Monday, October 25, 2010

Fall Sunday at Schnepf Farms


My little family and my whole world! Love my boys!
 With Halloween approaching and the arrival of my Grandma Dove from Michigan (Porter's Great Grandma or 'GG" as we call her) and my Aunt's parents Gary and Hally from WI, we decided to take the whole family out to Schnepf Farms this Sunday.  Schnepf Farms is a local farm that has been around for 100+ years and now is still a working farm, but also a play place to go for families.  They have a train, small rides, pig races, old timey stores, sweet shops and seasonal stuff, like now, they have a pumpkin patch.
Porter reaching for the BIG pumpkin!

So us 8 adults took the 3 kids to check it out. We had so much fun.  I love my family and I especially like a return to a more family centered Sunday.  That is kind of how I grew up.  We all stuck close to home, we all had a big dinner, relaxed and prepared for the week ahead.  I like that tradition.  It is a nice way to start a week off. I am hoping to continue that with Porter and our children.  I like the connectedness our family has, I feel very lucky to have family members that double as my best friends too.

Anyway, I digress.  Porter had a blast.  I know that he is young, but he really liked getting out in the fresh air, watching all the people, watching his cousins and getting spoiled by his GG.  We ate burgers, had homemade old fashioned lemonade, did the corn maze, train ride and lots of other activities.  We sat in the pumpkin patch and took pictures.  It was a really great way to spend a family day.  We are so busy in our lives, that it is hard to all get together on the same day.  It was a great way to celebrate fall with the family!


The Cousin Crew..... Macy, Madyls and P-man

Pilot in training

Tennis Ball Launch



The girls... Aggie, Hally, GG (holding Madelyn), me, Kristen and Macy Rose

I have no make up on people......

Our OTHER family, Porter's godparents and cousins

passed out for nap time, Neil added the pumpkin

this pic is funny for lot of reasons, this is Madyls' "fake" smile, Porter just woke up from a nap crying and Macy is in la la land!


Train Ride


Racing.... I lost.... terribly......


I love him. so so so so so so much. Look at that face!



Saturday, October 23, 2010

My Cute $3.50 Find.......


How appropriate is this??!  Gotta love Paula Deen! I got this on clearance for $3.50 at Tuesday Morning, a local discount store.  I saw it and HAD to have it.  I think I am going to hang it above my sink.  I also thought of my fellow blogger friend Sarah, since she recently moved to the South and is probably enjoying all the Southern food that we cannot get down here! She needs this too, I think we both married Southern men. They sure do cook different.  Lots of fried stuff.  Neil and my mother in law tell me all about the fried Coke, Snickers, Twinkies.  Blech, can't quite do those, but I do enjoy lots of traditional Southern cuisine.  My mother in law is an excellent teacher and expert on Southern Cuisine, she was with me when I bought it.  I do love the food though, High Cotton, in downtown Charleston is one of my favorite restaurants ever!

Here are my FAVORITE Southern Dishes:

  • Country Style Steak (not to be confused with Country Fried Steak)
  • Mac and Cheese
  • Carolina Mustard BBQ Sauce, goes great on Pork
  • Fried Chicken (of course!)
  • Buscuits and Gravy
  • Peach Cobbler
I am no expert yet on cooking ALL of these, but I am learning.  My mother in law's Shrimp and Grits are famous in Neil's hometown, but I don't like Shrimp or grits.  Blech.  There are variations on everyday dishes that I like "Southern Style" as in blackened, cajun style, spicy.  I like spicy.  I love going back to South Carolina and eating at all the local spots. Mmmmm.... Yummy!

Baby Wearing and My Newest Obsession!

I love baby wearing.  I really do.  It was a new concept for me, but I really embraced it.  I started with a Moby wrap, which is great for little babies and switched to the more convenient ring sling.  I still sling Porter when I am shopping sometimes and it is so easy.  He just chills out and looks around.  I think he likes being eye to eye with people, or closer, that is.  I think baby wearing will SAVE me when I have a second baby. It is the only way I got a lot of cleaning, laundry and house stuff done with Porter as a little baby.  Just strap them close to you and off you go! They like being in that close contact and the wraps make it comfortable. I try to stick with more natural products.  Items like Baby Bjorns and Infantino slings can be detrimental to developing joints. 

As Porter has gotten bigger and the weather cooler, I want to take up hiking as a family activity.  Since many trails are too bumpy for a stroller, I am DYING to get a Ergo.  They are sturdier, do back carries easily and good for bigger babies.  I especially like this one.  The Ergo Performance Carrier (in spring green of course:) that is made to be more sporty and good for outdoor/active events.  Too bad it comes with a $120.00 price tag! Eeek! I have been stalking Craigslist, but no luck.  The good thing is, if I do make the investment, it will last through several babies.  Cute huh??


ERGObaby spring green performance carrier in action      ERGObaby spring green performance carrier baby carrier

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

The Middle Ground and Mommy Guilt

Becoming a parent for me was not just about, well, being a parent, it was about teaching myself a whole new skill set, a whole new approach to life. I have been introduced to a fantastic “natural birth community” here in the East Valley. This is a horse of a different color for me. It is not the type of parents/role models I grew up with or place I ever thought I’d land. I am SO glad that I did though. It has changed how I look at my entire life.


Let me first say, this disclaimer, this NOT a knock on my mother, my father or any person in my family or ANY of my friends in any way. At all. Period. These are merely facts that led me down the path that I am currently on. No hurt feelings intended.

When I started looking into the natural community I certainly was no activist, I knew nothing and in fact considered nothing in regards to birth and parenting. I thought like lots of people think. You get pregnant, you see a doctor, you register at Babies ‘R’ Us for a ton of stuff (crap), have the baby and go on home to stumble through raising your child, most the times along the lines of how you were raised yourself. ‘Nuff said, right? Wrong. I pretty much went the opposite way. And sometimes it is harder than I thought.

In the natural community, words like baby wearing, genital integrity, exclusive breast feeding, attachment parenting, cloth diapering, co sleeping and nursing in public are as common. These are concepts I’d never heard of before. They are as common place as cribs, monitors, Pampers, bottles and bouncy seats are in the more “mainstream” baby-having community. In my world, my mother is/was WAY more on the mainstream side in terms of “baby-having”. She had me at 21. There was not a lot of money back in those days. Her and my father struggled in a bad, early 80’s economy in MI, while being newly married and my mother trying to finish college. I did get cloth diapered for a period of time, not for the environments sake, for money’s sake. My mom HATES the idea of breast feeding. Just not for her. She doesn’t want anything on her body like that, it grosses her out. So I got evaporated milk and Karo syrup. (I know it sounds terrible now, but it was common place back then, I guess.) My siblings were formula fed. (and with the exception of ear issues, very healthy) My mom was 2 weeks late with all 3 of us. She had a natural childbirth with me (for lack of better option, not on purpose), and has nothing good to say about it. She was induced, 8 years later with my sister and again with my brother. She was Pitocin and epidurals all the way. We all slept through the night by 6 weeks old, since we got cereal in our bottles. We all had every single recommended vaccination. My brother was circumcised, of course.

I know my natural community friends are banging their heads on something just from reading this. But, I hesitate to say anything too bad about it. My mother made those choices because she thought they were best at the time. She made a lot of them based upon Dr.’s recommendations, how she was brought up, what was popular for the time, (all this was 27, 19, and 17 years ago). So if you are judging, don’t. I don’t believe she ever meant to make careless, reckless choices regarding her children’s health. That much I do know. She has always put that at the fore front, the best she knew how, the best she was shown herself. Most of our friends and family members had babies the exact same way. It was commonplace.

So that is my background, the world I come from, most of which still applies today’s current mainstream baby community. So, imagine my initial shock upon entering a more natural based setting. Now, mind you, I have always been “off the beaten path” a bit myself. A black sheep, so to speak. But, when it comes to having babies, it is easiest to revert back to what you know. Which is what I did…..at first. When I found my natural community, I felt at home and at peace. I “fit in” better than I had in any group in a long time. The priorities in my life were changing and it paralleled and fit perfectly into this awesome group of people I was introduced to. This is how I want to be, I thought to myself after settling into this new "group". I love, love, love the people that I have met. Love them. I seriously know the best group of mommies (and Daddies) ever. They are inspirational for me. I cannot tell you how much I appreciate the ideas and guidance given to me by those that parent from a different place. It is great to be around people that are so different, yet share a common thread. This place isn’t necessarily better than how I was raised, it just works better for our family. Suits our granola-ish ways in a more fulfilling manner .

But I still struggle. Doing the ever seductive striving for perfection dance, I still wrestle with not being all the way there. (where is there?....you may ask. You know, that all natural, cloth diapering, breast feeding, baby wearing, activist, always kind, involved parent place) I strive to get there. And yes, the better part of me knows that this magical place called “there” may be a mystery place conjured up solely for the purposes of fostering mommy guilt and self doubt. But hey, we all have that little voice I think. Teaching this old dog (meaning me) new tricks, really is hard. It has taken a personality overhaul. One that was necessary, wanted and appreciated, but the inner battle still rages on.

This whole concept of parenting has changed my life really. It is called attachment style parenting, I guess, if I have to group it. (which I hate to do, I see everyone as individuals for the most part)  I wouldn’t say that I am all the way there or into it. I have read plenty of stories about "attachment style" mothers that haven’t left their children to have a date night with their husbands for years or taken an afternoon for themselves. And I get it, that that works for them, and I can totally see why. For me, I need more balance. I like going to happy hour with my husband occasionally, I enjoyed our over night trip to San Diego when he was 4.5 mo old and we left him for one night with my mother in law. I liked it at 9 weeks old, my husband was able to give our son a bottle of expressed breast milk so I could sleep more every once in awhile (I had issues nursing) since I was in my office by 8 AM every morning. At 5 months old, he took to a binky and it has saved us since. I used a guard while nursing and it got me through many a rough night. I couldn’t figure out my Moby wrap and felt like the biggest idiot ever. And the biggest one……. I weaned my son at almost 8 mo and put him on formula. Not because I hated nursing, I miss it a lot, in fact. I hated being tied to a pump. Pumping 3X a day meant less work time and an overall increase in time spent (away from my baby) at the office to make up the work. So, I stopped. And avoided my natural community for a solid month or so out of embarrassment. (which was totally stupid, of all people these mommies would understand) My Facebook page flooded when the Similac recall happened (none of this directed specifically at me at all, just general information when it happened) with article upon article discussing how disgusting, bug infested formula is and how second rate it is  to breast milk.  The perfection seeking mother I am felt like a second rate mom. I don’t want to give my son formula, but nursing became a chore not a joy. Hooking myself up to a machine, stressing about how many ounces I was getting, while dealing with everything else I dealt with this year (see previous post), so I made a choice. It was a hard one. It is hard to make these choices not only as a parent, but a parent in uncharted territory. Most of the above paragraph doesn’t enter in to a truly attachment style parent. Nobody else in my family struggles with such issues and sometimes I am jealous of that. Sometimes succumbing to Johnson & Johnson, Gerber and Huggies is….gulp…. easier. Sigh…..even though I hate the idea of being that mom too.

I have started to read blogs and articles since I have had Porter in an effort to find my way through this foreign concept of parenting.   I love 90% of attachment style parenting. We tend to parent in that in between area. Mostly natural. We don’t vaccinate, we did circumcise. We co-slept for 6 mo (and loved it), now he is in his crib. I make all his food, I love to wear him when he lets me. I am a huge birth advocate and try not to get on my soap box about that. (but I probably do anyways, sorry) I am passionate about midwifery, natural remedies and natural births. I feel proud when I read my natural mommy friends’ Facebook posts taking a stand for reproductive rights, breastfeeding education, healthy living and naturalism. I envy them, though I know I shouldn’t. I envy their knowledge, conviction and tenacity. Man, the middle ground is tough sometimes.

Now in my world, I have, on occasion given Porter Tylenol, let him cry for 5 minutes at night, fed him Gerber brand oatmeal and used the dye free baby Johnson and Johnson’s I got at my baby shower. Herein lies the rub. I feel guilty admitting that much of this is out of convenience. I have worked so hard to break lots of cycles in my short time as a parent, but I am not all the way there. I read a blog post today about checking your anger and realizing that your children will react the way you do in their own situations. This self awareness is not a piece I grew up with. I have written about being the change you want to see. I have written about being more kind. And it is VERY important and I meant every word. I not only have to learn how to be a good parent, I sort of have to learn how to be a better version of myself, the person who was in there all along. You see, this suits me, I just have to trust it, practice it, live it. I have to retrain many of my thoughts and habits. Easier said than done.

I am so grateful that I found this perspective and even more grateful I know a community of people I can dialogue about it with, but there is still a guilt piece there. I don’t want to be judged or looked down on and that fear is paralyzing sometimes. It is hard to even admit it exists. And the worst part is, it is all in my head. I know that the people I have met, my Blogger friends, many members of my family, my husband are all there to encourage me and watch me grow as a mother. I know that. It is my own inner dialogue. A place of doubt you go when you are in unfamiliar surroundings, but thankfully mine get more and more familiar every day.

So I am letting myself off the hook. I am going to just do my best and take what works for us and leave the rest. I am going to put my insecurities to bed (or try to) and know that I am in fact, a good mom, and I am still learning. This is why I started this blog; as a documentation of the growing pains of being a parent. I want Porter to know that I think of him every second of every day. That I never made any choices lightly, that I am human and fallible. That I still have insecurities and flaws and want to be loved in spite of them, the same way I will love my son in spite of his. I am glad that parenthood has given me a giant mirror that reflects back the opportunity to be and create whatever I want for myself and my family. It is freeing and I feel liberated. Long time coming I'd say. I am excited for what the future holds. So thank you to new and old friends, to ever present, supportive family, my caring husband and angelic son. I am not the girl I once was, I am just me now. And that is plenty, I think.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Getting Close to Walking......

So I got this walk behind toy for Porter and he LOVES it.  It plays music and he can sit in the front of it and play with all the lights, colors and music.  After having it two weeks, he now knows to stand behind it and can walk using it across the entire room.  I couldn't get many "action" shots, but I got these while he was figuring it all out! Won't be long now......




Neil's Anniversary Present

My husband is a great gift giver.  He is so thoughtful and even sometimes extravagant.  That works well for us since I tend to be more reserved and conservative.  In our two short years together, he has certainly done some really nice things for me.  From surprise diamond earrings at Christmas to a surprise belly cast, done when I was 41 weeks pregnant and tired, just because, to make me feel better about my body. Pretty sweet, huh? It isn't the material-ness that means the most, not at all. It is the creativity and the thought.  I have gotten countless cards, flowers, notes, trips and tickets.  Most of these were, as I like to call it PK-PH (pre-kids, pre-houses), when we had much more disposable income than we have now. Man, those days were nice, but I wouldn't change how it is today for anything. We have absolutely everything we need, we are blessed.  But, now times are a bit tighter and I think I got my most thoughtful gift of all. 

Originally, we planned on taking our honeymoon on or one year anniversary.  You see, we did things a wee bit backwards.  First came love, then came baby, then came marriage, then came multiple mortgages, job changes and major unexpected expenses.  Sooooo, instead we bought appliances for the house and stuck local.  My mother in law was gracious enough to fly in and watch Porter and Neil and I got a night away at a hotel that we got a 60% discount on.  When it came to gifts, I wanted it cheap and simple..... nothing extravagant, I told him. So, he went the thoughtful route and it meant the world to me.

Neil stuck to "tradition" with typical Neil flair. It started with a  bouquet of carnations.  Red, pink and white.  Inside the card read.....
 
I Love you! I look forward to spending anniversary after anniversary with you.  Carnations are the traditional flowers of first anniversaries, their scientific name "Dianthus", means flowers of God. That is because you are my goddess.  Dark red mean deep love & affection, white are for pure love & good luck, pink symbolizes a mother's undying love.  Love Always, Neil





Then I got a small, brown leather bound notebook and card number two.  Inside, the card read....

The traditional first anniversary gift is paper. Really?! What am I supposed to do with that? I thought hard and I hope you like what I came up with.  I'll be with you through anything. 
Love, Neil


Inside the leather bound notebook, on the first page he wrote.....

For our anniversary I want to make it easy for you to help me pull my weight around the house. Just look at all the lists you can make for me!

Turn Page, and he wrote

I also would like to offer you these as well:
  • one foot massage
  • one load of dishes
  • one load of laundry
  • one bathroom cleaning
  • one home cooked dinner
  • one night off to go out
  • an hour of undivided attention (no football)
  • a massage (professional)
  •  pedicure
  • a whole second page to fill up yourself
        I Love you






Fast forward to checking into the hotel.  There I was presented card number 3.  The other "traditional" first anniversary gift is clocks.  So I got a small box, with an inexpensive fashion-type watch and in the card he wrote.....

I will love you until the end of time.  When I am by myself and I think about the fact that you are my wife and it still makes me smile uncontrollably.
Always, Neil


Then I got another hard bound, larger green notebook and the final card #4.  And in the card he wrote....



I love our life.  I want us to give each other a gift.  When we wrote our vows last year we had no idea what it was like to be married. Now we do and I want to make new vows to you. New vows with you based on the experience and knowledge of actually being married.
Thankfully Yours, Neil


Open the notebook, and on the first page reads....

For us to share in good times and bad, to share our hopes and fears and convey our needs and gratitude.


Neil's idea here was to use the traditional gift of paper and use it as a journal or sorts for the two of us.  A place to write notes, fears, even anger and communicate respectfully with one another throughout year two.  Starting with a new set of vows and promises for the coming year.  A place to come back to to re-evaluate our priorities whenever we need to. To keep us honest, fresh, romantic.  I love it.

I cannot tell you how meaningful and thoughtful I found his gifts to me.  For very little money he was able to give me a really romantic, refreshing, inspirational anniversary.  I feel really honored and lucky to be his wife. My true life started the day I met him.  I am so excited about our future!  Hopefully, God willing, it brings as many babies, blessings, and memories as great as our first year.  I think this was the best gift I ever got.
The whole thing. Lovely. Perfect. Heartfelt.







Paper+Clocks+Carnations= Perfect 1st Anniversary


First Anniversary

October 17th was our First Anniversary!  Whew, we have been busy bees this last year.  From the time we got engaged to our first anniversary we have done the following: (and this is just the BIG stuff!)
  • bought house #1-closed about 10 days after we got engaged- May
  • got pregnant- 2 weeks after we got engaged. Best. happiest. "accident". ever.- May
  • planned a wedding 2000 miles away in SC-but it turned out lovely-June
  • Neil lost his father in July, 3 mo before our wedding, so sad
  • got married on the lake in SC- Oct
  • switched from traditional OB care to planned homebirth-best choice ever-Nov
  • Neil got a new job (and raise:), one which we were going to relocate back to SC after the baby-Nov
  • baby boy Smith (otherwise known as Porter) born at 42 weeks, Feb 6
  • Trying to organize/pack for cross country move with newborn/2 dogs/3 cars and house-Feb/Mar
  • I went back to work after my maternity leave- which we didn't plan on but stuff happens :( April
  • Rented out our perfect house #1, our 5 bed 3.5 bath house in anticipation of the move-May
  • Job opening in Neil's field came open at MY company, Neil interviewed, got position-May
  • Change of plans, not we are NOT moving, staying in AZ, now working for same company-May
  • Already rented house, so have to scramble to pick out, buy and close on much smaller house #2-June
  • move into said house, put unanticipated money, time and energy into getting it livable-July
  • unpacking, decorating, working on the new house while raising new baby, but LOVE the house and smaller mortgage-Aug
  • all this mixed with, holidays, hormones, vacations to visit family, buying a new car, countless things falling through, stumbling through new parenthood, family drama, lots of laughs, tears, wine, and memories. whew. what an amazing year!
Needless to say, we are ready for a break! It has been crazy, but it has been worth it.  In the end, we made it.  Things are starting to calm down and level off.  We are hoping for a much more mellow year two.  I don't think that I could have made it through it without my amazing husband.  We both we a bit older when we got married and had been through other serious relationships, heartbreaks, bad choices and when we met we just knew.  I think that we have a great love story.  I truly was swept off my feet and we have had set backs and leaps forward, but in the end I married the most amazing man ever.  I love being married and being a mom.  I finally feel comfortable with myself and I owe it all to my family.  I am blessed and thankful.


Dinner in Charleston, night before we got engaged


Day we got engaged, shopping at Folly Beach




Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Mr. Mom

Yesterday was quite a day in the Smith Family household! Our regular babysitter’s daughter was sick and had a slight fever, so at the last minute we had to scurry to figure out what we were going to do with P-man for the day. I wasn’t feeling well on Monday and had been out of the office, so it wasn’t a good day for me to be off.

Sooooo Neil to the rescue! He packed up his laptop, came by my work to grab Porter and away they went. Neil decided to work from home, problem solved. Ok, ok, so I will be honest…… I learned yesterday that I have an “inflated” view of myself as a mama. (who me?) I think I am super mom (not really, but for arguments sake…) I automatically assume that the house will be a mess, I’d get a TON of “how do I do this? How do I do that?” phone calls and I would come home to a stressed out, irritated husband. Not that Neil doesn’t spend time or do just as much as I do, he totally does. But ALL day, alone, while trying to work, now that is different. Plus, my inflated mama ego thought that some things just needed a “mother’s touch”. And I would understand if he were frazzled…. Heck I have had those days! Sounds about right for him to feel that way…. Right? WRONG!

Neil took him home, played with him, kept up with work emails, fed him his bottles, Porter took not one but two 1-2 hr naps. Neil even survived a huge, epic, diaper blowout after Porter had his lunch. He wasn’t even frazzled. He had me laughing so hard describing the situation. What?! Later, when my phone rang at work, I thought “uh-oh… here we go…” and instead I got a cheery husband on the other end of the phone. “What are you doing?” I ask. “Oh, me and the boy are out running errands? Do you need anything?”… Porter happily chirping “da da da” in the back. Ummmm what?! That’s why you called?! I can barely get groceries done and gas in the car the days I stay home. And the days I do “run errands” I usually get the stage 4 meltdown in the middle of Target. Especially if I am working too! But Neil went to the bank, post office, and grocery store. He made it home for Porter’s afternoon bottle and nap. Oh, and did I mention he did all this after doing the dishes and putting 2 roasts in the crock pot for dinner? (which were delicious by the way) To top that off, he and Porter headed to the gym in the late afternoon so Neil could get his workout in and Porter could play with the kids at the gym for an hour.

So, let’s re-cap. My "Mr. Mom",  for a day was able to shower AND get dressed in non sweat like clothes, work, do dishes, put pot roasts in for dinner, play/engage Porter, keep him fed/happy/clean, got him to nap good and got a work out in. Hmmmmm, something is wrong with this picture! Where was my frazzled hubby? He was working out, hanging out and appreciating time with his boy. How awesome!

I feel really lucky to have the husband I have. He is an AMAZING father. He sings to him, plays, and tells him about football. He bathes him almost every night to give me a break and talks constantly about how beautiful he is and how he is his pride and joy. Neil wants more babies.... yesterday. And lots of them. He calls it blissful insanity. Isn’t that great?! I am really blessed with him. He can’t wait to coach little league, help with math homework and go to football games. He tells me all the time that he pretty much has everything he could ever want and this is his dream life. (crazy huh?) He was super involved in pregnancy (my birth-y friends can attest to this one :) too. In fact, he took the book A Woman’s Guide to a Better Birth on the plane with him during a business trip, simply because he felt it had better information!! Ha, ha too funny! In all seriousness though, I couldn't have gotten through pregnancy and new motherhood without him.

In this day in age of absent fathers or fathers who cannot connect with their children, Porter is really a lucky boy. His dad will always be there for him and is constantly trying to be a better example and leader. I don’t think Neil will be able to be “Mr. Mom” full time unless we win the lotto or buy more houses, but he really did a great job yesterday. I appreciate him stepping up when our family needed him. I find new things to love about him every day. He really is a great father and husband. Turns out, “Mr. Mom’s” father’s touch is what saved the day!

Friday, October 8, 2010

Be The Change You Want To See.....

I have thought about writing this post for a few days now. It has taken me that long to simmer and think about what I want to say. I have read several articles and blog posts, and now that I am a parent, it becomes much more relevant, but I thought far enough off in time that I wouldn’t think about it.

Bullying.

Sigh. Big sigh. I didn’t expect the subject matter to get under my skin so much. But it did. For me, bullying was not very much of an issue in my life. I have, however, always had self esteem issues, bullying… not so much. In middle school, there was a scary, super tall girl at least two grades ahead of me that kinda terrorized me, but that didn’t last long. I had to think about it to even remember it. I wasn’t exempt from being embarrassed or picked on, but it all existed within the realm of normal growing pains. Example: I was a 34D by the time I was in 7th grade, while this may seem enviable, I can assure you at 13 yrs old, I was embarrassed and resented my breasts for calling that kind of harassing attention. But again, nothing major. I never really realized till now how fortunate I was in that regard. I wasn’t really bullied, but I was NEVER a bully either. I am sure many people will roll their eyes when they read this part, but I guess I was kind of on the “top” (not that I believe that this is a real place to be mind you) of the social food chain, per se. I was super outgoing and pretty popular, not the most popular, but those people were usually close friends of mine. I was a cheerleader, on homecoming court, student council, a straight A student. I drove a two year old car when I turned 16, I was a debutante, my parents were wealthy and my house had 6 bathrooms in it. Are you puking yet? It’s ok, I probably would too. Trust me, I am not that girl anymore, she has been gone for about 10 years now. Ok….. maybe not gone, but evolved, much more self aware and self made. I was probably snobby, yes, but never a bully. (again another thing that has been somewhat self corrected…. Hopefully :) I guess maybe I didn’t possess the “typical” characteristics of those that are bullied or more that I knew the “right” people. It was never a part of my awareness or social setting. I was lucky. Boy was I lucky.


In my adult life, I am much less bold and more on the outskirts. Life events have turned me into someone MUCH less confident. I struggled (and still do) with finding myself and figuring out what I want out of my life. I am often somewhere in the middle. Currently, that middle place deals with family/kids and is between mainstream and “crunchy.” I am not extreme on either one, probably a little more crunchy. I can appreciate a traditional and more progressive family structure, again I like the middle. Sometimes I wish I was more one way or another, more black and white. I exist in the shades of gray and I am working on appreciating that about myself.


It occurred to me that Neil and I serve our son on mostly basic physical and emotional needs. We comfort him when he is crying, which is usually due to being tired, hungry, wet or in pain (took a tumble, incoming teeth etc.) . We have not yet had to comfort him because someone didn’t want to be his friend or pushed him down. Now, there are few things I know for sure, but I know that Neil and I are good parents…. for now. Our world revolves around our boy. We do everything, would give anything to make sure that he is happy, healthy and safe. That is all we have had to do so far, and so far we have succeeded beyond our expectations. Our reward: a happy, healthy, active, jovial, affectionate ray of sunshine. Blessings abound.


This week, after watching news stories of children killing themselves and reading articles on the subject, I started to wonder….. what if my son is a bully? I don’t think parents of all bullies set out to raise their children to have self hate in their hearts, perhaps those parents hate themselves. I dunno, but I wonder. What if Porter is bullied? How will I create an environment that he knows he can come to Neil and I about anything and that we will always love him? Furthermore, how will I teach him to love himself, stand up for himself and have the courage to defend those weaker? How can I/we teach him to be a good man? Someone sensitive but not a sissy, confident but not arrogant, secure in his beliefs yet open minded. How will I do that? My new favorite blog, Single Dad Laughing ( I HIGHLY recommend this for anyone, top picks, You Just Broke your Kid, Congratulations and Memoirs of a Bullied Kid, read them you won’t regret it) talks about his experiences as a parent and his childhood, which was riddled with pretty severe bullying. Neil and I have discussed these at length and it is becoming more apparent that children become what you do not what you say. Both of us being stubborn hot heads…… have some work to do. Gulp. Yes that’s right, we need to be actual grown ups. Gulp again.


I think the best approach that I can take, as a parent (and wife), is to become a kinder, more self-actualized, forgiving person myself. Forgiving of myself as well as forgiving of others. I need to be more real, my children (God willing) do not need perfection from me, they need guidance. I will fail, inevitably, but it is how I pick back up that is important. Tiny eyes are watching. I never thought about the awesomeness of that particular responsibility. I am (as is Neil) on the permanent watch of the little people we have in our house. We will teach them, not just with our words, but more so in our actions. I feel it is my duty to the world to do everything in my power to make sure I turn out good hearted, contributing children.


I thought for days about how I can do this, what parent books I could read, or talk to the mothers I admire (Stephanie, Rose, Tatiana, my Grandma, Aunt Kristen, Step mom, Mother in Law…. to name a few). Then it dawned on me. They would only tell me what worked for them. And just as I am not a carbon copy of them, my family isn’t either. I would get advice, not answers. So, the largest part is on me and of course my husband. I must be a kinder hearted person. I must be more sensitive, confident not arrogant, secure but open minded. I’ll have to love myself more so that I have more to give. If I want my kids to make the world a better place, I need to have the same expectation of myself. What can I do to show them? To teach them not tell them. While this may seem like a fairly easy concept to grasp, I never thought about it with as much seriousness as I do now. Children are dying, taking their own lives and crying alone in terror. Will one of them be mine? I sure as hell hope not. I’m sure many of these have parents of these children that have died loved them, would do anything for them…. How will I make sure that I am different? I’m not sure that I can 100%. And that terrifies me. But it is my mission to try my heart out.


I have read the following paragraphs about ten times. From Single Dad Laughing, “You Just Broke Your Child. Congratulations” I have gone back over and over it the last few days and read them. This resonates with me. I replace the word “dads” with “parents”.


(from Single Dad Laughing...)


Dads. It's time to show our sons how to properly treat a woman. It's time to show our daughters how a girl should expect be treated. It's time to show forgiveness and compassion. It's time to show our children empathy. It's time to break social norms and teach a healthier way of life! It's time to teach good gender roles and to ditch the unnecessary ones. Does it really matter if your son likes the color pink? Is it going to hurt anybody? Do you not see the damage it inflicts to tell a boy that there is something wrong with him because he likes a certain color? Do we not see the damage we do in labeling our girls "tom boys" or our boys "feminine" just because they have their own likes and opinions on things? Things that really don't matter?


Dads. Speak softly to your sons. Speak calmly to your daughters. Who do you want your child to be? Do you want him to be the kid at school that sits by himself with absolutely no friends or self esteem? Or do you want him to be the kid running for class office and feeling like he deserves to win it? Do we not see that we have the power to give that to our children? Do we not see that we have the power to teach our children the tools of societal survival?


Dads. Do we not see the influence we have when we say we believe in one thing, but our children see us living something else? Do we not realize how little we encourage our children to actually decide what they believe, declare what they believe, and then live by it? Whether it's religion, politics, sports, or societal norms. It is not our place to tell our kids what to think. It is our place to teach our kids to think correctly. If we do this, we need have no fear of what they will decide for themselves and how strongly they'll stand behind it. A man will follow his own convictions to his death, but he'll only follow another man's convictions until he steps in manure.


This is how I want to parent. I want to teach so that my children are led by their hearts and their own convictions. I am going to serve as a humble leader/example while they are in my house, but eventually, they will fly away. I NEED to know that I have done the things listed in these paragraphs. It will be the crowing achievement of my life. If I can manage this, my children will not be part of the bullied or bullies themselves. Furthermore, they will be brave and have courage to stand up for what is right not what is popular. Who knows….. by standing up once for someone being picked on, my children could potentially be saving a child by sharing the light of their kindness. Giving someone else worth and validation that they do exist and that they do matter. That is all anyone wants, really. It is becoming increasingly apparent that this behavior is so desperately needed, children are dying, bringing guns to school and killing themselves. This is important. The answer lies in us.


Even in adulthood, I am continuing to learn you need to give to get and in the end only kindness matters. People will forget what you say but not how you made them feel. What prompted me to write this was the SDL, post “Memoirs of a Bullied Kid.” I read this section and immediately teared up at the raw truth and realized my responsibility to my son’s mental/emotional health.


I am going on thirty-one years old. I have spent the second half of my life studying self-esteem, self-love, and self-mastery. In the last several years, I have been blessed with the perspective to look back at those "horrible" years, and realize that the bullying I was receiving was simply the symptom of the bullying that the bullies were receiving in their own lives, whether it was their family, other bullies, or the "Perfection" going on around them. You see, I've learned one universal truth. People who love themselves, don't hurt other people. The more we hate ourselves, the more we want others to suffer. Every bully that bullied me (and by the end of junior high there were at least a dozen of them) was a desperate and hurting individual. The victim of something going on around them. A soul that was probably crying in solitude as often as I was, even if the crying was silent.


And so, I will ask you now to not hate the bullies. Experience tells me that hating them, or being angry with them, will always make it worse. Instead, put your arm around them. Love them. Tell them that they are valuable. Tell them that you expect great things from them. They will stop the bullying. They will stop, because they will start to love themselves. And people who love themselves don't bully others.


And with the bullies, it's really that simple. If they actually believe that somebody loves them and believes in them, they will love themselves, they will become better people, and many will even become saviors to the bullied.


If you are a parent to a child who is less than kind to other kids, I'd very much suggest you read my post from last week, You just broke your child. Congratulations. In fact, every parent should read it. As much as we may not want to mentally go there, a lot of the problem may lie in us. If the problem doesn't, the solution does. We all must understand that we have the obligation, as parents, to help our kids love themselves.


Now, let's talk about the bullied. If you haven't noticed, it's not generally the bullies that are killing themselves, slaughtering their schoolmates, or building bombs in their bedrooms. It's the bullied that are doing that. And my heart literally is pounding through my chest right now because I know just how easy it would have been to prevent most of these incidents. I also know all too well, the consuming thoughts that constantly go through the minds of the bullied.


Please.


So many kids would still be alive right now, if somebody, anybody, would have done something. So many beautiful, incredible, wonderful souls would still be walking among us if somebody, anybody, would have done something.


And what is that something that you and I must do?


Part of the answer is a mother putting her arm around her daughter over and over again, until she is not able to keep from telling the truth about why she is sad, quiet, or angry.


Part of the answer is a father starting a fun project or taking his son fishing for some one on one time. Enough hours under the hood of a car or on the bank of a river will always bring out desperate truths.


Part of the answer is a grandfather taking his grandchild out for ice cream and simply asking how the other kids treat her at school. For some reason, good grandparents can usually cut straight to the point.


Part of the answer is a teacher doing more than simply telling the bullies to stop. The answer is a warm hand on her pupil's shoulder, a listening ear, warm words of importance, and then finding a reason for the child to come back the next day, and the next, until that child knows that his presence is cherished.


Part of the answer is a youth director dedicating an entire night to the topic of bullying, and what each child can do when they are the ones being bullied, what to do if they see people being bullied, or what they can change if they realize that they themselves are guilty of bullying others.


And while each of those small parts of the answer are crucial, there is one big part to the answer.


Peers. Classmates. Fellow pupils. Did you know that you each have more power over healing the bullied and the bullies than anyone on earth. More than their parents. More than their religious leaders. More than their teachers. The majority of the answer lies in you, and it's simple.


The answer is as simple as you having the courage to find the kid who just got bullied and telling her, "don't listen to those guys. My friends and I are always talking about how awesome you are."


The answer is as simple as you having the courage to then invite her to sit with you at lunch. And it will take courage.


The answer is as simple as you having the courage to find the bully, and in private telling him that you don't understand why he's doing that, because you always thought he was a bigger person than that.


The answer is as simple as you having the courage to find the bully, and in private ask her if she's had a rough day. Care about her. Tell her you were wondering because of the way she was treating your classmate, and you feel she may be misunderstood. You will be amazed what you will learn.


The answer is as simple as you having the courage to find the boy who just got shoved or tripped and asking him if there is anything you can do to help him. You see, just knowing that you care will plant seeds for his own courage to blossom.


The answer is as simple as you.


The answer is as simple as you having the courage.


Do you have courage like that? I hope so. I don't want to see any more kids die……


This concept has had a profound impact on me and the way I intend to parent. Thank goodness I can work on myself for a bit before Porter reaches an age when we may have to deal with such things. “…I have leaned one universal truth. People that love themselves don’t hurt other people.” This struck me to the core. This is my truth and my lesson. To love more and hurt less. To be more kind and to have more courage. God has blessed me with an angel in baby boy form and I owe it to him. I owe him my best and I have to try and try hard. I will need to take personal accountability for many things I have not wanted to. I will need to heal. But this is my blessing. My family has humbled me into these discoveries and makes me love them even more. It is out of love for them that I am pushed beyond my previous notions of what a parent “should” be. So I’ll put the challenge out to everyone who may be gracious enough to read this far. Be kinder than necessary. Be intentional. Say nice things. Hug a child. Forgive yourself. Try harder. Make someone else’s day better, everyday. Maybe we all have some healing to do.


“Those who bring sunshine into the lives of others cannot keep it from themselves. “


-James M. Barrie

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Time Flys!

Porter is 8 months old today. Sigh. Don't get me wrong, I am really happy and a super proud mama, but I am having trouble as he gets older..... letting go.  Let me back up.  I am NOT an overly sentimental type.  I didn't keep everything he ever touched, I stopped writing on his baby calendar every day months ago, I'm not a crier (ok maybe a little now :).  So, these feelings are a bit of a shock to me.  I didn't realize how much I cherished having a little, little baby around.   Again, don't get me wrong, I adore the burgeoning personality and consider it an honor to watch him learn and grow.  I know, I know..... I can't have it both ways.  So you see my juxtaposition.  So, in light of all this, I decided to steal an idea from my friend (and fellow blogger) Sarah.  She is about 6 mo pregnant and she does a weekly pregnancy update, of the same highlights each week, so you can see the change throughout her pregnancy.  It/she is too adorable, so I am stealing (and modifying :) the idea and doing Porter's Monthly Highlights.  It will help me keep everyone informed and be happy and have gratitude for my healthy growing boy! (but seriously does he have to grow up so fast??!)

Porter's Monthly Update: 8 Months

Date: October 6, 2010

Weight: 21 lbs. 10 oz

Teeth: 4. Two front teeth, Two on the bottom


Movement: Um. Everywhere. Crawling at lightning speed, sometimes with one leg up.  We call it his "pimp" crawl. He is pulling himselff up on everything, climb the stairs and hangs on one handed.  No standing without assistance or walking yet.

Sleep: much better this month than last month. He is in bed by 7:00-7:30 every night. He puts himself to sleep now too. I sometimes have to fight to keep him up that late. He still wakes up at night, but he sometimes soothes himself back to sleep before I can even get out of bed. During high teething and growth times, we feed and cuddle him in the middle of the night still. He is up by 5:45-6:00 EVERY morning without fail.

Porter Loves.... : his binky, his Sophie giraffe, Daddy (BIG time), yo baby's, cords, being naked, plums and crinkly paper.
I love my Sophie Giraffe


Sleeping with my Daddy.






Food: well, judging by his weight, we have a healthy eater on our hands!  Mostly fruits.  Plums, peaches and applesauce are his favorites. He also LOVES yo baby's (organic yogurt for babies) and gets all excited when he sees me get them out of the fridge.  I introduced chicken for the first time this month.  I have to mix it well, but he likes it ok.  He will also sit in his chair and munch on Gerber Puffs or Cherrios.

Mood: happy happy happy.  He is a very jovial baby.  He has been super fussy if we try to keep him up late or if his teethers are coming in.  Other than that, he is one happy baby.


Our Happy Highlight of the Month:

Neil says..... Porter learning to say da da da and sometimes daaaa deee. (though most things are da da da, he is getting it!)  I think Porter watching his first Gamecocks Football game was a close second.
Go Cocks!

Linsay says..... Porter engaging with the puppies.  He gets all excited to see them in the morning.  He climbs all over Bailey and lets Guinness lick him all over.  They love each other. A.lot.




What we miss.... :

Neil says...... having to rock him to sleep.  Neil had what we dubbed "magic Daddy hands".  Now he is too big, doesn't like to be held that way.

Linsay says...... him letting me snuggle him as long as I want.  He even has a sigh now, like "Ugh, Mom, this again... can you please put me down so I can get into something I'm not supposed to."  Where did my little baby go??!!

We are looking forward to... :

Neil says.... Porter walking!  (we shall see if we take that back once it starts)

Linsay says.... The holidays! Halloween and all the festivities.  He is gonna be Tigger, I think.

Porter's 8 Month Pic's



See my tooth?!




You can seeone tooth at least, other 3 are hiding!


So Big!

My "Wild Man" hair! Always sticks up no matter what!