Thursday, May 28, 2009

My Budding Poet

Yesterday was Kitty's 3rd grade Poetry Brunch, and each of the children chose three of their poems to read to the class and parents. Kitty did a fabulous job, of course!

Kitty Reading to the Class

Limerick -

My little sister is a pest
She made a big fat mess
She kissed the fountain
And ran the mountain
And died because of her nest
- Kitty

I did talk to her about having her sister die because of her nest, but she explained that it was supposed to be nonsensical. I even threw out some other words like "sighed" and "cried," but she said that those words wouldn't make the poem nonsensical. I suppose we'll have to stick with "died." Ugh!


I Don't Understand

I don't understand why we have pie.
I don't understand why my sisters are mean.
I don't understand why we can only live on Earth.
I don't understand why flowers only grow sometimes.
But most of all I don't understand why we have to go to school.
I DO understand that boys are mean when they like you!
- Kitty


Hollie
Smart-elec, funny
Loving, caring, snoring
Best big sister ever
Hollie tamolie
- Kitty


Kitty and Her Best Friend "H" (They planned the shirts, of course!)

Mrs. Havekost (Her New Favorite Teacher) and Kitty

Beautiful job, Sissy!! You made me proud!

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Happy Middle School Graduation Day!!

WE MADE IT!!!!! After three very trying years, we have made it through middle school!!! I use the term "we" because it was definitely a team effort. Carson is very bright, but has the typical middle school disease. These grades don't matter so why do the work? He does well on tests, and his homework grades are counted separately as work habit grades. Once again, they don't matter so why do the work? After all, his class grade is good because he's bright enough to breeze through the tests. In his defense, his argument does make sense; however, he must do well at his job, school, and establish good habits so that when his grades do matter next year, he'll be already in the saddle.

I must admit that there is more to a middle schooler than just grades, though. Carson is a well-liked, funny kid. All of his teachers like him a great deal (probably to his detriment), enjoy his humor, and have no problem getting him back on task. He has a lot of friends, and they're the kinds of friends you want your children to have, good kids still making good choices.

Tonight, we went out to dinner to celebrate this passage into high school. Freakin' high school!!!! Yes, my baby has arrived and seems to be ready for the challenge. The mustang at the end of the tunnel is fueling that fire right now.

Carson, Rowland, and William

William and Jia

Sissy and Momma

Momma and Her High Schooler

Congratulations, Carson! You're in the home stretch, buddy!! And we're all betting on you to win!!

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

A Time for Memories

Lately, as you've probably noticed, I've been filled with so many memories of my children when they were younger. Tonight, I am flooded by those precious days with my firstborn.

I was always a pessimist, never thinking that anyone would choose me, that no one would ever want me for "forever." I dreamed of being a mother and a wife. I craved a child. When Rowland and I married, I became pregnant after just three months. I remember reading the pregnancy test and being so excited, trying to figure out a way to surprise Rowland with the news. I went and got a diaper, decorated it with goofy words and a stick figure of our baby-to-be, then placed it in the refrigerator where he would see it when he came home from work. Sure enough, he was just as overjoyed as I was.

The Man who Chose Me Forever

Over the next nine months, I ballooned, literally. (I also dyed my hair several different colors until my youngest brother told me that I looked like a pregnant punk rocker! That's a different story, though.) I loved feeling Carson moving inside of me. I remember moving into our new home and re-painting the baby bed that had been my little brother's. Rowland painted the room a beautiful teal green and painted clouds on the ceiling. I made a window treatments out of fabric that said, "I love daddy," placed letters on the wall spelling out Carson's name. The room was filled with bears, and lying in the middle of the baby bed was a precious onesie that I would picture our son wearing one day soon.

Me As a Balloon

Since I had a scheduled C-section, we had everything planned. My sister-in-law was in the room taking pictures, and Rowland was by my side the entire time. When that precious little (not so little at 9 pounds 6 ounces) boy was placed into my arms, I sobbed. I remember telling my mother-in-law that I now had everything I had ever wanted. I had a wonderful man who adored me, who had chosen me for life; I had the most precious baby boy I could have ever wished for.

My First Moments as a Mommy

Once home, I do remember the sleepless nights, the pain from the C-section, the relief I would feel when Carson would take his long naps as I lived in the "Twilight Zone." One of my earliest memories at home was walking into the hallway, holding my baby boy against my chest and looking in the mirror, realizing that I was his mommy, that he was really mine.

My Baby with His Blankie and His "Patise"

As Carson grew, he filled my world with joy. When he was only three years old, he could recite word for word dozens of Barney videos. He would place all of his "people" on the coffee table in the den and have them act out the various videos. He carried around a little plastic Barney for years, chewing on the hand until I thought surely it would fall off.

He didn't just love Barney, though; he also loved the musical "Cats." He would get all of his Winnie the Pooh people out and have them play the various parts in the musical, and as God is my witness, that child could have them act out and sing the entire musical! I would clear off the coffee table, and he would sit on it and play for hours.

Carson and I went everywhere together. He was my little buddy. I would take him up to the music store that we owned, and he would play in his playpen while I'd hang out with Rowland. What special, special memories. He was my toot-a-bootus, and we would hold hands, swinging them as we walked singing, "Tutti, tutti fruiti....a-rootie!"

Our Little Family

I remember his coming to the hospital and holding William for the first time, the proud big brother. Once, when William was only a few weeks old and was lying in his bouncy seat, Carson pulled the seat back as far as it would go and nearly sling-shotted him across the room!

Carson Holding His New Brother

Carson was so bright. He went to Mother's Day Out one day each week, and I would spend that day with Rowland, but I was always anxious to get back to my boy. When he started a four-year old program, he was such a big boy. I would pull up to the door, and he would walk right inside his classroom. Again, I waited anxiously for his few hours away from me to end. He always gave me the biggest hugs and the best smiles.

His First Day of Four-Year Old School

Sometime shortly after that, he turned into a little boy. He wasn't my baby anymore. It seems that it was only a couple of years ago that I released him to Kindergarten, then first grade, and now high school.

He still makes me laugh. I love his sense of humor. I cherish those moments that he lets me be his mommy. Not too long ago, I convinced him to lie on the couch with his head in my lap, and I stroked his hair for a good fifteen minutes, fifteen minutes that will have to last me until the next time he decides to lie in my lap!

My Baby and Me

I'm not sure where the time has gone. I never wished for him to grow up to be a young man. I wanted so desperately to keep him little, to feel his precious little hands in mine, to hear him sing in his sweet little boy voice, to snuggle with me while we would nap together, to squeal with delight when I picked him up from school, chattering away about his day....

I do know this, though. No matter how old he is, he will always be the one who made me a mommy, the one who truly taught me what unconditional love looks like. He'll never know the love I have for him until he walks past a hall mirror and sees his own child in his arms. And I'll always have my memories.

Carson in His Dream Car

Monday, May 25, 2009

Memorial Day - Time for Thought

I want to apologize on the front end for this post will probably ramble, something difficult for a person with a degree in English. I'm up late reading another Jodi Picoult book, "Harvesting the Heart." As I'm reading, I'm wondering why I always end up reading books that are somewhat depressing, very introspective, and often about psychologically confused women. I even asked my therapist once why I always chose these types of books. They consume my mind, cause me to feel that I AM the main character, a psychologically confused woman. Most recently, I read a book "The Almost Moon" which was about a woman who had a mentally ill mother. At the very beginning of the book, she kills her older mother, then goes through strange rituals of bathing her mother, dressing her mother, and eventually accidentally dropping her down the basement stairs. As she struggles with the relationship she had with her mother and struggles with the woman she has become, she took me through dark places, places with which I couldn't identify and yet with which I seemed to identify. (No, my mother is not mentally ill!) Afterwards, I needed someone to read the book, to discuss it with me. It was so strange.

Shortly after finishing that book, I moved on to a book about a woman who was a Harvard professor and developed early onset Alzheimer's. As I read the book from her point of view, I was drawn into the thoughts and confusion of Alice in "Still Alice." As you can imagine, this book had no happy ending and left me feeling confused as well.

While Rowland and I were in Boston, I read a book called "Our Last Summer." It, too, dealt with a young, dysfunctional girl and a sister who was dying of heart disease as an older teen. Upon putting the book away, I laid in bed next to my husband and cried, telling him that I, too, was afraid that I was going to die young as I've been a smoker off and on since I was 20. Surely, my few stolen cigarettes here and there would not lead me to an early death of lung cancer. I could hardly wait to get home to my children. I held my precious Jia, wondering how she would ever be able to survive if something were to happen to me.

Rowland encouraged me to pick some happy books. I always enjoying reading a good mystery so I read a couple from one of my favorite authors, "Hide" and "Alone." While they were both excellent books, "Alone" once again took me into a world of a woman who had been horribly abused at a young age and had major psychological problems.

Finally, I read "The Double Life of Isabel Bookbinder" which was actually a very frivolous and funny book. I wasn't sad when it ended and can't wait for the next book to be published. Unfortunately, that was the author's first novel so I may have a little while to wait.

A friend suggested Janet Evanovich's books about Stephanie Plum. They're numbered 1 - 12, and although I bought the first two, Jodi Picoult's book was still calling my name. I've spent most of the day reading her book, a book about a woman whose mother left her when she was young and who doesn't feel that she has the capacity to care for her newborn child. Eventually, she, too, succumbs to her own private demons and leaves her not-very-patient husband and three-month old child. She's still on her journey, and to be honest, I'm reading as fast and furious as I can, praying for a happy ending.

So why do these books affect me so strongly? I assume it's because of my own insecurities, my own struggles with not ever feeling good enough, not ever feeling like I do things as well as other wives and mothers, not ever feeling that I have the same energy as the rest of the world seems to have. Is that my medication? Is it my fight against depression? Is it my wrong view of myself? Or could it be that I just love my family so intensely that I feel overwhelmed at times, that I NEED to hold on to every moment, and it wears me out?

One thing I do know is that I love my children fiercely. Each one of them is so special to me in unique ways. Jia still clings to me, always seeming fearful that one day I won't come back. She has the most precious giggle, and she loves snuggling with her blankie, her beary, and her momma. I'm sad that I'm losing her to all-day school in July. Will she be okay? Will I be okay?

Little Kitty is the daughter I never thought that God would allow me. I remember her ultrasound, and I still never believed she was a girl until I held her in my arms. She is so full of life, singing and dancing, being overly dramatic about almost everything, and enjoying her friends immensely. I love that she still gives me big hugs and wants to have "dates" with just me.

Then, there's my precious William. He was such a strong-willed little boy, forced to grow up too quickly as he was only 16 months old when his little sister was born. He would follow me around the house when he was only nine months old, whining and crying until I would hold him. Even now, he has the softest place in his heart for me. He searches me out to tell me that he loves me, to give me hugs. When I'm sad, he feels responsible (although I definitely tell him that he's not) and loves on me until I can put back on my happy face.

Lastly, there's my firstborn Carson, my soon-to-be high-schooler. We had four wonderful years together before there were any other children. Actually, after Carson and all of the fun we had together, I didn't know if I would ever have any more children. He made me a momma, what I'd always wanted to be. He was my "toot-a-bootus," and we would sing and dance and watch Barney for hours on end. Now, he has my brother Douglas' sense of humor. I think that he is the funniest person whom I know. He fills my heart with laughter and joy when he hangs out with me. There's just something about that first baby!

I couldn't end without mentioning the love of my life. We've been through so much in our fifteen+ years of marriage, and we always come out stronger on the other side. He's my best friend. I miss him a lot these days because I'm so consumed with the kids and the house. I love the times when he talks to me, when he tells me what he's thinking, when he encourages me, when he demonstrates his love and, even more, his like for me. May God grant us many, many more years together on this Earth. Rowland is wise beyond his years, my rock, my Prince Charming, the one person I desire to spend time with over anyone else in the world. When he chooses me to take to a movie or out to dinner or to run to the store with me or to sing with him on Sundays, I feel truly CHOSEN. His holding my hand can make all of the stress in my body disappear. His arms around me make me feel like I can make it through the rest of a hard day, like I can relax as the world goes on around me.

So back to the original question. Why do I keep choosing these contemplative books? Perhaps there's something inside of me that fears losing myself, not being able to give enough of myself to those people who mean the most to me. Perhaps I'm afraid that when my children are grown, they won't love me like I love them. Perhaps life is too good, and I feel that I must keep in touch with the reality of just how much I could lose.

Perhaps I should follow my wise husband's advice and finish this book, then go on to some fluff. After all, I want to enjoy each day and fill each day with laughter so that one day, when I'm no longer here, my children and my husband will remember that I made them laugh, that I danced around the house listening to my dance music that they all laugh at, that I loved each one of them with the fiercest of a momma's love.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Happy Graduation Day!

Hollie's graduation from high school was yesterday, and I have to say that it was a proud day for all of us. She's worked so hard to finish well, and she's done a great job!

Last night, we took her out to dinner at Buca di Beppo's to celebrate and had a fabulous time. Congratulations, Hollie! As of this morning, you're officially an adult!!!

Suzanne and Danny, Joe and Jeannie, Mike, and the Family

Suzanne and Hollie

The Girls Crawling on Carson

Joe and Jeannie, the BEST Neighbors and Friends

William, Rowland (and His Tongue!), Danny, and Mike

Hollie and Her Best Friend Mike

And, of course, in typical Momma fashion, all I could think the entire day was that in only four more years, my baby was going to be standing up there, walking across the stage, and receiving a diploma. Bittersweet day!! It always comes back to my Momma's heart!!!

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

What a Mom'll Do for a Little Attention

Today, I left the house to go pick up Carson from school. When I left, I had on a pair of old gym shorts, a T-shirt that didn't match, torn-up tennis shoes, and NO, NO, NO makeup. I was the perfect image of dorkdom. I knew, though, that I wouldn't have to get out of the car and that no one would see me. In fact, I'd be home in only 15 minutes.

Carson jumped into the car in a great mood, laughing and being his goofy self. Since I think he's hysterical (He has my brother Douglas' sense of humor), we were having a blast until.....he asked if we could go buy a pair of tennis shoes for him to wear to Washington, D.C. on his class trip. And he wanted to go RIGHT THEN. Carson HATES to go ANYWHERE after school. He ALWAYS wants to go home! Always!!!! Being the needy mom that I am, I agreed. After all, we were having so much fun together, and that doesn't happen as often as it used to happen.

He suggested Kohl's, and although I knew that I'd have to walk halfway through the store to get to the shoes, then all of the way across the store to get to the restroom, I agreed. He was so funny trying on shoes and picking out the perfect pair, making jokes throughout. Then, out of the blue, he decided to look at shorts and T-shirts. He tried on the shorts OVER his jeans, then waddled to the dressing room with the shorts around his ankles! The image was hysterical! He chose a few T-shirts, and eventually, we headed back home with a huge bag in tow.

He'll never know how much I cherished that time alone with him, laughing and acting silly. I'll definitely put it in my memory bank to pull out on a "rainy" day. Who cares about clothes, shoes, makeup, and self-esteem when you get to be a mom enjoying her precious first-born?!

My Goofy Son

He'll Still Hug His Momma!