Wednesday, December 01, 2010

November

Aah ... 30 Days of Thankful, and I managed to post on all of them, with the exception of the weekend in Michigan.

I wasn't sure if I'd be able to make it everyday, and I managed to, which for me is a good thing. I have trouble with follow through some days.

It was nice to take the time, even if just for a minute every day, and find something to be thankful for. I think we're so caught up in our lives that we don't take the time to notice that we actually do have it pretty good, and that there is plenty to be thankful for, we just have to take the time and look for it.

So ... having said that and having been here every day for a month, let's see what the craziness of December brings!

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

November, Day 30

Today I am thankful for Modern Medicine. I don't even know if it is worthy of capitalization, but I'm doing it.

Last night I drove myself to the Emergency Room (stupid idea, I know) to see if they could figure out what the pain I was having was. It was pretty much center of my chest, and my gallbladder had been ruled out last week, and that doesn't leave a whole lot - lungs, diaphragm and heart. Well, with my Mom's family and their history of heart disease, I talked with The Husband and we decided to get it checked out. He stayed home with the kids, and I left for the hospital. I was seriously banking on it not being anything heart related, which is why I drove myself. If I honestly thought it was a heart issue, I would have gotten a ride, but I was 98% sure it wasn't, but I needed someone with some letters after their name to tell me that.

It turns out I've got some gastrointestinal "thing" going on, and last night they gave me a "GI Mix" which was lidocaine, Maalox and an anti-spasmodic drug, and wow! did that thing ever work. My pain went away in five minutes, and it was lovely.

I am supposed to follow up with a Gastroenterologist for a possible endoscopy. I am also wondering if there isn't a food allergy or sensitivity going on ... I had hives a few weeks ago and they broke out again last night, so I'm wondering if there is a connection. I highly doubt it, since my skin reacted wherever the adhesive touched me. I'm also taking a steroid for the next three days to keep the hives in check. I probably won't sleep alot either, as steroids tend to keep me awake.

So my thanks go to the hospital staff last night - here's hoping I don't have to see any of you again any time soon, unless it's in the produce section at the grocery store.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

November, Day 28

Today I am thankful.

Nothing specific, just sitting in the middle of the living room, with the laptop on a toy bucket, my dinner menu to the left, a stack of invitations to the right of that, and my coffee on the right of me kind of thankful.

It's good.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

November, Day 27

Today I am appreciative of my Mother in Law.

Yes, you read that right, in a world where it seems like people really dislike their MIL more than they like her, I actually am appreciative of mine.

Today we went out on our Annual Craft Fair Treasure Hunt, and we both came home with some goodies. She bought me, as she has for the past dozen years, a Christmas decoration. But that is not why I am appreciative of her.

She doesn't know all the details of our Financial Fall Out earlier this year. She just knows that she lent us some money to pay down some debt, with little background details. She hasn't asked me a thing about it yet. In my mind, she should have driven over here and shaken me by the shoulders demanding to know what in the world was going on in her oldest sons family. She didn't. She won't. She is being respectful of our difficult situation. For that I am thankful, because it is probably just as difficult for me to explain to The Husband's Parents what I did, as it was for me to face him.

In my mind, his parents need to think that we live in a land of bliss, and that the World is grand. I don't need them worrying about what goes on here ... they have enough going on without having to worry about us.

So, for that, and a million other reasons, I do appreciate my Mother in Law.

Friday, November 26, 2010

November, Day 26

Today is a lazy, after Thanksgiving Day.

I am making my own turkey today, with the hopes of leftovers for tetrazzini and soup next week.

The kids have a movie they wanted to see from the library, they're mostly getting along, and I've got a dinner to make.

It's good. It's the way I want it.

I don't know what I would call it ... maybe just the Day after Thanksgiving Bliss.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

how it plays out

I just saw ... karma? ... play out right on my street.

One neighbor, Neighbor P, has had a broken furnace for more than two weeks, and has been waiting for pay day to be able to buy the parts needed to repair his furnace. Our other neighbor, Neighbor M, had her furnace go out last week and had her new furnace installed yesterday. Well ... the furnace that was taken out of her house yesterday had the part that Neighbor P's furnace needed, and he was able to go and scavenge the piece he needed for free, take it home, put it in and get his furnace working again.

Important Fact: Neighbor P has two small children at his house.

Both neighbors have heat, and it didn't have to put Neighbor P in the position to decide heat or food, heat or mortgage, heat or insurance? Neighbor M may be making payments for a year to pay off her furnace, but it's doable for her. Not necessarily fun to make payments, but it's doable.

How's that for timing?

November, Day 25

Today is the BIG DAY. The one day when everybody realizes that they are thankful/appreciative/glad for something or someone. But what about the other days in the year? I hope that people do notice, even if for just a second, that they had something or someone to be thankful for each and every day. It may be something small, or something trivial, or something so profoundly soul shattering that it takes their breath away. Whatever it is, I hope that people stop and notice what they've got, instead of being busy lamenting on what they don't have.

Yes, some of the "don't haves" are pretty profound. I don't have a Mom that is Earthside for me to spend my time with. But, I have gotten to a point in that journey, and it's taken almost the entire ten years she's been gone, that I can sit back and be thankful for the time I did have with her. The same with my Pops - he's been gone just over a year and my family has gone to pot over it, but I am glad that I had him for as long as I did.

Is my situation ideal, no. Would I like to be living differently, yes. But, I am thankful that my husband forgave me and we're figuring it out. We're going forward, and in the end, we'll be better for it.

Today I'm thankful for what I have and what I had, in all it's forms, good and bad. I've taken something away from every person and every experience, and I'm better for it.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

November, Day 24

Today I appreciate the option to disagree.


Tuesday, November 23, 2010

November, Day 23

Today I'm thankful for Cream Cheese Frosting. Or something like that.

It's been an off sort of day, and it started last night and carried over into today.

I don't like this.

I attempted to drown my sorrows this morning in a batch of cream cheese frosting to go with a double batch of pumpkin squares. One tray was for school, the other tray will stay home and be eaten and shared over the course of a couple of days.

I suppose I should change it to being thankful that I have people in my life to share my baked goods with.

It's still not a great day, even frosted in cream cheese.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

November, Day 21

Lazy. Kind of.

Today I am thankful for somewhat lazy Sundays.

*big sigh of contentment*

I went to bed crazy early last night, and slept in this morning, made my way downstairs and made cinnamon rolls for the kids. I warmed up a cup of coffee.

For the not so lazy part, I helped Q with his school project, due tomorrow. The details were brought home on Friday.

While waiting for certain bits of the project to cure, for lack of a better word, I cruised the internet.

I ordered our Christmas Cards! (We haven't sent cards in five years!!)

I made dinner, and the kids ate it.

In the oven, I presently have Nantucket Cranberry Pie, thanks to Pioneer Woman. If this tastes as good as it smells, it's new title may be Awesomeness in a Pan. If I could bottle the smells coming from my oven, I would. I could also make a million dollars with said bottled scent.

And now the kids are lounging around, playing, before we do a bit of reading before bed.

It's been a great Sunday. I only wish they could all be this good.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

November, Day 20

Oh what a day it has been ...

This morning we were at a local middle school at 9am for the Annual Tae Kwon Do (TKD) tournament that our school hosts. The kids were scheduled for events at 9:30 (forms) and 10:30 (board breaking). My oldest nephew was also in the board breaking while the two nieces were hanging out with me in the bleachers.

My kids did pretty well, Q got a 2nd place trophy for forms and a 1st for boards. The Bee got a 1st place for forms and a 2nd place for boards. If you are a first place winner, you then qualify for Grand Champion of that competition, going up against all the other winners for age/belt rank.

I am thankful for my children's willingness to try, and to do their best, and to be a good sport even though they did not bring home the six foot trophy that they were aiming for. I am proud of them, because they have something that I will never have, and that is the lack of fear to stand up in front of everyone and to compete.

So, for Q and The Bee, know that Mommy loves you and I am proud of you trophy or no trophy, because you tried and you did your best, and that is all I can ask of you.

Friday, November 19, 2010

November, Day 19

It's still early in the day, so who knows what it may bring that could very well change my mind later.

I am thankful for the opportunity to go back to school in January. I haven't been in a classroom in a very long time, but this will help me with my recertification process. I have no idea if I even want to go back to a traditional school setting, but at least my teaching certification would be current, which would allow me the option to do a few different things.

So, while it will be a big adjustment, two classes, house, husband, two kids ... I'm up for it. I'm looking forward to the classes I've chosen too. It's nice that I can actually take a class that I need to take, and actually have it be something I'm interested in. Definitely a bonus.

Let's hope I can pull it off.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

November, Day 18

Today I am thankful for shelter.

I know, it sounds ... whatever. But, we have to remember that shelter is not guaranteed to everyone, and those of us that do have it, I am willing to bet that we often overlook it or take it for granted. Our house is too small, too messy, not in the right neighborhood ... whatever. But, firstly, we should be thankful that we have something to complain about.

With the downturn in the economy, how many people are *pinch* this close to losing their home?

How many people wonder where they are going to get next months rent money?

How many people don't have anything to call home, outside of a shelter, a park bench, or a tent in a park somewhere?

It's cold out today, and the wind is brisk. The thermometer says is 40 degrees, but it doesn't feel like it. I'm cold, but I was able to get in a car that starts and drive home, put my key in the lock and let myself in. Yes, the windows in my house are drafty and need to be covered with plastic, as we do every year. Yes, the living room is a mess, and I've got a pile of laundry that's larger than I'd like to admit.

But, I was able to come in out of the cold. I have a place that my children come home to after school and drop their stuff and can grab a book and a blanket and read. I know that our mortgage is able to be paid next month, and the month after that. I don't have to worry about those things.

For my shelter, in all it's imperfections, I am thankful.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

November, Day 17

** I'm using the back date feature, or whatever it's called, to put yesterdays date on my post, since I fell asleep at 9:00 last night, and was too busy during the day to post **

So, what could I have been thankful for yesterday?

I hit the ground running and didn't stop until 9:00 last night, when I fell asleep in the recliner reading a magazine that is over a month old (Halloween decorations and menus, not doing much good in November) ...

In hindsight, with my Thursday morning glasses on, I am thankful for a comfortable chair, a warm blanket and just enough quiet to let me get the sleep I needed.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

November, Day 16

Today I am thankful for messes.

Because I have a mess, it means I have enough, or more likely, probably more than enough.

To put a positive spin on the chaos that my children create, mess is a good thing.

Monday, November 15, 2010

November, Day 15

Hmm ... I had a good "I'm thankful for ... " earlier today when I was in the middle of doing something, and I knew I should have come over here and blogged it.

I've now forgotten it.

Should I be thankful for a memory that works well?

Sunday, November 14, 2010

November, Day 14

I am thankful for safe travels.

We just returned from a long weekend in Michigan with all sorts of family.

I saw my Dad, my sister and her two kids, met up with my husband, my in-laws, and later, my BIL, SIL & their three kids, saw cousins we hadn't seen in ten months, and then celebrated a 90th Birthday for Gigi.

Our travels were safe and uneventful, which is just the way I like them.

We're tired and have no desire to eat (we ate so much, and it was so good) or see the inside of a car until tomorrow morning, and we're home. Laundry to do, school to get ready for, a week to plan ... and we made it back here safely, so I could do just those things.

It's good.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

November, Day 10

Oh, what a long day today was, and just for kicks, it was one of those days. Yes, one of those. You may know the kind of day I'm talking about - you hit the ground running with the sun, and you keep at it all day long, only to discover that you didn't get squat done, and then it just keeps coming at you.

Yep, it was one of those.

So for today, I would have to say that I'm thankful for down time.

Tuesday, November 09, 2010

November, Day 9

Connections.

I am thankful for connections.

I am in the process of becoming a DONA (Doulas of North America) birth doula. Part of the process requires that I attend three births, only one of which can be a cesarean. I attended my first certification birth, which was a home birth turned transfer turned cesarean. That was a train wreck that may have left me traumatized on many different levels than The Mom.

My second birth was a volunteer birth, that was organized through a friend. It was a beautiful midwife assisted hospital birth. Just lovely.

I am currently looking for a third birth to attend. This is where my connections come in to effect. I got my second birth through a friend that started a volunteer doula organization for our area. I have an interview for a potential client next week, again thanks to the same friend with her doula organization.

When I was first out of college, I did not want to take advantage of any connections that friends or family may have had, and I can say for a fact that because of that, I definitely missed out on some job opportunities, or at least an interview. This time around, on a new job search in a new life chapter, I will definitely take any points in the right direction.

I hope that one day I can return the favor.

Monday, November 08, 2010

November, Day 8

A Circle of Friends

Tonight I spent some time with like minded friends, and it was lovely. It is so nice to be able to surround yourself with people with similar values, ideas, parenting ideas, etc.

Today I am thankful for the values and ideas that draw us together, and the friendships formed from that.

Sunday, November 07, 2010

November, Day 7

Today I am thankful that I could spend a perfectly ordinary Sunday with my husband at the hardware store looking at refrigerators, stoves and garbage disposals. We need to replace a broken disposal, and are looking at the other two because ours are 12+ years old and are starting to make goofy noises, and seeing as both of them have had work put into them, it may or may not be worth it for yet another service call.

This may sound perfectly ordinary, and why would one be thankful for that?

You see, I spent the last few years avoiding pretty much everything, including my husband. It was not a truly conscious decision, but for whatever reason and how ever it was (not) working, I avoided him. Today, as we were walking through the aisle with the drapery hardware, I realized how absolutely boring the hardware store was, but how, for us, it was a semi-monumental kind of day. We talked about appliances, and while they may be boring, we were actually talking about our home and our future, honestly and fully present in the conversation. If we would have tried to do this at this time last year, I would have pushed it to the side and ran and picked up the kids (they had a sleepover at the MB's last night) and spent the day fussing over them and avoiding and ignoring my husband.

This is some of the "what we're working on" I have alluded to in a previous post.

I told my husband how much I did realize how much I actually missed living my life, and apologized once again for it. He said it was okay, and that we were making it through. And while I know that, it still was not fair to him, the kids or myself.

So for some of you, actually, probably most of you, the perfectly ordinary may go unnoticed, but for me, today, it was monumental. And it was good.

Saturday, November 06, 2010

November, Day 6

This may not be as deep and serious, but still serious in a topical way, I am thankful that my gallbladder didn't act up again last night, letting me get some much needed sleep.

I am not worth much after having been up for almost 36 hours, with only three hours of painful, fitful rest somewhere in there.

Me thinks a doctors appointment is in my future.

Friday, November 05, 2010

November, Day 5

I am thankful for the time that I have had. I don't have a diagnosis, nor am I being dramatic, but I am thankful for the time that I have had.

Today is my parents 25th Anniversary. My Mom has spent the last ten of them in Heaven.

It is also my StepDad's Mom's (Gram G's) birthday. She would have been somewhere in her mid-90's (SD is 73). She has spent the last ten birthdays in Heaven as well. Yes, it was a crap year - my Mom died in January and my Gram died the following July. Crappy.

I am glad that I was given a second family when my Mom chose to re-marry after my bio-parents divorce. I am glad that this second family accepted my Mom and I with open arms and no hesitation. I have always been proud of my somewhat wacky, overgrown family tree. It just branches out all over the place, and I wouldn't trade it for anything.

And, I can't talk about one branch without the other, because had my Dad not remarried, I would not have my sister. I can't imagine life without her. She's awesome.

Thursday, November 04, 2010

November, Day 4

Today I am thankful for a very understanding husband.

I really screwed things up about seven months ago. Badly. To the point that I seriously thought I could very well end up a single parent. We're still working through it, but he loves me, and he gave me a second chance. I do know, however, that there will not be a third.

I am trying very hard to be the wife and partner that he needs me to be. Some days are not easy, and at times I wish I could just ignore it all, but that is not an option. We're in this mess together, and we'll find our way back. Some parts of the journey will take longer than others, but I have faith that we'll make it. It may be slow and occasionally ugly, but we'll get there, and we'll be better for it.

Right?

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

November, Day 3

I am thankful for a great group of friends that I found for myself, simply by being. I have gathered these friends through school (the kids, I haven't gone back yet) and through my birth work. I have surrounded myself with a good group of people, and I couldn't be happier.

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

November, Day 2

I am thankful for all the other working keys on my laptop today. I am glad that just one has decided to stage a revolt.

Stupid letter F.

(It took three tries to get that to show up.)

Monday, November 01, 2010

November, Day 1

Today I am thankful for warm not-so-little bodies that snuggle up to me on the couch, even when they're sick. I don't like the sick part, but I'll take snuggling up on the couch anyday. He's not going to let me do this for much longer, so I better get it while I can.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

MIA

Hmm ...

I have no idea where I've been, but I'm pretty sure it's been within a five mile radius of my house. Either at the grocery store, the craft store, the store next door or the kids school. Or somewhere in between.

I didn't get a job either, but I did attend a birth in a volunteer capacity, and it was lovely. More on doula-ish-ness later.

I've been at the library, checking out some new books, and loving it. I really think people overlook their library as a forgotten jewel of the community. I've always been a library person, I remember my Dad taking me there once a week when I was a kid (the building is still there, but now it's for the village). My Dad still goes to his local library on a regular basis, and I try to take my kids every other week, and that mostly works. We occasionally hit an overdue book or two, but that's okay. I don't mind. Mostly.

I've been at the craft store. I buy ingredients for projects I don't finish. I have the best of intentions, but I always seem to find something else, even though I make pacts with myself that I won't start anything new until something old is finished. For Halloween it was a spider web. Who knows what it will be for Thanksgiving and Christmas.

The grocery store. Do you realize how much money you spend on food? It's crazy. Absolutely crazy. I feel a freezer and pantry challenge coming on, with lots of crazy meals involved.

I've also been canning. Lots of cranberries, with a lot of applesauce on the horizon. I got two bushels of apples last weekend, and once I did the math, I realized that it may equal somewhere in the neighborhood of sixty pints of sauce. I don't have that many shelves. Or jars. Oops.

It's also been windy. Windy enough to knock down thirty feet of fencing. We are paying the neighbor to fix it - he has the skills and the tools, and seeing as he is unemployed, he needs the money. We'd rather pay him than somebody else. In fact, I think I can hear him out there now banging around.

Do you see how I have absolutely no pattern of thought here? Just bouncing from here to there. That's how my brain is working these days. I am completely wiped, and I think my body is letting me know. I sent The Husband and The Kids to a birthday party for a friend today, and I stayed home. I need to kick whatever this is and be done with it. I don't want to be sick on Halloween, seeing as I have two Enemies of the Galaxy (aka Darth Vader) to escort tomorrow night.

Maybe I have developed Adult Onset ADD. Is this even a real something, or did i make it up? You'll notice there is no H in my made up self diagnosis. Hyperactivity. Hah. There are some days that I don't have enough energy to make it through the day without the aid of a half a pot of coffee. Which, by the way, I now completely understand why my Mom drank coffee all day long. I get it. Yeah, I could be ADD, but definitely no H.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

work

Evidently I'm supposed to find a job.

That fits with the kids school schedule.

And that pays enough to make it worth my while should I end up needing to pay for before/after school care.

I hate money.

I hate my mistakes even more. I've come to call it perpetual punishment.

Blech.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

quiet


My house is quiet right now, outside of the tapity tap tap of my keyboard, and the fan that is on it's last leg in the laptop, my house is quiet.

No kids quiet.

No husband quiet.

Sit back with a cup of HOT coffee quiet.

This is good. I like it.

I have a list a mile long, and I'll get to it.

In ten minutes.

I've got a cup of coffee to drink first.

Monday, May 10, 2010

a different kind of Mother's Day

Today is my son's birthday. His actual time of birth is 8:29 pm, so technically, as I start this post, he's still seven, and we're rapidly approaching eight. The actual time matters to nobody except me, the date is good enough for everyone else.

I often wonder if I will look back every year, on May 10th, and think "Oh, at this time x years ago, my water broke all over the floor at the hospital." or "At this time x years ago, I was starting to push" or "Shit. At this time x years ago he was born and I was out like a light and his dad was in the other room." or "Fk. I remember hearing the baby next door, and I wanted mine, but I couldn't get my nurse buzzer and my husband was asleep and couldn't hear me because I had been tubed and had no voice, so I just kept pushing my morphine drip until it locked me out and I fell asleep."

I love my son. Absolutely, without fail, he is one of the best things to happen to me, love him. I would take the bullet, give away my organs, do whatever it took for my child kind of love. I cannot imagine my world without him - at all.

But, my memories of him being born are mixed.

I was that crazy woman that actually enjoyed her labor. For me, it was very calm, almost relaxing, and at no point was it overwhelming and out of control, until the very end, when it all hit the fan.

I had no drugs, no iv, and had made it to ten and was pushing, when they realized that Q was trying to make his appearance chin first. This is a virtual impossibility in a first time mom, with an anterior baby. Had he been posterior and/or been a 2nd or more child, they might have tried to continue with a normal delivery. Not for me.

My doctor looked at me and told me I needed surgery, which I understood was necessary, and I looked at my husband and said "Oh, hurry, go get the blue clothes" and the nurse told me "Oh, no honey, he can't come in, you'll be having general anesthesia, there isn't time for anything else."

Oh.

They took the brakes off the bed and they ran - I remember yelling to my husband to tell my Dad that I was sorry, that I would be fine. After that, I remember my husbands big brown eye watching through a crack in the operating room doors, until somebody went and closed it on him. I remember the room being freezing cold, and the table being very narrow, afraid I would fall off. I remember the anesthesiologist putting a mask over my face, and me taking if off, telling them that I was still awake, not to start yet, when I felt the cold of the betadine on my belly.

The next thing I knew, I felt my Dad's hand on my forehead as I woke up.

My mother in law was in the chair next to my bed, and my husband was somewhere with our friend.

I was awake long enough to learn that he was a boy, and I saw a quick video of him, that my husband had taken when they took him from the OR to the NICU. I was awake long enough to realize that he didn't look right on the video, but not awake enough to question the answers I was given.

I woke up again, in a different room, with an iv in my left arm, my husband asleep in a chair to my right. I couldn't speak, because, as I found out later, I had been tubed in surgery as an airway precaution (standard), and I couldn't find my nurse buzzer. The baby next door was crying and all I wanted was my baby, but stuck in a bed, unable to call for help, and afraid to move, I just kept hitting my morphine drip until it locked me out and I cried myself to sleep.

The next morning I was up and wanted my baby, but they had to keep him in the NICU. I had to jump through hoops to get to see him, and it wasn't until almost 18 hours after he was born, that my husband wheeled me down there, helped me scrub up and introduced me to our son. I heard this wheezy, pathetic little cry, and that was our son.

He was in a diaper, under the lights, with all sorts of monitor leads and an iv. His face looked like he had been beat up, and his voice was almost non existent because of a collapsed vocal cord. All of that happened when he tried to come chin first, and he ended up extending his neck and basically my pushing was causing his face to get smashed repeatedly into my pubic bones.

He was born limp, blue, not breathing with barely a pulse. I later found out that his beginning apgar was 1, and the nurse told me that was generous.

This makes me want to cry, eight years later.

I know understand why my Mom cried when she told me the story of my birth, even twenty years after the fact. I now get it.

The baby my husband and I waited 40 weeks for, the baby we had planned to meet, together, was born in a cold, sterile, bright white operating room, with a mother that was asleep and a father pacing the halls and reassuring our friends/family in the hall that it was going to be okay.

(It's 8:29 by my laptop! Happy Birthday Q!)

Our son needed to be resuscitated, poked and prodded. I don't know what's worse - him being welcomed by strangers, me asleep and his Dad not there, or me having been awake and the two of us having had to watch that happen. Both give me the shivers.

His birth ended up a five day NICU stay, and at the end, I felt like they were holding my son hostage - all I wanted was my baby. My baby, at my home, with us. It was made all that more difficult because by looking at him, physically, he wasn't sick. He was the biggest baby in there, and by far had the least number of issues, but he still had to stay until they could be guaranteed that his inspitory stridor was not going to cause problems.

My physical recovery was quick and uneventful, my scar is slightly wonky, but I don't care.

My emotions took a while to recover, combining his birth with the lovely roller coaster of post partum hormones, but it all worked itself out.

We finally made it home, and we hunkered down, amidst various doctor appointments, and started being a family. I remember our first night at home, how I sat on the floor of his room with him when he woke during the night, and I just held him and looked at him, and marveled. I didn't try to get him back to sleep, and I didn't care that I should be sleeping and I still had a surgery to recover from, but I took my son, and I held him and I stared at him, and soaked up every bit of Q that I could. It was beautiful.

And now he's eight. He officially turned eight eleven minutes ago, by my clock.

And what a fantastic eight years it has been.

I have been privileged to travel with him in a world of rocks and dirt, dump trucks and fire engines, John Deere and dinosaurs, Dr. Seuss books and Thomas the Tank Engine trains. Now we're moving on to chapter books and art supplies. He loves to dance and ride his bike, to make up stories and elaborate battle scenes. He thinks about the future, what he'll be and what he'll invent. He cares about others and the environment, and he mostly likes his sister, when shes not being pesky.

So what was a rocky start, and is still an emotionally tough memory for me, mixes with so many memories that in a million years I never would have imagined having the privilege of having, I am the parent of an eight year old boy.

Happy Birthday to you, Q. Happy Birthday to you.

Sunday, May 09, 2010

Mother's Day

Today is Mother's Day and I am enjoying a very lazy Sunday ... church in the morning, home, comfy clothes are on and a pot of coffee was made, the kids are taking much needed naps (a birthday party was at our house yesterday, more on that later) and I read most of the paper. Now I need to get ready for a Mother's Day cookout at my brother/sister in laws house.

A big sigh of true contentment ...

Today at church they talked of Moms, and at one point during one of the prayers, my daughter leaned over to me and told me that I should "pray for your Mom, even though she died". And I know that the wording looks harsh, but my daughters heart was definitely in the right place. She looked at me with her big brown eyes, full of sincerity, and thought of my Mom, a woman she never met, at least on this plane. I think that somehow, as my daughter was created, some spark of her zipped past my Mom and they met in passing. Yes, I would pray for my Mom, who I know is in Heaven, celebrating a Mother's Day with her Mother, both of them looking down on our large, somewhat wacky, family.

And yes, I will admit that it does make me sad that I cannot celebrate my Mother with her on Earth, and that I have a wait (hopefully a very long one, no offense to Heaven, but I have too much living to do) ahead of me until she and I are back together. However, I cannot focus on being sad, because on the other hand, I had her for 25 1/2 years. That is what I choose to focus on. Do I wish I could have had 25 1/2 more years? Yes, most definitely. But it didn't play out that way, so I choose to focus on the time we did have together.

So to my Mom, I thank you. Thank you for taking the risk on getting pregnant, thank you for the sacrifices you made and for doing the best you could with what you had to work with. I know that there were some lean years in there, and that the road was not always smooth. I wish it could have been easier for you. You gave me so much, often without realizing it, and I thank you. I hope that I make you proud.

For anyone that may happen to stop by little section of the blogging world, Happy Mother's Day to you. Hug your Mom for me.

Monday, May 03, 2010

great neighbors

I know this is late, and I suppose I could back date the entry, but this is how we work around here, so we'll just go with it.

Friday morning we were getting ready for school and at a crazy early hour, or at least crazy early for guests at our house, the doorbell rang. I opened it to find a May Day basket on our front door, and a pair of feet peeking out from behind my car.

It turns out that my very lovely neighbors were out spreading a little May Day cheer and they were the feet behind my car.

This is the first May Day bouquet I've ever received, and while I've thought of making them, I have never been organized enough to get one made and delivered.

Thanks to the 3M Family! You made my day, and even without knowing it, that was just what I was needing after a very long two weeks.

Maybe if I start now, I can "BOO" my neighbors for Halloween.

Friday, March 26, 2010

six days into spring

and it's an open declaration of war!

You may recall some of my chipmunk adventures. You may also recall that I absolutely hate those that are living in my backyard and under my back stoop. I'm all for cute, but you're not allowed to wreck my things.

They have also been known to run around in the front yard. I think they may have something to do with my buckling sidewalk. I can't be 100% sure, but since they have been seen tunneling on either side of the buckled area, I'm thinking it's a pretty sure thing.

I went out back today to clean up a little bit, and clear away some dead leaves, etc ... when I pulled the dead leaves from the hosta on the corner, the whole thing came out. No roots left, at all. Nothing. Just a big empty hole in the ground where the roots USED to be. Bastard chipmunks.

It's kind of an unused corner, and it was the perfect spot for my plants. Evidently it was also the perfect spot for my backyard nemesis (is there a plural for this?) to set up a self serve cafe.


Here is the front and back door to their home. I filled it last fall, and they have dug themselves out again.














These are my day lilies. I LOVE day lilies ... I have them in several places in my yard, and they are one of my favorite flowers. You'll see that I don't have to split them up this year because, oh, the chipmunks decided to eat the center of my flowers. See that big empty spot, yep, that's where my flowers used to be.

So, once again, I'm waging a battle with nature. I feel kinda bad about it, but not bad enough to stop. It comes back to this: you're not allowed to wreck my house or hurt my neighbors.

Sorry. Not happening here.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

it's that time of year

Where The Husband and I disagree about Q's shoes.

He says I buy him sissy shoes that are going to get Q made fun of or get his ass kicked by kids at school.

I say that they're mass produced Old Navy deck shoes, they're available for everybody, what's the big deal?

We've been having this argument since Spring 2005, when I bought Q a pair of blue deck shoes with a fun hibiscus print. That brought about an argument at my in-laws house, and my belief that my husband needs to let it go. They're shoes. It's a long argument, and there's a bit more to it than this, like my husbands belief that it's cool to wear Hawaiian print in the middle of winter, with shorts, to the mall, but that my son's shoes are going to get his ass kicked. One is cool, the other obviously not. It's a matter of opinion, and I've never known anyone to be teased about the shoes that they wear. I can't recall a single pair of shoes from any of my schooling that sticks out in my mind.

However, the magenta tights that Patty wore in high school, those I remember ....

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Wearing of the Green

Tomorrow is St. Patrick's Day, and dinner is at my house.

I've hosted St. Patrick's Day dinner at my house for almost eight years now. It's my one chance to share corned beef and cabbage with my mother in law and Uncle Duff. My father in law and my husband don't care for corned beef and/or cabbage, so they get to eat pork chops while we get the good stuff. Lucky us.

Which, by the way, I found out two weeks ago that I actually am some bit Irish, I think maybe an eighth, it's a quarter if I'm lucky. Go me.

However, I was sick last weekend, and am now so far behind that I wish for my very own leprechaun to come by my house and help me make it presentable for tomorrow.

So I blog. Yep. That's how I roll.

I'm thinking that a leprechaun showing up is not going to happen.

I'm just going to have to cook such a kick ass meal that nobody will notice the dust bunnies hanging out in the corner, and they'll ignore the stack of mail waiting to be opened/filed/shredded/whatevered.

And, as an added bonus, the cake I decided to make for The Husband to take to the clients tomorrow, needs to be made in the morning, no baking ahead for me, because it has to be hot, to melt some drizzley sort of topping on it. That means up at 5:30 to bake a cake that our family won't even get to eat. How's that for the Luck of the Irish.

Wherever you are, whatever you do, enjoy!

Thursday, March 11, 2010

it's raining

and I love it!

Yesterday, it was 60 degrees, and today it's supposed to be near that again.

Lovely! (Meant with all sincerity, no sarcasm here today)

I get to wear my uber-cool new rain boots.

The kids get to use their umbrellas, which is always fun.

The tree in my backyard is covered with moss. So is the rock in the front yard.

I really want to get outside, and hook up the rain barrel and put up the clothes line and clean out the garden and order my seeds and sell the castle and clean out the sandbox and and and

The list is a mile long, but I don't care. I love being outside, and can't wait until I can leave the windows open all the time and play in the dirt and have totally dirty kids that need showers every night.

Can you tell I REALLY want spring to make it's appearance.

Thursday, March 04, 2010

Is Spring on it's way?

I sure hope so.

I spent a good portion of the time this winter actually being disappointed that the huge snow storms didn't get us. Not to say that we didn't get snow, but they were always predicting feet of snow, when all we ever got were inches. I seriously wanted a foot of snow.

I wanted the world to stop, or at least slow down.
I wanted a world of white mountains and drifts, and fires in the fireplace.
I wanted days of soup and stew and chili.
I wanted to hunker down, wherever that phrase came from.

So now, we've had our usual early March warm up, just enough of a tease, to remind us that Spring is kind of around the corner. I'm sure we'll have our usual cold snap and hopefully one last snow.

But, for now, we've got blue skies, melty snow, squishy yards.

And brown. Yucky brown grass. What snow is left is grey and brown and ugly.

So, for me, spring can't get her soon enough now that it's brown. And ugly.

Yes, I know, we need the yucky brown days so we can better appreciate the beauty of spring, but I don't have to like it. It's part of our lovely weather pattern in this part of the country, the weather pattern I've been a part of for 35 years now ... and I still don't like this time of year, after the snow melts but before the green flies.

Here's hoping for a quick greening up when it happens.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

I didn't marry a romantic

This may turn into a vent here, so if you're the lovey dovey type, or married to one, you may want to pass this one by.

We are not a romantic couple, and when we attempt romance, it feels kind of weird. We're not a flower bringing, candle lighting type of couple. We love each other, but we don't love each other with poems and wine.

Today is Valentine's Day.

Typically, I like Valentine's Day ... I don't need flowers, I don't need a fancy dinner out, but I'd like a card, at least. Something. I don't care that you tell me you love me on a daily basis, but I'd like a card.

I tried telling myself that it didn't matter. But it does. To me, anyway.

So, Valentine's Day is on a Sunday. The Husband is home all day today. What a great combination.

Why does this make me want to cry instead?

I think what else gets me is that the kids see this, and what kind of example is this for them? So, after I get done here, I'm off to make them Valentine's. I did get them some (pathetically?) small candy treats, which I debated doing, since I don't want to consumerize the holiday. I bought them anyway.

Screw what The Husband thinks. This matters.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

when the volunteer form comes around

remind me NOT to fill it out, please?

I do enjoy helping out at the kids school, it's one of the ways I can stay involved and aware of what is happening. It also frees up the teachers time so that she can actually teach.

Tomorrow is the Valentine's Day party for the 2nd grade. They are decorating picture frames. Picture frames that needed to be painted white. There are 21 students in my sons class. If you were interested, this is what 21 drying picture frames look like.


My washing machine, Drying Surface Number One


My ironing board, Drying Surface Number Two

My clothes rack, an actual drying surface, Drying Surface Number Three

Tomorrow will be a long and busy day, followed up by a much needed Moms Night Out with some of the other Mom's.

I would just like my house back, please.

something different

We had an earthquake at 3:58 this morning.

We've had them before, but never as big as this one. Today's EQ was centered 15 miles from our house and they say it was a 3.8 magnitude. It was enough to get me up and out of bed, hands on the dresser trying to stop the noise from the drawer handles (lovely metal handles, beautiful to look at, make a horrid noise when having an earthquake, especially considering we have 29 handles) waiting for kids to come running. They slept through it. I was not so lucky ... not only did I wake up but I then laid there awake and thought. And thought. And thought some more.

I live in a pretty solid house, slightly wonky, but I know it's gonna last. It can take a beating - rain, hail, wind ... dent the siding, maybe loosen a piece or two, but overall, it'll last. Unless we're staring down tornado warnings, I don't worry.

I was reading some of the news articles about this mornings seismic activity, and while they couldn't seem to agree, the various articles said that the earthquake in Haiti was anywhere between 10,000 to 16,000 to 33,000 times more powerful. I think it was that for every one point increase in magnitude, it is 100 times more powerful. I'm not exact on the science or math for that one, but I seriously cannot even imagine that. 33,000 times more powerful. Crap. Even 10,000 times more powerful. No wonder there's nothing left except rubble.

So, I sit here and think and let my mind run, as it's prone to do, and am reminded once again that I truly am blessed.

Life is good.

I am thankful.

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

One Tired Girl

I think The Bee is growing.

It's that or she's got something wrong. And as the daughter of a lifelong diabetic (Mom was diagnosed at age 13), who has heard for her entire life questions of "are you sure?" regarding early signs of diabetes ... I don't like her sleeping this much. I know it's probably nothing, but you can't just "undo" years of questioning.

This is where I found her yesterday at 4:00 in the afternoon.


You'll have to excuse the after school mess, and I'm not sure why snow pants were in the dining room, but hey ... that's how it works around here.

You can see Q at the table doing his homework, like it's an everyday occurrence to do your homework while your sister is taking a nap on the floor under the kitchen table.

Let's just hope it's nothing.

Thursday, February 04, 2010

had a thought

I had quite the craptastic morning, complete with yelling (me) and crying (The Bee).

Not pretty, not good.

She was whiny, has been for a while, and I don't tolerate whine. Drink it, yes, otherwise, no.

So I yelled. She cried. I felt like crying.

We apologized, several times over, and all seems to be well.

So, after all of this, while heading to the Land of Plastic & Batteries (aka Toys R Us), I had a thought:

Running through the flower field with my hippy dippy dress is not easy.

Huh?

Yep - running through the flower field with my hippy dippy dress is not easy.

I try to be one of "those" parents - the one that doesn't yell, doesn't hit, ya ya ya ... we try to talk about what was done wrong, explain options and so on ... for the most part it works. It's tough, and believe me, there are some days when it would be so much easier to be the parent that yells, offers no explanations or discussion and leaves it at that. And yes, we occasionally do have those days.

In the mainstream world (you know, the world to my right, the one that I skirt the edges of) I would be that hippy dippy parent - I cloth diapered, made baby food, breastfed for over a year, co-slept - although I generally don't wear broomstick skirts and Birks.

I have Birks, but no broomstick skirt.

So yes, the type of parenting we have chosen, me, more than The Husband, since I'm with them all the time, is tough. It's worth it, definitely, but it's tough. I get criticized and have been made fun of.

So yes, todays jaunt through my hippy dippy field of flowers with my hippy dippy broomstick skirt was a rough one. But, for now, it looks like we're back on track.

This is good.