Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Our Daily Schedule/ Why I like my iPhone

Those of you who know me know that I'm not a structured person by nature; I'm an artist. So, I find ways to help with our now highly structured lives. Here is our DAILY SCHEDULE:


  • 6:00 AM Mike go walking/to the Y, Dolores check calendar, read, pray
  • 6:30 Dolores shower, dress, start some laundry, fold and put away clean laundry
  • 6:50 Mike shower, dress
  • 7:00 Get Boys up, dress - Dolores set out clothes, Mike help them dress
  • 7:20 Feed Timmy by G-Tube, give antibiotic
  • 7:30 Give Joel breathing Treatment, check backpacks again
  • 7:45-55 Mike put Boys on school bus
  • 8:00 Dolores get Girls up, bathe and dress them
  • 8:15 Meds & Breakfast for all at home (including Lucy, all meals)- Mike fix breakfast
  • 8:35-45 Mike put Ella on school bus
  • 8:45 Calendaring, Plan Supper, Errands, Phone calls, secretary work
  • 9:30 Mike leave for work
  • 9:30 Feed Timmy/G-tube: Give Reglan (weekdays@school)
  • [9:35 Sundays: Get in car, go to church (Mike to Church at 7:00 am on Sundays)]
  • 10:10 Snack, feed Lucy thickened bottle
  • 10:30 Nap for Lucy
  • 11:20-30 Give Joel breathing treatment (weekdays@school, prn)
  • 11:30 Feed Timmy/g-tube (weekdays@school)
  • 11:40-50 Get Ella off school bus
  • 12:00 PM Get Lucy up
  • 12:10 Lunch for all at home
  • 1:30 Feed Timmy/G-tube (weekdays@school)
  • 2:45-55 Get boys off school bus
  • 3:00 Joel breathing treatment
  • 3:10 Snack, feed Lucy thickened bottle
  • 3:20 Naptime for Lucy and Ella
  • 3:30 Feed Timmy/G-tube: give Reglan
  • 4:30 Get Ella & Lucy up
  • 5:00 start Supper
  • 5:30 Feed Timmy/G-tube
  • 6:30 Mike gets home (except on the nights he goes to the church or visits)
  • 6:30 Eat Supper together, Family Time
  • 7:30 Little Girls (meds) PJs, Family Prayers, feed Lucy thickened bottle, put little girls in bed
  • 7:45 Start Joel's breathing treatment, Feed Timmy/G-tube: antibiotic.
  • 8:00 Bathe the little boys, PJs,
  • 8:15 put the boys to bed... Mike sit with them until they go to sleep, Dolores put in more laundry, fold and put away clean laundry, Clean up
  • 9:30 give Timmy feeding/G-tube: give Reglan-- while he is in bed.
  • 9:40 Mike & I talk together, pray
  • 10:00 Our bedtime, Yay!
Whew! We have to be flexible because we're human and fun is also necessary and sometimes we get behind but we still have to get everything in there.

Often one or more of the kids wake up at night and need attention; Joel often climbs in our bed when he's sick. He rumbles the bed with his lungs and sleeps like a windmill. I worry all night, take his temp when he's hot and give him a breathing treatment.

Doctor appointments in other towns are usually on Mondays, which Mike has off. In-Home Early Intervention Therapies are squeezed in where they will fit and generally not on Mondays. If an appointment doesn't get on the calendar it will get missed.

The other day when the receptionist at a doctor's office said, "We're updating our files... Do you have a job?" I said "No." But I felt like I was lying... strange culture we have, that doesn't give credit for full-time parenting.

Now I'm not complaining, I love my "job", this is what I want to do!  I'm just stating facts. Life is a growth process and we each have our own "assignments". I'm sure if you look at your day as closely as I have, you'd find it just as busy.

So how do I like my iPhone? Let me count my favorite ways:

1. I can have as many alarms set to remind me of things as I need. I have 32 at last count, with various sounds. Joel can often tell me by sound what they're for. The screen brings up a message telling me what's next and will alarm until I turn it off so I can't miss it, even if I'm on the phone or if I left it in another room (unless Joel gets to it first and touches the screen).


2. Mike and I can easily see what's on eachother's iPhone calendars because whatever I put on mine automatically goes onto his and his/mine. Very helpful in scheduling the kids' many appointments!


3. I can send and receive email anywhere, anytime, including at the hospital - wherever there is cell or open internet service.


4. Same with the Internet, which helps find things on the go.


5. I keep the iPhone in my pocket and can use it at convenient moments while watching the kids if I need to. I can take notes when i think of things and email them or save them to use as reminders, grocery lists, or future blog posts when I have a moment to sit down at the desktop computer and do something with my blog. (i.e: Although I haven't figured out how to post more than just titles from my iPhone, I can pre-write posts and copy/paste it to the blog from an email I've sent myself to the regular computer).


6. I can take pictures anywhere and use them quickly by email. For instance, one day I was waiting in the car with the kids while Mike ran into a store to get something we needed. He took a picture of the item and emailed it to me. I was able to see it right away and say "yes, that's right, buy it". Pretty cool, eh?


7. The GPS feature helps me find my way around; I am directionally impaired so this application is priceless.


8. It's a phone at the same time, all-in-one.

So, forgive us if we've become "iMama and iPapa", but these phones are what I'd call "adaptive technology"!!!

2 comments:

BJ Barnes said...

I felt tired just Reading your list of daily do's! :) I don't think I could live your life and am amazed and grateful you can! :)
I too love my life and choose to be living it as I do! I also have chosen to be at home, (which I'm grateful I'm able to do), and have more to do than I have time in which to do it! My list is very different from yours, yet how nice that we each are doing what we love! :) Life is good! :)

Dolores said...

Yes, it is good to be able to be doing what we love!