Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Chunkin' Punkin' and Other Aesthetics


Well, it's official. The baby is a fatty. No one would expect less from a Church baby, but nevertheless, we are always surprised when they go through a year's worth of clothing sizes in 10 weeks. At Elam's two month check-up on the 16th, he weighed in at 17lbs 1.5oz and is 25.5" long. I wondered why the baby carrier seemed so unusually heavy!

We love the pudge, though! (And he loves us!)



Doug likes to hold the little man every chance he gets since he's gone all day. So much so, that he's willing to go to extreme lengths to multi-task.

Doug decided to grow some facial hair, which was totally fine with me since I love it. However...

...I woke up one morning just as Doug was about to leave for work and when he turned around I saw this: a Fu Manchu. No bueno. I stared at it in horror for a minute or two before I came to my senses and said, "Honey! You can NOT wear that to work! You look like Chester the Molester!" He did anyway, of course, like any self-respecting man would, and then came home and enumerated all the compliments he had received from his co-workers. (Uh-huh. Just smile and nod.)

He finally shaved it on the third day (a bit longer than Tim McGraw's 2.7 seconds, right?), but only after he was assured that I got photo worthy of Aaron Rodgers:


Luckily, the sole princess of the house seems in a fair way to redeeming the family name in the area of beauty. Doug walked by the bathroom on Sunday and saw this and had to do a double-take. Little Miss was carefully shaping her eyebrows and eyelashes with her clear mascara. Her cousin, Novalee, apparently has a "doll house full of makeup" she said, after playing there one day, and she wanted her own makeup. I was frankly hesitant- 1) because of the potential mess and 2) because she is only 5, people! Upon reflection, however, there didn't seem to be any harm in pink glitter lip gloss, some clear mascara, and a fruity Princess Ariel roll-on perfume stick. And now I am glad. It is teaching her the vital importance of caring for her personal appearance, and, let's face it, knowing that you look good is a great part of having self-confidence. All good things! In any case, she's a 5-year-old cutie-patootie! With some adorable sass to match!

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Our Particular Brand of Crazy Bliss



When you schlepp four kids around in public, you get a lot of attention. Many make the comment, "Wow! You must have your hands full!" and stare in disbelief at how I'm single-handedly "multiplying and replenishing (or otherwise impoverishing) the earth" and write me off as crazy, while others make the inevitable comments about enjoying this time now while I have it. Thankfully, motherhood really seems to fall somewhere in the the middle of those two extremes, and thankfully, that's the way it should be.

Many wonder why we have so many children and I like the way the writer (below) likens this to climbing Mt. Everest. It's a painful choice, but worth the views along the way and worth the reward at the top. Many know me for the introverted, intensely independent soul that I am. I require a lot time alone to decompress, compared to many. I like quiet. I like space. I like to say as few words as possible (most of the time), to the bewilderment of my poor husband. I like my quiet days at home. I like when the kids are in bed. My favorite thing to do is read. Alone. However, one thing I have always inexplicably relished was the craziness in our house growing up. I loved the warm little "cottage" on the lazy street with 6 happy people inside. 5 other people to have your back and stand in your court. 5 other unique people amongst whom to find a friend for the day. It was never lonely, and that can be hard at times for someone like me, but also comforting. It was a comfort I wanted for my children. The craziness of extremely large and loud family dinners I wanted for us all. So, in the midst of parenting, I may be "touched out" at the end of a day, or want to scream if I hear one more person ask me why, or yearn for retirement, but I know I wouldn't have it any other way and I know that I was never truly "me" until I became a mom. I grow every day, right along with my kids: more patient, more compassionate, more selfless, more wise.

No one loves our children more than me and Doug and, therefore, no one knows the emotional (and physical) roller coaster ride our particular brand of family life can be. We do our best every day only to fall into bed at night, thumping our foreheads, promising to do better tomorrow. We truly cherish the tender moments when we are reminded of just how young and innocent they are. Likewise, we cherish the moments when we notice how smart and independent they are growing. Someday we will be glad when they have grown and begin to fulfill their own purpose in life, and someday we will reminisce fondly of the short time we had with them. In the meantime, we will continue doing our best each day, and continue loving our kids fiercely, and continue taking the good with bad, and not feel guilty that we don't carpe every moment of every diem.

Now, after that wordy, introspective introduction, I hope you'll read this article. It's some much-needed validation for young mommies.


by Glennon Melton, The Huffington Post, January 14, 2012
Every time I’m out with my kids – this seems to happen:

An older woman stops us, puts her hand over her heart and says something like, “Oh- Enjoy every moment. This time goes by so fast.”

Everywhere I go, someone is telling me to seize the moment, raise my awareness, be happy, enjoy every second, etc, etc, etc.

I know that this message is right and good. But as 2011 closes, I have finally allowed myself to admit that it just doesn’t work for me. It bugs me. This CARPE DIEM message makes me paranoid and panicky. Especially during this phase of my life – while I’m raising young kids. Being told, in a million different ways to CARPE DIEM makes me worry that if I’m not in a constant state of intense gratitude and ecstasy, I’m doing something wrong.

I think parenting young children (and old ones, I’ve heard) is a little like climbing Mount Everest. Brave, adventurous souls try it because they’ve heard there’s magic in the climb. They try because they believe that finishing, or even attempting the climb are impressive accomplishments. They try because during the climb, if they allow themselves to pause and lift their eyes and minds from the pain and drudgery, the views are breathtaking. They try because even though it hurts and it’s hard, there are moments that make it worth the hard. These moments are so intense and unique that many people who reach the top start planning, almost immediately, to climb again. Even though any climber will tell you that most of the climb is treacherous, exhausting, killer. That they literally cried most of the way up.

And so I think that if there were people stationed, say, every thirty feet along Mount Everest yelling to the climbers – “ARE YOU ENJOYING YOURSELF!? IF NOT, YOU SHOULD BE! ONE DAY YOU’LL BE SORRY YOU DIDN’T!” TRUST US!! IT’LL BE OVER TOO SOON! CARPE DIEM!” – those well-meaning, nostalgic cheerleaders might be physically thrown from the mountain.

Now. I’m not suggesting that the sweet old ladies who tell me to ENJOY MYSELF be thrown from a mountain. These are wonderful ladies. Monkees, probably. But last week, a woman approached me in the Target line and said the following: “Sugar, I hope you are enjoying this. I loved every single second of parenting my two girls. Every single moment. These days go by so fast.”

At that particular moment, Amma had arranged one of the new bras I was buying on top of her sweater and was sucking a lollipop that she must have found on the ground. She also had three shop-lifted clip-on neon feather stuck in her hair. She looked exactly like a contestant from Toddlers and Tiaras. I couldn’t find Chase anywhere, and Tish was grabbing the pen on the credit card swiper thing WHILE the woman in front of me was trying to use it. And so I just looked at the woman, smiled and said, “Thank you. Yes. Me too. I am enjoying every single moment. Especially this one. Yes. Thank you.”

That’s not exactly what I wanted to say, though.

There was a famous writer who, when asked if he loved writing, replied, “No. but I love having written.” What I wanted to say to this sweet woman was, “Are you sure? Are you sure you don’t mean you love having parented?”

I love having written. And I love having parented. My favorite part of each day is when the kids are put to sleep (to bed) and Craig and I sink into the couch to watch some quality TV, like Celebrity Wife Swap, and congratulate each other on a job well done. Or a job done, at least.

Every time I write a post like this, I get emails suggesting that I’m being negative. I have received this particular message four or five times – G, if you can’t handle the three you have, why do you want a fourth?

That one always stings, and I don’t think it’s quite fair. Parenting is hard. Just like lots of important jobs are hard. Why is it that the second a mother admits that it’s hard, people feel the need to suggest that maybe she’s not doing it right? Or that she certainly shouldn’t add more to her load. Maybe the fact that it’s so hard means she IS doing it right…in her own way…and she happens to be honest.

Craig is a software salesman. It’s a hard job in this economy. And he comes home each day and talks a little bit about how hard it is. And I don’t ever feel the need to suggest that he’s not doing it right, or that he’s negative for noticing that it’s hard, or that maybe he shouldn’t even consider taking on more responsibility. And I doubt anybody comes by his office to make sure he’s ENJOYING HIMSELF. I doubt his boss peeks in his office and says: “This career stuff…it goes by so fast…ARE YOU ENJOYING EVERY MOMENT IN THERE, CRAIG???? CARPE DIEM, CRAIG!”

My point is this. I used to worry that not only was I failing to do a good enough job at parenting, but that I wasn’t enjoying it enough. Double failure. I felt guilty because I wasn’t in parental ecstasy every hour of every day and I wasn’t MAKING THE MOST OF EVERY MOMENT like the mamas in the parenting magazines seemed to be doing. I felt guilty because honestly, I was tired and cranky and ready for the day to be over quite often. And because I knew that one day, I’d wake up and the kids would be gone, and I’d be the old lady in the grocery store with my hand over my heart. Would I be able to say I enjoyed every moment? No.

But the fact remains that I will be that nostalgic lady. I just hope to be one with a clear memory. And here’s what I hope to say to the younger mama gritting her teeth in line:

“It’s helluva hard, isn’t it? You’re a good mom, I can tell. And I like your kids, especially that one peeing in the corner. She’s my favorite. Carry on, warrior. Six hours till bedtime.” And hopefully, every once in a while, I’ll add- “Let me pick up that grocery bill for ya, sister. Go put those kids in the van and pull on up- I’ll have them bring your groceries out.”

Anyway. Clearly, Carpe Diem doesn’t work for me. I can’t even carpe fifteen minutes in a row, so a whole diem is out of the question.

Here’s what does work for me:

There are two different types of time. Chronos time is what we live in. It’s regular time, it’s one minute at a time, it’s staring down the clock till bedtime time, it’s ten excruciating minutes in the Target line time, it’s four screaming minutes in time out time, it’s two hours till daddy gets home time. Chronos is the hard, slow passing time we parents often live in.

Then there’s Kairos time. Kairos is God’s time. It’s time outside of time. It’s metaphysical time. It’s those magical moments in which time stands still. I have a few of those moments each day. And I cherish them.

Like when I actually stop what I’m doing and really look at Tish. I notice how perfectly smooth and brownish her skin is. I notice the perfect curves of her teeny elf mouth and her asianish brown eyes, and I breathe in her soft Tishy smell. In these moments, I see that her mouth is moving but I can’t hear her because all I can think is – This is the first time I’ve really seen Tish all day, and my God – she is so beautiful. Kairos.

Like when I’m stuck in chronos time in the grocery line and I’m haggard and annoyed and angry at the slow check-out clerk. And then I look at my cart and I’m transported out of chronos. And suddenly I notice the piles and piles of healthy food I’ll feed my children to grow their bodies and minds and I remember that most of the world’s mamas would kill for this opportunity. This chance to stand in a grocery line with enough money to pay. And I just stare at my cart. At the abundance. The bounty. Thank you, God. Kairos.

Or when I curl up in my cozy bed with Theo asleep at my feet and Craig asleep by my side and I listen to them both breathing. And for a moment, I think- how did a girl like me get so lucky? To go to bed each night surrounded by this breath, this love, this peace, this warmth? Kairos.

These kairos moments leave as fast as they come- but I mark them. I say the word kairos in my head each time I leave chronos. And at the end of the day, I don’t remember exactly what my kairos moments were, but I remember I had them. And that makes the pain of the daily parenting climb worth it.

If I had a couple Kairos moments during the day, I call it a success.

Carpe a couple of Kairoses a day.

Good enough for me.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Church Family Word Cloud

Our word cloud formation from our blog feed. I guess I talk about Doug a lot!

(click on the image for a larger view)
Wordle: DNA47

I prefer the advanced option to make your own weighted words:
Wordle: family.1

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Two Months

Elam is two months old already and I have documented nothing of his life so far. It is very sad.

Two months ago, we met this handsome little devil. He was so alert! And he was actually smiling at me the next day in the hospital.

When he was born, we thought he was another Church boy clone with the features that typically come standard: blue eyes, blonde hair. After they washed him up, however, we began to wonder if maybe, just maybe, we had a feisty red-head on our hands. And as his hair has gotten longer, we've discovered that it's actually a bit curly.




We checked in at the hospital at 5:20am for the induction and found out that I needed a 4-hour treatment of antibiotics first, which no one had mentioned. So that was a surprise. They started the Penicillin drip undiluted and I thought my arm had caught fire! I think it was the most painful experience of the delivery, thankfully.
I kept telling the nurse that once I get started, I go fast and I'm fairly sure she didn't believe me at all, which is why I kept telling her. I wanted to know what the time-frame was on the antibiotics, so I'd know when the get the epidural, since they were gradually increasing the Pitocin as the time went on. Finally the nurse told me she'd bring down the anesthesiologist since I "seemed so concerned about it." I had the epidural around 10am and they increased the Pitocin drip quite a lot. Nothing happened for a while and I was beginning to wonder if it was working at all when I got a really painful contraction and inexplicably felt like I was ready to have the baby. Then suddenly the nurses were panicking. Did I not warn them? My doctor was rushed from her office to deliver the baby that was imminently coming. The head nurse explained that in all her years of nursing she had never had to deliver a baby without the doctor and was praying that her record would remain unbroken. Luckily my doctor showed up in time, to the relief of everyone and Elam was born 5 minutes later. Doug was able to catch the baby again. I'm not sure why he enjoys that part so much, but he has "caught" (with the help of the doctor) all of our babies and cut the umbilical cord. I think it's nice he likes to be so involved.



As soon as I had the baby, I realized that when I was sitting up, I had this awful headache and such congestion in my ear like they needed to pop. I asked the nurses if maybe it had anything to do with the epidural and they replied that it was unlikely (though I know now, that these were classic signs of a spinal block headache). It went away after about 2 weeks, but it was very limiting and extremely annoying.
As the weeks went by we realized a few things about our new little guy: he had a very tight lingual frenulum that we had to have clipped. It sounds much worse than it is. The ENT just opened his mouth and used the surgical scissors to clip the skin under there, Elam fussed a second or two and went right back to sleep.



He also had an umbilical granuloma that needed an application of silver nitrate to help it heal up. And finally, he was extremely fussy every night and sometimes during the day. When he was screaming non-stop for about two hours one night, we decided that something else must be going on. We tried Gripe Water which didn't seem to help at all, unfortunately, so then my friend Michelle persuaded me to try eliminating dairy from my diet. Fortunately (and unfortunately) this was a big part of the problem. Eventually I found that he also dislikes anything tomato-based, and anything remotely spicy. I now have a very limited and bland diet, but also a happy baby, and that is worth it!




With the Great-Grandparents, Bobbie and Jack


Halloween was a blur!

Here we are two nights before we had the baby at the ward trunk-or-treat




Evie for her Kindergarten Halloween party. Cutest bunny I ever saw...


My Ninja and Spice-youMan (as Hylton used to call him)


Our neighbor John gets a kick out of scaring the crap out of the kids- every year. Can you see the tense body posture of them all?


Reading with Daddy

All four kiddos- they all love him so much! Evie is so mothering and will try to soothe him when he's sad. Hylton randomly walks by and kisses him. Sterling likes to hold him (for a very short period of time).


Three Church boys: Papa Dewey, Doug, and Elam and The Girl


Thanksgiving was a little less chaotic.


Getting our Christmas tree at Strawberry Hill. The other kidlets are running around the farm somewhere.


Then Doug went outside, one fine day, to do some yard work and pulled a major muscle in his back while he was sweeping. He came inside supporting his upper body weight by propping his hands on his knees (try that while walking). Pretty much looked like Quasimoto. Sterling took this lovely picture of Doug trying to stretch a few days after it happened.


Elam was blessed on December 11th. Look at him! He's such a flirt!


The kids with Grandma DeeDee and Aunt CC








He likes to lay in bed with his brothers and sister while we sing to them all at bedtime.


And he likes to fall asleep in unlikely places, like the bouncer.


His hair is just the coolest. I am so jealous of that coif. Most of the time he's sportin' an eighteenth century hairstyle: swe[t forward on the sides and the curls in front flipped-up, a la Pride and Prejudice's Mr. Bingley:







We spent Christmas Eve at my Dad's. Between us being sick and generally home-bound, and my Dad having a month-long illness, this was the first he had seen of his new Grandson, besides the baby blessing.


The kids got to see "reindeer" out the windows. Do you see the hidden deer? He had his eyes locked on me.


A family of three deer were outside here.


Christmas Eve at our house. Christmas is truly magical.


As I was taking photos off my mom's camera, I found these oldies from this summer:
This is what a mellow family dinner looks like these days. This summer, there will be two more kiddos at the table (my sister is due with her 4th in May). But, luckily, there are now two less pianos in the room, so that will be better.... (haha, Mom!)
The craziness is so much fun... most of the time... I loved all the time we got to spend with our cousins growing up and our kids love it just as much!


The Vessey siblings. Yeah, we're a sad bunch of posers. With, apparently, only two facial expressions among the four of us.


My little Hylti on our camping trip - accessorizing.


Doll-babies.

Whew! And now we're all caught-up!