Reflections at 38 weeks.

  • I no longer have ankles; I have cankles.
  • There's just no use for modesty anymore.  I'm going to be totally transparent here and say that the other morning, I got out of bed and was walking around the house in this "outfit":  Totally naked on top, huge belly, underwear hanging on by a thread, and...red Old Navy flip-flops on my feet.  I walked casually into the kitchen, and my husband burst out laughing and said, "Wow.  This...is...rich."  What else is there to say?  
  • Swimming is like heaven.  It feels wonderful to be weightless for a few precious moments.
  • Remember that adorable pedicure I got a few weeks ago?  It doesn't look so pretty anymore :(.  Sorry, Amy.
  • I cannot wait to see what this little girl's personality is like!  She sticks her butt out all the time - I feel my belly shifting and then look down and it's practically flat on one side and a huge lump on the other.
  • I am still amazed when I realize that a complete human being is about to come out of my body, one that began with just two microscopic cells.  Truly a miracle...
  • People are just so fascinated with pregnant women, even complete strangers.  And yet pregnancy is one of the most common things that happens in the entire world!
  • Eggs, I love you.  My entire pregnancy you never let me down.
  • I'm shocked that I still don't have any stretch marks on my belly.  My midwife said it's hereditary, but I bet all the olive oil I've rubbed on it hasn't hurt either!

Barefoot Contessa's plum tart.

Almost 38 weeks pregnant, and all I want to do is bake.  Luckily, a friend of ours dropped by our house Monday night bearing a wonderful gift from his hometown of Cut and Shoot, TX {yes, you read that right} - a huge ziploc bag full of Texas plums!  What to do with all these juicy little guys? There was no way we could eat them all before they spoiled, so I decided to make Ina Garten's plum tart.

Being at the end of my pregnancy, I didn't want to consume too much sugar or other unhealthy stuff, so I slightly modified the recipe.  I hope you enjoy it!  You could probably use the same recipe and substitute another stone fruit if you'd like, such as peaches.  YUM!

Barefoot Contessa's Plum Tart
from FoodNetwork.com

Ingredients:

2 cups all-purpose flour {I used spelt flour}
3/4 cup finely chopped walnuts {I used organic raw walnuts}
3/4 cup light brown sugar, lightly packed {I used Rapadura sugar, which is less processed and also rich in iron- score!}
1 1/2 sticks cold unsalted butter, diced
1 egg yolk
2 pounds firm, ripe Italian prune plums, pitted and quartered lengthwise {I don't know what Italian prune plums are, but the ones I used were Texan :)}

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Then, prepare the plums...

Next, dice the butter. Make sure it's very cold and straight out of the fridge.

Combine the flour, walnuts, and sugar in a food processor or mixer. Add the butter and the egg yolk.

Pulse in food processor, or mix with an electric mixer, until crumbly. It doesn't take long!

Press 1 1/2 cups of the crumb mixture in an even layer into the bottom of a 9 1/2-inch springform or tart pan.

Arrange the plums in the pan, skin side down, to form a flower pattern; begin at the outside and work your way in.

Finally, sprinkle the rest of the crumb mixture evenly over the plums.

Bake the tart for 40 to 50 minutes, or until it's lightly browned and the plum juices are bubbling. Remove from the oven and cool for 10 minutes. Remove from the pan and transfer the tart to a flat plate. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Add a dollop of chocolate ice cream for my hubby...

...And vanilla bean coconut milk ice cream for me.

Nighttime picnic.

"Then followed that beautiful season... Summer....
Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical light; and the landscape
Lay as if new created in all the freshness of childhood."
~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

It was one of those summer nights when you just knew you were making a memory.  As the light was lowering in the sky, we gathered at our favorite place in Dallas, Southern Methodist University's campus, to set up a nighttime picnic.  It was Terrica's 28th birthday, and oh, how she loves picnics.  So before she arrived, Steven, our friend Michelle, and I set up a soft plaid blanket surrounded by lanterns, right near the fountain so we could feel its cool mist. 

Ever since living in Dallas, SMU's campus has been a safe haven for us, like our own private, beautiful park.  There is barely ever anyone there, especially at night.  The fountains that shine like gems and the enormous old pecan trees that form canopies over the squishy grass all say, "I am Dallas' best kept secret."

As the sun started to set, the fountain in the center of campus glowed even more brilliantly...

After a little while, Terrica, her husband Josh, and our friend Autumn all arrived, straight from yoga class, and we shared our picnic-y goodies.  Juicy, sweet watermelon, farm cheese, peanut butter and banana sandwiches, and for Terrica's birthday "cake" - Hail Merry Chocolate Tarts.  Mmmmm.  Take a bite, pass it on, take a bite, pass it on.

But mostly we just enjoyed the breezy evening, the cool mist spritzing us from the fountain, and being silly.

Autumn & Michelle with my buddha belly. Please notice the drip of watermelon juice about halfway down :)

Steven, Autumn, me and part of Michelle's head :)

Terrica's husband, Josh

It was a beautiful evening of community, celebrating Terrica's life - one that we are definitely blessed to have...

Terrica & Josh

...And an evening treasuring these last moments before our little girl arrives.

Nursery progress - sneak preview...

With much help from friends, family, and my husband, the master plan for the nursery is coming along! Talk about the nick of time - only 30 days left {if not less}!

I absolutely love expressing my creativity in this way, preparing a place for our little daughter.  Stay tuned for the completed room soon...

A lake with a dock and a hammock and a boat.

In honor of Memorial Day weekend when summer is unofficially welcomed, I wanted to share one of my favorite summer memories with you...

Five years and what seems like many moons ago, when I lived in Nashville, some friends and I spent time at a place called "Shiloh" on Smith Mountain Lake in Virginia.   This gorgeous place is also where What About Bob? was filmed, although it's called Lake Winnipesaukee in the movie.   More importantly, Smith Mountain Lake is the home of our friend Betty-Ashton's parents - Deke and Boo, two of the most generous people you will ever meet, who are constantly opening their spacious home to their children's friends, to neighbors, to strangers - really anyone who wants to come and enjoy the peace and natural beauty of Shiloh.  To young twenty-somethings living in Nashville, it was a retreat from our daily lives of jobs and schedules, a place where those of us with families in all different states could come together and be taken care of by someone else's mom for the weekend. 

An 8-hour drive away, it was worth every minute as we wound further and further out of the city and into the breathtaking Blue Ridge Mountains.  Finally, around midnight, as we slowly rolled down a tree-lined gravel driveway, we would spot Shiloh's warmly lit windows, beckoning us to come inside and rest.

Shiloh was built for company.  From the multiple sleeping quarters, to the huge L-shaped couches, to the drawers and bowls everywhere stocked with snacks and candy, this was a home used to having people around.  Love was worn into its furniture.  The two amazing weekends I spent at Shiloh, there were about 15 of us from Nashville.  By day, we relaxed in white lawn chairs on the sun-soaked private dock, rode in the speedboat with one of Betty-Ashton's brothers, jumped off the dock in crazy poses, and floated on rafts shaped like palm trees. 

By night, we curled and piled up on those L-shaped couches and watched movies, played guitars and games, sat in a row on the rocking chairs on the backporch, and inhaled the sounds of night in the mountains, a place where time stands still. 

All day long, we ate Boo's delicious cooking - giant salads, scrambled eggs with sausage - one amazing meal after another that she seemed to constantly be preparing, because with so many of us, once one meal was done, it was practically time to start on the next. 

Even with so many guests on a Sunday morning, "church" still happened at Shiloh.  Still hapazardly dressed in PJs and hair matted from swimming the previous day, we all gathered on the carpeted floor in Deke and Boo's bedroom, and Deke preached us a sermon from the treadmill.

One of my best life moments happened at Shiloh.  It was nothing monumental but a single memory where my surroundings were so perfect, and I felt so alive, so free, so in love with life.  It was a heavenly summer day, the kind where it's warm in the sun but not too hot, and a gentle breeze is blowing.  It was early morning at Shiloh, and no one else had yet awakened.  The bright sun glaring through the windows wooed me outside.  I walked down the hill barefoot through the soft grass of the backyard down to the dock and found the hammock under the enormous weeping willow tree.  For a few moments, I just swung in the hammock slowly, the branches of the weeping willow waving above me.  I heard nothing but the sounds of crickets and the lap of water against the boat in the boat dock.  There, I wrote this in my journal:

Could this be any more beautiful?  I can say that this is one of the most peaceful mornings I've ever experienced.  It's about 8:45am...I woke up naturally and tiptoed over to the window and peeked out the blinds.  Glorious sunshine, not a cloud in the sky.  I grabbed my journal and walked down here to the dock.  This is what I saw before me: The lake is glistening under the light of the morning sun.  There is not even the least bit of humidity and the sun shines brilliantly, lighting up the gorgeous green meadow across the lake.  A weeping willow hangs lazily over the water's edge and light shines through the threads on its branches as if through a little blond girl's hair.   This morning is the Sabbath.  I feel closer to You here than I do in a dark, cold church building.  And I'm so thankful you give us these little spots of heaven on earth...

Later that day, another experience I will never forget - Jen and I took out the kayaks for a peaceful paddle through the cove.  I recall the sun beating down on us and that I closed my eyes for a few seconds to feel its warmth as my oar made a hollow sound on the side of the boat.  There was a gentle, smooth resistance to my paddle in the calm lake waters.  As we glided through the cove, we were at the same level with the ducks and birds skimming the water, surrounded by nothing but green.  It was one of the most peaceful times I can remember...

These memories make me realize that I have become more of a "lake" person over the last several years, and I long for a lakehouse of my own one day - one with a firepit and a small dock with a hammock and a willow tree.  A place where summers are warm but not scorching, and autumn leaves begin to flash in the trees come early September.  A place where people feel warm and welcome and enveloped by trees and water.

But I do not have that now.  And that's okay.  So I will treasure my memories of Shiloh and remember the lessons I learned there - that we desperately need moments of peace and fun and rest.  And that we are made for the enjoyment of the things God has created - the community of people, and the beauty of nature.

Past Memorial Day weekend posts:

2009: First Pool Day.

2008: The Welcoming of Summer.

2007: Simple Truth on Memorial Day.

The Summer Day.

I've been wanting to get into Mary Oliver's poetry lately, and then I saw this poem on another blog today.  It's beautiful...

The Summer Day
by Mary Oliver

Who made the world?
Who made the swan, and the black bear?
Who made the grasshopper?
This grasshopper, I mean--
     the one who has flung herself out of the grass,
     the one who is eating sugar out of my hand,
     who is moving her jaws back and forth instead of up and down--
     who is gazing around with her enormous and complicated eyes.
Now she lifts her pale forearms and thoroughly washes her face.
Now she snaps her wings open, and floats away.
I don't know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention, how to fall down
     into the grass, how to kneel in the grass,
     how to be idle and blessed, how to stroll through the fields,
     which is what I have been doing all day.
Tell me, what else should I have done?
Doesn't everything die at last, and too soon?
Tell me, what is it you plan to do
With your one wild and precious life?