Mara got pretty excited when she saw the finished product.
Tycho: My room is super cool and Mara's room is super lame. Because my room has a rocket ship, so that's why it's super cool and Mara's room is super lame.
Yes, at some point in the last few months Mara started cooperating with picture-taking, but Tycho stopped cooperating. Whadya gonna do...
Friday, June 8, 2012
Thursday, June 7, 2012
We Painted!
Thanks to the lovely Shari Legere, who brought paints back from the states so we could paint the kids' rooms. Here is Tycho's room:
HE LOVES IT!!
Saturday, April 14, 2012
Here, There, And Easter
This is Mara jammin' on the neighbor's keyboard. I am sooo gonna teach this girl piano. She is mesmerized when I play at church. When she gets a chance to play, she bobs her head up and down and laughs and laughs. It's pretty much the cutest thing ever.
This stuffed animal is Mara's favorite. I wouldn't say she HAS to have it with her wherever she goes (she's too independent for that), but she certainly appreciates it when I remember to bring it with us places. And that appreciation is VERBAL. For instance, when I give it to her at bedtime and pull the string (it plays "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star"), she says "thank you," and then starts sucking her thumb (aside: it hasn't reached the point yet where the thumb-sucking stops being cute and starts being a bad habit to break).
This is my first time cutting a lobster tail. I did not volunteer for this task. But I concede it was a good learning experience.
This crab was in the garage last night and it FREAKED me out. I walked out to put Jacob's new bag in the scuba room and I heard it scuttling around. I found it by the tire, took a picture, trapped it in the recycling bin, showed it to Tycho this morning, then Jacob set it free.
And here's some Easter stuffs:
Mara and Tycho after their Easter egg haul.
About to color eggs
Finished!
Aquatic Easter egg hunt
Fell asleep that night with his prizes. And he's waving?
In the morning (Easter bunny left a trail of jelly beans to their baskets). Tycho was too excited to eat the trail, just followed it straight to the basket.
Mara, however, stopped and ate each and every one (good thing it was a short trail--just from her room to the closet).
(Mara with her mouth full)
With the loot
And aren't we cute?
Sunday, March 18, 2012
BFFs
This is Sara. She is Tycho's best friend. You might say it's unusual, that a three-year-old has a best friend, or maybe I'm just using the term lightly. I assure you, I'm not. He is his mother's son, after all.
It all started at a play group a few months ago. There are normally at least 10 kids that go to play group, and Tycho was equally friendly to all of them. Insert Sara. I'm not sure who took whose toy first, but it became a game. Sara would take whatever toy Tycho had, then run off, and Tycho would chase her (and vice versa). Also, I think maybe they pretend the toy is a football because, inevitably, the chasee would have to get tackled by the chaser.
One time, Jacob took Tycho for a "quick trip" to the NEX... and came back a couple hours later. Apparently, on the way to the store, Tycho saw Sara in the barber shop and he HAD to go keep her company while her dad got a hair cut.
Tycho gets to go to a little church class for twenty minutes (they read a bible story and then color a picture) and he always ALWAYS has to sit next to Sara.
Another place Tycho "has" to sit next to Sara: library story hour. And when we sing the good morning song, they like to put each other in the song:
Miss Kaneisha: Tycho, it's your turn for the good morning song. What would you like to put in the song?
Tycho: SARA!!
Everyone sings (as Tycho and Sara jump together): Good morning! Good morning! We like the little friend that you have. In fact we like her so much we're gonna put her in a song in a song... in a song. Put Tycho and his friend in a song. Hooray!
(note: normally when a kid gets to jump for the good morning song, he puts shoes, or clothes, or toys/stuffed animals in the song, so it goes "... we like the pretty shoes that you wear. in fact we like them so much... put so-and-so and her shoes in a song. hooray!" Get it? That's okay, neither do I, but I sing along anyway)
Sometimes we run into Sara when we're grocery shopping. One time Sara taught Tycho how to ballroom dance right there in the cereal aisle (I really wish I had my camera for that one).
Sometimes (okay, a lot of times) there are genuine tears when these two part company. I guess it's the toddler way of saying "I'll miss you."
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Home, Sweet Home
This huge tree is next to our house. It's perfect for climbing, though Tycho is a bit too young for that (so I have to help him).
This is Windmill beach. It's about five minutes from our house. We go to a beach at least once a week.
(this picture is from the day that Jacob went spear fishing at Windmill and caught a barracuda!)
This is Windmill beach. It's about five minutes from our house. We go to a beach at least once a week.
(this picture is from the day that Jacob went spear fishing at Windmill and caught a barracuda!)
Friday, February 24, 2012
You Know You’re In GTMO When…
I realized I haven't really written anything about where we live. So here you are:
There is only one grocery store, gas station, internet service provider, major street (Sherman Avenue, where the maximum speed limit is a whopping 25 mph… this actually may be one of my favorite things about GTMO), salon, school, church/chapel (serves all religions), auto shop, hospital, radio station, dry cleaners, library, McDonalds (we don’t care ‘cause we go MAYBE once a month… seriously though, how many places do you know that have only ONE McDonalds?), you get the gist.
You have to order online anything out of the ordinary (although I'm proud to say I've only done this twice--plastic sheets and Jacob's favorite cake mix--and everything else we just go without). And when I say "out of the ordinary," think balloons, and stuff of that sort. So, pretty much everything you don't use on a daily or weekly basis. The NEX (Navy Exchange, the one grocery store) runs out of stuff at seemingly random times and it feels like forever before they restock. You think, "There are only four packages of chicken breasts left. They wouldn't really run out of chicken... would they?" Yes, yes they would. The kids haven't had their fruit-snacks-fix in about a month. But, you learn to adapt (which I take pride in being good at... adapting, that is... not learning. I stink at learning). And the fruit snacks thing is probably for the better.
You figure you need some exercise, so you take a walk outside and five different people pull over to ask if you need a ride.
One of the women at play group had to take her car to the shop because banana rats ATE HER SPARK PLUGS (which apparently is not uncommon)
Iguanas are protected animals, so if you see one in the road you have to stop until it crosses. Banana rats are not protected animals. Also, they're really dumb, so it's pretty easy to run them over (on accident, of course...) They're called banana rats because they poop bananas. No lie. But not real bananas. The poop just looks like rotten bananas. But still smells like poop. Mental picture: both iguanas and banana rats are about as big as a pillow, folded lengthwise. With a tail. Actual pictures:
There is only one grocery store, gas station, internet service provider, major street (Sherman Avenue, where the maximum speed limit is a whopping 25 mph… this actually may be one of my favorite things about GTMO), salon, school, church/chapel (serves all religions), auto shop, hospital, radio station, dry cleaners, library, McDonalds (we don’t care ‘cause we go MAYBE once a month… seriously though, how many places do you know that have only ONE McDonalds?), you get the gist.
You have to order online anything out of the ordinary (although I'm proud to say I've only done this twice--plastic sheets and Jacob's favorite cake mix--and everything else we just go without). And when I say "out of the ordinary," think balloons, and stuff of that sort. So, pretty much everything you don't use on a daily or weekly basis. The NEX (Navy Exchange, the one grocery store) runs out of stuff at seemingly random times and it feels like forever before they restock. You think, "There are only four packages of chicken breasts left. They wouldn't really run out of chicken... would they?" Yes, yes they would. The kids haven't had their fruit-snacks-fix in about a month. But, you learn to adapt (which I take pride in being good at... adapting, that is... not learning. I stink at learning). And the fruit snacks thing is probably for the better.
You figure you need some exercise, so you take a walk outside and five different people pull over to ask if you need a ride.
One of the women at play group had to take her car to the shop because banana rats ATE HER SPARK PLUGS (which apparently is not uncommon)
Iguanas are protected animals, so if you see one in the road you have to stop until it crosses. Banana rats are not protected animals. Also, they're really dumb, so it's pretty easy to run them over (on accident, of course...) They're called banana rats because they poop bananas. No lie. But not real bananas. The poop just looks like rotten bananas. But still smells like poop. Mental picture: both iguanas and banana rats are about as big as a pillow, folded lengthwise. With a tail. Actual pictures:
(picture stolen from a photographer here on island)
This is actually one of the iguanas that hangs out by the chapel
(picture stolen from online)
Friday, February 10, 2012
How "I" Became "We"
Stoled from my long lost twin sister
1. How long have you and your significant other been together?
Jacob would say, “2005, 06, 07, 08, 09, 10, 11, 12… so that’s eight years” … even though we started dating middle/end of 2005 and it’s only the beginning of 2012. But, if you wanna be a little more exact (like me), go with six and half years.
2. How did you meet? (what's your "love" story?)
Well, Jacob will tell you the LIE version of how we met. So it’s a good thing I’m writing the post. Short version:
Me: YAY COLLEGE
Roommate Rebecca: My pal, Seth, goes here and his brother, Jacob, who happens to be a total hottie, is coming to visit. YOU GUYS SHOULD TOTALLY GET MARRIED
Me: Well… alright.
Insert various soccer games, volleyball games, dinners at Aunt Marilyn’s house, trips to DI, temple walks, car rides, dollar movies, so many phase ten games, phone calls from my parents saying the phone bill shows I went over my minutes, dances, swimming pool work-outs, pizza, lots of pizza, billions of games of pool, one borrowed jacket, one dinner with his favorite uncle, one Guatemalan bracelet, one snowball fight, one pink belly, and one call to my papa, and BAM, we’re engaged.
3. If married, how long have you been married?
We have been married 5 years, 6 months, 17 days (2027 days total)!
4. If you are married, where did you get married at? Big or small wedding?
The beautiful Ogden, Utah, temple. Small. And when I say small, I mean cheap. ‘Cause that’s how I roll. Just family at the ceremony in Utah, then two receptions for friends in Houston and Fort Worth. I’ve been to many a beautiful/extravagant wedding since, and to this day I still think mine was perfect for me!
5. Do you have any nicknames that you call one another? Share!
Not really. Of course, I always have my standard term-of-endearment in reserve: loser.
6. Name 3 things you love most about your honey.
Gosh, this is probably the best exercise for a wife… kinda like remembering to be the thankful—once you start thinking of all the things you’ve been given, you realize the list is never-ending. Sitting here thinking about it, I’m realizing he has so many admirable qualities it’s hard to pick three! He is so generous, which is a divinely-inspired marital balance because I’m incredibly stingy (at least I can admit it, right?). He’s charming. Seriously, he can charm the pants off anyone! It’s probably one of those things you have to use sparingly, or you’ll-like-blind people or something, but once in awhile he chooses to turn on his charm and it baffles me every time. I can always count on him to do the right thing. He might complain about it, or even joke (very convincingly) suggesting he’ll do the opposite, but I know he’ll choose the right in the end. Other things I love (sorry, couldn’t contain it to three): he is committed, witty, calm, certain, faithful, simple, loyal, observant, and truly just a grown-up child (in a good way).
7. Tell us how he proposed!
He said, “so when are we gonna get married?” and I said, “psshh, you haven’t even proposed yet,” and he said, “fine, will you marry me?” and then I hung up on him.
8. Is he a flowers and teddy bear kind of guy for v-day, or strawberries, champagne, and rose petals?
He is an all-of-the-above kind of guy (but change champagne to sparkling cider). He is a HUGE gift-giver. I have to be careful with what I say because I know the second I mention something I might want, he is out the door to go get it for me.
9. Are you a sunset dinner on the beach kind of girl, or pop a movie in and relax on the couch?
Depends. Did I have a busy day? Is the dinner free? What movie? Are the kids present? What’s the weather like? Sorry, too many unknowns to make that decision.
10. Tell us one thing you'd like to do with your significant other one day. If you could do anything? Go anywhere?
Scuba diving. On a cruise. In Australia. Or world cup?
11. Tell us what you plan on doing on this Valentine's Day.
We are making dinner together (chicken cordon bleu)… for somebody else (a couple that just had a baby). And going a Reef Raider’s meeting I think. And then who knows? Jacob knows.
12. Are you asking for anything this Valentine's Day?
CANDY (I have a problem… admitting may be the first step, but I’m smart enough to know I’ll never get passed step one)... but not the gamble chocolate
13. Give us one piece of advice about keeping a relationship strong and full of love.
Don’t go to bed angry. Hahahahaha j/k. The real advice is: COMMUNICATE (you may go to bed angry, but at least you won’t go to bed confused about it). But, yeah, I’d say about 90% of the fights are because we’re doing too much assuming and not enough talking. Even if you think something is obvious, voice it anyway.
14. Show us a picture of what love means to you.
1. How long have you and your significant other been together?
Jacob would say, “2005, 06, 07, 08, 09, 10, 11, 12… so that’s eight years” … even though we started dating middle/end of 2005 and it’s only the beginning of 2012. But, if you wanna be a little more exact (like me), go with six and half years.
2. How did you meet? (what's your "love" story?)
Well, Jacob will tell you the LIE version of how we met. So it’s a good thing I’m writing the post. Short version:
Me: YAY COLLEGE
Roommate Rebecca: My pal, Seth, goes here and his brother, Jacob, who happens to be a total hottie, is coming to visit. YOU GUYS SHOULD TOTALLY GET MARRIED
Me: Well… alright.
Insert various soccer games, volleyball games, dinners at Aunt Marilyn’s house, trips to DI, temple walks, car rides, dollar movies, so many phase ten games, phone calls from my parents saying the phone bill shows I went over my minutes, dances, swimming pool work-outs, pizza, lots of pizza, billions of games of pool, one borrowed jacket, one dinner with his favorite uncle, one Guatemalan bracelet, one snowball fight, one pink belly, and one call to my papa, and BAM, we’re engaged.
3. If married, how long have you been married?
We have been married 5 years, 6 months, 17 days (2027 days total)!
4. If you are married, where did you get married at? Big or small wedding?
The beautiful Ogden, Utah, temple. Small. And when I say small, I mean cheap. ‘Cause that’s how I roll. Just family at the ceremony in Utah, then two receptions for friends in Houston and Fort Worth. I’ve been to many a beautiful/extravagant wedding since, and to this day I still think mine was perfect for me!
5. Do you have any nicknames that you call one another? Share!
Not really. Of course, I always have my standard term-of-endearment in reserve: loser.
6. Name 3 things you love most about your honey.
Gosh, this is probably the best exercise for a wife… kinda like remembering to be the thankful—once you start thinking of all the things you’ve been given, you realize the list is never-ending. Sitting here thinking about it, I’m realizing he has so many admirable qualities it’s hard to pick three! He is so generous, which is a divinely-inspired marital balance because I’m incredibly stingy (at least I can admit it, right?). He’s charming. Seriously, he can charm the pants off anyone! It’s probably one of those things you have to use sparingly, or you’ll-like-blind people or something, but once in awhile he chooses to turn on his charm and it baffles me every time. I can always count on him to do the right thing. He might complain about it, or even joke (very convincingly) suggesting he’ll do the opposite, but I know he’ll choose the right in the end. Other things I love (sorry, couldn’t contain it to three): he is committed, witty, calm, certain, faithful, simple, loyal, observant, and truly just a grown-up child (in a good way).
7. Tell us how he proposed!
He said, “so when are we gonna get married?” and I said, “psshh, you haven’t even proposed yet,” and he said, “fine, will you marry me?” and then I hung up on him.
8. Is he a flowers and teddy bear kind of guy for v-day, or strawberries, champagne, and rose petals?
He is an all-of-the-above kind of guy (but change champagne to sparkling cider). He is a HUGE gift-giver. I have to be careful with what I say because I know the second I mention something I might want, he is out the door to go get it for me.
9. Are you a sunset dinner on the beach kind of girl, or pop a movie in and relax on the couch?
Depends. Did I have a busy day? Is the dinner free? What movie? Are the kids present? What’s the weather like? Sorry, too many unknowns to make that decision.
10. Tell us one thing you'd like to do with your significant other one day. If you could do anything? Go anywhere?
Scuba diving. On a cruise. In Australia. Or world cup?
11. Tell us what you plan on doing on this Valentine's Day.
We are making dinner together (chicken cordon bleu)… for somebody else (a couple that just had a baby). And going a Reef Raider’s meeting I think. And then who knows? Jacob knows.
12. Are you asking for anything this Valentine's Day?
CANDY (I have a problem… admitting may be the first step, but I’m smart enough to know I’ll never get passed step one)... but not the gamble chocolate
13. Give us one piece of advice about keeping a relationship strong and full of love.
Don’t go to bed angry. Hahahahaha j/k. The real advice is: COMMUNICATE (you may go to bed angry, but at least you won’t go to bed confused about it). But, yeah, I’d say about 90% of the fights are because we’re doing too much assuming and not enough talking. Even if you think something is obvious, voice it anyway.
14. Show us a picture of what love means to you.
when he cleans for me (acts of service=my love language)
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Excuses, Excuses
The reason for my semi-hiatus on the blog is that I'm working on my 2011 scrapbook. Thanks to this seriously awesome Christmas present I got from the in-laws, the scrapbooking is going swimmingly! (aside: I'm pretty sure I wouldn't use that word in regular conversation, but it seemed right in that sentence). I had never even heard of this contraption before, but now I'm pretty sure I can't scrapbook without it.
Here are a few recent segments from my five-year memory book (been doing it since November, and still goin' strong!):
January 13, 2012
I spilled cereal and Tycho said, “It’s okay. You don’t have to be in trouble or get spankings. I forgive you.”
January 15, 2012
I was sick today (boo). Put a water bottle on my forehead (headache) and Tycho said, “Hey, don’t use all the cold!”
January 17, 2012
I was singing along to “Fix You.”
Me: And I will tryyyyy… to fix you
Tycho: No, I don’t wanna be fixed!
January 18, 2012
Sometimes I can’t help but laugh when Tycho is crying. Tonight Tycho was in his room crying because it was bedtime… and talking to himself. “I forgot something. I have to tell Mom. I can’t go to bed because I forgot something. I have to tell Mom now. But I’ll get in trouble. But I need some water. I don’t wanna go to sleep.” All this while keeping up a steady stream of wails. Believe me; you would have laughed, too.
Other things a-happenin':
Happening: I'm really trying to teach Tycho to recognize letters and numbers.
Lesson: Patience is a virtue (and letters are hard and confusing!)
Happening: Mara has started pushing people (very rude for a one-year-old with such a sweet demeanor). She'll push Dad (or anyone) away when I try to hand her off to him/anyone. She'll push Tycho away when he's trying to steal my attention. She'll push Tycho (and say "no!") when he tries to take something she's playing with.
Lesson: Actually, I have not yet learned how to make her stop this. It's weird because we'll catch her in the act of doing something wrong (getting into the spice drawer, or any drawer, but the spice drawer is particularly fascinating to her, messing with the computer, throwing food, etc) and tell her "no" and she stops immediately. She's a really good listener that way. But for some reason, if she's not in the middle of doing something, if the something is already done and forgotten (like pushing/hitting somebody), the "no" means nothing to her. Any suggestions?
Also, I really loved this article and would share it with any first-time mom. And I wanna save it for my archives, so I'm posting the whole thing here:
http://www.ncregister.com/blog/to-the-mother-with-only-one-child
To the Mother With Only One Child
by Simcha Fisher
Dear Mother of Only One Child,
Don’t say it. Before the words can even pass your lips, let me beg you: don’t say, “Wow, you have nine kids? I thought it was hard with just my one!”
My dear, it is hard. You’re not being a wuss or a whiner when you feel like your life is hard. I know, because I remember having “only one child.” You may not even believe how many times I stop and reflect on how much easier my life is, now that I have nine children.
All right, so there is a lot more laundry. Keeping up with each child’s needs, and making sure they all get enough attention, is a constant worry. And a stomach bug is pretty much the end of the world, when nine digestive tracts are afflicted.
But I remember having only one child, and it was hard—so very hard. Some of the difficulties were just practical: I didn’t know what I was doing, had to learn everything. People pushed me around because I was young and inexperienced. But even worse were the emotional struggles of learning to be a mother.
When I had only one child, I truly suffered during those long, long, long days in our little apartment, no one but the two of us, baby and me, dealing with each other all day long. I invented errands and dawdled and took the long way home, but still had hours and hours to fill before I would hear my husband’s key in the door.
I cared so much what other people thought about her—they had to notice how beautiful she was, they had to be impressed at my natural mothering skills. I obsessed over childhood development charts, tense with fear that my mothering was lacking—that I hadn’t stimulated her enough, or maybe had just passed on the wrong kind of genes. I cringe when I remember how I pushed her—a little baby!—to achieve milestones she wasn’t ready for.
I lived in terror for her physical safety (I once brought her to Urgent Care, where the doctor somewhat irritably diagnosed a case of moderate sniffles) fearing every imaginable disease and injury. In my sleep-deprived state, I would have sudden insane hallucinations that her head had fallen off, her knees had suddenly broken themselves in the night, and so on.
My husband didn’t know how to help me. I didn’t know how to ask for help. My husband had become a father, and I adored him for it. My husband got to leave the house every day, and sleep every night. He got to go to the bathroom alone. I hated him for it.
When I had only one child, I told myself over and over that motherhood was fulfilling and sanctifying and was filling my heart to the brim with peace and satisfaction. And so I felt horribly guilty for being so bored, so resentful, so exhausted. This is a joyful time, darnit! I should enjoy being suddenly transformed into the Doyenne of Anything that Smells Bad.
I loved my baby, I loved pushing her on the swing, watching squirrels at the park together, introducing her to apple sauce, and watching her lips move in joyful dreams of milk. But it was hard, hard, hard. All this work: is this who I am now? I remember!
So now? Yes, the practical parts are a thousand times easier: I’m a virtuoso. I worry, but then I move along. Nobody pushes me around, and I have helpers galore. Someone fetches clean diapers and gets rid of the dirty ones. When the baby wakes up in the middle of the night for the ten thousandth time, I sigh and roll my eyes, maybe even cry a little bit for sheer tiredness—but I know it will pass, it will pass.
It’s becoming easier, and it will be easier still. They are passing me by.
I’m broken in. There’s no collision of worlds. We’re so darn busy that it’s a sheer delight to take some time to wash some small child’s small limbs in a quiet bath, or to read The Story of Ferdinand one more time. Taking care of them is easy. It’s tiring, it’s frustrating, but when I stop and take a breath, I see that it’s almost like a charade of work. All these things, the dishes, the diapers, the spills—they must be taken care of, but they don’t matter. They aren’t who I am.
To become a mother, I had to learn how to care about someone more than I did about myself, and that was terrible. But who I am now is something more terrible: the protector who can’t always protect; the one with arms that are designed to hold, always having to let go.
Dear mother of only one child, don’t blame yourself for thinking that your life is hard. You’re suffering now because you’re turning into a new woman, a woman who is never allowed to be alone. For what? Only so that you can become strong enough to be a woman who will be left.
When I had only one child, she was so heavy. Now I can see that children are as light as air. They float past you, nudging against you like balloons as they ascend.
Dear mother, don’t worry about enjoying your life. Your life is hard; your life will be hard. That doesn’t mean you’re doing something wrong—it means you’re doing it right.
Here are a few recent segments from my five-year memory book (been doing it since November, and still goin' strong!):
January 13, 2012
I spilled cereal and Tycho said, “It’s okay. You don’t have to be in trouble or get spankings. I forgive you.”
January 15, 2012
I was sick today (boo). Put a water bottle on my forehead (headache) and Tycho said, “Hey, don’t use all the cold!”
January 17, 2012
I was singing along to “Fix You.”
Me: And I will tryyyyy… to fix you
Tycho: No, I don’t wanna be fixed!
January 18, 2012
Sometimes I can’t help but laugh when Tycho is crying. Tonight Tycho was in his room crying because it was bedtime… and talking to himself. “I forgot something. I have to tell Mom. I can’t go to bed because I forgot something. I have to tell Mom now. But I’ll get in trouble. But I need some water. I don’t wanna go to sleep.” All this while keeping up a steady stream of wails. Believe me; you would have laughed, too.
Other things a-happenin':
Happening: I'm really trying to teach Tycho to recognize letters and numbers.
Lesson: Patience is a virtue (and letters are hard and confusing!)
Happening: Mara has started pushing people (very rude for a one-year-old with such a sweet demeanor). She'll push Dad (or anyone) away when I try to hand her off to him/anyone. She'll push Tycho away when he's trying to steal my attention. She'll push Tycho (and say "no!") when he tries to take something she's playing with.
Lesson: Actually, I have not yet learned how to make her stop this. It's weird because we'll catch her in the act of doing something wrong (getting into the spice drawer, or any drawer, but the spice drawer is particularly fascinating to her, messing with the computer, throwing food, etc) and tell her "no" and she stops immediately. She's a really good listener that way. But for some reason, if she's not in the middle of doing something, if the something is already done and forgotten (like pushing/hitting somebody), the "no" means nothing to her. Any suggestions?
Also, I really loved this article and would share it with any first-time mom. And I wanna save it for my archives, so I'm posting the whole thing here:
http://www.ncregister.com/blog/to-the-mother-with-only-one-child
To the Mother With Only One Child
by Simcha Fisher
Dear Mother of Only One Child,
Don’t say it. Before the words can even pass your lips, let me beg you: don’t say, “Wow, you have nine kids? I thought it was hard with just my one!”
My dear, it is hard. You’re not being a wuss or a whiner when you feel like your life is hard. I know, because I remember having “only one child.” You may not even believe how many times I stop and reflect on how much easier my life is, now that I have nine children.
All right, so there is a lot more laundry. Keeping up with each child’s needs, and making sure they all get enough attention, is a constant worry. And a stomach bug is pretty much the end of the world, when nine digestive tracts are afflicted.
But I remember having only one child, and it was hard—so very hard. Some of the difficulties were just practical: I didn’t know what I was doing, had to learn everything. People pushed me around because I was young and inexperienced. But even worse were the emotional struggles of learning to be a mother.
When I had only one child, I truly suffered during those long, long, long days in our little apartment, no one but the two of us, baby and me, dealing with each other all day long. I invented errands and dawdled and took the long way home, but still had hours and hours to fill before I would hear my husband’s key in the door.
I cared so much what other people thought about her—they had to notice how beautiful she was, they had to be impressed at my natural mothering skills. I obsessed over childhood development charts, tense with fear that my mothering was lacking—that I hadn’t stimulated her enough, or maybe had just passed on the wrong kind of genes. I cringe when I remember how I pushed her—a little baby!—to achieve milestones she wasn’t ready for.
I lived in terror for her physical safety (I once brought her to Urgent Care, where the doctor somewhat irritably diagnosed a case of moderate sniffles) fearing every imaginable disease and injury. In my sleep-deprived state, I would have sudden insane hallucinations that her head had fallen off, her knees had suddenly broken themselves in the night, and so on.
My husband didn’t know how to help me. I didn’t know how to ask for help. My husband had become a father, and I adored him for it. My husband got to leave the house every day, and sleep every night. He got to go to the bathroom alone. I hated him for it.
When I had only one child, I told myself over and over that motherhood was fulfilling and sanctifying and was filling my heart to the brim with peace and satisfaction. And so I felt horribly guilty for being so bored, so resentful, so exhausted. This is a joyful time, darnit! I should enjoy being suddenly transformed into the Doyenne of Anything that Smells Bad.
I loved my baby, I loved pushing her on the swing, watching squirrels at the park together, introducing her to apple sauce, and watching her lips move in joyful dreams of milk. But it was hard, hard, hard. All this work: is this who I am now? I remember!
So now? Yes, the practical parts are a thousand times easier: I’m a virtuoso. I worry, but then I move along. Nobody pushes me around, and I have helpers galore. Someone fetches clean diapers and gets rid of the dirty ones. When the baby wakes up in the middle of the night for the ten thousandth time, I sigh and roll my eyes, maybe even cry a little bit for sheer tiredness—but I know it will pass, it will pass.
It’s becoming easier, and it will be easier still. They are passing me by.
I’m broken in. There’s no collision of worlds. We’re so darn busy that it’s a sheer delight to take some time to wash some small child’s small limbs in a quiet bath, or to read The Story of Ferdinand one more time. Taking care of them is easy. It’s tiring, it’s frustrating, but when I stop and take a breath, I see that it’s almost like a charade of work. All these things, the dishes, the diapers, the spills—they must be taken care of, but they don’t matter. They aren’t who I am.
To become a mother, I had to learn how to care about someone more than I did about myself, and that was terrible. But who I am now is something more terrible: the protector who can’t always protect; the one with arms that are designed to hold, always having to let go.
Dear mother of only one child, don’t blame yourself for thinking that your life is hard. You’re suffering now because you’re turning into a new woman, a woman who is never allowed to be alone. For what? Only so that you can become strong enough to be a woman who will be left.
When I had only one child, she was so heavy. Now I can see that children are as light as air. They float past you, nudging against you like balloons as they ascend.
Dear mother, don’t worry about enjoying your life. Your life is hard; your life will be hard. That doesn’t mean you’re doing something wrong—it means you’re doing it right.
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