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celebrate.

4 Feb

My oldest son turns 15 today.

Fifteen.

Five long years ago I met him, at the booth in Burger King, a few hours from my home, and he changed my life.

I remember the ten year old boy, chubby, touting his newly discovered love for Harry Potter, able to list the names of all the fighters in the WWF.

Things change. He has grown many inches and I doubt he could remember the names of wrestlers he came home with the action figures for. But HP still reigns supreme. I can relate on that account.

Now I only vaguely know the things that interest him now. The letters he sends home include mentions of soccer games he plays, school subjects that are hard, and that he misses us. That is good to hear.

Phoenix has been gone so long. I miss him too, especially on days like this. When we went down the journey of adoption the dream was never to have our son celebrate these special days with strangers. It was to give him a home where the memories could be made with the people who promised to love him forever.

I never imagined, five years ago, that that was going to be a lot to ask.

I wish my son all the love in the world today. And when I call him this afternoon, I know my voice will crack, just like my heart has a million times over these past years, because that is what happens when you want so much for someone who can’t quite see it yet for themselves.

Happy Birthday Phoenix.

life & things like that.

15 Oct

So this past week-ish has been busy & fun & full. Lots of lovely faces & conversation & remembering the stuff that matters most.

{rehearsal dinner dessert, peach pie, for Andre & Goretti}

My brother got married. It was one of the most beautiful wedding ceremonies I have attended. Besides the very teary-eyed-hand-written-vows, there was also a special Chinese Tea Ceremony in which the elders in the family poured love & blessings upon the couple.

{Cute kiddos Isabela and Moses, and cousins, all dressed up. }

And the reception? Um. They nailed it!

{Goretti was a gorgeous bride and I am so happy to have a new Sister-In-Law!}

After the full weekend it seemed like everyday of the week was busy. Canning apple pie filling with a friend,

{after 3 years, we have perfected the recipe!}

Days  were spent visiting at a friends home, spending the day with my Aunt Nettie, morning coffee dates with people I haven’t seen in far too long.

Grandma and Grandpa had the kids for the night, where pumpkins were found and cider was pressed.

And while the kids were away, Jeremy and I spent the day taking a long walk, eating our Friday date-night pizza AT THE RESTAURANT! (we order it to go every weekend!)

We saw a movie and found some yummy drinks and late-night eats and then realized the walk home was too rainy and too windy and so we found a cab and came home in style:)

Before my writing group I had a free hour. Lucky me.

And now the week has started all over again. It just keeps on going. One boy is home sick and one boy is crying over oatmeal and I have more apples simmering on the stove top.

I have absolutely nothing I have to do this week.

That feels good. I am going to slowly work on the apple down-pour my mom gifted me with. I want to focus on some edits for the book I am working on. I am hoping to start putting together a 2×4 canvas painting. I want to read a few books that have been lingering on my side table. I want to make cinnamon rolls and a pot roast. I want to make nachos and watch the X-Factor with my kiddos. I want to remember that I am lucky &  that my life can be as amazing as I want to make it.

Yours can be too.

clean rooms.

4 Sep

This morning I decided we  MUST. CLEAN. BEDROOMS. BEFORE. SCHOOL. STARTS. TOMORROW. My kids were thrilled. Or something like that. But we worked together for 2 hours and several garbage bags later and we had 4 sparkling(ish) rooms. That is the way I like to start off a new school year. A fresh slate, or at least swept floors.

I decided since the rooms were clean I should show you some of the projects I have worked on this past Spring. At some point I rearranged all the rooms (again) and now they are situated AND NOT CHANGING for long time. At least thats what I said. My friends have told me they think in a year everything will be swapped again. Only time will tell:) So would you like to see?

WARNING: LOTS OF PICTURES—

Starting with Lincoln and Atticus room:

For the boys I painted it yellow (it was pink). And added little flags. I painted a bed for Lincoln I purchased at the Goodwill, and personalized it. Clean. Fresh. In the closet I have another 9 cube shelf that hold’s Lincoln’s clothes. The one in the room is for Atticus. As you can tell we are pretty minimal when it comes to toys. There is the kitchen and then one shelf opposite it that has all the boy toys. Less is more when it comes to kid toys!

Then there is Maisey’s room.

 

All the photos are getting wonky! Sorry! This room was already green, so I added pink stripes, Jeremy put in the chandelier, and I painted the inside of the closet pink. I found this awesome storage cubby thingy at the Goodwill and I painted the trim pink (it was already white) added hooks, and now we have the best dress-up clothes storage ever! There is so many built-in drawers in this room that it is perfect for all her clothes! She has 2 baskets under her bed that hold her American Doll and Bitty Twin clothes. Like I said before with toys, less=more!

 

Upstairs we have the coved ceiling attic bedrooms. First is Moses. I have given a peek in here before, but here we are again:

I mapped Moses’ room with old atlases and maps using wall paper paste. It was super easy. The built-in drawers house his clothes and Lego’s. And the shelves hold his books. His room is super small, but it is great for an 8-year-old boy!

Then there is the book nook. This is a closet that I designated as a reading space. Lincoln likes to use this for a quiet time when Atticus is napping in the boy’s room. It is also just a great place for a time out from the busy-ness of life. Sorry about these photos, it is very hard to photograph a closet!

I took an IKEA mattress and folded it so it is a cozy spot. I have tried sheets on it, but the kids move to much and they always slip off. Same with blankets. Now kids choose to bring their own snuggly things in this space when they use it.

A Harry Potter quote, and my old book collection.

The baskets on the bigger shelf hold board books and BOB books. This is another area I have worked on paring down. There were so many ripped, torn and ruined books I finally tossed them. Clutter=Chaos. No thank you:)

 

Last but not least is Isabela’s rom. She wanted a tree, a bird and blue sky. I did my best:

Her room is much bigger than Moses and we arranged it so she wont outgrow it for a long time (hopefully!). The built in’s here hold clothes and some of her craft supplies. The shelves hold her books and shoes.

My girl friend had the great idea to screw hooks onto her wall to hang her clothes (since there is no closet). In the future if she needs more closet space we can disassemble the book nook and use the hooks for scarves, jewelry or bags. It is a fun way to hang clothes though!

She has an awesome desk that she hopes to use as a sewing desk (once she learns to sew!) For now it is a great quiet craft/work space.

 

So there you go! Rooms are finally DONE and *clean*. Everyone is happily playing in their rooms right now since they are clean and I will take advantage of the quiet myself. Happy afternoon, and happy new school year, as well!

be brave.

15 Aug

Being known is a beautiful thing.

It allows tears to fall in all the right places and pain can be flanked by arms that have held you before.

It is scary at first, the being known bit, but once you let yourself fall into the beauty of it, it is the safest thing around.

And you know those people, the ones you don’t get to see nearly often enough- and although it may be minutes from your home to theirs, our lives are on different tracks for a season or two? One person walking east and the other west and even though it may seem like a long time coming, we hold out hope, knowing eventually our paths will cross.

Ours did this weekend.

{Kristy and Me}

She gave me a belated birthday gift, but I sorta think the timing was perfect. Because I unwrapped the package and quiet tears formed in my eyes.

I felt known.

{Be Brave.}

A daily reminder now wound around my neck and her hands stamped the words and my heart feels more full.

And that isn’t scary. That is the beautiful part I was talking about.

 

the ocean.

30 Jul

12 days away with your man and your kids does something good for your soul.

It fills you up and reminds you of the good.

The very. very. good. stuff goin’ on all around me.

Somehow the weather was perfect. The entire time. And if you know the Oregon Coast you know that is a tricky thing to serve up. But it held.

The blue skies held us and the soft sand held us and the smiles we shared held us

up.

So high.

And we flew the kites that had been tucked away for a long time. Tucked away in our hearts. Because sometimes you need a little time with the people most dear to feel Brave enough to fly them high.

And I did.

jamaica mon.

21 Jul

There were views like this:

 

And birds like this:

 

 

And beds like this:

 

 

And friends like this:

 

 

And this:

 

 

And this:

And smiles like this:We had a blast. It was 8 days in paradise with my baby daddy and 3 other couples who I adore. Vacationing with friends is fun, it turns out.

And it isn’t just because we are all fans of the Bacholerette  (who happened to clear out an entire game room at the resort to watch Monday nights episode together). No not us. That would be lame. Or would it?

Because it also means we were eight people who could laugh at ourselves, who could make a joke out of most anything and who could sing karaoke at the top of our lungs.

The pictures here  don’t capture everything (most our on my desktop at home, I am in Lincoln City , OR right now with the family). But no picture really could. Because most of the best moments never make it to a camera. Most live in our hearts.

My heart is full.

xoxo

 

beach trip 5 years later.

6 Jun

I went to the beach today with my kids. There was a field trip going on and I couldn’t bear that one would have to be in school while the rest of us traipsed around in the rain and wet looking for baby crabs and broken shells and little  pieces of ourselves in the sea shore, so we all went. I was very proud of myself for digging up enough rain boots for everyone.

I went to the exact same beach with Isabela, same time of year, five years ago. Five years. How is that possible that five years ago I was at this beach with this girl? Life can be crazy slow and it can be crazy fast. Basically it is just crazy. I was able to dig up the post I wrote so many moons ago {on my old blog, St. Udio} when I went on this field trip with her:

i was a chaperone on isa’s 1st grade field trip yesterday. i feel like such a grown up mom. and i guess i am, i have children who are in school and all that comes with that. parent teacher conferences, homework, end of the year carnival and, of course, field trips.

 i accompanied the class with five other volunteer moms. we went to see a production of ‘James and the Giant Peach’ and have a picnic lunch at a nearby park. it was a nice day out for isa, she loved being in a real theater and was amazed at the end when the character James revealed ‘he’ was actually a ‘she’ actress. oh the thrill!

 i had a good time, being with isa, but i was honestly a little anxious about going. i have seen her interact with other children besides her siblings only a handful of times. and those times she is still with her siblings and her parents. in this scenario i was getting a glimpse as to how other people viewed her, how she got along with her classmates, ect. and i was most dreading the question, ‘so you guys just moved here, right? where are you from?’ (since she has only been attending school here a few months). it isn’t that i want to avoid the truth, but i also didn’t want to get into an awkward conversation with isa in ear shot. she doesn’t need that. me telling her story, her history to complete strangers. so what is appropriate? when one parent asked i quickly and to the point told the truth. that my husband and i actually have lived in the area for awhile and that we just recently brought home the three kids as their adoptive family.

 the thing is, when you tell someone that sentence, it never satisfies their curiosity. i was able to sufficiently answer her questions after a few minutes and refocus the conversation on her and her children. thankfully isa was happy running up and down the shore, so she didn’t hear the exchange. it wasn’t that i was over sharing, but to her, as a fragile 7 year old, i know she just wants to be normal. she doesn’t want the label of ‘foster kid’ anymore. she jut wants to be ‘kid’. it was easy to see as she only called me ‘mommy’ at school, whereas at home i am usually ‘anya’.

 and more so, i didn’t want to tell this woman the kids’ story, and then have her repeat it to her child, or an older sibling. simply because kids are mean. that was glaringly evident as i watched the interaction between the 4 girls i was in charge of. growing up is hard enough without any extra stigmas attached to you. and believe me i have learned about stigmas in ways i never thought of since bringing home the children. a fellow foster-adoptive blogger wrote about those all to real feelings here.

 oh, my heart is so heavy for isa. i want her to be happy, to do well in school, have friends. i wish all the awful parts of her story could be erased. that on bus rides kids didn’t point out to her that my last name is different then hers. that we don’t look alike. making all her insecurities resurface. but i know as a mom i cannot create an entirely new life for her. i can shower her with love and affection. i can praise her and rejoice with her. i can affirm her and guide her- but I can’t save her.

 i am on such a steep learning curve, and some days i feel like i am making such tiny steps. but yesterday, i felt like i made a few big strides on that hill. i was able to join my daughter on a field trip- a first for both of us. i was able to hold her hand through out the play and wink at one another with inside secrets. i was just her mom and she was just my kid. and that is good.

I read that post and remember the day so well. I was such a baby then, 26 years old, and wanting so much to be…be what she needed. I didn’t know what I was doing. The difference is I thought I knew a whole lot more then I know I don’t know now. Growing up does that.

And Isabela is growing up. She now goes by Bela over Isa, she calls me mom- because I am her mom. I am her safe guard and her protector, and now more then ever I am figuring out what that means. And those insecurities we both felt four years ago? They are still there. To pretend they aren’t would be dismissing their authenticity. Our love was borne from loss. Our family tree was knit in pain. That is real, that is okay.

Isabela and I are still experiencing growing pains, don’t all real relationships though? We are still finding roots that were planted in hurt and grafting in trust, grafting in security. We are trying our best to water those parts, the lovely parts. And doing our best to hold with fragile hands the messier parts. We are doing our best to make our tree  lovely messy.

It is hard work this growing thing. Especially when you are growing people and strong hearts and steady hands to hold.

But it is beautiful.

And my Isabela? She is beautiful in so many ways.

this weekend.

21 May

{self portrait. backside.}

This weekend my aunt and my dad came over for breakfast and we sat at the table, the kids being silly and ridiculous, trying to one up each other on stories of glory and we were drinking coffee and eating scones with home made jam and it was good.

This weekend Jer and I had a stay at home date night that involved tucking kids into bed much to early, but still plenty worth it and pizza and salad and wine and laughter and love.

This weekend I wandered my very  favorite store for much to long and bought one very cute dress and felt like I was indulging because it was $7.99 but oh-so-perfect.

This weekend I wrote words on a page and shared the words aloud on a stool in my living room to ears who asked to hear verses and I felt validated.

This weekend I called my dear friend and talked and caught up and made plans and laughed about latin lovers and smiled.

This weekend I yelled and cried and felt like things were in despair and then I remembered to breathe and I was okay after a bit.

This weekend I didn’t feel like making breakfast when my husband was gone for the day so we went grocery shopping early enough to buy donuts and the kids ate as mom shopped and it was perfect because it kept them quiet and happy.

This weekend I went to the store to buy yogurt and left with chocolate covered raisins and chocolate covered pretzels and m&m’s and dark chocolate and then I brought them to my writing group and shared my loot.

This weekend I felt good in my own skin and my own heart and remembered to be gentle with myself.

xoxo.

 

where i get all sentimental.

10 May

The kids school had a ‘Muffins for Mom’ hour yesterday, in honor of Mother’s Day. Upon arriving at Moses’ classroom he gave me gift, one that would make any mom-heart melt. He had finished sentences about *me* and then compiled them in a book with drawings. I thought I would share some of my favorite ones here, for the sake of preserving a moment.

*My mom is happy when I give her a kiss and a hug.

*My mom is funny when she tricks me.

*When we are together my mom and I like to talk to each other.

*I really love it when my mom gives me a new book to read.

*My mom always tells me to use my words.

*The best thing she does is let me read.

*It makes her happy when I use my words.

*The best thing she cooks is lentil soup.

*My moms favorite household chore is cooking. 

*If she could go on a trip she would go to Italy.

One day, sweet goose, we will go to Italy together, and it will be *magic*.

 

late night gratitudes.

30 Apr

It is 10:45 and I just ate a handful of Cheeto’s and a glass of boxed wine. I suppose confessions are best made when the sky is dark and the house is quiet.

I wanted to come to this little place and list my gratitudes at this moment, on this day.

To record where my heart is at this time in history.

Today I am grateful for:

::a friend who made me a {delicious} latte this afternoon, willing to chat about the everyday parts of our lives.

::a daughter who choose to be Brave this weekend, even though it is so, so hard.

::a dedicated group of writers who push me every. single. day. to put the story of my heart on paper.

::a husband who drinks coffee and plays board games with me on Sunday mornings.

::a son who lets me sing him to sleep, lets me kiss his tears, who is willing to share his hurt with me.

::a phone call with my oldest friend, laughing out loud despite the hundreds of miles that separate us, feeling like I was sitting on her couch.

::deals at the Good Will in the form of bicycles and sweat pants.

::cheetos. and wine.

Sweet Dreams, my friends.

May you always find gratitude in this great big beautiful life.

 

 

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