MOM of 7

….life AMPLIFIED by 7 kids!

My 3 Things! (what are yours?) 01/13/2012

If you know me, you know I hate (HATE) winter.  Short days, little warmth, and sun is rare.

I JUST GET BLUE in the winter.  

Today, I heard some good news, some interesting news, that certainly could help us all cope:

ON A DAILY BASIS LIST THREE THINGS THAT YOU ARE….thankful for, love or make you smile.  

 

 

Have you tried this?

Here are MY 3 things~~~~what are yours?

 

Today I am thankful for (or I smile when I think about)….

1.  When ALL my kids are at home in the evening, I feel much more content.  I feel whole and complete.

2.  I like anticipating (looking forward to) Stephen (aka DADof7) coming home from a trip.  Short or long, just knowing that he’s on a plane, headed for VA Beach, and knowing he’s anxious to get home really makes me happy.

3.  I like it when I can look in the mirror (like today) and honestly tell myself:

TODAY, YOU ARE BEAUTIFUL~~BE CONFIDENT & OWN IT!!!

 

So, tell me~~~WHAT ARE YOUR 3 THINGS?

 

 

 

 

A Letter To My Daughters 05/24/2011

Filed under: Better Life,Kids — Mom Of 7 @ 11:31 am
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(I stumbled upon this today.  It’s worth the read not only for every Mom but a letter I believe every daughter would benefit from.  Well done!)

A Difficult Letter.

by TENA on MARCH 7, 2011

in MOTHERHOOD,PARENTING

To my daughters,

I preach to you the strength of women, and how you can do anything you put your mind to.  I tell you that you are perfect in every way, and to believe in yourself.   I teach you to be respectful, responsible, and independent beings.  All of this is sincere and meant with the best of  intentions.

However, it seems my biggest lesson should be to do as I say and not as I do.  It’s time you know that your mother is a hypocrite.  I have made so many mistakes in raising you, but if I do only one thing right, I can make you understand your worth and give you the confidence that I don’t have.

Learn from my mistakes, my insecurities, my self-doubt.

Trying on outfit after outfit, not being satisfied with the reflection in the mirror, crying about the numbers on the scale- these are things to avoid.  Don’t be so critical and hard on yourself.

Do as I say and not as I do.

Be proud of yourself and your achievements.  You are brilliant and talented.  You work hard and deserve success.

Do as I say and not as I do.

Extra pounds, zits, or bad hair days do not define you.  You are gorgeous inside and out and don’t let anyone make you think otherwise.

Do as I say and not as I do.

See yourself through other people’s eyes.  Accept compliments graciously.  They are telling you what they see, what everyone sees,  the beauty that is there.

 

There’s ALWAYS Drama When Women Pack! (let alone packing for the birth of a baby) 05/17/2011

The HORROR 🙂 of packing your hospital bag—when baby is on the way!

Do you remember what you packed in your hospital bag in preparation for giving birth?

I do!  Well, actually.  I didn’t!  I didn’t get to!

I was pregnant with the twins (Ian and Sarah-who are now 11) and only 34 weeks along.  I was fine—except I was having my 5th gall bladder attack, so once again we headed to Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton, Ohio thinking we would be there only for a few hours but alas my levels were so bad and the attacks had turned into pancreatitis and I wasn’t allowed to leave.

The next morning, my wonderful OB said I was killing my pancreas and I was no longer allowed to eat or drink.  NOTHING.  Not even ice could pass thru my lips.  I was admitted to the hospital, a PICC line IV was inserted for my nutrition and I was told by the end of the week we would test the lungs of the twins and deliver them.

Um, ok.  But I’m not ready.  The car seats aren’t in the car and um, I HAVEN’T PACKED MY BAG YET!!!!  Nor had I planned for 6-week preemies which drastically changed my diaper and FASHION plan for taking the twins home.

I HADN’T PACKED MY BAG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

The very long story, short, is….it didn’t matter.  I wouldn’t leave the hospital for the next two weeks and neither would the twins.  They were delivered via emergency c-section, went to the NICU nursery.  I recovered from 17 hours of hard on labor (with twins!) and a c-section and then had my gall bladder removed 4 days later.  When you look at the pictures of me, from then, woah, I look like ONE SICK PUPPY!  No amount of “packing my bag for the hospital” would have mattered.  I LOOKED LIKE CRAP!

Needless to say, I did a lot of things differently the second time around, when I was pregnant with Carter.  The day I found out I was pregnant, I packed my hospital bag (joking!).

But honestly, I found this story (posted below) earlier today and just laughed my butt off.  This woman tells a pretty funny story of her “hospital bag packing days!”

(Here is another woman’s account of how her hospital bag “transformed” between baby 1 and now, her 3rd.  Enjoy the read…pretty darn funny)

The Third-Time-Around Hospital Bag

May 13, 2011

So. You may be happy to hear that I finally up and packed a damn hospital bag. (You may also be mildly ambivalent, profoundly disinterested, or experiencing nausea and dry mouth. Side effects may vary, please consult your doctor.) Packing the bag, I believe, is the sure-fire way to prevent a repeat of Tuesday’s events, and guarantee that absolutely NOTHING of baby-and-labor-related interest happens until June 1st, when we are scheduled to go in and get ‘im.

The first time I packed a hospital bag I used one of those checklists from the Internet. (Many of which, I’ve noticed, still mention FILM. Like several times. Make sure your camera has FILM. Bring extra FILM. The hospital gift shop will overcharge you for FILM. It’s like a glimpse into childbirth circa 1994!)

Anyway, the checklist I consulted was a very, very looooooong checklist, and I ended up hauling a tremendous amount of useless shit with me. And none of it was organized very well, and since we changed birthing venues multiple times during my labor with Noah (an extended stay in triage due to overcrowding, then a birthing suite, then the OR, then recovery, THEN my non-private, exceedingly small room), we ended up needing a hotel-bellhop-style luggage cart to haul all the various loose things we’d pulled out at various points in time but neglected to re-pack.

By the time we made it to the recovery room, Jason was wheeling around a giant pile of Random Crap, with expensive electronics shoved in tote bags underneath a precariously-perched Boppy while various charger cords dragged on the floor behind him. Once we were in my room I kept finding smashed-up granola bars (“BRING SNACKS FOR YOUR PARTNER”) in my nursing bras and rogue tennis balls (“GREAT FOR COUNTERPRESSURE DURING LABOR“) in my toiletry bag.

And then! VERY MUCH WORST OF ALL, IN FACT THE WORST THING EVER! In an attempt to streamline and declutter my room later, Jason packed up a bunch of the Random Crap and took it home, but accidentally took the bag containing everything I needed for a shower. Shampoo, conditioner, body wash, razor, deodorant, you name it. We didn’t realize it at first, because post-c-section you aren’t allowed to shower for quite some time. Which was awful. I felt disgusting. I LOOKED disgusting. Visitors came to see the baby and I couldn’t stop thinking they were all staring at the oil slick on my head instead.

So when I finally got the all-clear that I was allowed to shower, I practically dove in headfirst. Only to discover that Jason had taken my things and I was limited to the hospital-supplied products, which included a horrible combination shampoo/bodywash, a bar of antiseptic hand soap and…nothing else.

Jason had just arrived for the morning and said he didn’t feel like turning right around and driving allllll the way home, so just to “deal with it” and he’d bring my stuff back the next day.

To this day, you guys, I am still SO SO SO MAD AT HIM ABOUT THAT.

We were determined to Do Better the second time. Having the scheduled c-section meant we didn’t need to worry about the tennis balls and squeezy stress fidgets or labor-coach snacks (plus I’d come to the realization that hey, Jason could PACK HIS OWN FUCKING BAG, IF HE WANTED ONE, WHY DID I CARE IF HE HAD FUCKING TRAIL MIX AND VENDING MACHINE CHANGE OR NOT, JESUS CHRIST). Plus — with the exception of the toiletry bag, which I was determined to keep shackled to my ankle this time — I’d learned that duh, you really don’t need ALLLLL your things with you right from the moment you show up. Stuff can stay in the car! Or at home, even! Your partner will go home at some point, especially since you have an existing child, and stuff!

And lo and behold! THERE ARE ALSO STORES NEARBY. STORES THAT SELL THINGS.

This freedom — this terrible, terrible freedom — to not feel limited to packing One Hospital Bag To Rule Them All, did have its drawbacks. I did, in fact, leave everything in the car except for my purse and a camera bag. This meant we had no bag of our own to put our own clothes in, once I was in a gown and Jason was in scrubs. The hospital gave us plastic drawstring bags…one of which we lost completely between triage and the OR (Jason’s clothes. They turned up HOURS later.) and the other of which contained my clothes but somehow was missing one of my shoes (MIA to this day).

Plus, I hadn’t done a very good job of making sure that if there WAS anything I really, really wanted right away, that it was in my purse, and not in the suitcase in the trunk of our car. Because apparently, “riding down the elevator and walking to the parking lot” was the new “I don’t feel like driving all the way back home so just ‘deal with it'” moment for which I still harbor a great deal of unresolved anger towards my husband. He was too preoccupied with the fact that we’d just had a BABY and look at the BABY and I want to hold the BABY and take pictures of the BABY to understand just how hysterical I was getting because I NEEDED MY HAIRBRUSH AND LIP BALM. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE GO GET ME A HAIRBRUSH AND SOME LIP BALM.

So! Good God. Hospital bag angst. The most first-worldy problem ever. Other than maybe your cleaning service forgetting to dilute the floor cleaner properly before mopping and LOOK AT ALL THESE OILY RESIDUE FOOTPRINTS WTF NOW I HAVE TO MOP GAH GAH BZZZZTTTT NESTING OVERLOAD.

(I mean, not that that last bit applies to me and my spoiled little life, or anything. Was just a figurative example.)

So we have one final chance to Get It Right. I would very much like to Get It Right. Or at least not verbally abuse my husband in a drugged-up hormonal haze over some trivial item that I have suddenly decided is the most important thing in the world go get it gogetit GOGETIT.

Here’s how the bag is shaping up so far. I think it’s at least, a pretty good start, and acceptable should we have another rush-to-the-hospital emergency because OH, I DUNNO, I COULD PEE MYSELF AGAIN, OR MISTAKE GAS FOR CONTRACTIONS, ANY OF THOSE NOT-AT-ALL EMBARRASSING THINGS.

In My Giant Ass Purse, On My Person At All Times:

Cell phone with all possible needed phone numbers, iPod selections, lifeline to Twitter, Google, blawwwwgs, etc.

Flip video camera

Kindle (book selections still TBD)

Fancy outlet splitter with USB chargers for all of the above

Headphones

Lip balm, assorted varieties

Hand cream

Nail file (for me or baby, but probably mostly me because my beautiful pregnancy-enriched nails have a history of breaking into stubby, uneven shards within 30 minutes of giving birth)

Hair brush and small variety of hair clips/bands/restraining devices

Oil-absorbing pressed face powder, because I clearly have Priorities

Laptop. I think. Not definitively sure which bag this will get shoved in, but I solemnly swear to not deprive the Internet of a prompt, timely posting with a baby picture and name information, no matter what.

*shakes fist at sky Scarlett-O’Hara style*

In Small Tote Bag, On Jason’s Person At All Times: 

The “real” camera, the big SLR one

Zoom and 50mm lenses

Extra memory card AKA NOT FILM

Extra battery

Charger

Card reader

Room for those plastic drawstring bags of our clothes, provided everyone dresses seasonally appropriate and does not wear exceptionally clompy shoes.

(Note that Jason has also been informed that IF we are heading to the hospital *in labor* and a VBAC appears to be at all a possibility, it is his responsibility to handle all the Labor Coach supplies — tennis ball, bathing suit, snacks — and also I am not reminding him about bringing his toothbrush or a change of clothes or whatever, YOU GO WITHOUT SHIT YOU WANT AND SEE HOW YOU LIKE IT.)

(Wow. I know! I should probably see a professional about this.)

In Small Suitcase, To Be Either Left In Car Trunk Or Hauled With Us, Depending On How I Feel That Day Oh Who Am I Kidding I Will Probably Tether It To My Ankle:

Bathrobe

Slippers

Nursing sleep bras

Lanolin, package of gel Soothies, small travel scissors for cutting said Soothies in half because those suckers are expensive and like, four times the circumference of my actual nipples, HEY-YOOOO.

Mother’s Milk teabags to kickstart boobs into production

Gorgeous embroidered shawl a friend brought me from India to use as an alternative to frumpy bathrobe and/or impromptu nursing cover in case of visitors. (While EXCEEDINGLY VAIN, I’m not particularly shy about breastfeeding, but still don’t really want to make like, the husbands of my friends and/or Jason’s coworkers or whoever else feel weird, but bringing an full-on classic “nursing cover” to the maternity ward seems kind of excessively fussy.)

Coming-home outfit for baby. Okay, maybe two outfits. I haven’t decided yet. Plus one is a newborn size in case of a 7-pound Ezra Variety of Baby, and one is 0-3 months in case of a 10-pound Noah Variety.

Soothies pacifers, because the ones the hospital offers are crappy and never work to stop the screaming and/or endless self-soothing on Mama’s increasingly battle-scarred boobs.

Toiletries, including dry/powdered shampoo, actual shampoo and conditioner, body soap, razor, deodorant, toothbrush and toothpaste, makeup bag, all packed directly INTO the suitcase’s interior pockets so there will be NO REMOVING ANY OF IT FROM THE ROOM WITHOUT MY KNOWLEDGE.

Outfit for me to wear home, UNLESS I happen to be wearing my black dress from Old Navy when we arrive at the hospital, because then I will just wear that home as well because it’s my best option right now because it fits and it’s black and slimming (SHUT UP) and comfy and every time I’ve tried to wear pants home from the hospital I’ve ended up kind of maybe crying over said pants and how they fit and look so FUCK IT, I’M WEARING A MUUMUU BUT WE’RE ALL CALLING IT A DRESS, OKAY?

Ample extra space for robbing hospital room blind. Boo-fucking-yah, free diapers and disposable mesh panties for everyone!

In Secondary Shopping Bag, Out In The Car, And I Promise To Be Okay If These Items Are Not Within My Possession Within An Hour Of Giving Birth Or Maybe Even Two But Three Is Probably Pushing It OH MY GOD GO GET THE BAG JASON:

Nursing pillow. I gave away my Boppy but that’s fine since I never particularly loved the thing, so this time I bought one by Balboa Baby. I bought it 100% based on the fact that the cover was cute. I know absolutely nothing else about it. It may in fact turn out to be the worst nursing pillow in the history of the world, but dammit, it’s cute. I AM EDUCATED CONSUMER WHO MAKES EDUCATED CHOICES.

Regular pillow.

Two full-sized towels, because the hospital only provides tiny little handtowels, which, COME ON, I need like 17 of those to properly dry off after a shower. (Why yes, I AM obsessed with the postpartum showering process a little bit). Both towels are old and disposable in case of horror-movie-like grossness* but still totally Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy approved.

Big Brother gifts for when Noah and Ezra arrive to completely ignore the new baby while we try in vain to take Incredibly Preshus Life-Affirming Photographs.

DVDs, because the hospital rooms do have DVD players but last time ours was missing the remote and didn’t really have working external buttons that made any sense, so the DVDs we brought mostly just sat there taunting me. Except for Iron Man, which Jason managed to get to play at fucking 11 pm the first night while I was trying to sleep and was the reason I suggested that hey, I know we have a private room this time and all but I think it might still be better if you don’t stay over again. Go be with Noah or something. I also fucking hate Iron Man to this day as well.

(Really, you do NOT want me to develop a grudge against you at any point during the immediate days postpartum. I will take it to my GRAVE.)

*Okay, this might very well launch us into another whole blog entry here, or cause a significant portion of the reading audience to head for the fucking hills**, but OMG. The Grossness. The Bloooooood. I am guessing — like everything — the whole lochia thing varies from person to person, but I am a bleeeeeeder. Some of this probably has to do with having c-sections — you are confined to bed with a catheter for quite some time afterwards, so I guess maybe it all just…pools and stores up more than for someone who is allowed to get up and out of bed right away? Because the first time I get up to use the bathroom and get cleaned up, it really, seriously is like a slasher film set in an abattoir. For this reason, I DO NOT pack my own nightgowns or underwear or maxipads or any of that sort of thing. I am a believer in the hospital-supplied Giant Mesh Disposable Panties and Two-Foot-Long Rectangular Pads. If my (cheap, cheap) bathrobe and slippers survive the stay, I consider that an unexpected bonus. 

**I’M JUST TRYING TO BE SERVICEY HERE! For anyone else packing a hospital bag! I was caught so unprepared the first time! Like this:

Carrie_1

OH MY GOD, COMBINATION SHAMPOO AND BODYWASH?!?! WHAT FRESH HELL IS THIS?!?! THE HORROR, THE HORROR!!

http://www.amalah.com/amalah/2011/05/the-third-time-around-hospital-bag.html

 

04/05/2011

Cosmetic Surgery:  The Answer to BULLYING?!

Just seven years old, Samantha Shaw of Sturgis, S.D. is about to experience something very grown-up: she’s going to have cosmetic surgery.

It’s not because she has a serious facial deformity or a life-threatening medical condition. Samantha is having cosmetic surgery because she gets teased about her protruding ears.

“The kids at school always ask her about her ears, and sometimes adults can be worse,” said Cami Roselles, Samantha’s mother. “One lady walked up to her and said, ‘Oh my God, what happened to your ears?'”

When people ask, Samantha just tells them she was born that way, but Roselles said the questions really bother her daughter.

“She always asks me why people ask questions. She’s very sensitive, so it really does get to her.”

Samantha’s doctor thought her ear deformity would get better as she got older, but Roselles said nothing changed. After doing some research, she looked into a type of cosmetic procedure called otoplasty, more commonly known as “pinning back” the ears.

Samantha, who will have her otoplasty on April 5, isn’t the onlychild to undergo cosmetic surgery because of bullying. Statistics from the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery show that the number of children and teens who get cosmetic surgery increased nearly 30 percent over the past decade. Experts believe an increase in bullying behavior is one reason for the upward trend.

Brian Donoghue, an 11-year-old from Long Island, N.Y., had the surgery last summer.

His mother, Valerie, said kids at school would often ask Brian why his prominent ears looked the way they did.

“He would turn it into a ‘Look what I can do with my ears’ sort of thing and he’d kind of fold up his ears. The kids thought it was funny,” said Donoghue.

But even though Brian was able to use a defense mechanism to fend off the taunts, his mother, who is an assistant principal at a high school on Long Island, said she’s seen the effects of bullying and didn’t want her son to go through that.

Experts say bullying can cause problems like depression in victims, and eventually, bullied children may start to lash out, feel depressed, and have academic difficulties.

“If we had gone much longer, we might have started to see some of those other behaviors,” said Donoghue.

Dr. Frederick Lukash, the plastic surgeon who handled Brian’s case, said he could tell from drawings Brian did that he was tormented by the teasing.

“His drawings showed exaggerated ears while other kids had normal ears. I could tell there were some deep-seated issues,” Lukash said.

Before doing surgery on a child, Lukash said most surgeons will talk to the child during multiple consultations to find out how the child feels, and how he or she interacts with peers. He encourages them to draw pictures. In many cases, like Brian’s, it’s clear children are upset by constant teasing.

As kids get older, teasing can take a turn for the worse and turn into bullying. In the age of social media and the Internet, parents say it’s reached a new level.

“Bullying is very different now with Facebook and sites like that,” said Donoghue. “I didn’t want him to go through that.”

But other experts say doing plastic surgery on a child sends the wrong message.

“Changing appearance is not the solution,” said Cheryl Rode, director of clinical operations at the San Diego Center for Children. “We never want to hold the victim responsible for the bullying.”

Rode said the responsibility must lie with schools and other places where children are as well as with society.

“It is our responsibility on a national level, not the responsibility of parents of victims to make change happen.”

What Lies Ahead for Samantha

Roselles said she decided to go through with the surgery because she’s worried the teasing may turn into more serious bullying.

“Having it done now is probably the best, instead of when she gets older and they make fun of her more.”

Otoplasty isn’t covered by insurance, though it used to be.

“If it’s not causing a functional problem, then it’s not covered,” said Lukash.

Otoplasty can cost between $5,000 and $10,000. That is more than Roselles could afford, so she reached an organization called the Little Baby Face Foundation. Surgeons working with the foundation operate for free on children with facial deformities, and the foundation covers other expenses, like Samantha’s trip to New York City.

Otoplasty is the most common cosmetic operation done on children. In addition to cleft lip or cleft palate surgery, it’s the only cosmetic procedure acceptable for young children.

Dr. Steven Pearlman, a facial plastic and reconstructive surgeon in New York, is scheduled to perform Samantha’s surgery.

“She’s going to have two related procedures. The general one is otoplasty for children whose ears stick out. We set back the ear and make it look more natural and normal,” Pearlman said.

The other procedure will be on her right ear, which is folded over. That condition is called lop ear. Both surgeries have a high success rate.

“The ideal age is about six years old,” said Pearlman. “The ear is 90 percent of adult size, so we can operate successfully and a child is old enough to understand why the operation is important.”

Samantha said she is nervous about having surgery, but excited about her trip to the Big Apple. She’s also excited about doing things many little girls her age get to do.

“She wants to wear her hair like other girls in her class do,” said Roselles, “and she wants to get her ears pierced.”

 

 

 

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/cosmetic-surgery-answer-bullying/story?id=13255540

 

MOM of 7 Dates Her Kids! 03/08/2011

Filed under: Faith,family,Ian,Kids — Mom Of 7 @ 3:34 pm
Tags: , , , , , , ,

MOM of 7 Dates Her Kids!

When I was divorcing my first husband my kids and I came up with this “date” concept.  Simply, we would take turns having one-on-one time with each other.  For three hours or so, generally on a weekend, one child and I would go somewhere (generally they got to pick) and we’d make it fun.

I loved it.  I used it as a time to tell them what was going on (with the divorce) and figure out where they stood with all the change.  The concept stuck and now several years later, we still do this.

Last weekend, my 10 year old, Ian, was driving me nuts.  The first problem is that he is too much like me so we butt heads quite a bit.  I love him dearly, but he’s one intense child, very strong-willed and very type A personality.  Hmmm, wonder where he got all this—I’ll blame it all on my X husband but we all know that’s a lie!  🙂

The entire weekend I felt like I was having to correct him, redirect him, set him straight.  So by the end of the weekend I was convinced HE HATED ME!  Come on, you know how I feel.  We’ve all been there.  As parents you struggle with correcting/over correcting versus not doing a thing and if  you know me I strongly abhor NOT DOING A THING.  I have to do something.   But after several episodes of confrontation with him I’m worn out emotionally.

So imagine my surprise, in the middle of the rough weekend, he asks ME for “boy time/girl time.”  (that’s what he we call it:  Boy time Girl Time or Girl Time)  Of course, I said YES!  Any opportunity to regroup in a positive way with my kids, I’m all about.   So we agreed upon Monday night (last night).

Honestly, I haven’t seen this all American, sports loving boy be this excited in a long time.  He instant messaged me as soon  he got home yesterday.  He couldn’t contain the excitement in his 10-year-old brain.

By 5:30 yesterday we were on the road to Dick’s Sporting Goods.  He was in Heaven.  And I was in Heaven cuz he was spending his allowance money, not my money.  🙂

But what made this night ultra cool was that once again I was reminded how important it is for us to make one-on-one time for each of our kids.  Honestly, I find out the most and greatest information when I take the time to slow down and spend one-on-one time with them.

Yesterday, Ian was in his typical form asking deep question that HE initiated; questions about Heaven and Hell and sex and drugs, alcohol.  He asked questions most 20 year olds wouldn’t ever ask their parents.  He asked questions that he would NEVER ask if I hadn’t taken the time to be alone with him.

One of the last questions he asked was about hearing the voice of God.  How? He wondered.

We finished our thoughts and questions as we pulled into the driveway nearly three hours after we started our “date”.  I put the car in Park and Ian said “thanks!”  I said…”for what?”  He said, “thanks for everything Mom.”

The way he thanked me was so incredibly sincere sounding it truly touched my heart.  I thought to myself, I didn’t spend any money on him (he used his allowance) but I gave him my time, and my thoughts and together we made great conversation.  And for that, he thanked me from his heart.

My friends, NEVER UNDER-ESTIMATE THE POWER OF ONE-ON-ONE TIME WITH YOUR KIDS!

 

Mothers LEAVING Their Kids For Careers. The BIG DEBATE! 03/04/2011

Mothers LEAVING Their Kids For Careers.  The BIG DEBATE!

 

Everyone is talking about THIS woman.  She felt she had “lost” herself after having her children and while working overseas she left her husband and two young children.  She just LEFT!

My head is spinning.  I don’t want to judge her and am trying not to be legalistic or narrow-minded.  But life is so difficult even when parents are together, let alone having to deal with a Mother who on surface level just LEFT her kids.  She says they’re fine.  Four of our children see their Mother every other weekend, at best.  I see how it hurts them; I see the internal conflict/struggle.

What do you think……

Ten years ago, Rahna Reiko Rizzuto–author ofHiroshima in the Morning–planned to spend six months in Japan doing research for her book before returning home to her husband and two young sons.

What she discovered about herself there changed her life forever.

“I realized that I had lost myself a little bit, and I wanted to give myself more priority,” she told TheToday Show‘s Meredith Vieira Thursday morning. So she eventually ended her 20-year marriage, and walked away from her family.

“I didn’t want to be a mother, and that was because I had this idea that motherhood was this all-encompassing thing and I was afraid of being swallowed up by that.” (more…)

 

Always a MOM of 7. NEVER a MOM of 8! :(

I know it sounds crazy.  Totally crazy.  Being a MOM of 8 sounds certifiable CRAZY!  Right?

When I was growing up I thought I would only have one child as an adult.  So I laugh often when I think….God, why did you give me 7?

In my first marriage, I had twins at the age of 28.  About 2.5 years later, I had our third child.  We were done; HIS shop was permanently closed.  Well, fast forward a number of years, and a divorce and now a remarriage and I’ll be honest with you, I struggle GREATLY with the thought that Stephen and I will NEVER have our own children.

Stephen’s shop…closed, yet perhaps reversible.  My shop?  Different story.  A few years ago, just PRIOR (ironic) to meeting Stephen, I had to have a pretty drastic surgery (we essentially had to fry my uterus) that complete prevents me from having any more children.

The desire to have another child is HUGE!  I love being pregnant.  I love the baby stage.  I love, love, love 6 months to about 2 years.  I love the smiles, the laughs, the little innocent personality that develops in front of my own eyes.

I look at friends baby pictures on Facebook and I just LONG for a baby.   I see videos like this one and my heart aches to experience this stage once again!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RP4abiHdQpc&feature=player_embedded

Stephen says we need to look forward to our kids having kids.  Um, I say…no thanks.  Not ready for that!  🙂  I want MY OWN!  LOL.

So, my reality is this….7 is enough.  I LOVE our 7.  I also know the Lord had a different plan and Stephen and I were never meant to have our own children. Our “plates” are full with 7 and the challenges are huge and days are long. But I’ll be honest with you, I think I will always be a little sad that after finding amazing love and a real partner in life with Stephen, that the two of us will never know what it’s like to have a child of our own.

Cuz shoot…..if we had a child of our own, that would be ONE REALLY TALL child!

 

$35 in Girl Scout Cookies: Invasion in MOM of 7’s house! 02/22/2011

It’s Girl Scout Cookie time.  The funny thing is, I could live without them.

The DAD of 7?  Well, he’s another story.

This year, he bought $35 bucks of girl scout cookies.  $35 bucks!!!!!  I just laughed.  Whatever makes him happy, well, makes me happy as well.   But here’s the deal, DAD of 7 (aka Stephen) isn’t home too much lately, so of course when the GS cookies arrive, I am left to pay for them and manage the daily ration of cookies to the 7 kids.

You’d swear the 7 kids NEVER had cookies, or sweets, the way they want to attack these cookies.

Thankfully, child #2 (aka Jen) announced to the tribe that they “best leave those cookies alone until Dad gets home or he will go postal.”  The cookies were immediately taken to the garage fridge (everyone forgets about stuff in this fridge–until it’s too late) for safe keeping.  

Stephen arrived home this past weekend and well, the seal was broken on the THIN MINTS and SOMOA’s.  Each child was given 2—maybe 3 if they asked kindly and asked when there were NO other children lurking.  After Saturday, the cookies went back to the safe—the garage fridge, until Dad returns home again THIS weekend.

I haven’t checked; I’m assuming the cookies are “safe” in the garage fridge and I’m assuming the kids have listened and not touched them.  Pitty the child that doesn’t follow these rules; he/she may be quickly sold on Craigs List if Stephen’s cookies are touched!!!!

But it makes me wonder….WHAT IS UP WITH GIRL SCOUT COOKIES? Why are they so good?  Why are they craved so much?  Is it the simple law of supply and demand (only available once a year) or are they laced with heroine?  (I’m joking of course…….I think)

Help me understand!  I just don’t get the craze, the hype.

What I do know, is I’m left at home, with 7 kids who clearly know the “hiding” spot and I’m expected to guard these cookies with my life!!!!

**

Now, if you need “tips” on how to mindfully eat these cookies…..check out what I found:

Tips for Mindfully Eating Girl Scout Cookies
1) One reason people mindlessly over eat Girl Scout cookies is due to the way they are packaged. The Thin Mints come in a long sheath and the Samoa, for example, are in rows. The natural “pause point” is at the end of the row or the sheath. A “pause point” is the place that you naturally stop and ask yourself if you want more. This way of packaging unconsciously leads people to eat more than they normally would. (Consider how Pop Tarts are packed in a set of two, to subtly imply that you should naturally eat two). Therefore, a helpful hint is to divide these rows of cookies into smaller baggies. That way when you get to the bottom of a bag of two cookies (instead of a row of cookies) you stop and ask yourself, “do I want more?” Creating your own pause points helps you to think mindfully about whether you really want another cookie. We often automatically respond to the subtle cues of packaging rather than our true hunger.

2) If you don’t want to waste the cookies but feel uncomfortable with how many you have on hand, there are recipes that call for using several cookies at once. See the recipes below. Bring one of these desserts to a potluck, or to an office meeting. http://www.girlscoutsww.org/cookies/recipes
http://baking.about.com/od/leftovergscookierecipes/Recipes_for_Leftover_Girl_Scout_Cookies.htm

4) Freeze a box. If you are like most parents, coworkers or grandparents, you buy multiple boxes to help your favorite little one. The good news is that they freeze well.

5) Bring a box to work or other events. They will be gone quickly. If you worry about contributing to other people’s mindless eating, you might also consider dividing up the cookies and putting one or two on a small plate. Wrap them up with pretty paper. This way you are sharing the cookies without leading others to eat them mindlessly.

6) Get the facts. Check out the nutritonal information on your favorite cookie.http://www.abcsmartcookies.com/cookies_nutrition.asp

7) Don’t panic! Remember that Girl Scout Cookies happen once a year. This challenge won’t last forever. If you do like them, eat them mindfully, savor and enjoy. Eating too many of them takes out the joy of these little treats.

 

MOM of 7 Makes Her Kids Choose: Drinking Straws or College? 02/17/2011

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Dear Secret Diary:

Oh the STUPID things I say to my kids when I’ve HAD ENOUGH!

9pm last night….I had HAD ENOUGH!

Yesterday was busy—busy work day, busy evening.  Shoot, I even made dinner.  I tackled a LOT yesterday, including laundry AND PAYING BILLS (big medical bills for one of our daughters), so by 9pm I was DONE.

I was on the second floor…the bulk of the kids on the first floor. ( NOTE TO SELF:  That’s probably not a good thing.)   I can tell a few kids are having a little too much fun downstairs which always has me concerned.  So I walk down the hall and toward the back set of steps which leads you directly to the kitchen.

AND I SAW IT!

IT WAS HUGE!

IT WAS REALLY LONG!

BUT IT WASN’T MOVING!

There, on the kitchen island (and beyond) was what the kids’ claimed as THE LONGEST STRAW EVER!  They thought it was cool.  Me?  Not so much.

Apparently they had found a ziploc bag of about 100 + straws and decided NOW would be the perfect time to make the world’s biggest straw.

By the way I reacted you would have thought they had spilled spaghetti sauce everywhere.  My voice was firm and direct and I said….

“ok raise your hand if you were involved in this!”

The guilty quickly admitted their involvement—they know not to play around with me.

One by one I asked them the same question (and today realize how stupidly insane and ridiculous my line of questioning was).  I asked:

“Guys, this is ridiculous.  You’re wasting straws.  Stop wasting stuff in this house.  Look, you guys need to pick one….do you wanna play and waste straws or DO YOU WANT TO GO TO COLLEGE?”

Yeah…that’s what I asked them.  I asked them to pick straws or college.  Have I lost my brain?  Like straws are even comparable to the COST of college.

Thankfully, they all picked college and cleaned up the mess/longest straw in the world.  I’m sure as soon as I left they all looked at each other and thought….is she on some kind of drugs tonight?

So today, I hang my head in shame (a little) and I’m laughing the whole time thinking….next time, I gotta come up with a better line of questioning!!!!!

STRAWS versus COLLEGE….not the best comparison!

 

Ask MOM of 7 02/03/2011

Filed under: Faith,Friends,House,Kids,Recipes — Mom Of 7 @ 8:58 pm
 
Greetings MOMs,
 
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