Friday, March 23, 2012

10 Weird and Not So Weird Things that Make Me Smile

I have no idea why this random post is being written, except for the fact I was driving on the highway today and started thinking about it....

1. Q-tips. I can barely pass my linen closet without grabbing (or contemplating grabbing) one or two to attack my kid's ears with. Josh and Seth make having kids with clean ears very difficult, so I really need and love Q-tips.

2. Going into the restroom at work and the toilet lid is up. This does NOT mean a male whose mother forgot to teach him manners and how to read has been in there. It means I'm the first one to enter after it's been cleaned. This really makes me happy.

3. Elvis Duran's phone taps. After a crazy morning begging Julia to get dressed, brush her hair, get into the car with her shoes on and without making Josh cry, hearing someone else hit the wall bc some crap has hit the fan makes me smile - and most of the time laugh out loud.

4. The big ass run back of a defensive lineman scoring a touch down. Their burly bodies huffing down the sideline while tiny little receivers bounce off them like pin balls makes my day and makes me miss football season.

5. Forgetting then remembering it's Friday and/or Pay Day!

6. Little old men holding the hand of his little old lady.

7. Josh running to the door as I'm leaving for one more hug and kiss

8. Julia reading to Josh - or anything with Josh that doesn't end with either of them crying or calling each other "butt cheeks" (the new insult of the month at our house - ugh.)

9. Seth making his "MmmmmmmMmmmmm" sounds while eating

10. Other people's pets...because they are not my pets.

So random, but true....

Monday, January 23, 2012

I have NEVER...

I saw a list like this on a blog today and thought it might be fun...except the whole time I felt sorry for this lady...so don't feel bad for me, unless doing so makes you want to fund a much-needed vacation to Cali!


I have NEVER been stung by a bee


I have NEVER ridden in a Limo


I have NEVER been tail-gating


I have NEVER been scuba diving


I have NEVER smoked/seen drugs


I have NEVER been drunk (I'm too much of a control freak)


I have NEVER been to California (the only one in my family)


I have NEVER made home made soup


I have NEVER grilled on a grill


I have NEVER watched Family Guy (hopefully never will)


I have NEVER water-skiid


I have NEVER been to NYC


I have NEVER lived alone


I have NEVER eaten at Melting Pot (my sisters don't believe it, but it's true)


I have NEVER spent more than a night away from my kids (except when having a kid)


I have NEVER liked meatloaf (my aunt ruined it forever years ago)


I have NEVER had a nose ring (but kind of want one)


I have NEVER seen the Godfathers, Tombstone, Rambo, or Vision Quest


I have NEVER changed the weight on my driver's license (and NEVER will :)


I have NEVER said the eff word (after so many years of not saying it, it seems a shame to start now)


I have NEVER seen a Panda Bear (and really want to for some reason)


I have NEVER broken a bone


I have NEVER sold plasma


I have NEVER eaten tofu




That's all I can think of at the moment. Just kind of fun to do :)

Monday, January 2, 2012

The 12 Months of '11

Just a little recap of the crazy year we just had...

Jan - We had found out Baby E #3 was a boy and could not for love or money come up with a name. I was working full-time. Julia was having fun in Kindergarten. Josh was being his sweet self and Jason was venturing into a new career.

Feb - Jason spent a week in St. Louis while I realized the unbelievably exhausting plight of a single mom. I took the kids to the Newport Aquarium by my pregnant self while he was gone. We had so much fun! (but I will never ever do that alone again)

March - March ended with me being done with work just in time to hang out with Julia for her spring break - and Josh, too, of course. We loved waking up with nothing to do, as I was changing gears from working mom of 2 to stay at home mom of 3 - with 11 weeks before Mr. Baby was due.

April - Oh geez, where do I start? Those 11 weeks I thought I had before Mr. Baby would come turned out to be 3 weeks. On April 16 at 1:42pm, Mr. Seth Freeman Ennis was born weighing 3lbs 8.6oz and 16 inches long. He was tiny, yet perfect. The last half of April was spent at the Special Care Nursery loving on this little gift, watching him grow and waiting for the ok that he was ready to come home.

May - Our daily trip(s) to visit Seth came to an end on May 12 - when he was finally discharged. I remember dressing him in his tiny blue preemie outfit, placing him in a car seat that swallowed him up in its straps, saying good-bye to the precious nurses, and heading for home with a smile no one could smack off of me. Later in the month, Jason turned 37 and Julia had a pink hawaiian party for her 6th birthday.

June - Kids went to VBS while I claimed maternity leave for not teaching. :) Loved having a few hours a day to get things done or just cuddle quietly with Baby Seth. Josh turned 3 and had a Spiderman party and Jason and I celebrated 11 yrs of marriage by going out for dinner and shopping.

July - My youngest sister Grace married "Uncle Phil" on July 1st. We had so much fun at the wedding - loved having all of our family together.

Aug - Lots of lazy days enjoying summer. We did King's Island and the Zoo...Swam at Grandpa and Grandma Ennis', Story time at Church...and then Julia started 1st grade.

Sept - After Julia started 1st grade, Joshua started pre-school. He LOVES Miss Liza and all of his friends there.

Oct - I started back to work full-time missing the kids so much I could hardly breathe. I love what I do, who I work with and who I work for, but nothing is better than getting to be Mom all day every day. I'm counting down to the time I get to be 100% Mom again in March. On a sad note, though, I lost my cousin Steve Oct 8...He was one of my best friends growing up and I was so honored to be able to share some of our memories at his funeral service. I hope he knew how special he was...He is missed by so many....

Nov - I turned 32 and am pretty cool with this age. I don't feel young/naive, but I don't feel old/feeble. I can work with this. Over Thanksgiving, the entire Estepp family spent a week on a beach in Florida. Such a wonderful gift to have everyone together. Jason and I took our kids for a day at Magic Kingdom...and it was just that - Magic. Julia and Joshua had a ball seeing their favorite characters and riding the rides. My cousin Krissy and her daughter Peyton joined us, too. Definitely a day we will not forget...Can't wait to go again!

Dec - Busy. Busy. Busy. Julia sang in our churches children's choir, Joshua was still his sweet self - but not wanting to sleep in his own bed, Seth got his first ear infection and Christmas. We woke up early to see what Santa brought, had brunch at Nanna/Poppa's, snacks at Jason's parents and then dinner at my Uncle Steve's. The day is jam packed - exhausting - but wonderful. I can't imagine spending it any other way.

Here's to 2012! After all of the highs and lows of 2011...I'm ready for a new year with new beginnings, aren't you?

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

One Year Ago

One year ago today, I learned sweet Seth was on his way...again...



I think about that phone call from the nurse a lot, maybe too much, to be honest - but having your child "come back to life" in a sense is truly something that surpasses my wildest imaginations.


From finding out Seth was coming to the nurse's mistake saying he wasn't to the call 5 days later saying my HCG numbers looked great to pain in my side symptomatic of an ectopic pregnancy to having an ultrasound reveal no tubal pregnancy, but perhaps now a molar pregnancy...


To receiving another call that things were fine.....To his rather dramatic birth....


My darling Seth has taught me a lot about trusting God...


While I was pregnant with him, I posted Proverbs 3:5-6 above my computer.


"Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him and he will make your paths straight."


I must have read this a million times - constantly giving my fears to Him and NOT relying on anything I thought I understood. I learned never to be so arrogant to think I know what God's plans are, but to be thankful that even when things don't seem o.k. - Trusting God completely allows me the freedom to know it's o.k.


We chose Seth's name because it means "Appointed." I thought it was appropriate for a little boy meant to be here as part of our family. I remember reminding God as I prayed while being wheeled in to the OR that my little boy was appointed and begged God to let my tiny baby to be born crying....and he was :) ...I took that powerful baby cry as a gift of certainty that Seth was completely in God's hands. I relied on this gift throughout his stay at the hospital...and even today.


So after this roller coaster of a year, I am very grateful that we are on the other side of it....The 5 of us together knowing we are more than o.k....moreso, we are having the time of our life!

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Since Seth

Sweet baby Seth turned 4 months last week...and it's so strange to think he's 4 months old already, yet his birth and stay in the hospital seems like a life time ago, too. Time is such a funny thing....

He had his dr. appt. last Monday. He weighed in 11lb. 11oz. and the dr. is very happy...actually, she said "Delighted" with how he's growing. Music to this momma's ears! I kind of find myself on edge about his size. Practically everyone we meet comments on how little he is and I can't tell if that's just something everyone says about babies (bc yep, babies are small) or if it's that noticeable that he was a preemie. So after every comment, I feel compelled to spill the story of how he was early, but doing great...yadda, yadda, yadda....Totally something I need to get over. I don't think anything is malicious, at all, I'm just a bit sensitive, I guess.

Having 3 kids, so far, really hasn't been too hard (ask me again when Seth goes mobile!). We have mastered the art of getting in and out of the car :) thanks to Julia being my big girl helper with buckling and unbuckling Joshua. Julia loves to play up stairs with her Barbies and Josh is content playing the leapster while I feed Seth. We got our groove on and I hope it stays this way for awhile.

My goal through all of this is to show love through patience - and to NOT NOT NOT sweat the small stuff. I know I could spend all day yelling at them for the silly things they do/say (don't get me started on words neighbor kids taught my innocent babies!!! ;) or I could lose my mind cleaning all day everyday (bc of the silly things they do), but I trying to find balance.

Parenting is a marathon, fo sho.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Stationery card

Cocoa Plaid Birth Announcement
To see Shutterfly's birth announcement designs, click here.
View the entire collection of cards.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Snuggle In and Meet Seth (uber-post)


There have been several moments in my life where one phrase or one look or one prayer showed me instantly that my life was going to change....I remember the feeling in my heart the first time I met Jason, first sight of my two older children and a few other times here and there.

Thursday, April 14, I had that same feeling after my routine dr. appt. when my doctor told me gently to go straight to the hospital and "let's not worry about making your next appt." I walked out thinking "this guy doesn't think I'm coming back!" My blood pressure was high, there was a lot of protein in my system and all signs pointed to pre-eclampsia. While I didn't know at the time that that would lead to my baby being born 48 hours later at 32 weeks, I knew my plans for this baby had just been thrown out the window.

I got to the hospital around noon. My nurse Jane's eyes bugged out when she took my blood pressure. After the results of my blood work came in, I was told I'd be spending the night...Then within hours of being admitted, I was told I wasn't going home before I delivered the baby. Needless to say, I was freaked out. I didn't have my hospital bag packed. I didn't have arrangements for the big kids (though if you know my amazing family, that didn't matter as my parents and sisters stepped in w/out question)...and most of all - This was NOT part of my birth plan!

I had extensively planned in my mind how this baby was to be born. I would have no drugs. No narcissistic doctor. A perfect Baby Seth iPod playlist (which I did have happily). A "my way or the highway" attitude with nurses who tried to tell me what to do. Breastfeed right away. Walk around shortly after showing off my beautiful 8 pound or so baby boy. Then leave a day later as a family of 5.

The story played out very differently.

I found myself hooked up to something medical at every extremity. Leg wraps to prevent blood clots. A blood pressure cuff that went off every 20 minutes. A huge IV port...and the dreaded catheter. Oh, and someone taking blood from the underside of my fore arm what felt like every few hours. There was no walking around. Ina May's Guide to Childbirth tips didn't matter anymore. I was bedridden.

Instead of telling the nurses what I wanted or didn't want, I was at their mercy. I became so weak that I could barely speak or lift my head, so drugged that reality was hazy and so swollen I could hardly see those a few feet in front of me. With all of this, I do remember these angels of women coming in to make sure I had what I needed and who tried to keep me as comfortable as possible. They did what they needed to, quite frankly, keep me and my baby alive - and I will forever be grateful for their skill and compassion.

The dr. (who thankfully was NOT the same one I had with Julia and Josh, but is now allowed to deliver my pizzas ;) wanted to hold off delivery until Sunday to give the steroid shots I'd been given enough time to be fully effective in preparing the baby's lungs for air, but by Saturday afternoon it was apparent that my body was not going to keep the baby healthy and this pregnancy was putting my health in serious jeopardy. His heart rate was falling as were my red blood counts while my liver enzymes were rising. At 1pm, the dr. came in and told us we'd be having our baby in 3o minutes. A nurse came in and said the anesthesiologist could be ready in 2 hours. My doctor shook her head and said, "No, we need him right now." I was numb. I'm not sure if it was the drugs, my trust in the doctor or my trust in God - maybe all three, but I couldn't freak out. I couldn't cry over the possibilities of harm to my baby being forced out of his perfect home 8 weeks early or panic in fear of a C-section. Jason and I just stared at each other with a quiet solidity knowing we had no other choice.

They wheeled me to the OR and after a horrible epidural experience with Julia's delivery, I closed my eyes the whole way down the hall and prayed that the spinal would work - Thank God it did....

I don't know how many people were in the operating room. It felt like 100. I couldn't see faces - just a host of people in yellow scrubs. I do, though, distinctly remember my doctor casually talking about her husband's profession and how they have their trust (as in legal - not marital) set up. Hearing her talk so non-chalantly gave me the impression I was ok. I mean, if this was a life or death situation, would her husband's career path really be relevant?

After a few minutes and a lady practically jumping up and down on my chest (I still don't know what that was about), Baby Seth Freeman Ennis was born at 1:42pm weighing 3 pounds and 8 ounces. He was 16 inches long and came out screaming...I had prayed he'd come out crying and his sweet cry gave me peace.

The neonatologist (I think) gave me a quick look at Seth and whisked him off to be evaluated. I heard someone call out an APGAR of 7-8, which sounded good to me for a baby born 2 months early.

I didn't see Seth again until Sunday night and honestly, I don't remember much of the rest of Saturday or Sunday. My family ate Marions pizza in my room Saturday night and I have no memory of that, at all. I don't know if I slept or talked or even thought of the new sweet life in my life. I vaguely remember blacking out when Susan (a wonderful gift of a nurse who saw a picture of me Jason brought and couldn't believe I was the same person she was taking care of - yes, I was that swollen!) and Jason tried to get me out of bed and into a chair. I fell over and heard someone yelling for smelling salts....I also remember another nurse telling me my blood counts were on the cusp of needing a blood transfusion...thankfully, they must have gone up since that was the last we heard of that!

Sunday night, I was wheeled from L&D to the Mother/Baby unit. We made a quick stop to the NICU to see Seth. I put my hand into is isolette and touched his tiny hand almost in disbelief of all that had happened in such a short amount of time. He looked so fragile, yet all his nurses said he was stable and really doing well considering how sick I was. He didn't need any oxygen or any life sustaining measures... just basic preemie care.

Monday, I got a shower! After not being able to shower for 5 days, let me tell you it was a shower I will never forget. I could barely walk or see, but I didn't care. It was one step in the direction of feeling human and I LOVED it...

After cleaning myself up, Jason wheeled me back to our sweet Seth and I got to hold him for the first time. It was so odd holding my very own child 2 days after he was born and not only that, holding him with all sorts of wires hooked up to him. Still, as I held him knowing he was mine, I felt a sense of victory and relief. We had already been through so much together and all signs were showing we were going to be fine.

My blood pressure continued to stay elevated and there was talk of keeping me more days than typical, but thankfully, when Wednesday came, I was discharged with a prescription for blood pressure medicine and a "take it easy" talk from the nurse.

Leaving Seth that day was bitter-sweet. We knew he was in the best place for his condition, but hated the reality that he wasn't healthy enough to come home with us. He stayed in the NICU for 26 days. It seemed like everyday we went to visit, we received a great report on his progress. The nurses and doctors were incredible and we truly felt the love they had for our baby and the pride they had in their role in getting him home.

He came home Thursday, May 12. It was one of the most memorable days of my life. Finally, our family was together and ready to start our lives as a family of five.

So here's the story of Seth's birth. It definitely wasn't what I had envisioned, but I am just so thankful for this happy ending. God has blessed us with another amazing gift in the form of a precious baby boy and I can't wait to see what He has in store for the 5 of us.....