The Wednesday That Changed Everything
It was 3:47 AM on a Wednesday (why is it always Wednesday?), and I was doing my usual routine: panic-googling my kid's symptoms while simultaneously adding $200 worth of "miracle solutions" to my Amazon cart.Essential oil diffuser #3? Check. Organic-everything supplements? Check.Another organizational system that would "change my life"? Obviously.That's when my laptop died. Just… gave up. Probably from exhaustion of processing my middle-of-the-night shopping sprees.And in that sudden silence, holding my fevering kid, I had a thought that sounds obvious now but felt revolutionary then:What did people do before we could buy our way out of every problem?
From Chaos to (Slightly Less) Chaos
Hi, I'm Abby. Former second-grade teacher, current mom of three, and recovering "buy-all-the-things" addict.For years, I believed the lie that good moms have:
- A medicine cabinet that rivals CVS
 - A pantry full of superfoods
 - An Amazon Prime addiction
 - The latest everything
 
Spoiler alert: I had all those things and still felt like I was failing.Then I inherited my Nana's house and found her life's wisdom in old notebooks, seed packets, and margin notes in cookbooks. This woman raised six kids through the Depression with:
- 10 medicinal plants
 - One cleaning recipe (ONE!)
 - A pressure canner and common sense
 - Zero anxiety about being a perfect mom
 
													
																
My (Ongoing) Journey Back to Common Sense
I'm not going to lie and say I transformed overnight into some serene domestic goddess.My first attempts at "simple living" included:
- Killing $100 worth of "easy grow" herbs
 - Making cleaning vinegar so strong it peeled paint
 - Fermenting things that… shouldn't ferment
 - A sourdough starter that achieved sentience
 
But slowly, with lots of failures and small victories, I'm learning that our grandmothers weren't backward — they were brilliant. They knew:
- Which plants actually help (and which are just expensive)
 - How to clean anything with 3 ingredients
 - When to worry and when to wait
 - That "good enough" is actually pretty great
 
What You'll Find Here
This isn't just about herbs (though I do love my finally-thriving medicine garden). It's about reclaiming the common-sense wisdom that marketing made us forget.I'm exploring:
- Nana's medicine cabinet — from garden to remedy
 - Kitchen wisdom — what actually works vs. Pinterest lies
 - Simple living — without the perfectionism
 - Real budgeting — saving money by doing more ourselves
 - Honest parenting — where "survival" is a valid goal
 
My husband occasionally chimes in with his DIY adventures (last week he built a spice rack that's only slightly crooked).													
																
What I'm Not
Let me be crystal clear:
- Not a doctor — just a mom sharing what works for us
 - Not perfect — I still panic-buy things at 3 AM sometimes
 - Not anti-modern anything — we use doctors, medicines, and yes, Amazon
 - Not judging anyone — we're all just doing our best
 
I'm simply someone who discovered that sometimes the old ways work better than my credit card.
Pull Up a Chair at My Kitchen Table
This blog is my virtual kitchen table — slightly sticky, always has coffee rings, and everyone's welcome.If you're tired of:
- Feeling like you need to buy more to be a good mom
 - Complex solutions to simple problems
 - Perfection pressure from social media
 - Wondering what people did "before"
 
Then you're my people.I share wins, fails, and everything in between. Sometimes it's about herbs. Sometimes it's about how I burned dinner while writing about herbs. It's all real life.
Where to Start
New here?
- Read about my 3 AM fever protocol that started this journey
 - Laugh at how I killed $100 of herbs
 - Grab my free "Start Simple" guide below
 
Want weekly truth bombs? Join my email list where I share:
- What worked (and spectacularly didn't) this week
 - Nana's wisdom I'm testing
 - Real savings from DIY wins
 - Honest moments from the trenches
 
Ready to simplify with me? Remember: You don't have to do it all. You don't have to be perfect. You just have to start somewhere.I'm still figuring this out too. But I'd rather figure it out together than pretend I have all the answers.Welcome to my slightly chaotic, always real, surprisingly simple world.Pull up a chair and stay awhile,Abby
P.S. — That laptop that died at 3 AM? Still using it. Turns out it just needed a rest. Same, laptop. Same.

