Friday, October 3, 2008

My First Post


Hello,
Welcome to A Girl, a Boy, a Baby and a Dog. I am the girl in this equation, the boy is my long-suffering husband, Jim; the baby is Claire, our newest and greatest addition; and the dog is our precious, yet testy dog, Murphy. We're all hybrids in this family. I am a hybrid of a stay at home/work from home/work out of the home mom. Jim is an attorney by day, rock star dad by day and night and a serious sports fan and blogger on the weekends. Claire is many things. She is part dream, part miracle, part exhausting, but 100 percent perfect. And Murphy? He's just part golden retriever, part basset hound. Maybe we're all just mutts after all.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

I'm baaaaaaaaaaaack!


How can it have been eight months since I last wrote? So much has happened in our lives. To start, Claire is 16 months old now. That's four months more than a year! She is walking (quickly), talking (sort of) and generally ruling the roost. She still looks just like her daddy, but is starting to act a little more like me. For example, she loves shoes. Loves them. In fact, I have bought her a few (okay, five) new pairs of shoes in the last few weeks. She knows that they're new, so every time someone comes up to speak to her, she leans down and points to her shoes. She also likes to walk around the house with them like most kids do with a teddy bear or a sippy cup. In fact, when her preschool teacher suggested that I send a "lovey" item to school with Claire to comfort her, I thought, "should I just send an extra pair of shoes?" Alas, Belinda the Bunny won out. Shoes on the feet. Bunny under the arm.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Pause


Happy birthday, Scoot. We miss you.

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Mama Always Said...


As my sweet girl inches toward a year (she's eight and half months), I am feeling a little weepy. She is more than I ever dreamed she would be. No one ever told me I would feel this way, and I find it overwhelming. I am so full of emotion as I look back over the past year and a half that I have a hard time even writing this.

While I really loved the newborn stage of Claire's life (I know, weird), I am really digging the six to 12 month stage. She has developed a little sense of humor As of the past month, she finds the following things hilarious: tongues, people with glasses, slobbery smooches from her dog brother Murphy and dog cousins Buddy, Tucker and Malli, getting her diaper changed, dad's red Georgia hat and peekaboo. She has really become this little person with opinion, favorites and personality. While many parents see leaving the house with their child of any age as an exhausting burden, I have really begun to love our outings. As silly as it sounds, I feel like she is my friend. I love teaching her things, and I often catch myself saying the same little catchphrases to her over and over again.

A few weekends ago was Claire's christening. That, coupled with her eight month birthday led me to reflect on some of the things the mothers in my life have said that have stuck with me. Some of them are funny, some serious, but all of them have somehow shaped the mother I have become. Enjoy.


"Lawwwwwwwww..." - My mom, grandmother and aunt all say this when you are telling a story. It's similar to an "Oh my God," but without taking the Lord's name in vain.

"What's it to you, frog face?" - My mother-in-law's suggested response to particularly nosy questions.

"I think you look great. Just maybe a little more blush." - According to my mom, there is no problem that a little blush can't solve.

"Have you fed her prunes yet? Just wait." - My grandmother's warning. She was right.

"I just couldn't imagine helping my child with homework and then raising my shirt for a snack." - A mom who I have become friends with from a play group in response to a woman's comment that the international average age for weaning a child from breastfeeding is FIVE YEARS.

"I have a drink every day at five. There's nothing wrong with it. As long as your child is in the house with you, you're technically not drinking alone." - A mom friend

"Your baby sleeps through the night at eight weeks? You know that means she's going to be a serial killer, right?" - A former boss whose children were teenagers before they slept through the night.

"Why don't you just dip her pacifier in some of that gravy over there? I bet then she'd stop crying." Another pearl of wisdom from my grandmother. I am happy to report that to date and to my knowledge, Claire still has not had any gravy.

"It is hard work - even if sometimes the outside world doesn't see it that way. No one touts a stay at home mom on the Fortune 500 (ah, because we don't make a salary!) But it is exhausting being "on" 24/7, 365. I mean, when I was working at least I got to pee in peace! What I realize is that I've sort of lost my way a bit. I sort of lost the passion I had when I first started this journey. I want to feel that way again. So I made the decision last night, lying there in bed, to rededicate myself to my job. My job as a mother. All the good. All the bad. I want to be there for my children during these years - to be really present in their lives. Because before I know it they are going to be out of my home and off into their own world, doing their own thing, without much of a backwards glance." - a fellow blogger vowing to rededicate herself to her life as a stay at home mom

"She's bringing snuggly back. Yeah! Give her a bottle, and she'll have a snack. Yeah!" - To the tune of Justin Timberlake's song, "I'm Bringing Sexy Back." Ok, my husband said this, but it has defined our parenting style for months now. Parenting can be fun, you know.

"Give yourself a few months. You might be surprised to find that you have changed your mind." My mother-in-law's suggestion when I swore up and down that I would never have another child after having such a difficult pregnancy. I'll admit it. She was right.

"I am proud of you for so many reasons." My mom in an e-mail to me this week. Every child should know that his or her mom is proud of them.

"It's the hardest job you will ever love." Pretty much every mom

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

You Be My Friend

So, most of you know that my sister lives in Ghana. She is about three months from coming back to the States, and I am counting down like it's my job. My sister and I have been able to keep in pretty close touch with only brief communication lapses due to technology blips or extreme business. We spoke this past Monday. She was upset because she had left her job. She had a lot of strong feelings as to why she was leaving and for the children she had taught. It wasn't an easy decision, but it was best. From what I gathered from our conversations, her boss was a top notch a-hole who didn't like women, or any people for that matter. So, we chat on Monday. There's a lot of, "You're doing the right thing," "I am excited for the next phase of my life," "Can't wait for that welcome home party." I start to get totally amped that her return is in sight -- like I can mark it on this year's calendar. For those of you who have ever seen the Singing Bee with Joey Fatone, "IT'S THE FINAL COUNTDOWN!"

I go on with my day yesterday. About 3 am, I woke up and couldn't get back to sleep. I stumbled out to the couch to see if the Fresh Prince of Bel Air might be on (it was), and and settle in for a night of insomnia. I must have dozed off because around 3 am, I wake up to my cell phone ringing. I notice that it's a Ghanaian phone number, but it's not my sister's number. I thought maybe she was calling from her husband's phone or something and had forgotten what time it was here. I answer the phone to a young gentlemen yelling, "Who is this? Where you call from?" I try to respond, but the caller's accent and the delay on the international call makes it impossible to find out anything. I hang up after about a minute, chalking this all up to a technological snafu. Not 30 seconds later, my phone rings again. Same voice. I hang up. As soon as a flipped my phone shut, thoughts of sheer terror course through my head. I begin to think that maybe something has happened to my sister and her husband. Last week's reports of two American soldiers being found dead in Ghana return to my consciousness. In my mind, something terrible is going on, and I panic. I begin a strict campaign of calling my sister every 15 minutes. 4:15 a.m. 4:30 a.m. 4:45 a.m. No answer. At 5:30 a.m., I know I have to get some sleep as my daughter holds no prisoners when it's time for her to wake up to eat -- any time from 6 to 7:30. I need sleep. I need to find my sister.

I wake up to Claire babbling at 6:30. I go pick her up. I call my sister. No answer. I decide to send an e-mail to both her and her husband, begging them to respond if they can. I basically am melting down. I am a victim of my own imagination. I don't even want to admit the things I was envisioning in my mind at this point. I worry that her ex-boss has done something, or that one of her students has stolen her phone or worse. I get another call from this Ghanaian man asking who I am and who I know in Ghana. I try to communicate without giving any information away that could hurt my sister in some way. He calls again. And again. He tells me he got my number from a text message but won't tell me what the message says. He must not understand me. In between his calls, I call my sister. Still nothing. It's 8 am now. I call my brother as he is feeding his sweet children breakfast. He stays calm, asking me all of the pertinent information. We agree not to call our mother. We don't want to worry her yet. I begin looking into calling the U.S. Embassy in Ghana.

The phone rings again. It is the Ghanaian man again, this time on a clearer connection. He asks me my name. He asks if I am American. Heart beating, I say yes. I am terrified he is about to tell me that he has my sister in his possession or worse yet, he has found her harmed. All I hear is, "I want to be your friend. You be my friend?" Then, I hear his friends gather around the phone to hear me, this American woman, speak. Yes, he wants to be my friend and for me to teach him English. He is a 17 year old living in Kumasi, the same place my sister lives. He was born in London, but was raised in Ghana. His English is thickly veiled in accent, and he cannot understand me. I guess he'd never met a Southern girl before.

Still worried, I call my sister again. Finally, she picks up. Clearly, my many calls have worried her. In unison, we say, "are you ok?" I sobbed. I mean, I let it go big time. She apologized over and over again, sorry to have ignored my earlier calls. Her husband's car had broken down, and they had been consumed with trying to get it working to get their friend back to the city. She assumed we'd talk later, but I kept calling, so she thought something must be wrong. In fact, I kept calling because I thought something must be wrong. All we can figure is that with Ghana's underdeveloped telecommunications network, a text message that I sent her somehow got to this guy's phone. She said it had happened to them before.

My Ghanaian friend has continued to call all. Every time I would pick up the phone, he would beg, "You be my friend." After leaving six of his phone calls unanswered this afternoon, I think he gave up. Oh well, I never was a good pen pal.

Normally, when I totally overreact about something, I get totally embarrassed and apologize a zillion times for being such a silly girl. I talk about what a drama queen I am and pass my overreaction off as being tired or hormonal or just crazy. With this, I was not ashamed. I was just thankful. I have never felt such a rush of relief come over me as when I hear her voice. Ok, maybe when I heard Claire cry for the first time, I was just as relieved, but seriously, they're pretty neck in neck.

Now, more than ever, with her having so little time left in Ghana, I just miss my sister. I miss talking about books with her and griping about our husbands, not that I ever do that...I miss finding items of my clothing missing from my closet, only to find that they somehow snuck into her suitcase and on an airplane to wherever she is going. I miss finding her bubble gum wrappers everywhere and knowing that no matter how messy my car is, hers will always be a lot messier. I miss helping each other pick out outfits and laughing like a child at her when she sings the Chiquita Banana song. I miss giving her things, knowing how much joy she finds in something new to her.

Thank God, my sister is ok. She is coming home.

Saturday, December 1, 2007

A Clean Bill of Health

This is a little brag, but I got some awesome news this past week. I went to visit my new rheumatologist this past Wednesday, a nice man I met at the Lupus Walk. I have been on the search for a good rheumatologist fr a long time. They tend to be an odd bunch, and having been through four of them already, I have been really eager to find a good fit. My very first rheumatologist was a misogynist who found me and my lupus to be a major annoyance in his life of self-importance. My next one forgot to call me with some disturbing lab results around the time of my miscarriage, so I just never really wanted to go back. My third one was awesome, but it took me a full hour to get there, then I usually had to wait about two more hours once I got there. The next one was just the on-call rheumatologist when I was in the hospital before Claire was born. Within the first five minutes of meeting him, he managed to call me fat (I was eight months pregnant) and tell me that he hated pregnant women. Classy.

So, imagine my delight when I attend an Alliance for Lupus Research event and I hear this mild mannered man speaking about the importance of funding for more research. I spoke to him after the event, got his card and made an appointment. When I got there, I didn't have to wait, and he had...wait for it...actually read my chart! He reviewed my lab work from my last visit and said that although I still have the antibody for lupus in my blood and always will, that all of my other lab work came back perfect and showed no signs of disease activity. This is a vast change from one month ago and from the entire past year. My kidney function is back to 100 percent, as is my liver. Both had gotten a little off during pregnancy and the postpartum time period, but they're perfect now! I am wholeheartedly encouraged and thrilled. I will continue to be monitored closely and will stay on two medications to keep everything at bay, but again, a major improvement. I know it could all change in a heartbeat, but for now, I am going to enjoy this healthy time and relish having my body back. I have begun to exercise again and trust my body again -- a wonderful feeling!

Monday, November 19, 2007

Her Father's Daughter


I find that there are many bittersweet moments in the life of a parent and a child. The moment you first see his or her sweet face, heading home from the hospital for the first time...there are too many of these moments to count. Just last week, I totally lost it as Claire devoured her very first bowl of squash. All of these moments make me so proud that Claire is growing and thriving, but they also make me sad because they're all happening so fast. Every time she does something new, I get that familiar ache in my chest.

Lately, what really gets me is watching Claire and her father, my husband, together. This is more sweet than bittersweet, but it still evokes major emotion on my end. He loves her so much, and I suspect she thinks he's pretty swell, too. I find this especially sweet because Jim is one of three boys and a long line of male cousins. In fact, Claire is the first female born into his family in more than a century. While I was always confident that he'd be a wonderful, hands on dad with a son or a daughter, I never expected him to be so good with our little girl. He's totally uninhibited in his adoration of her. It makes me love him even more than I already do, which if you can't tell from previous posts, is a whole lot.

Watching my husband with our daughter has made me reflect on my relationship with my dad. And here we go, I am getting that familiar ache in my chest and lump in my throat, even as I type this. A self-proclaimed daddy's girl for most of my childhood, I spent many of my Saturdays growing up sitting shotgun in my dad's red caddy (not a cool cadillac, but a grumpy old man cadillac). We would run errands, go mini-golfing and play whack-a-mole at the local arcade for hours. We'd go to the local magazine store where he'd pick up a Sporting News and I'd beg for candy. I eventually graduated to tween magazines, then teen magazines. We'd play catch in the backyard or race go-carts at the local track. It was fun, and I loved it.

As I got older, Saturdays with dad at the batting cages gave way to Saturdays at the mall with friends. Greenville Braves games with dad turned into movies with boyfriends. Our relationship changed. I still loved him, but I had other interests. As it turns out, so did he. Namely, he was interested in women who weren't my mom. I'll leave it at that.

I ended up being the one to find out about my dad's extracurricular activities. I had just turned 18, and I was heading off to college in a matter of months. A culmination of things led my mom to find out that my dad was being repeatedly unfaithful. He moved out. I was torn because although I loved my dad, he had done some really awful and embarrassing things to our family. I would never be able to erase those images in my mind -- images that no girl should have of her father. Worst of all, he left. He left his wife and his kids. Flat out, no looking back, he left. In a sick twist of fate, around the same time that my dad left, I was diagnosed with lupus, a sister disease to rheumatoid arthritis, the disease my dad had been living with for more than 20 years. The diseases likely have a common genome, making them easily passed from generation to generation.

We tried to maintain some kind of relationship, but he was under the spell of a new woman who had no interest in us, so he gradually and painfully slipped out of my life my sophomore year in college. Thank goodness for student loans, or I would have been up a creek without and education. Many painful years full of mistrust of everyone around me followed. What's left of my family -- my mom, my sister and my brother, plus our spouses and children -- has struggled in many ways to pick up and move on. We've tried to establish relationships beyond my dad. We're better than we were, but not there yet. We have all found that emotional wounds are slow to heal and quick to scar.

I guess all I am trying to figure out here is at what point certain families go wrong. My dad was a pretty good father to me. He wasn't always there, and he certainly was not a good father to my siblings, but he was pretty good to me. How do you go from proximity to distance? How do you cross that long bridge from spending every Saturday together to estrangement? I haven't spoken to my dad in five years. He knows I am married, but he wasn't at my wedding. He's never met my husband. My brother walked me down the aisle. I suspect he knows I have a baby by now, but he doesn't know her name and has certainly never held her like a grandfather should. He's just this person I used to know, who is part of my history, but likely not a part of my future. His image is stagnant in my mind, never changing, never improving.

As time goes by, I can go days, sometimes even a whole week without thinking about him, but that sense of loss is always there. When I look in the mirror, I see remnants of him from the color of my eyes, to the shape of my nose, to the fineness of my hair. When my hands and knees hurt from the pain of lupus, I wonder if he's hurting, too, and if pain is all we might have in common now. Then, I swear to never be like him, to love my family for as long as I live and to keep my promises, even when it's hard.

As I watch my husband with our child, I can only hope that he will always love her like he does now, that he will be there for all of the important moments of her life and that he will look back on his life with her knowing it was time well spent. There are so many sweet moments ahead for all of us, and I look forward to the branches of our family tree growing and blooming. Most of all, I look forward to Claire being a daddy's girl, because for her, it's something of which she can be proud.