Friday, May 29, 2009

The One Where Lizzie Checks In


So apparently there's this device...and you type words into it...and they magically appear on screen in something new-fangled called a BLOG POST. Perhaps you guys have heard about it?

Auuuugh, I'm struggling this week. Tomorrow is the anniversary of Mum's passing and I'm heading out in the morning to drop a flower in the ocean but as luck would have it, I have the flu. Caught it off Talented Hubby, who ("conveniently") happens to be Mr Germ Catcher. This week brought me right back to the feeling I got when I was sick back in February. At least this time, there's progression and phlegm and stuff like that, which is actually a good thing. But today? I took a Codral flu tablet - and a THREE HOUR nap. Choirs of angels sung, let me tell you. It's too early to theorize on an end to the whole shebang but it's definitely different to the last bout of illness and for that I am supremely grateful.

My brand new sewing machine sits (mostly) unused, which is an absolute tragedy! That's her in the above pic. I had so many grand plans for becoming acquainted with her (yes, my sewing machine is a girl) and so far all I've managed in a week is a half-hearted attempt at a softie. Just can't lift the scissors. Soon, my pretty. Soon....

Is anyone else a cool fabric hoarder too? I keep going into the brand-new-just-opened fabric store near me and finding the cutest cotton prints and cool flannels. An idea is forming in my mind - more to come soon - but for the most part, I fall in love with a print, get it home, and can't bring myself to mar it's beauty by cutting into it!

And with that thought, I'm off in search of the last of the household chocolate. Totally legitimate when you're sick :P

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Pollo Delizia Recipe ~ The Most Delicious Meal Ever

Because I love my bloggy peeps, here is the Pollo Delizia recipe as requested, conveniently packaged in PDF format and converted from metric to imperial for my American friends (I've also included my own tips and notes).

Pollo Delizia recipe

(If you like chicken, bacon, broccoli, semi-dried tomatoes and CREAM, this recipe is for you!)

Nom nom nom nom....

Sunday, May 24, 2009

A Kitchen Win And A New Friend - I Love How The World Works!

Yesterday was a good day.

Firstly, though perhaps not life-changing (or is it?), I had a new recipe win. This doesn't happen terribly often around here, but when it does, by golly it's like God The Master Chef himself comes to hang out and chop some onions with me in my kitchen.

The story goes like this. There's a chain of pasta restaurants down here in Australia called, unimaginatively, Fasta Pasta. A while back, when the kids could finally hold a fork without trying to stab a sibling, we decided to upgrade our eating out experiences from the Golden Arches to something a little nicer. Not too high-brow, since we were (are) still on a budget, but somewhere that we could sit down in as a family and share a delicious, good value meal that came to the table on REAL HONEST TO GOODNESS PLATES. Fasta Pasta fit the bill and for a while, my dish du jour was always the classic Chicken Parmigiana.

And then I found a new love.

The Pollo Delizia was the answer to a question my husband posed. "Hon, is it possible to come to this place and NOT order the very same thing each and every time?"

I branched out, and was thus hooked.

The problem with this new, delectable dish was that I couldn't reproduce it (to justice, anyway) at home. I tried, believe me. I kind of had an idea in my mind of what would go into it, but I knew I was missing something. I even went out to lunch a couple of times with my girlfriends, praising (and eating) the Pollo Delizia each time, and wishing aloud I had the guts to ask for the recipe. I was always too chicken to do that in person.

Then one day - this week to be exact - I caved, emailing the head office and literally begging for the recipe. I was going insane trying to recreate it. To be honest, I wasn't entirely sure I'd be successful, considering restaurants tend to like to keep their recipes close to their chests, but you know, I kind of figured 'why not?' and jumped.

The wonderful, awesome Sarah, from the Fasta Pasta marketing division, took pity on me and sent the recipe a mere two days later. I whooped with glee!

I tried to wait until the next week's menu rotation (beginning Monday), I really did, but the culinary awesomeness was calling me so I made a special trip to the supermarket yesterday to pick up the ingredients. We cooked it for dinner last night.

OH. MY. WORD.

I am a kitchen genius. It actually worked! To appreciate the thrill of that statement, you really need to have been in attendance the many, many other times I have tried to do a copycat/new recipe and failed miserably - suffice it to say, I can count on my ten fingers the times I've been so enamoured with a brand new recipe that I've instantly known I'd be cooking this for my grandkids one day. Cooking just doesn't work that way for me! I ate so much I was very nearly ill but I don't care because GOSHDARNDANGITWORKED and I didn't burn the food, or myself, or have the whole thing fall apart at the end. I cannot tell you how excited I was!

So there was that. Enough of a good day right there.

The rest of the 'good' part of yesterday actually happened earlier that afternoon, after our trip to the supermarket. Earlier in the week we'd gotten a flyer in the mailbox about a garage sale being held nearby, with proceeds to aid a sick little baby girl. The sweet girl first came to our attention when she was featured on a current affairs program in my city a couple of weeks beforehand - in that story, a charity tin raising money for an upcoming trip to the States for her medical treatment had been swiped, low-life style, from the counter of a local business. Thankfully, after the story aired, the money was replaced by kind-hearted community members, but of course they still needed a lot of money for the trip, so they were fundraising through garage sales and business donations.

Anyhoo, I walked Moo around the corner to the garage sale yesterday and was surprised to find the very same baby (and her parents) in attendance - and it turns out, the sale was at their house and all this time they'd lived just a few houses down from us.

I had a lovely conversation with the mother and got to meet baby Hayley - who is, I should point out, the most angelic little snippet you ever did see. She has a very rare medical condition - only ten or so kids in Australia have it - and so far, she's doing 'okay but not okay' (in the words of her mother - I wish I could name the condition, but it's one of those obscure collection of words you instantly forget the second you hear them). The first three months of her 5 month life were spent in the hospital. The trip to the States is to attend a conference on her rare condition. I guess because so few kids have the condition, there's no specialist they can see down here in Australia.

Baby Hayley has been on my mind ever since. Sometimes I marvel at life's little 'coincidences'. I had been planning to attend the garage sale earlier in the morning but the day kind of got away from me and after lunch I expected them to be wrapping up - so I was surprised to drive past after our trip to the store and see things still going strong. Hayley's mum said the morning had been freakishly busy, so had I gone when I intended, I daresay I would have missed out on a really sweet conversation. And I just can't get over the fact that the family lives on my street. We might never have crossed paths had it not been for the providential run of events.

Please keep baby Hayley and her family in your thoughts and prayers. They leave in two weeks and will be gone for a month to attend the conference and to hang out as a family with Hayley and their 2 yo daughter doing fun holiday stuff. On their return, Hayley undergoes an operation.

I just want to do MORE, you know? But I'm feeling very blessed today to have met the family :)

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

May Sucks, The Dog Is Crazy And I Love Containers Too

I'm in this weird limbo of emotional blankness right now, hence the lack of posting. There was a lot going on around (the real) Lizzie's Home for the first part of May and then Mother's Day hit and I worked myself into a tizz again. Up I went again in the wake of that, and down I came again this past weekend - the 17th marked what would have been my mother's 58th birthday. I don't think I'll be fully recovered until June - there's still the anniversary of her death (30th) and then the day of her funeral (June 6) to contend with. Honestly? May just plain SUCKS for me (with a bright spark for my own Mother's Day celebration with my kids, of course).

Most everything else is puttering along just fine. Charlie continues to be the source of both frustration and hilarity. His two favourite activities in the world include chasing the birds away from his dry food bowl outside - his brain must think he's flying, but his feet just can't keep up, so he usually trips - and devising ways to get into the loungeroom, something he's been banned from since day one. We have a great house for a dog, with tiles everywhere except the bedrooms - and the loungeroom. At six months old I guess you could say his sneakiness is akin to a 10 year old boy hopped up on red food colouring, LOL.

I was working on the sewing nook last night, with the nearby door to the tiled kitchen open so I could keep an eye on him. It was like a weird cross-species game of "What's The Time Mr Wolf?" - I'd look away, put a book on a shelf or something, and when I glanced back, he'd be an inch into the room. Again, I look away to do something and when I look back, he's in the door three inches. This went on for some time until he was fully in on the carpet, just stretched-out all comfy, a stupid dog grin on his face as if to say, "Nee-ner!" Not once did I see the little imp actually move.

Talented Hubby has returned to work after several weeks off. That man works so hard - I mean, it doesn't seem like it, since he just had most of a month off, LOL, but during non-leave stretches he works like the blazes. Apart from his day job, his joint-photography exhibition opened this week and he's expecting some sales to come from that (if you get the fancy to check out more of TH's work, you can see it here).

Kids are all doing great - Jay has his 'exam' for the nationwide literacy and numeracy testing this past week. For the benefit of my international readers, the Australian government tests each child in primary (elementary) school at year levels 3, 5 and 7 - the same test, over the same days, across the country - to see where they are 'at' with their reading/communicative and numeracy skills. The general aim is, I suspect, to 'catch' kids who are falling behind before they get too far behind, and it provides general information about how your child compares to his classmates, year level (both in his state and nationwide) and other useful stuff like that. Jay, being special needs, is exempt from participating (and so missed the Year 3 test) but this year his teachers all thought he would be perfectly fine and honestly, TH and I were very curious. By all accounts he did wonderfully well ("Mum, I finished the sums in ten minutes and they said you could have 50 minutes to complete them!") and going by what we already know about his academic performance so far, he's expected to be slightly above average, compared to other REGULAR, NON-SPECIAL NEEDS children of his age. Little man, we've had some dark days, but stuff like this makes Mama's heart burst. Mwah.

And so here I am, anxiously awaiting a text message from the Janome dealer (why a text? They offered it as an option so I took it - the library texts me when a book is ready for pickup, the Blood Service texts to remind me about appointments - thank God - so it makes perfect sense to me that a sewing machine retailer would act similarly, LOL). Soon as that baby arrives I'm all over it. In the meantime, I 'nest', preparing a sewing nook.

Laura at I'm an Organizing Junkie would be so proud of me. Containers and tubs feature prominently, :P (pics soon).

(Talented Hubby just called from work. He's had a difficult start to the day. As always, I continue to be in awe of how he manages to handle it all...)

And with that, I'm off to continue cleaning. Baby (sewing machine) must have a pretty place to sleep, LOL...

Monday, May 18, 2009

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Happy Birthday Mum

You were weather-worn, with a lined face, work-tough hands and always the same short black haircut. Unassuming. Reserved. Yes, sometimes even with a look about you like the world had you beat.

I didn't understand. I was just a child. I thought marriages lasted forever, even beyond the fighting. But you stayed. He stayed. There was a constant in our lives and as little as we appreciated it at the time, it was you.

I left home at almost-eighteen, still wet around the ears about men and what it took to keep a relationship working well. I have choked on that score - many a time - over the years. And then when the children came, a whole new depth of understanding finally came up and smacked me in the middle of the forehead.

I get it now Mum. I didn't get a chance to tell you, but I get it. I understand now, in a way that starts deep in my bones and radiates outward to the small person's hand clutched in mine, why you did the things you did, endured the things you endured. Why you kept your mouth tightly shut when all you must have wanted to do was scream at the injustice. Why you reached for tools when working became necessary. Why you always, always served yourself last, both at the dinner table and in every other aspect of your life.

I understand.

I just wish you were still around to tell you.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

My Current Basic Daily Plan

Those that know me well will testify to the fact that I love lists, schedules and routines. A blank notebook and a pen gets me excited every time (oh, the possibilities!) and there's a deep sense of satisfaction to be had when you've got your routine down on paper.

I've recently done some minor tweaking to my Basic Daily Plan, so ta da! Here it is:

Morning Routine

  • Rise early (6:00)
  • Let Charlie out
  • Head start on housework (start laundry, empty dishwasher - you know, the automatic stuff your caffeine-deprived brain can actually handle first thing out of bed!)
  • Quiet Time (over breakfast)
  • School day prep (begin by 7:00)
  • Feed Charlie (change water)
(School run)

  • Laundry (reboot machine, hang, sort - 15 mins tops)
  • Dinner prep / exercise
  • Housework (To Do List, Basic Weekly Plan - I generally carve out 11:00 am to 1:00 pm for this)
(Lunch)
Afternoon Routine
  • Baking
  • Home Project (organizing, sewing etc)
  • Free time
(School run)
  • Prepare snack
  • Supervise reading and homework
  • Laundry (fold, hang, iron, put away - whatever needs doing)
  • Finish dinner prep / exercise
  • Feed Charlie (check water)
(Dinner - 6:30)
Evening Routine
  • Kitchen clean up (around 7:00)
  • Kids' baths / showers, brush teeth
  • General tidy up
  • Lay out clothes for tomorrow (including the adults)
  • School lunches
  • Load washing machine
(Kids' bedtime - 8:30)
  • Free time
  • Take Charlie outside
  • Shower, prep for bed (10:00)
  • Go to bed early (by 11:00)
You'll notice that there are two 'dinner prep / exercise' entries. Trying to be consistent with my exercise routine was failing miserably, so I had to come up with an alternative. Also, I really quite like walking at 'pre-twilight' time of the late afternoon - my walk often takes me up some local hills and the view of the sunset from up there is spectacular. Since I'm never going to be a morning exerciser (seriously? you have got to be joking!), I'm left with two options for a walk - right after I drop the kids off at school (and before the day drags the energy from me kicking and screaming) or in the late afternoon/early evening, when it's a far more zen-like experience (I've had more than my fair share of 'quiet time moments' atop the local hills, that's for sure :) Unfortunately, Talented Hubby works a rotating roster which means sometimes he's home (to watch the kids) and sometimes he's not. Having two windows for exercise each day allows me to be a bit more flexible. I 'piggy-back' this on dinner prep too - if I've gone for a morning walk, then I prep in the evening. If I know I'll be walking later in the afternoon, I'll get as much dinner prep done as I can in the morning, so that all I'll need to do is leave simple reheating instructions for Talented Hubby later. Win-win!

I've also come to understand a few things about myself over the last few years that I've worked with a Basic Daily Plan. For starters, my energy is SHOT come lunchtime. I've tried scheduling exercise or housework during the hours between lunch and school pick up and it has always been a spectacular failure. I've discovered - and I can't believe it took me so long to work this out - that my day goes far more smoothly if I get what must be done out of the way before I sit down for lunch. Deep cleaning, serious household tasks and so on all get done early in the day. The wonderful benefit of all of this morning craziness is that my afternoons are generally my own. I'm trying to establish a routine of baking a little something each day (instead of a 'Baking Day' on the weekend, as has been my habit in the past). So as soon as lunch is finished with (around 1:30 give or take), I'll whip up something and pop it in the oven and then kick back a little - do some sewing, watch a little TV, clean out a cupboard. Nothing very taxing. I'm rested (without needing a nap, but that's always another option!) by the time the kids come home from school and the next crazy phase of the day begins. It also gives me a block of time every day in which to create, something I really wanted to promote.

You'll also notice I prefer to keep specific times out of the equation. I've tried that before on many occasions and I've found having a looser 'block style' plan works much better for me. Where times are helpful, I've noted that in brackets.

So there you have it! Are you a planner/list maker like me? What kind of schedule - if any at all - fits you best?

Friday, May 8, 2009

Why May Is Difficult

*This is quite a lengthy post. Sorry!

I've been contemplating the onset of May for a good couple of months now. May will be filled with a hefty chunk of difficult moments.

This is a picture of my mother, who died in May last year after suffering a heart attack. She's holding Master J, who was about six weeks old, at Christmas 1998.

On the 13th is Mother's Day*. I last spoke to her the day before Mother's Day last year.

On the 17th, she would have turned just 56.

The 30th marks the one year anniversary of her death.

My mother wasn't the healthiest of souls - she was overweight and she smoked. Heart problems were always going to be number 2 on a list of possible serious health implications as a reasult of her lifestyle. But 55 is young.

We'd lived through the Early Morning Phone Call before. Six years ago (and two weeks before our wedding), my father suffered two successive heart attacks on the same day. My father lives half an hour from town, alone (he and Mum had separated a year or two prior), and 'town' is a 'one horse wonder'. The silly bugger walked to the main road after his first attack to flag down the ambulance. True to his nature, his determination is what counted in the end - the ambos weren't entirely sure where his property was and may have missed the turn off. On route to the hospital he had to be revived twice.

All h*ll broke loose. I mean, I was two weeks off getting married, an event which normally necessitates a large dose of fatherly input. My mother was a cook on a cattle station waaaaaay up north of the country at the time and dropped everything to come 'home'. Though they'd separated when she left, she moved right back in to help care for Dad. Thankfully we didn't need to alter our wedding plans (we would have postponed had Dad not been well enough to attend), but in terms of living life on a razor's edge, we'd been there, done that.

Despite giving things a red-hot go, Mum and Dad separated for a second time a couple of years later. Mum moved in with my sister, who lived across country, and slowly made a life for herself independent of a partner for the first time since she was 18. I didn't often get to see her due to the distance involved and the cost of airfares, but we did manage to have a family reunion of sorts in the early part of 2005. It was the last time we saw her. And the last time she saw my kids.

The phone rang in the wee hours on May 30 last year, and hubby grumbled and groped for it. I was instantly awake. There's something so absolute about an early morning phone call. Nobody calls at 7am unless someone has died. I thought it was Dad. But my sister told me Mum had risen early for work (she was a cook at a mining site in Queensland by that stage, staying for a week on-site and going home to my sister's house on weekends) and was in the kitchen preparing a cooked breakfast for the miners when she collapsed. She was sped off to hospital after being treated by mine personnel.

My sister spoke to her via phone while she was in bed in hospital. She was groggy, but she understood what had happened. It was after this that Sis had called the family, waking everyone up. It was a school morning anyway, so I got up and went through the motions of preparing the kids. Then there was a second phone call.

Mum, ironically, had virtually mirrored Dad's experience. Both had had two heart attacks about an hour and a half apart, both of a similar type. Dad's heart had just been that little bit stronger.

I had last spoken to her a full two weeks before she died. I rang her for Mother's Day, but knowing that Sundays meant a long drive back out to the mining site for her, I got in early on Saturday (it was difficult to catch her during the week while she was working, so we reserved phone calls to the weekends). We nattered on about not much in particular. I hadn't bought her a Mother's Day/Birthday gift yet but I was going to go shopping that week and post it up to my sister's house. I forgot.

I intended ringing again the first day I knew she would be home after her next on-site stint at the mine. Only she worked through that weekend. It didn't seem important at the time. It seems odd to describe it now, not speaking to your mother for two or three weeks at a time, but it was normal for us, and neither of us was peturbed by it at all. Life happens.

The next thing I knew, she was dead.

The funeral was intense. Hubby and I packed the kids off to their other Nana and Poppa for the week. It was just so expensive to fly up at the drop of a hat that we just couldn't justify bringing the kids. Our whole family converged on my sister's tiny little house at the foot of a volcano. Where she lives is right in the midst of a tropical rainforest type environment. She literally walks out into her front yard and has to crane her neck to look up the mountain. A skip across the way and you'd find the Whitsunday Islands.

So we were all there, trying to organise a funeral. I put up with a horrible aunt (whom I've always had issues with, *smile*) asking incredibly impolite questions about how big our house was, how much we paid for it, and so on. We chose music. A Rod Stewart song for the seating and Fly by Celine Dion for the service. I, naturally, wrote the eulogy. Can you imagine it? Having to condense your own mother's life into two type-written pages? People tapping you on the shoulder asking if you remembered to include Great Aunty Gertrude's anecdote or the name of Mum's first pet?

The night before the funeral itself, there was a viewing. I let myself get swept along with everyone else and went into the little room. I made it three steps inside the door and howled. Later that night, I tried hard as I could to drink myself into a good mood (which, for me, isn't all that difficult - two drinks is all it takes *smile*). In retrospect, I would not view a body again. It was totally surreal - I don't know how anyone can do it.

At the funeral, I read the eulogy I'd written. (Later, the same nasty aunt had the audacity to pick it to pieces for not specifically naming Mum's siblings. I was going for something different - not a biographical account but more that it was my own feelings and thoughts).

It wasn't a totally bad week. I got to see my sister, her husband and their two kids for the first time in two or three years (they have always been northerners, and we've always been southerners :) A group of us were all staying at the same holiday park and gathered in the cabin every night to play cards for money, which was a lot of fun :) Yes, we gambled for money! LOL. And on the day we flew out, the day after the funeral, we even managed to swing by a bowling alley for an impromptu (but very fitting) game or two. My mother was an Australasian Champion and competed professionally in her early twenties :)

Mum was cremated and each of us four kids took some of her ashes home in a little urn. I kept wondering what would happen if security at the airport took issue with this little bottle, not believing it actually was her ashes. I walked through security probably looking completely guilty :)

Mum has been in a safe place here at home for the past year. I'm not one for displaying ashes and the urn is really quite itty bitty anyway. In a way, its quite fitting - Mum made it to virtually every corner of the country because of how far flung her kids ended up :) But I think its time to scatter the ashes. Probably this month - it does seem appropriate.

* Originally published May 1st, 2007. On the first anniversary of her death, May 30th 2007, I sprinkled her ashes into the sea near my home, at a place where we'd all gathered for a picnic and a swim when Mum made her trip down south in 2005. I can laugh now, but she didn't want to leave that little urn so I had to give it a solid THWACK! against the metal railing and I nearly dropped the whole shebang into the ocean! (Oh well, she always did love the water....) The following year (2008), I bought a gerbera at a local florist and spent some time sitting on the end of that same jetty before tossing the flower (yellow, her favourite) into the water. I watched it head out to sea until I couldn't see it any more. Kind of like Wilson from Cast Away *smile*. This year (and probably every year), I'll return, again with a yellow flower. It helps that her physical body was returned to nature, I think. Her soul is somewhere far more awesome :)

I hope she can see me, see the woman I have become these past three years. She'd get a very macabre kick out of knowing her very small estate was able to pay for a much-longed for laptop for me, LOL. I am very blessed to have a wonderful mother-in-law and since Mum's passing, I have always given my MIL a special gift just from me, something separate to the joint present Talented Hubby and I give. H is my adopted mother, and I love her to bits. I know Mum would have been really happy to see this :)

And so May continues to be quite tough for me, and the lead up to it has affected my blogging, as has some other issues currently on the Lizzie's Home table. Hopefully the funk will lift as May slides into June :P

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Randomness. Yes, Again.

Tonight marks the second night we've spent as a 'two child family'. Jay has been on camp since yesterday morning and to say that we were a little apprehensive about letting him go would be putting it mildly.

This is Jay's second camp - for his first last year (Grade 4), Daddy went along, which erased our concern, and it was also just the one night, with this week's camp being two nights.

I'm such a mother hen sometimes, I know :)

There hasn't been a heck of a lot going on around here otherwise. Moo has had her swimming lessons every day this week (part of the school curriculum down here, for one week every year) which has meant a packed swimming bag every day - I'm kind of over that :P

Talented Hubby has been on annual leave, but he returns to work on Saturday. He's not looking foward to it, LOL.

A local fabric store in my area is changing premises and I was able to snaffle up some really great bargains when I went out shopping with a friend on Tuesday - all fabric was $1 per metre (some was quilting fabric upwards of $11 per metre), all ribbon spools (whether they had half a metre or fifteen metres on them) were 50c. I replenished the ribbon stash quite admirably with that. I walked out of the store with over $70 worth of gear, for $38, including five laundry sacks for $3 each that I would have had to make myself (and these ones are far prettier!). I love days like that.

As you might have guessed, I'm trying to work out what I want to do by way of a blog design here. At the moment I'm just using a basic Blogger template but I've got a couple of other designs in the works in case I get bored. What can I say? It happens with remarkable frequency :P

Something far more brainy tomorrow, I promise...

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Blog? Schmog! I've Got Three Books Under My Belt!

Somewhere in the depths of my Blogger archive, there are 520 posts. Blogger counts unpublished drafts toward your total though, so I've probably got an even 500 knocking about.

Five hundred. Most of which were probably on the flip side of 500 words. Assuming (at a very large stretch, granted) that they were all that figure, that's 250,000 words. A quick burst of research on Google just now tells me 80,000 words is a reasonable length for a novel which means Lizzie's Home thus far pretty much equates to three whole books.

No wonder Talented Hubby questions the amount of time I blog, LOL.

When I was a young 'un, my future profession of choice was always 'author'. Being that I was a solitary child and read most of my early years away, that word was revered. Like 'amusement park designer' or 'resident chocolate factory taste-tester'. The bookstore was my Heaven; the local librarian, my pastor.

In high school, my voracious reading habits earned me a fast track into the advanced English courses and nothing would thrill me more than getting a CM on my assignments (confused? CM stood for 'completed, to a model standard'....the equivalent of an A+). I went a semester and three weeks straight getting nothing but CMs one year. The drought broke with a CS+ (completed, to a standard level - plus a wee bit extra). I was devastated and asked to resubmit. That's how hardcore I was.

It worked.

And I got a CM on my second try, LOL.

Don't worry, it didn't last. The twin evils of Physics and Chemistry soon put a kybosh on my eagerness to get to school each day and I finished my schooling with a solid, average record. But I never lost my passion for the written word.

Things got a little crazy right out of high school. There was a year or so of unfocused study which almost saw me heading toward a career in community services (ahem, my lecturer once told me my final childcare study was 'the best she'd ever marked' - the rain soon came down on my idealised version of motherhood when I had my own kids!)

Long story short, I met Talented Hubby and we soon found ourselves pregnant with Jay (and yes, there was a gap in between dating and procreating!) Even longer story short, Boof and Moo came fast on his heels (thankfully, not at the same time). At just-past-22 years of age I was the mother of three kids 3 years and under. TH was about to take a leap of faith, career-wise, and we were riding the wave of an autism diagnosis.

You could say day-to-day survival mode was our default setting.

Not much writing went on for quite some time. I tried to pick up study again and failed dismally (the particular course I tried to restart required a phone-in lesson for an hour, once per week per subject, of which I had three. With a special-needs preschooler, a toddler and a newborn, it just wasn't going to work. No child on earth, let alone three of them at the same time, naps to that schedule!) And then one day I discovered a well-respected writing course run out of my city was asking for applicants. There was a selection process, portfolio submissions (my piece was about autism, no big surprise), entry placements, the works, but after jumping through all sorts of educational and personal hoops, I got in.

That course - or The Years Of Which We Do Not Speak, LOL - was four years long, part-time of course, and done through external study.

For the first year, I rode high on my plumped-up feeling of self-worth as a writer. Look at me! I'm a Writing Student! Hand me that tweed jacket!

During the second year, I mostly enjoyed my work, but spent much of my free time obsessing over due dates and the various bits of research that needed to go into each assignment. I also discovered one of my lecturers was out to get me and I lived in constant fear of The Letter of Doom, otherwise known as a 'please resubmit' notice (for the record, I managed the entire four years with only ONE of those, woot!).

In the third year, my mother died and things just seemed a little....pointless. I went downhill fast, but scraped through. Most lecturers were extremely accommodating but I'd be lying if I said I gave every assignment the attention it deserved. Nine times out of ten, I wrote just barely what I had to, and nothing more. I still passed admirably (my high school English Studies teacher, Mrs Robertson, sat ghost-like in the background the entire time, tsk-tsking and muttering words to the affect of '"Oh Liz, if only you used your ENTIRE brain for that one!", LOL. I'm sorry Mrs R, really!) I seriously contemplated early-exit (with a lesser qualification), like every second week. Kind of like when you just pay that $50 get-out-of-jail fine instead of wasting time trying to roll a double first.

The fourth year was TORTURE. I thought of nothing other than The End. My last ever assignment was, appropriately, a portfolio of pieces geared toward our experiences with autism and special needs. Started with autism, ended with it. Despite an absolute task-master for a lecturer on that one, I finished the course as a whole with a solid B+ standing and a really good bit of paper saying I had survived and knew how to string a sentence together. I was thrilled.

And then I slept for a week.

That was fifteen months ago and I haven't done a thing - officially, that is - with my writing since. It's not like I haven't thought about it - I gave myself those first few post-course months off on purpose, to decompress from All The Big Words. Sesame Street, with all its forced ABCs, never looked as good as it did during the Autumn (that's Spring for you Northern Hemispherans!) of 2008. But it was always my intention to 'get back into it' and start submitting pieces, now that I was a Proper Qualified Professional Writer and all.

Where did Lizzie's Home fit into the timeline? Disillusioned with my fourth/final year, in March of 2007 I discovered blogging was a convenient way to avoid looming assignment deadlines and ta-da! Here we are!

I haven't wasted the last two years though - TH, are you taking notes? - my post count shows I've written three whole books' worth!
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