Sundays with Stretchy Pants

It’s like Tuesdays with Morrie, without all the wisdom.


I Miss Liner Notes

I haven’t bought a cd since May of 2006. I know it was then because that’s when Pearl Jam by, uh, that one band that was super popular in the 90s and will always, always be super popular was released. By the way, when I was looking for that release date, I almost hyperventilated when I stumbled across the announcement that they’re reissuing Ten. I’m saving my pennies for the set that comes with “…Eddie Vedder-style composition notebook filled with replica personal notes, images and mementos from the collections of Eddie Vedder and Jeff Ament, a vellum envelope with replicated era-specific ephemera from Pearl Jam’s early work and a two-sided print commemorating the Drop in the Park concert.” REPLICA PERSONAL NOTES! EPHEMERA! And that set comes with vinyl, so I can play the records on my Fisher-Price record player. I don’t even care.

So, I think Bryan might have bought Pearl Jam for me for my birthday and it sat on my desk for days and days until I finally had time to listen to it on a drive up to Michigan. Except I couldn’t read the liner notes because I get carsick when I read. All of the days leading up to my chance to really listen to it were filled with looking at it forlornly and fondling it and then being interrupted by the children. And they were kind of little back then so, though I did make them listen to Violent Femmes, they railed against any kind of deeper-voiced stuff. They weren’t fans of Pearl Jam and I wasn’t a fan of whining so I didn’t get a chance to listen to it very much.

I remember whole days spent in my room listening to new music over and over and over again, while reading every last sentence in the liner notes. If the lyrics were included, of course I would have to learn every single lyric first and then begin reading the liner notes. And then make up a dance routine. That last part only applies to Cyndi Lauper and Madonna tapes, or my sister’s filthy Prince records. In the 90s, it was Tori Amos and Pearl Jam and, instead of a dance routine, I would make up an I’m-too-good-for-the-world-and-all-that-is-in-it routine, which may or may not have consisted of eye-rolling and pouting in front of a mirror. In flannel. Whatever.

I’m going to buy the kids cds from now on and just rip the music to their mp3 players. No I’m not. But I wish I would because I think they’re missing out on getting to know the bands they love. I think. I don’t know. Maybe kids these days would rather look up a band’s myspace instead. It just seems wrong to me.
Kids these days and their electronic internet. They don’t know what they’re missing. My instinct is to ignore their Christmas lists and buy them cds from their favorite artists, so they too can enjoy the wonders of the liner notes. But my gift-giving instincts are usually wrong so I won’t do that. Probably. I’ll just spend the days counting down to the reissue of Ten, and then when it comes out, I’ll lock myself in my room with a cd player and the Fisher-Price record player and, perhaps, some reading glasses, and I won’t come out until I feel that Eddie Vedder and I are, once again, psychically connected through the liner notes.

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Where’s the Outrage, Michigan?

First, yes, there was a debate and Sarah Palin said words like “doggone” and “you betcha.” I want my VP to be smarter than I am. Biden kept his cool even when Palin repeatedly said nothing. Good for him. Palin was less stupid than she usually is. Good for her. Still, Bush is very “dadgum” and “yeehaw” so I think I want to go with a little smarter ticket this time. Check my Shared Items over on the right and I will show you some good post-debate blog posts, if that’s what your interested in.

Anyway, Michigan, are you pissed that McCain just frickin’ abandoned you? I’m inexplicably upset about this. Michigan has no rich people or something so he’s not wasting his time there?

As in national polling, it appears to be Obama’s edge on handling the economy that has propelled him to the top of the polls in Michigan. In the Free Press poll, Obama held a 15-point lead over McCain on fixing problems with the national economy, and he had an even bigger, 20-point edge on the question of which candidate is “more likely to fight
for the concerns most important to you and your family.”

I’ve never agreed with a statement more. I think this is what it comes down to for me with Obama: he takes my concerns seriously. My concerns about paying for gas and groceries and college and a house and speech therapy. I just think Obama knows that we’re struggling here in the middle class, while McCain really has no idea. Does McCain even know anybody in the middle class? Does he know anybody who has had to choose between saving for retirement or going to college or paying for speech therapy or buying a house? Oh my God, I just started crying when I typed that sentence. I think I’ve found my true feelings about this election. I’m not really an economics type of girl; I tend to want to talk about race and gender and civil rights issues, but man, this economy bullshit is kind of a big deal. We’re working really hard. My husband has a bachelor’s degree in accounting and a job with a major financial institution. I sometimes get paid to write stuff. We don’t have credit card debt. We don’t have a mortgage that we can’t afford. We don’t have a car payment. We budget a small amount each week for “spending money” and we go to the dollar theater and Subway for fun.  And still we have to choose between several extremely important, quality-of-life things: speech therapy for our daughter, retirement, higher education, and a home. We’re paying for Maya’s speech therapy out of our ever-shrinking 401(k). I dropped out of school because we can’t afford to pay for it without student loans, and my post-college liberal arts job wouldn’t pay me enough to make it possible for me to pay off my loans. Maya’s speech has come a long way, but when we first got her evaluated last year, it was noted that she had a “moderate to severe” speech delay with motor planning issues involved. That sounds worthy of treatment, no? Our $12,000/year health insurance did not agree that it was worthy of treatment. I don’t know, I think basic communication skills are kind of helpful in life, but apparently because she’s able to chew and swallow her food, she does not qualify for health care coverage in this case. Do you want to know how much it costs? I’ll tell you: $58/week for a half-hour each week. Impossible. We have no debt, and still it’s impossible. Why is that? Gas and groceries maybe. The extra-curriculars that we pay for for our homeschooled kids are bargain-basement low-income rec. center prices. Some of them cost $5, none cost more than $25. We are not living high on the hog. We do everything on the cheap. I think the only “luxury” we have is cable and we were even going to get rid of that last year to save some money, but we decided that our homeschool needs make high-speed internet a basic necessity and it’s cheaper to get the internet/cable bundle. For “vacation” we visit our family and stay with them. We live on a budget. Every penny is budgeted. And Obama knows it. That’s exactly why he’s winning Michigan and that’s exactly why he should win this election. It makes me so upset that McCain won’t fight for Michigan because I think that means McCain knows he can’t help Michigan and we should all take that as a sign that he will not be able to help all of the people across the nation who are in the same boat as Michigan.

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Things I Love So F*cking Much

1. Electricity. I got some, bitches!

2. Dawn. She works my blogs and she invites me to free spaghetti dinners. And she makes me laugh.

3. Kristen. She makes her husband deliver coffee to me and she sets up free coffee for her neighbors because she has a generator. And she makes me laugh.

4. My other friends here and in Chesaning, and my extended family. They invite me to do laundry at their house and they invite me to stay with them and use up their electricity in order to get me to shut up with the whining. They remind me that I’m very lucky to have several places to which I could flee if I really needed to. And they make me laugh.

5. My husband and children. They’re just awesome. Bryan’s awesome because he puts up with me for-evah! And he’s cute. And the kids are awesome because, well, they’re 50% me. I’m kidding! They’re their own little bundles of funny electricity-addicted awesomeness. And they make me laugh.

6. Margaret Cho. Thanks to Dawny for this link because I couldn’t have said it better myself. And it makes me laugh: I’m Christian You Fuckers

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We’re Supposed to do Things Right?

Dawn tagged everybody with this meme about 3 things we do well as mothers, and then she verbally assaulted me at the park yesterday and threatened my life if I didn’t do it. (Not really, she just asked me to do it and so I am. Because she’s the boss of me. But you can totally see her verbally assaulting me, right?)

1. I take an interest in what they find interesting even if I find it horrendous. You know, so we can talk about it and I can be excited about it with them. I think they like that.

2. I cuddle with them endlessly.

3. I’m teaching them that their feelings matter and that they don’t have to go along with something just to avoid hurting a friend’s feelings.

Number 3 has been more uncomfortable for me than anything I’ve ever done as a parent. And that includes saying the word vulva. This seems to come naturally to Maya so far, but for the rest of us, it is hard to say no to people we like. It is hard for me to allow my kids to say no to playdates or birthday parties, but if they don’t want to go, I’m not making them go, despite my extreme discomfort. It literally goes against my make-up as a precious pleaser to do this (right now, my Ohio friends are saying, “What? You’re the biggest bitch I know!” and I’ll take that as a compliment, thankyouverymuch.) In the past, Lena and Liberty have asked, “What if so-and-so gets mad at me because I don’t want to go to his birthday party?” And, while my instinct is to say, “You’re right! We don’t want people to get mad at us. What will we do if somebody gets mad at us? I guess we better just ignore your feelings for the sake of somebody else’s feelings. Get in the car,” I have choked down that sentiment, broke out in a cold sweat and said, “Well, darlings, it’s like this: Your feelings matter. If your friend gets mad at you just because you’re not comfortable going to his birthday party, that is your friend’s issue, not yours. You aren’t in charge of other people’s feelings. Chances are, your friend will come to understand and respect your feelings. If he doesn’t, then he’s not a true friend.” And then I passed out from the effort of conveying this most basic truth of humanity. Our own feelings matter? WTF?

This trip is hard. Dawn is right when she says other parents make all the difference in the world. We need other parents who can be open and honest about the struggles in their parenting, the struggles in their marriage, the struggles in their lives. And you know what? We need to be able to talkabout the good things without setting off a competition. If it comes up in conversation that I cuddled with Lena while she talked about her Pokemon DS game for ten minutes, it makes me uncomfortable when another mom comes back with, “Well, I cuddled with my precious for even longer while she was talking about something even more boring to me.” It makes me feel like I made her insecure with my very small good thing and I didn’t mean to do that. And then it makes me feel like I’m in a competition that I didn’t know I was in. I usually get a free t-shirt whenever I sign up for a competition. I don’t have one, so I didn’t sign up. Stop it.

This is not a new idea, but we really, really do just need to be able to share and not be judged or fixed or competed with. It’s amazing how many of the posts for this meme start off with something to the effect of, “I’m supposed to say what I do right as a mother, but there are so many things I do wrong,” even though the instructions clearly say we’re not supposed to say that. We can’t help it. We’ve been burned too many times by the mommy olympics and we’re afraid that if we say we’re doing three whole things right, 800 other mommies are going to feel insecure and point out exactly what we’re doing wrong, or what they’re doing better. Stop it. We don’t need that shit. Let’s celebrate ourselves because, no matter what we do, our kids are going to be pissed at us. Let’s just be there for each other when it happens.

Oh, I’m tagging Mechelle, TooTightPonytailGirl, Sharon, Alissa, and Kristen. Five chicks who are ever so hard on themselves and deserve to talk about what they do right because there is a lot. A whole effin’ lot.

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The Trouble with Coffee

The trouble with pouring your very first cup of coffee of the day is, you probably really need that coffee in order to function properly, which implies that you’re probably not functioning properly at the time of the coffee pouring. And sometimes, that first cup might come after you’ve run a bit and so, while your brain might need a lot of extra oxygen to compensate for not yet having coffee, the oxygen might instead still be going to your muscles to try to keep them from rebelling and turning into jelly. So, this decreased brain oxygen, combined with the not-yet-having-coffee issue can be a problem when you try to add cinnamon to your oh-so-necessary first cup of coffee.

You might know that the cinnamon is in a rectangular container as opposed to the cylindrical containers housing most of the other spices, so you might think that if you grab any old rectangular container out of the spice cupboard, you’re safe. This would be a mistake. You might not remember that you also have a rectangular container of sesame seeds in your spice cupboard. And when you grab that container, you might say, “Huh, I wonder why the cinnamon is making a sound when I shake it. Weird.” At that point, you would think it would register that you might have grabbed the wrong container, but no. It won’t. You might even glance at the writing on the box, see an “S” and say to yourself, “Yes, that’s right. ‘S’ is for cinnamon,” not realizing that the only time you’ve ever seen cinnamon start with “S” is maybe when it was up in lights at a strip club. It won’t be until you actually pour the sesame seeds into your coffee that you will understand that you’re an idiot who needs to stay in bed until such time as the coffee is consumed.

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For the Sake of the Children

I wrote about this before, but it still annoys me. The AP is again talking about the fact the people like to complain about the book And Tango Makes Three. Ignorance annoys me. And ignorance for the sake of the children annoys me with the power of a thousand suns. The parents who complain about this kind of book are the same type of parents who can’t bring themselves to talk about s3x* with their children, or even call their body parts by the appropriate names, instead giving them nicknames like woo woo or whatzit. Ridiculous. If you can’t say the word p3nis* to your son, good luck. Good effing luck with your head in the sand. That’s the kind of thing that puts the subject of reproduction (or *gasp* intercourse for purposes other than reproducing!) on a very high shelf, which makes it more intriguing and more attractive and then the kids find out about an awesome book like It’s So Amazing and find themselves feeling ashamed, but titillated. That is not a healthy combination. Pretty soon, because they got a taste of this forbidden subject, they’re desperate for more and since they can’t get their curiosity satisfied in a healthy way, by asking their parents about it and being provided with good age-appropriate books on the subject, that’s where p0rn from the neighbor or the dad’s stash comes in really handy (because, mark my words, the households who protest so much are the households where the dad definitely has a stash that his wife probably doesn’t even know about). And it’s not a good idea to learn about the birds and the bees from materials that are not age-appropriate and do not treat s3x as the important thing that it is. Can you say, deviant behavior?

S3x is a normal part of life and should be discussed as such with people. Children are people, just in case you didn’t know. And they have reproductive organs, even if you don’t want to believe it. Homosexuality is a normal part of life for some people and if kids were allowed to learn about it, they might feel they could come out with dignity and love, or if they’re not gay, they would be able to give their gay friends dignity and love when they come out, then we’d have less Ted Haggard situations in the world. Yeah, heaven forbid your child should be allowed to feel that his homosexual feelings are ok. It’s better if he tries to deny them and gets married and has 5 kids only to be living on the down low and blowing apart his life and his wife and kids’ lives in the process. Messy. But at least you didn’t have to explain homosexuality to a child. Horrors.

*Because there is so much deviant behavior in the world, caused by stoopid parents who won’t provide their children with non-judgemental information about one of the most normal things in life, I have to type those kinds of words like that so the deviants who google certain things don’t stumble upon my site. Stop being stoopid. And buy some books for your kids. Then let them read them whenever they want so it takes the mystery away and it becomes no big deal instead of this thing to simultaneously covet and feel ashamed about. You can start by calling their parts by the right names because if you can say those words, it’s much easier to say all of the other things you need to say over the course of a lifetime of parenting.

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Mmmm…Sooooothing

Is there anything in this world that is more exquisitely satisfying than a post-fever fresh fruit cup? Ice-cold pineapple, blueberries and kiwi cleaned and cut by someone other than me? Heavenly. Organic? No. Local? Definitely not.  Exactly what I needed? Hells yeah! I don’t think I’ve experienced euphoria of that level while eating fruit in my entire life, unless the fruit was floating in a vat of chocolate. Or vodka. I fear that nothing in my life will compare to the elation brought on by this lovely, luscious cup o’ fruit. I have peaked. It is over. Adieu.

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Speaking of Empowering…

Melissa just left a lovely comment about empowering these girls of mine, which is totally something we try to do. It would be awesome if it worked out that way. One of the empowering themes around here is that it’s ok to fight with people you love. This is tough for Lena to understand so it tends to come up a lot because she’s really trying to figure it out and I want her to know that it’s ok for her to say, “Hey, that’s not ok,” without worrying about hurting feelings because her feelings actually matter, too. And sometimes making your needs known can lead to fighting, but it’s ok. It’s ok! Everything’s ok. OK!

Turns out that it’s not so tough for Liberty to understand and I think she’s a little bit proud when she’s combative with her favorite people. It’s not a perfect system; we’re working on it. Both of them understood the issue in their own way until a stupid Disney channel show had the main character fighting and then making up with her best friend by saying, “We’re best friends; we shouldn’t fight.” And the audience said, “Awwww, clap clap clap,” and then Lena and Liberty panicked because that little sentence went against everything they had been taught for their whole life. But it was on tv and the audience seemed to agree! It took about 5 seconds for them to find me in the laundry room (or maybe I was napping or watching my stories on the other tv, who really knows?) and say, “Mom, should best friends fight?”

Stupid tv. Now we’ll be going over and over this in a million different ways from now until summer. And then they’re going to want to talk about my dad’s most recent divorce again, too. Don’t they understand that I tell them these things so they can discuss them amongst themselves, not so they can drag me into it all the time? I don’t understand how these things work. I’m not a healthy person! I shouldn’t be allowed to discuss it. *sigh* Stupid tv. I’m banning the Disney channel in favor of Adult Swim on Cartoon Network. There’s no mistaking the family values of Squidbillies.

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Nine Years

Lena and Liberty 6 monthsLiberty and Lena

Aw.

Three days after Lena and Liberty were born, Columbine happened and I thought, wow, these kids are seriously f*cked, what kind of a world is this?

Happy Birthday, Lena and Liberty! And since you don’t read this blog because Mommy swears in it, let’s talk about me now.

Birth story alert! If it had a title, it would be called “Why I Chose a Homebirth the Second Time Around.”

Lena and Liberty were born 4 weeks early after 8 weeks of bedrest and many, many lies by my perinatologist. He was a gentle, grandfatherly type who never wore his scary white coat and always sat down next to my bed instead of towering over me. I loved him and trusted him instantly. He was a big fat liar. Baby A (Lena) was head down, engaged in the birth canal ready to go, which usually indicates that a vaginal birth is a definite possibility. Baby B (not Lena) had a little bit of a problem in that her esophagus didn’t go all the way down to her stomach. Scary, but fixable I was assured. The perinatologist used this little defect to convince me that I should have a c-section: “You know, sometimes these babies also have a tracheal problem and if you give birth by c-section, I’ll be able to keep Baby B connected to you by umbilical cord long enough so we can create an airway for her. Otherwise, she could die.” Sign me up. I didn’t even question why the pediatric surgeon or the neonatologist didn’t tell me about this little piece of information. Are you wondering why they didn’t? It’s because it wasn’t true. I didn’t find out that it was a lie until I was strapped down on the operating table waiting for the gas to put me under. Dr. Neonatologist came to my bedside and said in his broken English, “I here to see what wrong with Baby B-if she need surgery today or can wait a few day, or if she have no airway, Baby just die.”

‘Scuse me?

“If there no communication between trachea and lung, nothing we can do, Baby just die.”

Mmkay. I’m not leaving this hospital without my Baby B’s airway, does everybody understand that? Let’s just forget for a moment that the whole reason I consented to this c-section was because Perinatologist told me that if there wasn’t an airway, the c-section would allow time for Neonatologist or Pediatric Surgeon (or maybe God? Now I don’t even know who he meant was going to fix this if it happened) to create an airway. And what about poor Baby A? She has been a very good girl, getting herself into a perfect position in order to come through the birth canal. She was planning on coming through the canal! She could have gotten herself all jumbled up and flipped breech or transverse or any other way that pleased her, but she listened to her mommy all those months and put her head right on my cervix like a good girl.

I didn’t say any of those things. What I really did was cry and yell at everybody to just stop, stop, stop. “She’s alive right now. Let’s not do the c-section! We don’t have to do it right now. I’m not really in labor right now!”

(Here’s a secret: I wasn’t really in labor, but I was so sick of being in the hospital that I just wanted it overwith. I had been contracting every 2-3 minutes for 8 weeks and they weren’t getting more intense and they weren’t changing my cervix; I just had an irritable uterus that wanted to contract constantly so as to throw everybody into a tizzy and make us all think that I should stay in bed. Forever. Perinatologist told me that when the contractions changed and became painful that I should let my nurse know and we would then do the section. On Friday, my ultrasound showed 2 healthy babies who were “both around 6 pounds” [more lies]. On Saturday, I was 36 weeks along and sick sick sick of being in the hospital, and fairly confident that my babies would be healthy so I lied to the nurse, “Um, I think I can feel these contractions now.”)

Again, I said, “Stop! She’s alive right now! Let’s just keep her in there.” Then they ushered in Grandmotherly Nurse to pat my hand and tell me that it would all be ok. My arms were strapped all the way out to my sides, crucifixion-style, so this move meant to comfort me was a bit of a stretch. All it did was remind me how f’ed up the whole thing was. So she patted my hand, 2 feet away from me, and then she put a mask over my face. I remember thinking that the mask would give me oxygen: They think I’m hysterical and I’m going to pass out if I don’t have enough oxygen…Is oxygen supposed to make me this sleepy?

I woke up several hours later in a lot of pain, with a lot less blood, a scarred uterus, and no babies by my side. Oddly, my first concern was the placenta, “Did they remember to send the placenta out to get tested?” Heaven forbid we didn’t find out if our girls were identical or fraternal! My second thought came immediately, “Is Liberty alive? Does she have an airway?” Yes, they assured me. “And Lena?” Yes, yes, yes. Both of them had a bit of trouble starting to breathe because of a lot of fluid in their lungs (stupid c-section). Liberty was on a ventilator. I couldn’t even think about it.

People were telling me how beautiful they were. My sister, my mother, my husband. A nurse brought me a Polaroid of each of them with their names, weights, and lengths written on the bottom. Lena was 4 lbs. 12 oz., 18 inches long and Liberty was 5 lbs. 1 oz., 18 inches. Um, ultrasound? You suck at guessing weights. I think a carnival worker could’ve done a better job. If not, I at least would’ve gotten a stuffed animal if the carnie was as far off as you were.

Honest to God, when I looked at those Polaroids I thought, “How in the hell does anybody know how beautiful they are? They have tape all over their faces, holding tubes in their mouths. People are lying to me again. I have ugly babies and nobody wants to tell me.” Then I realized that it was only Liberty who had a tube. I had looked at the same picture twice. Lena’s picture was grainy, but everybody was right, she was beautiful. Once I could look around the tube, I could see that Liberty was indeed beautiful too. The tube pissed me off because things that scare me tend to piss me off, but if it was helping her breathe, then fine. After looking at the precious Polaroids I went back to sleep.

It would have been a good sleep, too, if not for Resident who kept coming in and pushing on my stomach. Didn’t she know I just had abdominal surgery and she was very rudely putting way too much pressure on my wound? You would think that medical schools would teach people something like, “When a patient has just had surgery, try not to put pressure on the body part that was recently cut open.” Absurd. I was hooked up to a button that would deliver 1 shot of morphine every 8 minutes or so. Each time Resident came to push on my belly, I clicked that morphine button a hundred times. Resident kept telling me that it would only work once per 8 minutes, but I was banking on it malfunctioning. I made a deal with it that if it would just deliver 8 shots of morphine every single minute then I would love it forever and buy it anything it wanted. ClickClickClickClickClickClickClickClickClickClickClickClick.

Resident didn’t like the way my uterus kept gushing blood all over the place. No wonder I was so sleepy. Blood loss kind of takes the wind out of your sails. She gave me 2 transfusions and called it good. Could I see my babies then? Sure, but I had to be careful not to touch them. Fabulous. They’re lucky I was high, or else I would’ve really been rude.

Nurse wheeled me and my stretcher into the NICU where I called both my babies by the wrong name. I said, “Hi Liberty,” and Nurse said, “That’s Lena.” Oh. On the way to Liberty’s isolette I concentrated so hard, telling myself that I should really try to call the next baby by the right name. It was about a 20-foot walk and I think I fell asleep on the way. At any rate, I said, “Hi Lena,” and Nurse once again corrected me. Oh. I think the reason it’s called General Anesthesia is because you Generally have no idea who you are or where you are until it wears off. I don’t know, but that’s what I believe. Maybe it was the blood loss. Or the morphine. I don’t really know for sure, but my brain did not work well until all of my drugs wore off. Maybe 6 years later.

So Different Nurse then wheeled me back to my room, where she actually expected me to hoist myself up off of the stretcher and put myself in my bed. Ha! ClickClickClickClickClickClickClickClickClick. I got myself into my bed and then I promptly asked for something in which I could vomit. I did not want to vomit. I was in quite a lot of pain and I did not, did not, did not want to use my stomach muscles for the purpose of hurling into a tiny vomit catcher. I didn’t know I had any will power because when I’m doing something I shouldn’t do, I always say, “Gee, I wish I had will power so I wouldn’t do these things,” but I’m telling you when that puke was on its way out of my stomach I forced it all back down by the sheer power of my will. That might have been the happiest moment of my life.

Nurse left my husband and me in my room all by ourselves. It was about 7 hours after Lena and Liberty were born and I was still feeling guilty for faking real labor. I told my husband the truth and I asked him if he was disappointed in me. I can’t really remember what he said, but I know that he usually knows the right things to say so I have supreme confidence that he assured me that he was indeed proud of me and not at all disappointed, for Heaven’s sake. Or maybe he said he really had a lot of yard work to do and that would’ve been a nice way to spend a Saturday. Either way, I don’t remember.

After Bryan left, I started to talk to my belly because that was what I had been doing every night for the past eight months, and then I remembered that my babies weren’t with me anymore. And I wondered if they realized that I wasn’t with them. And then I cried and cried and pushed my morphine button until I finally fell asleep, which probably took about 10 seconds, but it felt like a long time.

And I wouldn’t change a thing. Except for the whole birth story/birth defect/scary/sad/angry stuff. Other than that, I wouldn’t change a thing. These girls have been amazing and I’m truly lucky to be their mother. If time could go more slowly, I would be ever so grateful. Nine years went by in a blink. Another 9 years and they’ll be 18. Where’s my morphine?

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Seersucker is for Suits…

…not for bellies. Alas, my belly does look like seersucker because of this:

Darn twins.

I hate to generalize when it comes to Lena and Liberty, but their birthday is tomorrow and I think it’s interesting that Lena keeps saying, “Our birthday is in 1 more day,” or “when we’re 9, I think I’ll get a job.” Liberty, on the other hand, will say, “How many days until my birthday?” or “when I turn 9, I’m gonna ROCK N ROLL!” I just find it interesting, that’s all. And I’m sure it isn’t 100% of the time, but still. I don’t think I’ve ever heard Lena use a singular possessive pronoun when talking about her birthday. I know this is true because that has bothered me before. Haven’t we done a good enough job showing her that she is an individual? Does Lena only identify as a twin and not a singular person? OMG, OMG, OMG! What if she can’t adjust to living a separate life? And then when I hear Liberty repeatedly saying “mine,” I’m all, “Geez, selfish! Don’t you know you have a twin?” (not out loud of course). These kids just can’t win.

Anyway, as most mothers do around the time of their kids’ birthdays, I’m thinking about their birth and all that jazz. The first two songs on my playlist are songs that really bring back that time for me. So much so, that when I listen to them today, they make me cry. Like, literally. I’m not going into all the details right this minute, but I had to leave both babies in the hospital (Lena for 2 days, Liberty for 3 weeks as she recovered from surgery to repair an esophageal atresia with a tracheoesophageal fistula) and I used to sing You’ve Got a Friend to them every time I was with them in the hospital (which, I’m sure contributed to their pain). And I cried because it wasn’t true that if they called out my name, I would be there. No, I would be at home. Without them. And they would cry and I wouldn’t know. Just the beginning of a long list of ways I would let them down.

Beauty for Ashes came into my head at one point while I was sobbing hysterically in a bathroom stall at the hospital. It was probably a week and a half after they were born. We were visiting Liberty and we weren’t yet able to hold her because she was having a hard time recovering from surgery. It was an awful, scary time. Beauty for Ashes was a song that I had heard a lot while I worked at the Christian bookstore and I really felt indifferent toward it until that day in the bathroom stall. It just came into my head and it really did bring me a lot of comfort at that time. I’m not looking up the verses, but the song is about the part in the Bible that says the exact same thing the song says: “He gives beauty for ashes, strength for tears, gladness for mourning, peace for despair.” I had all the ashes, tears, mourning and despair I could handle thankyouverymuch. I was wanting some of that beauty, strength, gladness and peace that was promised to me. I clung to that song like I’d never clung to anything in my life. And then one of my church friends came up to the hospital to pray for us and proceeded to tell us that Liberty’s issues were all probably the fault of my grandfather’s time in WWII (he probably killed children and now we had to pay), and my grandmother’s abortion. And our pre-marital sex. And I thought, “Huh. Are these the people I hang out with?” and then I cried some more. For different reasons. Church people are sweet. Anyway, when I listen to it now, I still cry. But I don’t cry when I look at my seersucker belly, so I guess that’s progress.

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