We have officially made it to the first year of the rest of our lives! I know we could say that every year, but this year it rings especially true. It feels good to, for the first time ever, be living somewhere we know we'll be for the long haul. We've had some wonderful adventures and now we're ready to settle in.

This might be basic, but your girl LOVES a new year. New Years is a reflective type of holiday and I'm a reflective type of person. I had such a peaceful New Years Eve. We didn't really make plans because I knew we'd be hosting all my siblings a few days later when my brother was in town and doing New Years types of activities with them then. Halfway through New Years Eve we were like, "Shoot, we should have invited my parents over!" We have such fond memories of New Years Eves spent with my parents in the various places we've lived, when they'd come visit us after the Christmas hustle. I really regret not having them over and carrying that tradition on (sorry Mom and Dad! We missed you!), but I have officially made note to get back on track for future years whenever possible.

We did play several games with Jack after dinner on New Years Eve, make informal vision boards of our goals and hopes for 2025, drive to a lookout spot two blocks from where we live to watch fireworks go off across the valley, and put Jack to bed a little later than usual (9:30). At this point I wrote down some resolutions with Jared and my sleepy lil' husband couldn't hang on anymore past about 10:15. He is such an outlier in our family. The rest of us would always rather stay up just a little longer! There's so much more to do in a day! But he would always rather go to sleep. It's honestly cute and I really wish my children inherited that trait, but alas. I do love when I can greet the New Year at midnight with Jared, but this year I was giddy to go downstairs and have two hours alone by our glowy Christmas tree to reflect and dream and plan.

It was peaceful and magical. I lit several candles, made myself cheese toast, got a bubbly drink, and parked myself in our living room where I could see the lights and fireworks of the valley twinkling and popping outside our big picture windows. We are getting VERY spoiled with the view from our rental house. There is a chance we will have great views from our next home, but honestly it probably won't be as good as the views in this home. You can see most of the valley from the main level of our house, and we get an entire unobstructed panorama view of the entirety of Utah Valley from the window of our primary bedroom upstairs. Because we're on the north side of the valley we get a full view of the sunrise AND sunset every morning and evening. We are feeling very happy with where we've landed and so far feel confident in our decision to build a home right next to our current neighborhood, hopefully by the end of the year. Jared has a bit of a commute to work, but it's nothing crazy (about half an hour in traffic), and the commute feels worth living in this location to both of us. (Not to mention home prices are a little lower on the Utah Valley side than if we decided to look closer to his work on the Salt Lake side.)

And that was our simple New Years Eve! The days since then have been filled with fun and cousin time. I am so grateful that we were able to be living in Utah during this extra long winter break out of school. The days went by so much more quickly and so much more fun hosting cousins and my parents and visiting fun spots with them. Here are some pictures from our week:

^^I will never get over waking up every morning and reaching up to pull open the curtains and see what type of sunrise is playing out right outside my window. 
^^We spent a day at Kangaroo Zoo with Cole, Chloe, and Caitlin. 2025 is the year of both my kids being old enough to play at and enjoy places like these. And there are SO MANY fun places for them to play nearby, even in the winter. We are feeling spoiled. 
^^New Years Eve games with our game-loving Jack! We are looking forward to Alice getting old enough to join in in future years. 
^^At midnight I woke Jared up for a minute to watch the firework display lighting up the entire valley below us. He didn't even have to get out of bed--we just drew the curtains and watched for a few minutes. The fourth of July fireworks are going to be incredible from here. 

^^Jordan and Amanda and Asher, Annie, and Eddie came to play!!! Just in the knick of time, too--Jack was asking me so many times every day when he'd be able to play with Asher. It was delightful to have most of my family over for a dinner of carnitas and Mexican rice (we missed you Peter and Abby!) and vision boarding for the new year. This is a fun home for hosting family. We send all the kids downstairs to play, and there's plenty of space on the main level to add an extra table for seating for everyone.
^^Gingerbread houses after New Years. We discovered that we are not cut out to build our own houses. They all fell apart. Next year we'll try and find some pre-built houses to decorate.
^^Dinosaur museum with cousins. Alice's favorite part was commanding me to "stay" while she ran up and down all the ramps.
^^The butterfly biosphere was a delight! It's probably my favorite Thanksgiving Point attraction yet. I thought it was just a room where you could hold butterflies, but there's an impressive indoor playground and much more.
^^Alice and Annie looking for butterflies. I am thrilled that Alice gets to have so many wonderful girl cousins all pretty close in age! There are six all within four years of each other so far.
^^The big kids
^^A butterfly landed right on top of Annie's bow! Felt like we were in a Disney movie. After we were done with the butterfly biosphere, my angel parents brought Chik-fil-a to our home and we hosted everyone for one last playdate. My sis-in-law Amanda is a genius at organizing and helped me get a jump start on deciding where to put things when we finish unpacking and reorganizing our kitchen in the next few weeks. 
^^This is random, but one evening we found ourselves stopping for ice cream at sub zero, just for fun. I'm sure I've said this already but it is WILD how many shops and restaurants are within a 6-minute drive of our house. Dozens and dozens of places to explore. We are doing a good job at pacing ourselves but it is really nice and novel for us to have so many options for a casual, quick family night on the town. Have I said enough how much we're loving where we've landed? Just in case I haven't:
^^we are officially shopping for our next home in the new-build community next to our rental! They are in the earliest stages of construction right now so it could be a year before we're actually choosing our home and moving, but community tours began this last week and we were quick to see what we could see. There are three homes being built that we were able to walk through, and one completely finished and furnished duplex we toured to see what the finishes will be like in these homes. The finishes are lovely and impressive and we are pretty committed to purchasing a home in the neighborhood. The dream is to have foothill trails we can walk to, which this area has. We also love that when we move, Jack won't need to make new friends and start over again. We will still be walking distance from all the friends he could make while we're in this rental, and he'll be going to the same school, still within walking distance. Amazing.
^^We spent an evening watching the sun set over Utah Lake. I can't believe we haven't done this sooner. One of the things I miss most about Washington are all the river and lake beaches our kids loved to explore. I forget that we still have that here! Maybe not as many, but the ones we have are wonderful. 

Well, I think I already broke my New Years Resolution for shorter blog posts, oops. Here's to a hopefully more boring week as Jack starts school so we can have a shorter post next week!

Happy New Year, 2025!

Confession--I just tried to read through last week's blog post to remember where we left off, and I couldn't make it through because it was so long. I've been WORDY with my posts lately. I'm a written processor and don't keep a journal anymore, so I fear the blog has been getting allll my thoughts and feelings. One of my New Year's resolutions is to work on brevity in the blog posts. This week I'm going to try just pictures with captions:

^^Not my best picture, but I've really enjoyed reconnecting with my high school bestie and her 4 little ones since moving here. Her oldest boys are 4 and 5 and they play really well with Jack. We went to a nickel arcade together and had a great time, and I got to swing by and see Jared's office afterward.
^^Christmas Eve nativity at my parents' home. We had a wonderful dinner with family and then played white elephant and did a nativity. Alice was in her element all evening, grabbing rolls from off the counter and roaming around like she owned the place. She was a big fan of the singing. I love the independence my kids take on when cousins and lots of family are around.
^^Christmas Eve! Next year Jared and I need to make an effort to either (a) assemble complicated gifts ahead of time, or (b) accept that we will be up well past midnight and get excited about it/make it a party. Jared loves making a grand display and setting up for Christmas morning, but he does not love staying up late. And this year we had to put together a 7-foot basement trampoline on Christmas Eve. And I hadn't wrapped a single one of Jared's presents ahead of time. It was worth it and magic! But our Christmas Eve felt stressful instead of fun. We only get so many Christmases with little ones, so next year we'll make an effort to figure out what we need to do ahead of time to make Christmas Eve and Day a joyful time for everyone. 

This year was always going to be wonky because we spent all of November and much of December in the thick of moving chaos instead of prepping for Christmas. Grace for that. But in the end, Jack and Alice were so happy and had their best Christmas yet. Jack was shocked by the trampoline and kept saying, "Thank you so much mom and dad!" all day long🥺 And then Jack and Alice spent an entire hour-long quiet time playing in the basement together for the first time ever. Three cheers for that. 
^^It was so fun to wake up to a white Christmas with snow lightly falling out our window since we're a little higher up in the mountains than most of the rest of the valley.
^^The best Christmas morning chaos. Jared was so excited Santa got that enormous giraffe for Alice, but she was so terrified of it hahaha
^^On Christmas Day we somewhat spontaneously had a lot of my family over for dinner. Everyone brought some pizza supplies and we made pizza and the kids disappeared into our "toymageddon" basement for a nice long time. Then we busted out the chimes since we ran out of time on Christmas Eve, and exchanged a few gifts. It was a 10/10.

I haven't read much by Gretchen Rubin, but a couple weeks ago I came across a Gretchen Rubin post where she said that if she is having a hard time deciding between two options that are both good choices, she always goes with the option that will make her life fuller. I've been thinking about that a lot over this holiday season. This move to Utah has been really hard. Not the living in Utah part, but the actual logistical parts, like packing, new schools and people, big feelings, etc. that come with a move. There have been times where part of me has wished we had just stayed put in Washington because the boat is rocking pretty hard getting used to these new waters. But when I think about what our life would have looked like staying settled in Washington versus moving here . . . being here surrounded by so much family for us and our children is the much fuller life, by leaps and bounds. So we're going to persevere through the rough bedtimes and new schedules and disorganized house! Because look at these little cousin ladies jumping on the trampoline! I can't wait for them to grow up together!
^^The day after Christmas we walked around to see the lights at Traverse Mountain and then tucked into Johnny Rockets for dinner. I think this was our first sit-down dinner as a family of 4 in a restaurant that went really well and was enjoyable for everyone! The casual, family-friendly diner feel helped a lot. Our food was great, and it just felt cozy and happy to be there together the day after Christmas. Next time we'll bring nickels for the jukebox. We feel lucky to live near TONS of family-friendly eateries and parks, museums, etc. We were worried about moving away from the small-town life we've known and loved for the past 6 years but we're taking it pretty well. It helps that we live up near trails so I can still access peace and quiet in nature pretty easily. 
^^Trampoline game night date with my boy! Games are his love language.
^^Our favorite family gifts this Christmas were from the grandparents, and they were both season passes. I am LOVING this as a gift idea from grandparents. Jared's parents gifted us Lagoon season passes because Jared has so many fond memories of going to Lagoon every summer with his grandparents who lived in Layton. And my parents gifted us a Thanksgiving Point family pass, which is going to get more use than I ever could have imagined because it turns out we live just 5 minutes away! We went to the Children's Museum this morning and Alice was so happy that I honestly think we'll spend most mornings there this year while Jack is in school. Thank you grandparents!

Christmas 2024

We must have found our village, because Jared spent the weekend in Washington, and of the 6 meals the kids and I ate while he was out of town, over half of them were cooked by and/or enjoyed with loved ones. And I didn't even preplan that out. Once again, it is wild to me how much of a support system has just, like, casually been here in Utah the whole time while we were white-knuckling our way through raising our kids on our own during most of the past decade (grateful for being able to dip our toes into a support system with Jared's parents living an hour away when we were in Washington, but it is a whole different level having so many loved ones with young kids living within 20 minutes of us now).  

"The Village" is an interesting concept to me. I know "the village" of today does not look the same as it did for people raising their children 100 years ago. I know people for whom the concept of a village does not exist in any way, shape, or form; I know that feeling because I spent a lot of time there. For me it was like, ok, I know people love us. I know people would help if we asked. But. We are so far away from those people that it would be an inconvenience for everyone involved, and that usually didn't feel worth it to me. 

I think it is absolutely possible to build your own village even if you don't have or if you live far from family, and if we had never been able to move back near family I think we could have built a community around us that I would have felt pretty comfortable calling on frequently. But not like this. I am slow to make friendships that have that depth and closeness, and we've never lived anywhere long enough to get to that point. I knew to an extent that a support system is what I'd be coming back to when we moved to Utah, but the ease of it has surprised me. 

Saturday morning, Jared left for his early flight and my brother Chris and his wife Caitlin invited the kids and I to an Ebelskiever breakfast they host at their home around Christmas every year. Their kids are near our kids' ages so we just, like, ate breakfast and chatted and the kids played?? The kids all had their moments but it's so much less hands-on to go to a gathering where there are other kids for my kids to play with. I wish we had invited families with kids to our home more often in past places we lived. It always felt like it had to be a production though to cook and clean all day, and here I am learning that it really doesn't. I am so grateful for our loved ones here who have come before me--my mother, my grandmother, siblings, friends--who are leading by example and showing me that it's supposed to be casual. It's supposed to be, "Come on over! Toys are everywhere because we live here. We have leftover chow mein, you have corn dogs, let's bring them together and call it dinner." That was basically our dinner Saturday evening, and our kids again just ran downstairs and played with cousins. Wild. I might need a refresher on how to be a conversationalist, because those skills have become rusty since I started having kids 6 years ago and I'm realizing I may have the opportunity for longer adult conversations again now that we're here. 

Sunday my parents invited us to their Christmas church service. Jared was out of town and my dad was singing in his sacrament meeting (and our church is at 8:30 but theirs is at 10:30) so it was a no brainer. After church my parents invited us to stay for a waffle lunch. I love when my parents serve waffles on Sunday. They set the table fancy and invite family over, and then we have waffles. It's beautiful and special but not overcomplicated. I've definitely been overcomplicating hosting and I'm grateful to practice taking it easier. Last minute on Sunday, my friend Julie invited me and the kids over for a casual dinner. She made a meatloaf and I brought frozen corn and some biscuits from a box. Boom, dinner. My kids play so well with hers, too. The weekend without Jared was busy with casual gatherings, and it flew by so much faster and less lonely than time apart has gone in the past.  

In a season that has lots of other stressors--Jack missing his old school and friends and routines, us getting unpacked and set up in an unfamiliar home and neighborhood--I am grateful that we have people in our life with whom we can gather. A village. People who aren't "helping us" by inviting us over anymore than we're "helping them" by coming over. We're just people who want to do life together and to have our kids do life together and it's a beautiful thing. And it is helpful! If you don't have this in your life but ever have the opportunity to try it out, whether near family or by creating it in your own community, let this be your nudge to give it a whirl. Signed, a big-time introvert who loves alone time but is finding such relief and comfort in having a nearby village of loved ones. And now for some pictures!

^^A cozy, casual breakfast. The kids have been sharing a room since we moved here. It has been a good thing at night because they seem less scared. But I'm finding that Alice is waking up much earlier in the morning because she wakes up when Jack does around 6:40. This isn't a big enough problem to separate them into their own rooms, but I do miss my restful Washington mornings, when Alice would sleep in until 8:00 and Jack would play quietly until 7:30 (we had a deal where he could eat school lunch if he waited until 7:30 to wake me up in the morning, because at that point it would be too late for me to pack him a home lunch--we've tried having the same deal here, but it doesn't work as well when Alice wakes up with him and needs me.) I have to tell myself that it's ok that she wakes up early because it will keep her napping well for longer.
^^I had a nice visit with my sweet grandmother this last week, during which Alice fell asleep and took a half-hour nap on me for the first time since she was a little baby. It was very sweet.
^^Jack does not love the stage. He was pretty grumpy about having to be in his school Christmas concert last week. His class sang "Snowflake" and something else that none of the kids seemed to know the words to. Jared and I loved watching him, and evilly enough we kind of enjoyed seeing him squirm and have to do something that was uncomfortable for him. Parenting has come with some pretty uncomfy moments for us this past month and there's nothing we can really do about it but grit our teeth and push through. Satisfying to see the tables turned for a sec😅  
^^Alice doing her Lovey's hair and makeup.
^^The world's cutest polaroid. 
^^The world's cutest tantrum. Alice was very upset that our neighborhood pool is closed for the winter. So upset that she kept laying on the ground and acting out "swimming" and then making this face when I told her it was closed. 
^^We accidentally discovered a magical park 10 minutes from our house! We were trying to go to the Highland Family Park but for some reason my map took us to Highland Glen Park. We are excited to come back in the summer and play at this tucked-away lake with a beach. 
^^When Jared is gone for the night I always stay up too late, do a little home project (like putting this tapestry on our big empty wall), and watch a rom com (The Holiday this time). 
^^Jack and Alice dressed for Christmas Sunday and playing with legos together. 

Our Village

I can't believe we're so close to Christmas. Jared's new job is starting really slow with the patient load because it's a fairly new clinic, so he has actually had quite a bit of free time when he's at work. He asked me to send him a family picture from our last week together in Washington so he could turn it into a Christmas card. He was so excited to bring home a whole bundle of Christmas cards that evening, and then I noticed that the cards are from "The Johnson Family"😂 I was all for keeping them and sending them out to close family and friends anyway because (a) they'd think it was funny, (b) most of them will end up in people's trash cans anyway after the holidays, and (c) It feels like a good reflection of the chaos of our year to have the wrong name on our holiday card😂 He did end up ordering a new batch but I fully plan on sending the original version to my siblings. 

It's been a pretty good week over all. I got a few family pictures on our wall to help it feel a little more like home. We are settling in more and more--Jack is getting off to school without much problem anymore, and we've made some tweaks to the bedtime routine that seem to be helping (the "tweak" is that mom leaves the house entirely to take Savvy on her walk and then spends time writing during the hour before and after bedtime--we discovered that if I'm in the house AT ALL the kids will sob and sob because they want me in their presence 100% of the time if they know I'm home; everyone does much better with Jared doing bedtime, especially now that he's working all day so that's his only time with the kids). Jack goes to primary better now that he knows and likes his teachers and the kids in his class. So all said and done, I'd say it's taken about a month in our new home to get to a place of feeling like I can catch a breath here and there.

That said, it's still tough. And I like to write these things down so that the next time I'm going through a similar difficulty (which will be in about a year most likely for our next move) I can look back and get a feel for how long it took to get through the weeds the previous time. I'm so glad we were able to keep a majority of our furniture and have some things ready to put right up on the walls to make it feel more like home. I'm glad I've gone the "quick" approach with decorating instead of the precious approach that would take longer, knowing we'll only be here a year anyway. I do feel at home and happy about our house and neighborhood already. However, I still feel like I'm navigating some discomfort at being unsettled. I don't feel like myself, and that wasn't helped by getting a drastic haircut right after we moved, oops😅 I kind of feel like I'm living someone else's life in this post-move era. Next go around we're hoping to have a few weeks of overlap between when we need to be out of our rental and into our home, so we can move one room at a time and start fresh with everything a little more organized in our next home. It's a little chaotic here and by the time everything is put away nicely and NOT chaotic, it will most likely be time to start thinking about packing up to move again. Le sigh. Grateful to be here though, and reminding ourselves that moving is just a season, and there is joy and community and home on the other side. 

And we already have a good bit of community and joy and home now! We had my parents over for dinner once this week, and my high school bestie's family. I should have taken pictures but we were having too much fun for that. So now, some other pictures from our week:
^^Alice with the street style walking around our neighborhood. She loves winter clothes/accessories.
^^A very cool sunset from my walk with Savvy on the trails near our home. We chose this neighborhood based on its close proximity to foothill trails and I am SO happy we did. A quiet sunset walk in the foothills is my happy place. Currently this is only happening on the weekends because it's too dark by the time Jared gets home to be roaming around the mountains, but come springtime I plan to be here daily.
^^Alice in her happy place--on a step stool with some cheese.
^^Jack scooping molasses cookies. The Christmas activities have been less frequent than usual this year but we're still making up for it with the 15-foot Christmas tree:
^^Jared took the kids sledding while I put our family pictures up on the wall on Saturday afternoon.
^^And we had a game night with cookies last night. We'll break this place in yet.

Breaking It In

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