We (Ellie and I!) are back with another baby book club post. Our book of choice today is a book about sharks called Sharks Teeth to Tail from Smithsonian kids. Sharks Teeth to Tail was written by Jaye Garnett with illustrations by Beatrice Tinarelli.
This book was another thrift store find, and it caught my eye because my husband loves sharks.
Image by Nina Harper
It also looked like a good choice to me, because I am trying to ensure that I get her a variety of books to grow up with.
I have gotten her a few princess-y books (such as one cute search and find princess book with little flaps to open to search for the crown) but I want to make sure she is exposed to nature books, planet books, science books, books about good habits, books about arts and music, and more.
I also want to be intentional about getting her plenty of math books. One of the princess books I picked up is actually a math princess book, so I’m excited for that one as well!
Back to the shark book.
Sharks Teeth to Tail is a nice sturdy book. It is full of information; this is not one of those rhyming story books with a few lines. No, this book contains precise information on shark senses, parts of a shark (first dorsal fin, pectoral fin, etc), types of shark teeth, “notable” sharks, and suggestions for helping your kids follow the spark of curiosity (such as visiting an aquarium and drawing pictures of the sharks there).
My baby daughter was actually very interested in this book. I guess the combination of pictures and colors on each page was appealing. This book does also have that texture feature, where some of the images are raised, but my daughter isn’t quite there yet on exploring textures.
I do love that this book features real pictures of different kinds of sharks, and real terms. The information is not “dumbed down.”
I actually enjoyed learning about sharks from this book too. For instance, I learned that bull sharks have a special ability to swim in fresh water as well as salt water!
I also enjoyed the book for a silly reason. The images of the different shark teeth brought back a very specific childhood memory for me in which I worked overtime to convince my dad to let me buy a shark book from the Scholastic catalog. Even though I was a reader as a kid, I didn’t care about the book at all. I wanted the tiger shark tooth necklace that came with it!
I remember my dad being pretty good at seeing through that kind of thing, but I guess in this case I wore him down because I did get that shark book and necklace.
Sharks Teeth to Tail is joining No Matter Whaton the favorites shelf.
Here in Wisconsin, in the United States, we take something like electricity for granted.
Yesterday afternoon, some unexpectedly strong storms rolled through this area, and took down quite a few tree branches and I suspect probably some whole trees as well.
We lost power, and therefore internet as well, from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. this morning.
My phone was close to dying, and my husband was out working with our vehicle.
So my daughter and I spent the day and evening in a very, very quiet home.
Fortunately it was cool enough outside that I could have the windows open and it wasn’t too hot.
And without trying to meditate or anything, I inevitably had to appreciate what electricity brings to our lives.
Without going too deep:
It powers air conditioning (despite the negative environmental effects of that) which is an unbelievable blessing on hot, hot, hot summer days. It powers the light that allows me to read any time of day or night.
The microwave, our other appliances, everything that makes modern life so easy, relatively speaking, is thanks to electricity. The garage door opener, the internet, the TVs, the phone chargers…
As much as I may complain about cellphones, or TVs, or any of that, the truth is that when the electricity popped back on this morning, I was relieved.
I appreciate all of the ways electricity powers our modern lives (even knowing that it’s not all upside).
I’m going to microwave a burrito right now, and I am damn grateful for that.
I’m introducing a new posts category for cultivating a grateful heart.
These posts will just be short little snippets of gratitude.
Everyone has struggles, and those struggles are real and valid, though always context-dependent. I have plenty of struggles right now too, but I know that in this life I also have many, many blessings. Fresh water, access to safe food, access to safe, clean water for my daughter’s formula, access to formula in the first place…the list goes on.
I am not someone who believes in hiding or downplaying life’s challenges and nor do I believe in constant positivity.
I do believe that there is a way to balance being real and acknowledging struggles with an awareness and appreciation for blessings, and that’s what I intend to do here with my Grateful Heart posts.
I was working on my Etsy shop this morning, specifically on editing my shop’s story and the little bios I included for my family. In doing so, I finally felt that I was better articulating what I like about the shop, and I was pleased with my efforts to give a little insight into our family through our bios.
So, I wanted to share that information in a post as well, so that anyone who might be out there reading The Honest Juggle gets a little better sense of who we are.
First, my shop’s story, below. š
From Baby-Centered to Broader Dreams
I first called this shop The Little Juggle Company since it was something I started alongside my blog The Honest Juggle.
For better or worse, I felt that The Little Juggle Company was a bit too baby-centered, and while I have baby items that I love, the majority of the shop items are not for babies.
So, welcome to LumenFern Goods Co. I like the magical feeling of that, and I hope you do too!
Yes, this is a print on demand shop. However, the designs are my own, and the quality of the products is excellent. I hope to eventually add more handmade goods, but that requires a bit more time and starting capital.
Why Print-on-Demand Still Matters
So why buy print on demand items?
Well, first, the items are unique! And you are not putting pouring your hard-earned cash into the overfull pockets of certain CEOs. No doubt those behind Etsy and the fulfillment partners do alright as well, but I gotta say I am very grateful for the opportunities that are available through these platforms.
Second, I don’t know about everyone else, but I like certain kinds of designs on certain kinds of clothing shapes. It gets a bit boring if it’s all plain, but I absolutely hate wearing company logos around.
Furthermore, as a sometimes average, sometimes plus-sized woman, I find most mainstream clothing designs to be either poorly fitting, not flattering, itchy, or with designs that are fine, but that I can’t really stand to wear around.
I enjoy dreaming up the designs and refining the shop’s vibe, and I hope that what is created will bring joy to others too.
When I’m not working on LumenFern Goods Co., I’m working on my blog The Honest Juggle, or just plain working or spending time with my family.
Meet the Family Behind the Shop
And, here, is a little introduction to my family. š
Hi, I’m Nina! I enjoy creating designs for clothing, notebooks, mugs, and more. I enjoy hiking in state parks, writing, reading, starting too many projects in the home, gardening, and cycling. I don’t do enough of any of those things! (Note: you can also read a little bit more about me here.)
š¶ Ellie ā Assistant in Training
Ellie is my daughter, my assistant, and my inspiration! She enjoys kicking and shrieking, and her unicorn toy with the teether rings. She is currently working on growing two little teeth.
šØ Gabriel ā Partner & Papa
Husband, partner in many (mis)adventures, and Ellie’s papa! He has a soft spot for sharks, and enjoys fĆŗtbol, boxing, cooking. He happily watches horror and gore, but gets teary-eyed at movies like Wonder, and The Six Triple Eight.
š± Max ā Keyboard Supervisor
Max likes to step all over the keyboard, which is (sometimes) a good reminder to take a break. He is a big boy with a big heart, though he loves pestering Tina a bit too much. He is usually content to be picked up, but also enjoys wrestling.
š± Milo ā Cuddle Advocate
Milo is a jealous little baby with me (Nina), but plays mom to his big brother Max. He would rather we all took a nap and cuddled all day, but, like Tina, he hates to big picked up and hauled around.
š± Tina ā Feline Royalty
Resident diva. She was once a trash-can-diving, not-quite-feral-but-close adolescent, and has not lost her wily ways after eight years of domesticity. She is a feisty girl with a very soft diva heart.
Earlier tonight, I was thinking about the tagline I picked for my blog: finding meaning in the mess.
I started to wonder: what if Iām not really living up to that tagline? I havenāt exactly been philosophizing about finding meaning.
But then I thought, well, finding meaning in the mess is kind of the default in life, isnāt it?
Despite our best efforts (and I think even for neurotypical people), life is often a mess. What we choose to do every dayāor have to doāis all in the pursuit of survival first. But once thatās out of the way, it becomes about finding meaning, even if we donāt consciously realize thatās what weāre doing.
So Iām covered!
Haha. But I think I originally conceptualized this tagline as something I might explore further, kind of in a silver linings way. This year has felt particularly chaotic, so the question becomes: What have I learned from that?Did some good come out of the chaos?
And I believe the answer is yes.
But I also think Iād be putting the cart before the horse if I didnāt address something else first:
Iāve been thinking about death a lot lately.
The other night, I realized Iād been thinking about it so much that I started to get nervous: was I experiencing a sense of impending doom? That can be a legitimate medical red flag.
I donāt know if thatās whatās going on. But itās true that death feels everywhere right now.
Look at this administration. Weāre seeing death all around us: the death of rights, the death of certain values (integrity? honesty?), and actual death in Ukraine, Gaza, and around the world of people who relied on USAID for sustenance.
I canāt look at the news without seeing death.
And then in our little familyās orbit:
My husbandās father died the same week our baby girl was born. His grandfather passed away a few weeks later. My grandmother had a stroke recently, and it seems like the end since sheās no longer responsive.
And of course, my mother died when my siblings and I were kids. That loss is as present as ever since becoming a mother myself.
But somehow more affecting, in some ways, is the sudden, brutal death of our dreams.
In just a few months, and even as grateful as we are to have our daughter, weāve gone from working on home projects and dreaming of future plans and vacations⦠to just existing.
Knowing our life here is now temporary.
Knowing that any day now, weāll find the foreclosure summons in the mailbox.
We poured so much energy into the fight at first. Side jobs, side hustles. I was out doing grocery deliveries three days after giving birth.
But the fight has since kind of gone out of us, as obstacle after obstacle knocks us back.
Weāre not really talking about the future anymore.
I havenāt really sat down to process thatā¦let alone grieve it.
I see photos of us from last fall and early winter, and I already donāt recognize those happy faces.
And honestly? I donāt really want to grieve it. It already sucks. The thought of sitting down and unpacking every regret, every smothered hope, every wrong turn, itās just too much.
And despite my best efforts to convince myself otherwise, Iām not really finding any solace in saying things like:
This is our journey. This is a new chapter. This is just another adventure.
Maybe itās some lingering trauma, or whatever you want to call it, from when we were kids. After my mom died, my dad used to say that: Itās a new chapter. He said it for different life events. But things never really settled down. Things never felt normal or stable again.
At some point he just stopped saying it.
And that train of thought led me to my first real sense of grief over my ADHD diagnosis.
After the evaluation, the practitioner told me I might feel some grief thinking about what couldāve been. I didnāt really connect with that at first. I thought:
āWell, that may be true for some people, but I am who I am, diagnosis or not.ā
Exceptā¦
In a way, an ADHD diagnosis feels like being told other people were right about you all along. That you are the reason everything in your life is a mess. That you donāt see things clearly, you make stupid mistakes. And worse: thereās not much you can do about it except maybe take medication to get closer to who you should be⦠but arenāt.
And suddenly, I felt regret over getting the diagnosis, which, of course, is irrational, but hear me out.
The medication has helped. I feel more like a complete person. I donāt wake up feeling like a freshly-risen zombie anymoreāstumbling around, confused, hungry, disjointed.
But⦠does it matter?
I feel better, sure. But who cares, when our family is on the verge of losing our home?
Great. I have a little more focus during the day. But what good is that when I canāt translate it into any real income?
This is the part where I could try to find a hopeful way to wrap things up. Something uplifting. Something sunny.
But Iām not going to do that.
Sometimes you just have to sit amongst the debris of your life.
Psst. I’m starting to try to tackle my next steps, and to do that, I need to wrap my head around The B-Word (Bankruptcy). If you are interested, you can read more about that here.