Saturday, September 01, 2012

Two Months Old

Kennedy is now a whole 2 months old!

She's starting to smile some and loves her bath time. She loves to stretch and makes some of the funniest little faces in the morning when she gets up.

She sleeps through the night. She usually goes down somewhere between 9 - 10:30 and sleeps till 6:30 - 7:30. Every once in a while we get a 4 a.m. wake up call if she's gone to bed to early the night before. We are so blessed with our great little sleeper.

She loves music. Radio, CD (especially her hymns lullabye), music from her toys or play yard, doesn't matter where it's coming from...she loves it.

I started back to work and made it to two days of pre-planning before I had to go out for gallbladder surgery. That gave me a few more days with her but that was the only up side. When I did finally head back to work she started staying with her Mimi (Brandon's mom) and her daddy. Mimi keeps her on the days that Brandon works and the mornings that he gets off from work. Daddy comes home and gets her and then has her until the next time he goes back to work. Brandon really is so good with her and I love watching him bond with her. I can usually catch them asleep together in the recliner when I get home from work.

She did get her two month shots the other day and that was heartbreaking. She cried for just a few minutes and then knocked out for the rest of the day. She did really well but it's hard to see her not feel good.

Here's her two month stats:

10lbs 5 oz (50th percentile).
23 3/4 long (95th percentile).
Her eyes are still a blueish gray.


Sunday, August 26, 2012

Can you help?

Can you help?

Maybe you have been looking for a tangible way to help those in need. Maybe you want to help someone but you don't know that your money will really go to a good cause and used to benefit others. Below are two stories from families in my church that you can help. I know each of these families personally and can provide additional information if you need it.

At church this morning I was stopped by my friend Gail who told me of her sweet nephew and his fight in this world. Easton was born just a few days ago with a rare skin disease. Basically, he was born with no skin on a large part of his body.

You can read and donate here http://www.indiegogo.com/SAVEBABYEASTON.

I can't imagine as a mother watching my poor baby live in this amount of pain. It breaks my heart for Easton, his parents and siblings. Anything will help this family and their rising cost to help take care of their sweet family.

We were also given the chance to help another precious couple and their "baby" girl. Katie Smith is the daughter of our Music/Worship/Missions/Everything else Pastor Dan Brothers and his wife Mary Beth. Dan and MB came to our church a few years ago and the Peevys instantly fell in love with them. We have loved serving alongside of them on the mission field and on the stage and love their hearts for people and missions. They have been there for us in some of our hardest moments and have never turned us away from a prayer, hug, phone conversation or just time to hang out and chill.

Katie is a beautiful, 31‐year old former teacher, who was diagnosed with Cystic Fibrosis at just 4‐months old. For the most part, she has lived a fairly normal life until November 2010, when she was officially listed on the lung transplant list at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida. While her course of treatment has been determined, when this might take place is unknown...
We know that God has a plan in all of this, but never imagined that she would still be waiting for her transplant after almost two years. Even with insurance, Katie will have many uninsured, transplant-related expenses such as: co-pays and deductibles, doctor visits, insurance premiums and the costly immunosuppressant medications that she will need to take for the rest of her life.
 
To help offset her uninsured costs, a fundraising campaign in Katie’s honor has been established with HelpHOPELive (formerly NTAF), a nonprofit organization that has been assisting the transplant community for nearly 30 years. All contributions are tax-deductible, are held by HelpHOPELive in the Southeast Kidney Transplant Fund, and are administered by HelpHOPELive for transplant-related expenses only.
 
4 day, 3 night Carnival cruise for 2 in an ocean-view cabin on your choice of Carnival Cruise Lines ships. $1,132.00 value.

Certificate is valid for a full 18 months. Winner chooses when and where to travel.

Enter to win!

To enter, you may donate directly to HelpHopeLive at http://www.helphopelive.org/
1. Click the link http://www.helphopelive.org/
2. In the “Find a Patient” box, enter Katie (first name); Smith (last name)
3. Choose “Lung” in the Type field
4. Click "Find!"
5. Click on Katie’s Cruise Raffle under “My Fundraisers” (left side of page)
6. Complete the information page – be sure to include the number of tickets you are purchasing!

Enter by September 24 - Drawing will be held on September 29, 2012. 

  4 day, 3 night Carnival cruise for 2 in an ocean-view cabin on your choice of Carnival Cruise Lines ships. $1,132.00 value.

Certificate is valid for a full 18 months. Winner chooses when and where to travel.

Enter to win!

To enter, you may donate directly to HelpHopeLive at http://www.helphopelive.org/
1. Click the link http://www.helphopelive.org/
2. In the “Find a Patient” box, enter Katie (first name); Smith (last name)
3. Choose “Lung” in the Type field
4. Click "Find!"
5. Click on Katie’s Cruise Raffle under “My Fundraisers” (left side of page)
6. Complete the information page – be sure to include the number of tickets you are purchasing!

Enter by September 24 - Drawing will be held on September 29, 2012. 
 

Wednesday, August 01, 2012

One month!

Someone told me the day she was born to not blink because they grow up so fast. Ok...a lot of people told me that. That statement didn't feel very true the second night in the hospital when she preceeded to scream (the entire night) like we were killing her. We even asked if they had a different model of baby to test drive before we took her home (I really hope she never reads my blog). Thankfully she got over that, we took her home and time has literally flown by. I don't know where this past month has gone and my little girl is growing up for sure.

I try not to blink.

I am trying to savor each and every moment. I am trying to look into her eyes a little longer while I feed her and trying to memorize the look of her tiny hand holding mine. I am even trying to enjoy the moments where she is screaming for no-real-good-reason-at-all and remember that there is coming a time when she won't let me soothe her like she does now. I listen to each coo, grunt, lawn mower sound while she is sleeping and hope that she'll always be that cute.

I'm really trying to not blink.

Here's her one month stats:

She weighed 7lbs 4oz at birth and now she's 8lbs 13oz.
She was 20 inches long at birth and now she's 21 1/2
She's still eating like a champ. 4 oz or so at a time.
She sleeps from 11 - 6/7ish but going down at 11 has become a nightmare of sorts. (She said screw all the books you've been reading on how to get me to sleep and just come hold me!)
Her eyes are still that blue/grayish color for now.
Her hair changes every day. Some days she's blonde, some days it has a redish tint (people love to point that one out), some days it looks brown. Maybe she'll just have natural highlights and not have to buy them like her mom.

I know month 2 will pass by even faster than first because work is about to start back up soon. I know I have been screaming that I am ready but really I am in the corner sucking my thumb and rocking wondering how in the world I am going to make it through those first few days.

Kennedy,

You have turned our month upside down and we wouldn't want it any other way. We are trying to capture all the memories we can. We love you. More than we could have imagined. Please don't grow up so fast.

Love,

Your mom and dad.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

2 weeks

Kennedy is now 2 weeks old. We went for her appointment last Tuesday. She was up to 7 lbs 8 oz. She is now mostly formula fed due to feeding issues that I have had. She is growing great and doing well according to the doctor.

Sleeping is a roller coaster around here. Right now we go between great nights and horrible nights. We usually get 2 or 3 great ones before we have to go through a rough one.

On her great nights she usually wakes up around 10, eats and goes right back to sleep. She will get up again somewhere between 1 - 3 and then again at like 7. Most of the time she eats and goes right back to sleep until her early morning feeding where she wants to play....a lot.

On the not so great nights she wants to feed at 11, 12, 1 and 2 (give or take a few hours and feedings) and usually again at like 4 and 6. Occasionally she will go back to sleep but most of the time she wants to play and coo.

I never realized how much having a baby is a learning curve. You can read all of the books, blogs and plans you want to. The reality is your child will tell you what to do and how to do it. Sometimes it's like cracking a code, you just have to keep doing what you can until it works right for your baby.

Our next big challenge comes this week when Brandon goes back to work. He has been with us since the 27th when we went into the hospital. He has been such a great husband and daddy and I am more in love with him today than ever. He has taken care of me in every way possible and does great with Kennedy. He's changed more diapers than I have at this point and has become a champ at helping with bottle feedings. He usually gets up with her in the early morning feedings and stays with her until I wake up later in the morning. I love coming into the living room and seeing them talking and playing. We are going to miss his help, especially at night, and just him being here to play with her.

I have 3 more weeks before school starts back and I am excited and dreading it all at the same time. I love the start of school but I know I will miss her more than imagineable once school starts back. We are so blessed that Brandon has a job where he will be able to take care of her most of the time. The other days she will go to his mom's house. I know that I don't have to worry about her when I am at work but I will miss spending time with her.

It's all going by so fast but I love watching her change and grow.

Thursday, July 05, 2012

Kennedy Anne Peevy

Kennedy Anne Peevy came into this world on June 28th at 4:50 p.m. I was admitted to the hospital on Wednesday night and given some medication to make the induction process a little easier and to help me sleep. Well sleep I did. So much that they had to come and shove oxygen up my nose and remind me to breathe.

The next morning at 7 a.m. the doctor came in and broke my water. A few hours later I chose to get an epidural. At first it seemed liked everything was going fine. There were a few places that the epidural worked. However, as the contractions became stronger and she began moving into position for birth it became clear that the epidural was working everywhere except the most important place.

After a few consultations with different anesthesiologists and it was determined that there was nothing that could be done to make it work correctly. I was scared to death to have to give birth naturally but there was really nothing else to do than to get through it.

With an amazing husband by my side and an incredible nurse who helped me get through it, Kennedy came into this world completely healthy and perfect.

We are so in love with our amazing gift. She is precious. She is such a good baby. She only gets up once a night and is doing so well. She has long legs and arms. We love to watch her yawn and stretch. It's our favorite thing that she does.

She has her daddy's eyes and her mama's chin. Brandon was blonde at birth and she takes that after him. She has my cheeks and lips.

We sit here and stare wondering how in the world we could be so blessed to be her parents. We are so excited she is with us and can't wait to watch her learn and grow.

Welcome to the world Kennedy. We love you!

Monday, June 25, 2012

Ready or Not...

Ready or not (and honestly I think I am leaning towards the not) Kennedy is coming this week. We are headed inWednesday night to start the induction. I am praying that she is here by Thursday afternoon but only time will tell.

I have such mixed emotions. I am so glad the end is in sight. I have tried to not take a single minute of this pregnancy for granted. However, I am tired of being pregnant. I am tired, sore, and have officially ran out of room for this little girl. I am ready for the heart burn, carpel tunnel and swelling to go away. I am grateful and thankful to have been given the chance to carry this sweet baby for the last 38 weeks but I am ready for it to be over.

On the other hand, I am sad that the end is in sight. It took us a while to finally get pregnant and be able to keep the pregnancy. I don't know what the future holds. I don't know if I will ever be pregnant again and get the chance to feel these little kicks (or Tyson like punches.) As hard as this pregnancy has been it has been everything I could have ever imagined. It has been such a sweet feeling to carry her and be bonded with her like no one else has had the chance. As this pregnancy comes to a close, it saddens me to think it could be the last time that I get to experience this. I am so ready to see her face and get to watch her grow but there is a part of me that will miss carrying her so close.

There are so many feelings that come along with her finally coming into the world but I am just so ready to meet her. I can't wait to see her sweet face, to see all this hair that has given me such heart burn, to see who she looks like. I can't wait to be her mother and watch her become a daddy's girl.

"For this child I prayed, and the LORD has granted me my petition that I made to him." 1 Samuel 1:27.

So...ready or not. Kennedy is coming.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

So close...

Today we hit the 37 week mark. That means we have a full term baby on our hands. The growth scan on Monday showed that she is weighing 6lbs and 10oz which is right on track. She gave us a little scare on Sunday by sleeping almost all day and not really feeling the need to move. She woke up on Monday and hasn't quit moving since.

Tomorrow is our 37 week appointment and here are a few of the scenarios that could play out.

1. We meet with one of our doctors that we haven't seen in a while. She is super sweet and soooooo little. I really like her though and I am so glad she makes up the third doctor in our practice. Depending on how high my blood pressure is and how the baby is doing she could decide that we need to induce that night or possibly the next day. We will check to make sure no signs (other than swelling and high BP) of pre-eclampsia have reared their ugly heads. If they have it will be an immediate induction or c-section depending on how bad.  OR....

2. My BP could still be slightly elevated but showing no signs of BP and we put off the induction for another week. At this point the thought is that we will not try and go beyond 38 weeks because of my consistent high blood pressure. OR....

3. She could come on her own during that week of waiting but I am putting a big YEAH RIGHT on that one.

So to sum it all up....we could have a baby tomorrow but it won't be any longer than next week. As much as I love the doctor that we will see tomorrow and wouldn't care if she delivered Kennedy, our regular doctor is who we will see the following week. We have been with him through the last 4 years. It would be awesome for him to be the one on call. We are so thankful to go to a practice that we really to love and trust all three of the doctors and adore the nursing staff.

So that's the update. Until then it's a lot of Dallas, Waltons, Saved by the Bell, reading on the Knook and trying to pass the time until she gets here.

Friday, June 08, 2012

Countdown has begun...

Well, we are officially on a countdown to baby being here. I hit the 35 week mark this past Wednesday. A few weeks ago my blood pressure was extremely high and I was instructed to go home, drink water and rest. I was also sent to a specialist to keep a close watch on Kennedy's growth for the last few weeks of this pregnancy. So every Monday is now spent getting 4D ultrasounds (glad I paid 100.00 for this a few weeks back and got zero good pictures and now get one every week) checking her weight and growth. Every Thursday we get to see our regular OB practice that monitors her heart to make sure she is not in distress. I am on blood pressure medication and modified bed rest until she makes her grand entrance into this world.

Which could be sooner than later.... Right now she is doing great and I am doing great. However, they will continue to monitor me to make sure that I don't develop pre-eclampsia. At 37 weeks we will look to see how things are going and determine then if we will induce or allow her to come on her own.

Which doesn't seem to be anytime soon.... Regardless of what my mom and aunt think, she has not dropped at all. After my check the other day it seems as though she is not ready to come on her own which is actually a good thing. Although her chances on the outside world are really good at this point, I would love for her to come when she is good and ready. Reality is that my blood pressure will probably not go down any further than what it is currently and at some point we will have to pull the trigger and get this baby out.

All of this is a little nerve wrecking for me. It's crazy to think that I could have a baby in my arms in less than 2 weeks but definitely no more than 4. WoW!

So until then I will continue to lay on the couch, fold laundry, watch a Baby Story like an idiot and catch up (judge you) on YOUR life on facebook.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Sweet Summertime

This school year was great! It was hands down the best year of my teaching career. Great kids, phenomenal co-teachers, amazing administration. It was great to be able to co-teach and not have to deal with the pressure of teaching resource classes . It was amazing having administration to support me and help me get through this pregnancy as well as I have. It was really nice not having any additional responsibilities or coaching duties. Overall it was just an amazing year.

BUT…Oh how I love the summer. Summer is a great reward for everything that we have to put up with during the year. This year the summer break means getting some time to relax and get things ready for Kennedy’s arrival. She is expected to be here sometime between July 4th – July 11th by the way she is measuring. She could always be earlier or later (oh I pray not!) and we could not be any more excited. I am planning on taking 6 weeks from the beginning of the school year, so I should have anywhere from 9-11 weeks at home with her before going back to work in September.
That is all tentative but the plan right now.

Tomorrow marks week 33 and so far everything is still going great. My blood pressure was elevated last visit (couldn’t have been because we showed up to the wrong office and I had to make it back for the last day of school) but the doctor wasn’t concerned because of all that I had going on that day. He has decided to start bringing me in every week just to keep an eye on it and make sure she is still doing well.

She has days that she is really quite and doesn’t move much. It scares the crap out of me but I am told it’s normal and that she is just growing and running out of room. She usually makes up for it the next day by holding Zumba lessons in my stomach. I love those days but they are becoming sorta uncomfortable as hard as she kicks and punches.

We have been more than overwhelmed and blessed by our different showers and groups of families and friends. Our living room and her nursery looks like Babies R Us right now. I plan to post about the different events in the coming days. Brandon and I both feel undeserving of all the love people have shown us and are humbled by the amount of people that care for us and our family. I have loved washing all the little clothes and blankets and Brandon is having fun setting up all the equipment and playing (I mean setting up) all the toys! :) My plan is just to take everything a day at a time, task at a time and get things finished for baby girl’s arrival.

It will be a sweet summertime for sure.

Thursday, May 03, 2012

10 Reasons....

Happy Anniversary Brandon Peevy. 4 years ago today I was blessed to become your wife. You show me everyday what it means to love and to be loved. I can't wait to watch you become Kennedy's daddy in just a few weeks. She's lucky to have you! So with all that said...here's a little top ten list for you! Top Ten Reasons I Love My Husband. 10. Even though he has grown to hate Millie (she doesn't obey...ever) he lets me keep her and deals with her because he knows I can not handle getting rid of her right now. 9. He loves New Hope. I mean the boy LOVES New Hope. He loves going back there with me. He loves talking and mainly listening to all my aunts and uncles (see #5) and their stories for the 1,000th time. He loves riding around the country looking at all the old stuff and just driving for miles through farm land and green grass. 8. He is my defender. 7. He has a crooked middle finger and it makes me laugh. 6. He loves using his EMT skills when I do something stupid. Just like the other night when I dropped a pot roast back into bubbling liquid and it burned the living piss out of me. He came over all in EMT mode and taking care of my poor splattered neck. 5. He loves the old people in his life. I can take a room full of teenagers any day but give me a room full of old people and I am at a loss. Brandon on the other hand, can talk to old people all day, every day. He loves to hear their stories and just hams it up with them. It was so cool to be able to watch him with both of his grandfathers before they passed. He would just sit and hang on every word his Daddy Bob would say. His whole face just changes when he is in their presence and I adore him for it. 4. He does all the yard work. Enough said. 3. He is so good to help out around the house and probably does way more than his fair share if we were honest about it. He is always vaccuming (he really likes it actuallly), cleaning up the kitchen, folding laundry, and the list goes on. There is no division of labor in our house and it's amazing to have someone as helpful as him. 2. I've always said I fell in love with the boy for his smile and it still stands. He has the most infectious smile ever. He grins from ear to ear and it's precious. 1. He loves me. He adores me actually. It has taken me a while to be comfortable with someone loving me like he does but he does it so well.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Nursery

Brandon and I have a really bad habit. We like to start things and if it doesn't get done within a day or two we usually just leave it there and think that by some miracle it will get done. We have a 1,000 little projects here and there that we haves started but never finished. We are notorious for painting a room and then stopping at the touch ups and therefore leaving it looking like CRAP (for proof look at my living room, kitchen, bathroom and guest bedroom.) So I knew when we started the nursery that we needed to have plenty of time to get it done. Not just a let's start on Friday and see what we can finish by dinner on Saturday night type of thing.

The good news was that Brandon had actually already done one major part back in November. Actually, the day we found out that we were pregnant, Brandon was laying down hardwoods in the nursery room to prepare for our home study. So that part was already checked off the list.

Back when we thought Kennedy was a Titus , we had planned on a fireman themed nursery. Well as much as I believe in women's equality I didn't really think that Kennedy would love a fire themed nursery. So....I had to turn my brain into girl mode.

Now let's just go ahead and put this out there. I am not a pink person (yes I know my blog is semi-pink but I'm talking like overboard, throw up, pink!) I really have never have been a pink person. Closest I ever came was a stint of really liking purple. I hate purple now. So I had to come up with something that was girly but didn't look like Pepto Bismol was sponsoring my daughter's room.

That's when I found her bedding. It was perfect. Blue, greens, some yellowish/golden color, chocolate and white. Although it sounds boyish the paisley all over the bedding really made it look cute for a girl.

The next idea was the idea of the tree and I am so happy with the way that it turned out in her room. I was going to order stencils at one point but then convinced myself that if I can decorate a cake....I could decorate a wall. I free-handed the tree and had a lot of fun.




The next idea was the little girl silhouette that I found on Pinterest. I decided to paint her on there (with the help of power point and a projector.) I had been contemplating a quote from the ever famous Winnie the Pooh (also found on Pinterest) when my mind took over and the conversation went a little something like this....

Me: Awwwwww she's cute
Me: Awwwwww the dandelions that she's blowing are soaring through the air
Me: Heck yes! One should not feel compelled to creep when one feels the impulse to soar. Dr. Potts would love it.

So there you have it. I threw it up in powerpoint, painted some butterflies and it all came together.




I really am so proud of her room and can't wait to finish it up. This time we actually have to finish it up because she needs some blinds. Like serious blinds. That room gets sun from the minute it comes up till the minute it goes down.

We also have to finish curtains and bookshelves (Brandon's daddy is making those.) My grandmother's rocking chair is also being recovered for the room. I love that I have that rocking chair in my possession and can not wait to rock her in it. I really can't wait to watch my mom rock Kennedy in the same rocking chair where she once rocked with me.




Other than that a crib mattress and a baby and we are all set! :)

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Review Mirror

We were here a year ago. It's a hard place to look back. I want to say that where I am today makes up for all the pain of that point in time but the truth is...it doesn't really. At all. Sure, I am thankful for where we are now. I am thankful for the life that is continuing to grow inside of me. Longer than any other life has grown inside of me. I am thankful for the little heart that is beating, lungs that are breathing, brain that is thinking, blood that is flowing inside of me right now. But that place of a year ago STILL HURTS. It hurts when I think of November and what could have been with that little life. It hurts when I see other people go through something like this and those feelings of anger and hurt come rushing back to me. It hurts to recall those memories of waking up and knowing that it was over. It hurts.

My faith has been made stronger (starting to sound a little like Kelly Clarkson I guess) through that time. I am thankful for that. I am thankful that the Lord chooses to restore and heal both broken bodies and hearts. I am thankful that the Lord is faithful and have learned that faithfulness is not dependant on your plans going the right way.

I am glad that this season of life is in our review mirror and at times I think that I have driven it completely out of sight. But somehow I know it will always be with me and a part of me is ok with that. It keeps the memory fresh of dependence on Christ and the need for mercy and strength each and every day whether or not we realize it.

I am excited about what's ahead in our future. I can't wait to hold Kennedy. To snuggle with her, to sing to her (though she might can wait for that), to stay up late at night watching her breathe, to pray over her, to dream big dreams for her.

Today I am thankful for what is behind and what lies ahead and for the grace and strength to go through it all.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

24 Week Appointment

We only got an ultrasound confirming that she is indeed a baby girl so there are no real updates as far as measurements. She is using me as a trampoline right now and turning all crazy. During the ultrasound she changed positions 2 or 3 times so who knows where she will end up.

The doctor is not concerned with my swelling in my feet since my blood pressure was 120/80 yesterday. She is sending me to a Chiropractor that specializes in pregnancy to try and help the nerve in my lower back that is now pinched thanks to Little Miss.

I got the dreaded glucose juice that I have to drink 30 minutes before my next appointment in three weeks. I'll start it at 7:45, have 5 minutes to finish it and then have to wait an hour before the check my blood. So looking forward to this appointment! ;P

In other news we have decided to cancel our trip to DC this Spring Break due to logistics and my back killing me. We have decided to just go into the mountains for a few days and then spend the rest of the week getting the nursery and things ready for Kennedy. My mom and aunt will be here towards the end of the week to help and I can't wait for my Aunt Jettie to make her first trip to Georgia.

Things are coming right along and I am hoping the next 16 weeks will go by uneventful and fast!

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

It's A....


A sweet baby girl. How in the world did I really think that I could have a boy first? That would be breaking Judson tradition apparently. :) (To date all of my close friends from college have had a girl first.)

Kennedy Anne will be her name. I wasn't really excited about all the girly names out there. I just can't see myself with an Aubrey or Ansley. Brandon finally looked at me one day and mentioned by facination with the Kennedy family and suggested it as a first name. I fell in love with it and there you have it. The Anne is my sister's middle name and just fits well with Kennedy.

I have started working on her nursery. So far the scheme is chocolate walls with white, lime green, bright blue (yes I know she's a girl...it'll be cute....trust me!) and some pink accents.

I am trying to wrap my head around the fact that I am having a daughter and what all that means but that's a whole different post for a different day.

I'll post stats on her tomorrow after our 24 week visit this afternoon.

Thursday, March 08, 2012

Surprise

Surprise....

I do still remember how to log on to my blog. Shocking I know.

Things have been a little more than crazy around the Peevy household. It seems like we are always in a constant whirlwind of activity but we wouldn't have it any other way. :)

So here's the updates:

Brandon is doing great and loving the fire department. He is about to take his CDL test so that he can start the path of becoming a driver (yeah they don't let you just drive around a big ol' fire truck apparently.) It will take him close to 3 years before he is promoted to driver but he's excited.

I am continuing to do well. School has been kicking my tail. It does every year around this time. The warmer it gets, the crazier the kids get. The full moon this week isn't helping. I actually had a kid kicked out of school last week for reporting his weed stolen at school. Well played my friend, well played.

I am 22 weeks and a day pregnant as of today. Everything continues to go well. It took a while to really feel the baby move but once it started it has been full force. The baby has been playing games with us and we still do not have 100% confirmation on the sex. The best guess is a boy but I haven't bought anything blue yet. We have another ultrasound on the 23rd and hopefully baby will stop sitting with legs crossed and help this mama start planning for the arrival.

Speaking of arrival...I can't believe that in 4 months I will have a child. It is something that I have longed for and prayed for but feel so unprepared for. Last night at dinner I had the chance to snuggle with a friends' 8 week old baby and got really emotional. Somewhat overwhelmed and somewhat fearful. Excited to be a mama but scared at the responsibility that comes with it.

Registering for this kid was INSANE. I can not believe all the stuff that is out there for something that is so small. Swings, mats, bouncy things, more swings, more bouncy things. Good night there's so much crap to think through and I honestly have had no clue where to start. At least when you get married you have been in a house before and know what your taste is and what to register for. Baby....heck I don't know.

So since I don't have a clue 1. what the baby is and 2. what I am doing...we decided to fix up other areas of the house that I do know a little something about like the living room. :) We recently put down new carpet in the living room and new tile in the bathroom. We are trying to be Bob Vila and honestly it's working for a house that we don't want to sink much money into. We have some new light fixtures to replace the 1950's chandeliers in the house and are working on moving the laundy room from down in the basement to the upstairs (thanks to Kay Davis lobbying my father in law for that one.)

For spring break we are headed to Washington D.C. Brandon has never been there and I love it. We plan to head out early Saturday morning and there's a lot on the to-do list. I'll post more about our plans as it gets closer. I am excited about showing Brandon the city and possibly meeting up with a few friends from college while I am there.

Till next time...

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Another chapter...

I started this blog after college as a way to keep up with friends and see their cute kids. It has become a journal of the different chapters of my life such as my move to Georgia, my marriage to Brandon, my journey through infertility/miscarriages and such. In recent months it has become more of a journal/help tool for those going through adoption. It is with you in mind that I am careful the way that I write this entry.

I have been writing this blog post for a while now and trying to find the right words. Although there is some thought behind this post I doubt I will be able to convey the true emotions that this chapter brings.

Back in October, Brandon and I decided to expand our family through adoption. We began to research and start the mounds of paper work that adoption involves. We made it to our first interview and had a great meeting with a phenomenal agency.

Two days later I began to get sick, felt super tired and just felt like something was wrong. Sure enough, after taking a pregnancy test, Brandon and I found out that I was pregnant. (Catch that Jennifer?)

Although we were excited, fear began to creep in and I just felt like it was the beginning of another end. Day after day things continued to go well and though there have been some scared and bumps in the road, it looks like the baby is doing well.

We are currently 15 weeks and have seen the baby during a few ultrasounds to make sure everything continues to be ok.

Brandon and I decided to go through with our home study to have it on file but have not gone past that stage. Our home study stays good for a year. We are still planning on adopting but felt like this pregnancy needed my full attention at the time.

We still have a heart for adoption and still believe it will be a part of our future.

I know this is hard for some people to read who have followed this blog because of their similar paths to ours. Please know that I am still well aware of your struggles and pray that your heartache comes to and end soon.

Please continue to keep us and the baby in your prayers. We are hopeful that in July we will be holding our sweet baby. We can't wait to add another Peevy to our pod.

Thursday, November 03, 2011

How to help a family that is adopting

Stole this from an adoption blog I follow...so true! By the way...we probably won't have an "airport" experience like she talks about...but we will have a long car ride :)

Supporting Families Before the Airport

Your friends are adopting. They’re in the middle of dossiers and home studies, and most of them are somewhere in the middle of Waiting Purgatory. Please let me explain something about WP: It sucks in every way. Oh sure, we try to make it sound better than it feels by using phrases like “We’re trusting in God’s plan” and “God is refining me” and “Sovereignty trumps my feelings” and crazy bidness like that. But we are crying and aching and getting angry and going bonkers when you’re not watching. It’s hard. It hurts. It feels like an eternity even though you can see that it is not. It is harder for us to see that, because many of us have pictures on our refrigerators of these beautiful darlings stuck in an orphanage somewhere while we’re bogged down in bureaucracy and delays.

How can you help? By not saying or doing these things:

1. “God’s timing is perfect!” (Could also insert: “This is all God’s plan!” “God is in charge!”) As exactly true as this may be, when you say it to a waiting parent, we want to scratch your eyebrows off and make you eat them with a spoon. Any trite answer that minimizes the struggle is as welcomed as a sack of dirty diapers. You are voicing something we probably already believe while not acknowledging that we are hurting and that somewhere a child is going to bed without a mother again. Please never say this again. Thank you.

2. “Are you going to have your own kids?” (Also in this category: “You’ll probably get pregnant the minute your adoption clears!” “Since this is so hard, why don’t you just try to have your own kids?” “Well, at least you have your own kids.”) The subtle message here is: You can always have legitimate biological kids if this thing tanks. It places adoption in the Back-up Plan Category, where it does not belong for us. When we flew to Ethiopia with our first travel group from our agency, out of 8 couples, we were the only parents with biological kids. The other 7 couples chose adoption first. Several of them were on birth control. Adoption counts as real parenting, and if you believe stuff Jesus said, it might even be closer to the heart of God than regular old procreation. (Not to mention the couples that grieved through infertility already. So when you say, “Are you going to have your own kids?” to a woman who tried for eight years, then don’t be surprised if she pulls your beating heart out like Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.)

3. For those of you in Christian community, it is extremely frustrating to hear: “Don’t give up on God!” or “Don’t lose faith!” It implies that we are one nanosecond away from tossing our entire belief system in the compost pile because we are acting sad or discouraged. It’s condescending and misses the crux of our emotions. I can assure you, at no point in our story did we think about kicking Jesus to the curb, but we still get to cry tears and feel our feelings, folks. Jesus did. And I’m pretty sure he went to heaven when he died.

4. We’re happy to field your questions about becoming a transracial family or adopting a child of another race, but please don’t use this moment to trot out your bigotry. (Cluelessness is a different thing, and we try to shrug that off. Like when someone asked about our Ethiopian kids, “Will they be black?” Aw, sweet little dum-dum.) The most hurtful thing we heard during our wait was from a black pastor who said, “Whatever you do, don’t change their last name to Hatmaker, because they are NOT Hatmakers. They’ll never be Hatmakers. They are African.” What the??? I wonder if he’d launch the same grenade if we adopted white kids from Russia? If you’d like to know what we’re learning about raising children of another race or ask respectful, legitimate questions, by all means, do so. We care about this and take it seriously, and we realize we will traverse racial landmines with our family. You don’t need to point out that we are adopting black kids and we are, in fact, white. We’ve actually already thought of that.

5. Saying nothing is the opposite bad. I realize with blogs like this one, you can get skittish on how to talk to a crazed adopting Mama without getting under her paper-thin skin or inadvertently offending her. I get it. (We try hard not to act so hypersensitive. Just imagine that we are paper-pregnant with similar hormones surging through our bodies making us cry at Subaru commercials just like the 7-month preggo sitting next to us. And look at all this weight we’ve gained. See?) But acting like we’re not adopting or struggling or waiting or hoping or grieving is not helpful either. If I was pregnant with a baby in my belly, and no one ever asked how I was feeling or how much longer or is his nursery ready or can we plan a shower, I would have to audition new friend candidates immediately.

Here’s what we would love to hear Before the Airport:

1. Just kind, normal words of encouragement. Not the kind that assume we are one breath away from atheism. Not the kind that attempt to minimize the difficulties and tidy it all up with catchphrases. We don’t actually need for you to fix our wait. We just want you to be our friend and acknowledge that the process is hard and you care about us while we’re hurting. That is GOLD. I was once having lunch with my friend Lynde when AWAA called with more bad news about Ben’s case, and I laid my head down on the table in the middle of Galaxy Café and bawled. Having no idea what to do with such a hot mess, she just cried with me. Thank you for being perfect that day, Lynde.

2. Your questions are welcomed! We don’t mind telling you about the court system in Ethiopia or the in-country requirements in Nicaragua or the rules of the foster system. We’re glad to talk about adoption, and we’re thankful you care. I assure you we didn’t enter adoption lightly, so sharing details of this HUGE PIECE OF OUR LIVES is cathartic. Plus, we want you to know more because we’re all secretly hoping you’ll adopt later. (This is not true.) (Yes it is.)

3. When you say you’re praying for us and our waiting children, and you actually really are, not only does that soothe our troubled souls, but according to Scripture, it activates the heavens. So pray on, dear friends. Pray on. That is always the right thing to say. And please actually do it. We need people to stand in the gap for us when we are too tired and discouraged to keep praying the same words another day.

4. If you can, please become telepathic to determine which days we want to talk about adoption and which days we’d rather you just show up on our doorstep with fresh figs from the Farmer’s Market (thanks, Katie) or kidnap us away in the middle of the day to go see Bridesmaids. Sometimes we need you to make us laugh and remember what it feels like to be carefree for a few hours. If you’re not sure which day we’re having, just pre-buy movie tickets and show up with the figs, and when we answer the door, hold them all up and ask, “Would you like to talk for an hour uninterrupted about waiting for a court date?” We’ll respond to whichever one fits.

Supporting Families After the Airport

You went to the airport. The baby came down the escalator to cheers and balloons. The long adoption journey is over and your friends are home with their new baby / toddler / twins / siblings / teenager. Everyone is happy. Maybe Fox News even came out and filmed the big moment and “your friend” babbled like an idiot and didn’t say one constructive word about adoption and also she looked really sweaty during her interview. (Really? That happened to me too. Weird.)

How can you help? By not saying or doing these things:

1. I mean this nicely, but don’t come over for awhile. Most of us are going to hole up in our homes with our little tribe and attempt to create a stable routine without a lot of moving parts. This is not because we hate you; it’s because we are trying to establish the concept of “home” with our newbies, and lots of strangers coming and going makes them super nervous and unsure, especially strangers who are talking crazy language to them and trying to touch their hair.

2. Please do not touch, hug, kiss, or use physical affection with our kids for a few months. We absolutely know your intentions are good, but attachment is super tricky with abandoned kids, and they have had many caregivers, so when multiple adults (including extended family) continue to touch and hold them in their new environment, they become confused about who to bond with. This actually delays healthy attachment egregiously. It also teaches them that any adult or stranger can touch them without their permission, and believe me, many adoptive families are working HARD to undo the damage already done by this position. Thank you so much for respecting these physical boundaries.

3. For the next few months, do not assume the transition is easy. For 95% of us, it so is not. And this isn’t because our family is dysfunctional or our kids are lemons, but because this phase is so very hard on everyone. I can’t tell you how difficult it was to constantly hear: “You must be so happy!” and “Is life just so awesome now that they’re here??” and “Your family seems just perfect now!” I wanted that to be true so deeply, but I had no idea how to tell you that our home was actually a Trauma Center. (I did this in a passive aggressive way by writing this blog, which was more like “An Open Letter to Everyone Who Knows Us and Keeps Asking Us How Happy We Are.”) Starting with the right posture with your friends – this is hard right now – will totally help you become a safe friend to confide in / break down in front of / draw strength from.

4. Do not act shocked if we tell you how hard the early stages are. Do not assume adoption was a mistake. Do not worry we have ruined our lives. Do not talk behind our backs about how terribly we’re doing and how you’re worried that we are suicidal. Do not ask thinly veiled questions implying that we are obviously doing something very, very wrong. Do not say things like, “I was so afraid it was going to be like this” or “Our other friends didn’t seem to have these issues at all.” Just let us struggle. Be our friends in the mess of it. We’ll get better.

5. If we’ve adopted older kids, please do not ask them if they “love America so much” or are “so happy to live in Texas.” It’s this simple: adoption is born from horrible loss. In an ideal world, there would be no adoption, because our children would be with their birth families, the way God intended. I’ll not win any points here, but I bristle when people say, “Our adopted child was chosen for us by God before the beginning of time.” No he wasn’t. He was destined for his birth family. God did not create these kids to belong to us. He didn’t decide that they should be born into poverty or disease or abandonment or abuse and despair aaaaaaaall so they could finally make it into our homes, where God intended them to be. No. We are a very distant Plan B. Children are meant for their birth families, same as my biological kids were meant for mine. Adoption is one possible answer to a very real tragedy… after it has already happened, not before as the impetus for abandonment. There is genuine grief and sorrow when your biological family is disrupted by death and poverty, and our kids have endured all this and more. So when you ask my 8-year-old if he is thrilled to be in Texas, please understand that he is not. He misses his country, his language, his food, his family. Our kids came to us in the throes of grief, as well they should. Please don’t make them smile and lie to you about how happy they are to be here.

6. Please do not disappear. If I thought the waiting stage was hard, it does not even hold the barest candle to what comes after the airport. Not. The. Barest. Candle. Never have I felt so isolated and petrified. Never have I been so overwhelmed and exhausted. We need you after the airport way more than we ever needed you before. I know you’re scared of us, what with our dirty hair and wild eyes and mystery children we’re keeping behind closed doors so they don’t freak out more than they already have, but please find ways to stick around. Call. Email. Check in. Post on our Facebook walls. Send us funny cards. Keep this behavior up for longer than six days.

Here’s what we would love to hear or experience After the Airport:

1. Cook for your friends. Put together a meal calendar and recruit every person who even remotely cares about them. We didn’t cook dinners for one solid month, and folks, that may have single handedly saved my sanity. There simply are not words to describe how exhausting and overwhelming those first few weeks are, not to mention the lovely jetlag everyone came home with. And if your friends adopted domestically right up the street, this is all still true, minus the jetlag.

2. If we have them, offer to take our biological kids for an adventure or sleepover. Please believe me: their lives just got WHACKED OUT, and they need a break, but their parents can’t give them one because they are 1.) cleaning up pee and poop all day, 2.) holding screaming children, 3.) spending all their time at doctors’ offices, and 4.) falling asleep in their clothes at 8:15pm. Plus, they are in lockdown mode with the recently adopted, trying to shield them from the trauma that is Walmart.

3. Thank you for getting excited with us over our little victories. I realize it sounds like a very small deal when we tell you our kindergartener is now staying in the same room as the dog, but if you could’ve seen the epic level of freakoutedness this dog caused her for three weeks, you would understand that this is really something. When you encourage us over our incremental progress, it helps. You remind us that we ARE moving forward and these little moments are worth celebrating. If we come to you spazzing out, please remind us where we were a month ago. Force us to acknowledge their gains. Be a cheerleader for the healing process.

4. Come over one night after our kids are asleep and sit with us on our porch. Let me tell you: we are all lonely in those early weeks. We are home, home, home, home, home. Good-bye, date nights. Good-bye, GNO’s. Good-bye, spontaneous anything. Good-bye, church. Good-bye, big public outings. Good-bye, community group. Good-bye, nightlife. So please bring some community to our doorstep. Bring friendship back into our lives. Bring adult conversation and laughter. And bring an expensive bottle of wine.

5. If the shoe fits, tell adopting families how their story is affecting yours. If God has moved in you over the course of our adoption, whether before the airport or after, if you’ve made a change or a decision, if somewhere deep inside a fire was lit, tell us, because it is spiritual water on dry souls. There is nothing more encouraging than finding out God is using our families for greater kingdom work, beautiful things we would never know or see. We gather the holy moments in our hands every day, praying for eyes to see God’s presence, his purposes realized in our story. When you put more holy moments in our hands to meditate on, we are drawn deeper into the Jesus who led us here.

Here’s one last thing: As you watch us struggle and celebrate and cry and flail, we also want you to know that adoption is beautiful, and a thousand times we’ve looked at each other and said, “What if we would’ve said no?” God invited us into something monumental and lovely, and we would’ve missed endless moments of glory had we walked away. We need you during these difficult months of waiting and transitioning, but we also hope you see that we serve a faithful God who heals and actually sets the lonely in families, just like He said He would. And even through the tears and tantrums (ours), we look at our children and marvel that God counted us worthy to raise them. We are humbled. We’ve been gifted with a very holy task, and when you help us rise to the occasion, you have an inheritance in their story; your name will be counted in their legacy.

Because that day you brought us pulled pork tacos was the exact day I needed to skip dinner prep and hold my son on the couch for an hour, talking about Africa and beginning to bind up his emotional wounds. When you kidnapped me for two hours and took me to breakfast, I was at the very, very, absolute end that morning, but I came home renewed, able to greet my children after school with fresh love and patience. When you loved on my big kids and offered them sanctuary for a night, you kept the family rhythm in sync at the end of a hard week.

Thank you for being the village. You are so important

Tuesday, November 01, 2011

Mix of Emotions

All I can say is WOW!

I have no idea how to put into words all of my hopes, dreams and fears now that this process is officially underway.

We had our first home study meeting tonight. Melissa, our case worker, is super sweet and on our side for sure! :) She really likes us and that's a great thing.

We walked through our home study requirements and she was pretty impressed with all my organizational skills. Honestly so am I! I can't believe I have really kept up with all of this paper work. Brandon says when I want something I go until I get it. I guess this has been motivation to stay organized and do what I need to do.

As she began to talk about the possible heartaches that could happen through this process, a part of me wanted to stand up and scream, NO! No, there can't be any more heartache. Don't you know that I have been trying for 2 years, 3 if we are honest, to have a child and for 34 out of 36 times I have gotten my period and wondered why I am broken? Don't you know the other 2 times I lost my baby and experienced grief like I had never imagined was possible. There is no more room for heartache. None.

Truth is...there is more room for heartache. I have not been through what other women have been through. I have never given birth to a still born child. I have never miscarried beyond 6 weeks and for that I am so grateful. There's room I suppose.

My biggest fear throughout this process is that we will be matched and the mother will change her mind during the "dreaded days." The length of those days is different for each state. Florida is two days or as soon as the birth mother is released from the hospital. Georgia is TEN DAYS. 10 days folks. That's a LONG time. Not to mention if the birth father doesn't sign off and comes forward later he can screw with you until the finalization which can take up to 4 months. Ai yi yi.

The thought of finally having a child to love of my own makes me want to take this risk but honestly I am scared now. I am literally placing my future in the hands of the Lord and two birth parents who can have me on a string.

We still feel called to do this even after tonight but I am not going to lie...my heart feels like it is on the chopping block.

We will finish up the final few parts of our paper work this week. We still have the sanitation check, medical reports, Brandon's part of the profile, photographs of us and our house and our FBI clearance. We are going to go through a process that cost more money to get our FBI clearance back quicker. This is because a lot of the grant programs that we are applying for have to have a completed home study first. We are not trying to rush the process but we can only make a good choice of agencies once we know what kind of financial resources we have. We will mail what we have on Monday and then we will set up our individual interviews from there.

While I am organizing all the paper work, Brandon is becoming Mr. Do-it-yourself-Bob-Villa around here. He is getting ready to lay new floors in our nursery room and hallway and he is super excited. He's excited to learn how to do it. I am excited for him and will continue to support him from my computer and paper work on the couch. :)

I know that I am pouring out my heart on this blog these days but to be honest, it's my outlet because I imagine that everyone who reads it cares. It's also a journal to look back on through our journey as well as a sounding board or help to others going through this process. I can't wait to read this journey with a little one in my arms one day and smile at the incredible journey that we are privileged to experience.

Until next time...

Rockin and Rollin

I am waiting to wake up from the dream that this home study process is acutally rocking and rolling right along. (I actually had a dream last night that someone handed me a check for 20,000...oh for that to come true :)!)

Today we found out that we don't have to pay for our 911 checks or septic tank inspection. That is HUGE since there are so many little things that will nickle and dime you to death when it comes to adoption.

We have just a few little things to fill out and the second wave will be done.

Today at 4:30 is our first meeting with our caseworker for our home study. It is our first of 4 meetings with her. We (I) am nervous. It's the first money that we have applied towards anything and that in itself is nerve racking.

I'll update tomorrow and let you know how the meeting went and what to expect next in this process!!

Until next time...

Friday, October 28, 2011

Open or Closed

I knew there would be a lot of decisions that we would have to make in the process of adoption. Race? We don't care. Gender? Doesn't matter to us. International or Domestic? We've chosen domestic. All these choices have been made and honestly have come quite easily.

The hardest decision ever has been deciding whether or not to do open, semi-open or closed adoption. I try to pull from my own experience through some of these decisions but for this one, my experience is kinda jaded. I knew my birth mother and it wasn't a very pleasant experience. She's not really a nice person (ask Sara Beth) and I don't really like her to be honest with you. I have never met my birth dad but I am really ok with that too. Sure there are moments where I would love to see what he looks like now. Moments where I wonder where he has been all this time. What is his story? How much of his genes have played into my story? Ask how many other children he has donated sperm to but never acknowledged or wanted.

But now here's the decision staring me in the face. What if my baby has birth parents who are actually kind and good but just young and not ready to give this baby a life? What if my baby is in the tummy of a woman who is so desperate to keep her baby and love it like she has the other 5 that she has birthed but knows that she has no money or resources to do so? What if my child will have good people for parents? Can I watch my child bond with the woman that carried them and be ok with it? Can I really keep up with all the communication that is required with an open adoption? Can I really put my heart out there like that? Do I really want the birth parents to know everything about me?

But then again there is the side of closed adoption. When my baby lies awake at night with those doubts and questions, do I really have the right to choose a close adoption and not have those answers for my baby? Can I really keep them from their heritage just to keep my heart protected? It would be so much easier but God has obviously not chosen us for an easier path.

Semi-Open means that all communication will be through the agency. All pictures, all phone calls, all meetings, all letters, everything would be through the agency. It seems like a good choice but she might not be open to it.

Whatever the path, I pray that we make the right choice. The choice that will allow our baby to grow to be a healthy person both emotionally and physically. The choice that will put the pieces together for our child.