Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

It has Been Eleven years since my mother died!

It has been eleven years since my mother died.

Eleven years without either of my parents.

Our Wedding 2005

1986


And still, some days, it feels as though I am standing in that room again—alone beside her, watching and waiting for the end to come.

The day my mother died was filled with emotions that did not make sense together. Grief sat beside relief. Love beside anger. Sorrow beside exhaustion. There were moments of tenderness tangled together with memories that still hurt. I remember feeling guilty for the ways my heart could not settle on one emotion, as if mourning was supposed to be simple and pure. But it was never simple.

Death does not suddenly untangle a complicated relationship. It does not erase childhood wounds, unanswered questions, or years of longing for things that never fully existed. Instead, all of it arrives together in the same room. The love. The hurt. The hope. The disappointment. The ache for what was, and the ache for what never became.

I remember watching her breathe, wondering which breath would be the last. Time moved strangely in that room. Every second felt heavy. I was no longer just a daughter—I had become the witness to her leaving this world. There is something profoundly lonely about sitting beside death, especially when the relationship itself carried loneliness long before that moment.

I sat there trying to remember a time when she loved me—truly loved me—or wanted me.

And I had none.

No memory came rushing back. No warm moment appeared to soften the silence in my mind. I searched anyway, desperately, as though somewhere inside me there had to be proof that I had once been held gently, wanted fully, loved without condition.

But even with that emptiness sitting inside me, I still wanted my mother.

That is the part people do not always understand. A child does not stop longing for their mother simply because love was inconsistent, absent, painful, or never given in the way it should have been. The ache remains anyway. Deep and instinctive. Almost impossible to explain.

As I sat beside her in those final hours, I remember thinking how strange it was to grieve someone while also grieving what I never had with them. I was mourning her death, but I was also mourning the relationship I spent my whole life hoping would someday become real.

I wanted one memory to hold onto.
One moment where I felt chosen.
One moment where I knew, without question, that I was loved.

But sometimes the hardest truth is realizing that the child inside you kept surviving on hope instead of evidence.

And still, even then, I wanted my mother to reach for me.
I wanted her to say something that could heal the years between us.
I wanted, even at the end, to finally feel like someone’s daughter.

There is a particular kind of heartbreak in realizing that the longing for a mother can survive even when the memories do not.

I still ache for someone to hold me the way I hold my own children.
To wrap their arms around me without hesitation.
To listen without rushing me.
To guide me without conditions, limits, or fear that love might suddenly disappear.

Sometimes I watch the way I comfort my children—the way I pull them close when they are hurting, the way I stop what I am doing to truly hear them—and I realize that somewhere deep inside me is the child who still wonders what it would have felt like to receive that same kind of care.

Not perfection.
Just safety.
Just softness.
Just someone who stayed.

I think the hardest part is that I want to be held just as tightly. I want to feel whatever my children feel when I wrap my arms around them and tell them everything is going to be okay.

And sometimes I wonder—who does that for me?

Yes, I have Ken. My husband. My best friend. The person who has stood beside me through so much. His love is real, steady, and faithful. I am deeply grateful for him.

But the love between a husband and wife is different from the love a mother gives a child.

A spouse walks beside you.
A mother, at least the kind I longed for, is supposed to be the place you fall apart without fear.

There is something so primal about wanting to be mothered. Wanting someone to look at you and see not what you can do for them, not how strong you are, not how capable you have become—but simply see you as someone worth protecting, comforting, and carrying when life becomes too heavy.

I think that is why the ache still lives inside me.

Because I became strong before I was ever held.
Responsible before I was nurtured.
Independent before I ever felt safe enough to depend on anyone.

And even now, as an adult, there are moments when I want to crawl into someone’s arms and rest without guilt. To not be the strong one for once. To not have to explain why I am hurting. To simply be cared for with the same tenderness I try to pour into my own children every day.

My grandmother—my mother’s mother—was the closest thing I will ever know to that kind of love.

And she did love me. I know she did.

But even with her, there was always a line. A limit to how much of herself she could fully give me. Not because she was cruel. Not because she withheld love intentionally. But because before she was ever my grandmother, she was my mother’s mother first.

Her heart was tied to her daughter in a way I could never untangle.

I think one of the deepest pains was watching my grandmother love my mother with the kind of devotion I spent my whole life longing for myself. She protected her. Defended her. Carried compassion for her wounds, her struggles, her pain. And part of me understood that. A mother’s love for her child runs deep.

But I was a child too.

And sometimes it felt as though there was no place for both truths to exist at once—that my mother could be hurting and still hurt me, that my grandmother could love me deeply while never being fully able to step outside her loyalty to her daughter.

So I learned to live within the limits of that love.

I took the comfort she could give. The moments of safety. The glimpses of warmth. I treasured them because they were real. But somewhere inside me, I also understood that there were places my grief could not go with her. Certain truths that sat too close to the pain of her own child.

That kind of loneliness is hard to explain.

To be loved, but not fully held.
To be cared for, but still emotionally orphaned in some quiet way.
To know someone wanted the best for you while also knowing they could never entirely stand on your side without it feeling like a betrayal of someone else they loved first.

And yet, I still carry gratitude for her.

Because even limited love can leave light behind.
Even imperfect love can become a lifeline for a child trying desperately to survive.

But I would be lying if I said it did not ache sometimes—to realize that my grandmother loved her daughter with the kind of fierce, unquestioning love I spent my entire childhood hoping someone would someday give to me.

Sometimes I want to scream from the top of a mountain for someone to help me.

Not because I am falling apart in some dramatic, visible way. Most people would probably say I am doing well. I work. I teach. I parent. I love my family. I keep moving forward.

But underneath all of that is this ache I cannot fully explain.

An exhaustion that does not come from one bad day, but from a lifetime of carrying myself.

And the hardest part is that I am not even sure what I need.

I do not know if I want someone to save me, comfort me, guide me, or simply sit beside me and finally notice how heavy everything has been. Sometimes I think I just want permission to stop being strong for a little while.

Because when you grow up without being emotionally held, you learn how to survive by becoming your own protector, your own comfort, your own caretaker. You become the person everyone else can lean on while quietly wondering where you are supposed to go with your own pain.

So the feelings build in silence.

The grief.
The loneliness.
The longing.
The exhaustion of always being the one who manages, adapts, survives, and keeps going.

And sometimes it rises so suddenly inside me that I feel like screaming into the sky:

“Can someone please help me?”
“Can someone please see me?”
“Can someone please hold the parts of me that have been carrying too much for too long?”

But even then, I do not always know what help would look like.

Because what I ache for is not something that can be neatly fixed.

I ache for the kind of safety that is supposed to begin in childhood.
The kind of love that teaches your nervous system it is okay to rest.
The kind of care that allows a child to believe they do not have to earn tenderness.

And when you grow up without that, part of you keeps searching for it long after childhood ends.

I think that is what people misunderstand about trauma. Survival does not mean the longing disappears. Sometimes surviving only means you learned how to function while carrying an invisible hunger for comfort, protection, and unconditional love.

There are days I envy the ease with which my children collapse into my arms when they are hurt. They do not hesitate. They do not apologize for needing comfort. They trust completely that I will hold them.

I wonder what that must feel like.

To need someone and not fear becoming a burden.
To cry and know someone will come.
To rest without waiting for love to be withdrawn.

Sometimes I think the little girl inside me is still standing somewhere with her arms open, waiting for someone to finally say,

“You do not have to do this alone anymore.”

There are days when it feels like this is not just a wound, but a missing part of who I am.

Not something broken that can simply be repaired, but something that was never fully given to me in the first place.

People often speak about healing as though every pain eventually closes neatly with time, love, or understanding. But some losses are different. Some grief comes not from losing what you had, but from never truly having it at all.

And how do you fully heal from the absence of something your heart needed in order to grow safely?

I do not know if that ache will ever completely disappear.

There is still a part of me that feels unfinished. A quiet emptiness where a mother’s comfort, protection, and unconditional love were supposed to live. Sometimes I think I carry that absence everywhere I go. It follows me into motherhood, into relationships, into the way I question myself, overthink everything, and struggle to believe I am worthy of being cared for without conditions.

It is hard to explain to people who were loved gently as children.

The absence becomes part of your identity.
Part of the way you see the world.
Part of the way your body holds fear, loneliness, and longing.

And maybe the hardest truth is realizing that some wounds do not heal by disappearing. Some wounds heal by learning how to live beside them without letting them consume every part of you.

I do not think the little girl inside me will ever completely stop searching for the mother she needed.

But I also know this:

That missing piece did not stop me from becoming loving.
It did not stop me from becoming gentle.
It did not stop me from becoming the safe place I once searched for in someone else.

Sometimes I look at my children and realize they will never fully understand the depth of what they were given simply by being held, heard, comforted, and loved consistently. And part of me is grateful for that. They should never have to understand that kind of emptiness firsthand.

There are still moments when the grief feels bottomless. Moments when I wonder who I might have become if I had been loved differently from the beginning.

But even in that sorrow, there is something sacred in the fact that I chose not to pass the emptiness forward.

The ache may always live inside me.
The longing may never fully leave.

But so does grace.
So does love.
So does the quiet courage of becoming the kind of mother I once needed myself.

I hold them when they cry.
I listen when they speak.
I apologize when I am wrong.
I stay.

And sometimes, in those quiet moments when my children rest safely against me, I grieve and heal at the same time.

Because somewhere deep inside me is still the little girl who wanted someone to hold her like this too.

Sunday, October 8, 2017

What to do for Michael's birthday and a little more. (FYI I am venting about family)

Over the last 3 or 4 weeks I've been trying to figure out what to do for Michael's birthday.
There was a family incident a few days before Kaylee's birthday in August and I ended up canceling her tea party that was just for family and still kept her kid birthday party at the park. Kaylee was fine with that and had a wonderful time at her park party.

But this incident has been weighing on my heart and mind. It triggered something inside me that I never expected. I have been having some really BAD dreams/nightmares about my past. It also did not help that it also happen when I was going to the grief group at church which had already triggered things for me. I really wish I understood the human brain. I have not had dreams like these in years I think it has been almost 13 years. Since they have been this bad. Strange who words can trigger so much. They are almost worse than being physically attack and this is what I am trying to protect my kids from and I am at a loss on how to implement healthy boundaries and keep everyone safe. I know that I still hold on to so many of those words and names that I was attacked with over my childhood and even adulthood. I will never forget them. I have learned that they do not define me but sometimes it is hard to remember that though. My parents called me stupid and bad starting at a really young age, I had a cousin who called me an incompetent human-being for must of my grade-school and middle school years and no one stood up and told them to stop or took the time to tell me that it was not true. A family member blamed me and said that caused my Grandfathers death because I caused him to much stress, My mom called me a selfish person for most of my adult life even in-front of family and friend and no one told her to stop or told me she was wrong. I have gone to therapy for years trying to get these words and beliefs out of my head. These are the ones that I feel comfortable about writing you should hear the stuff that I can't even write about. I don't want my kids to have to deal with this. Words hurt and stick with you for ever even if you tell yourself it is not true and there is no reason for my KIDS to ever have to go through this. It broke my heart into pieces when I had to explain to Kaylee what SELFISH meant! and it killed me even more that I did not stick up for her when the work attack was happening. I felt like I failed as a mother for the first time. I have had to do a lot of processing and thinking. The good thing is that since this incident happened I've learned that we have so many people that we're not related to by blood that are family to us. And I treasure every single one of them that have included my children into their lives, and even Ken and I. My kids are so so lucky. Grandma is 93 and wont be around forever. I kept think that she is the last then it will only be Lewis and I. But I have realized that I have been lucky enough to have start to grow a family out of friendships and love. I see that now and it gives my heart a little peace. 

So back to Michael's Party am I ready to set these boundaries and follow through with how and what are okay behaviors to put up with? I have no idea what to do and this is really bugging me.I am struggling to come up with something for Michael. I feel he deserves a party because he has come so far this past year and I believe that this would be the first party he'd understand what was going on and what it was for. I also want it to be a fun happy day for him as well. He has improved so much in talking it is impossible not to celebrate that. I hope I can come up with something simple and meaningful. 

I'm torn on what to do. The one thing that I've learned over the past few months is that just because someone's family does not mean that you forgive them and go on with them in your lives. You can tell a family member to stay away and have healthy boundaries if they're never going to change and hurt you.  

Saturday, August 26, 2017

Grief support group week 2 and 3 and updates on the family.

Sophie:

So I have been going back to the grief support group and proud of myself for doing so. It has been a little over whelming but also has brought me some relief as well. This is the first time that I have ever been in a support group with people that I know and also know my family and at first I was not sure if I should be a part of the group because of that but I have stuck it out and have shared things that I have only ever told my therapist and that part of share things to people I know has been the hardest but also the most liberating thing I have ever done. The group has been extremely supportive and have been patient with how hard this is on me and the fact that I am not good at explaining my emotions at all. It has brought up some emotions and I know that I have been extra short with Ken because talking about this always makes me edgy. But he never complains just checks in with me every now and then. Next week we focus on Spirituality and I know right now that this one is going to be a hard one on me.

The group has also mad me realize how much anger and hurt I still have towards my family and even my parents even though they are dead. My whole life I told myself I am so lucky because it could have been a lot worse but I am slowly learning that it a way I avoid having to deal with or even think about what happened. My mom played a victim and the poor me rule as long as I can remember and I never wanted to do that. I never wanted any attention. I still have a hard time with that. I am also realizing at how much I miss them. I am not sure if it is them that I miss or the fact that I missed having any parents at all. I have always just taken care of anything that I need to do no problem I just did it but now at the age of 35 I wish I had a parent to call on. I am learning that a child's relationship with a parent or caregiver in really important and do to my situation growing up neither Lewis or I have someone we can call on, we have no safety net other than each other and that is not the same and what is even harder is that I feel we are both going through a hard time in life and we can't even give support to each other. I guess that is when we turn everything over to God and have faith! God's grace is amazing and I feel it daily and thankful that it is there but still my heart is telling me one thing and head is running a non stop script in my head about the other stuff. I guess that is why this whole month has been a hard one emotionally. I have felt really sad and lonely yet I am so happy to be around Ken and the kids. With Michael's therapies I don't get out of the house as much as I want. I have also tried to get in contact with a few friends with no luck. So I guess it all adds up and my brain wont shut off.

This week I had a lot of kids in my house and I loved it. With it being the first week of school a lot of kids only go half days and get out between 12:00pm and 1:00pm. At one point each day I had 7 to 8 kids in my house all the same age! I LOVED IT!! I always wanted to have a lot of kids but that is not happening now so it was nice to have it while it lasted! I was tired and in bed at 8:30 every night but it was so much fun and I loved hearing all the laughing, playing and yes even the fighting was cute. But it was a lot for Michael and it has had a few side-affects on his sleep. Up at least 3 times a night and really grumpy and clingy to me during the day. So maybe it is good that we can not have anymore kids! I can still dream about what it would have been like though and I would have loved it. Michael would have adjusted over time! (I am not sure Ken would though) LOL

I am excited about Labor Day because we will have people over and do a BBQ and the kids can play in the water. I try to have something that I can look forward too. I need to get better about planning one thing very week so I have things to look forward

Kaylee:

Kaylee started Kindergarten and is loving it! Her teacher is amazing which is good. It is so hard for me to think of her as a kindergartner! School has only been in for a week but so far she can't wait to get there and always wants to leave early! We had back to school night and got some more info which helped us understand how they do things. 

Kaylee also lost her first tooth on Wednesday! I could not believe that it fell out. But she was so happy plus the tooth fairy came in the middle of the night!! Michael keeps asking about his teeth. I guess he wants to loss his tooth just like his big sister. She has a dentist appointment on August 31st and she can't wait to show them! 

Kaylee's Birthday is on Tuesday and she will be 5 years old!! She can't wait. I have had a hard time getting a party together for her. For some reason I am just having a hard time this year. Plus last Sunday my Aunt said some pretty hurtful things to Kaylee and I! I am still trying to process it all and figure out how to handle it all. My heart is full of sadness for Kaylee as she does not understand all the stuff that goes on in a family she just loves everyone endlessly. But this time it affected her greatly. So possessing time is needed for me to decide on what to do next. I canceled a tea party that I was going to have for the adults in her life because of all of this so to make up for that we are going to take Kaylee to her FAVORITE restaurant on her birthday!

Michael:

Michael's behaviors have gotten a lot more intense the past month and it is stressing me out a little. We meet with his ABA team and they have noticed it as well. I asked if it could be his age and some of it is probably age but most of it is sensory and  him getting overly stimulated and not knowing how to tell us or dealing with it himself. He is only 2 almost 3. He has about 3 to 4 melt downs a day and they last anywhere from 5 to 45 minutes a few have lasted hours! On top of that he has the usual temper tantrums that very 3 year old has. It is just so tiring. I need a break from him.

On the plus side Michael language is improving DAILY! He is talking clear and using more and more words. I am so thankful that communication is possible now. He also has a visual schedule that we use and that seems to help a lot with transitions. The one thing I am not good at but need to improve is prep him for things. I mean start about 30 minutes before we leave the house or get Kaylee from school. I need to tell him details of what the process will be. Example: "Michael we are going to get Kaylee from School. You will be in the stroller." (because he thinks that he gets to WALK) "so we are going to get our shoes on in 5 minutes!" And do this a few time so he knows the transition process. I have learned that some of his melt downs come from frustration of not understanding what is happening or what is expected of him. So I do my best to prep and explain both visually and verbally.

Ken:

Ken has been at Costco a year September 1st! He loves it. They asked him about being supervisor and I think he wants the position but we will see. I just happy that he loves his job and has a set schedule every week. The raises are good the personal time is great and he loves how he is treated. It is been so nice to see him happy with work. We also get to see each other a lot more too!



Thursday, May 25, 2017

Health Insurance, Michael and thinking about Grandpa Guetschow

This last few weeks I have been really tired. Michael is doing better about not needing us to go in his room when he wakes in the middle of the night but I still hear him in there complaining or moaning. I am so happy that he can put himself back to sleep most nights! I have 2 more days of treatment and new medications and then I have a break for a month as we switch over all our health care to new doctors. I will have to see be seen and re-evaluated by my new doctors before we do any other medications as well as a few tests and blood work YUCK! I think I found my new primary care doctor. I meet him in 2 weeks so I hope it goes well. It just all takes so much time. I am feeling scared about not being with Kaiser any more. Not so much because I love my doctors but I have been with them since I was a teenager and it feels safe. But I am willing to change. Its just hard.

Michael has had a hard 2 weeks and it is not letting up yet. I think he is having a growth spurt and he is hungry all the time and will only eat Peanut Butter and Jelly sandwiches, Hot dogs, Broccoli, pasta and a few fruits. He seems to get overly stimulated really easy these days and will go crazy. It wears me out. He is always crashing into something or rolling around on toys and jumping off things. I am afraid he is going to get really hurt but so far so good. He is starting to hit and push Kaylee really hard and it hurts her. I am not sure how we can brake him of this but we are working on it.

On Tuesday we went swimming at my in-laws house and it was so much fun. We swam for almost 2 hours. Then had dinner there. The kids had the best time there. I am so happy that they both like the water. I need to get Michael into swim lessons soon. Kaylee is pretty good but still needs a few more lessons. I am looking forward to a lot of swimming this year!

I have a job interview today and I am excited and scared all at once. I am happy to have this chance though and if does not work with what I am looking for then I will move on. I am kinda excited it get out of the house though. I think anything that gets me out of the house is good. I have a few other ideas if this job does not work out.

Last night grandma invited us over for dinner and we had steaks. Ken BBQ them. They were so good but it got me think about grandpa and the night before he died we had steaks for dinner. It was Grandma, Grandpa, Lewis and I. It was a wonderful dinner and he talked to all of us so nicely. He told me I was beautiful and that Lewis was so smart. It was like he was saying his goodbye. After dinner he went to bed and did not talk again and died 4 days later with me and mom by his side. I really do miss him. This July it has been 20 years since he passed away. Crazy! So much has happened in those 20 years. There is so much I wanted him to be part of. Grandma says she mad at him for missing all these little great-grandkids running around the house. I just wish he could have been here for her these last 20 years. I can't imagine my life without Ken for a month, 20 years would hurt so bad. Strange how I think of grandpa more as a father than my own dad. Grandpa spent the most time teaching Lewis and I about gardening and always always took care of us. I also love listening to him sing. I still play his music for the kids and I love hearing them sing along with him.
April 1982 Dennis and Pam's wedding.

Grandma and Grandpa's Backyard 1983

2 of my favorite pictures of me with him. I have photos of when I was older but these will always be my favorite. His birthday is on May 28th. I always have sweet corn for dinner to honor him as well as we eat popcorn for snacks all day long. His favorite foods.

May has always been a hard month emotionally for me. So much has happened for me in May and it brings up a lot of hard memories and old emotions. I guess that it is fitting that both my parents died in May. I am going out to lunch with someone that I have not seen in a very long time next week. Almost 16 years! Crazy how time flies by. I am trying to plan a lot of fun things this week and next to help make the rest of this month Sunday swimming at my in-laws after nap time. And so much more.

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

A few random updates

These last few months have flown by. So much has been happening for all of us. So here is a run down on all that has been going on since October. Michael is 2 now! Plus Christmas in 19 days!
This is an amazing photo and I am so happy that we took it. Grandma has been a life saver these last few month for the whole family. I never imagined how much joy and love I would feel with her being in my kids lives. My heart truly overflows every time I see them together. I don't know how grandma has done it. With all that has happened throughout her life time she keeps going.



Ken is now a FULL-TIME employee at Costco with a SET SCHEDULE but has routing days off. He had his 90 day review and they are very happy with everything he has been doing. These last 3 months have been really hard on us with him working between 60 and 80 hours a week but it has been worth it! In January Ken is either going to quit CVS all together or transfer back to Foxworthy and only work 2 days a week. We are waiting to see if they will approve the transfer. All in all Ken is so happy with Costco his mood has improved so much and he feels like he is part of a team. He took an almost $5 pay cut though. So money is going to be really tight if he leaves CVS all together so please pray with us that they will okay his transfer.

We had our 1st review with Kaylee's teacher as well and learned that Kaylee is doing great with her school work and is the very very active and social. The only thing they are really working on is sitting calmly during circle time! LOL that is never going to happen. She goes M-F from noon to 3:30pm. The best part is Kaylee wants to go to school everyday. A month back she was sick and cried and cried when i would not let her go for 2 days. She is also finally out of 24 month clothes and can wear all 2t pants and 2t or 3t shirts! I am glad that she is growing. Kaylee also loves christmas. She decorated our tree, her room and Michael's room. We are doing the new advent calendar this year acts of kindness. Each day we do a kind thing for someone. She is amazing. I don't know how much she understands but her heart is amazing. The other day we were leaving a store and there was a man (i assume he was homeless) in a wheelchair asking for help. She asked about him. She thought for a minute and asked if we could give him some of out stuff. So she gave him a bag of goldfish and some capri-sun drinks. But the best part was she went and talk to him as if she had known him forever and wished him a Merry Christmas as we walked away. I hope that she never losses that. In her mind everyone deserves kindness no matter what.

Michael has been making great strides in talking these last few months! He has more and more words but the best part is that he sings songs all the time! His new favorite is Rain Rain go away..... He is going to finally start OT in January. I have been trying to figure that out for almost a year now. He is currently on antibiotics yet again for an infection and we are planning to have more tubes, his adenoids remove and biopsies all done at the same time in January. But slowly we are starting to see changes. ABA has been hard on all of us not just Michael. ABA is very day from 9 to noon and the 2 times a week in the afternoons 2.5 hours for a total of 20 hours a week, he has speech 2x a week and early intervention therapy 1x a week. The if you through in his doctors appointments and feeding therapies I spend a lot of time just dealing with him. But it has been so worth it. He has been making so much progress and I am learning how to parent him differently which makes us both more happy. He still gets in his moods and sometimes I can not figure out what he wants/needs but we are working on it.

As for me I am counting the days until Ken is just working one job. I am tired of doing all the parenting! He is gone in the morning when they wake up and he is gone for dinner time and bedtime. It has been hard. I just want to have ken around again to hang out with. I miss him and the fun we have. I have been trying to plan stuff to look forward to each week but its hard with 2 small kids. I am alone a like more than I like to be. I have been also having a hard time with my parents not being around which makes me really miss my grandpa Guetchow a lot. I have been dreaming about my mom a lot the last few months and the have not been the best of dreams which is even harder. I don't think i will never understand how the mind works. So for now I just push forward.

I am hopeful that 2017 will be much better that 2016 but still Ken and I have some big decisions to make in the next few weeks 2017 and I am nervous because as always my kid well being are the most important in my mind. As for now I pray a lot about everything and know that God is really the one with the plan not me. I am never truly understand his plan but knowing that it is there is some what comforting.

Sunday, October 30, 2016

October is almost over!

This month is finally over! It has been a long one. Michael has been sick a lot and also started ABA therapy (25 hours a week), Ken has been working 2 jobs (almost 70 hours a week), I am have been dealing with my own health issues as well and we also had to some unexpected car issues (470 $ worth). I have also been reminded of how lucky I am to have so many people that love and care for my kids. With all that has gone on this month I have had to have lots of help for loads of people many of them are not related to me by blood but I consider to be part of my family. It fills my heart with such joy when I see my kids with all those amazing people that have welcomed them into their hearts. We also took some family photos with Grandma that turned out great and I am so happy to have them.



But there were many many good things as well MOST importantly Michael turned 2 years old!
It feels like he has been here a lot longer than 2 years! So much has happened in that amount of time. I am I truly luck to be his mommy. His birthday was perfect and there were so many people around him that love him so much. He is changing so fast and improving so much with his speech. He makes animal sounds now and loves singing. His favorite song is The wheels on the bus. His Favorite book is The truck book. This favorite toy is either a car or a ball and his favorite word is MOMMY!

Kaylee has had a great month at school. She is learning so much and is growing up so fast. Just listening to her talk takes my breath away. It is so hard for me to believe that she is only 4 years old. The one thing that I am so jealous of is how she prays and just talks to God! She says God is inside me and with me forever! She reminds me of it too when I am sad she tells me to talk to God about it!
The best part is that she is asking how to spell everything that she can think of and she is starting to spell things back.



This month/year has been the hardest on Ken and I as well. Ken and I are BEST FRIENDS and this year has gotten in the way. I think that for me the hardest part is that we don't get a chance to hang out and have fun and be ourselves. I think that this month we only got the 2 days in Disneyland to be our old-selves with the kids and I loved every minute of it. this month it has been 17 years since our first day (that is almost a half of a lifetime together). I know that it is just this hard time for what will really turn out to be a short time out of our lifetime together but it is still super hard. I know that we can work through it.
June 2005

2004

December 2000