a postive negative.

i remember the first time i saw that result. 2002, i remember thinking, well more like hoping i could will it to be so. to be positive. if i didn’t watch it for three minutes. if i just put it on the counter and walked away. i remember seeing it for 3 months. then 6 months. then 9 months, for a year. then another. sometimes i would walk the aisles of Babys R Us, just to see if i could jinx it. i know, it was crazy. 2003 i remember buying the bonus package – hoping i would only need the one. i remember following tips and tricks for an accurate testing ; just doing all i could to hope for a positive positive. always getting a positive negative. that freakin single line.

blog1will and i had talked openly about our desire for a family while we were dating, 2001. it was no secret we wanted a big-ish family. we were looking forward to that season in our lives. we talked about adoption and how we would love for that to be part of our journey. i remember being so happy and grateful to know that we were on the same page. my youngest brother joined our family through the miracle of adoption ; i prayed to be so lucky one day. when i was older and wiser.

so a couple years of way too many positive negatives…why did i do that to myself. every month. well some months i didn’t take it but you know starting is just as clear a signal as a single line on the stick is.  as if i could beat the clock before i started each month. we had gone to the dr. we had done the testing. oh the testing. it’s a special kind of humiliation. everyone trying to find reasons for all the positive negatives. i went to a couple doctors. i heard some ridiculous things and some helpful things and so heart breaking things. will was so supportive. we talked about it every day. he listened to me talk in circles. we cried together. we laughed together. we would talk about how we just can’t get it right and then laugh with tears. humor has always been my favorite choice of medicine. after much prayer we knew that pursuing medical options wasn’t right for us. i was diagnosed with severe endometriosis and we were just hoping for a miracle. i was at peace but still so very sad.

we were young. we weren’t what one would call financially well off or stable for that matter. will was in school full time at Boise State University, working more than full time. i was working as a pre school teacher then at a spa and as a nanny. our days were busy. we had dogs. we had cats. we had a home. a yard. we had callings. we had family. we had friends. our days were full. we were so very blessed.i feel like we made the most of it. despite the constant pain in my heart.

well meaning people would tell us to not worry about kids, to just enjoy our lives and that one day we wouldn’t be able to have this time back. blah blah. it only served as reminder that no matter what we did we couldn’t change the fact that the next chapter in our journey wouldn’t be written how we were hoping. then there were the folks who told us “just relax”, that is literally one of the worst things you can say to someone longing for children and constantly coming up short. or maybe if you visit taught all the time or read scriptures every day or prayed more often…then we would get pregnant. if only it were that simple. not to say i didn’t try to be more valiant in hopes of a miracle.

one morning in the late fall of 2004, will and i separately had the same experience. it was time to adopt. this was the right thing now. i was filled up the most overwhelming joy, peace, excitement and fear that day. i remember calling him to tell him about my experience, only to hear his was just the same. it was time for our next chapter.

so many questions. where to start? what to do? how? when? so i made a list of where to call to get started. first CASI adoption agency, then LDS Family Services. I made those phone calls. i picked up packets. oh i love packets. that i something i miss with everything being so digital. it was really was the beginning to the positives of the so many negatives we had experienced.

 

10 things i have learned while driving.

70 miles in a day.

10 – adele, justin timberlake and drake are playing at any given moment on any station. thank goodness for the alt nation sirius radio station.

9 – tutoring while driving ; it’s a real skill set. go ahead, give me a number to round, a problem to estimate, word to define … and if common core gets the best of us, we ask siri.

8 – kids legs touching one another is similar to falling into a portapotty ; at least i am guessing based on the reaction of my wild ones.

note the spaces in between

7 – mcdonalds really does have THEEE best crispest coldest diet dr pepper there is. and for $1.06, its a dose of heavenly goodness. this mama needs her cold one.

6 – benny singing along to his favorite song can stop any complaint, boredom or woe others may have. #handclap it induces a smile one can’t deny.

​5 – for my protection and well cause i love them, i must be prepared with snacks and water at all times. i will have a herd of hangries on my hands if not.4 – this won’t be how i spend my afternoons forever. this isn’t what i will always do. enjoy it. gasp, one day they will be driving themselves to and fro.

3 – an empty water bottle (there’s usually one or two near by) is a pretty good flying vessel to break up two or more know it alls in the back seat.

2 – family sing a longs are therapy. especially as we practice our british accents while singing out chitty chitty bang bang songs.

1 – i love hearing from them. who they sat by at lunch, what made them laugh, how they learned, when friends weren’t true and when friends were truer than true. i love that we have somewhat undivided time together right when school is out. i learn everyday from them, as we drive and drive.

nearly 70 miles every day.

how do you find joy in this season?

 

savor.

“mom, will you carry me to bed?”

he asked me this as i was holding him, staring into his eyes. i had just asked him if he knew he was now four and a half years old. he giggled and said “no, i am not. wait is it true?”

and then it hit me.

when your heart stops for a moment while it processes.

the anxiety kicks in.

when my role as a mom no longer be what it has been for over 10 years.

already: it has changed. there are so many tasks, the ones that threaded my days together, that i don’t do. there are no bottles being made. no diapers being changed, thrown out to the garage to be taken to the trash can. no babies needing a gentle bath after yet, another explosion. no testing of the baby food to see what their favorites would be. i’ll tell you what no one hated baby peas like miss kadence and she loves them like candy now. no more getting little humans dressed : like little dolls who have amazing high kicks and ninja moves. there are a few daily tasks that passed and i wasn’t sad to see move on…like the hours spent trying to consul a colicky baby boy. or the wet sheets in the night. or running out of diapers or formula at the most convenient times. 11 pm or 5 am. wait, was that only us? as i type this “cry me a riverrrrr” plays thru my head. i will JT. i will cry a river over my babies being so freaking old.

so when does it happen? when does this creeping transition take place? i don’t know. but it is sneaky, really sneaky. the same kind of sneaky when a certain now 9 year old wakes up before the rest of the house and sneaks a few chocolate chip granola bars into his room. when i awake i have no idea. it isn’t for a few days till i notice a wrapper or piece of one poking out of a drawer … that sneaky bugger.

a few things i am holding onto still. dedicated to savor. to enjoy:

being woke up every morning but a little voice and footsteps : somewhere between that of an elephant and a puppy. the request “can i snug wich you?” a refill of water- there will be a day, not too far away, that i am sure no one will need a cup water filled by their mom. until that day i will be grateful to help out with such a task. the excitement one has when they finished a chapter in their current book. the “you have got to come and see this mom!” those vary from how cute the dogs look cuddled on the couch, to a four hundred piece lego creation. every day there is a lot of “you gotta see this”.  and guess what? sometimes i had just sat down and i don’t really wanna get up at that moment. well i am resolving to change that attitude.

while it continues to change and evolve, my heart grows more in love with these awesome humans. i hope to be able to find the joy in this stage of parenting. to have no regrets. tis not the easiest of tasks somedays.

here i am, mother of an 11 year old, two 9 year olds, a six year old and 4 year old. now missing : the time we had three cribs, went thru hundreds of diapers a month, multiple 5 point harness system car seats at one time…i hope to have a few more requests “mom, will you carry me to bed?”

just to be able to say YES! 

 

graduation.

a few weeks ago we were lucky enough to attend the graduation services at BYU-I. my younger brother and younger sister graduated. so proud of them. it’s an incredible accomplishment.

sometimes i forget that as everyone around me grows older, i do too. wait, im not in my twenties still?  like being around all these youngsters graduating college. most of us, we aren’t the same age. most of us are in totally different seasons. might as well grab my glasses from sliding down my nose as i smile at them, remembering when.

as i walked throughout the I Center and around campus, i couldn’t help but notice all the young families i saw. dozens of women with children toddling hand in hand, babies closely held in wraps and carriers. binkies attached, backpacks packed with emergency snacks and entertainment. lots of hustling and moving about to find their seats, to find their loved ones on screen. i won’t lie, at first glance i thought to myself “is this worth it? won’t you be in the hall the whole time?”.

then i saw the husbands. the husbands with the babies. because the moms were graduating. i mean it was a sight. incredible.

fast forward a few hours, enjoyed the inspiring hopeful messages, pass the giving of the diplomas and onto the gathering of all the graduates with their friends and family. that is where i witnessed some incredible moments. just little moments in time. celebrating milestones. young couples graduating together, with kids in arms together. moms with their grown children around her, she the graduate.  both my siblings worked, started businesses, met and married their forever love and my sister is pregnant with their first baby ; all while working towards their college graduation goals. AMAZING.

bottom line; i was blown away by the commitment, endurance, accomplishment of these people. of these young moms. i was a young mom once. in survival mode and didn’t even attempt to add school onto my teetering plate. inspiring women. we really are capable of doing hard and difficult tasks. and guess what doing them well too! and these women are raising awesome humans. it was privilege to witness them.