Enjoying the Small Things

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Today is my Favorite Day

July 12, 2010 By Kelle

We rooted for Holland last night. And by “rooted for” I mean we went die-hard. We gathered with Dutch friends, wore orange shirts, ate orange food, painted orange toes and watched as friends scooped up Nella, made a Conga line and danced and sang…Hup, Holland, Hup!

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They may not have won but we had fun none the less. The World Cup of Half-Full, Baby. And painted in our friends’ kitchen, in Dutch, were these beautiful words…Today is my favorite day.

Today is my favorite day.
Today, I clap and cheer as the bunny makes more victories in the land of sitting up.

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And Lainey’s dubs herself “The Spotter.” She takes “spotting” very seriously, stabilizing her back and slooooowly withdrawing her hand, but quick as ever to guide her back to upright if she falls.

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One-one-thousand, Two-one-thousand, Three-one-thousand has slowly grown to Eight-one-thousand, Nine-one-thousand, Ten-one-thousand until her little body gracefully topples and we all clap and cheer and “Yay, Nella, Yay!” until she smiles.

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Today is my favorite day.
Today I look back at pictures of our week and smile. Today I remember how great it is to have Poppa here, stopping by to grab a cup of coffee, paint some grandaughter toes, sit at the kids table and draw pictures of dogs and cats and smiling little girls.

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Today is my favorite day.
Today when Nella falls asleep, I have “Just Us” time with my little sprite. We lay on the floor on our tummies, stretch our legs and play another game of Memory. She wins most of the matches, proudly piling up her prized wins in an impressive stack. Two ladybugs. Two goldfish. Two pizza slices. She’s proud.

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At nap, we lie all intertwined and she thumbs Puppy’s ear and asks me to tell her a story about Grandma Krissy. I know which one she wants so I tell her about when Grandma was little. When she and Aunt Karen rode their bikes to the doctor for their shots and on the way home, crashed their bikes into each other, leaving their sore legs throbbing. She laughs when I act out the crash. She listens intently and her eyes say “I love you.”

Today is my favorite day.
Today, we sit on hot pavement as the sun sinks behind the woods and I watch as my girl draws eyes on my octopus with fat sidewalk chalk.

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Today is my favorite day. Today, after the sun sets, I dig through my basket of mud masks and scented bubbles and fill the tub with hot sudsy water. Today, I sink into its comfort and dog-ear magazine pages with 15 dollar wedges and candy-apple fingernail polish. I sip an ice-cold beer and listen in the distance as Daddy coos to little girls who haven’t realized Mama’s missing.

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Today is my favorite day.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized 174 Comments

Chickens & Cats, Cats & Chickens

July 9, 2010 By Kelle

Key West.
Where hula hoops randomly dangle from street signs, a calm reminder never to take anything too seriously, I guess.

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And the not-so-subliminal messages of the parrot-colored town sank into my soul, a consistent reminder…

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We started our trip Tuesday morning packing the car to the brim with the essentials—suitcases, bathing suits, sunscreen—as well as the equally important non-essentials—granola bars, Sun chips, carbonated beverages, a bag of books and flashcards and toys that play noise, making a five hour drive with a baby a little more bearable. We sailed across the long strip in the Everglades, pointing out an alligator snout here, a colorful orange tree there. The sky was blue and vibrant; the car passengers calm and happy.

And then from there, it was bliss. Morning coffee on the balcony overlooking the ocean and evening beers at Hogsbreath overlooking the vast color and diversity of a town that has proclaimed itself One Human Family. Friendly cats roam the streets and curl up in shelves in little corner shops. Curious chickens wander through town, cackling and crowing and fighting the pigeons for their turf. There is so much flair here–so much who-the-hell-cares here.

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And we walk and we walk and we walk, winding through gardens, a kaleidoscope of brightly-colored buildings, rickety stairs, soap shops, open bars, street misters, jugglers and fortune tellers, and cats…more cats.

Poppa hoists Nella over his shoulder where she slumps into a comfortable snooze. I offer him the baby carrier but he guffaws and says something along the lines of We’ve been holding babies without those silly things for a long time, and somewhere I’m sure my grandma—the one who rocked her grandchildren to sleep and laid them down on a pile of blankets long before the days of Pack N’ Plays—is smiling.

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We return to our hotel at night, sharing a spaghetti dinner in Poppa’s room and late-night cookies. And later, I soak in the deep tub with the bubbling jets and close my eyes, entranced in the cloud of steam and hum of hot water. It is quiet and calm. It is the first time our entire family has been able to relax in a hotel since before Lainey was born. I am thanking Poppa and Gary in my head over and over for treating us. I am grateful.

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There is much to be thankful for. There is much to enjoy. On the way home, I watch as the sun shines its golden face on my girls. They are happy. And so am I.

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The little one peeks over the plastic edge of the carseat and catches my eyes…

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And rewards my affection with a grateful grin.

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I am in love with Life.

Our weekend in review…

Thank you, Poppa & Gary so very much.

And now for a grand giveaway.
Poppa (my dad) & Gary’s vacation rental business is giving away a 3-4 day Labor Day weekend stay (valued at $750) for up to 6 persons at one of their properties at Bonita by the Beach (exact dates and properties to be arranged with winner after selection). If you are able to travel labor day weekend and provide your own transportation to and from Naples, please visit their site and click on the “contact us” bar. Fill out a submission form, include your e-mail address and in the comments, write “labor day giveaway.” Submissions will be numbered respectively and the winner will be randomly drawn (generated by Random.org) and announced Tuesday, July 13th.

If you can’t travel Labor Day weekend and are planning a vacation for later this year (or next), mention the blog and receive a 10% discount on your rental.

Look for Good…and you will find it.

Filed Under: Travel 217 Comments

On Down syndrome

July 6, 2010 By Kelle

The title of this post may surprise you. Because it surprises me. Because…I forget. The two words that felt so heavy months ago, like iron chains that shackled me and pulled me beneath waters that choked and suffocated me until I almost drowned. They’re gone, those shackles. I float happily now, light and free, aware of its presence in our lives but…well, just that. Aware.

This is what I wanted. As I was scraping away layers of who I was months ago, discovering our new meaning, rearranging things in our life and finding a place for the new term to live in our spaces, I hoped I’d end here. That life would take center stage and Down syndrome would move to the back like a stage assitant whose name appears in small print at the end of the credits. I searched the Internet for families that did it like I wanted to and put band-aids on my heart when I found them…familes that moved on and loved life–the ones that you’d never know “it” happened to them unless you dug a little deeper. Families that were not defined by it. And it happened on its own. We became that family, the one I wanted to be.

But every once and awhile, it appears. Last night as she was playing, grasping toys and waving them in front of her. And her movements were a little choppy, up and down, up and down, pounding her forearm to her chest like a hammer. And Brett looks up at me and says, “Is that normal? That choppy movement? Or is that Down syndrome?” And for one tiny little second, my mind starts spinning. Is it normal? Did Lainey do it? What if it’s not? And I want to Google it, but I don’t know what to search. And I don’t want to see what it says. And I laugh it off and go to bed but it’s 6:00 right now and I’d be lying if I didn’t say I woke up early and have let the bus hit me again. It could have been a light and easy hit, but no. I asked the driver to hit me hard. “Smack me real good so my body flings up in the air like a dummy and I hit the pavement hard on the way down,” I tell him. And he obeys.

See, I don’t usually think this way. In fact, I was commenting to a friend the other day that my acceptance of Down syndrome is much like her acceptance of having two boys. Like sometimes it will hit her for a moment that she never had a girl. And for one second it might be sad…that “I’ll never know what it’s like to have a girl” feeling…but then instantly comes this love for her boys and she smiles and moves on. The same argument could be made about only having girls and never knowing what it’s like to have a boy. And that’s just what it’s like for me. Mostly I don’t think about it. But sometimes, for one second it will hit me…”My daughter has Down syndrome,” and my throat will start to tighten and for one second–one tiny, tiny second–it hurts, but right before it closes to the point of robbing my oxygen, it opens back up–as quick as it closed–and I breathe. “Yeah? So what. She has Down sydrome.”

My friend might never know what it’s like to have a girl. I might never know what it’s like to have a boy. And I’ll never know what it’s like to have a Down-syndrome-less Nella. But there’s a lot of things we’ll never know. Every choice we make eliminates another. Random as it is, I’ll never know what it’s like to be married to an Asian man, an Australian man, a British man with a sexy Hugh Grant accent. I’ll never know what it’s like to get wasted on my 21st birthday. I’ll never know what it’s like to have triplets or to travel around the world before I get married. I’ll never know what’s like to be a natural blonde. And I’m not going to cry about any of it because there’s a million random things I’m never going to know, and everyone’s life is custom-made for them. And when I hear about moms who kiss their babies before running to their chemo appointments or kindergarteners who draw pictures of their daddy-less families and nonchalantly tell their teachers that their daddy’s in heaven…well, I’ll take my custom-made situation just as it is, thank you. Because it’s beautiful and I am grateful.

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I am reminded that I had these same feelings with Lainey. That there were plenty of nights I woke up early like today, unable to sleep because my mind wandered over unexplained fevers or scabs that didn’t heal. I’ve been hit by the bus in non-special needs land too, and I guess that’s a comfort. And hell, maybe she grabbed toys and jerkily hammered them to her chest too. It’s okay, it really is. I just had to put it out there. Peel off the painful layer, type it out and put it to rest where it belongs.

Parenthood is hard and beautiful. Scary and rewarding. Sad and Happy. All at once. Last week my friend traveled to Texas to be with her best friend when she welcomed her baby early…just three-and-some pounds. It was scary…and although my friend doesn’t have babies yet, I had to sit back and smile at her account of it all after she kissed that baby goodbye and headed back home. Because she was smitten with the love of that little boy and what his family went through and being present to witness the transformation welcoming new life does to you. Especially when it’s a little bit scary. It rocks you to the core. Picks you up, smacks you down hard and then rebuilds you with all new parts. Loving littles is one of the greatest, most wonderful things that will ever happen to you. And the minute you welcome one into your life, you inherit a thicker skin…because the bus will hit you plenty of times to the point you’ll think you damn near died. But you don’t. You pick yourself off the ground, dust off your knees…and move on. Because beauty awaits. The beauty that fills in all the holes and rough spots.

So, I guess I didn’t feel that one coming. But it’s out. And yes, I do have these days.

On a lighter note, we’re off to Key West to engrave some sweet memories in our sweet littles’ minds…and don’t forget to check out how to pack The Perfect Picnic over at Babble.com

Filed Under: Designer Genes 499 Comments

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