Thursday, February 28, 2013

I Love...

Honchito (my made up spanish for little boss) has been in our lives for 100 days today and in honor of the occasion I came up with 50 things I love about him!

I love...
1-10. His tiny fingers, toes, his big blue eyes, looong eyelashes, semi-bald head, big belly, his hand size booty (seriously, fits right in my hand!), perfect skin, sweet smell, BIG smiles
11.  How tightly he grips my shirt
12.  When he pulls my hair
13.  When he smiles so hard his eyes crinkle shut
14.  His almost laugh
15.  When he chuckles in his sleep
16.  Kissing his cheeks
17.  How much he loves reading “Brown Bear, Brown Bear”
18.  Snuggling with him
19.  That he slept in our arms almost exclusively the first 6 weeks
20.  When he looks like Louis
21.  When he looks like me
22.  That I made him (!)
23.  That God gave the perfect gift to us at the perfect time
24.  That he has discovered he can control his hands
25.  Reading to him in his rocker
26.  How tiny his socks are (and some still aren’t tiny enough)
27.  That his eyes follow me when I walk away
28.  How strong he is
29.  When he really cries- like the “waaaaa”- so cute!
30.  His pouty face (one of the things he got from me)
31.  How much he loves baths
32.  Dressing him up like a little man
33.  Skin to skin time
34.  How he smiles at Sadie dog
35.  When his tummy is full & his whole body goes limp
36.  When he's upset but calms down the second we snuggle him
37.  When he kicks & waves his arms with a look of intense concentration
38.  When he rests his hands on his tummy
39.  When he stares at something & you can just see the gears working in his head
40.  When he looks at something & smiles like it’s the coolest thing he's ever seen
41.  That he is such an easy going guy!
42.  That even when I feel cabin feverish, I know that I am doing what God made me for & I delight in that
43.  When he is startled & his hands fly up like a wizard or orchestra conductor
44.  That Sadie's barking doesn't faze him because he heard her barking for months before he was born 
45.  What he has brought out in Louis
46.  That despite my diabetes he is perfect, not too small at all!
47.  And because of my diabetes I got to meet him 13 days early! (assuming he came on my due date)
48.  Dreaming about his future
49.  That (God willing!) he is the first of several children we will have & I can't wait to have more
50.  That he is mine!

Thursday, February 7, 2013

God is still in control... (Carter's birth story)



So if you know me well (or if you read the story of how Carter came to be), you know that I prefer to be in control and I always love a plan!  And as surprisingly as Carter was created, his birth was just as exciting, if not more so. (btw I started writing this before Christmas, and am just now finishing!)(and sorry, it's super long because I knew if I didn't write it now I wouldn't remember it!)

I had heard conflicting opinions throughout my pregnancy as far as when he would arrive, although everyone agreed that making it to 40 weeks was not an option.  Everything went SO well though, the entire time, that I made it to 37 weeks with no issues and the perinatologist said I should deliver in my 38th week, could wait til 39, but she didn’t want to get too close to 40.  My ob was going to be out of town for my 38th week though, so we scheduled my induction for the day she got back, the day before I was 39 weeks, so Carter’s birthday would be November 25th.  Yay, we have a plan, I can tell people the plan, I can use the plan to make other plans (schedule house cleaners and carpet cleaners, have Thanksgiving at my parents, etc.).  But I should have known that God had his own plan. 

Two Tuesdays before Thanksgiving, Louis’ grandmother Marianne passed away, so he was in Sweetwater from Wednesday through Friday to be with his family.  We agreed that I shouldn’t travel (the hospital in Sweetwater is sub-par, and Abilene is better but still not my preference), but Louis didn’t want me to be alone so he sent me to my parents until he got back, which was a lot of fun really.  I felt like Annie in Father of the Bride 2 when Bryan goes to Tokyo (?), but was praying we didn’t have the same outcome with Louis running into the delivery room at the last minute!  The whole time I was at my parents, and the weekend after, I was fighting my blood sugar.  Usually I’m trying to keep it down, but I was constantly snacking trying to keep it up!  At some point I ate an entire meal and didn’t take any insulin, and afterward my blood sugar was perfect (this is not normal for me, especially while pregnant).  On Sunday I finally put it all together.  During the 3rd trimester of pregnancy the placenta secretes a hormone that messes with the efficacy of insulin, bad enough to cause some women to have gestational diabetes, and in my case, causing me to increase my insulin dosages.  If I was no longer needing the big doses, of insulin, then my placenta was no longer giving off the same amount of hormone, indicating placenta failure/deterioration.  (Which is normal… at 40-42+ weeks, not at 38) I called the after-hours line for the ob and talked to the doc, and she recommended I talk to the perinatologist on Monday.  Well I called the perinatologist’s office, and they said the ob had to refer me if they were to make me an appointment (even though I already  had one scheduled for the next day!).  So then I called the ob, and they set me up an appointment with the Nurse Practioner, whom I love, but when I saw her and explained the problem, she immediately said she didn’t feel qualified to take care of me, so she sent me to an ob who had an opening (remember my ob is out of town), and then that ob said basically the same thing, and said I needed to see the perinatologist (umm DUH that was what I wanted from the beginning)!  Anyway, he fit me in, heard my story, did an ultrasound, agreed with/confirmed my instinct, and said that even though we had a 1 in 1000 chance of having a problem in the next 6 days, there was a smaller chance of Carter needing NICU time, and it was worth that risk to get him out early.  He sent me home to get my stuff in order and told me the nurse would call with my check-in time in the next hour or so!

Well OK, we are having a baby tomorrow!  I called Louis who got on the train, I called my mom, and texted my sister so she could hit the road from Abilene, and drove home to finish packing.  We got all of our stuff together and got back to the hospital where they admitted me and started an IV and put me on the fetal monitors and gave me a drug to start the process.  My family came for a quick visit and then Louis and I tried (and mostly failed) to get some sleep.  Of course they woke me up frequently to check my blood pressure and temperature, and every several hours to see if I had made any progress, and also several times to check my blood sugar.

Anyway, we woke up before 7 the next morning and we packed up our stuff to get transferred from the 4th floor down to the ground floor where Labor & Delivery is.  We met our awesome L&D nurse Katie, and they started me on pitocin!  I was barely dilated (1 “and a wiggle”) when we started, and at 10:00 when they checked me again I was all the way to 2 =/ So the doc came into break my water.  Now remember how my doc is out of town?  Well LUCKILY the ob on call was AMAZING.  She was very nice / kind / compassionate and communicated well with me.  I felt very comfortable with her taking care of us. So she examines me (awful) and breaks my water (SO weird), and pretty quickly the contractions that had been no big deal all morning got more intense.  Still something I could handle, but definitely started having to breathe a little bit.  Katie let me know that as soon as I felt like I might want the epidural to let her know, because the anesthesiologist would take a while to get down to us and to get prepped and then for it to kick in, so she didn’t want me climbing the walls and then let her know.  The anesthesiologist happened to be around the corner, so I let her know that whenever he was finished he could come take care of me.  Another awful part… because 1) they kick the husbands out, 2) I had no idea what to expect, 3) the anesthesiologist had a weird bedside manner and poor communication (he asked me if he was hurting me at some point… umm yes?!  I never knew what he meant or if I wasn’t supposed to be hurting at that point), 4) my blood pressure bottomed out near the end and I felt like I was going to faint so they had to lay me down and squeeze a bag of fluid in.  The pain was manageable, but the whole thing stressed me out.  I thinking I started crying when the ob examined me before she broke my water, and I don’t think I really stopped until the epidural kicked in… I started because of the pain but then I was just so anxious I couldn’t stop.  BUT when the drugs did kick in?  Smooth sailing!  Never felt another contraction or cervix check!  

Unfortunately sometime after that Katie noticed that after every contraction Carter’s heart rate dropped.  She had me roll over, roll the other way, lay on my back, check my blood sugar, lower the pitocin, stop the pitocin - basically try anything, but it kept happening.  At about 2:00 (7 hours on pitocin, 3 hours on the epidural), she explained that she was going to go grab the doc, because if the baby couldn’t handle this amount of stress, the stress of labor really wouldn’t be good.  Doc examined me (I was dilated to a 3), checked the fetal monitor and agreed.  She said the heart rate wasn’t bad by itself, nor was the super slow progression, but together they didn’t make for a rosy outlook.  My Bishop’s score was a 4 when we started, making a successful induction more difficult (best is 7+).  She recommended a c-section.  I suppose I had a choice but when the baby’s well being is jeopardized, I don’t know who would say no!  We had that conversation around 2:45 & he was born at 3:14!  She warned me that they would be moving very quickly, but not because there was any kind of emergency, but because the OR & necessary people were all available and ready.  I think they wheeled me in around 3:00, prepped me & then began.  It’s crazy because it actually would have been over even sooner except that Carter has a huge noggin, and it was in there kind of wonky & caught on my pelvis, so after trying to get him out through the original incision they stopped, cut another inch, and then he came out!  The doc told me afterward that he may have never come out vaginally because of how his head was situated (so thank you God for sending me in to the c-section before I labored all the way & pushed for several hours…)!  The c-section was no big deal, though I did feel sort of detached from the birth since I didn’t do any work.  I cried the whole time, but that was just my reaction to the stress & fear.  For whatever reason I had not considered a c-section so I was processing that, & that my baby was minutes away from birth, & that two docs are chatting while my insides are open & I can feel them touching and pushing, but no pain.  The sweet anesthesia nurse petted my head the whole time!  Anyway, he popped out & they cleaned him up & I got to hold him one handed for a couple minutes.  Here comes my only complaint with the whole experience: they took him away at that point and I didn’t get to see him until almost 3 hours later.  The thing was that they needed to monitor his blood sugar – babies born to diabetic moms often have super low sugars and have to be given sugar water – so they took him up to the nursery to do that.  His sugar was fine, great, normal actually, BUT they couldn’t bring him back down to L&D, he had to stay on the recovery floor until I got up there.  Fine, except that I couldn’t go up to recovery until I could move my feet, a process which took a couple hours.  So I was stuck in L&D with my dad, Louis was stuck outside the nursery watching Carter, and my mom and sisters floated back and forth.  So of course I got up there around 6:00, they brought him to me, and by then not only had I not gotten to hold him, no one else really had either.  So Louis and I held him a bit, then he got passed around to my family.  Then Louis’ family arrived and he got passed around to all of them.  Which is not a problem at all, we’d all been waiting to meet this kid for months, but Carter and I didn’t get skin to skin time until 10:00 I think.  I think I was in shock, because that didn’t bother me at the time and my face is hilarious in all the pictures.  I don’t look happy at all, I think because my kid was born in like 15 minutes and I hadn’t really accepted that he was HERE.  That first night I kept him for awhile but then sent him to the nursery so I could get a few hours sleep without feeling like I needed to watch him breathe.  That second night I held him the entire night and just stared.   That is when I think we really bonded.  Next time I will insist that they monitor baby’s sugar wherever I am and not take it away, and I want skin to skin time within the hour, and if I have a c-section the baby will stay with me that whole time we’re waiting for my feet to come back to life and we can bond and then the rest of the world can have at it.

I’m not saying it was like the most exciting birth of all time (except that fact that it was my first!), because babies are born in cars and planes and in bathtubs, and I’m pretty sure few births are completely without surprises, but it certainly was nothing like I expected.  But it was wonderful!  Louis was amazing and only left the hospital once in 6 days.  My family was great, took care of Sadie, brought us non-hospital meals (because the hospitals definition of a diabetic menu is not the same as mine), came once or twice a day to hang out, Kara even gave me a shower and a pedicure, and thanks to the timing Macy got to be there and stay for a week after!  Louis’ family got to come even on very short notice when the plan changed.  I don’t know if next time we’ll do a scheduled c-section or a VBAC (I haven’t even asked), but I did learn a few things and know better to expect next time either way.  My pregnancy was great, the labor was fine, the recovery manageable, and motherhood has been nothing short of the best thing ever, so we’ll definitely do it all again, sooner or later!

Saturday, November 3, 2012

The Final Countdown, Lessons Learned, and the Name Game

Carter will be here in about three weeks and I am so ready. And also so not ready. Physically I'm fine! There have been a few unpleasant side effects (for example, the beginnings of gall stones we discovered this week), but honestly I have loved being pregnant. I already look forward to the next one just to go through all the different stages again. Emotionally I'm ready to see him, meet him, snuggle him, dress him up, show him off... But I'm also nervous still about raising a little boy! Not only is he a child (which I have no experience raising), but he's a boy (which I have little experience with period)! Luckily, as everyone reminds me, they grow slow enough that I have some time before I'll be responsible for manners and sharing and morals and goals and making sure he's a successful human being.

What a lesson this pregnancy has been in worry and control. I surprisingly have not been a worrywart about this pregnancy. Like at all. Which is so not me. I usually worry about everything, especially things I cannot control, and especially things that haven't happened yet (and probably never will). I'm not sure if God knew I would need peace or if I've actually grown enough to trust him and myself to know that everything will be ok. Which is not to say that I just threw caution to the wind- I killed myself to get my blood sugars great before we got pregnant and then got them even better since. And I took my vitamins and tried to limit the French fries and chocolate and have had minimal amounts of caffeine, etc. And everything has been great! This whole time the docs have been checking to make sure he grows enough and isn't too small (because of my diabetes), and sure enough we have a 90%ile baby. Already 6 lb 11 oz with an estimated two more pounds of growth. (Which I don't really believe but I skipped that day of med school so he may be right.) Thank you Father for taking care of us!



So I've liked the name Carter (see http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Carter_(ER))
since junior high (but of course I wasn't having any sons, just daughters, so what did it matter?!) ;D and of the 100s of names L and I went through it was one of his favorites too. And I love Carter Kane (http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carter_Kane) and am finishing up the John Carter books by Edgar Rice Burroughs (http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Carter_of_Mars) (which are really incredible especially considering they were written 100 years ago!), and I've felt good about our choice the whole time. It's not the most common name, but its no Apple or Suri so it's doubtful he'll come home with a black eye because of it. The other day though I looked up the meaning of Carter Nicholas, and was even more sold. Carter means "transporter" or "driver" and if you know Louis you know he loves Jason Statham aka the Transporter.

And Nicholas means victory! Amen this has been a victory! Mostly over my diabetes and my battle with God for control, but I like that lil C has a strong name!

Three more doctors appointments this week, and my last days at FRE before C comes, and then I'll really be ready for him because I won't have anything to do but twiddle my fingers and pray!  These days can't go fast enough!

Monday, July 16, 2012

The Story of Carter (aka my battle with God for control)


Let me start with this.  Even with my months, no years of planning for this child, he was still a complete surprise.  Which I think is the way God likes it!

Ok I’ll rewind a bit.  In college I lived with 3 amazing girls and 3 of us got engaged within 6 weeks of each other, and got married within 7 weeks of each other.  And everyone’s money was on me to get pregnant within the first year.  And had I been a less responsible, obsessive planner type, it definitely would have happened.  Because above all else I have wanted to be a mom my whole life (and Louis feels the same about being a dad).  But we lived in Abilene for a few months while Louis finished school and had $0, and then moved to Dallas and Louis started his career and it didn't take too long to pay off our debt, but still we were married for 2 years before I had a full time job and was making actual money.  So our plans were delayed because I wanted to work for a certain amount of time (2-3 years) and have a certain amount of debt (0) and savings (as much as possible) before we brought a baby into the world.

Fast forward to Fall 2010.  I’ve just started teaching but I can see that a baby is now nearer to a possibility so I began talking to my endocrinologist about what that would take.  And in order to get his permission (yes permission), I had to have an A1c close to or less than 6.5 (average blood sugar of 150 or less).  So Summer 2011 I got the fancy glucose sensor, and got off the pill and at some point early that fall, the doc said, “it could be better but if you were pregnant right now it wouldn’t be bad”.  Which I heard as “GO!”, so we started trying.  But it wasn’t that easy since my cycle is super affected by stress, which I was because of school, and then even more so by the fact that getting pregnant wasn’t as easy as “16 & Pregnant” made it seem.  

Fast forward to March/Spring Break 2012.  I go to the ob/gyn and show her my charting and temp taking and what a mess this baby making was for us.  She agrees that it shouldn’t be this difficult for me, and she was going to run blood work, and barring anything coming up weird, start me on clomid.  If clomid didn’t do the trick for us within a couple of months, she was going to send me to a reproductive endocrinologist (with my diabetes she wasn’t going to mess around).  First off I had to get my current cycle to end (at this point 6 weeks long) & a new one to start, so she put me on progesterone to kick start it.  I did my research on both drugs, and found good info.  One thing that I read that stuck with me is someone who said that back in the day, if you took progesterone and got your period, then you weren’t pregnant, and if you took it and still didn’t get it, then you must be pregnant.  Sort of a weird pregnancy test.  Anyway, after confirming that my blood work looked normal and I still had not ovulated as of that Monday afternoon at the doctor’s, I started the progesterone, with the expectation of getting my period in 8-12 days.  8…9…10…11…12 days pass.  And nothing.  And I remember what I read.  And told Louis to go fish around in the bathroom and find a test.  And I laughed when it said “pregnant”.  Laughed.  Like Sarah.  We should have named this kid Isaac.

After all the trouble I went through- tried to make a plan, control the situation, and do it my way, God said nope, “I got this”.  Which he always does.  April of sophomore year of college?  I decided to stop worrying about never having a boyfriend and aim for Vanderbilt, where I could specialize in voice disorders.  (A very wise roommate told me that God would not have put the desire to be a wife and mother on my heart if he didn’t intend to make it so, something that has stuck with me for 6 years!)  May of that year I randomly applied and got a job at Chili's (which is SO out of my character to do something spontaneous and potentially scary) and met Louis, a boy whom I soon realized I couldn’t leave for Tennessee!  And my plan changed.  For the better.  And the same with baby boy.  And the doc can’t explain how it happened either.  On every sonogram I’ve had but one (so 5/6) he has measured the same, due on 12/3, which a predicted conception date of Monday, 3/12… the day I went to the ob/gyn to complain and figure out a plan.  The day I had bloodwork done that said I wasn’t ovulating.  What?!

I sometimes complain to myself or Louis that I don’t understand God, I don’t get why He and I can’t be on the same page about somethings, about how I don’t understand how some people never seem to be challenged and others are constantly being challenged and I’m somewhere in the middle (14 years of diabetes makes me a little bitter but still aware that I have it pretty darn good).  BUT then I look at my husband, and down at my belly which is stretching the buttons on this shirt, and think about my family, and even my sweet puppy dog, and my church family, and the job that has taught me more things than lessons  I taught, and I am so glad that God and I aren’t on the same page.  Can you imagine what your life would be like if you had planned it?  Would it be as good?  Mine wouldn’t!  I might have more money and a bigger closet but it would be lacking in so much else.  And those challenges?  I am thankful for those too, because although situations have not always come out like I wanted, I have learned from every single thing.  I hope that if you are challenged you accept that God is strengthening and molding you, and if you aren’t challenged, that you try to learn from others!  (And let’s be honest, there is always somebody who is “worse off”, so we all have a lesson to learn.)  And I hope that if you are like me, and struggling with God for control of your life, you allow him to take the reins a little more, because it is a much more scenic ride when he does!

Monday, July 2, 2012

Randomness

I thought for a fun way to kick off my return to the blogosphere, I would give you a list of 25 random thoughts/facts.
  1. Foremost on my mind these days is the fact that in 18-20 weeks I will have a child.  Like I’ll be waking up every couple of hours to feed him and changing hundreds of diapers.  Really?  I still don’t think it has really sunk in.
  2. His name is Carter Nicholas.  Carter because it’s a name we both really liked, and there are some good Carter’s out there.  My favorites being John Truman Carter III (Noah Wylie’s character on ER) and Carter Kane (from Rick Riordan’s YA Fiction Series), and Louis’ being Dwayne Michael Carter, Jr (aka Lil Wayne) and Joe Carter (World Series MVP).  Nicholas is Louis’ middle name and since I “convinced” him that having a Louis Nicholas III wasn’t the best, I decided I had to use part of Lou’s name.
  3. Part of me finalizing Carter was reading Rick Riordan’s latest book and realizing that Carter Kane’s little sister’s name is Sadie.  Coincidence? I think not!
  4. I have 2 friends due the same week as me, one due two weeks after, and another a month later.  Apparently we all had the same idea in March!
  5. Carter’s due date is 12/3/12, but he will probably arrive somewhere between November 5th-19th due to my “Class C Diabetic” status.  Kind of scary that things could get hairy in November, but I am glad that my diabetes means that I’ve already gotten to see him 5 times through sonograms and will have countless more to watch and be sure he is growing properly.
  6. I will be 26 in a couple weeks.  Weird. 
  7. With a summer birthday I had 2 or 3 pool parties... for the kid who sunburns in 10 minutes.  And now I avoid sun like the plague and tell myself it’s to avoid wrinkles.
  8. As of this summer I have been out of college as long as I was in college.  Weird.
  9. Louis and I have been married for 1,423 days.  Wow.  My parents have been married for 10,643 days.  WOW.  Can’t wait til we hit the 10,000 day mark on Christmas 2035. (!) (And let’s be real, I can wait!)
  10. Louis and I want 4 kids.  But as a friend remarked last night, “Let’s see if we like this one first!”
  11. I have the best parents in the universe (they’re going to be getting a lot of calls for advice in the coming years!) and I am very much my parents child.  There is hardly an original thing about me ;)  some things from Daddy: stubborn, mathematical, fine hair, my feet, appreciation for how things work; from Momma: emotional, bookworm, fair skin, sweet tooth, my love for antiques and country music.
  12. I have two younger sisters and Louis has three younger brothers.  We are both classic oldest siblings, so we are both stubborn, bossy, know-it-alls who expect to get our way.  We're working on it...
  13. My sisters are my best friends.  Louis is great, but the night before a wedding I have to text one of them for advice on which dress to wear, and they’re the ones helping me pick nursery furniture and crib bedding.  Kara, Macy, and I made a plan long ago to live next door to each other and my mom and have kids at the same time.  I still plan on fulfilling my part of the deal!
  14. Speaking of sisters, you know those 4 kids we want?  I want two of each (which hopefully God & I are on the same page about J), because I want Carter to have a brother, but I also want him to have a sister, and she needs a sister too.  Make sense?
  15. I love Pinterest.  I’m not as obsessed as some people, but I’ve been a faithful member for a long while, even before it was cool (since my aforementioned awesome sisters are always on the up & up on what will be cool).  And now my goal is to put all those pinned recipes, crafts, patterns, ideas, tips to good use.  After we get back from our roadtrip I’m going to plan a week of only pinterest inspired food & activities.
  16. And speaking of our roadtrip, Louis and I are going on a 10 day (!) roadtrip from July 9th to 19th.  It will be a fun trip!  Hopefully I’ll still love my husband by the end :)
  17. I have never been to any of those cities or states or seen the Pacific Ocean or a proper mountain, so I am happy to cross a bunch of things off my bucket list!
  18. My summer TV faves: Suits, Rookie Blue, SYTYCD, and White Collar.
  19. My favorite books this summer…  Ha like I can pick a favorite.  I’m pretty sure I’ve already read 15+ books in the last 4 weeks, with a nice stack still waiting for me!  I’m a reader.  Probably unlike anyone else you know.  Nothing makes me happier or more relaxed.  And I don’t do Kindle/Nook unless I just have to or I can find good free stuff.  I like having a book in my hands and shelves full of them just waiting to be reread.
  20. I can sew, crochet, and knit, and next I would like to learn to quilt.  I know how to piece it, just not the actual quilting part.
  21. Things I collect: crosses, dishes, books, clothes.  Ok collect might be the wrong verb but I do have a lot of all of those things.
  22. Best compliment I can remember receiving: “I think if I had kids and I had to trust someone else to take care of them, it would be you.”  And that friend may not even remember saying that but it stuck with me as a good representation of who I am, what is truly most important to me, and who I want to be!
  23. Second best compliment I ever received: “You remind me of Rory Gilmore.”  Not only is Alexis Bledel beautiful, Rory is a smart, sarcastic, quick witted, and well-read lady.  Girl after my own heart.
  24. I’m kind of obsessed with my puppy dog.  Though to be clear, I don’t know anyone who has met her and not loved her (if they were a dog person).  She is very calm, well mannered, and very sweet.  She loves sitting up on her hind feet, laying in the sun, getting her ears or belly rubbed, and napping on every cushioned surface in the house.  I’ve seen her with a few small kids and she has always been gentle and has taken their ear or tail tugging in stride.  I know she is going to be so good with baby Carter!
  25. My goal in life is to be the ultimate mom.  Note: not the cool mom.  Basically I want to be like my mom.  I never thought she was “cool”, but looking back, I know she did everything for us and gave us everything.  We had the best Halloween costumes, best birthday parties at home, home cooked meals.  She helped out at school and with Girl Scouts, and at church in Bible Hour, VBS, and small groups.  If I had ever played a sport I know she would have been out there with a cooler of CapriSuns and oranges cheering us on and trying to learn the rules to T-ball.  She taught me responsibility and work ethic, manners, how to treat other people, how to read!, how to sew, to love and value myself, to make and strive for high goals, and how to quietly love and trust in God.

Monday, August 15, 2011

First Day of School


This is something I created (based off of something I had but couldn't use in its current format) for my kiddos to complete next Monday.  Kind of a fun get-to-know-you / survey / questionnaire activity.  What do you remember about your first days of school?  I mostly remember school supplies and a new outfit...