Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Happy 1st Birthday Emma!

My baby is one now!  She is such a joy to be around, and it has been an amazing year with her in our life.  Somehow Emma knew exactly what to do to fit into our family and we can't imagine life without her.  Emma, where have you been all my life?  I am so glad you are here!

At one years old, Emma is a sweet...



 ...funny...



...cuddly...
...agile...


 ...and sensitive little girl.  She hopped on the toilet all by herself in the above picture and surprised even herself when she filled it with pee!  In the below picture she took a ride on the carosel at the zoo and broke down crying when it started to move.  She is extremely sensitive when we tell her no, and will even burst into tears if you look at her wrong.  This is new territory for Will and I, since we are used to aggressive defiance from our older daughter when things don't go her way.
 Emma loves wagon rides...
...and stroller rides, as well as short cat naps.
Emma enjoys bringing books over to us and climbing into our laps to read.
She has added the words nigh-nigh for night-night and says it when she is tired.  She loves saying my name like a chant: mamamamamama and she says Uh Oh when she drops something.  She also says Dora, dog and duck much the same way - duh!  Here she is below pointing at the pair of ducks in our neighborhood, waving and saying "Duh!"
Emma is walking like she has done it all of her life, and has even started to run.  She popped two more teeth this past month - her fourth front one on the top, and a molar on the top!  She still only has three teeth on the bottom though.

For Emma's birthday we ended up staying home because Lucy was still sick.  Unfortunately, by bedtime Emma was running a fever as well.  It didn't seem to slow her down though, and we had a nice and relaxing day together.  I made all of her favorite (dairy-free) foods including pancakes for breakfast, tortillas and hummus for lunch, and orzo, pickles, grapes and homemade pitas for dinner and an apple cupcake for dessert.  We were able to play outside for a short period of time until the wind picked up so badly it kept blowing Emma over.

Emma thought opening presents was funny, and after she ripped each piece of wrapping paper off of the gift, she stood up and walked it over to the garbage can in the kitchen.  This made gift opening a very slow process but highly entertaining for Will, Lucy and I to watch.  We gave Emma a Little People doll house, a book I made for her about the day she was born, a wooden book shelf Will made for her room that will hang at her height on the wall, and a snack tray for her seat in the double stroller.  It was tough coming up with meaningful gifts for someone who would rather just play with dirty socks and has a big sister with every toy a little girl could ever want, but we managed!

Here Emma is below getting her second measurement written on our family growth chart.  She measured in at 27 inches tall, about a 1/4 inch shorter than Lucy at a year old.  Ironically, Emma was a 1/4 taller than Lucy at birth.  It will be interesting to see how their heights play out over the years.
Happy birthday Emma!  We love you ever so much!

Friday, April 13, 2012

Suburban Homestead

Will and I share many hopes and dreams for our family.  One of our biggest dreams was made a reality the day we bought our house, over two years ago now.  We had been on the search for a certain kind of home to grow a family in since we were dating.  After all, we did meet in the School of Architecture, so design is very important to us.  But just as important to us was the type of beliefs that go along with the particular type of architecture we love.  The American Arts and Crafts Movement which took place in the 1920's and 30's embraced craftsmanship, attention to detail, and simple, beautiful designs that were both pleasing to the eye and highly efficient.  Out of this movement was born the Bungalow, a house design built for middle class families trying to live the American dream.  Most of these Bungalows are very modest in size, but were made with great attention to detail, and used local materials and artists as much as possible.  Wood, glass, and masonry were integrated into these homes with reverence, resulting in beautiful simplicity which still resonates with a lot of people today.  We dreamed of our Craftsman Bungalow, in walking distance to most everything we could need - schools, shopping, library, post office, medical facilities and outdoor recreation with enough property  to refine our own crafts - Will's woodworking and our love of gardening.

Our search had become an obsession however, especially after we lost Luke.  It felt like if we could just find that house we had been dreaming about all of these years then our life could be happy again.  We would fill the emptiness we felt with endless car drives searching miles and miles for the perfect house.  We thought we found it several times, only to watch it slip through our fingers.  It was an emotional roller coaster, fueled by our desire to prove to ourselves that there was a dream within our control.

Unfortunately, most bungalows that are left some 80 to 90 years later are usually found on busy roads or packed tightly on tiny lots in subdivisions.  Will and I wanted the best of both worlds - a simple and beautiful bungalow, but on a decent sized lot on a quiet street.  After a decade of searching, we were beginning to think that we would need to make some compromises to find our dream home.

But one day in early January, 2010 a house popped up on our Internet search that fit every single criteria we had.  Our hearts were nearly pumping out of our chests we were so excited and scared at the same time.  We dialed up our realtor (who is more like a family friend) and she agreed that this house was perfect and we didn't have a moment to lose.  We were walking through it hours later, and put in an offer after our walk through.  It was perfect.  But the anxiety was only beginning.  Two other offers had been put in and ours was the lowest.  We couldn't afford to offer any more, and the next day we learned that we had lost it.  To make a long story short, over the next couple of weeks the house was put back on the market two more times.  Our third offer (of the same price our original offer was) was accepted and we achieved the unimaginable - our dream home.

And here we are today, a little over two years later.  The disbelief and awe has begun to fade, but our love and genuine appreciation remains.  Every morning I wake up and look out of my bright and architecturally pleasing Craftsman windows and I can't help but smile.  Barry Manilow's song, "Looks Like We Made It" constantly runs through my head.  We are so grateful.  Our home has been amazing in the healing process as we learn to readjust our hopes and dreams for our family.  When Will and I fell in love over a decade ago and began planning our future together, never did we think for one minute it wouldn't be as we planned.  Everything changed when we lost Luke though.   We learned a difficult lesson - our life together may not be what we had imagined.  But despite the hard times that we now understand inevitably come, it is still a beautiful life worthy of hopes and dreams.

So Will and I have been very busy since we moved into our dream home, making to-do lists, researching, building, digging, growing, fixing, painting, cooking, baking, canning, and, well, you get the idea.  It is our hope to make our almost 1/2 acre lot a self-sufficient producer of children, food and most recently, chickens.  In February we bought eight baby chicks and brought them home.  Here we are below on our way home from the farm with the tiny chicks stowed at my feet in the car.
We set up a comfy little box in our basement complete with a heat lamp and found endless hours of entertainment watching our new "Chicken TV".  Lucy has taken a shine to these little birds and loves to talk to them as well as feed them.  Emma thinks they are funny and loves to say "hi" over and over to them.


Here are the girls below, watching our chicken TV.  I think Lucy is wearing a pair of 3D glasses to add another dimension to the experience.
But baby chicks grow even faster than baby humans we found out.  Before long, these little birdies were big!  But still not big enough to go outside.  And despite nightly cleanings of their little box, they started smelling.  After a couple of weeks of the stench getting worse with each passing day, I finally told Will he had 48 hours to get them out of the house or I would sell them on Craigslist.  Needless to say, 24 hours later (another reason why I love Will - he is so efficient!) they were set up nicely in our garage with a heat lamp over head to stay warm.  
All winter long we have been researching chickens, gardening and how to make our piece of property as efficient as possible with all systems joined together in a complimentary and tightly run ecosystem.  After the girls were tucked into bed, Will would head out to the garage and build the chicken coop, while I curled up on the couch with a stack of library books.  Here Will is below building the coop in our garage.


Many people have asked us why we would go through all of this work when a dozen eggs can be bought at the store for a dollar.  There are many reasons, but I think the main reason can be summed up with our Craftsman mentality.  We value the art to be found in the details and systems that are efficient and designed with great thought.  Easier and faster isn't always better.  We find enjoyment in quality and process.  We could have a microwave, but we choose not to because food just tastes better heated by slower methods and a lot of research says the more traditional ways of heating your food is healthier.  Finally, after gardening at our house for the past two summers, it became clear to us that manure would really help our growing efforts.  The chickens provide the manure, while we feed them all of the many table scraps left over from our two toddlers.  They will also eat the bugs and weeds in our lawn and in return provide us with eggs more nutritious than any we could find on the grocer's shelves.
The coop is finally finished, and last week we enlisted the help of family and neighbors to move it into the run we have set up.  Our first-laid eggs have already been promised to the friend who donated the left over roofing shingles from his house and the gentlemen who helped move the coop.
Will has been busy digging holes for cedar fence posts and building garden boxes for a new method of gardening we are going to try this year as well.
All Will has to do now is put up some extenders on the fence posts to keep the deer out, plant our seedlings that he started in our basement last month, and hook up the rain barrels he made.
I have been busy planning out what to plant and how to grow each fruit or vegetable to it's maximum potential.  All I have to do now is apply my book knowledge to real life!
So far, our little homestead has eight chickens, one peach tree, four blueberry bushes, countless strawberry plants, raspberries, black caps, rhubarb, asparagus, herbs and annual veggies like tomatoes, cucumber, peas, beans, pumpkin, beets, squash, onions and garlic.  Oh, and two precious little girls!


Lucy and Emma are loving all the time spent outdoors while their mama and dada work.  And when Lucy isn't busy digging holes in the garden and Emma isn't occupied chewing on rocks and drooling mud they are having a blast in their new playhouse the chicken coop.  Too bad once the chickens move in the stench will ruin their fun!


If the above picture was our family billboard, I think it would say, "A toaster oven family living in a microwave world!"

Monday, April 9, 2012

Easter Feast!

I hope everyone had a wonderful and relaxing Easter.  It was great having both of our kids enjoy the festivities this year, as last year Emma was a newborn.  I also think it is pretty cool that Emma has celebrated two Easters before she even is a year old!  Here are some pictures, showcasing our holiday preparations and festivities.

Lucy and Emma enjoyed coloring Easter eggs.


 Lucy also helped me bake some coconut filled bunny sweet buns.  The recipe was from Pinterest (I know, shocking!) and I have to say I was a bit underwhelmed.  They were delicious, don't get me wrong, but the filling leaked out of them before we even put them in the oven, making it look like the bunnies had peed, as Lucy put it.  Even after they were baked, the bottoms were still quite soggy.  Here Lucy is below, poking holes in the buns for the bunnies eyes.
 Easter morning the girls did an Easter egg hunt in our yard before church.  It was extremely windy and cold and we were of course running late for church so it was a rather rushed affair.  I will admit that I gave pretty big, obvious clues to the hunters to speed things along.  Here Emma is below excitedly clapping two of the eggs she found together.
 Lucy was super excited when she noticed some eggs hidden in our newly renovated garden.  I promise my very next post will be on our new garden, so consider this your sneak peek.
 The Easter bunny even hid an egg in Luke's little garden.  You can kind of see my beautiful statue of a mother holding a little boy, and my yellow tulips that remind me of Luke, and the little pine tree we planted in honor of  him.
 After church we went to the cemetery to drop an egg off at Luke's grave.
 I wanted to do a family hug on Luke's plot, but Emma was fast asleep in the car.  We decided not to wake her as we still had a busy day ahead.
 Emma woke up when we arrived at our next destination, Grandma and Grandpa T.'s!  The girls did another Easter egg hunt there and fortunately the sun came out.
On our way home from Grandma and Grandpa T.'s, the girls both took their afternoon naps and were able to play outside when we got home.  My sister Jane and her boyfriend Matt joined us for a later dinner where I made several recipes from Pinterest - some yummy garlic potatoes, some honey balsamic roasted carrots, a fruit salad, the bunny buns, and of course, ham!  It was a wonderful way to end an otherwise jam-packed day in the comfort of our own home.  I think I consumed more calories on Easter than I have the entire year so far combined!

Easter is the reason I grieve my son Luke with HOPE.  Because Jesus rose from the dead, we will have a spectacular feast in heaven some day, reunited with all of our loved ones.  So until that day, back to the straight and narrow.  Well, at least as soon as the Easter candy is gone.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Uncle Bob

Last Monday Will's Uncle Bob passed away.  I've waited a bit to post this, as it is taking a while to sink in.  Uncle Bob had been battling illnesses for as long as I've known him and I'll never forget the first time I met him.  It was at Will's Aunt Nancy's wedding about a decade ago now.  After the wedding ceremony something went wrong with his heart and he had to go to the emergency room.  I remember thinking how serious it sounded.  Between countless ER trips and hospital stays later,  I had the pleasure of getting to know Uncle Bob.  At family functions he could usually be found sitting on the edges of the festivities, limited by his disabilities.  And although he suffered a great deal over the last several years, he always looked on with a smile and was quick to laugh at the cute things his grand-nieces and nephews said or did.  He loved reading about our family updates on this blog too and I will never forget watching him hold our daughters for the first time.  Here he is below holding a day old Lucy with tears in his eyes.
 And here he is below holding a six week old Emma.  I know he would have visited Emma at a day old if he could have, but he was a patient in the hospital at the same time she was born.
I wish I could post a third picture, of Uncle Bob holding Luke.  However, I know without a doubt that he is holding Luke in heaven now and telling him all about his family on earth.  Thank you Uncle Bob for all of your love and support and we are looking forward to the day when we are all together again in heaven.
Lilypie First Birthday tickers
Lilypie Second Birthday tickers
Lilypie Angel and Memorial tickers