Category Archives: Life in general

Just handy…

Below is an art project they did at Jack’s daycare – paint the kids’ hands and make two handprints so the eight fingers make eight legs for spiders. Jack’s spider is just like him, short a few digits. I had mixed feelings when I saw this project. I obviously don’t want them to not do projects like this because of Jack’s hand and I love that we have these unique art pieces and at the same time I’m reminded of the everyday things that will come up that will point out Jack’s limb difference. And despite how things could be so much worse for him (because this really will never hold him back at all – at least not physically), I still hate that he has this particular thing in his life, because again, we want the easiest path possible for our kids.

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I’ve talked about Jack’s hand before and I want to reiterate I’m not ever sad and don’t sit around thinking about what he can’t do because I truly believe his possibilities are limitless. But I do want to talk about a few things that have been on my mind and heart with regard to his hand that the art project sort of brought to the surface.

A couple of weeks ago Liam was playing with a Mexican Small Drum, similar to the one pictured below, the kind where you spin the handle back and forth between your hands so the balls on the end of the strings hit the drum to make a rhythmic sound. After Liam was done with it, Jack picked it up and tried it out but couldn’t do it at first. He looked at me and said (in Jack speak), “I can’t do it, I need another hand.” As you can imagine, I felt the wind leave my sails. That was the first time he’d ever really acknowledged that his left hand was different from the right one. I immediately recovered and said, “No, you can do it, let me show you.” And I put it back in his hands and twisted it back and forth using the base of his little hand against the handle and it worked just great.

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Source: monstermarketplace.com

I was relating this story to friends and one of them asked, “Did it make you cry?” And it didn’t make me cry – I’m sure it could if I thought about it too much – but it was similar to what happened right after Jack was born. We had no idea when I was pregnant that his left hand was any different from his right hand so when he was born and the doctor laid him on me and we saw his hand for the first time there was a fleeting moment where I thought (and said aloud), “What is wrong with his hand?” And I truly hate, hate, hate that that will forever be my first thought when seeing my second-born, but it was. Immediately, my wonderful doctor quickly and calmly dismissed it and said something along the lines of, “Oh, he’s all right, that happens sometimes – it might have been an umbilical band [it wasn’t] – but he’s just fine.” And he was just fine and perfect. I will forever be grateful to her for that moment of assurance and peace because it has set my mind and my heart on track every moment since then. And I didn’t cry then, so how could I cry over these other moments – it’s all in how we react in the moment that will help set the tone for Jack, to teach him that, though he is different, it’s no big deal and he can’t let it get him down.

Another friend and I were talking about this and she asked if I thought Jack was sad about his hand. And the easy answer is not yet but I’m sure he will probably be frustrated by it in the future, and yes, sad. So we take the moments that come now and set the stage for the future, teaching him how to react until it is second nature. I hope we are teaching him to not hold himself back, to challenge himself when he’s faced with possible limitations. It’s just like with both boys, how we have always reacted neutrally when they have fallen down and don’t make a big deal out of these falls and it has taught them to brush the little spills off and to pop right back up, unphased (something that never ceases to amaze others who see it); this is what we are showing to Jack, when he thinks he can’t do something, he can try a different way and see if that works and if he feels sad about his hand, he can buck up and remember that everyone is different in one way or another. So far, so good. Though I should note that I do want to be careful that we aren’t dismissing valid feelings, because his hand will likely make him feel a whole variety of things that we will have to cope with and he needs to know that it’s also okay to have those feelings – but not to dwell on those that aren’t helpful.

And this has absolutely nothing to do with the above, but it’s just a cute story that happened with Jack. Often when the boys say, “I want [something].” I respond with, “Well, I want a million dollars. We don’t always get what we want.” This happened today when Jack asked to watch TV and a few minutes later he walked over to me and put his hands in mine and said, “Here’s a million dollars… can’t I watch TV now?” [I totally turned on the television.]

Things that make you go hmmm…

  • PF Changs opened this week… I wonder how long it will take for the crowds to die down before I can try it (I have been there once and have been wanting their lettuce wraps ever since).
  • We tried the new Bagger Dave’s this weekend – the food was very good (yummy homemade sweet potato chips) and reasonably priced (half off kid’s meals on Sunday – though no chicken nuggets for poor Jack), and the service attentive – but you would have thought that since we were one of the first customers in (third table seated), they would have offered us some special deal/treat. Nope. In the marketing world we call that a bad plan.
  • I have had a package that had shown on FedEx‘s website as “In transit” since last week Thursday, from the same city I live in – I had chalked it up to being lost and then today it finally says “Out for delivery” from the US Post Office – huh? None of that makes sense to me.
  • Does it seem crazy and unnecessary that Kohl’s will be open at midnight for Black Friday sales after Thanksgiving? Apparently they decided to stop upping their opening time by one-hour increments and just make the leap to midnight. Stooopid. Though awfully tempting to just stay up and go shopping… Simon and I are the rare couple that likes to get up early and get the good deals if we think any are worth it (we will later debate how valuable our sleeping time is compared to a good deal). Last year we weren’t going to go but then we ended up in the ER with Liam (croup) Thanksgiving night and ended up coming home at 5 a.m. so we dropped Liam off at my parents’ house and headed over to Target.
  • On a related note to the above – I’m attempting to do all my shopping online this year, so far I’m having great success.
  • Others have said it better and more thoughtfully, but I’m sickened and appalled that anyone can defend Joe Paterno. While no laws were broken by him, I whole-heartedly agree that a multitude of moral standards were ignored and stomped upon along the way. Because no matter how much money it makes or how powerful the legacy, no football program is more important than the safety and well-being of a single child. Shame on anyone who thinks differently and shame on those who known bad (awful/terrible/despicable) things are happening and do NOTHING – I don’t care how old you are, you know better.
  • I hesitate to write this in case my neighbors ever find my blog but here goes… I don’t live in the south or the country, yet my neighbors have their five-year-old daughter sporting a full-on mullet. Her bangs (a.k.a., short part of her hair) extend from the top of one ear, all the way around her forehead to over the other ear and the rest of her hair is a few inches past her shoulders. How do they think this looks good or normal?
  • Last Friday the hubby and I got to have an unexpected date. I had an event at church and had a sitter home with the boys and when it finished I called to see where he was and he was just wrapping up at work so we ended up meeting at a local pizza place that has added a sports bar area (and was therefore open late) and we got to have an impromptu date. It made me happy (and also feel old because when he initially proposed we meet at a bar that used to be a favorite of ours, I thought, no, I don’t want to deal with that crowd).
  • For the last month I have been eating right and working out more than ever and haven’t lost a SINGLE pound. Frustration. That’s all I have to say about that.
  • We’re moving offices next month… how long do you think I can procrastinate packing up everything before I’ll begin to panic and stop sleeping?

Forward Thinking

So, it’s November… two more months left in the year!? It hardly seems possible that we’re nearing the end of the year. But it’s also the time of year I look the most forward to so it seems fitting that it’s time for another forward thinking post! Here are some things I’m looking forward to in the next two months.

Going away this weekend with my friend, Tracey. We are leaving Friday morning and not coming back until Sunday and neither of us can wait! Whoot! I believe (though correct me if I am remembering incorrectly) this is the first time I’ve been away from all my boys for two nights since I went to Key West with my girlfriends when we turned 30 – that’s a long time. We have no big plans, sleeping in without being woken up by our children, going to see Footloose and exploring some cute northern Michigan towns. I’m hoping to get caught up on magazines and get at least one book off my Kindle. And I just love my husband for “letting” me go! I’m sure the boys will have lots of fun without me and if they don’t, at least I’ll be de-stressed and able to handle it when I get back!

The first snow of the season – I love winter (though I hate driving in the winter, every rose has its thorn) and I love the magical feeling of a first snow.

Conferences – Liam’s first school conference is next week and I can’t wait to hear what his teacher has to say – the good and even the bad. I enjoy other’s insights into my kids, especially the insights of those who are professionals because goodness knows I am most definitely a newbie in the parenting a 5-year-old arena.

Writing my thing(s) I’m thankful for at the Thanksgiving service at my parent’s church. This tradition has been going on as long as I can remember and everyone takes a paper leaf and writes their thankful thing and then a couple of families collect them and hang them on a tree at the front of church.

Also looking forward to Thanksgiving weekend in general… good food, good times with family and a long weekend!

Holiday parties – I love the festivities of Christmas and the added excuse to get together with groups of people to laugh and enjoy a plethora of good food.

Revisiting the real reason for Christmas with my boys – I love talking with them about baby Jesus and each year you can see it clicking more with Liam and that warms my little heart.

Christmas in Lansing with my family doing our normal traditional get togethers and late-Christmas in Australia with Simon’s family doing their traditional things – Simon’s sister’s been facebooking about making Christmas pudding and the recipe involves soaking fruit in Cointreau and rum for many days, I can only hope there will be some left for us!

Let the fun begin… but first, a nice, relaxing weekend to kick it off… that is just what the doctor ordered to offset all the tantrums that will need diffusing and the time-outs that will need to be enforced over the next two months because the one thing I do know about parenting is that fun times = inevitable meltdowns by the short set (and sometimes Simon).

Top Ten Halloween Observations


1. Traditions are wonderful and I’m so glad we’ve got some for our kids – one such tradition is spending Halloween with our good friends and their girls. We’ve done this every Halloween since Liam and Keila were 1 and plan on continuing it long into the future!

2. My mom totally had the right idea about being the one to stay at home while my dad took me around the neighborhood trick-or-treating. Tracey and I send the boys off with the kiddos and we hand out candy at their house. It’s a perfect set up.

3. Halloween really is fun for the whole family – the kids get to haul in the candy with the illusion that they will get to eat it all and the parents get to sneak it out of their buckets after they go to bed.

4. I enjoy being able to make Halloween costumes – and I’m not at all being sarcastic about that. Though I feel like the Angry Bird costumes might be the pinnacle of my costume-making career.

5. The grown up costumes are way more entertaining than the kid costumes – all the teachers at Liam’s school dressed up for the parade but my favorite was the male teacher who was dressed like a blond Dorothy.

 

He at least should have gone the extra mile and shaved his legs, don’t you think?

6. If you are helping out with the class Halloween party and having to make a fool out of yourself by doing Halloween motions with the kids for a game (e.g., flap your arms like a bat, walk like a skeleton and dance like a princess), the least the other parents could do is avert their eyes and not sit and watch you.

7. Carving pumpkins is not worth the effort if your kids are too little to actually clean them out and do any of the work. We tried last year and completely skipped that activity this year but since I made their costumes (from scratch, without a pattern) I figure I can let it slide.

8. Parents at our school take the Halloween parade very seriously – I arrive 20 minutes early and still had to drive on the bike path to park out on the lawn by the road.

9. My kids make darn cute Angry Birds.

 

10. When you haven’t eaten a whole lot of sugar for 6 months – 3 snack sized candy bars make you hyper… but at least I know the crash is coming…

P.S. It’s NOVEMBER! How did this happen?


Top Ten {Tuesday}This post is linked to Oh Amanda’s Top Ten Tuesday.

Happy Halloween!


Hope you had a fun and memorable Halloween! This photo absolutely cracks me up! One child is having a mini-fit while the other is spaced out. But at least I look cute. That’s what it’s all about!

Now to raid the kids’ candy buckets… at least they also each got a toothbrush! More tomorrow – right now I’m in a sugar coma!