We've been 8 times in the last month. Yes, eight times! And we both have an appointment next Monday - OB for me, 6-month checkup for Nate. Then hopefully we can stay away from there for a while. It's getting ridiculous, especially since it's a 30-minute drive each way. (Did you know you can write off your travel expenses to and from the doctor's office on your taxes? Too bad we don't itemize!)
Other than that, it's been a SUPER busy week, and we're all fighting lingering colds, but still going to bed late. Maybe going to bed at a decent hour should be one of my new years resolutions. (As I type this, it's 1:41am.)
We got our family pictures done at Target earlier this week, and the small versions are available online already. I just HAD to change my picture at the top, even though it doesn't really fill the title bar...
A friend keeps turning me on to all the crafting blogs, and I continue to be inspired with new ideas! Unfortunately, it has caused my wallet to shrink substantially in the last couple weeks. I'm afraid to add up my receipts from JoAnns and Hobby Lobby because of the guilt I will inevitably feel. My current projects are:
* working on the basement. Actually, this is a joint project - Brian's doing all the manual labor, I'm doing the decorating. :) We rent a town home with an unfinished basement that is big, over 400 square feet. It's just a big open room, and we're trying to make it livable without actually finishing it off. So far we've gotten old carpet and puzzle foam flooring to cover the cement floor, which has turned out pretty well. Today I finally stopped procrastinating and bought some home decorator fabric to put up on the concrete walls. The Scotch double-sided foam tape works really well, and we'll be putting some tacks at the top to keep the fabric in place. So far we've used 13 yards, and we probably need another 18-20 yards to finish. Before and after pictures will definitely come once we're done!
* felt farm. We have a small corner of the basement as the designated "play area," and I spent all evening working on a 4'x4' felt square on the wall, decorated like a farm. I've got the whole background done, and just need to cut out some animals now. Obviously Nate isn't old enough to play with it yet, but he'll grow into it!
* Mod Podge. When I worked at Hobby Lobby I remember people buying it and never really knowing what it's for. It's basically a kind of glue that also works as a sealer on craft projects. It works really well. In fact, the picture at the bottom of this post is a gift I made for a relative for Christmas that used paint, paper, wood, and Mod Podge. It was time consuming, but easy at the same time. (I can't say who it's for in case a family stumbles across this post! but I'm pretty sure none of them read my blog...)
* anything and everything scrapbooking/papercrafting. I got my Christmas present early (a Cricut Expression!!! My husband is the best.) and have been playing around with it the last couple days. It is awesome - I have two cartridges to go with it, and basically, you plug one in, select a shape and size, and it cuts it out for you automatically. It cuts from 1/4 inch to 12 inches. I've already designed upcoming baby's birth announcements, but this will make it SO much easier. Once I actually FINISH a project I will put up a picture.
**********
Sorry it's all craft stuff, again. I have it on the brain lately.
12.13.2009
11.10.2009
Feeling Quite Domestic These Days
My resolve to "blog around once a week, or something like that" was obviously not specific enough, since I'm going on 7 weeks here. I actually DID write a blog post when we got back from vacation, but didn't completely finish it, and thus, it was never posted.
I've been feeling so lazy the last couple months! I would like to blame it on first-trimester fatigue, which was probably 50% of the problem. The other 50% was just pure laziness, plain and simple. I like playing around online, and reading other people's blogs, but writing my own posts is just too daunting of a task.
I have finally gotten my energy back in the last week or so, though. Between going to bed a little earlier most nights and nearing the 13th week of pregnancy, I have finally been able to pick myself up off my bed, do laundry, clean my kitchen, cook, and clean my toilets. I'm getting ready to start on my Christmas cards (yes, a little early, but last year I was scrambling to get them out at the last minute and I'm tentatively planning on making them my own, so I really need to get going on that!)
**********
Speaking of handmade Christmas cards - I've decided I'm going to (eventually) open an Etsy shop for handmade cards and birth announcements. I've seen a lot of shops that will create a card for you and you can print them off at home, but very few people sell handmade ones. The store is actually "open"... but I have nothing listed. I'm waiting until I get a few other projects done around here before I come up with a few cards to list in my shop.
**********
One of the projects I'm currently working on is diaper inserts - FINALLY, FINALLY, FINALLY officially making the switch to cloth diapers. It's tempting to stay in disposables when your hubby brings home 10 packs that are the perfect size because they were clearanced out and were priced at under $5 a pack. But we're almost to the end of them, so I'm working on getting the inserts finished by the end of the week. I'm going to order a pattern for newborn diapers ASAP so I can get going on those before May. (I am very anti-pattern - nothing I make while following a pattern ever seems to turn out quite right - but this is one item I am finding I cannot sew without some type of guidance that involves measurements.)
I also made homemade applesauce and apple butter last week. The apple butter is for a Christmas gift... but I was SO proud of myself for doing it all from scratch AND for the fact that the can actually sealed properly! And I don't even have "real" canning equipment.
Thus far are my domestic and crafty ventures... I hope this phase doesn't end soon. I'm feeling so motivated these days.
Oh, and one more thing - I started a blog specifically for Nate (well, it's called The Little Dunns, so eventually it will be MORE than just about Nate) so that I have a place where I can put every. little. thing. about him, if I want - and then those of you who read this blog who don't particularly want to know EVERY detail don't have to get disgusted by posts about poop. (And yes, my most recent post was about his lack of poop. Don't worry, nothing really gross or gag-worthy. No pictures, either.) I will still mention him on this blog, of course - but I'm using the other blog as more of a day-to-day journal (well at this point it's still in week-to-week mode) so that I can eventually print out the posts and put them in a book. I'm much more likely to journal on the computer than writing in a book, sadly.
**********
I just realized after I posted this that I never actually came out and announced it - but we're expecting another baby! I'm due May 28 - on Nate's first birthday.
But I think you all knew that already. Just in case you didn't figure it out. :D
I've been feeling so lazy the last couple months! I would like to blame it on first-trimester fatigue, which was probably 50% of the problem. The other 50% was just pure laziness, plain and simple. I like playing around online, and reading other people's blogs, but writing my own posts is just too daunting of a task.
I have finally gotten my energy back in the last week or so, though. Between going to bed a little earlier most nights and nearing the 13th week of pregnancy, I have finally been able to pick myself up off my bed, do laundry, clean my kitchen, cook, and clean my toilets. I'm getting ready to start on my Christmas cards (yes, a little early, but last year I was scrambling to get them out at the last minute and I'm tentatively planning on making them my own, so I really need to get going on that!)
**********
Speaking of handmade Christmas cards - I've decided I'm going to (eventually) open an Etsy shop for handmade cards and birth announcements. I've seen a lot of shops that will create a card for you and you can print them off at home, but very few people sell handmade ones. The store is actually "open"... but I have nothing listed. I'm waiting until I get a few other projects done around here before I come up with a few cards to list in my shop.
**********
One of the projects I'm currently working on is diaper inserts - FINALLY, FINALLY, FINALLY officially making the switch to cloth diapers. It's tempting to stay in disposables when your hubby brings home 10 packs that are the perfect size because they were clearanced out and were priced at under $5 a pack. But we're almost to the end of them, so I'm working on getting the inserts finished by the end of the week. I'm going to order a pattern for newborn diapers ASAP so I can get going on those before May. (I am very anti-pattern - nothing I make while following a pattern ever seems to turn out quite right - but this is one item I am finding I cannot sew without some type of guidance that involves measurements.)
I also made homemade applesauce and apple butter last week. The apple butter is for a Christmas gift... but I was SO proud of myself for doing it all from scratch AND for the fact that the can actually sealed properly! And I don't even have "real" canning equipment.
Thus far are my domestic and crafty ventures... I hope this phase doesn't end soon. I'm feeling so motivated these days.
Oh, and one more thing - I started a blog specifically for Nate (well, it's called The Little Dunns, so eventually it will be MORE than just about Nate) so that I have a place where I can put every. little. thing. about him, if I want - and then those of you who read this blog who don't particularly want to know EVERY detail don't have to get disgusted by posts about poop. (And yes, my most recent post was about his lack of poop. Don't worry, nothing really gross or gag-worthy. No pictures, either.) I will still mention him on this blog, of course - but I'm using the other blog as more of a day-to-day journal (well at this point it's still in week-to-week mode) so that I can eventually print out the posts and put them in a book. I'm much more likely to journal on the computer than writing in a book, sadly.
**********
I just realized after I posted this that I never actually came out and announced it - but we're expecting another baby! I'm due May 28 - on Nate's first birthday.
But I think you all knew that already. Just in case you didn't figure it out. :D
9.21.2009
Accepting, if Not Understanding, the Will of God.
I keep intending to write another blog post. I really do. But either I don't have anything to say, or I don't have enough time to write down everything I want to say. Some days I'm full of thoughts, other days, nothing. And I can't force it. :) Only papers for school should be forced!
But it's been an entire month since I last posted. And Things Weigh Heavily On The Mind.
Life is changing, in a significant way. Someone who we have all come to know, trust, and love, is leaving. Someone who I can honestly say has been the most influential person in my life, after my husband. Someone who, in many ways, brought Brian and me together, both through his counsel and his prayers.
Our priest of 8 years is leaving our community.
I realize that we have been immensely blessed to have him for this long (or to have been fortunate enough to have him at all!) and that most priests don't stick around even for this long. But for some reason, we all thought he would never leave. He was assigned to our parish as a deacon. After his ordination, he was driving to his new assignment, and he got a phone call from his superior telling him to head back to Kansas City - they had changed their minds. And in Kansas City he has been, since the day of his ordination.
I met him shortly after this. He started a youth group, and I began to attend. I found out through some other friends - we didn't even attend his parish at the time, but we were informed that all were welcome to come. And it was through this ministry of his that my family was led to his church, and the St. Philippine Duchesne Latin Mass Community. It took us almost 2 years to finally make the switch from our old parish, but after attending, and seeing the reverence, experiencing the beautiful liturgy, and hearing the powerful and inspirational words of this humble priest, we knew this was where we belonged.
He was certainly not a man of expensive taste or elaborate words - he was born and raised in Montana, before Montanans had television. He was a cowboy, a country boy, a man who raised horses and worked on a farm and wore cowboy boots, who became a science teacher. He knew God was calling him to the priesthood, but was waiting for the right moment to come, for the right order to join. Then finally, the right moment came. The Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter opened a seminary in the United States. And he joined.
His only goal was to give glory to God. He certainly took no glory for himself, and his faded, patched cassock attested to that fact more than words ever could. While some people did not appreciate his matter-of-fact preaching, no one could accuse him of being fake. He was as real as they come - refreshingly honest! What a rare trait these days, even among clergy. However, he was not so blunt that his words would sting - rather, they would touch your heart in a profound way. His words would make you so proud and yet so humble at the same time to have received the beautiful Catholic Faith; they would make you realize the true horror of sin and help you receive God's grace to overcome your faults; they would make you jubilant at the great glory of God and unspeakably grateful for the Precious Gift Christ offers us in the Blessed Sacrament.
He knew how to read people, and how to touch their souls. There are countless incidents of people needing a bit of spiritual advice, a spiritual boost, or just a little anecdote to help them go along their way - and he always knew exactly what was necessary to say. It might be a quote in his sermon, or a little extra tidbit in the confessional that was completely unexpected, but it always had the power to bring peace to a person's heart and regain his hope and confidence in God.
He was certainly not perfect; no one is. But if ever there was a man striving for sanctity! When preaching about a topic that would be uncomfortable for some, he would always say in a lighthearted way, "I'm in sales, not management. If you have a problem with what I'm saying, your problem is with God, not with me." He constantly reminded us that he had to tell us things, even if we didn't want to hear them, because it was his job, and it was the only way he could go to heaven! He would constantly urge us to strive for sanctity, to develop a delicate conscience, and to desire the grace of never committing even a deliberate venial sin. He truly valued our spiritual progress. Under his direct spiritual guidance as many as 10 men and women entered into the priesthood or religious life. His sermons were true gems, and thousands of people realize this, as the recordings have been spread throughout the world.
There are three memories of him that I especially like to recall. The first was when I was in my junior year of college. I was taking Chemistry, the course material was all online, and I had absolutely no idea what I was doing. I attended his youth group one Saturday night, and happened to sit at his table for dinner. He was asking how school was going and I was telling him about my failure of a Chem class I was taking. Of course, being a scientist by profession with a masters degree in Biochemistry, he wanted to hear more. I admitted that I had no idea how to form chemical compounds, a basic objective of my chemistry class. I was good at math, so I didn't know what I was doing wrong! Instead of laughing it off, he grabbed a piece of paper and began writing. He spent 10 minutes explaining to me how 2H2 + 02 = 2H2O, and several other more complex problems. (I will admit I don't remember it now, but it did help me immensely at the time!) I was so flattered to receive that little bit of help from someone who surely could have spent his 10 minutes much more profitably - and I will admit I still have that little piece of paper he wrote on. I am firmly convinced it will someday be a second-class relic.
Another of my favorite memories took place February 24, 2008 - two days before Brian and I were engaged. It was no secret to anyone that we wanted to get married, and it was just a matter of Brian finishing school or finding a job that could support us, or both. He had been promoted just 2 days before to a management position at his store, and his salary was increasing enough for us to live on, and he was planning on popping the question soon. He walked into the sacristy that Sunday morning to serve, and mentioned to Father that he got a new job. Father's eyes lit up, and the first words out of his mouth were, "So when are you getting engaged? Go talk to her dad!" (Obviously I heard about this after the fact, but I think if Father hadn't given him that little bit of encouragement, our engagement might not have been a mere two days later!)
And the last of my favorites is so incredible, I find it hard to be a coincidence. It was two days before Nathan was born. Father had been gone for almost two weeks, for a 3-month medical leave of absence. A good friend of mine has recently had a baby, and he had spent 10 days in NICU for a bacterial infection. He had recently been released, and she was spending the day over at a mutual friend's house. I was, at the time, two days overdue. I had a doctor's appointment that afternoon, so I stopped by to chat with the girls before my appointment. The plan was for me to be induced in two days, and this was just a routine weekly visit. I left our friend's, and went to my doctor's appointment. (Brian wasn't with me; he was trying to make it through his last two days of work before his week of vacation.) My blood pressure had skyrocketed, and my doctor wanted me to go straight to the hospital. He told me I could only go home to get my hospital bag (and my husband) if I could do it "without exerting myself." On my way home, I gave Maddie a call letting her know what was happening, and I told her to keep me in her prayers and I would call her later that evening. When I spoke with her later, she told me that not even an hour after I talked to her, Father had called her from his vacation. (This was 100% unheard of - if he was calling you from vacation, he must have had a REALLY good reason!) He wanted to see how her baby was doing. Then he said he had thought about me for some reason, and was wondering how I was doing, and if I had had that baby yet! She was slightly surprised, and informed him that she has just gotten off the phone with me, and filled him in on my situation. Of course he promised to pray right then for me, and the baby. But the timing was so ironic! While it can easily be brushed off as a coincidence, everyone who has heard the story and knows Father agrees that it is more than mere coincidence. Especially because when I arrived at the hospital and was hooked up to monitors (most likely just minutes after Maddie had received the phone call), my blood pressure was perfectly fine.
Of course there are many, many more stories I could tell, and it seems like everyone has at least one story - a story that, simple as it may be, gives a little glimpse into the life of this man who truly lives out his vocation as a reflection of Christ on earth.
No one knows where he is going, at this point. He is going on another, more permanent medical leave, as he has health problems that are still undiagnosed. He may be eventually reassigned as an associate somewhere else, he may not. He will not be coming back to Kansas City. He informed us that we may never see him again in this life, but, for the last time, exhorted us all to become saints so that we can meet again in the next life. And since no amount of tears and prayers can bring him back home to us if it is not God's Holy Will, the only thing that can reunite us is eternal life. So while our hearts are heavy with earthly sorrow, we strive for sanctity so that our souls can be filled with the same heavenly joy that is radiated through this saintly priest.
But it's been an entire month since I last posted. And Things Weigh Heavily On The Mind.
Life is changing, in a significant way. Someone who we have all come to know, trust, and love, is leaving. Someone who I can honestly say has been the most influential person in my life, after my husband. Someone who, in many ways, brought Brian and me together, both through his counsel and his prayers.
Our priest of 8 years is leaving our community.
I realize that we have been immensely blessed to have him for this long (or to have been fortunate enough to have him at all!) and that most priests don't stick around even for this long. But for some reason, we all thought he would never leave. He was assigned to our parish as a deacon. After his ordination, he was driving to his new assignment, and he got a phone call from his superior telling him to head back to Kansas City - they had changed their minds. And in Kansas City he has been, since the day of his ordination.
I met him shortly after this. He started a youth group, and I began to attend. I found out through some other friends - we didn't even attend his parish at the time, but we were informed that all were welcome to come. And it was through this ministry of his that my family was led to his church, and the St. Philippine Duchesne Latin Mass Community. It took us almost 2 years to finally make the switch from our old parish, but after attending, and seeing the reverence, experiencing the beautiful liturgy, and hearing the powerful and inspirational words of this humble priest, we knew this was where we belonged.
He was certainly not a man of expensive taste or elaborate words - he was born and raised in Montana, before Montanans had television. He was a cowboy, a country boy, a man who raised horses and worked on a farm and wore cowboy boots, who became a science teacher. He knew God was calling him to the priesthood, but was waiting for the right moment to come, for the right order to join. Then finally, the right moment came. The Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter opened a seminary in the United States. And he joined.
His only goal was to give glory to God. He certainly took no glory for himself, and his faded, patched cassock attested to that fact more than words ever could. While some people did not appreciate his matter-of-fact preaching, no one could accuse him of being fake. He was as real as they come - refreshingly honest! What a rare trait these days, even among clergy. However, he was not so blunt that his words would sting - rather, they would touch your heart in a profound way. His words would make you so proud and yet so humble at the same time to have received the beautiful Catholic Faith; they would make you realize the true horror of sin and help you receive God's grace to overcome your faults; they would make you jubilant at the great glory of God and unspeakably grateful for the Precious Gift Christ offers us in the Blessed Sacrament.
He knew how to read people, and how to touch their souls. There are countless incidents of people needing a bit of spiritual advice, a spiritual boost, or just a little anecdote to help them go along their way - and he always knew exactly what was necessary to say. It might be a quote in his sermon, or a little extra tidbit in the confessional that was completely unexpected, but it always had the power to bring peace to a person's heart and regain his hope and confidence in God.
He was certainly not perfect; no one is. But if ever there was a man striving for sanctity! When preaching about a topic that would be uncomfortable for some, he would always say in a lighthearted way, "I'm in sales, not management. If you have a problem with what I'm saying, your problem is with God, not with me." He constantly reminded us that he had to tell us things, even if we didn't want to hear them, because it was his job, and it was the only way he could go to heaven! He would constantly urge us to strive for sanctity, to develop a delicate conscience, and to desire the grace of never committing even a deliberate venial sin. He truly valued our spiritual progress. Under his direct spiritual guidance as many as 10 men and women entered into the priesthood or religious life. His sermons were true gems, and thousands of people realize this, as the recordings have been spread throughout the world.
There are three memories of him that I especially like to recall. The first was when I was in my junior year of college. I was taking Chemistry, the course material was all online, and I had absolutely no idea what I was doing. I attended his youth group one Saturday night, and happened to sit at his table for dinner. He was asking how school was going and I was telling him about my failure of a Chem class I was taking. Of course, being a scientist by profession with a masters degree in Biochemistry, he wanted to hear more. I admitted that I had no idea how to form chemical compounds, a basic objective of my chemistry class. I was good at math, so I didn't know what I was doing wrong! Instead of laughing it off, he grabbed a piece of paper and began writing. He spent 10 minutes explaining to me how 2H2 + 02 = 2H2O, and several other more complex problems. (I will admit I don't remember it now, but it did help me immensely at the time!) I was so flattered to receive that little bit of help from someone who surely could have spent his 10 minutes much more profitably - and I will admit I still have that little piece of paper he wrote on. I am firmly convinced it will someday be a second-class relic.
Another of my favorite memories took place February 24, 2008 - two days before Brian and I were engaged. It was no secret to anyone that we wanted to get married, and it was just a matter of Brian finishing school or finding a job that could support us, or both. He had been promoted just 2 days before to a management position at his store, and his salary was increasing enough for us to live on, and he was planning on popping the question soon. He walked into the sacristy that Sunday morning to serve, and mentioned to Father that he got a new job. Father's eyes lit up, and the first words out of his mouth were, "So when are you getting engaged? Go talk to her dad!" (Obviously I heard about this after the fact, but I think if Father hadn't given him that little bit of encouragement, our engagement might not have been a mere two days later!)
And the last of my favorites is so incredible, I find it hard to be a coincidence. It was two days before Nathan was born. Father had been gone for almost two weeks, for a 3-month medical leave of absence. A good friend of mine has recently had a baby, and he had spent 10 days in NICU for a bacterial infection. He had recently been released, and she was spending the day over at a mutual friend's house. I was, at the time, two days overdue. I had a doctor's appointment that afternoon, so I stopped by to chat with the girls before my appointment. The plan was for me to be induced in two days, and this was just a routine weekly visit. I left our friend's, and went to my doctor's appointment. (Brian wasn't with me; he was trying to make it through his last two days of work before his week of vacation.) My blood pressure had skyrocketed, and my doctor wanted me to go straight to the hospital. He told me I could only go home to get my hospital bag (and my husband) if I could do it "without exerting myself." On my way home, I gave Maddie a call letting her know what was happening, and I told her to keep me in her prayers and I would call her later that evening. When I spoke with her later, she told me that not even an hour after I talked to her, Father had called her from his vacation. (This was 100% unheard of - if he was calling you from vacation, he must have had a REALLY good reason!) He wanted to see how her baby was doing. Then he said he had thought about me for some reason, and was wondering how I was doing, and if I had had that baby yet! She was slightly surprised, and informed him that she has just gotten off the phone with me, and filled him in on my situation. Of course he promised to pray right then for me, and the baby. But the timing was so ironic! While it can easily be brushed off as a coincidence, everyone who has heard the story and knows Father agrees that it is more than mere coincidence. Especially because when I arrived at the hospital and was hooked up to monitors (most likely just minutes after Maddie had received the phone call), my blood pressure was perfectly fine.
Of course there are many, many more stories I could tell, and it seems like everyone has at least one story - a story that, simple as it may be, gives a little glimpse into the life of this man who truly lives out his vocation as a reflection of Christ on earth.
No one knows where he is going, at this point. He is going on another, more permanent medical leave, as he has health problems that are still undiagnosed. He may be eventually reassigned as an associate somewhere else, he may not. He will not be coming back to Kansas City. He informed us that we may never see him again in this life, but, for the last time, exhorted us all to become saints so that we can meet again in the next life. And since no amount of tears and prayers can bring him back home to us if it is not God's Holy Will, the only thing that can reunite us is eternal life. So while our hearts are heavy with earthly sorrow, we strive for sanctity so that our souls can be filled with the same heavenly joy that is radiated through this saintly priest.
8.21.2009
Can't Believe I'm Blogging During the Day...
But Nate is asleep! WHAT!?!? He's been fighting a daytime nap for weeks now (he's gone up to 3 days straight with no nap) and today he's taken TWO! Not long ones... but this is a start at least. Here he is right now. (Yes, on Mommy & Daddy's bed... oh well. We're working on the transition.)
I should emphasize that he is a good sleeper at night - although he usually wakes up at least 3 times, he goes right back to sleep, and he sleeps in his own bed. So I really shouldn't be complaining, should I?
This has been a crazy busy week - the busiest week I've had since Nate was born. I started tutoring again, two days a week, so every Tuesday and Thursday at promptly 8:30 I pack up my books, diaper bag, lunch, and baby and head out for the better part of the day. Tuesday was a little rough for Nate (it was day 2 of a not napping streak). Thursday was better - he slept most of the time (in the sling, but oh well.) This child is going to know more Latin and Geometry than any other kid his age - and hopefully he'll pick up on some of the piano lessons, too.
We are planning a trip to Colorado at the end of September with my family (or Radacolo according to my brother Joe). I'm very excited - we haven't left the state since our honeymoon last summer. (I take that back - we crossed the state line when we went to the Baehr's house at Christmas time. Missouri, whoo-hoo. And we went to the Plaza, which is in Missouri too, I guess, but only by about 2 blocks).
Speaking of my family - my brother Pat (almost 7) has decided that Nathan is his favorite nephew. Which is great! considering he has no others... he'll just randomly say "Oh Mom, I love my nephew Nathan. He is such a little stinker." It's quite cute. :)
Nathan has a second cousin now! My cousin Erin had her baby yesterday - a little girl, named Kiah. They live in Indiana, so it might be a while before we get to see her (see my aforementioned dedication to staying within the boundaries of the state of Kansas.)
Well that nap was short-lived! I never understood power naps - so many people have told me that power naps are what got them through college. I was always a "I'm-taking-a-nap-so-please-don't-disturb-me-for-3-hours" kind of girl. Still am. Obviously my son takes after his father...
I should emphasize that he is a good sleeper at night - although he usually wakes up at least 3 times, he goes right back to sleep, and he sleeps in his own bed. So I really shouldn't be complaining, should I?
This has been a crazy busy week - the busiest week I've had since Nate was born. I started tutoring again, two days a week, so every Tuesday and Thursday at promptly 8:30 I pack up my books, diaper bag, lunch, and baby and head out for the better part of the day. Tuesday was a little rough for Nate (it was day 2 of a not napping streak). Thursday was better - he slept most of the time (in the sling, but oh well.) This child is going to know more Latin and Geometry than any other kid his age - and hopefully he'll pick up on some of the piano lessons, too.
We are planning a trip to Colorado at the end of September with my family (or Radacolo according to my brother Joe). I'm very excited - we haven't left the state since our honeymoon last summer. (I take that back - we crossed the state line when we went to the Baehr's house at Christmas time. Missouri, whoo-hoo. And we went to the Plaza, which is in Missouri too, I guess, but only by about 2 blocks).
Speaking of my family - my brother Pat (almost 7) has decided that Nathan is his favorite nephew. Which is great! considering he has no others... he'll just randomly say "Oh Mom, I love my nephew Nathan. He is such a little stinker." It's quite cute. :)
Nathan has a second cousin now! My cousin Erin had her baby yesterday - a little girl, named Kiah. They live in Indiana, so it might be a while before we get to see her (see my aforementioned dedication to staying within the boundaries of the state of Kansas.)
Well that nap was short-lived! I never understood power naps - so many people have told me that power naps are what got them through college. I was always a "I'm-taking-a-nap-so-please-don't-disturb-me-for-3-hours" kind of girl. Still am. Obviously my son takes after his father...
8.02.2009
Our 1 Year Anniversary
We celebrated 1 year of wedded bliss last Sunday, July 26. (hooray!) We left Nate for the first time with Brian's parents - I always told myself I was never going to be one of "those" parents who gets all emotional leaving my children for an hour or two. I was wrong. It was a little difficult. He was great, though (or so they say!). We went to The Chaz Restaurant on the Plaza, with a gift certificate Nicole had given us for Christmas and we never got around to using before Nate was born. The food was excellent, and we were the only people in the restaurant for most of the meal.

us before dinner (photo courtesy of Mr. Dan Dunn)
**********
Nate is getting so big! He was almost 14 pounds at his doctor's appointment the other day, and has moved into a lot of size 6 month clothing. *tear* Nate has had the chicken pox for the last 2 weeks, along with all 8 aunties & uncles who got it - but he's finally over it. He had a very, very mild case, maybe 15-20 spots, unlike my brothers and sisters, who were covered from head to toe. The older 3 are proof that the chicken pox vaccine isn't really effective...
us before dinner (photo courtesy of Mr. Dan Dunn)
We didn't get each other anything, not even cards (that was not intentional... I really meant to get/make one!) and although we got the top layer of our wedding cake from the Dunn's freezer, we forgot to eat it... oops. It's still sitting in our fridge. We're going to have it tomorrow. Brian did give me flowers a week before our anniversary, though.
And that is just so typical "us"! Can't really describe it - "laid back" might be one phrase used when people refer to us. Both of us can really go out of our way to "wow" the other one, do something really special - but it's usually completely spur-of-the-moment. But on our anniversary? No gifts, no cake - we took a nap that afternoon, too. But we're so okay with that.
And that is just so typical "us"! Can't really describe it - "laid back" might be one phrase used when people refer to us. Both of us can really go out of our way to "wow" the other one, do something really special - but it's usually completely spur-of-the-moment. But on our anniversary? No gifts, no cake - we took a nap that afternoon, too. But we're so okay with that.
**********
Nate is getting so big! He was almost 14 pounds at his doctor's appointment the other day, and has moved into a lot of size 6 month clothing. *tear* Nate has had the chicken pox for the last 2 weeks, along with all 8 aunties & uncles who got it - but he's finally over it. He had a very, very mild case, maybe 15-20 spots, unlike my brothers and sisters, who were covered from head to toe. The older 3 are proof that the chicken pox vaccine isn't really effective...
our handsome little boy in one of his "serious" moments
7.13.2009
7.12.2009
Baby Envy
Today Nate & I went with Becky & her kids to the hospital. We were visiting another friend who just had her first baby yesterday. She had a baby girl, and she was BEAUTIFUL! Tiny, too - Veronica (the baby) was 2 pounds less than Nathan was at birth. She had the most perfectly round head with just the right amount of hair and a tiny little bow in it, and gorgeous smooth, pink skin. I love smooth baby cheeks! They are so kissable.
Coincidentally, Theresa gave birth at the same hospital as me - her room was 4 doors down from where I had delivered. Being there reminded me of my "birth experience" just six weeks before, and as I talked with her & listened to her birth story, I was suddenly overcome with a strange and overwhelming desire for a baby. What!? I HAVE a baby! A brand new baby! What is wrong with the one I have? Why do I want another one? And why so soon? Am I crazy?
**********
I love my baby boy! He is very cute, very sweet, very calm, very easy. And that's just it - easy. Almost too easy. And that's not a bad thing! I still have a LOT of free time. It's not quite the same as before - I can't run out and go shopping as easily, for example. He has to go everywhere with me. But I like that! I like having him with me all the time. I always thought being a mother would be one of the most fulfilling and rewarding things ever - and I was right.
So my baby envy isn't because there's something wrong with MY baby - on the contrary. It's rather because there is something so wonderful about bringing a new little life into the world, and being solely responsible for nurturing that little soul: a task so daunting, and yet so desirable at the same time.
A common philosophy in today's culture is that it isn't wise to have more than one or two children because they will be "deprived." By deprived, they mean deprived of material goods - lots of vacations, nice cars, big houses. Not wanting our children to be deprived - that's exactly why we want to have a large family! We don't want our children to be deprived of the love that brothers and sisters have for each other; the lessons of patience, humility, and generosity that can be so much more easily learned with siblings; the memories of playing board games, going on camping trips, making up stories, spending long summer days outside, lots of birthday parties, and just being silly with those wonderful people we live with; the love a little child has for their new baby sister just home from the hospital; the knowledge that while the world said material things were the most important, Mommy & Daddy chose you instead. These truly are the things in life that make a child privileged, not deprived, and the things that form a child's character - not material goods.
Now as far as wanting another baby already - I guess it's just that motherly instinct, just like when you reach down to help up a little child that has fallen at the park, even though you don't know him, and how you feel especially sorry for him with his skinned-up knee - more so than you ever would have before you were a mother. The desire to nurture, to teach, to love.
I have always been a multi-tasker, schedule-filler-upper, do-as-much-as-possible kind of person. I like being busy. Nate is causing me to slow down a little, and my life is much slower-paced than ever before. I enjoy the excitement of everyday life - I like a little bit of organized chaos. So I guess that's another reason I would love to add another little baby to the mix.
I know, God willing, we will get our next baby when the time is right, and I should enjoy this time with my one darling baby right now, and take advantage of the free time I do have. I am a very goal-oriented, check-off-tasks-on-a-list type person, so I am working on my "things I would like to accomplish" list. Long-term goals currently includes wedding and honeymoon album (maybe I'll get it done before our one year anniversary! wait... that's 2 weeks from now), Nate's baby book, a quilt and a cross-stitch for Nate's room, learning to cook more from scratch, being more consistent with cleaning. I know there will be more. I'm trying to find a balance between simply enjoying life and actually getting things accomplished. Our young family has many, many years ahead - we are trying to make the most of our hours and days.
**********
Or maybe, I am just crazy.
Coincidentally, Theresa gave birth at the same hospital as me - her room was 4 doors down from where I had delivered. Being there reminded me of my "birth experience" just six weeks before, and as I talked with her & listened to her birth story, I was suddenly overcome with a strange and overwhelming desire for a baby. What!? I HAVE a baby! A brand new baby! What is wrong with the one I have? Why do I want another one? And why so soon? Am I crazy?
**********
I love my baby boy! He is very cute, very sweet, very calm, very easy. And that's just it - easy. Almost too easy. And that's not a bad thing! I still have a LOT of free time. It's not quite the same as before - I can't run out and go shopping as easily, for example. He has to go everywhere with me. But I like that! I like having him with me all the time. I always thought being a mother would be one of the most fulfilling and rewarding things ever - and I was right.
So my baby envy isn't because there's something wrong with MY baby - on the contrary. It's rather because there is something so wonderful about bringing a new little life into the world, and being solely responsible for nurturing that little soul: a task so daunting, and yet so desirable at the same time.
A common philosophy in today's culture is that it isn't wise to have more than one or two children because they will be "deprived." By deprived, they mean deprived of material goods - lots of vacations, nice cars, big houses. Not wanting our children to be deprived - that's exactly why we want to have a large family! We don't want our children to be deprived of the love that brothers and sisters have for each other; the lessons of patience, humility, and generosity that can be so much more easily learned with siblings; the memories of playing board games, going on camping trips, making up stories, spending long summer days outside, lots of birthday parties, and just being silly with those wonderful people we live with; the love a little child has for their new baby sister just home from the hospital; the knowledge that while the world said material things were the most important, Mommy & Daddy chose you instead. These truly are the things in life that make a child privileged, not deprived, and the things that form a child's character - not material goods.
Now as far as wanting another baby already - I guess it's just that motherly instinct, just like when you reach down to help up a little child that has fallen at the park, even though you don't know him, and how you feel especially sorry for him with his skinned-up knee - more so than you ever would have before you were a mother. The desire to nurture, to teach, to love.
I have always been a multi-tasker, schedule-filler-upper, do-as-much-as-possible kind of person. I like being busy. Nate is causing me to slow down a little, and my life is much slower-paced than ever before. I enjoy the excitement of everyday life - I like a little bit of organized chaos. So I guess that's another reason I would love to add another little baby to the mix.
I know, God willing, we will get our next baby when the time is right, and I should enjoy this time with my one darling baby right now, and take advantage of the free time I do have. I am a very goal-oriented, check-off-tasks-on-a-list type person, so I am working on my "things I would like to accomplish" list. Long-term goals currently includes wedding and honeymoon album (maybe I'll get it done before our one year anniversary! wait... that's 2 weeks from now), Nate's baby book, a quilt and a cross-stitch for Nate's room, learning to cook more from scratch, being more consistent with cleaning. I know there will be more. I'm trying to find a balance between simply enjoying life and actually getting things accomplished. Our young family has many, many years ahead - we are trying to make the most of our hours and days.
**********
Or maybe, I am just crazy.
7.10.2009
Insomnia
I felt like the most privileged new mother in the whole world for the first 3 weeks of my baby's life. Nathan was sleeping 6-7 hour stretches, every night (except for the first night home from the hospital - that was a different story)! He would go to bed around 11 or so, & get up around 6 to eat, & then go back to bed for 3 more hours. I didn't want to brag about it too much to my other friends whose babies woke up every 2 hours on the dot, but I felt very lucky.
That has ended.
Nate will not sleep now.
Well... I shouldn't say "will not sleep." How about "fights sleep with every ounce of energy he can muster after being awake for 12 hours straight"?
It is currently 1:55 am - & my darling little boy has fallen asleep briefly & awoken 3 times in the past 3 hours. He is now laying next to me in my bed as I type. I guess our mattress is just more comfortable than his. Not asleep though.
Thankfully, once he's been asleep for more than 45 minutes, I know he'll stay asleep for a good 2-3 hours. It's just getting him to fall asleep initially! He doesn't like naps, either (hence the being awake for 12 hours straight stuff.) Thankfully, we can usually make it through the first 8-9 hours without being cranky.
Besides his cat-napping & dislike for going to bed at a decent hour (which really isn't a huge deal because he's fairly pleasant in the meantime), there is only other difficulty we have:
his love-hate relationship with the pacifier.**
We started off with these Nuks.
He didn't love them, but he didn't hate them, either. He'd fuss, Mom would give it to him, & it would calm him down. But he couldn't keep the darn things in his mouth! He was constantly dropping them! Like, every 7 seconds dropping them. Mom got tired of putting them back in his mouth. Holding them in didn't work, either - that made Nate angry.
So Mom bought these.
I didn't really like that the nipple is so long and thin - I thought they might slip out too easily. And... I was right. Nate doesn't care for these at all, mostly because he can't hold them in on his own. As soon as he stops sucking, they pop out.
We ended up at Grandma's without a pacifier on the 4th of July - his Nuk disappeared somewhere between the fireworks stand & their house. He was a crabby boy that night! So Grandma went to her "baby cabinet" & found a few pacifiers that none of the other kids had liked. So we rinsed them off &, lo and behold, Nate found one that he really liked! I was thrilled - he was taking it so much better!!!
There was only one problem.
It is the most hideous pacifier that has ever been manufactured.

Glow-in-the-dark orange and forest green? Who came up with this, anyway?
I want to buy a new one that is nicer looking, but I want this exact shape. There's not even a "brand" name on the pacifier - the closest thing I can find at the store is a MAM. But the Target by us only has pink MAMS. A no go. So I guess we'll stick with fluorescent orange and green for now. The cute baby makes up for the ugly paci, anyway.
** Disclaimer on the pacifier:
I guess I feel the need to justify a pacifier since it's somewhat a "controversial" subject - they're not "natural", baby should nurse if they need to suck, they can suck on their fingers, blah, blah.
Nathan is NOT a comfort nurser. He eats & is done, done, done. Get away, Mom. But he still wants to suck, & hasn't mastered the sucking on his fingers thing yet. He'll sometimes suck on the side of his fist, but honestly, he prefers the pacifier so much more! And I can throw the pacifier away when he gets too old for it. I can't exactly throw away his thumb...
That, & I'm his mother. So I get to decide. :)
That has ended.
Nate will not sleep now.
Well... I shouldn't say "will not sleep." How about "fights sleep with every ounce of energy he can muster after being awake for 12 hours straight"?
It is currently 1:55 am - & my darling little boy has fallen asleep briefly & awoken 3 times in the past 3 hours. He is now laying next to me in my bed as I type. I guess our mattress is just more comfortable than his. Not asleep though.
Thankfully, once he's been asleep for more than 45 minutes, I know he'll stay asleep for a good 2-3 hours. It's just getting him to fall asleep initially! He doesn't like naps, either (hence the being awake for 12 hours straight stuff.) Thankfully, we can usually make it through the first 8-9 hours without being cranky.
Besides his cat-napping & dislike for going to bed at a decent hour (which really isn't a huge deal because he's fairly pleasant in the meantime), there is only other difficulty we have:
his love-hate relationship with the pacifier.**
We started off with these Nuks.
So Mom bought these.
We ended up at Grandma's without a pacifier on the 4th of July - his Nuk disappeared somewhere between the fireworks stand & their house. He was a crabby boy that night! So Grandma went to her "baby cabinet" & found a few pacifiers that none of the other kids had liked. So we rinsed them off &, lo and behold, Nate found one that he really liked! I was thrilled - he was taking it so much better!!!
There was only one problem.
It is the most hideous pacifier that has ever been manufactured.

Glow-in-the-dark orange and forest green? Who came up with this, anyway?
I want to buy a new one that is nicer looking, but I want this exact shape. There's not even a "brand" name on the pacifier - the closest thing I can find at the store is a MAM. But the Target by us only has pink MAMS. A no go. So I guess we'll stick with fluorescent orange and green for now. The cute baby makes up for the ugly paci, anyway.
** Disclaimer on the pacifier:
I guess I feel the need to justify a pacifier since it's somewhat a "controversial" subject - they're not "natural", baby should nurse if they need to suck, they can suck on their fingers, blah, blah.
Nathan is NOT a comfort nurser. He eats & is done, done, done. Get away, Mom. But he still wants to suck, & hasn't mastered the sucking on his fingers thing yet. He'll sometimes suck on the side of his fist, but honestly, he prefers the pacifier so much more! And I can throw the pacifier away when he gets too old for it. I can't exactly throw away his thumb...
That, & I'm his mother. So I get to decide. :)
6.16.2009
Introduction, I suppose
I guess I should do a little "introductory" post before I dive in here.
I am a complete and total procrastinator. I mean, I do get things done. I can meet a deadline. I'm not a deadbeat or anything. But I wait til the LAST POSSIBLE SECOND to do everything. My baby is almost 3 weeks old & I have about 65 more birth announcements to do. I also have 50 thank-you notes to write for baby gifts (many of which I received at my baby shower... in APRIL.) In college, I sewed my costume for our spring play the night before the dress rehearsal. I once finished a paper 20 minutes before class - it was worth 35% of my semester grade. I could go on and on... but my point is...
I have been wanting to start a blog for a long time. I created imaginary blog posts in my head. I had a list of all the great things I would write about. In fact, I even created THIS BLOG - 3 months ago - and never wrote one single post. So now, in an effort to break the cycle of procrastination - I am posting!
So hmm... about me...
I live with two members of the opposite gender - the Dear Husband, and the Dear Son. The Dear Son goes everywhere with me. The Dear Husband? Not so much. His newest hobby is golfing - he is taking a golf class for college credit. Ah, the beauty of a Liberal Arts degree - such a well-rounded education it even includes a physical education course. So we have spent two out of two days apart this week so far so he can hit some balls & get a tan.
I love both of these males very much, and if I ever complain about them, know that it is with a light heart and a smattering of exaggeration. (Who knows... the Dear Husband might read it someday. So I have to throw in this disclaimer... love you Dear Husband!)
I guess a good description of myself would be "jack of all trades, master of none." That's not to disparage my few talents, but rather my admission that I truly have too many hobbies to master one well. I love cooking, scrapbooking, sewing, crafts, writing, reading, music - and I always have at least one unfinished project in each of these areas. Maybe someday I will finish all of my projects. Then I will have nothing left to do with myself but go to JoAnns and start again.
one more thing. I often don't like starting my sentences with capital letters. perhaps it's from all that chatting online & texting, combined with the fact that I'm no longer a student & very seldom write papers anymore. however, I ALWAYS use punctuation. something about not using punctuation bothers me a lot. and I always capitalize proper nouns. ironically, it drives me crazy when my English students don't capitalize when they should... then again, they are being graded. no one is grading my blog.
Anyway, I will try to make my blog as interesting as possible, seeing as how I HATE reading boring things myself. That way even if no one reads it, I can still go back and read my entries and be entertained. (Wow... that sounds a bit narcissistic.)
The Dear Son needs his mother now...
I am a complete and total procrastinator. I mean, I do get things done. I can meet a deadline. I'm not a deadbeat or anything. But I wait til the LAST POSSIBLE SECOND to do everything. My baby is almost 3 weeks old & I have about 65 more birth announcements to do. I also have 50 thank-you notes to write for baby gifts (many of which I received at my baby shower... in APRIL.) In college, I sewed my costume for our spring play the night before the dress rehearsal. I once finished a paper 20 minutes before class - it was worth 35% of my semester grade. I could go on and on... but my point is...
I have been wanting to start a blog for a long time. I created imaginary blog posts in my head. I had a list of all the great things I would write about. In fact, I even created THIS BLOG - 3 months ago - and never wrote one single post. So now, in an effort to break the cycle of procrastination - I am posting!
So hmm... about me...
I live with two members of the opposite gender - the Dear Husband, and the Dear Son. The Dear Son goes everywhere with me. The Dear Husband? Not so much. His newest hobby is golfing - he is taking a golf class for college credit. Ah, the beauty of a Liberal Arts degree - such a well-rounded education it even includes a physical education course. So we have spent two out of two days apart this week so far so he can hit some balls & get a tan.
I love both of these males very much, and if I ever complain about them, know that it is with a light heart and a smattering of exaggeration. (Who knows... the Dear Husband might read it someday. So I have to throw in this disclaimer... love you Dear Husband!)
I guess a good description of myself would be "jack of all trades, master of none." That's not to disparage my few talents, but rather my admission that I truly have too many hobbies to master one well. I love cooking, scrapbooking, sewing, crafts, writing, reading, music - and I always have at least one unfinished project in each of these areas. Maybe someday I will finish all of my projects. Then I will have nothing left to do with myself but go to JoAnns and start again.
one more thing. I often don't like starting my sentences with capital letters. perhaps it's from all that chatting online & texting, combined with the fact that I'm no longer a student & very seldom write papers anymore. however, I ALWAYS use punctuation. something about not using punctuation bothers me a lot. and I always capitalize proper nouns. ironically, it drives me crazy when my English students don't capitalize when they should... then again, they are being graded. no one is grading my blog.
Anyway, I will try to make my blog as interesting as possible, seeing as how I HATE reading boring things myself. That way even if no one reads it, I can still go back and read my entries and be entertained. (Wow... that sounds a bit narcissistic.)
The Dear Son needs his mother now...
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