Squawk, Paper, Scissors…Crafting With Kids

“I’m bored!”  “There’s nothing to do!” It’s the two phrases every parent dreads hearing from their children. If I left it up to my kidlets to choose what to do, they’d pick watching cartoons and playing video games (at least my son) all day, every day. As much as I love the boob tube, I don’t want them to turn into couch potatoes so I’m always trying to come up with fun activities that we can do together.

THM-BirdhousesA lot of times that means doing crafts, playing games or working on some other type of project. Doing activities are a great way for us to spend time together, talk about life and create fun and happy memories as a family….at least that’s what I’ve heard and ironically, seen on TV (hey, wasn’t I trying to get my kids away from that evil box in the first place?).

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What Moms Really Want For Mother’s Day

Mother’s Day is this Sunday, May 12, so don’t screw it up!  Just joking, just please make sure to give dear old mom a phone a call to share a “thanks for having and raising me right kind of moment.”sparkle - http://www.sparklee.comI’m not particularly picky when it comes to Mother’s Day gifts.  I mean, who doesn’t like to get something wrapped up all pretty with a surprise inside?  Sure, around the Christmas holiday or my birthday I give The Hubs some suggestions in case any family member should ask what they should get me, but I very rarely hate what I get (though a few times I’ve had a good chuckle about items I’ve received!). 

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Old School Blogging – Marriage, Babies & Bliss Edition

At 3 pm today, spring break officially started in my house and I’ve got 10 full days of family fun ahead!  We’ve got playdtes, outdoor activities, movie marathons and even an amazing trip on the agenda!  Even The Harried Mom is taking a spring break of sorts – this week we’re loading up on reviews and giveaways of “fun things to do with kids!”

However, I’m going to start this break off by kickin’ it back old school and joining in again with a new installment of “Old School Blogging.” I really enjoy these posts because they are so entertaining read and I always learn something new about my favorite bloggers!

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I Want My Kids To Always Believe In Puff The Magic Dragon

Next week my little girl turns three!  Though she started ballet and she’s going to be Cinderella this Halloween, she isn’t really a girly-girl.  She loves to be rough-and-tumble like her big brother, has no fear of climbing rock walls either on our swing set out in the yard or over at the playground  and for weeks now, she’s been doing her own version of Tae Kwon Do (I definitely see a Black Belt in her future!).

I’m thankful that she’s not a child who is captivated by TV.  Yeah, she likes “Yo Gabba Gabba” as much as any other pre-schooler, but after watching a few minutes she usually gets antsy and moves on to do something else.    One of her all-time favorite things to do is to sit down, snuggle with mommy, daddy, her nana, her aunts, her uncles, her brother, her nursery school teachers or the nanny and read books.  LOTS of them!

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Things I Can’t Say…Or Else I’d Be In Big Trouble

I don’t know if it’s because I’m in desperate need of a vacation (I’m counting down the days, hours, minutes and seconds until our annual beach trip) or if the excessive heat and humidity we’re having this summer has done a number on me, but I’m finding that LOTS of things that I would normally shrug my shoulders at and not let bother me are totally getting on my nerves.

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I Want To Hold Your Hand…..

Two weeks ago, I was looking forward to a fun-filled weekend with my hubs and kidlets – a Monster Jam show for my son, a little Nana & Pop Pop time for my daughter and then wrap it all up with the big game, the Super Bowl on Sunday night.  Instead, it all changed when barely after midnight Saturday morning, I felt a pain I had never felt before.

Fast-forward to 6:30 AM: I was being wheeled into the operating room, prepped for emergency surgery.  I wasn’t sure where to look – there were lots of doctors and nurses buzzing around.  My head was dizzy from following them all.  I saw the clock on the wall and just focused on that. I watched the second hand rotating around its face.  Time was ticking by and it seemed to go by so fast.

Had it really been merely five hours earlier that I was in bed lying next to my husband when the pain in my abdomen became so unbearable that I woke him and told him I needed to go to the emergency room?

“They’ll probably just tell me it’s gas,” we joked to each other, but somehow I knew in the back of my mind that it probably wasn’t.

Luckily, it wasn’t a busy night at the ER. In fact, there was only one other patient there and she was being transferred, so I got to see the doctor right away.  I didn’t have a fever, I wasn’t nauseous and aside from the pain, I didn’t feel “sick.”  However, the moment the doctor touched my stomach the pain was unbearable.  He told me he was sending me for an MRI, but it seemed likely that it was my appendix.   I was given two vials of some plastic-tasting drink, a shot of dye into my IV and then off to the MRI.  It took longer for the tech to take me to and from the actual MRI than waiting for the final diagnosis.

They quickly confirmed it was my appendix. It was severely inflamed and they told me I was lucky it hadn’t burst. But it had to come out: surgery would be imminent.  The doctor said he would go make the arrangements with the surgeon, but before he left I asked if I could use my cell phone.

It took me a few tries to get my home phone number correct.  My hands were shaking and I kept dialing the wrong number.  After dialing the correct number, the hubs picked up the phone and asked me “what time is it” and “where are you?”

I told him “It’s 4:30 and I’m still at the hospital.  It’s my appendix and they’re going to send me as soon as possible to surgery.”

There was a long silence from each of us.

I lay there on a gurney in the empty ER, fighting back tears so I could hastily make arrangements with my husband.   I told him I’d call my sister and ask her to come over to the house ASAP.  He would call his brother and ask him to do the same.  We both agreed that it would be best if my husband would stay home until the kidlets got up that morning, and explain that mommy was sick and had to go to the hospital.

As soon as we hung up the phone my tears started to pour out.   Sure, I’d been to the ER many times before, but never for myself.  I had been there holding the hands of my kidlets  for the various bumps and bruises they got from falls, with my hubs when he got a nasty lung infection, and recently when both of my parents dealt with serious illnesses.

Now it was my turn, but no one was there with me to hold my hand.  I had never felt so small, alone or scared before in my life.

Though I’ve birthed two children, I’d never had an operation in my life and certainly had never been put under full anesthesia before.  I didn’t know what to expect.  I met about a dozen different technicians, nurses and doctors who all came at me asking a million questions:

Could you be pregnant?

When was the last time you ate food?

If necessary, would you want a blood transfusion?

Are you allergic to any medications?  What about latex?

All your personal items, including your wedding band and engagement ring will be put in the security safe, if something were to happen to you, who should we release the items to?

Who is your next of kin and can you give me their cell phone number?

One of the nurses, sensing and clearly seeing my fear tried to reassure me.  “Don’t worry, getting put under is nothing.  In fact, it’s probably the best sleep you’ll ever get.”

My mind, however, wandered to dark places, imagining a string of terrifying scenarios. “Will I ever see my family again?” “What if something happens during the operation?” “What if I don’t wake up?”

Yes, it started to seem like the beginning of a tragic Lifetime movie.  All I wanted was to have my husband there with me, holding my hand.  At that very moment my Blackberry buzzed with a text message.  It was from my husband.  It said, “I love you” quickly followed by “I will be there as soon as possible.”   The moment I read that, I got a total sense of zen-like calm.  He was holding my hand – virtually at the moment, but he would soon be by my side and all would be okay.

I sent him a text back, saying “I love you too” and send this picture:

As I looked at the clock in the operating room tick away the seconds I thought, the kidlets must be up by now and daddy’s probably telling them about me, they’re thinking of me and I’m thinking of them…they were holding my hand too.

The next thing I knew, my name was being called.  I was in the recovery room.  I opened my eyes and the first thing I saw was a clock – now it was 8:30 am and as I groggily looked past the clock and the nurse, I saw my husband being brought to my side.

The first thing he did was hold my hand…

10 Things I Love About Motherhood

10 Things I Love About Motherhood

1) The expression of pure joy on my kidlets faces as they shout out “Mommy!” when I come to pick them up each day from preschool/daycare.

2)  The ability to end an argument/disagreement with my kidlets point-blank just by saying “Because I’m your mom, that’s why!”

3)  That I am seen by my kidlets (at least for now) as omnipotent and have the answer to their endless list of questions.

4)  The handmade presents the kids me make for Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day, Christmas & my birthday.

5)  All the hugs, kisses and cuddles before the kidlets go to bed each night.

6)  Sitting on the couch or lying in bed with the kidlets and reading books.

7)  Getting to watch all the cartoons, like “Tom And Jerry,” that I enjoyed as a kid with my little ones (same goes for toys, I can play with toys again without getting strange looks)

8)  The awesome push gift I got from the Hubs after each kidlet (hey, for the first one it was a Tiffany Charm bracelet and I got a charm with each kidlet – I stopped at 2, I didn’t need to fill the bracelet that bad!  I love showing it off sort of my badge of honor for 9 months of hard work!

9)   The pure joy and delight my kidlets get when they accomplish or do something by themselves for the first time.  Makes me feel as though I have achieved a goal as well – helping them to discover their world.

10) All the ups and downs that are still ahead of us.  I look forward to the adventures we will have together as a family.

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