enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

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I have been meaning to get a post like this together for ages. It's taken forever because the act of "documenting my days" leaves less time to actually "do the work" of my days.

There is a huge difference between our daycare days (currently T/Th) and my mama days (currently MWF). This is what a "normal" Tuesday work day (yesterday) looks like for me. I've tried to work in some of my "secrets to success" as well (though the real secret is to stay off social media). Later this month I'd love to share a "normal" mama day looks like for me too.

For the most part, I wake up between 6 and 7 with Ellerie these days. Today, I woke up at 7am and she was still asleep (due to the fact that she was awake at 4:50am and Paul got her back to bed). I was able to have some breakfast, scroll Instagram, read the four blogs in my reader that still post and wake up.

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She started making noise around 7:30 (again, I cannot stress enough how un-normal this late start was) and when I went in she was already asking for "BOOK?" We diaper changed and grabbed a book and headed out to the kitchen where I drank coffee and she sort of picked at her breakfast of pancake, sausage (both reheated from the weekend) and half a banana.

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Sidenote confession : thinking about, prepping, and worrying about toddler food is my least favorite part of parenthood. GIVE ME ALL THE OTHER PARTS (including 4am wake-ups) and take the food back please. I realize it's all a stage and this is a phase, but man, the feeding part stresses me out. What she will and won't eat, how much she will and won't eat, how bizarre it as that just yesterday she could not get enough of something she now despises…it drives me up a wall.

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After she eats a few bites we read a few books, watch a bit of Daniel Tiger and read a few more books. In the middle, I'm prepping the house for the robot vacuum which means clearing the floor and moving the furniture. In a perfect world, the robot would clean all the floors every Tuesday and Thursday but only about one out of every four days do I prep the house well enough that it doesn't just get stuck on a toy and beep at me for three hours. (This is pretty much the only good cleaning our house gets on a weekly basis, so I should be better at it.)

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Around 8:10 I get Ellerie dressed and we fold her laundry. Then (hooray!) she eats more banana before we load up the car and head to daycare. It takes less than 10 minutes to get there, drop-off goes well and I'm back home at 8:40.

My work days are WORK DAYS. I work. I don't do chores, I don't run errands, I don't schedule doctors appointments or get the car fixed. It's like going to a "real job" two days a week and I try to treat it as such.

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The first thing I do is deal with email. I no longer read email on my phone so my inbox hasn't been touched since around 7pm the night before when Paul was putting Ellerie to sleep. I recently realized that I should only "check email" when I am in the mood to make decisions. Email, if you actually want to get through it, is not about "checking." Instead, it's about making decisions. Tiny decisions and huge decisions. Emails that need a response usually are asking a question and so I want to be in the mood to answer questions. I've found it helps to just knock them out one at a time during a few longer chunks of time each day.

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I've talked about this, but I say "No" a lot. Saying "No" is the only reason I am able to stay sane and keep this ship afloat. No regrets, no hard feelings, no guilt, just a realistic understanding that there are only 24 hours in the day and the ones that belong to me without additional commitments are precious.

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Email takes me about 20 minutes. I love how gmail sets it up. I have real emails from humans in the front tab, then mass emails (which get a quick skim, possible read and then deleted) and then emails from robots (mostly sales, paypal notifications, electric bills, shipping notifications and notices that my library books are due) on the right tab. Those emails need to be read and processed, but never need a response.

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After email I take a look at my list (which is currently just print outs of the GTWB pages that I've adapted – I too, am anxiously waiting for July). I have three blog posts that I'd love to get written today. This one, the DITL that will go live on Wednesday, Ellerie's film photos from March (which will go live Thursday) and then a post about collaborating on GTWB that will go up next week. The Ellerie film post is the easiest so I start there.

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I have a podcast call scheduled at 10am and so I make sure to eat something before that. I am like a hobbit (with low blood sugar) and I eat six small meals every day. Today it's ham and cheese on sourdough. While I eat (at my desk) I post a photo to both the @gettoworkbook and @elisejoy accounts. I don't take time to scroll and see what other folks are up to.

While I wait for the podcast I get started on this blog post.

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I'm chatting today at 10 am with Jessica Turner who wrote The Fringe Hours for a podcast episode that will go live later this month. Jessica is a pro, she's done a bunch of podcasts already, so the interview is quick and easy. It will take no editing which is my absolute fave. We wrap up the call around 10:45, I turn the robot vacuum back on and I get back to writing this blog post.

It's currently 10:57am and I'm "caught up" for the day… so I check email. (Nothing exciting, obviously.) So I pack a few orders that need to go out, check the real mail and deposit a check. I check IG – to answer questions – not scroll the feed.

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My GTWB sticker proof came back. These small circles will be used to fancy up the bubble wrap that protects the books in their cardboard packaging. Getting all the packaging materials secured is on my list for this week.

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It's 11:15 and I have to regroup and focus on getting my collaboration post written. This is just the first pass, basically a brain dump of text and it takes exactly 25 minutes to write 930 words. Afterwards, probably after lunch, I'll go through, link and add graphics/photos. On Thursday, I'll read through again and edit for clarity.

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It's 11:40, I check email again and magically, not a single person has sent me something. Virtual high-fives, Internet! I grab my phone and go to have lunch – which today is veggie sushi I picked up from the grocery store yesterday afternoon. I try to read a bit during lunch but can't focus today…I'm thinking about this post.

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I re-gram a photo from @thecraftedlife who shared my GTWB business card on the GTWB feed. One of the reasons why I created a separate account for the book is to do things like this; I want to be able to share how people are using GTWB in their own lives. I love the idea of a feed full of various handwriting, careers, projects, lists and inspiration. My @elisejoy account will always be a mix of personal photos, Ellerie, plants, food and work. But the planner feed will focus exclusively and un-apologetically on the planner.

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It's 12:08 pm and I am going to get back to work pulling photos for the GTWB collaboration post.

It's 1:22 pm and I'm cross-eyed. But the collaboration post is done. You'll see that next week! My eyes need a break in a big way so I'm going to hop in the shower before my next podcast call at 2pm.

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I have a few minutes at my desk to read through Allie and Claire's Charge Up Introverts which is what my afternoon podcast is about. Then I'm grabbing water and tidying up my desk before we start.

Annnnd, that was quick and easy. I never schedule two podcasts a day, but I think I might start. It's nice to be in the zone and it will be nice to not have to worry about recording much the next few weeks.

Again, because I'm a hobbit, another quick snack break. Greek yogurt and strawberries at my desk while I write the podcast shownotes and edit those two shows. They are super good ones … no major edits aside from music adding. Usually I pull quotes for IG during the show but missed it this time so I'm listening while I edit photos for this post. I'll write the quotes and snap a photo with my phone so the Wednesday the episode is live (and I'm on Mama duty) I have that photo ready to roll for IG.

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It's now 3:35 and I'm "done" for now. I'm going to walk up to the grocery store (it's a 15 minute walk) and figure out what dinner will be. This is my "big exercise" for the day and a very valuable re-charge. I listen to podcasts the whole time.

I'm home at about 4:10 (with stuff for fajitas for dinner). Paul texted at 4:05 that he's on his way to pick up Ellerie which gives me awhile to make adjustments and add links to this post, deal with email one final time for the day, wash the dishes that have accumulated in the sink and start dinner prep.

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Ellerie and Paul get home at 5pm. I miss the moment they walk through the door on camera but catch it in real life. Dinner is mostly prepped so we finish and Ellerie snacks on cheese. If my child could survive on cheese alone, parenthood would be the easiest gig.

We eat, then do bath and read stories, play with blocks and put stuffed animals down for a nap on repeat for about an hour after dinner and then around 6:40, Paul starts the pre-bed reading, rocking, milk process and I go to the office to upload the week's podcast episode and finish up this post. Usually I try really hard to be "done" with work before P and E get home, but podcast nights are always a little off.

Paul will study until 8pm and then we'll watch an episode of Game of Thrones. We just started season 4 on Netflix discs. We will be in bed around 9:30 and I'll read until 10.

The end! πŸ˜‰

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REMINDER : Today is the last day to get a free print with your GET TO WORK BOOK pre-order. A few of you wanted updates on sales! As of 7pm Tuesday I am at 21.6% of my 3 month sales goal. Progress for sure, but I've got a long way to go.

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Today on ELISE GETS CRAFTY I'm chatting with Amy Tan about her creative career path. It's pretty twisty with great lessons. Subscribe or stream here!

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77 responses to “how my work days roll”

  1. Ashley Avatar

    Really loved getting a glance into your day! I always admire anyone who can work from home, I would find all my “chores” to be too distracting to get anything done, on top of that I’m a master procrastinator! I have also started having “rules” around the amount of time I spend on social media – more about being present in the moments and savouring the small amount of time I have with my family each day since returning back to work, but it’s been so helpful and freeing.
    Lastly, thank you for your sidenote confession on kids and food. Going into this parenting gig food was the least of my worries and now it’s the bane of my existence. Honestly, who knew that food would be the biggest stress and less desired task each day?! In the end I’ve resigned to the fact that we can only do our best to offer them a variety of healthy foods each day – what they actually eat can’t really be forced πŸ™‚ you’re doing an amazing job, keep on keepin on!

    Like

  2. Michelle Avatar

    Awesome post, Elise! Really interesting. I would LOVE to see what a “mama day” looks like. I’m pregnant with my first and can’t get enough of that kind of stuff. πŸ™‚

    Like

  3. Hanna Avatar

    Loved today’s post! As a twist of fate, I’m currently working on my own business from home, and finding a good workday balance has been a challenge. After almost 3 months, I’m finally finding my groove and getting more done every day! Thanks for sharing your day with us! πŸ™‚

    Like

  4. Valerie Avatar
    Valerie

    I am a regular office type worker and your days just fascinate me.

    Like

  5. Sarah Alsey Avatar

    This might be my new favorite post! I loved seeing the “how”.

    Like

  6. Jamie Bagley Avatar

    Hey girl, loved this post! I noticed you listen to podcasts on your walk, have you done a post of podcasts you love? I’m always looking for new ones. πŸ™‚

    Like

  7. Kelly Avatar

    Thanks for sharing your day! And, I just ordered my GTWB. Can’t wait, and am so excited for you. πŸ™‚

    Like

  8. klr Avatar
    klr

    I really enjoyed this post, it’s interesting to see you work / keep motivation. In total agreement that staying off social media is proportional to getting work done.
    On the sidenote, I really hate dishing kiddo advice because it’s not universal as each child and family unit is different. BUT smoothies and making smoothie popsicles with the leftovers has changed my life. My toddler loves them, and especially in popsicle format using munchkin molds. When he doesn’t eat more than two bites at dinner, it makes me feel better knowing he’s eating a mango / spinach or cherry / broccoli popsicle for “dessert”.

    Like

  9. Molly Avatar
    Molly

    I’m totally with you on toddler eating. My 17 month old could also easily eat cheese all day every day:) I read once to think about a balanced week of nutrition (rather than day) and that helps calm my nerves a bit:/ Thank god for avocados!

    Like

  10. Leah Noble Avatar

    I loved this!!! It is so inspiring to see how you spend your days and get things done.

    Like

  11. mloo Avatar
    mloo

    I lovelovelove this kind of posts!!!

    Like

  12. Christina Avatar
    Christina

    I also love these kind of posts. Keep them coming’

    Like

  13. Misti Avatar

    I’ll just join the ‘love this’ bandwagon! Looking forward to the Fringe Hours podcast!

    Like

  14. Leigh Anne Avatar
    Leigh Anne

    What is it with kids and cheese! My 9 and 5 year old would also happily eat nothing but dairy and pasta all day long. This was an awesome post. Glimpses behind the scenes are some of my favorite blog posts.
    Also, thank you for recommending the Invisibilia podcast. I’ve listened to the first two and love them. I’m fascinated by how the brain works and affects our lives πŸ™‚

    Like

  15. Lauren Avatar

    I love these kinds of posts. It’s super helpful to see what a real life day looks like and how much discipline is needed to actually do the work you dream about doing. Plus, your family is so cute and you’re getting things done πŸ™‚

    Like

  16. katie Avatar

    Phew! Your day sounds intense! Really interesting to read about how focused you are to get everything accomplished in the days you have without Ellerie. Thanks for sharing.

    Like

  17. Pattie Avatar
    Pattie

    Would you mind sharing the names of the four blogs in your reader that you read each morning?

    Like

  18. Anna Avatar

    I always love these posts- fun to see how your workdays have changed and stayed the same as your family and career has changed over the years.
    And your comment that checking email is about making decisions was a big lightbulb moment for me. We tend to treat email like it’s this annoying but straightforward task we have to get through before we can do the real work- but I know in my job, email (for better or worse!) often is the work.

    Like

  19. melissa Avatar

    OK…Toddler Food….I had to laugh because I’m literally sitting in bed dreading breakfast. I have a two year old and you never know what she’ll request or insist on eating. Yesterday was left over mac and cheese with bacon for breakfast. Gross and hilarious all at once. I wish you so much luck in the food department. If you find any tricks, please share!

    Like

  20. Annette Avatar
    Annette

    Love the post. I only read four blogs anymore and your is the first on my list each morning!

    Like

  21. emily hassman Avatar
    emily hassman

    1, I love reading this because I fantasize about ditching my 8-5 and doing “something creative”… but it’s hard to get specific about what I actually would want my days to look like, when it’s so different from my working-mama daily grind in the office.
    2, I finally ordered my get to work book today πŸ™‚ I think it’s truly amazing that you’re 20% of the way to your first goal, and you don’t even have a physical product to ship yet! Can’t wait to get my hands on that book.

    Like

  22. Elise Avatar

    I should! Right now I listen to this american life, 99% invisible, reply all and also recommend old eps of after the jump and invisibilia.

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  23. Elise Avatar

    THANK YOU!

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  24. Elise Avatar

    Great tip!

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  25. Elise Avatar

    Good idea!

    Like

  26. Courtney Avatar
    Courtney

    I’d be interested to hear from you about the serious decline in regularly scheduled blogging… I follow lots of blogs but it’s down to 5-6 that are posting regularly.

    Like

  27. andrea Avatar

    Such a great insight in how your (work)days roll. Love how focused you are and that you manage to not scroll through your IG-feed while posting something there. IG is probably my biggest “problem” πŸ™‚

    Like

  28. Cameron Hernandez Avatar
    Cameron Hernandez

    Thanks for sharing, you get tons done during those few hours!! I also work from home (as a virtual tax preparer) and it is a little crazy this week with kiddos home for spring break. You have made me think about that it doesn’t need to be all or nothing, i.e. I can have mom time 3 days a week and two full days of work. I will look into two days of daycare for my baby. That is so much better than trying to do mommy duties, chores and work everyday and not succeeding.

    Like

  29. Susan Avatar

    Don’t stress about toddler eating. I swear it will sort itself out. We went through eating hell with both our kids at that age and I’m so glad to say they are normal, if slightly adventurous eaters now!

    Like

  30. Gemma Avatar

    I’ve loved reading this and can totally relate to so much of your day! My work days differ each week as my step-children live with us on alternate weeks which means I have to adapt my workflow to fit!

    Like

  31. Amanda - Small Home Big Start Avatar

    Great post! It really helped me think about how I could manage my day differently. Thanks for sharing!

    Like

  32. Hannah Avatar
    Hannah

    LOVE this! So interesting!

    Like

  33. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    Elise, when my now teenager girls were little, they drove me nuts with eating too. I had a wonderful pediatrician tell me to strive for one good meal-she said if they eat one really good meal a day, you’re good. My one daughter barely ate a thing until she was in kindergarten-now both girls are still very petite and thin, but incredibly healthy. Just keep offering good food and try not to stress.

    Like

  34. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    My super nosy self loves these kind of posts! I also work from home and have a 12 month old daughter so this resonates with me on multiple levels. I’d love to implement a few days of day-care into our routine to feel like I’m actually WORKING. My mom comes to watch her most days, but even then I feel like I’m always “on” as a mom and it’s hard to focus on work. Also, I super admire your ability to stay off social media. It shouldn’t be so hard, but for some reason it is!

    Like

  35. Laura Hager Avatar

    I loved this! It’s so interesting to see what a real day looks like. We always see all the amazing stuff you work on, but it’s nice to know how the work gets done. I want to have my own business one day, so it’s great to see how others get to work at home. Thanks so much for sharing!
    Laura
    http://laurahager.blogspot.com

    Like

  36. Katie Avatar
    Katie

    I have to say that feeding a toddler is the hardest, most frustrating thing I have ever done. My girl is nearly 5 now and she is still particular about what she eats, but now she can be reasoned with and offered small rewards ( like 1 chocolate covered raisin) for eating new foods. There is no reasoning with a two year old.
    When my second child arrived I had no choice but to LET GO of a lot of that guilt and stress in order to stay sane. I am so much more relaxed now about food. Our job as parents is to provide the food, not to force them to eat it. Just do your best! Also, if your child sees that you are stressed about what they are eating or not eating, they will be stressed out too. I learned that the hard way. Do your best to make mealtimes a positive experience. It does get easier!

    Like

  37. Kim B. Avatar
    Kim B.

    You are always so generous and open. Thank you.

    Like

  38. Kim B. Avatar
    Kim B.

    Yes, this. It really is true!!! When I try to think of how to describe to others what I “do” in life, I think to myself . . . well I sit at the computer and email a bunch, and I talk to people on the phone a bunch . .. my job really is to communicate and to explain some of the (sometimes crazy, sometimes logical) US government regulations that we have to live by in my particular environment, and also to make a few things happen. But it’s true, each email is a decision — how to respond, how to treat each tasking or question or even challenge or expressed frustration.

    Like

  39. Jamie Avatar

    Don’t stress the food! My 2.5 year old will scarf down carrots one day and refuse them the next; some days all he wants is “Wheat Mins” and others he surprises me by being totally into my pulled pork sandwich with slaw and onion chips on it… Just like everyone else says, offer good foods, EXPECT their appetites to be inconsistent, and let go of the stress. They really do seem to eat what they need when they need it.
    On another note, I would totally love to live your life. I’m working toward taking a day off my “real” job each week so I can have time to be creative again. Working full time and raising a baby is tough!

    Like

  40. Johanna Avatar

    Yes! Double this. My son is turning 4 this summer and I SO remember this time of food craziness, although I must have banned most of it from my mind as I can not for the life of me recall any details. He started daycare/kindergarden/whatever the right term might be when he was 1,5 and the first thing served at lunchtime is raw veggies. He never ate those at home, but being offered them over and over and over again each day turned him into a cucumber-bell pepper-tomato-carrot-avocado-eating kid, which still surprises me to no end. I once heard or read that it takes kids 20 times of trying something to decide wether they like the taste or not (or to come around eating it?) but man, who has the nerves to do this?? I sure didn’t. So glad for daycare (even though us parents do the cooking πŸ˜‰ ). Hang in there, Elise and Ellerie!

    Like

  41. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    hey! there are really more than four but the ones I can count on for regular daily updates (these days) are a cup of jo, style by emily henderson and a beautiful mess. πŸ™‚

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  42. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    whoohoo! thank you!

    Like

  43. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    I don’t have too much to say on it, mostly because I am not sure what happened. Actually, here are my theories :
    1. the original “crop” of bloggers is growing up, starting families and pulling back from what they were sharing online and we haven’t found the new crop yet.
    2. people don’t have the energy to produce the magazine style quality that is expected from blogs these days.
    3. more folks are reading on mobile and it’s hard and annoying to comment on mobile so comments have decreased which makes bloggers feel like no one is reading or engaging / sense of community has decreased.
    4. bloggers are turning to other forms of social to share their lives and work.
    whew. πŸ˜‰ I am sure it’s more complex than that, but those are some ideas. πŸ™‚

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  44. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    yes, getting a FULL DAY was a gamechanger for me. It’s expensive to send her to daycare but worth the time for me (and I generate more income when I am not trying to juggle her too.) Good luck Mama!

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  45. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    thank you!! yes, I always remember that my brother ate about 4 foods for 18 years and he is a healthy functioning member of society. πŸ™‚ thank you!

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  46. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    wonderful tip! love this and idea to look at the week as a whole instead of the day. πŸ™‚

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  47. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    Our job as parents is to provide the food, not to force them to eat it.
    …LOVE THIS! πŸ™‚

    Like

  48. Kat Post Avatar
    Kat Post

    Great post! Always curious about how bloggers’ days go! And I need you to explain the tabs on gmail???? I did not know you could do that! Looks like it could help me alot- any tips would be appreciated!
    ps- as a mother of 3 and a preschool teacher, let me just tell you that your toddler is doing what all toddler’s do- the pickiest eaters on the planet! She’ll out grow it! xo

    Like

  49. Katie Avatar

    You mean toddlers can’t survive on cheese alone? (just kidding… mostly…) Z-man is getting older, and definitely showing more of his own little personal desires. Which sometimes conflict with what Mama thinks is best for him. I’m with you on the “hating food” bit! It feels so stressful trying to figure out what would be best for them, and making sure they have a decently balanced diet! Doing it on a small income makes it even more stressful (for me, at least).
    Loving hearing about your work day! Your podcast is totally my favorite to listen to… I love putting it on during the stressful time of feeding so my mind can be happily occupied while I’m trying to keep the sippy cup and cheerios from being flung on the floor! πŸ˜€

    Like

  50. Krista Avatar

    Man I love your blog. I love what you do here and how inspiring you are. Even the mundane stuff is cool to hear about. Sorry, but it’s the nerd in me that loves spooking around someone’s day. This was a great post. Keep on doing what you’re doing because it’s awesome Elise.

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