Wednesday, October 3, 2012

A billion photos because I feel like it...

Or..."Our Summer: the Photographic Cliffnotes In Reverse Order"

Abby's such a good big sister.  She held Weston while he fussed...until he zonked out!

1st day of school, 1st 4th & 6th grades.

The whole brood on a hike with friends.
Abby 11, Alex 9, Lee 6, Cora 3 1/2, Weston 8mos

On the way back, we stopped by White Pass & there was snow!  Cora  showed her intelligence by wearing shoes.

"Folding laundry."  They called themselves Unnawarriors.

Kiddos participated in a kids-only track event, including a relay.

Redneck baby bed.

4th of July at my favorite resort:  my sister's house!

And a very very happy 4th of July to you, too!

Hiked with the older kiddos & my sister's family.
Why yes, I am posing that way to cover my love handles.  Why do you ask?

Wes has a really strong suck and gives lots of kisses.  And it would seem that my beautiful niece gets hickeys easily.

 This is what happens when you put a mortar in a watermelon.  :-)
Hey, guess what?  That stuff's spicy.

The only baby I know who often spits up out his nose.

1st big-boy bath.  Lovin' life!

He sleeps for one Grandma...

...and showers another Grandma with his, um, love.  Sorry, Mom.

For Alex's 9th birthday, we ran a 5k.  16yo niece got 1st place overall for the women, and Alex toasted his Mom & Dad by 10 minutes!!!  He got 2nd for his age group & we couldn't have been prouder.

The weather was uncooperative, so we picnicked in the living room.

Can you guess where we went after lunch?

This is what happens when a newly tie-dyed shirt isn't rinsed out, then a graduating kindergartener gets in a water fight .

For Father's Day, we went for a drive after church.  RIGHT after church.

We found a local hike to take.  It's a good place to get lost.
Not that we'd know from experience.
*cough*

A sideless bridge over running water?  Yikes!

I super love my Ellaroo wrap.

I love how everyone's looking away except Weston.

At the end of the hike, Lee and Cora were the best of buddies.
I love this photo, except for the Awkward Family Photo moment.

He even stopped to tie her shoe for her.  What a good big brother.

One of Wes's newly-found favorite things.

For Abby's birthday, we went to the skating rink.  It was super fun, and I learned that my camera doesn't take clear action shots, no matter the setting.  Boo.

Yes, I do teach my children to sniff cedar.  Don't you?

Because sometimes a chopstick drum on your head concert is what's on the agenda!

Chewy Granola

Hello, Blogland, it is I--Dyann--and I am actually here to actually do something with my blog.  Actually!  (If any of you have heart attacks at this announcement, never fear--Hubby has jumped headlong into the cardiac unit at nursing school.  He'll know what to do!)

I've always been me.  I've got some quirks and I'm a little weird sometimes (Rachel and Aubrey, don't tell how often 'sometimes' is.), but I've always had sort of the same perspectives and opinions about things.  I figure out what works for me and I do it that way.  (That's not rationalizing OCD, is it?)

But over the last year, I've noticed a shift in my paradigm that I wasn't expecting.  It all started with this guy:


Pretty handsome, ain't he?  When we got serious about him resuming his schooling and changing track, we knew that there would be some necessary monetary changes.  So we started figuring out how we could get our overhead as low as possible while still retaining a modicum of responsibility.  For example, paying rent for a modest home instead of picking up some cardboard boxes and calling the park our really, really big backyard.  Responsible.  One of the most far-reaching decisions that I made was to switch to cloth diapers.

Honestly, when my friend told me about 4 years ago that she was cloth diapering (or CDing, as it's abbreviated in the CD universe), my first response was, "Why on earth would you do that?"  I immediately recalled the cloth diapers and plastic saunas pants that my little brother wore.  No thanks.  But after a bit of research and a lot of convincing, I decided that never having to budget for diapers would be a good thing.

So I did it.  And surprisingly, I love it!  Cloth diapers have come a long, long way since our own padded-tushy days; they're easy, simple, varied and super cute!  I mean, people plan outfits around which diaper cover a child is wearing that day.  I don't do the fancy ones, though, as I went with the lowest-overhead option, which is a little more complex.  But I love it because I'm doing it.  At first it was a little tricky because it was all new, but as time went on I got better and better.  I'd get a little giddy when I changed Weston's chubby little bum because I was doing it--I was REALLY doing it!!!  Now I can fold a tea towel into a moderately complex origami fold with one hand while hold the baby with the other AND talk on the phone!  And you've got to admit:  the boy DOES look pretty darn adorable in nothin' but his unders.


But let's face it:  it's poop.  And it's not really blogworthy.

As a result of jumping into the CD world, I've been exposed to a new microcosm of moms who are way, way earthier than I have been.  I mean, I've always been a bit of a recycling nazi, but this is intense.  So between the knowledge gained from the CD group, Dr. Mercola and a touch of facebook thrown in for good measure, I'm doing things (or not doing things, as the case may be) that I never really imagined a year ago that I would be.

Like:
--making my own deodorant out of coconut oil, baking soda and cornstarch.  (Antiperspirants have been strongly linked to breast cancer, especially if they contain aluminum.)
--lying out in the sun and eschewing standard sunscreen.  (Vitamin D is essential and I don't get enough; the chemicals in sunscreen are actually known to cause skin cancer ?!?; I use a different, natural sunscreen if I'll be out for a while.)
--curing my infant's plugged tear duct by dropping breast milk in his eye--via my fingers, thank you.  (It's full of antibodies, so it works great!)
--using coconut oil as diaper rash cream, face/body moisturizer and conditioner. (It also smells yummy.)
--delaying or eliminating immunizations for my children.  (This one is a bit tricky, but lots of the immunizations have such horrific side effects that I'd rather skip it or delay it--like the HPV vaccine causing cervical cancer (and the medical community doesn't explain that you are only exposed to the virus by being promiscuous); an oral polio vaccine in India recently caused a huge number of polio-copycat cases; the MMR is linked to autism and brain swelling. !!!  There are people out there who don't vaccinate their kids at all, instead concentrating on building a good immune system.)

So now I'm ready for this to be my family car, right?
Not quite.  Because I still buy inorganic foods (would do organic if it were cheaper), send my kiddos to public school, gave birth at a hospital and plan to wean Wes before he learns to ride a bike.  And I don't grow all my food, weave baskets and make my own feminine products.  So I'm not the super-crunchy granola type.  But neither am I Wonder Bread.  I'm in the middle.

I'm chewy granola.

And you know what?  I sorta' like it.

(PS--I'd be a terrible mom if I didn't post a picture of my sweet baby girl who's 4 now.  It was her birthday when I started this post.)

Monday, May 21, 2012

6 Monthiversary

I'm such a great mom.  Because the first post I have on my blog about my new baby is for his 6 monthiversary. Actually, I think that makes me a good mom, but a terrible blogger.

Whatever.

6 months ago I went to the hospital to have a baby.  (And rightly so, judging by this picture.  At least my booty looked small!)


I had decided previously that I'd have an epidural not because they're fun and I enjoy the funky sensation in my spine for months afterward, but because I was tired.


Frankly, I really would have preferred to just sleep and let my body do what it knows best.  I mean, quadriplegic women have babies, right?  And how much pushing can they really do?  Why can't I do that?  *pout*  So I was induced in the morning, and I got the epidural when I felt like it, which was before things got really uncomfortable.  (So different from Alex's natural birth.)  Between pushing--which I did because I was supposed to, not because I wanted to--I chatted and joked with the doctor and my husband.  I've never done that.  Usually I'm in the zone and nothing exists unless I can hear you or you're touching me (and I might not want you touching me).  But this time I had an "Okay, let's get this over with" attitude.  So weird.

Anyway, when all was said & done, all those begrudging pushes gave us this:


8lbs of Weston Matthew


The nurses loved his apricot halo of hair, and the charge nurse insisted that she be called back in when he was bathed, because she just had "...to see that hair when it was dry!"  Funny.  From Day 1 Weston's been a really super chill baby.  Even in the hospital he didn't cry much.  I remember lying there feeding or snuggling with my little guy in the middle of the night, feeling so bad for the mother of the screaming baby next door.  I kinda' wanted to go over and offer to hold the baby or swaddle 'em up real tight or something.  Poor baby.  Poor Mom!


So for 6 months our family has reveled in a really chill baby.  I think that either the Lord knew that this time of my life is a bit crazy and a happy, relaxed baby would be a blessing; or that Wes just knows that as #5 he doesn't get all of my attention.  Or both.  While we were living in MIL's basement, Grandpa would boast to his clients that "This baby never cries!  I've never heard him cry, ever!"  So when Little Man got fussy, I'd be sure to hand him to Grandpa.  (It helps that as Grandpa's age increases, his hearing doesn't.)

This kid is a charmer and a flirt.  A little eye contact is usually all it takes for him to break into a great big grin.  It's so big that he often has to turn away or put his chubby fists up to his mouth.  This boy has grown women giggling.

We call him Little Man, but really he isn't.  Well he used to be.


Lookit that teeny tiny little bundle tucked happily in my hospital gown!

And technically he is a small human.  But a couple of weeks ago I stepped onto the scale with both of us, then just me.  I did the calculations in my head, but the number didn't come out right.  So I did it again.  Same numbers, same mental math.  Then I used a dry-erase marker on the bathroom mirror (they wipe right off with a little square of tp, so they're the best for love notes, to-do lists, phone messages--whatever!) to do the math.  Sure enough, Mr. Weston weighed in at a whopping 20.6 lbs...at 5 1/2 months!

We call him Ginormo Boy.

And the funny things is that he's not fat.  I mean, he's a baby and he's got some chunk on his thighs and cottage cheese on his butt and everything, but he's not FAT.  Just solid!  He's very proportionate...for an 8-month old.  I moved him into 6-9mo clothes at 4 1/2 months.  Crazy.  I can't even touch my fingers around his ribcage.  I also call him Bohunk.  And Lug.  But mostly I call him Cutie Guy.


   1 month--looks like both of his big brothers


2 months--puttin' on the chubs
(And who's feeding Abby the Miracle Gro?)

3 months--his first controlled arm motions

4 months--a redhead party!

5 months--NAKED BABY!

6 months--'sharing' his blanket with his big sis


I think I'll keep him.



Thursday, April 26, 2012

How To Eat an Elephant--er, update my blog

We're getting settled.  Yay!!!  We're renting a house that everyone that sees it says is really, really cute.  And it is.  I was ambivalent when we first saw it, but it's really growing on me.  There are some things that I adore, like the LIGHT!!!  There are windows everywhere.  I don't have to turn on a single blasted light during the day.  Even in the basement!  It's so great.

Every day I blog.  In my head.  I miss blogging.  And I'm not exactly sure how or when I'm going to catch up.  But I've had an idea, and I hope it will work.

For years I wasn't able to really keep a schedule.  Sort of, but not really.  And there are so many things that beg to get done every day, that I'm feeling rather overwhelmed.  Unpack boxes.  Hang photos.  Finish the will paperwork.  Clean the kitchen.  Fold the laundry.  Feed the baby.  Pay bills.  Change our address with a handful of entities.  Pull weeds.  Exercise.  Read with Cora.  Plan a menu.  Make dinner.  Sweep.  It's endless, and I feel like if I spend lots of time doing one thing (like cleaning) that other things suffer for it (like hanging pictures, and I'm just waiting for a really nice one to get kicked, then stepped on).  So I've come up with something that hopefully will work:

My Schedule
6:45--alarm
7:00--get up, do 7-minute ab workout, read scriptures, pray
7:30--kids' alarm, breakfast, pack lunches, take them to school
9:00--quick tidy
9:30--computer time (email/blog/facebook/billpay/freecycle/craigslist/diaperswappers/youtube)
10:30--yard/garden time
11:30--shower
12:00--lunch
12:30--read with Cora
1:00--household stuff/errands/laundry/unpacking/menu planning
3:15--pick up kids/snack time
3:30--outside for either gardening OR play/exercise time at the park
4:30--homework/meal prep
6:00--dinner
6:30--clean up
7:00--bedtime routine
7:20--5-minute clean-up
7:30--family scripture study/prayer
8:00--bedtime story/tuck-in
8:30--ME time
10:00--BED

It hasn't worked yet.

So I know it still needs some tweaking.  Everything's okay until after school, when everything falls apart and we're not eating dinner until 7:00, and I never did get any exercise in.  I'll work on it.

Riah told me he's proud of me for making this up.  He said that he's glad that he'll be limiting my facebook computer time.  Not like I was an addict or anything, but we are both aware that sometimes it uses a bit too much of my time.  Like every day.  When I first showed him my schedule, his first question was one to verify that I'm not going to freak out and get frustrated and angry that little things keep messing up my SCHEDULE!!!  Crazy things like, say, feeding a baby or looking at my children when they talk to me.  Phht!  What does he think I am?  OCD?  Of course not!  O.C.D. isn't in alphabetical order.  Duh!```

Anyhow, hopefully this will help me to be able to eat my elephant in teeny tiny bites instead of being overwhelmed at the sheer size of the herd.

Wish me luck!