Jan 11

3girlsandapug now has its own Facebook page. Become a fan of the page by following the link below.

http://www.facebook.com/business/dashboard/#/pages/3girlsandapug/419649240353

Jan 11

Last week I was busy working on other projects for the blog and unfortunately I wasn’t able to post for the rest of the week. My week away from posting will hopefully just make this site even better than before.

I will be back to regular posts beginning today. Be sure to check out all of the changes to come in 2010 at www.3girlsandapug.com.

Dec 25

Enjoy your day with your family and a replay of my holiday poem.

‘Twas the Pug Before Christmas

‘Twas just weeks before Christmas, when all through the house
not a creature was stirring, not our pug (or even a mouse).
The stockings were hung, Charlie Brown Christmas was on the flat screen,
The house was adorned in perfection – it was quite the holiday scene.

The children were upstairs playing in their room,
Except just one who snuggled up with me as if she missed the womb.
In our moment of bliss between she and me,
I turned to her and said, “Plug in the tree.”

When all of a sudden there arose such a clatter.
As Aggie leaped off the couch as if something was the matter.
She turned to give us quite the glare,
Her giant pug eyes wide, not a blink in her stare.

Between anxious spins and puggy yaps
She used her paw to give us pesky taps.
Faster spinning and jumps so lively and quick,
We thought maybe she had seen a glance of good ol’ St. Nick.

My daughter and I looked at one another in awe.
What had we done to create such hoopla?
Then the answer came from the one so young and sweet:
“Mom, instead of ‘Plug in the tree,’ she thought you said, ’Pug gets a treat.’”

Dec 15

jamba juice flatbread

Jamba Juice is offering a FREE California Flatbread today, Tuesday, December 15th from 11AM – 2PM. Not all locations sell the flatbreads, so you might want to call first. Enjoy!

Dec 15

Notice all the changes to my blog design? I’d love feedback — honest feedback — from everyone on the redesign. Write a comment and let me know your thoughts.

Thanks for sharing in the joy of the first year of my blogging journey.

There’s more to come in the weeks to come and into 2010.

Nov 26

Enjoy your wonderful day with friends and family. See you on Monday for more joy in the journey at 3 Girls and a Pug.

Oct 28

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Today marks the 150th post for 3girlsandapug. Looking forward to 150 more.

Oct 23

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I’m working on a new look for 3girlsandapug.com. Please be patient as I work out the bugs in the new format.

Oct 20

I know it’s time to reorganize our pantry shelves when the kids, my husband, and even I find myself opening the door, looking at a full set of shelves, and thinking, We don’t have anything good to eat. Really, a pantry is not that much different than the grocery store shelves and we need to display things in a pretty, organized fashion in order to make our inventory move. Otherwise we’ll be stuck with items that are out of date and undesireable. Ulitmately, this costs money and sending us back to the store to spend more.
Here are 5 easy steps to getting your pantry open for business again.

1. Dedicate some time. I recommend doing this when no one is around and your kitchen is already clean. You’ll need lots of counter space and few interuptions. Nothing’s worse than “helpers” on this project.

2. Take it all out. Remove every single item from every single check. Try to group like items together on your countertop to save time when you put it all back together. Wipe down each shelf with warm soapy water and then pat them dry with a towel if needed. My daughter spilled a whole box of quinoa in our pantry once and I had to use our vacuum attachment to get them all. (FYI…quinoa is a small bead-sized grain that is incredibly hard to pick up.)

3. Toss it. Sadly, you’ll find items on your shelves that have expired or weren’t stored properly (thanks to small hands that don’t like to properly close packaging or use clips). Remove what you can’t use and add items to your grocery list to replace those items you have discarded.

4. Restore order. Now you’re ready to put it all away in an orderly fashion. I try to dedicate a shelf to similar items such as spices and oil, grains and pastas, canned items, and snacks.

5. Use logic. I put the lesser-used items on top and keep the snack foods (healthy ones only) on the bottom pantry shelf for the kids to access easily. They know this is their zone to pilfer from during snack time with independence.

Question: What items do you always have in your pantry?

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Oct 19

sound of music

Several nights ago my children begged me to let them watch, “The Sound of Music.” I had to marvel at what a different upbringing my children enjoy when I compare it to my own non-musical childhood. Growing up, we watched that classic tale every year on TV, too, but we were not a musical family at all. No one would mistake us for an Osmond—that’s for sure. But my husband is quite the music man. While he has never performed professionally or been paid for the boisterous sounds he creates, he has brought audiences to their knees begging for more. (I won’t bring up the fact that all his groupies were under the age of 5.) My husband even joked (somewhat seriously) about trying out for the Wiggles when the yellow Wiggle became ill and had to quit the show. I actually think being a Wiggle isn’t a half-bad fallback career for him.

He did come from a singing family and all of my children love to sing. They sing in the shower, in the car, and in public. All things I never did. We never even so much sang a Christmas carol in my home. Not once did we gather around a piano and sing as a family. Not even one bar of “Jingle Bells” rings out in my mental family scrapbooks. There was no caroling in my home. There was no joining in with the neighbors for a fun game of “Name that Tune.” We didn’t like to sing. We didn’t want others around us to break out in song. And we were fine with it. You could probably add dancing to that list of things we didn’t do either. My brother still has a fear of Irish Jig dancers to this day. The sight of Michael Flatley makes him nauseated so naturally I thought it would be funny to send him a copy of Lord of the Dance for Christmas one year. I’m not sure if he’s over the trauma of opening his gift and seeing Ol’ Mr. Flatley’s face grinning back at him. Poor guy. It was supposed to be funny, but in my family we can’t even joke about not liking singing and dancing.

But again, I go back to my adoring daughters who live for song and dance and I wonder, Is it their paternal DNA that makes them so blessed with great pipes, or is it because my husband answers questions with song lyrics and belts out the words to classic rock tunes acapella while doing dishes? Who will ever know? But what I do know for sure is that genetic tests could prove there is nare an ancestor of mine who has a musical bone in his or her body. I’m just glad I married up in this area or else I’d be trapped in a car listening to three girls belt out the words to every Taylor Swift song in an unmentionable key.
Question: What great trait do you think you’ve nurtured or passed on genetically to your child?

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