Thursday, November 24, 2016

Day 9: Place

Day 9:  What place are you grateful for?


I am grateful for the Oregon coast.  My family has a beach house there, near Depoe Bay.  Growing up, we would visit this beautiful beach area every couple years, and I have so many good memories of family time spent in Oregon.  When we were little, we would explore the caves, play a game called "Weenie Wave" where we dodged the waves, and collect seashells.  As we got older, we hiked over the rockier parts of the coastline, had triple jump contests in the sand, and read through stacks of library books while tanning on the beach.  In the evenings, we watched the sun set over the ocean and watched for a green flash, played blackjack with M&Ms as our betting currency, and took walks through a pitch black tree tunnel as my brothers jumped out and tried to scare us.  On rainy days, we went into town and explored the boardwalk stores selling saltwater taffy, souvenir snow globes, and Oregon hoodies.  Farther down the road, in Newport, there's a fantastic bookstore, a seafood restaurant that makes a mean clam chowder, and a respectable aquarium.  So many of my favorite childhood memories take place in Oregon, and I can't wait to take my own kids to this special place.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Day 8: Book

Day 8:  What book are you grateful for?



This was a hard one for me because I LOVE books and I am grateful for a lot of them.  I'm grateful for the fiction books that have most entertained and moved me this year (A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara, The One in a Million Boy by Monica Wood), I'm grateful for books that have challenged the way I view an issue (The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander, Far From the Tree by Andrew Solomon), I'm grateful for books that have encouraged me at just the right time (Soul Survivor by Philip Yancey), and I'm grateful for books that are so beautifully written that they should be considered a piece of art (Gilead by Marilynne Robinson).

But the book that I am most grateful for is the Bible.  I know this is a bit of a cliche in Christian circles.  But this is the book that has been my steady companion through the ups and downs of life, and that speaks to you in new ways with every new reading and every stage of life.  The wisdom books help you work through every emotion you will ever feel.  The Gospels and New Testament show the model life of Jesus and give instructions for how we can try to live like this.  The entire book is a beautiful story of redemption and hope.  This is the one book for which I am most grateful.

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Day 7: Memory

Day 7:  What memory are you grateful for?


I am grateful for the memory of the 4th of July, 2005.  That summer, I lived in Washington DC, where I was doing a clerkship with Bread for the City.  Kenny and I had just started dating that spring, but had already made plans to spend our respective summers on opposite sides of the country.  But Kenny was able to fly out to DC and visit me during the 4th of July weekend.  The evening of the 4th, we went down to the National Mall - there was a live band playing patriotic songs and an amazing fireworks show, with the nation's most iconic memorials in the background.  It was one of those evenings where everything feels perfect, like you're in a movie - young, in love, in the nation's capitol for this patriotic event.  And as you get older, you realize how rare these perfect, magical moments are, and it fills you with gratitude for every chance you have to experience a night like this.

Monday, November 21, 2016

Three Kids: Does it Live up to the Hype?

Ivy on her birth day
This is my blog post about adding a third kid.  I heard from many people that the transition from 2 to 3 kids is when things really get crazy in a household.  The Internet supports this idea.  (See, for example:  here, here, and here.)  I wondered whether it might be different for us, for the reasons listed below.  We are 4 weeks into being a family of 5, and I'm happy to report that so far, adding baby #3 has been the easiest transition.  Here are some of the X Factors that have made this transition the easiest of the three (and why #3 might be okay for you, too):

  • Baby's personality - This was the big challenge with bringing home Baby #2.  Zoey was a baby who demanded to be held at all times.  Ivy (*so far - i'm nervous to even write this*) is the mythical "easy baby" - she eats a couple times each night, but mostly sleeps when she's not eating between the hours of 10pm - 7am.  She doesn't mind being set down sometimes, and she hardly ever cries without reason.  This gives me breathing room to get my other tasks done, and makes it more enjoyable when I do get to cuddle her, as it's a choice rather than a round-the-clock demand.  
  • Age spacing - I wrote this blog post a few years ago about the pros and cons of having kids close in age.  (Josh and Zoey are 21 months apart, and developmentally even closer.)  When we brought Zoey home, Josh was young enough that he needed help with pretty much everything, as most 1-year-olds do.  It felt like there was always someone crying and urgently needing my help.  Now, with the older kids at ages 4 and 6, they can do many more things independently - particularly, keep themselves entertained (at least, if they are forced to do so) - and this is a game changer.  
  • Special needs - I buried the lede because this factor won't apply to many of you, and for those of you who it does apply, you already know it well - but this is by far, by far the biggest one for us.  When Josh was born, his medical needs and the physical and emotional challenges that went along with that were beyond my wildest expectations of difficulty.  When Zoey was born, Josh still had very significant extra needs (like being bolus tube fed 8 times per day on top of attempting oral feeds, like attending 25 doctor and therapy appts in Zoey's first 3 months of life, etc.).  Now, as we bring Ivy home, Josh's extra needs are much more manageable - many of the therapies are handled at school, the doc appts and hospital time have slowed WAY down, and this whole aspect of our life is still there but much less demanding.
  • Support from others -  For both of our Reno babies, we have had tons of support - all of Kenny's family is here, and we have a strong network of friends and church people who help us out.  This includes regular babysitting each week - also a game changer. For baby #2, born in Virginia Beach, we didn't have any babysitting support, and this was really hard.  We did have church friends who helped us with meals, prayers and emotional support, etc., but it was just harder to get babysitting from anyone when Josh was still medically fragile and we didn't have any family in town. 
  • Experience - I have a naturally anxious and controlling personality, and with newborn babies, things can feel pretty out of control.  You have less control over when / whether you sleep, whether the day will be easy or crazy, pretty much everything.  But it helps tremendously to KNOW things are going to be this way, and that it gets better - and to know it from experience, not just from other people telling you and you secretly wondering if your baby will be the exception that never ever learns to sleep through the night, stop crying without consolation, etc.
  • Busy-ness - Never thought I would list this as a helpful thing, but it actually is.  If I have time, I waste SO many hours worrying about things - how to get Josh to eat more, should Zoey start kindergarten at age 5 or 6, how can i get Ivy to sleep more hours in a row at night, etc. - but with 3 kids, there's just not time to get too obsessive about any one thing - you have to prioritize and limit your worrying.
So for those of you who are currently expecting #3, or who are contemplating adding a third, I'm here to tell you that it's not always the case that this one is the most difficult!  (I'll update again in a year, as it might just be way too soon to see the challenges of 3 kids.)
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That's not to say that there aren't some big challenges in this adjustment!  Here are the biggest 3 right now:

1.  The newborn needs and the corresponding exhaustion parents feel can be all consuming - this is just true with every new baby, no matter how many times you do it.  It's a challenge to care for a newborn even when that's literally the only thing you've got going on - add in siblings or a job or any other duties, and it's pushing you to the breaking point.  (However -- that experience thing I mentioned above - hugely helpful in maintaining perspective by the time you get to #3.)  Things are pretty crazy in those first few intense, sleep deprived months.  My "crazy" milestone with Ivy was backing into the garage door while it was still halfway down, getting the door fixed, and then having *another* garage door fiasco one week later.

2.  The kids are in 3 different stages and it can be a challenge to match them up -
- Josh is in the school-aged child stage:  Rush rush rush in the morning, big break from the child during the day, then condensing a bunch of things into the evening (dinner and bath, sometimes homework and other activities, squeeze in some downtime, get to bed).
- Zoey is in the preschooler-at-home stage:    It's the opposite of rush rush rush - you try to make activities during those long school hours stretch out as far as possible, especially activities that the kid can do somewhat on their own.  Matching these two rhythms works pretty well.  The ways that they are different complement nicely.  But then you add in:
-Ivy is in the newborn stage:   It's no problem to pick up Josh from school on time, or to build in time during the day to do a craft project with Zoey - until you're balancing these tasks with caring for a baby who sometimes needs to eat, or be walked around, or have a diaper blow-out, right at the same time you were planning to do those other things. (It's more challenging but also more fun - I can have conversations with the older kids that babies can't have; I can enjoy cuddles with my newborn that the older kids are mostly not interested in anymore; etc.)

First Halloween!

3.  Outings with all the kids - Loading and unloading 3 kids who are still in car seats; bringing everything that each kid needs; finding a time that works really well for all of them - the challenges are myriad.  So there is a lot more getting help, taking kids out on a rotating basis, and just avoiding unnecessary trips out of the house.  I'm hoping this part gets a little more manageable as the kids get older.

Friends who have multiple kids:  which was the easiest transition for you?  Which was the hardest?  Why?

Day 6: Nature

Day 6:  What in nature are you grateful for?



I am grateful for Lake Tahoe.  There are only so many places in the world where you can experience beach, mountains, and forest all in the same place:  how lucky am I to live within an hour's drive of one of them?  My kids love to dip their toes in the freezing cold water, build sand castles, and search for pine cones as big as their heads.  I love to breathe in the fresh mountain air and enjoy the beautiful view of bright blue water and snow capped mountain peaks.  And for me, this stunning lake reminds me of the beauty and glory of God.

Sunday, November 20, 2016

Day 5: Sound

Day 5:  What Sound are you grateful for today?



I am grateful for the Christmas song "O Holy Night".  Both the music and the lyrics are stunningly beautiful and perfectly capture the hope of the Christmas season.  And I know it's not for everyone, but I love acapella music.



Here's another one of my favorite Christmas songs by the same group - "O Come O Come Emmanuel".

Saturday, November 19, 2016

Day 4: Food

Day 4:  What food are you grateful for?



I am grateful for sushi.  It's not an every week or even every month meal for me - it's a special treat.  It's often the chosen meal for celebrations, so it feels festive.  Coming off 9 months of pregnancy, I'm grateful to have the green flag to eat it again.  One of Reno's distinctives is a plethora of all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants, and so I also associate sushi with abundance.  (The plate pictured above is what we call a starter here in northern Nevada.)  I'm grateful to live in a time and place in history where, every once in awhile, you can eat ridiculously big and lavish meals.  I had never tried sushi until Kenny and I started dating (this might sound crazy to people on the coasts, but is pretty common for Midwesterners) - he introduced me to what is now one of my favorite meals - so I also associate sushi with happy early memories with Kenny, for which I am extremely grateful.