Archives for July 2014

¡Costa Rica!

Do you have those times in your life where you look at the schedule a few months down the road and think: oh, I’ll have tons of free time as soon as June gets here, or August gets here… and then June or August get here and SURPRISE!! you still don’t have any free time. No, just me? Well… this is pretty much the story of my life.  But since I love crazy busy and a little out of control schedules (I know you can’t really do it all, but I really love to try!) this is really how I like to spend my life.

My full time work life has been busy, and I’ve traveled quite a bit for it, I got to squeeze in a few days with my husband’s youth group as they rebuilt houses in Moore, OK (and an ER visit… because while 99% of the youth escaped injury free from the trip, Reese hit his head on a desk in the dorms they were staying in and had to get staples in his head), and then pretty much as soon as I got back from that I left on a trip to Costa Rica to visit the medical clinic our church started and for which I sit on the board.  costarica3

I’ve been on the board helping to get Clinica Emanuel (the picture above) started for about 2 years now, and it has been an awesome blessing and an interesting experience.  4Corners is the non-profit organization that we created and so far we have opened and been operating a medical clinic for the Cabecar people in the mountains of Costa Rica.  The Cabecars are indigenous people that live in the southeastern part of Costa Rica in the Limon Provence. They live in 16 different villages up the mountain, and have very little medical care, clean water, transportation, etc. Our clinic operates a couple of days a week and serves people from all the villages, with patients frequently walking 3-4 hours to get to the clinic (and you think you’re 30 minute wait in the air conditioned waiting room was long!).

Our goal with this trip was to do the prep work for a team that will be travelling to this area  in the fall to build a community garden in a second village. I traveled with the Executive Director of this organization and we stayed in a small tourist spot on the Atlantic Ocean called Cahuita. Even though this was not a vacation trip, I was pleasantly surprised by the nice (and cheap!) rooms with air conditioning… since the whole time it was there it was either 100% humidity or raining.

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From Cahuita the clinic is in a village that is about an hour and a half drive up the mountain… 4 Wheel drive mandatory.  The first portion of the trip is through a Dole banana plantation which is pretty cool to see! They have all these banana trees with blue bags covering the bunches of bananas.  The bags apparently prevent birds and pests from getting to the bananas.  (I got out to take a picture in front of some of them)

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From there they hook the bags onto a pulley system and this donkey brings them to the processing area where they are put into boxes and shipped to your grocery store! costarica7

Anyway, after the Dole banana plantation, we get to a river that we cross in the Jeep (hence 4 wheel drive necessary). Its not very deep right now–as you can see the woman wading through on the right–but it does get pretty deep in places and when it rains a lot, the river can get too high to cross.

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From there we spent some time at the clinic and then went to another village up the mountain where Ulysses (in the picture below) is donating some of his land so that we can build a community garden for them to have some additional food and income for the village.   costarica1

 

On our way into that village I snapped this picture of the Cabecar women who definitely work hard and walk long distances.  costarica6 It was a great trip and a fantastic experience, aside from my run-in with American Airlines who chose to cancel and delay our trip home 36 hours (48 for my co-traveller).  Is it just me or do companies just not really care about customer service anymore?!

I’m so glad to have been able to go on this trip, it definitely helps shape some of the decisions we make on the board to have gotten to experience these people’s lives first hand.  I am so excited for the group to go in September to make the garden a reality!

 

And a total bonus… at the end of the week my college spanish was coming back to me!

Office Switcheroo

I showed y’all yesterday what is soon to be my husband’s new study but by nature of moving the guest bedroom out of there, we needed somewhere else for our guests to stay.  The logical choice here was my office (I love all our house guests, but I’m not sharing my bedroom with them!).  When I last showed it to you guys, it looked a lot like this:

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Since we moved the twin antique oak bed into my husband’s office, we put the double bed in this room.

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It is definitely a bit of a tighter squeeze than it was before, and to accommodate the larger bed we had to take a section out of the desk (you can see below where the extra section is supposed to connect).  It is still plenty of desk space for me whenever I do work at home, and I love the new duvet.  It just so happened that I had a couple of gift cards I could ‘purchase’ with points from my credit card, so of course I chose Pottery Barn and bought  this duvet.  I think it is an awesome pop of color in the gray room.  I still need a few pillows to add some contrast, and for sure need a bed skirt… how fashionable is that box spring above?

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But it works for now and is a pleasant room for me to spend time in when I’m working at home!

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The camera collection is still exactly like it was, and I think it frames the bed nicely.

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And PS after I finish writing this I’m going to go wash the duvet to get those creases out! When I get those other things checked off the list, I’ll show it to you again!

Upstairs Switcheroo

One of the mostly untouched rooms left in the house is/was our upstairs guest room.  We have two bedrooms upstairs, one that has been functioning as my office/craft room and the other which we used as a guest bedroom.  There were two major issues with this: 1. The guest bedroom was directly over the garage door (which is outrageously loud and our main entry/exit out of the house) and 2. The husband had no area for himself.  Up until now, this second thing hadn’t been much of an issue (I mean… not for me at least 🙂 ) But my husband and I are strongly considering him going back to graduate school in the spring and to do so, he’ll need his own space to study, work, etc.  So we decided to do a little switcheroo upstairs.  We moved the guest bed into the office and the single bed into what will be his study.

So the room that looked like this:

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Now looks like this:

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Obviously we are going to do a lot more to this room, I’ve ordered a desk for his birthday present (don’t worry he already knows about it, so no secrets spoiled here) but unfortunately it is backordered until August!! We will probably paint, get a new comforter for the twin bed, and maybe paint the red dressers again? Still trying to nail down my mental picture for how I want this room to look, but it will be more male oriented and definitely a nice calm place for him to study and write.

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I love this bed, it came from my grandmother’s basement and needed a little TLC to get it back up and going, but it is such a gorgeous piece of woodwork. And makes a perfect second guest bed to have (in case my grandmother and my parents come to stay or a guest has a child with them.)

We are also going to hang more of our diplomas in here and a few things that are meaningful to the husband, but I’ll keep y’all updated every step of the way!

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Stay tuned tomorrow for the update on the office.