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This blog is really about our kids, Jacqui and Kyle:

Jacqui is a wonderfully energetic and opinionated five-year-old. She was born with a rare birth defect known as a lymphatic malformation (LM) and has been through a lot in her young life. She had a trach until she was a year old, had surgery in New York to remove her LM with world renowned surgeon, Dr. Milton Waner (at age three), and still has a G-tube. She is a bright sunny soul in spite of everything.

Kyle is a thoughtful, and slightly reserved 2-year-old with a magical giggle and a wise-looking smile. He is clever and charming and a bundle of pure joy.

Our goal as parents: To treasure every moment and to raise our children to be extraordinary individuals.

Welcome to an inside view of our world!



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Groceries, Diva Ballerinas, And Things That Go ‘Vroom’!

October 29, 2007

BA1

You know those kind of days that are so packed with stuff from your ‘To Do’ list that you just want them over before they start? …Well I had one of those days the Friday before last. On the ‘To Do’ list were: Laundry, ballet lessons, grocery shopping (involving stops at three different stores)… to name but a few.

I have mentioned this before, but it is nothing short of AGONY to get a herd of small children rolling out the door anywhere near on time when you are attempting to follow anything remotely resembling a time line. I had planned ahead, laid out clothes, packed a diaper bag with snacks, extra clothes, and distracting toys for Kyle, and I had packed up Jacqui’s dance bag for class. My purse, keys and grocery list were waiting on the counter - all ready to go.

I woke up to the sound of riotous laughter over the baby monitor. Not good. I opened our bedroom door and found that the diaper bag had been dragged up the stairs from its post near the door and lay ravaged in the hall - emptied of all contents that could in any way be construed as a necessity. I moved towards the villainous giggles and cautiously opened Kyle’s door.

Jacqui was sitting on the floor feeding Kyle goldfish crackers through the slats in his crib. “Kyle’s a monkey at da zoo an’ I’m da zoo feeder peeples.” Kyle interrupted with monkey shrieks for emphasis and fell back onto the crib mattress in a fit of hysterical giggles. Apparently the snacks would have to be repacked.

“Why are your ballet slippers in the monkey cage?”

“His feets was cold.”

“Ah. Why isn’t he wearing socks instead?”

” ‘Cause dey don’t fit so very well.” She held up her ballet tights. “Dere’s holes innem’ now. I wroted you a note on da gophery liss to buy some new ones…”

Not the ’socks’ I had meant. I pinched the bridge of my nose in a fruitless attempt to stave off an impending stress headache as I accepted the shredded tights. I told Jacqui to clean up the mess and get dressed.

Her eyes widened and with the appalled tone of a débutante that had just been ordered to take out the trash, she gasped, “Not me!!”

“What do you mean, ‘not me’? Why not you? You made the mess.”

“Cause. Ima Diva Ballerina. Diva ballerinas DON’T clean up.”

“Why not?”

She rolled her eyes. Five years old and she rolled her eyes at me! “Cause Mom! Dey jess don’t! Dat’s wat Diva’s don’t NEVER do.” She arched an eyebrow and put a hand on a hip looking for all the world an imperious Diva Ballerina. “You should know dat word mom. Maybe you needta look it up in your dishy-o-nerry.”

Oh, the insufferable insolence!! I gasped and struggled to camouflage a giggle.

She stomped her little foot. “You don’t never ever laugh at Diva Ballerinas, Mommy! It’s jess NOT done.”

“It’s ‘not done?’ Where are you getting this stuff?”

She scowled and stomped again. “Dat jess means ya don’t never do it! It’s da Diva Coda Effiks!!”

I choked. “Code of Ethics? I don’t think Divas have ethics as a rule.”

“YES DEY DO!!! Effiks ARE rules, Mommy! You shooda know dat! I’m jess not gonna talk about dis ennymore!” Her chin jutted skyward as she marched down the hall with the indignant swoosh of a tutu pillaged from a previously packed dance bag.

I marched along behind and placed a surly, snapping little diva in time out. Apologies were eventually made, Jacqui discovered that diva’s do in fact clean up messes (in our house they do anyway), children were dressed, I was dressed, and breakfast was started.

I repacked snacks and the diaper bag, re-wrote the scribbled out section of my grocery list, added ‘ballet tights’ to the bottom of the list, re-packed Jacqui’s dance bag and began the search for my keys, which had been pilfered from my purse. I found them in one of Kyle’s favorite hiding places… the sound hole of my harp. Jacqui used to do the same thing, don’t ask me why. I quickly started a load of clothes and we finally shuffled out to the car.

We were barely on time to ballet class. Kyle decided this would be an excellent time to begin shrieking and screaming like a tormented banshee. He wasn’t in the mood to be distracted by any toy, no matter how entertaining. Toys were nothing but grenades to launch at Mom’s head. Mom - the big mean lady preventing him from running out the door and getting a better look at the big panel truck out in the parking lot. He pointed, wailing at the door… “Vroom, Vroom!!” Giant crocodile tears sliding down his baby cheeks as he signed ‘please’ and pointed, “Vroom, Vroom!!” towards the door. Kyle is completely obsessed with anything that has wheels and makes loud motor sounds. This includes planes, trains, cars, trucks, motorcycles, lawnmowers and even vacuum cleaners. He kept up the howling through the entire hour-long lesson. With about ten minutes to go, Jacqui came running out of the studio to sit scowling on the steps leading up to the studio office.

“What are you doing?” I asked her.

“Takin’ a rest.” She scowled and tipped her nose toward the ceiling.

“Why don’t you go back in and dance?”

“Cause! Ima Diva Ballerina, an’ diva’s need dair rest!” I heard parental sniggering behind me. They were gleefully giggling that it was my child and not theirs.

“Back in class… now!!” I hissed over Kyle’s shrieks. She scowled and folded her arms.

I narrowed my eyes and in a sawmill whisper began to count… “Jacqueline!! One…”

Kyle suddenly stopped bawling and pointed a finger at Jacqui with tiny shakes for emphasis… “Toooooooo!! No me me me feeee!!” The sniggering erupted into guffaws as my 18-month-old perfectly mocked my trademark phrase… “Don’t make me say three…”

I pulled down his emphatic little pointy finger and Jacqui skulked back into class casting baleful, diva-like stares in my direction after every pirouette. I could hardly wait for grocery shopping.

BA2

We loaded up the minivan to head to the first store. Can I just say that I HATE loading kids in and out of car seats? It makes me feel exhausted just thinking about it. The activity would be excellent practice for pro wrestlers. It’s ridiculous. Sticking a baby in a car seat is kind of like trying to thread a lump of squishy bread dough through a straw. Sticking an opinionated five-year-old with diva aspirations into a car seat is like trying to suit up a psychotic bobcat into rappelling gear. I can tell you that neither one is particularly enjoyable. One of many reasons I prefer to grocery shop late at night after the kids have gone to bed.

We get to the first store. A specialty grocery store where I have to go for some of Jacqui’s supplies for her Gluten-Free Casein-Free diet. Unfortunately, the store is of the hoity-toity variety. My kids don’t do hoity-toity very well. Sometimes blending in with the Wal-Mart crowd can even be a stretch. I take a deep breath and in we go… Kyle screaming the entire way through the parking lot in protest of my senseless deprivation of his quality time with all the wonderful ‘vroom vrooms’.

Jacqui immediately starts chatting up anyone who she can cajole into making eye contact with her. Some folks hear her and begin noticeably walking faster without turning around. One little old lady, polished and pampered to the ‘n’th degree, makes the mistake of smiling in Jacqui’s direction. Jacqui reels her in like a stunned trout. I avert my eyes and develop an all-consuming interest in organic radishes.

“Hi Lady!”

The lady smiles broader and walks closer. Noooo! Don’t fall for it! Runnnnnn!! Part of me wants to warn her but I don’t. I move in for a closer look at $4.79 a pound organic New Zealand Jazz apples.

“Ooooo! How old are you sweetheart?”

“I’m five. We need new punkins!”

“Oh, are you going to carve pumpkins with your Mommy?”

“We jess need new ones ’cause our old ones is dead now.”

“What?”

“Our old ones died. Dey was all black ‘an squishy wif alotta buggies innem… EWWWWW!!” Jacqui held her nose and waved her hand in front of her face wildly. Honestly. I don’t know why it is that the kid can’t ever seem to initiate a normal conversation.

The lady took several steps back and began feeling behind her for her cart, eyes transfixed on my child in helpless horror as Jacqui began to go into even more detail about moldy bug-infested pumpkins that we let sit too long before throwing out last year. Won’t be making that mistake again…

A few aisles over, a lady with a $50 manicure and a Dooney and Bourke handbag leaned in to talk baby talk with Kyle. He promptly blew a raspberry in her face. I offered her a tissue I had pulled out in preparation for the occasion and she declined with an appalled shake of her head as she careened around the end of the aisle in an elegantly frantic escape run.

KPA

In the moment that I was distracted by my inner ponderings of just how anyone could move that fast in high-heeled Jimmy Chou’s, Jacqui had disappeared. I wheeled back around the corner and reached the produce section again just in time to see her send an avalanche of oranges bouncing across the polished slate tiles. I stuffed her in the cart as she wailed that “Diva Ballerinas do NOT ride in shopping carts like babies!!” I started to count and Kyle once again finished my threat in mocking glee… “No me me me fee!” They both laughed together like madhouse inmates as I chased down $3.37 a pound organic oranges while the produce manager looked on with complete disdain.

We get through the checkout and I catch a pomegranate, two dragon fruits and a rambutan that Jacqui managed to sneak into the cart when I wasn’t looking. She begins wailing when I hand the rambutan back to the clerk.

“Nooo!!! Dat’s my new pet! She’s name is Fuzzy! Please… Give me back Fuzzy!”

I whisper in her ear threats of impending doom and she quiets to a hiccuping snuffle.

We pay and get to the door just as the heavens open up and begin pouring walls of water over our path to the car. We try to wait it out. Nope. We make a run for it. I forget to stuff Jacqui back into the cart and she makes a point of vigorously stomping in every puddle over two inches deep on the way to the car. I fling Jacqui in one side, slam the door, and then take Kyle to his side to begin the car seat wrestling match. They are finally buckled in.

The sun comes out as I lift up the first bag of groceries to place in the back of the van. And then I stomp a puddle in frustration as the bottom rips out of the chic, recycled paper bag. The handles stay helpfully attached to the bag’s top and I mutter to myself as I peer through the giant hole in the bottom. As we head to the next store, Jacqui perversely complains that she is all wet and cold. I explain to her that those are the consequences of Diva Ballerinas stomping in puddles without their rain boots.

“Mooooooomm!! Evvybody knows Diva Ballerina’s NEVER wear rain boots!”

Store #2: Another specialty grocers. Rewind and replay store #1 experience complete with rainstorm. Only this time substitute organic $1.20 a pound potatoes for the oranges. I ignored the cashier’s pressure-packed question, “Paper?” and insisted on plastic grocery bags. We unload the cart and more car-seat wrestling ensues.

The last store is clear across town. Jacqui cries at the top of her lungs the entire commute that her knees ache. She’s going through a growth spurt and has been having some pretty rough growing pains. She is howling for ‘pink medicine’ at the top of her lungs when we pull into the parking lot. Before going into the store, I check through the diaper bag for the bottle of ibuprofen. Not there. Of course not. It’s one of my necessity items. Why in the world would it possibly be where I put it? I explain that we will get some medicine in the store and load everyone into a nearby cart.

“Mommy? Why do my knees get so ouchy?”

“Because you’re growing really fast right now.”

“Am I growing really, really super fast?”

“Yes.”

“I will be very big soon?”

“Yes, soon.”

We straggle into the third store looking like half-drowned rats. This is one of those super stores. Groceries, hardware, clothes, you name it, it’s there. Everything, that is, except the hoity-toity gluten-free casein-free items on my list necessitating my first two stops. I head down the aisles stuffing items in the cart and checking off my list as quickly as possible. On the medicine aisle I snatch a bottle of ibuprofen off the shelf and give Jacqui a dose, setting the box aside to make sure I pay for it on the way out. We take a quick detour through the clothing section, past the lingerie, to where the socks and tights are kept. I stick two packs of pink dance tights in the cart and head for the check out.

I begin unloading the cart and am completely dumbfounded when I pull out a pink, lacey brassier.

“Ummm… Jacqueline? What is this?”

“Hel-oh-oh! Dat’s chess unner-wear Mom.”

“I know that. What is it doing in the cart.”

“Um… waitin’ to get paid for…”

The child is so doggone literal! I try again… “Why did you put it in the cart?” Should’ve known better than to ask that one too…

“Cause I need chess unner-wear.”

“No. No you don’t.” I hand it to the clerk and her shoulders are shaking with silent giggles.

“But, EXCUSE me! Yes I DO need dat Mom!”

“Why?”

“Cause! You said I was growin’ really fast. “

“Your legs and feet are! Not your chest…”

“Yes it is! See?” And she yanked up her shirt to demonstrate the imperative nature of the need before I could do a thing about it. “I really, really need chess unner-wear!”

I tugged her shirt back down. “No. You really, really don’t.”

She started bawling. I started counting. Kyle finished with a flourish, “No me me me fee!”

The entire line behind us erupted in laughter as I took our receipt. Jacqui shouted in indignation as we wheeled to the exit, “You muss not laugh! Ima Diva Ballerina! You muss never laugh at Diva Ballerinas!!!!”

BA3

And I learned something else you must never do when it comes to Diva Ballerinas. NEVER take them grocery shopping. And I mean never. Ever.


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Flowers For Melody

October 28, 2007

Another one of my blogging buddies is going through a very rough time. Melody, the author of the wonderful blogs Wrapped Emotions and Slurping Life, is having a particularly difficult week. She is the devoted mom of three amazing little boys - each with sets of unique medical issues. Here is what she recently had to say…

“I became unraveled by the one more thing, the one more diagnosis, the one more problem placed in our family’s life. One more issue with which my child must deal. One more issue with which our family must deal. I never try to explain here how truly difficult it is navigating and nurturing the needs of my sons. It is so tiring to live it, emotionally and physically, that I can’t even think about delving deeply into words of explanation… My family is currently faced with issues and decisions that I never could have imagined…”

The lovely Jenny, over at Live And In Color has asked for help in sending a very special bouquet of flowers to Melody this week to help lift her spirit… And, as I adore Melody, of course I said yes : ) Jenny asked volunteers to “draw, paint, craft or photograph a flower this week and post it to your blog. It can be as elaborate or simple as you like. Maybe say a few words about what Melody and Wrapped Emotions have meant to you.” So… Miss Melody… to let you know that you are loved…

OL

My Dear Melody -

At first I puzzled over what to do… A special lady such as yourself deserves a very special flower. I had a number of ideas, but none of them “fit”. The intricacies of origami have always put a smile in my heart, although I have never before attempted anything beyond paper airplanes. I thought it may help put a smile in yours as well. I thought a lot about what kind of paper to use for the flower, and then suddenly, I knew. I pulled one of Jacqui’s numerous medical bills from our file and began making delicate folds. With a little bit of Photoshop tweaking, something that once put nothing in my heart but stress, grief and despair transformed into a thing of beauty right before my eyes.

I am slowly learning that this is true of most things in life: What from one angle appears to be nothing more than pain, heartache, blackness and despair… From another angle becomes exquisite in its loveliness. This is particularly true when we allow God room to be God. When we can completely surrender in absolute faith. I wish that I could do this more often than I do. Sadly, I do best at this when I have exhausted all other options.When it comes to our children, it is so very difficult not to worry, not to play all those torturous “what if” games, not to want to fix everything and make everything perfect… right now. But God rarely works that way. His path is often different than the one that we would choose, but it is achingly, breathtakingly beautiful without fail.

It is my family’s prayer for yours, Melody, that somehow, sometime, this fresh pain and heartache will be transformed into something beautiful and filled with meaning for your family. That instead of dragging you down with worry and heartache, it will knit you closer together as a family and infuse new meaning into your faith.

And, for a little something extra… Jacqui saw me working on the flower…

“Whatcha doin’ Mommy?”

“Making a flower.”

“What for?”

“I’m going to take a picture of it and send it to a friend to cheer her up.”

“Dat’s very nice! Why’s she sad?”

“Because her little boy had to go to the doctor and they found out there was something he needed help with.”

“From da doctor?”

“Yes.”

“Sometimes help from da doctor can be very ouchy. Huh, Mommy?”

“Yes, sometimes.”

“Are you very sad when da doctor gives me ouchy help Mommy?”

“Well, I’m not sorry that the doctor helps you, but I am sorry that sometimes it is ouchy, Sweetie.”

“I don’t want dat boy’s mommy to be sad. I wanna make a flower too!”

I handed her a piece of paper and she watched as I made folds and tried to mimic them. I smiled at her valiant efforts until she suddenly announced, “Maybe I fink dis’ is not wurkin’ so very well… How about I color her a rainbow flower instead?”

“That’s a lovely idea. Melody would love a rainbow flower from you.” She smiled and pulled out her markers and several minutes later handed over the following work of art…

RF

I thought she was done but then she jumped up, clapping both hands to the sides of her face and exclaimed, “Oh wait!” She darted out of the room and I heard her clamoring up the stairs and down the hall to her room. Her progress back seemed much slower. I finally caught a glimpse of her creeping down the stairs and she slowly made her way back into the office, shielding something with her hands. She set it down on the desk.

It was the dandelion she had carefully brought home from yesterday’s walk. I had told her it was the last one of the season… which had unfortunately resulted in a laboriously slow return home after she had announced, “Oh no! Da last one! Mebbe I must save my wish for later den!” So we hobbled home, carefully preserving the last wish of summer. As soon as we had gotten home, she had placed it gently in a jar and set it on her dresser. I couldn’t imagine what she was intending to do with it now.

“I fink mebbe Melody and her little boy need da last wish more dan me.”

“You want to give Melody your last wish?”

Her eyes sparked as she smiled and nodded vigoursly. So, first we took a photo of Jacqui’s last dandelion of the summer…

DL1

And then Jacqui closed her eyes, oh so tight, and wished in a whisper…

“I wish dat Melody and her little boy could have dair wish ’stead of me havin’ mine and dat da doctor can make her little boy all bedder wifout any ouchy helps, I wish, I promise, I wish…” And then she blew…

DL2

We wish so many things for you, Melody. That you would be encouraged, strengthened, with renewed hope and renewed purpose. That joy will flow in and fill all those gaps that make life feel fragmented and cement your family together during this set of new, fresh heartaches and challenges. You have our most heartfelt prayers… and the last wish of summer.

Much love,

Michelle, Jacqui, and Jacqui’s Family

Wrapped Emotions button

If you haven’t been over there yet, why don’t you click on the button above and stop by Melody’s place to leave her an encouraging note? You just might be the smile she needs to get through the day : )


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A Hug For Jo

October 27, 2007

“Mommy? Why are dair tears in your eyes?”

Jacqui came into our office and climbed into my lap as I sat in front of the computer and began brushing away my tears as her tiny face clouded with concern.

“Oh, I was just reading a very beautiful poem that one of Mommy’s friends wrote.”

“Read it to me.”

I clicked back over to Jo’s blog at A Broad’s Thoughts From Home and read Jacqui the following poetic tribute of a loving daughter to her father:

Air

Outside I see the impossibly red leaves
of a Japanese Maple flutter in the breeze
like flags at a carnival.
My favourite tree but the fire stars
seem out of place here near heartache.
I move my eyes back to where we
keep an unhappy vigil, each interval
between the lift fall of you breathing longer.
Soon we hold our own in ironic sympathy,
in disbelief that another will come –
knowing your last might have
drifted across the room unseen
and slipped through the window
to join the skittish breeze
as it shakes the maple.

This poem is for my father who died of asbestosis last Monday, leaving us brokenhearted. I can only hope he is now free to breathe.

“It is boodiful… why’s it make you cry’?”

“Well… it’s a sad poem. It’s about how much she misses her daddy.”

“Ohhhh…. Like wen I missed my Daddy very much wen he went to Cally-formy-ya (California) for his work?”

“Um. Yes, kind of like that.”

“Wat’s your friend’s name?”

“Jo.”

“Dat’s a very priddy name. Will Jo’s daddy be gone a very long time?”

“Yes. A very long time.”

“Ohhh. She must need a hug. Can we go drive an’ see her an’ give her hugs to make her feel bedder an’ not so lonely?”

“I’m sure she would like that sweetheart, but she lives on the other side of the world.”

Her forehead wrinkled up in frustration over the complexity of the travel situation and she placed a finger on her chin as she puzzled.

“Oh! I will draw her a hug and mail her one!”

“I don’t know her address”

“You figger it out an’ I’ll go make her a hug, k?”

And off she ran for her papers and crayons before I could discuss the matter further. ‘Figger it out’ the kid had said…

And she was back.

“Mommy? How ‘ya draw a hug?”

“I have no idea”

“Here! You help me draw one… it’s ‘portant!”

I rubbed my temples trying to decide what to do. I had no idea how to draw a hug, but I didn’t want to dampen Jacqui’s compassion either. Suddenly I remembered my sister-in-law had helped my niece and nephew’s make ‘hugs’ to send to Jacqui once when she had been in the hospital.

“Ok,” I told her, “Hugs are very special and you can’t just draw them. You have to cut them out too. What color should we make the hand part of your hug?”

Jacqui clapped her hands with a grin and shouted, “Pink!!!”

“Why do you choose pink?” I asked her.

“Cause pink makes me feel happy! It will make Jo feel happy too!”

“Good reason. Pink it is.” I sat down and traced her little hand prints onto pink paper and then cut each one out. “Now… what color do we make the hug part?” I got down some spools of ribbon for her to choose from.

“Lallow!” She shouted (yellow) grabbing the spool and handing it to me.

“Why did you choose yellow for the hug?” I asked her.

“Cause lallow looks like sunshine an’ that will cheer Jo up I fink.”

“Good choice!” Jacqui smiled with pride as I snipped a length of yellow ribbon. I punched a hole in each hand print and tied the ribbon between them.

“Now I needa lamma-lope to mail dis hug to Jo!”

“Well, I don’t have her address to write on the envelope - so we can’t mail it to her. How about I take a picture of it and send it to her on the computer?”

“Ok… But I still wanna put da hug in a lamma-lope to mail to Jo.”

I took the picture and handed her an envelope. Jacqui happily stuffed the ‘hug’ in the envelope and sealed it as I began typing this post. So, to my very dear and talented friend Jo… here is a hug from Miss Jacqui, and one thrown in from me as well. You are very much in our prayers and we hope your beautiful poet’s heart soon begins to mend. We hope you feel the warmth of this very special hug across all of those oceanic miles and know how very much we care…

(Oh, and if you would like me to send you the original, Jo, just click on the “Contact” button on the top of my blog and send your address to me in an email… I will happily put Jacqui’s hug in the mail to you!)

For those of you who have never been to Jo’s blog, you are missing out on some extraordinary beauty. Jo is an amazingly talented poet and her heart is at least twice as beautiful as anything she has ever written. She could really use some encouragement right now, so why don’t you stop on over and leave her a comment on this post to let her know that she’s being thought of during this very difficult time after the loss of her father… and tell her Jacqui sent you : )


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A ‘Tiss’ To Build A Dream On…

October 22, 2007

BK1

It had been a long day. I actually felt that I would snap in two if I had do deal with just ‘one more mess’. There had been an impressive collection of them starting the moment Jacqui and Kyle had first opened their eyes in the morning. At breakfast it had been Jacqui’s spilled orange juice, and Kyle’s flinging of cheerios. Why is it that babies only sneeze after their little mouths have been loaded with spoonfuls of oatmeal? After lunch the entire toy box had been upended during the search for a missing Cinderella tiara. A glass of water that Ken had left sitting on the table next to the couch was promptly dumped on the kitty by Kyle before I could think to stop him. A box of Kleenex was gleefully emptied of every last tissue leaving the family room looking like a littered public park. At lunch, banana slices were squished onto table tops and macaroni was flung on the floor. After lunch, someone ‘opened’ the mail and left it strewn through the living room and down the hall. On and on it went, with me wondering all the while why it was that I was even attempting to salvage some order out of the chaos.

I sat down with a load of freshly dried laundry to begin folding and Kyle dived into it face first and full of giggles. I was too tired and frustrated to join him in his hilarity. I sighed and repeatedly picked him up and set him down out of the way as I folded towels, shirts and matched up pairs of socks. I really just wanted to cry. To quit. To go somewhere else where everyone didn’t derive such joy in churning up such mayhem out of all of my attempts at order. Why? I wondered to myself. Why did I even bother to try?

I folded the last piece and Kyle gave me a coy smile while tugging a neatly folded blanked out of the laundry basket and toppling about a third of my most recent efforts to restore order. Frustrated tears gathered, blurring the lower half of my field of vision as he toddled grinning towards me… And then something extraordinary happened…

My beautiful little blue-eyed baby reached up, held my face between his little dimpled hands and spoke his first sentence…

“Tiss me.”

I gasped in a sudden breathless fusion of emotions: Surprise, joy, pride… My response wasn’t swift enough for the little cherub’s liking, “Tiss me!” He demanded with an insistent squeeze. The tears fell, but not for the reasons they had first formed. I scooped him up and kissed him again and again as he giggled and shrieked with joy.

BK3

In a moment of magic, I had the answer to my why’s. Because of moments like this. Because of twinkles in eyes, sparkles in grins, magic in giggles. Because of little hearts growing up knowing that they are loved beyond measure. Because of futures dearer to me than my own…

…Because little hands reaching up for “tisses” with coy blue-eyed smiles are kisses worth building dreams on.


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Picture Day Part Two!

October 18, 2007


The Cuteness Hotline is Now Open…


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