Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Nose Full of Spaghetti Makes the Momma Freak Out

First of all, just know that Matt is away for a work trip, so I am basically a single mom this week.  That always makes everything harder.  I need someone else who is an adult around some of the time to bounce things off of.  It keeps me sane.  OK, it keeps me closer to being a sane woman- we all know I am crazy, but it makes me enduring, right? Now I have help and plenty of support, do not get it twisted.  Billie has been chauffeured around by her sweet grandparents all week so I do not have to get the baby out in the cold.  Side note- since she is technically the baby,  I can always call her that even though she will be three in April, correct?

Getting back to our evening, we had left over spaghetti for dinner with salad.  Super easy since it was left over, and my kids eat the heck out of whole wheat spaghetti.  So we were all happily eating and just enjoying ourselves and Harper says "OUCH! Mamma, get the sketti out my nose, it hurts!" Seriously? So I jump up and look up her nose.  Yep, she has spaghetti up her nose! I am not even kidding! I pinch the other nostril and say "Blow" but she so does not comprehend what that is.  At all.  So then I run to get the nasal aspirator.  I never saw the spaghetti again.

So at first I am like it's gone.  She either swallowed it, or I did get it out the other way and it's fine.  But then doubt creeps in and I start thinking she could get sick, it could fester and grow some crazy bacteria on it and she could lose her nose.  OR she could lay down in her crib to go to sleep and that thing slip back in her throat and choke her in her sleep! I'm telling you, I need more adult interaction.  I do what I always do when I have a doctor-ish question about Harper.  I text one of our NICU nurses.  Not even kidding, her response was "I honestly don't know what to say!" OMG! What? You are my source for all things Harper, if you don't know what to say we may really be in trouble here.

Now I do know I have an AMAZING ability to make mountains out of mole hills, but if my NICU nurse is alarmed,  I should be freaking out already! Her next text says "I would probably call Greg and Abby." (My WONDERFUL pediatricians) My heart starts beating faster and I am sure I am flushed and sweating.  I am all "Really? That's not a stupid call?" She says "No, not at all.  I would call if it were me."

Bless my pediatricians.  They must really love my kids, because they always act happy to hear from me, always take me seriously, and always give me great advice.  He basically told me to take a chill pill, but in a really sweet, really funny way that had us both laughing.  And he calmed me down and gave me some tips to watch for and try later, too. They have totally talked me off a ledge on several occasions and I could not get through motherhood with out them.  I am so blessed they haven't kicked me out for being so high maintenance, long winded, and melodramatic.

We gave Harper a long, hot bath tonight and let her stay up a little late just to keep a watch on her and help me feel confident the spaghetti was no longer in her nose.  You can bet if she coughs or breaths deep tonight, I will be rushing to her bedside.

The real sweet/funny thing tonight happened when I was rocking Harper to sleep.  We always read a book, drink a bottle of milk (no judging, I know I have to break the bottle habit. Easier said than done,) sing songs, and say prayers.  It's a ritual.  We do it every night.  It helps make the screaming and crying shorter if we keep this routine.  This is Harper's prayer tonight:
"Dear God, Thank you for sketti. Thank you for Harper's bath. Thank you for rocking in da rocking chair. Thank you for Harper's baba. AAAAAAAAMEEEEEN! Let me take a bow. Thank you, thank you so much!"  So sweet and so FUNNY! I am telling you, that baby is so funny! Her vocabulary and speech skills are miraculous, to say the least, and I swear she has a sense of humor.  This was honestly her prayer, in her own words, verbatim.  And then she sang every single word to "Jesus Loves Me" at the top of her lungs.  I can't even tell you how blessed I feel as I lay her down in her crib tonight.  As hard as today might have been, it was so worth it to get to that prayer and song tonight. 

And then...I came out of her room and my precious thirteen year old said she heard Harper singing and thought it was so cute! I told her the prayer that was said and Billie and I laughed and laughed.  God is so good to me.  I am so blessed. I have so many wonderful people in my life that put up with me and my family's shenanigans. 

If you are awaiting an email from me tonight, and several of you are waiting for various info from me, you will get it tomorrow.  This momma is done for the night and must go to bed.  But I will get to you, and I have not forgotten.  Promise.  

Friday, January 17, 2014

Thirteen

Billie will be thirteen years old on Monday.  I will officially be the mom of a teenager! How the heck did that happen so quickly?! I know everyone says it, but they truly do grow up in the blink of an eye. I am trying to savor every last second of her childhood. I am so blessed by this kid! We have some celebrations planned (and some BIG SURPRISES for her-I'll update when I can share the secret), but I thought everyone would enjoy a snap shot into her 13 years.  She is the best kid a mom could ever ask for.  I really hit the jack pot when it comes to daughters! Enjoy!
7 lbs 11 oz-Born on Inauguration Day 2001 (We watched George W. inaugurated as I labored, and it snowed, too.)

She had such chubby cheeks! She was a great baby; very easy, and a sleeper-oh how that baby slept!

Did I mention how much hair she had? She has more hair here at 5 months than Harper has now at almost 3!
3.5 years old. 

5 Years old-Beach trip to Outer Banks, NC

Look how proud she is!
First Day of Kindergarten.  She looks happy here, but when I dropped her off she screamed and had to be peeled off of me by Mrs. Bounds.  Mrs. Bounds called me about an hour later to let me know she was doing fine and had settled down not long after I left.  I am totally getting all verklempt thinking about that morning, one of my hardest as a mom.

Proud Big Sister. I would not have planned them 10 years apart, but God had a great plan.  Those two have the most precious sibling relationship.  I feel in my heart God gave Harper as a gift not only to grieving parents, but to grieving Billie, too.  She has gone through so much loss in her 13 years and it has given her such compassion and gratefulness. She would have been a great sister anyway, but I know losing her brothers made an impact on the kind of sister she is today.

My beautiful ballerina.  She loves to dance. She loves to sing. She loves music, books, and movies.

So Grown up! Funny fact: Billie had blue eyes until she was almost 5, when they changed from blue to green. I love her green eyes, they are beautiful and I can always tell if she is sick because they turn gray.  I have no idea where she got them from, because my eyes are brown and Michael's were blue! It bothered me when they changed at first,  I felt sad that her daddy didn't get to see them change, but I think he knows.



Look at those eyelashes! Sarah Mcaffry took this in the spring

Her ballet recital will be Peter Pan this spring.  She was so excited when her costume came in this week, she danced around the house in it most of the evening saying "Aye Matey."

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Happy New Year

Happy New Year! May 2014 be the happiest, healthiest year for all of us! Just a quick update to bring you up to speed.  I am finally healed - mostly! I do not think my leg will ever be the same, but I am now released from PT and working out hoping to build my quad and strength back and I walk with a slight limp, especially after I have been sitting for a while. 
I had a female related surgery in November to remove endometriosis that was causing me lots of pain, although we didn't know that was what it was until they got in there.  I had lots all around my bowels and bladder that were really making me feel lousy.  He also pinned my ovaries back up where they are supposed to go, and removed a large part of my right ovary along with my tubes.  Funny thing, I was told when I had Harper and my hysterectomy that they took my tubes, but they were still in there and they had cysts in them that may have been causing some of the pain, but maybe not.  The doctor explained to us that because there was so much blood when I had Harper (my uterus had ruptured and I had been bleeding for 14 hours by the time they took me into surgery) and it was an emergency situation, that it is very hard to see everything and be sure of what you are getting.  That seems crazy to me, but since he was also there for Harper's birth, I am tempted to just believe him.
Two weeks after my surgery, Matt went in to have his ACL repaired, again.  They also removed a large bone growth from the front of his knee.  He is still in PT and on crutches, and hopefully will be weening off them beginning next week. 
Billie broke her arm in two places back in October.  Not kidding.  She fell at ballet class and tried to catch herself, fell wrong, and Snap!  Bless her heart.  We knew the instant we saw it it was broken, no question on that one.  She is all better now.  If you got our Christmas Card, you know we tried to make light of the situation, I will post the picture below.  At this point, we really just have to laugh to keep from crying.
On to 2014, it is going to be healthy for us! No question, there will be no surgeries and no breaks.  Period. End of story. No negotiating it. 
We had a wonderful Christmas, in spite of our trials.  God is always good, right?  My mom and step-dad came over for the first annual "Christmas Adam." (Christmas-Eve-Eve) We had so much fun and I made a delicious lemon-pepper-rosemary Chicken, Mashed Potatoes, and Huge Salad. I have historically made a huge Christmas morning brunch, and then felt rushed and late all day Christmas day- rushed through "santa" gifts to get to cooking, rushed through brunch to get to Christmas dinner at 2, rushed through that to get to Christmas Dinner #2 at 6 (or 8, because they are always waiting on us.) So I got wise this year, and knew my limitations with my health and Matt's, and I spaced everything out over three days.  Genius! Best decision I made all year! And now it can just be tradition.  My kids got to spend time with Ya-Ya and Papou and have them all to their selves,  and the grown ups got to enjoy breaking bread together. 
Then, on Christmas Eve we had the Williams and Rosecrance's over for brunch.  More perfectness! The Grandpas got to bond and get to know each other better, we all had yummy food (I make a mean brunch, let me just tell you), and Grandma and Grandpa Williams got to see Harper open her gifts for the first time ever! It was lovely, and we took our time and enjoyed each other so much.
Christmas Day was even more perfect - not even kidding! Billie woke us all at 7:30, so excited.  We relaxed opening Santa gifts and enjoying left over home-made cinnamon rolls from brunch the day before.  Billie and I went to The Williams for dinner later in the afternoon and had a wonderful time, and Grandpa and Grandma Rosecrance came over to get Matt and Harper over to David's after Harper got in a nice long nap.  Then we joined everyone at David's for another meal and our fun Christmas tradition of Dirty Santa (Although we all get fabulous gifts so the only dirty thing about it is who ever steals!)
I was given the gift of pampering and time off from my family.  Complete with babysitter for Harper and appointments already made, I set out the Friday after Christmas for a luxury facial, a hairstyle at Be styled, a movie with Billie, and then dinner with Matt.  I had nothing to worry about and it was so rejuvenating! I kinda wish I could do that once a month! I will settle for a two hour reprieve once a month for coffee or a pedicure! I have learned I do need time for myself, otherwise I am just grumpy and not fun to be around, just ask Matt!
I hope you all had a wonderful Christmas and A Happy New Year, too.  I have actually started a few blogs, just getting some thoughts off my chest, that I hope to finish and share with you before the end of January. Check back in a week or two for those! I'm not promising, but I am promising I will try my best.  They are really good, it's just so hard to find the time to get all my thoughts down.  You all know how long-winded I am! HA!

Christmas Card 2013

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Break a Leg...

I know we have been unusually quiet here on the blog, even for me!  Sorry about that, but I just haven't felt like writing, or really like doing anything.  Yes, I have let myself sink down into a drab abyss of depression.  I think it would be hard not to, even for the happiest of people, given the last 4 months. WARNING: This is a long, sad story, so if you want to, skip to the end.  So to catch you up, the last week in February we went on a fabulous 5 day vacation to Snowshoe, West Virginia where we joined good friends and all skied together happily.  It was seriously the best vacation we have ever had.  So we made plans to go again before the end of the season, actually over Billie's Spring Break in March. 
Let me back up a smidge (pretty sure that is a Crystal-ism, but you know what I mean)... So on our first run down the mountain on that fabulous vacation, Billie took a bad fall.  I was worried how I was going to get her down the mountain.  Literally, she would ski 5 feet, then fall or sit down, screaming her foot hurt.  Billie is an excellent skier, but it had been a year and she had very long, skinny skis (the longer and skinnier the ski, the faster you go).  I get nervous every single first run of every single trip.  Pile on top of that the extra long skis, being 12, having a great friend with you that you only see a few times a year and who has already been here skiing for 3 days, and you have what I like to think was the case of "I'm terrified, new at this, embarrassed I can't quite get the hang of it, I am gonna say my foot hurts and that's why I can't do this." So I tried the "I'm your momma and I am not going to leave you here so let's get down this mountain together" technique.  It worked.  It took us 30 minutes to get down that beginner slope, but it worked.  We walked back to our condo, she stopped crying once we got on the ski lift, so I felt pretty certain I had called it correctly and she wasn't really hurt, just a pride-hurt kinda thing.  We got her boot off, she was a little whiny but felt much better getting her boot off (and knowing she was safely inside with a couch, fire, and TV.) I forgot to mention we both had "New-to-us" boots.  These were slightly used boots that Matt found at a thrift store that were great! Billie hates shoes.  If she could go barefoot 24/7 she would.  If she could ski barefoot or in flip-flops, she would.  She likes room in her toes so she can wiggle and move and breathe.  You can't ski in boots like that.  They have to fit well, trust me, this is true, and I will explain how I know this first hand in a bit.  Billie had a bruise on her foot, but once the boot was off she was fine and she decided to go back out that night for night skiing with a fresh, borrowed set of short, wide skis.  She did great!  No crying, no falling, no stopping her.  The rest of the week was fabulous and we were all sad when we had to leave.
She complained her foot her here and there for a few days, we iced it and it was fine.  After ballet class, she would complain again, so about two weeks later I broke down and took her to the orthopedic.  It was broken.  Yes, I know, I am worst mother of the year.  Turns out Billie has a little extra bone attached to her Navicular bone (which you can google, but is the pointy little bone just above your arch on the inside of your foot, close to the ankle.) A lot of people have this extra bone, and it is a commonly broken bone.  So Billie is in a boot for 6 weeks.  (Side note: when she came out of the boot 6 weeks later, we saw a different doctor and he felt it may never have been broken at all. I took her the first time, Matt took her the second time so I don't know how one doctor saw a break, and one did not.)
As Spring break approaches, we decide to go on our trip, and leave Billie with her grandparents to have some fun, since a ski trip will be miserable with a broken foot. Matt gets a terrible virus  two weeks before the trip.  I have never seen him this sick before.  He spends 48 hours in bed, and is still sick when he gets up.  Harper ends up catching it and an ear infection a couple days before we leave, so we leave her with the grandparents, too.  Matt had to pretty much force me to do this.  Harper has Chronic Lung Disease, so a cold for her meant breathing treatments, wheezing, very grumpy, and a very worried mommy.
We go back to Snowshoe, and they have a deal so we buy season passes for next season, and this trip is FREE!! Too good to be true, and my constant ranting "maybe all this is a bad omen (the broken foot, Matt's illness, the sick baby) and we just should not go skiing" goes on deaf ears.  We actually have a good trip.  Our second day as we are walking to the bus, my boot starts breaking and falling off as we are walking.  I end up walking in my sock, pretty much.  It was so funny! Remember I said we had "new-to-us boots?" I guess mine were not as good of a deal! Before dinner, we head to the store at the top of the mountain and I get a great pair of new, new-to-me boots.  We got them used at the rental shop.  $400 boots that are slightly used for $60- good deal!
I wake up the last day feeling horrible, I caught Matt's ick.  So I stay in bed and let the Matts' (our good friend, Matt went with us) hit the slopes with out me that morning. I catch up with them at lunch, and we hit the slopes after a good meal.  My first run in my new boots I realize immediately that my boots are too loose.  Remember earlier when I mentioned you need a good fit in ski boots? This is how I know, my boots were fine for walking, but for skiing I had just enough room to make maneuvering on the slopes impossible. Ski boots have tons of adjustments on them though, so with the Matts' help, I got them tightened and the next run was better.  I really wished I had two pair of socks on, though.
The day was great, we are getting one last run in before they close and as we are riding the lift up I say "This has been the best day! I am feeling so confident, I am going so much faster than I have ever gone.  I am so glad you talked me into keeping these long, skinny skis.  I wish night skiing was open so we could ski tonight! I do not want this day to end!" Oh, how those words haunt me.  We get off the lift, decide to take "Gandy Dancer" for our last run.  This is a blue (intermediate) and, while it does have a steep hill, I had skied it at least 10 times the day before.
We take off, both Matts are ahead of me, it is going good.  We hit the really steep section of the slope, I start going pretty fast, and I get a little scared.  I do some self-talking "It's fine.  Your a little fast, but you can turn and slow down.  Your fine.  You can do this." I can barely see either Matt ahead of me, they ski and board much much faster than I do, even at this "I-am-scared-fast" speed I was going.  I start to turn, a boarder in front of me wipes out, so I am forced to turn back the other way.  It has been snowing for two days, and powder is much harder to manipulate your skis in.  I get some powder on my skis, and start to fall back.  I quickly gain my balance, but by now I am going VERY FAST.  So I know I need to slow down, so I turn and angle my skis a little up the mountain, my plan is to get to the other side and just stop, catch my breath and my bearings. I get to the middle of the mountain, there is something like a bump, or mogul.  It is small, but I can not avoid it and as I hit it, I jump a little tiny bit in the air and I am so off balance - I am going down.  I start to fall, my skis are covered in the back with snow and are so heavy I can not move them.  I land first on my elbow, I hear a loud "crack" and I think "oh, good, my ski came off."  I look up the mountain from where I just came to see if anyone is going to hit me, and I see my feet in the air with my skis still on them.  The back of my ski is stuck in the ground, my hips hit, and I hear that "crack" again.  It hurts.  The rest of my body hits the ground, hard, and I kind of slide down the hill a few feet and then stop.
I just lay there a minute and think "Am I ok? Does this hurt?" My heart is racing.  Actually, recalling this now has my heart racing and tears welling up in my eyes.  I know the outcome.  I look up and to my right, down the mountain, I see Matt Crouch, and to the left, my Matt.  Matt Crouch is much closer and he yells "You all right?"  I just shake my head.  Then I ask myself "Are you all right?  What hurts?" My answer "my elbow, and my knee." I try to decide which hurts worse and if it is getting better.  More self talk.  You are fine.  Just catch your breath.  Let yourself rest.
I see Matt Crouch taking his skis off and I yell at him to wait, I am going to try to get up.  I get up pretty fine.  I tell him I am going to try to ski to the side just to get out of the middle of the mountain.  I aim my skis and my eyes to the right, but the second I let any weight hit my right leg, I am in agony. I ski on my left leg to the side and sit down. Tears stream down my face. I am not usually a big crier, but his hurts and scares me. He walks up and helps me get out of my skis.  I tell him I am pretty sure my leg is broken and I am going to try to scoot down on my butt.  Yeah, right.  Any movement at all is just excruciating by this point. So my Matt walks up to us, they stick the skis up in the snow behind my head as I lay there crying, and everyone that passes they ask to go get the ski patrol.  It seemed like forever before ski patrol came, but they finally made it.  Most embarrassing thing I have ever done.  Lay on the slope crying, waiting for ski patrol. (Side note: a ride on a sled behind ski patrol is terrifying and you do not want to do this if at all possible.) They get me in a splint and on a sled and take me back to their first aide area at the bottom of the mountain.
They check me out and say they think my ACL is out.  They give us three options: pain meds and a ride in an ambulance to the hospital, pain meds and a $6,000 ride on a helicopter to the hospital, or no pain meds and we take our selves.  We choose the latter, hoping and praying I will feel better in a couple hours. (Another aside: The ski patrol asked if I was a beginner or intermediate skier. We mulled it over and decided I fall somewhere in between.  He said I should never have been on that slope.  It is not for beginners or even intermediate. Good thing I never let the boys talk me into Cup or Shays!( black diamond slopes)
Matt runs to get the car, they give me crutches and send us on our way.  I mentioned that it has snowed for two days, so when we pull into the drive way, the car gets stuck, slides, and we came close to losing it in the woods.  I sit on Matt's snowboard and they carefully slide me down to our condo, which is in the basement. We get my clothes off and we quickly see that my leg is seriously swollen and seriously hurt.  Since it is late, and there was so much snow, and our car is now stuck, we decide to stay the night and work our way home to help tomorrow. The great people that own the condo we are staying in help the guys get our car out and give me ice packs.
The drive home in the morning was the worst ride of my life.  Just getting to the car was horrible.  But we made it, and we called our Knoxville Orthopedic once we had cell service.  Since it is an 8 hour drive to Knoxville, we weren't going to make it so they suggested we stop in Johnson City, because we had to anyway to get the kids and the dog, and see someone there just to get x-rays and pain meds.  The orthopedic in Johnson City told us I had a broken tibia plateau.
So I had surgery about two weeks later, and it went fine, and I started PT and the slow process of learning to walk after two months no weight-bearing on my leg. I also broke my arm, but it didn't require surgery, Thank GOD!
Fast forward to June 29, which was my first day leaving the house with out crutches! WOOHOO! Then on the next day, I was walking in our house and I tripped on one of Harper's toys that she had left laying in the hall way, and I fell.  Hard. Guess what?! I broke my leg again! The same leg, the same bone! Not even kidding.  On July 10, exactly 3 months to the day from my last leg surgery, I had another surgery to fix my tibia plateau fracture.  So now I have screws and a balloon plus Gor-tex sutures from my first surgery holding my tibia together. Oh, and I fell so hard, the surgeon had to twist my tibia back into place.  Lovely thought, isn't it?
So there you have it, three broken legs and a broken arm later, here we are today.  I am healing, albeit slowly.  No weight-bearing for two months, and then I learn to walk again, again. I see my surgeon for my first post-op Monday, and I have already started PT again. I love everyone at PT, but I so wish I didn't have to go through this again.  Matt is either going to wrap me in bubble wrap, or trade me in for a new model, and I can't really blame him.
Thankfully we have had tons of friends and family helping us.  I am so certain they are all ready to turn me in for a new model, too, though.  I am seeing a little light finally today, and since I have been putting off this blog for 4 months, I decided today was the best day to just face it all and get on with healing.
In the middle of all this, Harper tuned 2! She is really doing great.  She is talking so good, even putting 2-word phrases together. I am so proud of her.
Billie is also doing great.  She ended 6th grade with second honors, and totally rocked her TCAPS (standardized tests here in Tennessee). She was baptized and confirmed into the church in May. She went on a mission trip last week to Nashville. She got back yesterday and had wonderful stories and memories to share with us.  She is leaving next week for Choir Tour with the church, and it will be so hard to let her go again after just getting her back.  We missed her so much while she was gone, but I am so thankful for the friendships she has with her youth group at church, and these trips not only teach her so much about doing for others and serving, but also allow those friendships to grow and strengthen.  These are good kids and I want her to have those strong bonds with good kids as she gets into her teen years. Hopefully they will grow up together and help each other make good choices as the become young adults.
The boys had their 5th birthday this week.  So hard to believe it has been 5 years since I held them.  I was just a few days post-op, and had a migraine that day (no doubt, because it was their birthday and I just couldn't handle it that day with everything else.) Matt took the day off from work and he took flowers to the cemetery.  I really didn't get out of the bed that day. I hope to make a cake or cupcakes and celebrate it in a few weeks when I can get around better. I hate that anything stressful in my life gives me a migraine, but that is how I handle everything. I miss my boys.  I see them in my minds eye as little 5 year old boys.  I think they look  a lot like Harper, only all boy.  I am certain they are happy and healthy and enjoying being 5 in heaven.  I imagine they are fishing with Michael. Tomorrow is the anniversary of Michael's death, so maybe they will have a huge party.  While it is a sad day always for me, I know Heaven is so happy to have Michael, Joshua, and Caleb.
I appreciate your prayers as I continue to heal and get stronger.  I am terrified that I will break a leg again, so pray that my fears are unfounded, and that I remain healthy once I get over this last surgery. I long for the days that I can take care of my family again, and I know this has been so hard on Matt and all of our family as they have had to take over my roles.  Think of me tomorrow, too.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Quick Update

Just a quick update to let you know we are all doing fine!  Matt and I both came through our surgery an post-op great!  It was quite a challenge to have us both have surgeries and then Brian (Matt's dad) also had surgery a week or so after mine and all of this happened between Thanksgiving and Christmas!  It was crazy for sure, but thankfully, we have amazing family and friends that came through to take care of us and the kids and now we are pretty much back to normal.  We had a wonderful Christmas, just a little slower pace than usual, which was nice.  Harper is walking now, I am not sure if she was the last time I posted but she is running now! It is amazing to see her go, too.  She is still so tiny, just 16 lbs 13 oz as of yesterday, so she looks like this tiny infant that walks.  I will post a video if  I can ever catch her to take one! She is doing great, though, and really trying to talk and do all kinds of things.  Both girls had a virus, and Harper had an ear infection to go with hers, last week.  They were both pitiful.  Billie is much better, but Harper is still fighting hers off.  Makes sense that hers would take a little longer to pass.  She still has a fever and is grumpy and not eating or sleeping good, but she has really done great with it, all things considered.  Harper loves Billie so much and just wants to play with her and sit with her and no one in this world can make Harper laugh like Billie can.  It is so magical the laugh that Billie can get from Harper Grace. I know that is a very very short update, but I had some sweet emails from followers asking if we were OK and I hated to go any longer with out an update, but this is all I have time for now.  Having a toddler and a 12 year old really keeps me busy!!! (And I wouldn't want it any other way, either!) Love and God Bless to you all and thanks, too!

Friday, October 26, 2012

Harper Loves Her Brothers

This just happened yesterday and after, I thought I should share it with you all.  We have pictures of the boys hanging over the changing table in Harper's room - it was Joshua and Caleb's room first and we just can't take them down.  She points to them a lot and smiles and jibber-jabbers.  Yesterday as I was changing her she pointed and said what sounded like "Baby Joshua and Caleb." At first I thought I just heard what I wanted to hear, but Billie - who was in her room down the hall- said "It sounded like she said 'Joshua and Caleb!" And then later in the day I was changing her again and Matt was talking to her and she pointed at the pictures and again said "Baby Joshua and Caleb!" Matt just looked at me and said "Did she just...?" I was like "Yes, I really think that is exactly what she is saying." What is so funny, is he was asking her at the time "Harper, who's your favorite man in this house?" Ever since we brought her home I have felt like I see recognition in her eyes when she sees their picture.  I am sure I am wishing some of that, but she always smiles at them and points to them and jibber-jabbers at them.  I guess I just find it comforting that before she was born she knew them, and that maybe they had a part in her early success when it was so hard and almost impossible for her to survive.  There were so many times in the beginning that she was on the brink, heart rate disastrously low, O2 levels in the tank, nurses bagging her and pleading with her "Come on, Harper!" I like to think they were there cheering her on telling her to quit clamping down, to allow the precious oxygen into her lungs. All of this is to say, Harper loves her brothers and they will always be an important part of our family and of our lives.  I am so thankful for the opportunity to be their mommy, and it was yesterday when Harper was pointing at them that I felt a little more like I am their mommy.

To update you on Harper's progress - she is up to 15 pounds 4 oz! Not walking yet, but crawling everywhere, pulling up and cruising.  She has three teeth, and three more on the way.  She says about 6-10 words, sleeps through the night, waves, claps, dances, knows 6 different signs, feeds herself and just last night took a sippy cup for the first time! She is developing in leaps and bounds, she may be a little delayed still but she is catching up quickly.  She is still tiny, but she is growing and with the way she is now eating solid foods I am sure she will continue to make strides here.  She doesn't want to be spoon fed, little Miss Independent wants to feed herself.  She will eat almost anything she can pick up and put in her mouth, though, unless it is meat or a green vegetable.  She will, however, eat Tuna! We are still working on the veggies, but she will at least eat spinach and any orange veggie so that is a huge improvement.  She will devour any fruit or grain.  She still chokes a lot, but I have calmed down and we just work through most of them without assistance.  She is so happy all of the time, she is just a real pleasure and blessing.

Billie is doing great in middle school! She got 4 A's and 3 B's on her report card.  She had a rough start finding her place and making friends, but now she has settled in and is enjoying it much more.  Soccer season is almost over, she is playing for the middle school and she loves it and loves her team mates.  They have a big tournament this weekend and then the season is over.  She is maturing so much, the changes she has made this year (6th grade) remind me of the changes she made in Kindergarten.  It was like she went to school a baby one day, and came home a little girl back then. She went to 6th grade a little girl and has turned into a young woman right before my eyes.  Wednesday night we had company over to watch game one of the World Series.  I had made dinner and had everyone eat while I put the baby to bed.  As I was rocking Harper, I could hear someone doing the dishes and assumed it was Matt. I was so surprised when I walked out of the nursery and saw Billie at the sink!  She had taken it upon herself to do the dinner dishes, no one asked her to do it, she just did it because she wanted to.  It was so sweet and such a wonderful surprise for this momma! I am so proud of her. 

 Matt and I are good, but  we are each having surgery in the coming month and can use your prayers.  Matt has a shoulder surgery and I have to have my hernia repaired again because it has failed. Matt will be down for about two weeks, or at least in a sling for two weeks and then he should be feeling much better.   He has had a lot of pain from his shoulder and he is actually looking forward to getting relief from that pain. Please pray that all goes well with the surgery and he gets great results.  He loves to golf, and if his shoulder pain continues or worsens, he will have to give it up and that would break his heart.  I will have a longer recovery, but it has to be done so I am just going to suck it up and do it.  Please pray I am not it the extreme pain I was in with the last hernia surgery, and that this one doesn't fail.  They are going in surgically this time instead of laparoscopic like last time, and they will not just be putting in the mesh but they will be putting in an additional mesh and also pulling the muscles together to close the hole. Sounds miserable to me, that's why when he offered this option the first time around I chose the other laparoscopic option instead.  Of course, hind sight being what it is, I wish I had just gone this route back in January when I had the original hernia surgery. Hopefully I will be back to myself in 4-6 weeks, only better because the hernia will be repaired once and for all.

Thanks for you love, prayers, and support ~ Crystal

Friday, September 7, 2012

No-Nap Harper

I thought you might get a kick out of this video.  I already posted it on Facebook, so if you are among my FB friends you may have already watched this.  I had put Harper down for a nap and she cried like she usually does and then got quiet.  I thought she was settling down to go to sleep, but then I heard her crying with that tone that says "something might be wrong."  I picked up the video monitor and peaked at her and at first had a hard time figuring out what I saw, then I grabbed my camera and ran in there.  It was so funny I had to laugh, which made her laugh, and then she cried some more.  Needless to say, there was no nap had that day.  Enjoy...