Guess who’s thrilled to be in the big tub with her sisters now?
My Word! Makes me want to grab her right out of that tub and smother her in kisses til she belly laughs.
And she’s THRILLED with the floating by buffet bar.
– Contagious Joy.
Striving for a God-honoring daily legacy amid life's beautiful adventure.
So it’s time to start sharing about California. Buckle up this is gonna be a long ride.
No, in order to remain sane I’ll just start to throw in come CA posts here and there amongst my other ramblings.
So day 1 we traveled. We hauled 3 kids and 2 adults (we met my parents at the airport) out of their beds between 3:30 and 4am and loaded into the van. Rodger, Matt’s Daddy, was so gracious to stay over the night before and drop us off at the airport. You may be wondering why we didn’t take the boys – no it’s nothing personal people. We had just planned this trip before ever getting the placement and there is something MUCH different about traveling with 5 children (two of which are babies) and trying to find accommodations for 7 people and a vehicle that’ll fit us on the other side. Since things would be further complicated with vacation clearance if Mom would even want her boys traveling cross-country and other stuff we nestled the boys in at Grandma’s house and called frequently. We knew she’d smother them with spoiling and love and they’d have many wonderful opportunities to have adventures with her throughout the week.
So our plane took off at 6am ON THE DOT. And we attempted to settle three little ones in for nap #1. Hannah was out like a light at take-off with a little nursing goodness. Abi was next in line with Daddy’s hair petting and Rachael decided to stay awake the whole time and talk my Mom’s ear off. Since my Dad added in at last minute (not knowing where exactly he’d be flying from until his trucking orders were given) we hugged and promised to see him on the other side in CA. Mom graciously joined our clan to provide support staff. π
The girls got a chance to have more “firsts” than just the flying and found themselves enjoying the airport monorail much more than the actual flying itself. Something about the excitement of a train mixed with having your feet decently grounded brought a smile to all of our faces as the girls enjoyed the window seats.
I am ridiculously proud of how well the girls did on both flights getting to CA. There were many opportunities for meltdowns, but they really did a great job. Since I had adjusted everyone onto almost CA time a week prior to our departure, the effects of an early morning and airplane excitement were the only two challenges that day. Sadly we learned that my dear Rachael felt the effects of air-sickness not on the last landing (in which she started turning a bit green) but in the rental van right before we were about to cross the golden gate bridge. So with a little pull-off on the side of the road, change of clothing, and the use of the last of my baby wipes we gimped along to the hotel, stopping occasionally to coach the poor child through it all. All I can say is, when my kids are physically ill, they are MIGHTY troopers. Though “I need a bag” was a phrase that took a week for Abi to stop repeating in the van after our CA vacation.
So we hit a Subway for dinner (lunch in CA time) and headed back to the hotel (sitting in traffic for what felt like years while the poor Rachael still experienced her motion sickness.
Once finally to the hotel, we put the girls to bed (who went willingly) at 6p CA time. Rachael’s color had returned to her face and her normal spunk post-shower spoke of motion sickness ending with her two feet on solid ground. We were happy to see her keep dinner down before bed and the two girls knocked out without a complaint. Hannah and I knocked out somewhere in the land of “lay down and be quiet so the girls will go to sleep”. I awoke to Daddy watching ESPN and my Mom and Dad bringing us a pizza for dinner. The girls didn’t even stir.
Thus ended our Friday day of travel. And joy CERTAINLY came in the morning with a solid 13 hours of sleep for all.
… to be continued …
Hannah started crawling forward today. (She’s been perfecting the backward side-shuffle for three weeks). Yeah, the day we returned from our 8 day vacation. Yep, the day we are all exhausted and stranded somewhere between West coast and Midwest time. Yep, the day Mommy had the camera out because I was reviewing vacation pictures. Yep, the day Mommy and Daddy exhaustedly planned a short movie to limp three tired kids along until bedtime.
Hannah started crawling forward today.
Her motivation: a pile of remote controls. =)
Once she realized the belly-flop wasn’t going to work,
that left leg started to get antsy. Then the hands started kneading in place. Then came the organization. And the first bold left knee/right arm coordination.
And after three slow-motion forward crawls, this happened:
VICTORY!!!
Bravo, baby girl!
Saw various “sensory bags” on Pinterest and thought we’d give it a go with some of our junk drawer “freebies” and a cold “no play outside” afternoon. Gathered some stray beads, googley eyes, small fake flowers, tissue paper, beads, foam stickers, buttons, bows, bells, leftover lotion, veggie oil, corn syrup, food coloring, shaving creme, paint, and various other little items to allow many, many choices.
“Wait, let Mommy take a picture and try not to look like you hate your life…” – Mission failed. HA! –
“Ok, now pick what you’d like to go in your bag.”
Then we added the gooshy choices to their hearts’ delights, squeezed the air out and sealed that puppy up. I added some duct tape to make myself feel a little easier about handing the bag to the preschoolers who would then run through my house with food colored, water balloon bag joys.
The play got mighty creative.
And some bags had to be double-bagged once *ahem* enjoyed.
“AHHHH Attack-face!!!”
I even made one for the babies. (Supervising at all times)
Hannah approved (Little Man was asleep, but later approved).
So the bags were fun for a day. But after two days they turned all slimy. Maybe it was the veggie oil seeping into the freezer bag plastic. Eh, who knows. But we wished them goodbye and counted it a great “get rid of junk AND enjoy the afternoon” craft. =)
Psalm 127: 3-5
Children are a heritage from the Lord,
offspring a reward from him.
Like arrows in the hands of a warrior
are children born in oneβs youth.
Blessed is the man
whose quiver is full of them.
During a battle not all arrows stay in the quiver. And we don’t know how long each of these arrows will stay with us. Time is never promised. But we’re delighting in our full quiver.
– Adore these dear ones.
So with “twins” and especially “twins who eat” we could easily be drowning in a baby food bill. So instead of starving our children π I decided to be a bit financially savvy and make a boatload of baby food. I could have been more financially savvy by actually buying stuff on sale or better yet… having children who will reach baby food eating age when fruit is in season. But since I’m not that good (or whatever). I spend $35 on fresh fruit/veggies and cooked/pureed those boogers. We’ve been eating baby food for weeks (well, the babes, not me) and I don’t even think we’ve made a dent into the overloaded basket of food in the freezer. I don’t think I’ll need to make any more baby food until they hit “table scraps” age.
Various apple kinds
Thanks again Mommy for the awesome handmixer thingy!
(Yay for awesome Christmas presents!!!)
A “family size” jar.
Sweet taters!
Babyfied! (Hannah’s favorite)
Mmm, pea glop!
I also made carrots, bought and fed Hannah avocados (fork squished), some green beans (ran out of freezer space to do them all) and accidentally forgot about a bag of pears in the bottom of the fridge that’s now living in Mr. Trashcan (can’t expect perfection here people. HA!).
I froze them in breastmilk storage bags by type so I knew how many ounces were in each bag (4 oz and 6 oz quantities). I just grab a baggie out and serve it straight or mix it with other stuff for variety.
The twins? Oh they give it two “helping, I promise” spoon-grabbing thumbs up! =D
– Baby goop cheers!
Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Baskerville 2 by Anders Noren.