I have vacuuming, dusting, or mopping, they help me. They think it is a blast to sit on top of the kitchen table while I mop. Or, I put the chairs on the living room rug and they play "airplane" or "bus" while climbing over all the chairs.
Wordless Wednesday
Our Days/Weeks
And that concludes the longest, most hodge-podged post EVER.
What Do You Do At Home?
I....
* I love to make foods from scratch. I usually am racking my brain trying to figure out how I can make a homemade version of this or that. Why? I know, it's more time-consuming, but I think most things are better for your health, not to mention super tast-a-rrific, if they are homemade. Seems like a fun challenge to me, so I don't mind investing the time into it. Confession: We do have oreos, cool ranch chips, Reese PB cups and Mountain Dew in our pantry, per my husband's request...sitting next to our homemade bread. (Let's all gasp together: GASP.) I try my best to steer clear of these foods, but I am also known as the mysterious nibbler in the fam and will get a sampling here and there.
* I insist on cloth diapering, because there's just something addicting about it. Do I like it always? NO WAY. The peanut butter poo stage is not especially fun, and I don't particularly like it when the poo gets under my fingernails while cleaning off a diaper. Eek! Thankfully, we have a sprayer attached to the toilet (and for the record, if you come to our house, it's NOT a bidet. Trust me, some have silently thought it and it came out later in conversation.) Confession: Disposables are my friends!! We aren't purists. My little wore disposables for months and is now wearing them again, because we need more cloth. There's something so beautiful about throwing away the slimiest blow-out diaper, putting on a slim disposable, and not feeling like I have to wrestle an alligator trying to get clothes over a seam-busting bum. Disposables are an expensive beautiful though, and one we cannot afford for the entirety of our girl's diapering.
* Cleaning: I am the picker-upper of the house and try to keep things in order, until I run out of energy. Then, I let it go for a few days and enjoy the bliss of just being messy...until I can't stand the dust bunnies staring at me from under the TV cabinet anymore. (Oh the joys of having a dog + hardwood floors. ) I'm in the thick of teaching Laney to pick up after herself and what has helped the most is really organizing her toys. I bought these tubs from Walmart, and they are the perfect size.
I love that they are clear and that the lid snaps down. When things have a home, it's easy and fun to clean up. Best of all, I can easily remove toys and bring them out later. When there's a play date at the house, I can put away most of the tubs that are the messiest and just leave a few out. When they tire of that tub, clean up and bring out a new tub. I can also put the tub with the tiniest pieces in my eldest's room, so that my youngest can't get her hands on it and possibly choke. Confession: Although vacuuming is my favorite chore, my vacuuming efforts just don't cut it. The Hubbs and I have agreed that we not only want, but NEED to invite people over to our house just to get the house clean. Pitiful, we are.
* Create: I love to create. It's so fulfilling to the deepest of my being. (I'm quite the drama queen when it comes to my loves.) I daydream of making clothes and toys for my girls and even for their baby dolls, but I just don't have the energy or the time to do it, unless I sacrifice precious hours of needed sleep. The hardest part is having to muffle this inspiration. But..I then realize that I need to refocus myself on these fleeting days and enjoy these precious littles before they are teenagers and don't want to cuddle up and read on the couch or have a dance party in the kitchen. Confession: Psst...I do stay up late every now and then and sacrifice those precious hours of sleep. And believe it or not, I don't regret it the next day. My latest craft party was making some finger puppets for the girls: the three little piggies and wolfie! I'm not quite done with the piggies and have yet to make their houses. Baby steps! Click here for the easy tutorial.
* Shopping: I'm a bargain-er at heart and love hitting up garage sales, Good Will, and second-hand stores, in search of re-purposing something. My latest project was an all-wood mirror I found on a major clearance at the mall, due to a few scuffs. We needed a place to hang towels, so I transformed the mirror into a towel rack for the bathroom. I found the hooks for free! We glued some wood to the back of the mirror where there was a shallow area, so that we could have some wood in which to screw the hooks. Worked out great!
With grocery shopping, I love stocking up on meats/other goods that are on sale at the grocery store. I am now brave enough to go shopping with both girls, which was a huge adjustment for me. We're still in the nursing stage, so the timing is still a bit tricky to hit it just right with both girls, but it's doable now, compared to a few months ago when I wouldn't DARE leave the house with both by myself. Confession: I'm not a Grocery Game Member or coupon clipper. (GASP) I REALLY want to be, but just don't think I take on that task right now and do it well. Please convince me otherwise, because I really want to do it and save away!
* Play: I REALLY try to soak up my time with the girls. Every day I think about how much I love what I do. I love being home with my girls. I love that my husband works so hard to provide for us so I can stay at home. We do puzzles, draw on the chalkboard, play with stamps, play polly pockets, teach Laney how to play with her little sister, run outside, etc... I try to have play dates frequently as well. I like the social time, as much as my children, and I also want to be there to see how my little interacts with others. Confession: Sometimes I find myself saying "Not now"..or "Just a minute..." when the kids are wanting to play. The "whatever" at times never comes to fruition or I put forth a feeble attempt to satisfy that request. I really am trying to pay attention to my words/responses to my children and being that woman of balance between playing and serving my family. Both are important for children to see. It's the balance that's so delicate and one that I'm trying to refine. I try to include my eldest in some of the projects and chores around the house.
These are the biggies of my day. I'm sure I've left off a few biggies as well, so if you have any questions, ask away! What is your FAVORITE thing that you do at home? Pick one and share!
Toddler Activities with JoJo
This week has been the biggest reminder to me why I am thankful that I had two kids close together - they play together so much! I have tried to divide what I do with Samuel (3.5) from what I do with Joel (2), but they pretty much do most things together! Just like Christina & Margaret said, it is mostly jr. versions of what Samuel is doing. Here's what you will see at our house on an average day:
1. Reading. This is SOOO important (but I'm sure you already know that!). Reading to your child each and every day is the most important activity you can do for their development. I try to read a variety of books with a growing vocabulary. We visit our library at least 3-4 times a week (it is two blocks from our house and an easy walk no matter the weather).
2. Dancing. I crank up the stereo and we jump around to the music. I try to get him to clap or stomp to the beat. But it is also a fun time to be silly with mom. He has so much more fun when I'm willing to jump around with him.
3. Puzzles. Joel loves to do the handful we have at home or the ones up at the library.
4. Cars. We have a small Rubbermaid box full of Matchbox cars. I will sit on the floor and play with them with Joel. We make them talk to each other (this is how I sneak in speaking kindly and having good manners like saying please, thank you, excuse me, etc). I also try to get him to sort them according to color or to try to line them up in straight lines.
5. Water Play. Ed started this and at first I wasn't excited about it. But both boys LOVE this. We push a chair up to the kitchen sink and let them play with the faucet/sprayer and a small collection of measuring cups, etc. They will play and play at this. This can be a helpful activity if they are bored and want my attention while I'm trying to get dinner ready.
6. Boxes & Bowls. Margaret listed this one with Jonathan and I agree. Joel loves to play in empty boxes and big bowls. He and Samuel will crack themselves up with tipping out of it, playing "Pop Goes the Weasel", pretending they are in boats, etc.
6. "Tootie Time". This is "tootie", that rhymes with "Nude-y" that means Naked. Every morning to get them from jammies to clothes and every evening to get them from clothes to jammies, the boys have "Tootie Time". I let them run around the living room with their clothes off. They think it is hil-ar-ious. And it has ended the tears from "I don't want to get dressed."
7. Playing with Random Things. This is probably the most popular thing to do at our house. Joel loves to get into the Recycle Bin and pull out all sorts of things. I used to get uptight about this, but then I realized that there was no reason for me to get so bent out of shape about this. The items are all rinsed and clean and it's pretty funny to see what he comes up with to do with the 2 liter bottles, toilet paper and paper towel rolls, boxes, etc. The only things I keep away from him are glass jars and metal cans that may have a sharp edge.

8. Flashlights. (I realize he is playing with a MagnaDoodle in the pic, but the flashlight in front of him made me think of this!). Each boy has their own flashlight and they love to run around the house and play different games that don't make any sense to me. We have an unfinished part of our basement that they call "The Dark Part" and they run in and out of there with their flashlights.
I hope you are able to see through this list that it isn't necessary to do "structured" activities with a toddler. The idea is to be active and creative throughout the day - and kids do this naturally. If you want to feel like you are "working on something" with your kiddo, then work it into their play. Do color naming and sorting as you play. Practice gross motor skills by running, jumping, balancing, etc. And most of all, have fun with your toddler and make sure to laugh A LOT!
Toddler Boys
Toddler Activities
Update on Cloth
With my firstborn, we used prefolds, snug-to-fit diapers, bumgenius, one pocket diaper, bummis super whisper wraps, wool covers, and one interlock cover. With my second, we added a few thirsties fitteds in cute colors, and three fuzzibuns (thank you Shannon!). I got out the prefolds and the snug-to-fits that I bought from Green Mountain Diapers with my firstborn. I only bought two new snug-to-fits from GMD's and the rest I bought used from ebay for a fraction of the cost. Although I was especially thrilled by my steal of a deal on these cotton cloth fitteds at the time of purchase, I was NOT excited to see that they didn't hold up well for the second child. I knew that when I bought them they probably wouldn't hold up, but just forgot about that little tidbit. They were really on their third life of diapering, so I think they held up fairly well. Just be aware that if you decide to buy used, don't always expect the diapers to be available the next time you want to cloth diaper.
Now that Mattie is about 18.5 lbs at six months, we have outgrown our thirsties fitteds/covers and are in need of a bigger size. She has also outgrown the rainbow prefolds that I bought from GMD (they don't sell that size anymore). Mattie isn't quite big enough for the next size up of prefolds that I already have on hand. I have been waiting on our income tax returns, so we could purchase more diapers. Will I choose a different diaper this time?
This time around I am wanting to order at least one envibum and possibly try converting some of my prefolds into fitteds myself (you know, with all that spare time I have on hand now ). There are several patterns out there that I find appealing. I really like on in particular, but I don't have a serger, so that sends me searching for another pattern. I also want to try dying the converted prefolds to all different colors. First time around, I was able to resist all the cute colors and prints, telling myself that it's just a diaper. Deep down I really wanted all the cuteness a diaper could offer. This time around, I'm definitely going to aim in getting some cute colors on my girl.
We have some wool covers, but I haven't been able to use them since they are more summer-ish. I'm afraid they won't fit come summer, so I will probably sell them. And really, this time around, I'm aiming for trimness more than anything. I am not as into wool as I once was, although wool covers are adorable!
I LOVE SNAPS.
I posted this diaper the other day when I wrote about the BumGenius deals out right now. I posted it for a reason. I'm IN LOVE with snap diapers. Here's my latest with cloth diapers:
In short, I still love cloth diapers. I'm excited about getting my 8 diapers back in snap form and think that will really help me stay strong in using cloth all day long whether we are home or not!
