Mary, Mary why ya buggin'?

Random thoughts and musings from an oversexed housewife.

Monday, February 27, 2006

Desperate


I've gotta get out of here. I'm really struggling with Spring fever and it's not even Spring yet. The weather here is so wierd lately and I just can't wait to move. The people and the monotony of this life here is getting to me. I'm looking forward to purging ourselves of all the crap we've accumulated over the last five years and starting fresh. I can't wait to be closer to family and out of the cold, cold Montana winters. I just wish summer would arrive sooner!

As you can see I'm a little manic. This post is a reflection of the strange vibe I feel lately. I don't know if it's my desperation to get out of here or what, but please pray that I don't crack under the pressure!

Things that bug the shit out of me lately:

1) Parents who stand around talking while their kids run around and behave like shit heads
2) Parents who give their own hang-ups to their children
3) People in authority positions that act like they listen, but really never do
4) Homework
5) The monotony of it all

Things that always give me some pleasure:

1) My husband
2) Grey's Anatomy
3) My kids' imaginations
4) The sunshine
5) A good book

Things that make me giggle:

1) The word wiener
2) My husband
3) The book I Love You Stinky Face
4) My dog's grotesque under bite
5) Seeing everyone and their brother wear those butt ugly colored Croc clogs

Some things I can't wait to do:

1) Move
2) Celebrate my 10th anniversary
3) Go camping
4) See family
5) Lose weight

Friday, February 24, 2006

Too Cute!

A friend sent me this picture today and I couldn't stop staring at it! Oh My! Baby porcupines are the cutest creatures on the planet! Don't you agree?

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Mary's a Loser!

The dogs spend most of their time outside in the summer and fall, but when the weather turns, I don't have the heart to leave them outside. They have a great warm dog house, but this is Montana, people, it gets -30 here. So since they're in all the time I have to contend with dog hair and stink. It isn't enough that I deal with 3 boys who make my house smell like feet and ass half the time, but now dog smell too?!?!

Well when I let them in today their paws were caked with mud and it was getting all over my kitchen floor. At first I thought to sit down and clean their paws with a warm cloth and then, during a moment of total insanity, I decided I would bathe them myself. What was I thinking?

In the end the bathroom was soaked from ceiling to floor (and toilet paper in between), I was drenched from my jeans to my underwear and the dog hates me. Needless to say I didn't bathe the other two. It was just more than I could take. So one dog is now clean, fluffy and smelling sweet and the other two are stinky, stinky, stinky. With the mud on their paws I actually took a bucket with doggy shampoo and washed their paws. I need to get a life!

Craig has serious Olympic fever! Every evening he comes home and immediately turns the t.v. on to watch the latest event. He's not deterred from anything, he even got into the ice dancing the other night. Did you see all of those falls! If we've learned anything it's that ice is slippery shit! By the way, was that Italian chick a trip? She had looks that could strip paint. Holy hannah, the girl has rage issues! Anyway, Craig watches it all and can't seem to control himself. I on the other hand have enjoyed some of the events, but come on!?! I can't possibly get into all of it.

Really? Curling? I find it to be on par with watching grass grow and water boil. Ick! I also miss my Desperate Housewives, Grey's Anatomy, Medium and a myriad of other shows that are in re-run because of the Games. I've been doing some reading and Sudoku puzzles instead. Can you say addicting?

I bought a Sudoku book because they're everywhere and I've actually read a couple of articles about this latest craze. These puzzles are so addictive. Once you start you can't help but want to continue. We've purchased several books now, we even got a kids Sudoku for the boys and they seem to enjoy it too. Many of the books go from easy puzzles to hard. Those hard ones are a little out of my league. I need to cheat my pants off to finish one of them and I'm not proud of that.

And this post just totally confirmed what a total loser I am! I spend my time with stinky kids and dogs, watching too much t.v. and doing number puzzles. Riveting!

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Alien McFrank



So I was bathing the boys the other night and my son Sammy had a toy alien in his hand, playing with it in the tub. This action figure looks very similar to the alien from the movie Alien. Scary! I told Sam that it had spit that was like acid:

Sam: What's acid?
M: It's a liquid chemical that can burn your skin. I saw it in a movie.
Sam: I don't think that's true.
M: How do you know? Have you ever seen an alien?
Sam: Yes. His name's Alien McFrank.
M: Alien McFrank? Where'd you see him?
Sam: In my bed. Something was tickling my foot and I looked down and it was Alien McFrank. But he's a nice alien.
M: He is?
Sam: Yeah, he has acid for spit, but he doesn't spit on me. He said he wouldn't spit on my family either.

All of this came out of his mouth without skipping a beat. He didn't even hesitate when coming up with the name Alien McFrank. He said it all with such confidence that it makes me consider that there just might be an alien race that comes down to Earth to tickle our feet.

This is my Sammy. He's a crack up. He has a fantastic imagination and a way of looking at the world in is very own unique way. He drives me nuts most of the time. He's very distracted by the world around him. He has a difficult time getting stuff done because he has a story to tell, or something else to do. Lately he just wants to have a chat with his teacher when he's supposed to be doing his work. We discussed this at Parent/Teacher Conferences yesterday.

Sometimes I just don't know what to do with him. I don't want to squelch his creativity, but he makes me crazy when he doesn’t get the most basic things accomplished because he's busy counting something, rhyming words or singing in his "own language". I want to be a supportive mom, but the world we live in demands that you go to school, do your work and do it on time. If he didn't have any time constraints he'd be fine. It's always the fact that he's on a time table that he gets himself in trouble.

Oy! This parenting gig is tough stuff! I worry that I'm too tough on him. I get so frustrated and I end up yelling at him to hurry up. The child is a gem! He's a sweet and kind soul with a wild imagination. He's the kind of kid I would be friends with if I was his age. How can I be a good parent to him and help him be successful? How do I teach him about time management without turning into the wicked witch of the west? How do I make sure he knows that I think he's a wonderful, awesome kid even though sometimes he drives me nuts?

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

XOXOXOX


I used to really hate Valentine's Day! Of course that was before I met Craig. Since his sweet soul entered my life, everything's been different. I'm not a flowers and candy kind of gal, although I won't turn those down. I don't need to be fussed over, I just want him to acknowledge me and be sweet. That's not hard or complicated. For ten years he's done right by me.

What I now love about Valentines Day is my chicklettes. I love spoiling them with chocolate and buying them cheesy Valentine stuffed animals. I even baked them heart shaped muffins this morning. Am I a sap or what? Of course the muffins were before a shower and coffee, so I grumbled at my dumplings the entire time! "Happy fricken' Valentine's Day! Eat your muffins."

I sent Craig to work with a card and some cinnimon bears. You know the big, red, hot gummy bears? I told him I got them because he's hot and squishy, naw, I said because he's hot and sweet. I adore him and I told him so. His REAL present will come later... wink...wink!

I am wishing all of you a love-filled Valentine's Day. May this day not be the commercialized, Hallmark card, lame conversation heart day from hell we all loath, but rather a day that you spread LOVE to those special people in your life and maybe sprinkle some of that goodwill on a stranger, you'll both be better for it!

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Celebrate Adoption

I'm so lucky that adoption never had any stigma attached to it for me. My eldest sister adopted two boys and another sister placed a baby for adoption when she was 16. Each of us has a different perspective because the process was different for each of us. My sister who adopted has one adoption that's open and one that's not. My other sister's adoption was entirely closed. I think that plagues her today. Her son would be 28 years old and she has no idea where he is or even if he knows he was adopted. There's no contact, no pictures just wondering.

My adoption is as open as you can get. I chose Gabby’s parents in my third trimester. I spoke with her forever dad on the phone and set a date to meet him and his wife a week later. As fate would have it, I went into labor early and I met them while I was on the delivery table shortly after Gabby was born. It was during that meeting that I saw the hand of God working in my life. I know that may sound kooky, but it's the truth, so I don't care if it makes me sound like a holy roller.

They told me how beautiful she was and asked me if I chose a name. I said I had chosen Gabrielle because it means sent by God. They said that they had picked two girls names, Isabella and Gabriella, so her name became Gabriella. Amazing!

The next several days were emotional because she was five weeks early. She couldn't go home from the hospital because her lungs were at a crucial stage in development. The hospital where she was born didn't have the ability to properly care for her so she and I took a plane ride to another city with the facilities for her care. Her parents transported my mom in their car. We all met up at the hospital and took vigil by this angel, praying that she would quickly recover.

Those days we all got to know each other. Her forever mom told me that she could see how much I loved her and that she loves me and would understand if I wanted to change my mind. I had previously told myself that once I involve a couple into this adoption thing that was not turning back. I wouldn’t have called them if I wasn’t sure of my decision. So, when she said that it floored me. She had just as much love and emotion vested into this relationship with this baby as I did. She was being so loving and so selfless. I didn’t need any more confirmation that my decision was right on. I was lead in the right direction and this couple was sent to me to parent my child.

Our relationship has blossomed ever since. They are godparents to my middle son. We spend time at dance recitals and swim meets for Gabby. They have a second daughter and all of us, as a family get together. The girls went camping with us this summer and last spring the boys stayed with them for the weekend while Craig and I went to a wedding in Chicago. Gabby never wonders where she came from. She knows how much she’s loved. Total honesty has worked for us. I can’t recommend open adoption enough. It has helped me remain close to my birth child and yet move on with my own life.

I wish the media would show more realistic adoption stories. You always see the adoption that went wrong, the birth mother who changed her mind or the adoptive parents who kept secrets from their child. I also get frustrated with people’s responses to adoptions. To an adoptive couple they might say, “Oh you are both so wonderful to rescue that unwanted baby. What person could give away their child?” To birthmother’s they say things like, “you’re such a hero,” how can I be a hero and also be the ogre who just “gave away my baby”? It’s never made any sense to me. I did what was right for me and for Gabby. I wasn’t ready to be a parent. That’s not an easy thing to admit when you’re 23. I was about to graduate from college, it wasn’t as if I was 15 and still in school. But I knew that parenting was a tough job and I knew I would be doing it alone. I wasn’t ready. I knew as soon as I spent any time with the parents I chose for her that I’d made the right decision. We had an adoption ceremony when I signed my relinquishment papers. It was a difficult time, but I didn’t once doubt my decision.

Before Gabby went home with her parents she and I and my mom spent a couple of days together in a foster home. My mom and I were able to bond with her and tell her how much we loved her. When it was time we had an adoption ceremony. I signed my relinquishment papers and we exchanged prayers, hopes and dreams for her future and our future. The experience was bitter- sweet. I was sure of my decision and yet I was very sad. Saying good-bye, watching them leave with her while my mom and I left empty handed was one of the hardest things I've ever done.

In retrospect, the whole experience made me more confident in myself and my ability to cope. I was also able to become closer to my mom. We connected in a way that I never thought possible before that time. She supported me with the open adoption when other family members could not and she helped me through when I know that she was suffering along with me. The magical thing is that I gained so much from my adoption story. I learned a lot about love. I think that's what makes so many of these life experiences so scary. To really love someone you make yourself so vulnerable and so open to get hurt. It was in loving Gabby and her parents that I learned that it's okay to put yourself out there like that. When you make yourself so open, sure you can get slammed, but the reward is so awesome! The love that returns to you is a miracle. I try to tell people that I felt God had chosen me to be a vessle to carry this child for someone else. After I got through the pain of losing her, I saw all that was gained. I'm very grateful that I had her and that my life was changed in such a positive way.

Here's an odd tidbit, my eldest son and Gabby share the same birthdate. They are 3 years apart in age and very similar in personality. They get along famously. They refer to each other as half brother and sister--a word I never used with CJ. I let them define thier own relationship. Luckily, all the kids get along so well. They love and support each other without any coaching from thier parents. It's so awesome to see them all together. It makes me so proud that this is my family.

(The first picture above is during the adoption ceremony when Gabby was placed in her parents arms. The second picture is of my mom and I giving Gabby a bath at the foster home where we stayed with her for a couple of days before the ceremony. The next picture is of me, Gabby, her parents, my mom and her other grandparents the day of the ceremony. The final picture is of all the kids at the lake this summer. For the life of me I can't figure out how to put captions under the pictures without jacking up the text. Sorry!)
 

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