Friday, February 28, 2014

sadness in sunshine

I haven't posted about this yet, but I've been meaning to, since it was such a special experience. Totally sad, but very special.

Last summer, I mentioned here on the blog, I did a day camp with the Stake Primary and I met lots of people from around the stake. I did the tag-alongs class and one of the little girls in my class was a sweet thing, and her mom (serving in another part of the camp) would come eat lunch with us every day. 

Several months later, I discovered this mom was pregnant. It was not a big deal, as this happens a lot in Mormon world :-)  It would be her 5th child. She wasn't in my ward, so I didn't see her often.

Tuesday, February 4, some people were making comments on Facebook about certain scheduled things being canceled because of a funeral -- someone had lost a child. When all the information was finally presented, we learned this mother lost her full-term baby during delivery.

The funeral was Saturday, February 8. I am not sure I've ever been in a meeting where literally, every man, woman, and child in attendance was crying. It was SO spiritual and SO sad. Here are some things I remember and some thoughts I had:
  • The first speaker was one of the daughters. She said she was so very sad, but her wise mother told her something that changed how she felt. Mother said, "we will always be a family of seven." It is amazing to remember we are families forever.
  • The father was so calm, collected, and handsome. He said he loves to wrestle with his kids, and he felt that Baby looked down from heaven and saw how rough they were and changed her mind. We all laughed through our tears. What a wonderful father.
  • The mother had been given a journal by a friend (someone who had also lost a child -- reassuring her that she was not alone), and the journal was for writing to the Baby. She read many of her thoughts, and they were so beautiful and insightful. Seeing the grand scheme of things is hard. If we believe we'll see our families again and be sealed forever, which we do, it doesn't necessarily dull the pain of waiting decades for it. 
  • A friend was telling me how hard this struck her. How was she "more worthy" that the other mother to have had four children that lived? We take it for granted that we have these spirits to raise, while this special mother was sent a spirit that didn't need to live in this life to receive exaltation. 
  • Our faith teaches us that we need to come to earth, receive a body, and be "tested" through adversity, given chances to choose good. However, the age of accountability is age 8, and anything happening before that truly doesn't count. All babies or children lost are celestial beings, who have passed the test without actually needing to perform.
  • It's a beautiful thing that the Mother is able to feel that Baby was too good for this world. Baby didn't need to be here. Baby was needed back at home with God. I hope that comforts her, although I know she aches. There was a table at the service, covered in sweet baby girl clothes, some of the photos from the hospital, and some framed messages. One I thought was really touching said, "Dear God, because we are not able to hold this precious little one on our laps and tell her about you, could you please hold her on your lap and tell her about us?" 
  • There is this "old wives' tale" that goes around in the Mormon Church that women who have lost babies will have the opportunity to raise those children from infancy in the next life. Another friend of mine, quite the hard-nosed realist, firmly told me once how ludicrous that was, since our spirits are adult spirits. We were created as adults, we'll be resurrected as adults -- not children. However, someone I attended the funeral with said that the Prophet Joseph Smith has talked exactly about this (since his wife lost many children in pioneer times), and his teachings declare it's true. The spirits will be as children, waiting for the mothers. I need to find his exact teaching to know for sure, but that is a glorious thought. I think I have a personal study goal now, haha.
  • I often think about those moments I want to give up or scream or cry in bed. Parenting little children is hard. They are needy. There are sleepless nights. It can be taxing in every way. But that mother, every ounce of her being wants to be up all night with her newborn, exhausted. Every day her body reminds her of what is lost -- the pains after childbirth, lactation, the weight! She has no baby to show for the nine months of her toil. It makes me feel grateful that the frustration I feel sometimes is still a very real feeling, and I'm blessed to feel it. I'm blessed to have these living children that help me feel.
  • I have heard other stories, from friends or in the news, about those who do genetic testing and when it is confirmed that the baby will not live after birth, choose to terminate the pregnancy. I've always thought that was so sad. An article in the Ensign that I remember reading was about a woman who was told by several doctors that her baby wouldn't live. They all advised termination. She said, "you know what? I'm going to enjoy every moment of these 9 months that I have with my baby. If that is all I get, so be it." She refused to let go. Of course that story is beautiful in and of itself, but the final miracle is that her baby was born completely healthy in every way. It just goes to show that sometimes, pregnancy is the blessing. 
  • Another friend recently has learned she is expecting her 5th child -- another boy. Five boys! Many have asked her if she's disappointed it isn't a baby girl. She says, "truly, no. I am blessed that I can be pregnant. I'm blessed with relatively easy pregnancies. I'm blessed with healthy babies. Who am I to be disappointed? I'm so grateful."
It's been an unusually sunny February. This morning the sun is shining and the forecast is great. I hope that Mother looks out the window today and feels some hope. I know for me, when my life is in crisis, sometimes the sun just makes it worse. I literally have felt like crawling under the covers and hoping I didn't have to wake up. Some trials are just so awful and so hard. 

Perhaps this mother's trial, and her reaction to it, was meant to inspire me. Inspire others. Every single one of us left that meeting positively uplifted and touched. We all left better people, better parents. You better believe I was the most patient mother that day. All I wanted to do was hug my babies and tell them I loved them. Over and over. I have this fear... it's a real, tangible fear. I fear something is going to happen, something big and ugly. I fear car accidents and choking. I fear medical problems and drowning. I FEAR. I know I need to make peace with death, and I haven't done it yet. I know I need to find faith over fear. I know this mother is having the opportunity to do that right now, and in many ways I feel she is better off than I am. For right now, I'm just going to try a little bit harder, love a little bit more, and hopefully find some solace in the sunshine.

Dear God, please bless the family of sweet baby Hazel.  

Saturday, February 22, 2014

for my boy's books

I FINALLY finished a project today. I have A LOT of projects in the works, but this one... ha... I actually made the book sling and gave it to Wesley last Christmas (Christmas 2012), but it has sat around in a drawer until TODAY.



It's a cool airplane/rocket print (to match his awesome airplane room decor) and you can see the inside is a checked brown. Cutting the fabric and making it was EASY. It's, duh, a huge square, with the ends sewn up so there are loops. Like no big deal. The worst part was all the afterthought... getting the double curtain rod hardware, finding dowels that were long enough, buying a stud finder, finding a spot in the room that worked, getting the drill out, more measuring, etc. I'm terrible with the "screw gun." I don't know why Shane didn't volunteer to do it for me but he didn't :-)

There also was some delay because up until recently Wesley has still been mean to his books. He has ripped off covers, broken board books in two, taken out a clump of pages here and there... sigh. But we haven't had a lot of book drama in the last few months, so I thought he was ready! He seemed excited when it was up. Fun surprise for him.

Now I hope he doesn't break the wooden dowels or mess with it too much. I had a heck of a time getting it all screwed and I even missed the stud once and had to try again. Sigh. The dowels are barely long enough.

As icing on the cake, not too long ago I repurposed an already-crafted-but-no-longer-relevant $1 wooden frame from Michael's. I covered it with a fabric scrap and I think it looks awesome! I had considered mod-podging it afterwards but I really like it just the way it is, so I don't want to take that step and risk hating the finished product.


I told Wesley we can pick whatever picture he wants to put in it. For now, he's happy with him as a baby with Dad on the beach.

More on my projects list...
  • Tooth fairy pillow
  • Burp rags for baby shower gifts (got TWELVE yards of fabric cut this week, so we're ready to sew!)
  • Linens for a bread warmer basket
  • Jewelry shelf
  • Family Home Evening chart
  • and more. many more. 

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

happy new year

HAHAHA! This project has been sitting around my house since January 2010! FOUR YEARS, PEOPLE! I finally finished it.


I did it with the Young Women group in Beverly Park Ward years ago. I remember doing the prep work... the frames are cut out from cardboard, then at the activity we took various sheets of tissue paper and could decorate it. The final touch was to add a photo, modge podge the whole thing, and attach the "resolutions" to the back.


The green/white frame has been sitting in my craft stuff for four years. I needed a photo worthy of it. At first I wanted a picture of me and Wesley (remember this was 2010!!), but never had a good one. Now I figured a photo of the two kids being cute is good enough.

I'm going to keep it by my bed and work on the resolutions this year.
 

Thursday, February 6, 2014

seattle seahawks

I'd like to speak my piece about the Seattle Seahawks and then never mention it again. (You can already tell by the tone here how I'm feeling.)

It is super exciting that they won all those games during the season, they won the NFC championship, and then won the Superbowl. Like, super exciting. Seattle has only had one championship in its history of pro sports (an NBA championship in the '70s or something), so this is very cool and big for the city. We watched the NFC championship game and we watched the Superbowl. Of course I was rooting for the city (and curious about the lackluster commercials to boot). I am all about "spreading the love," as in the 49ers (NFC championship opponents) have won gobs of times in the past, as have the Broncos (Superbowl opponents). The Seahawks were the underdogs, who have never won before, and by golly I wanted them to have their minute of fame.


That being said, lalala, I'm so done with this. DONE.
  • First of all, let it be reiterated, that our coach Pete Carroll got in BIG TROUBLE for CHEATING at the University of Southern California. He had folks on his staff who offered rewards/money/whatever to new recruits, and that was against the rules. He got in trouble, USC was fined/sanctioned, and he basically ran to Seattle with his tail between his legs. I mentioned this fact to someone and they got mad at me, "well you can't get in trouble for offering pro players money!" like it was just ludicrous I'd imply he was a cheater in that regard. Another friend admitted that she really hoped he "found Jesus" somewhere between California and Washington. Well, sorry folks, there are lots of ways to cheat. In fact, the Wall Street Journal, in the days leading up to the Superbowl, did a fascinating article on how both the Seahawks and the Broncos cheat at football. Evidently there is something called a pick play, and it's totally against the rules, but plenty of teams do it -- Seattle and Denver included. Refs are evaluated/judged worse for making "bad calls" then they are for making no call at all, so lots of refs just ignore the pick plays. It just confirms that the concerns of my household are validated. I don't trust Pete Carroll farther than I can throw him. If there's a way to cheat, he will find it. I am taking this Seahawks win with a grain of salt, and it will always be tainted for me.
  • All the fair-weather fans are making me CRAZY. They're selling bows for baby girls made with bottle caps for $20. A shirt they've had in their closet for years for $15. Someone knitted a hat in Seahawks colors and it was going for $50. I mean, really? Just wait until all this is over and buy something on clearance, sheesh. Do you think they're not going to win if you don't wear their color? I'm over it. I do not own any Seahawks gear but I'll hold onto my Mariners jersey until it's worth millions. Football is fine and sometimes interesting, but it's NOT MY LIFE.
  • The icing on the cake was yesterday. They had a huge victory parade in downtown Seattle. It would have been cool if I was still a working stiff, because I could have gone to work at 7 AM then had a good view from 32 floors up. The parade route went right past my old office (and plenty of my co-workers were talking about it yesterday on Facebook). Lots of people -- 500,000 to 700,000 people! -- went to this parade. And if you want to be crazy and do that on one of the coldest days of the year (22 degrees when Laurel went to bed last night... only in the 30s during the day), then fine. Here is what I am NOT OK WITH:  Five private high schools in Seattle canceling school so everyone could go to the parade. Edmonds Elementary School (not our school) telling parents that children missing school to attend the parade would be an excused absence. A little girl who rode the bus with my son getting home, finding her house locked because her whole family was "at the parade" and now stuck outside in the cold. Not enough transit to get all these people to/from. PEOPLE. IT IS JUST A PARADE. The fact the schools and school districts are supporting kids MISSING SCHOOL to go cheer for a team that already won their game is just LUDICROUS. I can't even explain how disappointed and mad and disgusted I am. It's a football game. These people didn't cure cancer, fight overseas, find Jesus. Ugh. Lots of my Facebook friends pulled their kids out of school and went to the parade as a family. I just can't even fathom it. What are we saying about our priorities here? A football game is more important than school? I'm totally upset. 
OK, I'm done. I want this over with already. I really don't care anymore and Seattle has literally gone crazy.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

eek! i'm here, promise!

Wow no posts in January? I'm a loser.

This sums it up...

  • Spent New Year's at my friend's "cabin" on the lake with the kids, there were fireworks and popcorn and hot tubbing and it was awesome.
  • Been trying to work out/lose weight/eat right but the dang arm is making it hard.
  • Having a hard time with arm surgery recovery. Very discouraged. Lots of crying, stretching, hoping, waiting.
  • Went to an essential oils party and am gonna try it. Feel like a total hippie.
  • Got really sick and barfed A LOT. Laurel had it first. It hit me harder. Shane and Wesley escaped unscathed. I lost 2 pounds and I kept nothing down for 24 hours. AWFUL.
  • Finished a good book and realized I'm on track to probably read at least one book a month for awhile. Decided to write them down on a calendar as I finish them.
  • Have enjoyed Downtown Abbey (love!), the Bachelor (double love!), and the Biggest Loser (triple love!). TV has been good to me recently.
  • Did some family history once, when I downloaded some pictures a distant relative had posted on Facebook of some of our ancestors. Felt very cool. Want to do more.
  • Actually wrote some Wesley memories in my Wesley journal. I am resolving to do that more. (And the Laurel journal). 
  • Made a list of sewing projects and accomplished one or two. I made a remote-control holder with some extra fabric that hangs off the dresser, the TV sits on top of it so it stays put. All the remotes in my room are in it. Very cool! Maybe pictures would be nice.
  • Helped in Wesley's classroom once. Fun to watch him at kindergarten.
That's all for now. I'm staying busy but feeling good. Just gotta get this arm all better.