Category Archives: Life in general

Scenes from a life lived (limb) differently

Happy Tuesday, folks – hope the week is treating you well now that we have survived the Polar Vortex and the Arctic Blast – I’m just waiting for the Blizzard Apocalypse to strike. For family and friends out of the country, the weather reports have been a great source of entertainment lately – we are all amused by the drama cold weather brings. It’s like it’s surprising that winter has come yet again, like it does EVERY year.

The following is a series of things that have been on my mind and I just want to gather them all in one place. They are all related to Jack and his little hand (more on that here). I hope that someday he can read this and realize that while his little hand is a “thing” it’s not the only thing about him, it’s just another part of who he is and what helps make him the amazing person he is – but it’s also something I’ve put a lot of thought into to figure out how to shape his view and thinking with regard to it and how he lives his life.

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Jack has started a new habit when he is asking for something and I have already turned him down once, he puts his hands together like he is saying a prayer and pleads, “Pretty please.” The first time he did this, I had to stop myself from automatically saying “yes” because this little gesture was punctuated by the difference in his hands. That little hand stops me in my tracks sometimes and I have to remind myself that he gets no favors because of it and I do him no favors if I baby him or allow for different rules because of it. It’s not tough love, it’s just love. And the hope he won’t use the hand has an excuse for not doing something or has a means to garner sympathy.

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I’ve also discovered that he’s caught on that he can use his little hand as a reason others aren’t nice to him – he made up a story that some boys at daycare told him his little hand was stupid which instantly made my big, bad momma bear come out but after further questioning and checking with his teacher, I discovered he likely made it up because it seems he has a flair for the dramatic and likes playing the victim. I’m onto his tactics and have related the story of the boy who cries wolf, while reminding him that if someone does make fun of him for his hand, a) it’s not okay, b) what they say is untrue and c) they aren’t worth being friends with – but he should still be nice to them.

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A friend had a baby recently and the first time we visited her, Jack checked her hands to see if she had two big ones or one little one like him. This would have given me pause if it wasn’t for the fact we had just seen a bunch of children younger than Jack at a Lucky Fin Project gathering who all had limb differences like him. My friend admitted that his checking made her heart hurt, but it made me smile because for once he didn’t just assume he was the only “different” one in the room. That’s why the Lucky Fin Project is awesome – it raises awareness about limb differences and celebrates them – bringing us together online and in person.

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A couple weeks ago, as we were pulling out of the driveway, Jack asked, “When I go to heaven, will I have two big hands?” THAT, that made my heart hurt. I responded with, “I don’t know buddy, but I bet you’ll have whatever hands you want in heaven.” I pray that someday he’ll be content with the hands he’s got and not be wishing for something different. But I pray the same thing for Liam and all the people I love, that they will be content with who God made them to be and not go after being something they are not.

– + – + –

This math question was in Liam’s homework packet last week:

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Can you imagine why I might have a problem with it considering one of my children only has six fingers? The lovely assumption that 10 fingers for each person is a given. The possibility that this question will be included in Jack’s homework packet when he is in second grade?

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This article ran in the Sunday paper and was given to me by our very well-intentioned daycare teacher who perhaps realized I might be offended but was nice enough to think of us when she read it. I have no qualms about the story, but I wish the reporter had taken a little time to talk about all the things the little girl can do with her limb difference (which, incidentally, is a whole category of “conditions” but not a specific condition itself… it appears the girl has symbrachydachtyly like Jack, NOT a condition called “Limb Differences” as reported in the article). The article also reported that the girl was born without a hand which is just untrue, she appears to have been born without a fully developed right hand; in the pictures she does have a hand that is missing digits. The Robohands, while very cool (and the whole high schoolers building it aspect is also pretty amazing), does not seem necessary in this case and I feel like the articles makes it sound that way – like the Robohand is helping her overcome this horrible thing when in actuality, it is NOT a horrible thing or a deficit. I hope the little girl in the article and her mother realize that her limitations are not about questions of “can she or can’t she do something” but instead are opportunities to figure out how to do something differently. I don’t expect Jack to tie his shoes the same way that Liam does, but I expect that we’ll figure out a way for him to do it. And he can squeeze the toothpaste out just fine. Thankyouverymuch.

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As I’ve talked about before, the thing we tell Jack to tell others when they ask about his hand is: “This is just how God made me.” That his little hand is what makes him special… which of course, in brotherly competition, leads Liam to ask, “What makes me special?” And rather than highlight all the things about him that make him who he is, we stick with the story of his belly button which then leads to picking one thing about all the people we know and talking about what their special thing is, because we are all unique, physically, mentally, spiritually and socially (for the record, my special things are my longer-than-my-big toes second, third and fourth toes and Simon’s is that his uvula is split in two [the hangy-downy thingie in the back of your throat]). No other person is exactly like us, though we may share common qualities, God made us all special. Not better or worse than any another person but special. Individual. Each with our own set of characteristics. Our own set of problems and our own set of joys. The one thing we universally have in common is that we are all different.

I resolve…

ememby_2014resolutionsSo, hey, it’s cold. Just putting that out there in case you were in the U.S. and hadn’t noticed that detail or are in another country and hadn’t been inundated enough by FB status updates related to said cold temps.

Due to an ice storm in December and aforementioned cold weather (and copious amounts of snow – thanks Polar Vortex), Christmas break was extended an additional 3 days – Simon also got the last two days off after only working Thursday and Friday last week after his extended post-surgical break (off since December 13 – life is just so hard for SOME people). So we’ve had a whole lot of family togetherness because I can work from home when the roads are treacherous (or staying in my pajamas seems appealing). The wonder of this family bonding was broken today as Liam was back at school, Jack was in daycare and Simon is currently at work for the night… back to reality. (I also went to work today in case you are keeping tabs.)

Our break was good. Filled with happy times, gift-giving and receiving, visiting friends in faraway places like Ohio and tiny, multi-colored rubber bands. My boys LOVE rainbow loom (or, rather, they love the knock-off varieties they received for Christmas after mastering making fishtail bracelets on plastic forks). [A more energized blogger would provide links for those of you who haven’t a clue about rainbow loom but please note the plethora of family togetherness mentioned in the previous paragraph, I am spent.] But, did you know it is possible to make nativity scenes* and various animals out of those tiny rubber bands? And I can neither confirm nor deny whether I spent an evening over the weekend watching (and following) a YouTube video featuring a Russian-accented man showing people how to make a turtle out of tiny rubber bands. And while I can neither confirm nor deny how I spent my time, if you watched my children sleeping, you would see them cuddling tiny turtles that appear to be made out of rubber bands and that is pretty special and sweet.

Anywho… back to New Year’s Resolutions… first, let’s take a look at the ones from 2013 and how I did with them:

  1. Read more books (a minimum of one a month)
    I read at least 15 books – it’s hard to know for sure because I didn’t keep an actual list so I had to look at hard copies and purchases made on my Kindle and make an educated guess but I am back to reading more like I used to do which is what I wanted to accomplish with that one.
  2. Pray EVERY night with the boys.
    I did pray with them more often and we had plenty of theological discussions in the car. We’ll call it halfsies.
  3. Eat more meals with all four of us around our kitchen table
    Sadly, it doesn’t take many meals to achieve this, but it does help to have a new kitchen table.
  4. Be a better friend to my family
    I don’t know that this one could be measured. And I also don’t know that I tried real hard with that one
  5. Prepare house for selling/renting (and preferably, do one of those things) [SOLD and MOVED]
  6. Work on non-blog writing
    Fail, but I paid more attention to what I read (word choice, opening lines, voice, etc…) and read a book about writing so that is a tiny step in the right direction.
  7. Host a dinner party
    I count having 12 people for small group around our dining room table. And hosting Thanksgiving.
  8. Lose 50 pounds
    Well… FAIL. This happens when you move and let things go for the last six months of the year. But it’s a new year and we’re going to get back at it, starting NOW.
  9. Move 500 miles (walking, bike, elliptical)
    I stopped tracking this but at the point that I did, I was at 360+ miles in August so I am going to say I made it – it helps knowing every figure 8 in our neighborhood is a mile.
  10. Go on a family vacation
    Texas – spring break – it might not be original, but it was fun and it was two weeks of family vacationing.
  11. Spend more days at the beach
    Not sure how many is more… but I had a nice tan, so that counts.
  12. Procrastinate and worry less; laugh more.
    Another unquantifiable one… but I did have some good times and great laughs… but selling and buying houses and being put (officially) in charge of a company will make for a bit of worry, it is only natural and rather unavoidable.
  13. List my gratitude on a weekly basis
    Like a few others above, I started strong on this but fell flat the second half of the year. So another halfsies.
  14. Make sticky toffee pudding.
    Delicious (even with the dates) – it is the yummiest. Made it twice. 

One resolution not listed above but that I completed was not drinking Diet Coke – like at all and for the whole year. I honestly did not think I could do it which is maybe why I didn’t mention it at the start of the year. I used to have a sidebar image that said “Given enough Diet Coke I could rule the world” which is untrue but such was my love for the stuff. I drank it nearly daily – certainly not as much as others who shall remain nameless but more than enough. I read a study that said something along the lines that those who drink Diet Coke are [some percentage I can’t recall] more likely to be depressed so I gave it up, thinking it would last for a month or so but I went the WHOLE year without any Diet Coke, save the accidental sip I took of Simon’s on our way to Texas when I thought I was drinking my iced tea. After a year-long break I don’t really miss it (I mean sometimes I would love to have a DC, especially when the boys get kid’s meals from the golden arches – because their fountain DC is divine) and I don’t know if I’ll go back. I did have regular Coke this past weekend because a friend brought it over and it was after the new year started so I thought, why not, and let me tell you – I had an eye-ball hurting headache. It wasn’t the caffeine, because goodness knows I’m not crazy enough to give that up, but something in that Coke did NOT agree with my system so for now, no Coke products for me. Why would I want to work past my body’s rejection of it to go back to acceptance? Crazy talk.

So not so bad. On to this year’s NEW resolutions:

  1. Procrastinate less.
  2. Do better.
  3. Get healthier.
  4. Read (and keep track of) at least 12 books.

Procrastination is my least favorite trait about myself and I mentioned that today to a friend and she said that she would never have taken me as a procrastinator which means I am good at hiding this character flaw and at the end of the day – the person I’m hurting most is myself because procrastination leads to worry and worry leads to anxiety and anxiety leads to very many bad things. Add to that I think my brain chemistry could use a little rejiggering and you have a recipe for near-panic attacks and low-grade depression. I am not being overly-dramatic (or hypochondriacy) and I am seeing my doctor next week to discuss my options – but I want to be open and honest because the world of FB (and the Internet in general) has a tendency to only show the pretty version of stories and we end up comparing our worst selves to everyone else’s best selves and feeling bad about the perceived shortfalls when in reality, we are all imperfect and trying to do our best in the world. So I’ll let you know how it goes.

The above also leads to wanting to do better. I almost made it “Do it better” but thought I would save my husband’s snickering about what “it” I was hoping to “do better.” It’s just a general statement, and maybe too general because aren’t most resolutions an attempt to do [something] better? But for me it works. I’d like to end this coming year feeling like I did better, that I am better and that those around me feel and are made better because I was in their lives in some way. From a Christian perspective, that’s sort of what we’re all striving to do/be… better. Be better followers of Christ. Make the world a better place. Do better.

Given my complete failure since my 35th birthday to be on track health-wise (well, not complete, but certainly not my best effort to date)… I need to get back on the bandwagon (damn the bandwagon). Saying it out loud isn’t going to make it happen but maybe it will make it more likely. But nothing will happen if I don’t try and refocus on clean eating and working out again.

And the world is just a better place with books in it and I love them. Any book recommendations, please send them my way!

Thanks for hanging in through this whole post – rambling sentences and all. I hope your 2014 is kicking off in a wonderful fashion and that the next 350+ days bring all the good things.

*I absolutely did NOT make any nativity figures out of rubber bands, but I did forward the link to a friend whose son worked on them.

2013 Year in Review

2013 has been my worst blogging year since I start blogging but one of the biggest years of change for our family – funny how real life gets in the way of documenting life online. Just as it should be. But I miss writing here and staying on top of the things we’re doing and the mundane parts of life that I find funny at the time – or important enough to share (importance is totally relevant – I’d imagine the text exchanges that occur between myself and others are of little to no interest to the rest of the world, but they entertain me and a handful of you). I got my annual site statistics report and hilariously, 4 of my 5 most viewed posts were from previous years:

  1. Working Girl (because people are strangely looking for Skidz online quite a lot)
  2. Five Question Friday (because way too many people google terms related to freakish feet and toes)
  3. Do As I Say (Thanks to “Roll ’em Ferndock” and my dad)
  4. Bungee Cords: a parent’s helper (because other parents are as desperate as I have been)

Actually, those four entries were all from 2011 – apparently I wrote about things of greater interest to the general public at that time. Sorry to be letting the masses down by solely blogging about my kids, our lives and inspirational quotes… I will try harder to dredge up crap topics from the recesses of my mind in 2014. The world will be a better place once again.

In the meantime, on to a look back at our year. It was the best of times… it was the most stressful of times.

January 2013
I made a new set of resolutions… later this week (maybe tomorrow, maybe not… I like to keep you on your toes) we’ll see how I did at sticking with those resolutions.

It snowed, finally. Unlike this year where it started snowing at Thanksgiving and has yet to stop, last winter was a little slow to start so when the snow finally came in January, my kids were THRILLED.
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Jack started drawing and surprised me by drawing a picture of our family – sadly his first drawing was on a Boogie Board so I had to document the picture on my phone instead of physically saving his first drawing for the rest of his life.
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February 2013

Jack turned 4. He’s still a picky eater – though yesterday he did eat (and love) a bagel with cream cheese and a different kind of “fruit” snacks – so there is hope. He said, “I guess I’m not so picky today.”

We visited my college friend, Heidi, and her family in Chicago. Two boys are way crazier than one girl, but they all loved each other.
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We also visited Legoland… it was as awesome as my boys had hoped.
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March 2013
Fulfilled a fantasy of mine of being in the same room as Adam Levine… at a Maroon 5 concert which ended shortly after it started because Mr. Levine had laryngitis. I am still a little bitter that our time together was cut short.
wpid-IMG_20130225_234827.jpgJack had an epic nosebleed and I blogged about some things that are not great.

Started our two-week vacation to Texas with a road trip. We survived and even enjoyed it. So much so we’ll be doing it again this coming year. Either it really is fun to be in a car for two days with our two boys or we are gluttons for punishment. You decide. Or maybe, it’s the food that keeps us coming back.

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April 2013
We celebrated 8 years of marriage… successfully making it past the 7 year itch.

This kid was still cute:

IMG_20130219_141227We decided to put our house on the market (incidentally the most popular post of this year). And unlike the last time we tried, this time the house sold! Whoot! The only time our house has ever looked this uncluttered and clean.
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May 2013
Simon and I remained as cheesy as ever!
wpid-IMG_20130511_204552.jpgRealized that selling our house is awesome and buying a new one is even better but it still brings its own issues.

Blogged about more funny text exchanges. They still make me laugh.

June 2013
Chopped my hair off and donated it, marking an item off my 35 things before 35 list.
wpid-diptic_1369778877325.jpgThe boys got their first cavities (and fillings), they started and graduated from swimming lessons and we found handmade tortillas in Grand Rapids!

We went camping with our small group and captured one of my favorite pics of the boys:
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Almost all the small group kids in one picture = miracle.
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Bought this house and moved into it (technically on July 1):
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Liam finished up first grade and I realized there is no chance he will ever grow up to look like me.
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July 2014
Moved and said goodbye to the old house.

Started a new list.
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Liam lost his first tooth.
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Got together with my mom’s side of the family for a little reunion. Aren’t we all so cute?
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Attended a wedding of two middle school and high school friends who reconnected and fell in love. Got to dress up and leave the kids home. My favorite picture of the two of us lately.
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Attended the most fun water-themed birthday party… my boys were HUGE fans of the giant slip and slide.

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Also fans of fountain near our new house.
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August 2013
Mah baby turned 7!

Finally made it the Farmer’s Market and stocked up on dill for making pickles. Surprisingly, Jack likes pickles as much as he appears to like having this photo taken.
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Got to experience a French macaroon – delicious, heavenly, worth the wait.
wpid-IMG_20130827_143411.jpgEnjoyed hosting my brother and his family from Texas… loved spending time with them here in town and in Whitehall with the whole family. Special thanks to Quinn and Chris for hosting us and letting us burn all their firewood (the Sawyer kids love a good fire).
September 2013
Liam started second grade at his new school and fulfilled his own dream of riding the bus.
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Jack decided he should start doing homework.
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I decided I needed a book club in my life and that I didn’t want to have to get a babysitter to go to it so I decided to start my own Laid-Back Book Club.
Book_Club_400And I started looking forward to contentment after all the change.

October 2013
We discovered a new donut place close to home. They also have apple cider slushies that are yummy (and cheap).
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George is still a great dog, despite needing surgery to remove a bladder stone.
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We had fun with friends at apple orchards.
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And downtown visiting ArtPrize.
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And Halloween at the new house was filled with Power Rangers, candy and neighborhood fun! We’re so glad we moved.
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Simon enjoyed a weekend away in Iowa for MSU football with the Sawyer men.

November 2013
Simon conceded to sushi for date night so I conceded to Thor II for the movie choice. We were both pleased with the evening.
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I got away for the weekend with my college friends for lots of laughter, good food and sleep. Perfection. (Also handy since I was at the start of having mono after having had the flu two weeks earlier – so glad I got a flu shot this year.)

We hosted our first Thanksgiving where we cooked the turkey ourselves… despite a couple mishaps, all went well and we hope to be hosting again next year!
wpid-IMG_20131128_184938.jpgLiam went to his first home MSU football game and loved it, which means he gets to join the men at the away game next year (I’m sure Jack will be indignant about that one… too bad little brother).

We also got together with a group of fellow Lucky Fin families from Michigan – Jack happened to be the elder child there with a limb difference and he loved being the big kid!
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December 2013
Snow, snow and more snow. We started the month with a brief power outage… just a precursor to the major outages that happened at the end of the month. Our kids loved flashlights, candles and no school.
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I got to cuddle for hours with this sweet baby and get my girl fix.
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Simon had knee surgery and I had big plans for making holiday treats (plans that were accomplished).

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Christmas was marvelous and family-filled and I wouldn’t have it any other way!

After time at my parents we headed a little further southeast to Cleveland to visit our beloved friends (and Trader Joe’s). We left filled up on social time and good food – tanks topped off with love!

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We reunited with George and headed home… I drove between Lansing and GR and this is how George sat the whole time – watching my lap and hoping for an opportunity to jump across and snuggle up.
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We’re wrapping the new year at home and we’re very happy with that plan.
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And that’s all she wrote… see you in 2014!

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Our Savior Has Been Born

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Merry Christmas!

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This might be my favorite Christmas card we’ve done and I’m not going to try and top it next year, don’t worry – I know a good thing when I see it. One of the people I work with does these kinds of illustrations and I asked her to do one for us that encompassed our year and our family and she hit it out of the park – I could not have been happier with the final product. Thanks, Mary, you are amazing!
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May your homes be filled with love and laughter this Christmas, and your hearts be filled with child-like wonder as your consider the true gift of Christmas. Blessings and love to you all!