Yes Ma’am.

This is worth writing down

Today, both boys said “Yes Ma’am,” in unison while I was getting onto them. This was the first time TWO has ever said it, and he clapped for himself and cheered afterwards. It was one of those rare moments where I thought to myselfI’m doing something right. Kind of like how I feel when ONE rushes ahead of me exclaiming, “I’ll open the door for you, Mommy.

This is a long road, but I sure hope I can keep plodding along and trying to enforce manners. And maybe one day, in the middle of dealing with who-knows-what, I’ll look out the window and see one of my sons opening the car door for a girl. Or standing up for each other, or speaking up for someone else who may not be able to. This is my dream.

Chicago 2013.

Here’s what happens when I’m let out of the house: I take pictures of random things that entertain me, and then I come home from a really big trip with photos like these.

This was in the airport.

And then there was the experience I had in the Nashville airport where all of the stalls were available (see photo below), and yet, some bitch decided to use the one right next to me. Really??

I had a wonderful, but exhausting, trip with my girlfriends. And then Husband picked me up in New Orleans and I burst into tears … from exhaustion, from the stress of air travel and feeling my uterus contract into a painfully tight ball during every single takeoff and landing, from smelling too many strangers, from missing my family, and from being overwhelmed. I’m fairly certain I’m not a sissy in real life, but in pregnant life I TOTALLY AM.

Here’s what I’ve learnedI don’t think I should travel while pregnant, but I realized this slightly too late, while zooming up the elevator in the John Hancock building. That is when I thought to myself, “Oh shit.”  The moral of the story is that I’m glad I went, but wow, that trip really kicked my pregnant ass. 

Luckily, there were people present who took pictures of us instead of bald eagles with widespread wings. This is why I need my friends.

Lunch at Karyn’s Cooked, a well-known vegan restaurant.

Sweet Jolene turned 25 last week (we shall be 25 forever)!

Fuzzy night time photo taken by a well-dressed local.

I like this picture. Also, I did Kate’s hair (far right) and I kind of want to chop mine off now. And get a hot pink blazer like Kelli‘s.

View from the Hancock Building.

Breakfast at Bongo Room in Wicker Park. Hands down, best breakfast of my life.

WEEEEEE! On the elevator going 90-something stories up and I thought I might die.

Dinner at Giordano’s pizza.

City life.

Mmmmmm.

This is all vegan! It was surprisingly yummy.

Group photo!

I have to give props to Anca, our beautiful hostess in the white dress standing next to me in the picture above. She was so delightful and her husband Cort was so helpful and polite that I kind of wanted to cram them both into my suitcase and bring them back to Louisiana with me.

No, really.

Now that I’m back home, I have a ton of laundry to do and children to hug and lemon water to drink. And sleep to catch up on. It’s good to be missed.


GIRL’S TRIP.

In 24 hours, I’ll be heading to the airport to fly away for three days with some girlfriends. We’re going to Chicago!

I am going to eat like a man and (window) shop and behave as if I’m not almost 6 months pregnant with my third child. 

I AM GOING TO LIVE IT UP, because once Pepper is born, I’ll have three kids to look after and who knows when I’ll be able to do something like this again!? Maybe never. So seize the moment I shall. 

Night #3.

Tonight is night #3 of no crib for TWO. I couldn’t handle the thought of another crazy night and I set up the Pack N’ Play for him to sleep in. He’s not going back in his big crib … this will have to do for now. It’s a temporary fix, though, because he can almost drag his body up and out of it.

I KNOW IT WOULD BE EASIER TO LEAVE THE KID IN A CRIB UNTIL HE IS THREE. I’m no dummy. But that’s just not going to happen, due to the fact that we‘re having another child in a few months and I need to get ready for her because if I don’t, the Earth is going to open up and swallow us whole. Our whole house, all of our stuff, sucked down into the abyss. Do not question me. 

The same abyss is also going to suck us down if Husband doesn’t do something about the weed situation happening in our backyard and put a new bulb in the front porch light.

TWO is a giant acrobat of a toddler. He needs a booster seat for the table, and a real bed to sleep in. He wants to do everything he sees his big brother doing. So … that’s how it is, and I am trying to make the best decisions I can.

Here is night #3. The picture is blurry because I was kind of frantically trying to snap it before he sensed my presence and started screaming again:

This whole experience reminds me a lot of what we went through for the first 5 or 6 months of his life when he WOULD NOT SLEEP, AND I THOUGHT I WOULD DIE, OMG. We made it through that, and we‘ll make it through this. Here is a reminder of how far we’ve come.

 

A Nice Reminder.

I am alone a lot of the time. I’m hormonal and exhausted. I am easily overwhelmed and find myself questioning my decisions a lot. So after a really tough stretch of mothering, I came across this on the internet and it was exactly what I needed. I’m not sure who the author is, but it sure helped me get through the remainder of my day. It’s good to be reminded that I was created to do this job, and I do it well. I would welcome anyone who questions my abilities to come take my place for 3 days.

No … really. Come on. I DARE YOU.

***

A little boy asked his mother, “Why are you crying?” “Because I’m a woman,” she told him.

“I don’t understand,” he said. His Mom just hugged him and said, “And you never will.”

Later the little boy asked his father, “Why does mother seem to cry for no reason?”

“All women cry for no reason,” was all his dad could say.

The little boy grew up and became a man, still wondering why women cry.

Finally he put in a call to God. When God got on the phone, he asked,

“God, why do women cry so easily?”

God said, “When I made the woman she had to be special.

I made her shoulders strong enough to carry the weight of the world, yet gentle enough to give comfort.

I gave her an inner strength to endure childbirth and the rejection that many times comes from her children.

I gave her a hardness that allows her to keep going when everyone else gives up, and take care of her family through sickness and fatigue without complaining.

I gave her the sensitivity to love her children under any and all circumstances, even when her child has hurt her very badly.

I gave her strength to carry her husband through his faults and fashioned her from his rib to protect his heart.

I gave her wisdom to know that a good husband never hurts his wife, but sometimes tests her strengths and her resolve to stand beside him And finally, I gave her a tear to shed. This is hers exclusively to use whenever it is needed.”

“You see my son,” said God, “the beauty of a woman is not in the clothes she wears, the figure that she carries, or the way she combs her hair.

The beauty of a woman must be seen in her eyes, because that is the doorway to her heart — the place where love resides.”

Frayed.

I’m in the trenches of transitioning TWO to a toddler bed in preparation for sleeping in a big twin bed soon. We have installed a child proof knob on the inside of his door, otherwise he would be running wild when it’s time to be sleeping.

He stands at his door and screams … and screams … and eventually finds his way over to the rocking chair, where he has fallen asleep the past two nights. We pick him up and move him to his bed, but if he happens to wake up, we start all over again.

Night #1

Night #2

This morning, his diaper leaked at 4:30 a.m. and he has been pretty much freaking out ever since. There are few things that annoy me more than being woken up repeatedly, so around 5:00 I accepted it for what it was, got him out of his room and started a load of laundry.

I spent the next hour and a half trying to keep him from waking the other sleeping members of our household. At 6:30 I moved the clothes from the washing machine to the dryer and returned to the kitchen to find this.

I believe he was preparing to leap when I intervened. My nerves are shot, and I’m exhausted. But thankfully, because this is my second child, I know it gets better.

Posted in TWO

Full-Body Varicosity.

I know you have all been waiting on the edge of your seats, but the suspense is over – I do not have a hernia.

I have an issue with one of my ligaments, round ligament varicosity, to be exact.  It mimics a hernia. Joke’s over, ligament. I know what you are, and you are not my intestine. I hope you had fun watching me freak the FREAK OUT.

I actually think I have full-body varicosity. I have diagnosed myself with this (made-up) condition because all of my veins are big and blue and sticking out in places they shouldn’t be. It’s an unsightly problem, but what a relief to learn that is my issue … and not innards escaping.

I told Dr. Boudreaux two things yesterday during my appointment: I think my entire vaginal area is rebelling (“No more babies, you bitch!” is what it’s telling me), and, I love her. She is such a great doctor, OMG. Like I think we could be friends outside of the doctor’s office. I feel a bond with anyone who has taken the time to me at length about my hoo-ha. My old doctor would never have indulged me and stated aloud in the exam room that my vagina cannot actually decide to “rebel,” because it doesn’t have a mind of its own.

She would have given me a well-deserved blank stare.

I love a health professional who will bring it down a level and be funny for a minute. I know they are rushed, but my OB never makes me feel like I’m being brushed aside. I give her 5 stars. Now … let’s get through the next 120 days, and get this baby out of me so my varicosities can go away.

Big Boys.

Oh man.

The time is coming, and coming quickly, when we will put both of our boys into one shared room and hope that we don’t spend the remainder of this year and possibly next in a constant state of sleep deprivation. 

Husband and I are nervous. A 4.5-year-old and a 1.5-year-old in a room togetherwill they do well? Will it be a disaster? Will they sleep? Will they bloody each other and themselves when they should be sleeping? Will bedtime become a total and complete nightmare for me, especially doing this alone because Husband doesn’t come home until well after they are in bed?

I used to be excited about this, but now it makes my stomach kind of hurt. It’s anxiety. This weekend my parents generously purchased the sturdiest bunk beds we could find, along with a large chest of drawers, and I am slowly formulating The Plan. Of course my mind is focused on the decorating of this room, because that is fun and distracts me from the reality of what might actually happen once The Plan is implemented … but here is the fun stuff:

We won’t stack these into bunk beds until they are much older … I’m not ready for a trip to the E.R. just yet. They will be two identical twin-sized beds for now.

The chest is very tall and should hold all of their clothes really well.
I found this “mix and match” bedding at Target – it’s available online only – and it’s perfect. Affordable AND fun.

I was thinking of doing a little solar-system/space theme in their room so the stars work really well. Also, the colors go with all of the stuff they already have. Score!

The furniture is waiting in the warehouse for me to get it together and arrange for delivery. I told them 6 weeks, which would put this transition happening around the end of March. 

Dun, dun dun …

  

Low Point.

Sometimes motherhood is BULLSHIT and I think it’s important for someone to say this. There are plenty of warm and fuzzy moments and teachable moments and times when you feel like you have really done something good with your day.

But then there are other days that just suck. From beginning to end, they suck. Occasionally this can drag out for weeks. Sucky day after sucky day with little glimmers of warmth and fuzz thrown in. I am currently in the midst of a sucky MONTH.

We’ve all been sick, one right after the other. Husband and I are bickering. The kids are cranky. No one is sleeping well. ONE woke up with a massive nosebleed – it looked very much like he slaughtered an animal in his sleep – and at almost the exact same moment we were dealing with that, we found TWO in his bed stark naked. He stripped off his pajamas and diaper himself and was just hanging out, waiting for someone to retrieve him.

It’s raining and we are on our last $20 until payday. The kids are out of school for the Mardi Gras holiday and I don’t feel like being fun and creative and thinking of cool things to do. You want to know what I feel like doing? Locking myself in the bathroom for 12 hours.

Thankfully, Husband is being really good-natured about my hormonal episodes. Yesterday morning around 9:30-ish I finally had one kid asleep and the other one was with my in-laws and I announced that I was going to take a nice long shower. Husband said “okay” and proceeded to follow me into the bathroom … OH NO YOU DON’T. 

I proceeded to screech at him about how I just needed time to myself and I wanted nothing to do with anyone and he got his feelings hurt (understandably) and went into the living room. A few minutes later I started to feel guilty and went to apologize. I walked in to find that he had shut all of the blinds and curtains in the house and it was really dark and cave-like which instantly put me in an irrationally bad mood. I walked up to him and said, “I was coming to apologize for being mean to you, but then I saw that you shut all the curtains and that made me mad at you againso I no longer wish to apologize.

And then I walked away. 

Surely at some point things will start to improve. I realized just how low we had sunk when I showed him my lump, which might be a hernia, and he seemed to mistake it for a booty call. No, that‘s actually my intestines. Perhaps we can try to reclaim our romance once my INNARDS HAVE BEEN SEWN BACK IN.