Enjoying the Small Things

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Setback.

February 24, 2010 By Kelle

Today was one of those days.
Where wacked-out hormones blend with exhaustion, the tail-end of sickness and an incredibly emotional month to brew this lovely shade of gray.

I knew these setbacks would come. And I cried. And slept. And struggled to be patient and hide my pain from my little blonde free-spirit who wanted to read books and water flowers.

I dreaded Nella’s afternoon doctor appointment today because I thought the onslaught of info would begin…the hardships, the differences, the therapy, the scary things I didn’t want to hear.

I cried on the phone with my sister on the way there. And then Lainey fell asleep in the car and I forgot the stroller and I couldn’t bear waking up her tired little soul for her little sister’s appointment. So, I schlepped her sleeping body over my shoulder, twisting uncomfortably to keep her head from falling and balancing a diaper bag and carseat with 7 pounds and 4 ounces of baby in the other arm. And then I walked through a parking lot, breathing heavy and chanting to the rhythm of my jeweled sandals hitting the pavement…I’m a rockstar. I’m a rockstar. I’m a rockstar.

In the midst of my pain and sadness in life, my sarcasm often brews. I usually don’t mean what I say, but I say it because it feels good and the wit it takes to concoct something halfway funny and caustic distracts the part of my brain that feels pain. And because I’m sad, I usually don’t feel guilty for biting satire.

Which is why I didn’t feel bad when I said “F#@! Holland” today or “I hate wooden shoes.”

My sister always says exactly the right thing when I call her crying. She knows when to cry with me and she knows when I need to stop. Today, my Obi Won had good things to say.

“The very first line in The Road Less Traveled,” she told me, “says…

…Life is Difficult. This is a great truth, one of the greatest truths. Once we truly know that life is difficult–once we truly understand and accept it–then life is no longer difficult. Because once it is accepted, the fact that life is difficult no longer matters.”

Oh, the truth.

And, though I may have cursed wooden shoes and Holland, I came to the realization that, in any parenting situation, there are a thousand Holland situations. And a thousand Italys too. (Warning: Going into far-fetched Analogy Zone. Hang on.) And there’s air traffic control monitoring this constant stream of flights, for any given child, that take off and land in both the beautiful expected and the unknown lands where we must search for beauty. Perfectly “normal” children with 46 chromosomes take their parents to Holland. When girls grow up and tell their moms they aren’t having children, thus crushing grandchild dreams. When boys choose art over football and disappoint their fathers. When children move away and don’t come home for Christmas. When girls become teenagers and slam doors and call their mothers b-words.

And who says Nella will never take me to Italy? I feel like she already has…when she’s breathing heavy on my chest at night and the weight of her tightly-jammied body sinks right into my soul and I smile thinking, “this is just like Lainey.” When she takes her first steps someday. When she says ‘mama’ or ‘I love you’ or reads her first book out loud.

It’s just a mess of flights and destinations for every child…some good, some bad…but that’s parenthood. Period.

Our doctor appointment ended up going beautifully. Not daunting or scary at all. I smiled and told Dr. Foley it didn’t seem any different than Lainey’s one month appointment. Sure, we talked about steps ahead, but they don’t scare me. And we are fortunate to have a pediatrician who delivers all this information happily…like a mom…like someone who cares but knows that deep down inside, we just want to love her and enjoy her. It felt like Italy.


Thank you, Laura Weber for our new hat! We love our hats!

Setbacks come and go, and we move on. Because Life is difficult…but I’m accepting that and already…it doesn’t seem so bad.

On days like these, I get excited to go to sleep at night…to snuggle between the girls, feel the weight of newborn on my chest and know that tomorrow is a perfectly blank slate. We can walk to the lake, have a tea party in the yard, paint and color and bake. Tomorrow, it will be Italy.


(Thank you to the person who so kindly sent this beautiful hat we received today for our bunny. Wish we knew who it was from!)

And, for the record, I still hate wooden shoes.
…but I love tulips.

…and her birth announcement:

~k

Filed Under: Coping, Designer Genes, Mamahood 259 Comments

Newborns & Balance.

February 16, 2010 By Kelle

Well, Hello there.

During Nella’s morning pilates session (seriously, how delicious are newborn legs, stretched all stiff-like and toes curled? …and how do they hold them up for so long?), I became completely overwhelmed with just how much I love newborn.

Both Brett and I, during each pregnancy, would sit and talk about what we looked forward to in those first few weeks. And, amid sweet breath and tiny milk-stained lips, pursed little birdy mouths and the first blink-blinks of baby eyes taking in the bright light of their new world in the delivery room (that’s Brett’s favorite and I still remember him, three weeks ago, while I was crying and completely distraught, comforting me with his recognition of the ‘blink-blinks’ we looked forward to)…anyhoo, we always agree on one favorite newborn trait: froggy legs.

I can’t get enough. And I’m just left in this beautiful state of awe looking at those perfect, frail little legs curled up…that they are one of the few leftovers of in-utero behaviors and that just a few short weeks ago, they were curled up just like that inside me. Inside me. In my body where her perfect little self called home for so long.

This brand-new stage of newborn is so fleeting, I find myself holding her envisioning sand in an hourglass…just trickling out of my hands, and I can’t hold on to it tight enough.


Big, big yawn!

And, as she’s slowly slipping from newborn to baby, I am soaking up every bit of it, chanting “stay little, stay little, stay little” all the while.

She’s just delicious.

As is her big sister who lives up every day to the meaning of her name. She is complete sunshine despite the fact that “no way” and “go away” have become frequently used phrases in her vocabulary.

There is this ever-present cloud of guilt for her lately, and I’m realizing it is most likely everything to do with a second sibling and nothing to do with a second sibling with an extra chromosome. She’s just so incredibly lovely and her world has been a bit rocked these past few weeks, and it’s all I can do not to give her a popsicle every time she asks or let her paint the walls with the lipgloss wand because it’s fun and she wants to.

I want to take her to the park. I want to rent a funhouse for the back yard. I want to buy a pony and let her ride it every second of every day. I want to stop what I’m doing at any given moment and bake cookies with her or turn pipecleaners and pom-poms into some fabulous toddler craft. But, I guess I also want to run naked through a field of daisies just to say I did, but that’s not going to happen either.

That whole balance thing just gets more challenging as life moves on, but I know it evens out eventually. There are days when we bake three batches of cupcakes and follow it with widdling sticks from the woods into a homemade dollhouse furnished with origami furniture we dyed with fruit juice. And then there are some where I feel like Mary Poppins if I just spare five minutes to fling a tuna can across the tile in Lainey’s made-up version of floor hockey. And I guess the same holds true with our marriage in that there are days where I’m obsessively sending “you’re the best husband in the world” texts and spending hours in the kitchen knifing strawberries into hearts and drizzling chocolate into the words “I love you” over angel food cake just to make him feel special when he comes home (okay…I don’t really do that) contrasted with the more-frequent-than-I’d-like manic crazed days when I’m so busy, I don’t notice until an hour after he comes home that he’s even here. Damn that Balance. So it is…one of my life’s goals over time is to merge these polar opposites into a more consistent balanced middle-ground. Like maybe we’ll just buy the furniture next time for the widdled-stick dollhouse. Or accept the fact that being a very good mom just might be as simple as spending an afternoon drawing bodies with sidewalk chalk in the driveway.


And, for the record, I drew the body. She drew the boobs.

And this is a totally random tangent, but you know how when you get a new car, you start seeing it everywhere? Well, I swear every song I hear on the radio is about falling in love with a baby you weren’t expecting. Until I was singing with Kanye West’s Knock Me Down the other day…and I’m singin‘ and singin‘ thinking again how…holy wow, even Kanye writes songs about loving babies, and then, without even realizing…I sing along with the following part…
And I quote: I think I’m gunna kick it with my girl today….(and then, my favorite)…”My pimp-ship’s flyin‘ high.”
I don’t know what a pimp-ship is, but I’m quite certain it has nothing to do with loving your kids.

However, I will be kickin‘ it with my girls today…and loving every minute of it.


And, I almost forgot…
Some of the things you shared that you are loving (from your comments on the last post):

* American Pie by John Mclean
* The new inspiration I’ve found lately, and plan to use it to inspire others
* The smell of old photographs and the warm feeling I get while looking at them- It’s incredible to see how my Grandmom held my Mother’s hand and I especially love the one of my Grandfather holding my Father and staring into his eyes at 4 weeks old
* My hometown of Vancouver, BC, and watching “home” on tv daily because of the Olympics. I am so proud to be a British Columbian, and I don’t know a more beautiful place on earth than BC.
* Our 6th daffodil that just opened up in the back yard
* 30 Rock: Sometimes you have to laugh until you pee. just a little.
* Those human interest stories of Olympic athletes – they get me every time! The only trouble is that then it is hard to pick who you want to win the gold – it’s like “well I want so-and-so to win because her mom has cancer, but I want other-so-and-so to win because she recovered from a horrific accident, etc. etc.” But those stories make the Olympics the cool thing that they are, to me anyways!

Thank you! Had so much fun reading them! There’s so much to love…

…like Nella’s little comic book drop-kick. Take that, Batman.

…and taking down my old header? That was hard. That was very hard, but we are moving on.

~k

(If you’re in the Naples area, we are back to work…mini shoot coming up. Info HERE)

Filed Under: Coping, Mamahood 160 Comments

Week 1,619

February 12, 2010 By Kelle

I began to title this post “Week 3,” as in our-third-week-into-this or three-weeks-since-the-big-day, but I am beginning to see this differently and, as this is simply one step on the grander scheme of life, I am rather officically 1,619 Weeks into it. Life, that is. That’s 31 years, give or take a few weeks.

Last night, a friend sent me a passage she had underlined in her copy of Maya Angelou’s Wouldn’t Take Nothing From My Journey Now, and I smiled reading it.

“Life is pure adventure, and the sooner we realize that, the quicker we will be able to treat life as art; to bring all our energies to each encounter, to remain flexible enough to notice and admit when what we expected to happen did not happen. We need to remember that we are created creative and can invent new scenarios as frequently as they are needed.”

And oh, how true that is…and our real-life has exemplified a new understanding of that these past weeks.

Life as Art.

I have consciously been able to control my sadness and coming-to-terms with all of this quite well, but the past few days, that subconscious sadness–the part that can’t be controlled with self-talks and good quotes–that cloud of can-this-be-happening? that seems to follow and shadow me no matter how many times I watch The Hangover (four, in a row, to be exact) to mask the seriousness of it…well, it was beginning to get to me.

I hate “The Bus.” I tried to lapse on payments so the repo truck would come and drag it away, but it lingered, not so much running over me like a few weeks ago or even hitting me, for that matter. I still have the grill marks on my face from the last hit, so that was nice of the bus; however, it’s the threat of a hit…the unknown…the smell of the exhaust or perhaps the memory of the pain of the last hit. And, I’ve been known to take a good analogy and fly it to the moon with exaggeration, so I’ll chill on the bus thing before you’re left scratching your head, but I’ll have you know I once likened one of my sister’s bad days to cows in pasture eating grass or somethin’ or other and, by the end, the cows had run out of the fence, the grass had been eaten, I think there was manure, and my sister and I were left laughing hysterically by the end of the analogy because we had no idea what we were even talking about anymore. I am often asked, in the middle of an elaborate analogy, “Where are you going with this?” And the answer, I tell you, is…to the moon.

Back to the bus. The thing is, I hate being sad. I hate being negative. And while I may be teased on my over-positivity or need to find a cape emblazoned with “Enjoying the @#!*-ing Small Things,” I too wallow in a bad mood from time to time. However, I’ve found I am quite healed by the Fake It Till You Make It Strategy–searching for the good (and there’s lots to find), writing about the good, taking pictures of the good, talking about the good–basically bathing in the many little things that bring joy to our life until I am no longer faking it, I believe it completely and have allowed the good to rise above the bad in that ever present glass of “Half Full.” Unrealistic? Perhaps, but I don’t think so. Regardless, I’d much rather live life as an unrealistic optimist than a realistic miserable pessimist. It’s so much more fun.

So, we’ve continued to do that…and it’s not just this whole thing that has challenged us. We’ve been doing it for years.

And if we had a gallery, we would exhibit pieces of our life this week. Slices of wonderfulness.


Life as Art: An Exhibit of our Week…

The Art of an Afternoon Cup of Coffee.

…enhanced by the accompaniment of a snuggled baby.

The Art of an Evening Picnic at the Lake with Cousin Joann.

The Art of a Dog Pondering Life in the Eastern Sunlight

and A Little Dog Protecting a Little Baby

The Art of Two Little Friends

(and I have to say, my girl’s friendships have meant so much to me these past weeks…I just want her to be happy. I want her to be unaffected by the emotions, the change. And seeing her in total bliss, skipping around with her little gap-toothed grin and wayward pigtails…well, that makes it all seem better).

The Art of New Baby Feet
(which, in my opinion, may just be the most delicious form of art there is)

The Art of Watching the Littles Entertain the New Baby
(and her little eyes taking it all in. Yes, she is loved…and that is how she will learn to be just as fabulous as she will be…which is very, very fabulous.)

The Art of a New Space
It’s been awhile since I did something new to the house…and it always makes me so happy to “feather our nest.” A friend stopped by a couple weeks ago when we brought Nella home and completely surprised me with two beautiful chairs for my girls from the furniture store she works at…and I fell in love hard and heavy with their quilted fabulousness and have been waiting to highlight them deservingly. Finally, yesterday, with a small handful of Craiglist earned cash, I walked into Homegoods and found a clearanced slightly damaged trunk, a lamp, an old suitcase and a few picture frames…all for less than that handful of cash. Then rushed home to set it up and hence improve the quality of my day a trillionfold.
So, out with the big clunky couch and in with the…

Superfun Play/Workroom

(p.s. Trunk double duties as storage…all my photography props fit inside, and the suitcase stores my printer paper.)

…and our gallery continues to grow.

…bringing all our energies to each encounter. …and we don’t have to fake that to make that. It’s real, and it’s beautiful.

1,619. That’s a really good number.

…and it’s only gunna get better and better.

The daddy comes home tonight…and we are anticipating his arrival like a soldier’s welcome home.

Life as Art…painting it beautifully. ~k

Filed Under: Coping, Designer Genes, Mamahood, Our Everyday 140 Comments

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