Anonymous wrote: I feel you on the healthy protein breakfast. Here's a recipe that I pre-make for the week.
(This makes one small pan, like a square cake pan)
--2/3 of a tub of cottage cheese
--three eggs
-a few handfuls of shredded cheddar cheese
--A few handfuls of chopped frozen spinach ( I defrost it but I think you can get away with adding it frozen.
Combine eggs, cottage cheese, spinach and a handful of cheddar in the square cake pan. Sprinkle cheddar cheese evenly over the top. Bake at 425 for 15-19 min (until bubbly-crispy-melty on the top).
You can sub spinach for broccoli, you can add onions/garlic, you can add sausage etc. It's so versatile. It freezes beautifully and a portion defrosts in one minute. I make it and cut it into squares, put into foil packets, and freeze and defrost one every morning.
This might get a little spendy with three kids, but Trader Joe's sells several varieties of pre-cooked egg fritata things (I only have one kid so...) I give them to my 8 yo on the weekend and then go back to bed.
Anonymous wrote:I am in bed by 8pm due to the morning rush and needing to get up at 5am. I love it! Lights out in my house early so kids get a full nights rest. Nothing better than my bed and sleep.
It's Sunday now and I slept 10 hours last night! Even with 8-9 hours per night on weeknights, I still sleep extra on weekends..
Anonymous wrote:I miss the days of waking up, having coffee, getting ready for work and walking out the door. For the past 8 years I have been running every morning from the minute I wake up until the minute I drop kids off and start work. Lunches, breakfast, backpacks, water, feed the dog, clean up all the dishes, get kids changed, etc. By 7:30am I am exhausted and the day hasn't even started! Just a vent post - I am so tired!
Anonymous wrote: I feel you on the healthy protein breakfast. Here's a recipe that I pre-make for the week.
(This makes one small pan, like a square cake pan)
--2/3 of a tub of cottage cheese
--three eggs
-a few handfuls of shredded cheddar cheese
--A few handfuls of chopped frozen spinach ( I defrost it but I think you can get away with adding it frozen.
Combine eggs, cottage cheese, spinach and a handful of cheddar in the square cake pan. Sprinkle cheddar cheese evenly over the top. Bake at 425 for 15-19 min (until bubbly-crispy-melty on the top).
You can sub spinach for broccoli, you can add onions/garlic, you can add sausage etc. It's so versatile. It freezes beautifully and a portion defrosts in one minute. I make it and cut it into squares, put into foil packets, and freeze and defrost one every morning.
This might get a little spendy with three kids, but Trader Joe's sells several varieties of pre-cooked egg fritata things (I only have one kid so...) I give them to my 8 yo on the weekend and then go back to bed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids if you are saying you have done 8 years of this? They seem quite capable to help. They can pack their own backpacks (my k kid does it), they get fill up their own water bottles (my k kid does it), they can feed the dog (pretty simple) and you can fix their lunch the night before so that all you need to do is zap it in the microwave the morning of.
OP - kids are 8, 6 and 3. Dog is still a puppy. By doing this for 8 years I mean some variation. At one point I was breastfeeding before I would drop off to daycare and getting pumped bottles together. Now its lunches and breakfast. Dog is too young for kids to help (beyond putting food in a bowl). They can't walk dog at all.
Um, whose idea was it to get the puppy?
I'm sorry for piling on, but surely, OP, you know a lot of your stress was self-inflicted, right?
Not OP, but nothing wrong with getting a puppy. The feeding could possibly be passed off to the 8yo. Or the older kids could do more of their own stuff while OP feeds the 3yo and puppy.
It is bad to get a puppy when your day is exhausting by 7:30 am. I feel bad for the puppy. No way is she getting what she needs in terms of care, attention, exercise and training. Then everyone is gonna be pissed at the dog because it had no training.
Op here - this I take exception to. The puppy is well taken care of and goes on 3-4 walks a day. We have already done training and will do extensive training in the month to come (needs to be 6 months old for the course). She is a puppy - of course we get frustrated but I know it’s not the puppy’s fault.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids if you are saying you have done 8 years of this? They seem quite capable to help. They can pack their own backpacks (my k kid does it), they get fill up their own water bottles (my k kid does it), they can feed the dog (pretty simple) and you can fix their lunch the night before so that all you need to do is zap it in the microwave the morning of.
OP - kids are 8, 6 and 3. Dog is still a puppy. By doing this for 8 years I mean some variation. At one point I was breastfeeding before I would drop off to daycare and getting pumped bottles together. Now its lunches and breakfast. Dog is too young for kids to help (beyond putting food in a bowl). They can't walk dog at all.
Um, whose idea was it to get the puppy?
I'm sorry for piling on, but surely, OP, you know a lot of your stress was self-inflicted, right?
Not OP, but nothing wrong with getting a puppy. The feeding could possibly be passed off to the 8yo. Or the older kids could do more of their own stuff while OP feeds the 3yo and puppy.
It is bad to get a puppy when your day is exhausting by 7:30 am. I feel bad for the puppy. No way is she getting what she needs in terms of care, attention, exercise and training. Then everyone is gonna be pissed at the dog because it had no training.
Op here - this I take exception to. The puppy is well taken care of and goes on 3-4 walks a day. We have already done training and will do extensive training in the month to come (needs to be 6 months old for the course). She is a puppy - of course we get frustrated but I know it’s not the puppy’s fault.
OP - how does your dog get 3-4 walks a day? My husband and I both work from home so I know how our dogs get that kind of treatment but I assume since you and your husband both work out of the house you are paying someone to walk the dog? If so, think about other areas you can outsource.
Also, why doesn't your husband do anything in the mornings? How early do you guys get up? I get it, mornings can be crazy, but it sounds like he does NOTHING, in which case you need some help around the house morning or evening (and you better be able to afford it or he needs to find another job!).
You can make scrambled eggs ahead of time and reheat them. You can also make breakfast burritos or bagel egg sandwiches ahead of time and reheat in the morning. My kids know if they want eggs in the morning we have to plan ahead the night before and I will make time for that but generally speaking breakfast is something that can be microwaved or toasted or eaten cold. I'm huge on filling breakfasts and protein, and I eat eggs a lot, but I make my breakfast after the kids get on the bus. Simplify until you're less exhausted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids if you are saying you have done 8 years of this? They seem quite capable to help. They can pack their own backpacks (my k kid does it), they get fill up their own water bottles (my k kid does it), they can feed the dog (pretty simple) and you can fix their lunch the night before so that all you need to do is zap it in the microwave the morning of.
OP - kids are 8, 6 and 3. Dog is still a puppy. By doing this for 8 years I mean some variation. At one point I was breastfeeding before I would drop off to daycare and getting pumped bottles together. Now its lunches and breakfast. Dog is too young for kids to help (beyond putting food in a bowl). They can't walk dog at all.
Um, whose idea was it to get the puppy?
I'm sorry for piling on, but surely, OP, you know a lot of your stress was self-inflicted, right?
Not OP, but nothing wrong with getting a puppy. The feeding could possibly be passed off to the 8yo. Or the older kids could do more of their own stuff while OP feeds the 3yo and puppy.
It is bad to get a puppy when your day is exhausting by 7:30 am. I feel bad for the puppy. No way is she getting what she needs in terms of care, attention, exercise and training. Then everyone is gonna be pissed at the dog because it had no training.
Op here - this I take exception to. The puppy is well taken care of and goes on 3-4 walks a day. We have already done training and will do extensive training in the month to come (needs to be 6 months old for the course). She is a puppy - of course we get frustrated but I know it’s not the puppy’s fault.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids if you are saying you have done 8 years of this? They seem quite capable to help. They can pack their own backpacks (my k kid does it), they get fill up their own water bottles (my k kid does it), they can feed the dog (pretty simple) and you can fix their lunch the night before so that all you need to do is zap it in the microwave the morning of.
OP - kids are 8, 6 and 3. Dog is still a puppy. By doing this for 8 years I mean some variation. At one point I was breastfeeding before I would drop off to daycare and getting pumped bottles together. Now its lunches and breakfast. Dog is too young for kids to help (beyond putting food in a bowl). They can't walk dog at all.
Um, whose idea was it to get the puppy?
I'm sorry for piling on, but surely, OP, you know a lot of your stress was self-inflicted, right?
Not OP, but nothing wrong with getting a puppy. The feeding could possibly be passed off to the 8yo. Or the older kids could do more of their own stuff while OP feeds the 3yo and puppy.
It is bad to get a puppy when your day is exhausting by 7:30 am. I feel bad for the puppy. No way is she getting what she needs in terms of care, attention, exercise and training. Then everyone is gonna be pissed at the dog because it had no training.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids if you are saying you have done 8 years of this? They seem quite capable to help. They can pack their own backpacks (my k kid does it), they get fill up their own water bottles (my k kid does it), they can feed the dog (pretty simple) and you can fix their lunch the night before so that all you need to do is zap it in the microwave the morning of.
OP - kids are 8, 6 and 3. Dog is still a puppy. By doing this for 8 years I mean some variation. At one point I was breastfeeding before I would drop off to daycare and getting pumped bottles together. Now its lunches and breakfast. Dog is too young for kids to help (beyond putting food in a bowl). They can't walk dog at all.
Um, whose idea was it to get the puppy?
I'm sorry for piling on, but surely, OP, you know a lot of your stress was self-inflicted, right?
Not OP, but nothing wrong with getting a puppy. The feeding could possibly be passed off to the 8yo. Or the older kids could do more of their own stuff while OP feeds the 3yo and puppy.