Layer 8@1X

Work Life Balance

“I’m Not Getting Anything Done” or “There’s no such thing as work/life balance” or “I Hate to Break it to You, But You CAN’T Have It All!”

Despite the fact that every single person that had more than one child, I didn’t realize how much more work two little ones would be than one! One was easy peasy… Sure, there were challenges with our precocious 2 year old, but she slept for 12 hours solid, she was generally easy…

She slept (still does) about 12 hours straight every night… So there was plenty of time for me to tidy the house, catch up on work, do little projects like clean out the pantry or organize my closet!I could get up early if I had to catch up on something or stay up a bit later.

Then came along our second little “bundle of joy”!

And she was (is) amazing in so many ways… but she DOESN’T SLEEP! I mean… I guess some people have it worse, so I’m not complaining. Well maybe I am a little!

She goes down okay, around 7:30/8ish, and she’s up between 4:30 and 6:30 EVERY DAY! By the time we get Emma down it’s 8:30/9:00 at night and I’m beat.

I know some people say not to worry about a messy house or dirty laundry… to enjoy them while they’re little!

But what about those of us who really feel better when our house is in order and the laundry put away? Or those of us that also have companies they run, albeit from home? Or those of us who simply feel “yucky” because we can’t get our pre-baby body back because there simply aren’t enough hours in the day!


OK so here’s the thing… your kids ARE the single most important thing in your life. PERIOD. They likely have been since the moment you knew you were carrying these tiny little humans inside, but there are other things that are important to you… as a mom… as a wife… as an employee or business owner… as a friend… as a PERSON… you get the point!

And everyone will tell you that you can have it all or you can balance it all…

Well, I hate to break it to you. You can’t!

Your life, the moment you decided to have children, will never be in “balance” again.

Before you stop reading or think this is going to be a negative post. It’s not at all! It IS about being realistic and giving yourself some room to breathe, especially if you’re trying to juggle a house, being a mama, and any kind of work, whether you have a full fledged business, a side hustle, or a full time job/career, and taking some time for yourself/spouse/friends.

The good news… you CAN do/have all of these things!

The bad news… you can’t give them all 100% or even 25%/25%/25%/25%.

Gary Keller wrote in “The One Thing”: “The reason we shouldn’t pursue balance is that magic never happens in the middle; magic happens at the extremes.”

For instance, because I work hard “most” of the time, we can take vacations whenever we want (for the most part). We’re able to get annual passes to DisneyWorld and extend our trips to Florida by a couple of days whenever we want to play in Orlando. Or, when we sit down on New Years and come up with trips we want to take for the next year, we can plan a month in Italy for the summer where we can focus on our kids and experience as a family during that time.

Let me step back and tell you a little about me so you can understand where I’m coming from!

I have two little girls who are my world… end of story! But, unfortunately, there’s a bigger world out there and I have to deal with other things like my business. My husband and I have an 7-figure email company that we have to run by day. We flip houses for “fun” (our goal is 10-12 a year). We have some other smaller ‘businesses’. I have EmmaAndEllie.com. We work from home and have a house to maintain and keep up with. And add in some hobbies (like photography) and health (like exercise and healthy eating which takes time)… and there you have a pretty full schedule. Oh yeah… and since I’m human, I do need to sleep. Truthfully, I am pretty useless without 6-8 good hours of rest.

So, how do you ‘balance’ all of that?

I don’t. Some days I give 80% of my time, energy and effort just being “mom”… These are the days one of them needs to stay home from school and they need extra snuggles and play time or attention… or when there’s a holiday event at school and I choose to show up and show my support so my girls know I’m there for all the important things in their lives…

For example, today was “Thanksgiving” at school. Ellie’s lunch was at 11:00 and Emma’s was at 11:45. Add 15 minutes to/from school and a quick stop at the grocery store to grab dinner items so we could make it to swimming on time! I had to leave at 4:15 to make it to swimming on time and feed them between classes, get them in their PJs and to bed all on time!

Other days, I have to leave them at school til 5 because I have to deal with a pressing issue with our development team or a customer service problem that needs my attention. I realize that plenty of kids go to school or daycare for 10 hours a day every day and are just fine… And on those days, it’s just a whirlwind to get them home, fed, bathed and to bed on time. These nights are more hollering and then going to bed feeling guilty for not making those moments I had special, but heck… you’ve got to take care of basic needs regardless!

Then there are times when the house is simply a disaster and I have no choice but to stop everything and work on my space. When my house is a mess, I’m stressed and frustrated and never 100% productive or at peace in any other area. I plan to get up early in the morning and Ellie happens to wake at 4:48 crushing any plans of early morning productivity. So I wake up stressed, not the patient and kind mother I strive to be and start all of our days on a sour note! NOT the way I want my kids to start their days nor behavior I want them to model.

So what do you do when you have more to do than there are hours in the day?

You choose!

You choose what to focus on TODAY so you keep the important things front and center. Sure, there are days that I have to work a little longer or times when the dishes simply need to be done. At those moments, my girls need to realize I need a little time and they need to play with their babies on their own for a little while. It doesn’t mean I’m not a good mother or I’m letting their childhood slip by.

It models for my children that you need to take care of day to day… It teaches my children that a clean and organized home is a healthy environment. They understand the value of working hard for something… (because I work so hard so much, it enables me to take vacations to DisneyWorld and give them undivided attention for a week straight or the ability to attend every event they have at school because I can take the time away from business).

It’s about realizing that there is always going to be something that’s taking more of your attention. You

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Vaccines

Vaccines seem to be one of the top hot button issues that ignites a firestorm at the mere mention of the word.

One one side of the argument, you’ve got those that are TOTALLY against vaccines no matter what and the other side where people are pro any and all vaccines. And I get, both sides are only trying to do what’s right for the kiddos and when it comes to kids, people can get pretty protective if they think they’re doing the right thing and the alternative is harmful…

But what about us middle of the road folks?

I talk to SO many parents that aren’t “against” vaccines, but certainly don’t like them and have genuine concerns about one more of them. But us “middle of the road” parents aren’t allowed to voice our fears and frustrations without someone jumping on them from one side or the other or both. This not only applies to social media, but even most doctors aren’t even willing to have a discussion with you about it.

When I had my first daughter, I didn’t really know better. I was terrified about vaccines because there’s enough bad PR out there that any sane person would have reservations. I tried to do my homework to understand both sides of the debate. Nonetheless, I followed the schedule like an obedient parent, not bucking the system much at all.

However, when I declined the flu shot for her, you’d have thought I was abusing my kid. I brought up legitimate concerns, totally willing to have the discussion, but all I was hit with was “I just have to tell you that babies die every year from the flu”.

I understand that, but what about the rest of the story… Were any of these kids compromised in any other ways? Did they have any other issues that caused them to get more sick than others? Did their parents not get them to a doctor soon enough to get Tamiflu?

But asking this questions just pissed the doctor off… So, as a result, I simply chose to decline the flu vaccine.

I DID reluctantly get one myself when both of my girls were infants after much browbeating…

Fast forward to 2017 when I had my second daughter…

We went through the first round of vaccines at 2 months, again… not feeling comfortable with the whole thing but not really feeling able to ask any questions. This time, my littlest peanut did NOT react well. She had her shots on Friday and we were hosting a holiday party on Saturday. She pretty much slept for FOUR days straight. I could barely get her up to feed her. At one point, we almost brought her to the ER, but another mom said “that can happen with vaccines. It happened to one of my kids too.” UGGHHHH… Still didn’t make it any less scary, but she pulled out on about day 5.

So, this time, when we had to go back for the next round, I was a bit stronger with the pediatrician and simply told her that what happened last time didn’t work for me and we needed a new strategy here. I explained that I was not trying to “get out of” doing vaccines, but there had to be a way to modify it where it wasn’t so much on her little body all at once.

She then asks me “well, what do you want to do?”

WHAT??? How the heck do I know. I’m just a mom for god-sakes. I can’t be the first person that’s asked for some sort of modification.

Now. I’m annoyed!

We ultimately agree that we’ll just come in every 2-3 weeks until she gets the complete round. It satisfies me, but I am still left feeling a little unsettled… like she just threw it out there to appease me and keep her practice by making sure I’m up to date on shots.

I do feel like that gives her little body time to recover from one before she gets to the next. Plus, it’s less of whatever substance the vaccine is suspended in to process from her system. But I’m really just going on a hunch I have and I’m FAR from a medical professional!

The plan seems to work. Ellie does well… only very mild side effects like icky diapers and loss of appetite for a day or so.

Before the next round, their pediatrician moves away and is replaced by another one with really good reviews and years of experience. So I feel at ease. When the time comes for the next round, I explain what we did the last time and she kind of looks at me with disdain, as if I’m being an idiot, or worse, putting my child in danger.

Reluctantly, she relents and we do the same thing, but only after she tells me “Now, you’re going to have to make sure you don’t forget or skip these, you know…”

For crying out loud… I think I’m competent enough to remember to come back to the damn doctor in two weeks.

We cart ourselves back to the doctor in 2 weeks to prove that I’m willing and able to keep the vaccination train going but I do mention that she has a cold and I’d heard that maybe we need to postpone until she’s better.

“Absolutely not. She’s fine”

Well.. she was NOT fine.

We ended up taking her in the following day because she was crying inconsolably, drooling buckets of fluid, not sleeping, not eating, and even tugging on her ears.

Turns out, when your child even has a mild cold, you should hold off on vaccines. It was a MISERABLE 3 days for everyone… Our hearts broke for her and there was nothing we could do. We used essential oils (please no debate here. We understand the safety)… we used Vicks… We used humidifiers and steam showers… and we got through it, but it wasn’t necessary to put her through all of that.

Waiting an extra week was not going to impact her one bit. In fact, some babies don’t even make it into their 1 year well visit until now….

At the end of the day, I don’t think that it needs to be anti-vaxxers vs pro vaccine folks… I think it needs to be “physicians having candid conversations with parents” about their concerns and working together to do what’s best for the kiddos.

So here’s the big question I have after all of this…

NOBODY questions anyone that wants to space out vaccines for a dog or a cat, but when you ask about it for a tiny human being, you’re totally crazy… What gives???

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Infertility Journey

My husband and I got married in 2009. I was 34 at the time and he was 37. We decided to wait just a little while to make sure we had things lined up before trying to start a family. We worked on setting up a new business, getting health insurance, etc. We wanted to be “responsible” and have all of our ducks in a row.

In 2011, we were ready to move forward and started trying in August.

A couple weeks later, my sister-in-law called to tell us they were expecting and got pregnant the month they started trying. I thought, “Awesome. We’ll get to it and the cousins can be a couple months apart.”
Month after month, nothing happened. I tried acupuncture. I tried ovulation detectors. I was told I had a thyroid disorder, with which I may never be able to have children.

I met with a fertility specialist who told me that if I didn’t get on with it “now,” then I’d never have kids (I was 36 at that time).

I left that consultation in tears and didn’t do anything for several months. My heart shattered. I felt broken. I was sad. For as long as I could remember, I had always planned on having children. It’s what I was meant to do.

When people would ask “why are you so committed to building your own business?” The answer was simple. It was so that when I finally had children, I would be in a position to be home with them, to not have to go outside of the home and work 60-hour weeks to give them the life I dreamed of for them.

So, ironically, all that I had worked toward for the last 15 years was useless!
It was almost a year and a lot of “Googling” later, when I found an educational seminar that was being held in the area. My husband and I went.

After the informational session was over, we made an appointment to see the doctor, Kaylen Silverberg. I had asked the staff how long a cycle of IVF would run. When she told me about 45 days, I made up my mind that we’d be pregnant in 60 days!

We went to our initial meeting full of questions about IVF and when we could start the process.
The doctor kind of talked us down and suggested we do a few tests first and that IVF may not even be necessary. He removed a fibroid and cleaned up my endometriosis (which I was completely unaware of before) and suggested we try on our own for a few months because that could have been the problem.

Nothing happened…

Then, we stepped it up a notch to Clomid and IUIs (intrauterine insemination). I thought for sure that we were going to get a positive pregnancy test in just a few days. I mean, all the tests were fine. My ovarian reserves were good. My tubes were open. My husband’s sperm wasn’t bad (not great, but not bad), and I was otherwise healthy. We just needed a little push, I swore!

Well, the first round didn’t work…

The second one didn’t work…

And we were growing more and more impatient and frustrated.

Our next step was to try an IUI with injectable medications. But then, I got a positive reading on a pregnancy test the next month, on our own! We were over the moon!

I called the nurse, and she had me confirm it with a blood test.

She called back, “Congratulations! You’re pregnant!”

Woo hoo!!! We were having a baby! We couldn’t have been more excited. We looked at the calendar and were expecting a baby in November.

Two days later, we went in for a follow up blood test. The nurse called that afternoon and told us she had some bad news, and that I was going to miscarry. She noted that if we hadn’t been paying such close attention, I would have simply thought my period was late and thought nothing of it.

I was CRUSHED. I had no idea that was even possible. The nurse didn’t tell me what to expect, and it didn’t occur to me that we could have an issue. I cried a while and then dusted myself off. We went on with our evening plans and figured we’d proceed with the plan we’d put in place with our doctor.

A week later, we got a call from my husband’s brother to tell us the news that they were expecting. He told my husband first and then wanted to tell me himself. I tried to sound happy for him. I shared that we had just miscarried. But he was too excited to really absorb it.

Next, my mother-in-law asked if we heard the great news. My heart felt like it had been stomped on. I had barely finished telling her we’d miscarried our own.

I desperately wanted to be happy for them, but I wasn’t. I was angry. I was hurt. I know it wasn’t rational, but I couldn’t help it. I was furious with my mother-in-law for not being sensitive to our loss. It was weeks before I could talk with her again (and we had been super close). I didn’t know if I could ever rebuild that relationship.

I couldn’t even talk to my husband that night. I was angry that he even let his brother talk to me. How could he do that knowing how badly I was hurting. Why did he make me do that? I think I spent the next few days and nights locked in our guest room, barely coming out.

As the days passed, we tried to dust ourselves off and keep taking steps forward.

We met with the doctor and planned to proceed with IVF. However, there was a study that was coming up for which we would qualify, saving tens of thousands of dollars. So we waited…and waited…and waited.

After about five months, we figured out how to get our health insurance to cover the IVF treatments and decided to forge ahead instead of waiting for the study to be approved.

In September of 2013, we started our first round of IVF. To this day, I remember getting dizzy and nauseous for those first few days as I tried to stick a needle into my stomach. Each time, I felt like I was going to pass out. It must have taken me 10 minutes for each of my first shots as I got used to injecting these hormones.

I set my alarm to wake me up in the morning and again at night, so I wasn’t a minute late on my meds.

Everything was moving forward. We had our egg retrieval scheduled and were waiting to find out if we’d be transferring on Day 3 or Day 5. We were planning our weekend around that answer.

Then, I got a call from the nurse to tell me that we would not be having any embryos transferred that month, that my progesterone was too high. I didn’t understand. This was not brought up to us as a possibility. But apparently, the guidelines had changed literally a week before our transfer, and we would have to freeze them all and transfer during my next cycle.

Once again, I was angry and frustrated. How could we not have been warned about this? I almost didn’t do the egg retrieval and thought to myself, “Maybe we can just have sex and one of the eggs will just work on its own.”

I cried some more. I just didn’t understand why we couldn’t catch a break.

I was already tired of sticking myself with needles, going to the lab to have my blood drawn, and all the visits every other day to the doctor, sitting in the waiting room for hours at times.

Little did I know that we were only just beginning.

A month and a half later, we transferred three embryos. We watched the clock. I spent a bunch of money on pregnancy tests and…BIG FAT NEGATIVE.

By this time, I was getting used to disappointment. I was starting to think we weren’t meant to have kids, that I wasn’t good enough to have children. I even told my husband that I’d understand if he wanted to leave and find someone who could give him children. And I meant it. It wasn’t fair…

But, we met with our doctor and went over our expectations, what might have gone wrong on our first round of IVF, and a plan for moving forward.

The next month, we tried again. This time, we wound up with three embryos and transferred two. Days later, I started testing (even though I was supposed to wait nine days, or something like that!). I got a POSITIVE!

It worked!!!

I kept getting blood work done and the numbers were skyrocketing. I visited Doctor Google and was convinced we were having twins. Their due date would have been my grandmother’s birthday. We had finally been successful!

We went in for our first ultrasound and the doctor asked what we thought about triplets. One of the two had spilt into identical twins. We both looked at each other and had a temporary freak out!

He then looked for a third heartbeat and there wasn’t one. It was only twins…and we were thrilled!

And then, I saw the look of concern on the doctor’s face as he looked at our chart and sat down and said that it didn’t look good. Yes, there were heartbeats, but they were slower than they should be at this stage. We would have to come back in a week to see if they were viable.

The next week, after searching online for anything to give us hope, our biggest fears were confirmed. The twins had died, but NOW the second embryo had a heartbeat, which was also too weak given the stage. We had to come back again in a week to confirm that the third embryo was no longer viable. Meanwhile I was sitting at home mourning my two babies whose tiny hearts I just heard beating. I was crushed.

We opted to have a D&C in order to get some information and to rule out something bigger that was causing the problems. It was then that we found out our babies, who were due on my grandmother’s birthday, were twin boys. I was so sad. I was certain that with the due date on her birthday there was no way it couldn’t NOT happen! I was wrong again.

Every time we got one step further than before, we still ended up with the same result…no baby.

We ultimately had to speak to a therapist for the sake of our marriage. This infertility deal was consuming me. It was literally eating me alive. I ate, slept, and dreamed about babies. Whenever I’d see someone with a little baby, or got an invite to a birthday party or a shower, I would wind up in tears…angry, jealous, hurt, __________ (fill in the blank with any negative emotion you can think of).

When we started on round three, we opted to have screening done to tell us which embryos were chromosomally normal. It was expensive, but neither of us had it in us to let our hearts be broken again.

This time, we wound up with multiple embryos that made it through to testing and two came back normal. We knew we really wanted two children and the doctor told us that he was pretty confident that out of two, we would get at least one baby. There was no guarantee, however. They both could work. Neither could work. Or one could work. There was something about this cycle…I felt optimistic. I felt confident. But each time before that I felt like things were going in our favor, that we’d managed to get over another hurdle, and then we were met with another, bigger disappointment. So, we stopped getting excited at this point.

We talked long and hard and decided to do another round of IVF so we could have better odds of two children by freezing more good embryos.

I did two more rounds of medication…two more retrievals…two more rounds of testing for chromosome abnormalities and both times, we ended up with no embryos.

I remember standing on my front porch, talking to my doctor on his cell phone on his way home. I was exhausted and had tears in my eyes. I just told him that I didn’t have it in me anymore right now. My body needed a break. It had been a solid year that I’d either been pregnant, having a miscarriage, or taking fertility drugs. I just couldn’t jump into another round. Plus, my body just wasn’t responding.

I know the science says that there’s no link to back-to-back cycles decreasing results, but I needed a break, whether it was physical or mental. It wasn’t working right now.

It was also at this time that my husband and I decided we were going to try to transfer one of the two embryos from our third round. If it didn’t work, I’d pull up my big girl pants and go for a few more rounds of IVF. If it did work, then we were done. We would be thankful for whatever we had. If we had one baby, or two…we would just be happy, and it would be what our family was meant to be.

On December 8, 2014, we transferred our first embryo. We had already picked out her name before we went in.

Four days later, I got a faint positive line on a home pregnancy test. I was happy, but not excited. We’d been down this road previously. We knew that there were a whole lot of steps before we could breath a sigh of relief.

I finally got to the date of the blood test and, yes, I was in fact pregnant.
We’d been here before a couple of times. I knew it didn’t mean anything. Sure, I was a little more confident because we knew that chromosome abnormalities were not going to be the problem, but even so, I couldn’t relax.

I continued to do the blood tests, and numbers kept rising like they should, but they’d done that before too. I knew better than to be enthusiastic. The road ahead was still quite long and winding.

We had our first ultrasound, and everything looked good.

This was the furthest we’d made it, so I was convinced that on our next visit, we’d get some sort of bad news because every time we’d made it one step further, it was the next step that came back to hit us.

Ultrasound after ultrasound, things looked good, but I wasn’t convinced.

When we were released from the Reproductive Endocrinologist to our Ob/Gyn, I was terrified. It was like I was going to be fed to the wolves. I was so scared that something was going to go wrong.

We didn’t even let ourselves buy anything more than a blanket and stuffed animal until week 27, when the survival rate was on the positive side! I was so terrified that we didn’t even paint the nursery or buy her furniture until I was well into my third trimester. I just felt that if I did ANYTHING to show that I was excited or that I believed this was going to actually happen, she’d be ripped away from me. And I didn’t know if I would be able to handle the pain one more time.

This continued until August 31, 2015, when I finally saw my baby girl and held her in my arms. She was my world, and I couldn’t believe that I was finally a mom. I lived for this moment. I ached for this moment, and I finally felt like our prayers had been answered and everything was going to be okay.

We embraced every moment and every milestone as we grew as a family and watched the world through her eyes.
We desperately wanted to give her a baby sister (we knew from the chromosome testing that both normal embryos were female). So, on January 26, 2017, we went in for the transfer of our second embryo. We understood that it might not work but we had this calmness about us, like we just knew that this was going to work and complete our family.

Again, just four days later, I got a positive home pregnancy test and everything sort of went along the same path as our first, except I was so busy chasing my toddler and moving into a new home that I couldn’t obsess over everything. I didn’t have time to think about the negatives. Although in the back of my mind, I couldn’t fully believe that we’d get to the finish line without something going wrong.

But, on October 1, 2017, we welcomed our second miracle baby into the world, and I couldn’t have ever imagined how much my heart would grow. Within minutes, I couldn’t imagine life without both of my girls.
The journey was long. The journey was painful. But the journey was beautiful in that it made me appreciate my family so much more. I don’t take the little moments for granted. I love hard. I hug them often. I hold them as much as they let me.

It wasn’t how I expected to have a family, but life seldom works out exactly as you have pictured in your mind. In this case, it was so much more. Things do happen when and how they are supposed to. And I wouldn’t change a single moment in the process because it got us to where we are now.

It also led me to the Fertility Foundation of Texas, to many of the people you will meet in the chapters that follow, to new friends and opportunities, to the knowledge gained through firsthand experience that enables me to help other couples facing similar struggles.

I am not unique. My story is not “one of a kind.” Infertility is scary. Infertility is lonely. And while the journey may be different for everyone, the goal is the same, and the pain is real when you realize that you need help!

The positive is that in most cases, if you stick with it, infertility can be cured. You can have your family. It may not be in the way you thought when you were 20 years old dreaming of 2.5 kids and a white picket fence, but if you want it bad enough and you stay the course, there is a path to family.

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Happy Fall Y’all!

Happy Fall Y’all!

To say that we love the holidays around here would be an understatement!

Having grown up in New England, September 1st always signals the start of fall. And despite the fact that I’ve lived in hot climates since a month before my 18th birthday when I moved to Miami, I just never got the fall season out of my system!

So, on September 1st, the fall decorations come out in full force!

Pumpkins and leaves and pinecones and more!!!

PHOTOS

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Goodbye Red

When It’s Time to Say Goodbye…

Today is a hard day… In short… today sucks.

Nearly 19 years ago, I had a faithful companion come into my life… She was a tiny little thing, playful as could be and she would be trusted friend for many years to come.

For a four-legged friend, she sure gave me some special memories.

… Like when my friend and I were walking down to downtown Coral Gables and about a quarter mile from my apartment, we heard little bells ringing in the distance only to turn around and see two little kittens following us into town. (We had to turn around, walk them home and start again a few minutes later)

… Or when I’d had a particularly bad break up and cried on the couch for days to be comforted by a snuggly little cat nestled up to my neck.

… Then there was the time she “disappeared” and I thought something had happened to her only to find her on my doorstep a week later with a gash in her side. We got her all fixed up and then she was desperate to show me “what happened” by taking me through a song and dance down the steps, through the bushes and over to building where she had apparently been trapped when they put up vents (apparently this was her cooling off place in the summers in Miami)

… Then, there was the time that she befriended a giant rat and I had to banish her from the house for 24 hours while I recovered from the site!

… She was there when I bought my first home – through the beginning of my real estate career and when the market crashed. She was there every time I started a new business or a new job…

… she first came up to my now husband’s house in West Palm Beach and jumped on the back of the sofa only to fall right off the other side (She’d never had a couch that wasn’t up against the wall, so she was taken quite by surprise)

… And who could forget the 29 hour drive from West Palm Beach to Texas in the front of a 27′ moving truck where she had to have one paw touching Brandon the WHOLE way there, all after a night of no sleep because she’d just been given her rabies shot and was channeling the cat from Pet Semetary! Oh, and if cat’s could use shortcodes, she would have absolutely said WTF as we bounced over the bridges in New Orleans and 2 in the morning!

… Even as she got older, she would race around the house as fast as she could knocking ping pong balls down the wooden staircase one by one and watching them bounce down each step. Once she was done, she’d come get one of us to go down the stairs, pick them up and bring them back to her to do it again.

… Then, when we struggled for years to have kids, she would lie with me as I cried, fearing I would never hold a baby in my arms. And when I finally did get pregnant, she slept on my belly for the whole 9 months, probably in cahoots with Emma, plotting their schemes on me and Brandon.

… She was ever so sweet to both Emma and Ellie and we never had one moment where she was anything but good with them.

They both loved her… through her, at early ages, they learned to love animals, to be gentle and to be kind to them. They learned to pet her “softly” and to “be gentle”. Emma learned how to brush her and feed her (and they both tried to sample cat food a time or two. Admittedly, Emma was pretty quick to learn not to try it again… Ellie, not so much!)

I knew this time was coming for a while, but it doesn’t make it any easier. We decided to keep her with us for an extra week and try one more kind of medication to see if she’d rally at all, but mostly because we needed a little more time to give her some love and attention. We’d been pretty caught up in kids, business, and life that we didn’t pay quite as much attention to her as we’d have liked. Whose kidding? We haven’t even had time alone for ourselves, so in my guilt… I just needed this extra week.

And, like my mother in law said, she would tell us when she was ready to go.

So, here I sit, with a heavy heart, waiting anxiously for someone to come to our home and help her move on peacefully. Part of my struggle was putting her in the car one last time (she HATED car rides) and to take her to a vet office, which terrified her to say goodbye. It didn’t seem fair… It didn’t seem right…

So, instead, we have someone coming to her, at home… where I’ll hold her in my arms one last time and tell her just how much she’s meant to me and our family. Through good times and bad, she’s been my buddy… She’s stayed with me through laughter… She’s loved me through tears when nobody else was there…

Now it’s time to Rest In Peace, sweet Red…

You’ll always hold a place in our hearts…

We love you… and will miss you…

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Friendsgiving

Friendsgiving!

In 2009, Brandon and I moved to Austin.

Since then, we would occasionally host a handful of single friends or were invited to a friend’s home for Thanksgiving dinner, but as the years went on, friends started having families of their own, some people divorced and it just wasn’t the same. So, last year, we decided to host a “Friendsgiving” celebration the Saturday before Thanksgiving.

We planned on cooking the turkey, a couple of appetizers and desserts and having friends bring the sides.

Well! That backfired and nobody paid attention to the directions! Probably because they were used to us always cooking huge spreads for our parties. With a 6 week old and 27 month old, it turned out to be quite a production!

So this year… we changed things up a bit and used Evite to send out the invitations and put a list together of what we needed. For example, 2 desserts, 2 appetizers, potatoes, sweet potatoes, stuffing, etc.

It went MUCH better this time around and most people responded with what they’d be bringing though we still ended up making green beans, stuffing and sweet potatoes!

We also decided it was time to invited families and kiddos. Up until recently, our main circle of friends had been the adults we’d been with for the last decade, so we decided to invite the families we’d gotten to know from Emma’s class, Ellie’s swim friends, and few other playgroup friends..

The plan was to have a mother’s helper be able to take all the kiddos to the playroom, but apparently the teenagers are on to this gig and have “party rates” which start at $15 and then add $2/kid… Well, turns out, we’d have been paying about $40/hour to have someone have a handful of kids in the playroom at any given time. Plus, it wasn’t like Thanksgiving is an adult party or anything… so why shouldn’t the kids be a part of it all, right?

Plus, the more kids, the more eyeballs on them and the more time parents have to mingle if all the kids are playing in rather contained spaces!

So, we decided to get rid of the area rug and the coffee table and replace it with the foam letter mats we had, add in Emma’s art table and the big round plastic IKEA table we keep in the playroom.

The art table was stocked with crayons and placements (insert photo) that the kids could color and write what they’re thankful for on. The plastic table had a variety of puzzles, stacking toys and domino-type blocks for the older kids.

Of course, we have the play kitchen and then all the little kid toys and books in the middle of the room. The kids LOVED the bright colored mat and ran straight there to play with the toys. And all the parents got to keep an eye on their kids!

At dinner time, we had a handful of highchair/booster seats available for parents with small kids and a “kids” picnic table for the ones that could sit on their own. We put a plate of turkey with all the fixins’ in the middle of the table and let the kids pick what they wanted to eat… although most of them had filled up on snacks before dinner!

We put a little “kids” appetizer plate with applsauce pounces, mandarin oranges, granola bars, and apple juice (all in keeping with the fall theme)! And then fruits, veggies, cheese and crackers, the adults were sharing with their tiny companions!

To keep the cocktail part simple, we had a couple bottles of wine, a case of beer and sangria bar complete with holiday flair (apple slices, orange slices and cranberries)… We like having a signature cocktail because you’re not guessing at what kind of wine everyone likes, if they drink wine at all, how much to get, etc. Lots of people bring a bottle or two with them as a hostess gift or a bottle to share with other guests, so it keeps it pretty simple!

For us, it’s the perfect way to kick off the holiday season, share it with people we may not get to spend time with during the holidays because of crazy schedules, and open our home to the people that are important to us through the year.

And an added bonus… I REALLY try hard to wait to put Christmas decorations up the day after Thanksgiving, so if we celebrate early, that should mean I can start decorating for Christmas early, right? 😉

Add some photos from the party!

about-me

Epic Fail

Epic Fail

So, we’ve all had those days, right moms?

Where we have the best of intentions and everything unravels and you go to bed with the biggest heap of mom guilt weighing on you.

Well, today might just be my biggest fail as a mom.

It was easy when there was just Emma… I could focus all of my attention on her and if things weren’t going perfect, I could scoop her up and redirect both of our attention to something else and we’d just move on… Very rarely did a raise my voice or get really angry.

Then, Ellie comes along. She is sweet and joyful and precocious… and VERY mobile starting at the ripe old age of 10 months. She’s the curious little one who wants to get into everything. I mean EVERYTHING!

And then there’s the two of them together. That’s when I turn into the horrible NAG-MONSTER… “Don’t do that” “Stop” “Hey, knock it off” “Don’t push your sister” “You can’t sit on her head” “Stop taking your sisters toys” and on and on I go.

On this particular night, Brandon had gone out with some friends and I was going to feed them dinner, do a little art/sticker project together, read some stories on the couch while I gave Ellie a bottle and she drifted off to sleep at which time I would carry her to bed and have some quality cuddle time with Emma before it was time for bed.

About 2/3 of the way through dinner, all hell broke loose!

Fighting…
Screaming…
Biting…

I finally managed to settle everyone down and made our way to the couch with a nice warm bottle and two sweet little girls. We’d salvaged the night. Phew…

Three minutes into the bottle, Emma turns to me and says “poo poo in my diaper”… UGGHHHH now I’ve got to stop the bottle, change a diaper and hope Ellie settles back in. And throw in a little “WHY can’t you just use the potty? You’re THREE YEARS OLD…”

So we get through the diaper, we go back to the couch, and I even relent by turning on the TV for some Mickey’s Clubhouse… (I really do try NOT to use the television as a parenting tool, but sometimes you gotta do what gotta do, right?)

All is well, Ellie’s eyes are closing and Emma starts screeching as toddlers seem to do at the most inappropriate time.

BAM… no sleep for Ellie now.

And guess what… “I poo poo’ed again”

Now I’m pissed.. I holler and yell and ask WHY we are still not using the potty. Surely, screaming is going to get my point across and she will magically turn around and say “OK mommy, since you said it that way, I’ll start using the potty now. Sorry about that!”

Another diaper, a crying baby, and a “screaming bloody murder”” toddler.

Now I’m cooked. I just want (NEED) the kids to go the heck to sleep so I can have just a few hours of personal, quiet time, alone in my house.

I’m trying to rock and bounce Ellie to sleep and Emma’s in the background whining “Pick me up, mommy. Pick me up”

I ask her to stop talking nicely 20 times in a row. Then I lose my patience. “How can you NOT see I’m TRYING to put your sister to sleep so I can spend time with you”

This goes on and on and I wind up yelling some more and we’re all terribly upset.

I’m upset because they won’t just listen and go to sleep.

Ellie’s upset because, well she’s one and doesn’t understand any of this other than we’re all very tense and people are screaming around her. I hate this for her…

Emma’s upset and crying hysterically because her affectionate, loving, patient mother has lost her mind and has left her to sob by herself (which happens… ummmm… NEVER)

I FINALLY get Ellie to fall asleep after bribing Emma with something that I can’t even recall at this very moment and then come back out in tears because I’ve just made their last hours of the day AWFUL.

I suck…

I’m a horrible mother…

I’m ruining my kids…

I don’t deserve to have these precious souls…

What if something happened to me or, worse, to them in the next 24 hours and this is what I lived with for the rest of my life, or what if this was their last memory of their mother? MAN… What a jerk I’ve been and I need to do some serious repair work and NOT do that again!

Then, I remembered the “magic relationship ratio”…

“For every negative interaction, we need five – or more – positive interactions…”

So, I stopped the pity party and did my best to make it up to Emma before she went to bed… I let her download a puzzle app on my phone and we played together. She tried to use the potty once before bed to make “mommy happy” and we laughed.

We read some books and we sang some songs together. We took selfies and laughed.

We snuggled and I held her close. I apologized for being a jerk (in different words, of course)… And I told her she was the most important person to me and that I loved her.

Sure… I probably needed a whole lot more than FIVE on this particular night, but I did my best to have as many positive interactions until she was fast asleep.

I went and rocked and held Ellie next and told her how much I loved her and how sorry I was if I upset her before bed. Of course, she was sleeping and wouldn’t have understood me either way, but it was the right thing to do.

The next morning, I remembered the rubber band method I’d heard about before and stuck 5 hair ties on my left wrist and made sure that I praised, complimented, and loved on those girls the next day in any way possible. I limited the “NO’s” and made sure there were lots of “yeses” to their requests.

Every now and then, I think an Epic fail as a parent forces us to step back and remember they are precious. Their childhood is fleeting. They are only ours for a little while so we need to make it count.