Sunday, February 4, 2018

My afternoons with Ro

In another life (years ago, and when I was still single and living in Oregon) I spent much of my time as a nanny and babysitter, mostly for date nights and occasionally a summer job of two but I did have one steady part time Nanny job that lasted 3 years, oddly enough I took over the job for my older sister (she was also a Nanny for quite a while).

He was 14 months when I started watching him. I spent afternoons with him while his Mom taught piano lessons and sometimes while she just did chores or ran errands. He was a wildly imaginative boy- we would go for long walks and spend hours at the park, I taught him some songs that we would sing together. He was small for his age but his vocabulary was amazing, I taught him the word Acapulco and when we went to the boat park, we would always pretend to sail there, to somewhere warm, he was the captain and I was Leen.
Once we were at the park, the one down the road from his house that we went to most often and he ran to greet another kid, he said “welcome to the park, I’m Rohan and that’s my best friend Leen” - I almost cried, it was just the sweetest thing to hear him call me his best friend.

The hardest part about being a nanny is how much you fall in love with the kids, and knowing that you time in their lives in temporary.

Rohan was 4 when I stopped watching him, his younger brother had just been born a few months before and he was a fussy baby who only ever wanted his mommy so after a few months of holding a crying (sometimes screaming) baby I moved on to find a full-time nanny job but I never stopped loving that little red head boy.
Thanx to facebook, I got to see him and his brother grow up, their mom Jennifer and I would exchange birthday wishes and comment on each others photos, she was the kind of hands on mom that everyone wishes to have, spending so much time in their home I got to see first hand how much she and her husband loved those boys.
They traveled to exotic international destinations and she made her living by teaching piano, her house was always filled with music and often, between students she would play the most beautiful songs- their tiny house would be filled with music. I grew up playing Piano too so I could appreciate the difficulty of the songs she would play, but she made it sound so easy and effortless.
She was very kind, an organic vegan, who did all the things that the magazines say you should do to take care of yourself, to Love yourself, so when I heard that she had cancer it was a shock to say the very least. She went through treatment and got better, I saw the photos she posted of the boys Halloween costumes, the birthday celebrations, robotics at school and I commented on how big the boys were. She commented on my kitten photos and videos and said how she would adopt one if I still lived near by.
Ro is a teenager now, and his little brother a preteen and yesterday I got a text from my sister informing me that their mom had died. I had not seen her facebook in a while and didn’t even know that she was sick again. She was 45. I know she will be deeply missed by her husband and the boys and I find myself looking back to those days when I spent my afternoons with her happy little red headed toddler.

They will be in my prayers in the coming weeks and years, that they will learn their new normal without her, that they will remember the very best of times and that they will continue to love each other the way she taught them too.
Life is short. You really never know when your last day will be. So live it, say your I love yous and take your road trips, take photos and videos and paint painting and sing songs- because life is short.

Thursday, May 26, 2016

16 years of lessons

I have worked so many jobs in the last 16 years that one might get whiplash trying to keep up with my work experience but I will say that I have learned something from every job. And now as i'm about to step into a new season without bosses and time cards and steady ready paydays I wanted to take a moment to commensurate on those lessons. 




Childcare- this was definitely my first job, before i could drive me and my sisters would go door to door in our neighborhood with our babysitting flyers and offer our expertise! Then being a big sister to many small foster kids who shared my home growing up, then as a worker with my mom in our home daycare, then as a temp/vacation nanny and then part time to full time live-in nanny. I would say this is the job that comes the easiest for me, kids are fun and easy for me, yes they can be hard work but the day to day of being in childcare, it was easy to see the impact I was having, easy to see that the love i put into my job was being soaked up. 
from this "job" i learned that when all else fails, making up a silly story and singing a silly song almost always works. a day outside is never a waste. the smallest moments can become precious treasures in you memory. i learned creative problem solving and pretty decent fort building skills. i learned that crafting is the best kind of play, magazines are meant to be cut up, crayons are meant to be dull, and white is meant to get colored. i learned that it is fully 100% possibly to fall in love with a child that does not belong to you and want to protect them, guide them, teach them and love them. and i learned the art of goodbye and how hard it is to let go when the job is over. 




Retail- I love people so it was no shock that I did so well at retail, I have a positive, happy, energetic personality so I was a natural fit to greet and ring people up, to help them find a style or size or show them where the clearance items are. My favorite thing about retail was the chance to work along side so many different people, to share our stories with one another, to cultivate friendships that I may never had outside of the job. 
what i learned from this job was that a smile really does go a long way, I learned that in retail there is endless possibilities to organize/and that this makes my heart happy, I learned that i have amazing folding skills (though you wouldn't know is by looking at my clothing pile, lol). I learned that is is possible to get a very angry person who wants a return and can't get one, to calm down by showing them that you care, and understand and are willing to do everything in your power to try to assist them. I learned that alot of people go shopping when they are having a bad day and that me, as the retail worker at the place they are shopping, i had a chance to make that day better by genuinely caring. I learned that there are alot of people who do not take pride in their work, that there are alot of people who see numbers and percent signs and not people and I learned that life is far to short to let other decide and dictate my mood. 




Photography- I remember my first "fancy" camera, my uncle (the photographer) gave it to me for Christmas, it was a film camera, before digital was affordable to normal people, it looked so cool and i felt soooo very cool when i carried it around. I was in high school and i remember learning all the technical stuff about where to set your subject and how to get the best lighting, how to convey emotion in a photograph. I cannot count the number of photo jobs i have done, I remember most of them, everywhere i go i see potential photo shoot locations and i learned an awful lot from this job too- 
from behind the lens I have the amazing ability to make someone feel beautiful, so zoom in on what they see as beautiful in themselves and to bring out the shine inside them. I learned that the best gift for a mom is a candid of their child, happy and silly and all them, that an un-posed moment, an unprovoked expression and an otherwise ignored detail can become a cherished memory hung on the wall. I learned that weddings are stressful. I learned that the back sides of buildings and tops of parking garages and forgotten little corners make wonderful backdrops. I learned that i love editing photos almost as much as i love taking them. I learned that i was not charging enough for my services and then i learned that I was happier as a hobbyist photographer and not a professional. (also learned that second scooting is the bomb) 




Call center-
I learned that if you communicate that you are listening, and you really listen, really try to help, then most of the time (not all) an angry caller will calm. I learned that despite the urging to end the call sooner, I couldn't reconcile providing less than my best for people who needed it so desperately. I learned what it felt like to be seen as a number. I learned the toll a stressful job can take on your life, your weight, your sleep. I learned that a higher pay is NOT worth it if you hate the job. and i learned that life is too short to stay where you are not thriving.- I also made a lot of great friends here, and had alot of great team leads, and this company did open the door to insurance for me so i am very grateful for that. I learned that even in the painful, uncomfortable seasons, God can use it to work something great in your life. 




Overnight (3rd shift) - while i did work plenty of overnights at kohls (mark downs and holiday) and loved them, it was not until Walgreens that I really committed to this lifestyle (for 7 long months) and learned the lessons that it had to offer. 
Here I learned that even a 10 hour shift can go by quickly if you stay busy, that there is almost always something that can be better organized! I learned that a smile and a kind word really does go a long way, especially in the middle of the night or the start of the day. I have learned that if you set a bell on your counter, and you are nowhere to be seen (in the food isle checking for expired dates) 95% of people will not ring that bell, I have learned how gross people can be (yup cleaning bathrooms was on my list), I learned the names (& cigarette brand) of my regular customers and they learned mine, it was a weird little "family" and my time as part of it was brief but I will carry the lessons with me. And I met a wonderful soul named Andrea, she worked for 14 years for Walgreen, she trained me, in my first week and when I switched to nights, she would be my relief in the mornings. Andrea had Cancer, she'd beat it once before but it came back. I remember having conversations with her, she had a very deep relationship with Jesus and we talked about how she was going to win either way- if she lived, and beat it again, she would have more time with her family, but if she didn't, if cancer killed her, she would get to be with Jesus, and see heaven and be pain free. Andrea died a few months after I left Walgreens- and I know that there are so so so very many people who felt that loss, and a lot of them only knew her from her job, where she stood behind a register (a "simple" job) she worked that job with excellence and taught us all a lesson on how to be a better human. 

And in working as an insurance agent, I learned that I do not work well on my own. I thrive when I am surrounded by people, noise, motion...

I know that the lessons learned here were teaching me for the most important job of all - to be who I need to be as a wife, a sister, daughter, friend and who I need to be when I'm a mom, someday, to whatever kids God sends my way. No job, however small or how ever long it lasted was ever a waste of my time...

God Bless












Monday, April 18, 2016

a prayer for my SOMEDAY kids



I read an article once (as a teen) about parents who prayed for their children before they were born, before the mom and dad even met, one even kept a journal of notes to their someday kids. I earmarked that article in my heart and never forgot it.

in the 15 or so years since I read that article I too started to pray for my kids. I decided early on (helped along by a dr who told me how difficult it would be for my body to endure and recover from a pregnancy due to the scoliosis i have) that I would adopt my kids, my parents did foster care, and I grew up knowing that there were children in the world without homes, without parents, even without suitcases (just garbage bags that held everything in the world that belonged to them) -I decided that I would find children like them someday and adopt them.

I wish I could say I remember the day I first prayed for my someday kids, I can say I remember sleepless nights (many of them) where I used my time to dream of, think about and pray for my kids and the difficulties they would face, and the life we would both lead before meeting each other.
In my 20's I even wrote out some of these prayers in my journals during my morning devotions, along with the desperate prayers of a single girl longing to find and love a man of God.

I found him, or rather we found each other, in my late 20's and at age 30 I walked down the isle and said I do. And we talked about the kids that would someday be ours, that would make us a family. We decided that since our kids would kids and not babies, and that they would most likely be troubled in one way or another (from the events that left them parent-less and in the foster system) we decided that we needed to be married for a while first. 5 years, so that we knew we had a strong foundation to offer our kids, to hedge our bets against a culture that says divorce is the best option when times get hard, to learn how to communicate, and compromise and be with one another before adding to our numbers.

That was almost 3 years ago, that I said I do. and it is not lost on me that now, 2 years away from our 5 year mark, my someday kids are most likely already alive, they have faced, or are facing or about to face the hard times, the part of their lives that will shape their views on this world, that will inspire high school essays on overcoming, the times that will birth insecurities and fears into their hearts.

My prayers for you my children have changed, they have become more pressing, more frequent and more personal. I don't know your names, your faces or your voices but God does and I ask him to watch over you, to protect you and to build into me the traits you will need in a mother.

I dream of putting together a pink room, filled with sparkle and fluff, of filling a closet with clothes and games, toys and treasures, of reading bed time stories and making barbie dresses out of old socks, messy painted canvas on my wall, Christmas and Easter and birthdays and Fridays with my daughters.

and my sons too (maybe, we will see) but daughters for sure.

I want to be there fully for you, in the middle of the day in the middle of the week so i'm working towards a career that will allow that, I don't want to have to go to work and leave you home day after day.
I watch my husband (your dad) with our cats, so tender and loving as the carries them around the house, as he sings to them and plays with them and I know that he will be a wonderful father, he is so steadfast in the way he works, and even in the way he plays (his love for all things related to board games).  He is caring in a way that surprises you, and he is always there to help when i need him, sometimes before I ask. I know you will love him and that he will love you, someday soon.

And I have a wonderful family full of cousins and aunts and uncles, grandmas and a grandpa who will all love you so much. They might be scattered between states and separated from us by miles but there is so much love there, I promise that we will make the time to see them often, so you will know that you have a big beautiful family.

I pray today that God will protect you, that no matter what your day holds, that you have a hope in your heart for a better day ahead. I pray that you see the beauty in the sunshine, in the dandelion and the shadows. I pray that you feel love, from a sibling or family member, a teacher or a neighbor - that the fear you feel, the uncertainty that you face, is never bigger than the love you feel. I pray that somewhere in your life you have heard of Jesus and his love for you, that you can turn to him for comfort. And I pray that in some way, you can feel my love too, a love that has been growing for more than a decade (before you were born).

I want you to know that even though I may have missed your first step, your first words, your first day of school, that I don't know your favorite food or color or how you react to thunder storms, that I think of you often. That I see a mom in the store, with a whiny child in tow and I think of you, my someday children. That I see kids at church, singing and laughing and i think of you. I see my lovely little niece Joelle or any of my wonderful nephews and I think of you.

It might be a few more years until we meet. until we have a house big enough for more than two, until we start to search for you. But i want you to know that you are loved, so much, even in the unknown you are loved. I woke up today thinking of you and I couldn't shake it so I had to tell you and since I don't know you yet I wrote it here and I whisper a prayer.

I love you little ones.

Mom.














Monday, March 17, 2014

The end is near!

The Mango and the Cantaloupe make ALL the difference, the cucumber probably helps too, the last few juices have been really good! There is still an icky aftertaste but I can taste the fruity notes more than i can the veggie bite.

I still have not lost any weight but I was being honest when I said that wasn't the point of this fast, I DO see a change in my body shape, my problem areas are starting to smooth a bit, and I am more motivated to work out.

My craft room will be rearranged to make room for a workout space- and the juicing will continue (on a part time basis for the foreseeable future)

We do have a few days left so I'll keep updating you.

Friday, March 14, 2014

Day 4 and Day 5

Day 4- Both juices were so gross I chocked them down as fast as I can- they were filled with whatever we had left (we were running low).
I did eat an apple and a banana this day too- to attempt to push along the natural process that comes with a juice fast (or the one that's supposed too anyways).

Day 5- My 31st birthday AND cheat day (declared by my husband!!!)
I had a cupcake and half a can of spegettio's, some Butterfingers chocolate eggs, 1/4 can of original pringles, for birthday dinner I had Salmon and mash potatoes and 3 mozzarella sticks!

I did get a bit sick (run to the bathroom kind) - probably just a shock to my system but all is well now. It's Saturday now, we went to the grocery store and spent another 50$ to finish out the juice fast.
We bought- 
6 red apples
3 cucumbers
4 bananas (for eating not juicing)
5 bags of carrots
5 grapefruits (for griffins juices ONLY)
6 oranges
2 mangos
.5lb of ginger
2 pears
a bundle of beets
1 cantaloupe (for my juice only)

+
Yugurt
v8 juice
prune juice

It was supposed to be a 10 day fast but we skipped a day (day 5) and Griffin says we will stop when we run out of fruit and veggies, even if it isn't as long as we wanted it to be. He has lost 10lbs already, I didn't weight myself but I do see subtle differences in my body shape and the clarity of my skin (the dryness and redness).

We took the frozen mulch and put it outside, tomorrow (if the weather holds out) we'll till up some ground for our soon to be garden and put the mulch in the ground there- maybe we can grow enough to keep your fruit and veggie bill low! 

Tomorrows Juices- 
juice 1- 4 orenges, 6 small carrots, and some ginger
juice 2- 1 beets, 5 small carrots, 2 apples, 2 apples, and ginger

and griffins juice (he's doing 3 a day) 
2 grapefruits, 1 pear, and a bunch of kale

I'll give you reviews tomorrow!

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Day three-

Torture! why did i choose to do a juice fast again??? lol. We are running out of the good stuff (apples and oranges) and the juices are getting even yuckier!!!!

But my husband decided that we are going to declare Friday (day 5 AND my 31st birthday)- so i'm trying to look ahead to that. I admit I did cheat just a bit- Yogurt- everyone said I would be spending alot of time in the bathroom with all the fruit I'm digesting but it turns out that I've got the opposite problem and Yogurt is the best way I know how to get things back on track, AND I'm buying some bananas tomorrow, but I AM still drinking all the juice so I don't really see it as cheating, I'm still denying myself all the yummy stuff I want super bad. Turns out that a long work day is a great thing when you are on a juice fast, especially since I don't work at a place that sells food!

We've kinda veered away from recipes, We kinda learned what combo's work and what one's dont and what we like and what we don't. We are gonna shop for the second half of the fast on Friday after dinner, we are gonna get cucumbers and beets and a few other things we couldn't find the first time around!!!

My visit home FEB 2014

I started writing this just after I got home and then I forgot to finish it, only remembering when I started blogging about the juice fast. I want to take the time now to tell you about my visit home last month. We didn't get to do Christmas together this year so we all planned to come together in Feb- my sister flew in from Idaho, I came from Arkansas and Kyle and Megan were gonna drive in from Mcminville, But the snow got in the way a bit!!! A 10 hour flight day turned into a 24 hour flight day with two missed flights, two more that were canceled and two that were late and a overnight stay in the lovely Seattle airport.
After a long trip I landed in Oregon, Met up with my parents and sister and made our journey home, a LOT of snow was waiting for us... 10 plus inches.
My little Niece Joelle spent every minuet of my visit with me, which I didn't mind, and we spent alot of time with her family too (my sister and her hubby and little Jaren) Due to the snow I didn't get to see too many of my friends, I did get to see my Bestie Jennifer and her husband Matt.
The visit went by WAY to fast, not enough Joelle dates, not enough family dinners and not enough game nights and not enough Jambas!!! My birthday wish (i turn 31 two days from now) Is that my visits home will be more frequent and last longer!!!! I love you guys and miss you!!!