Monday, September 29, 2008

Emme's Very First Campout

Friday Ryan took Emme on her very first camp out.

She was thrilled to eat foil dinners, cook smores, and sleep in a sleeping bag in an actual tent.


All I can say is thank goodness for father daughter camp outs!


What was I doing while Dad and Emme were off playing in the great outdoors? I spent the evening at the Arizona Diamond Back's baseball game with Braden and the twins. I think I was actually the one roughing it.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Happy Birthday Emme!

Emmry has been talking about her 5th birthday party since September 16th of last year. From the theme to the cake, it was set in her mind just like her wedding is. Her plans were to invite all her friends to our house for a heart birthday party, play heart games, do a heart craft, and have a "ginormous" heart cake from Costco. So as the big day drew closer, I became more and more worried. The games, crafts, and cake I could do, producing the friends was a bit trickier. Thankfully one of the girls from her primary class was available and we invited her over for a heart themed playdate. Emmry has already made contingency plans for next year;s party in case she still only has one friend. Thankfully we have plenty of chocolate cake to spare and share. Maybe we'll make some friends yet!

Sunday, September 14, 2008

An Amendment

After the past two days, I feel it necessary to amend my previous post that absolved Chloe of any blame in our current "phase." I wonder, what exactly is the predetermined time limit for a phase? When do you move onto a chapter or a period of life? This phase I've decided has unequivocally crossed over the time limit whatever it is. We are definitely ready to move on. I'm not sure how much longer we can bare the artwork covering the walls, doors, rungs of the cribs, bodies, toys, carpet, blankets and sheets. Today the only solice I have is thinking ahead to the day when I'm able to say, "I hope you have a kid just like you." And today Chloe, I really mean it.

Friday, September 12, 2008

POOP... a four letter word

I'm not sure what happens. I put my adorable little girls to bed. They are bathed and smell like soap. They look so cute in their ducked-taped-on pajamas. They insist on wearing their swimsuit cover-ups with the ruffle on the bottom and their sun hats. To complete the adorable factor they each are wearing one black Paten leather Sunday shoe. I cover them with their blankets, then uncover them and peel back the layers to find their cute, soft bellies which I must kiss before they happily go to sleep. I recover them, making sure their babies are also covered. Ryan brings them a drink of water and we turn off the light and shut the door with a big sigh and a silent Hallelujah.

The next morning I wake to find my girls completely undressed. Chloe still has her diaper and pajama bottoms on because without Hadley's help she can't remove the duct tape. Hadley is not only naked but has redecorated her crib in poop. There are not many four letter words we say in our home, in fact none. But when the words, "Oh poop!" come out of my mouth everyone knows to make themselves scarce. No one wants to do the cleaning up.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Aloha

Eight years ago Ryan and I made plans to travel to Hawaii with some friends. Unfortunately the trip took a back seat to what would consume us for nearly the next decade of our lives... Ryan's education. We promised ourselves when he completed his training we would take that trip. Amazingly, that time has finally come and we were able to fulfill that dream, though we did not invision doing it with our four children, my parents, and my six siblings and their families. Clearly, it was quite a celebration!
As it turns out, my family happened to plan a reunion in Hawaii this year and we were able to tag along. Our last beach trip being just last April, we felt completely prepared for the sand castles and forts, the wave jumping, the boggy and body boarding, the surfing and the jelly fish. Wait... not the jelly fish.

It seems the jelly fish loved the beach as much as we did and unfortunately Braden was their target. So we quickly became experts in treating jelly fish stings. Many of you may be thinking of "that Friends' episode" and yes that apparently will work, though we cannot comment on it from experience. Don't try bathing the area in fresh water. This may feel good initially, but it spreads the toxin and leads to a dire of complaints, i.e., "I want to die," "I never want to go to the beach again," "I want to go home right now." On the positive side, after Braden was stung on two separate occasions we gained sufficient knowledge to become the first aid house on the beach, lending assistance to other unfortunate vacationers.

One of the true highlights for Ryan and Braden was surf lessons. After a two hour lesson, they became pretty adept surfers. Braden particularly had a great time and continued to ask over and over throughout the trip when he could go again. Though I am sure they were as awesome as they say, I am only taking their word for it as I missed the whole thing. It seems the pineapple plantation was much too interesting and consumed the entire afternoon. Thankfully a few pictures were taken and Ryan came home with a souvenir to prove his manhood, a foot torn up by coral.





As it usually turns out, some of the unscheduled moments were the most memorable. Of our trip to Waikiki, it will not be the beach, aquarium, Pearl Harbor, or International Market Place that the kids will remember. No, what they will remember is a giant tree with hundreds of vines just begging for the inner Tarzan to be released. Many succumbed, but Braden and Ryan did it in style, ascending the tree and swinging down from its branches. As they prepared for their first swing, my sister leaned over and told me she came prepared with the location of the children's hospital. I leaned back and told her we'd have to make due with an anesthesiologist because we didn't have insurance for another week.

Thankfully Ryan's education was not put to the test on our little Tarzan, but his work on jelly fish stings and an out-of-joint elbow was well worth the years and money we put into his training.
The trip all in all was a wonderful one. It started off a bit rocky with Hadley throwing up once in the car on the ride to the Phoenix airport and then again on the shuttle bus (you should have seen how fast the woman next to us moved), and ended a bit the same with thankfully just one episode on the way to the Honolulu... But the middle part was all we had hoped for eight years ago.
Congratulations Ryan!

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Happy Birthday Girls

It's hard to believe that it has been two years since the birth of our miracle twins. From the beginning I thought the first year was going to be the hardest, but we proudly sailed right on through it. The second year humbled us quite a bit and left us wondering... what were we thinking? We really hope it can't get any worse.
Perhaps the terrible twos times two will prove
itself to be just that, but today we throw all caution
into the Hawaiian wind as we celebrate Hadley and Chloe turning two. The girls are celebrating their birthdays in style in Hawaii with my parents, and my six siblings and their families. As it is Sunday, there is a limit to the entertainment we can provide them, but visiting the Hawaii temple, playing on its grass, and dipping into its fountains will be quite memorable for all of us.

Tonight we had a party unlike any we've had in a long time, with grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins surrounding us. We sang, ate cake, and opened presents and truly felt blessed to be together. The girls are obsessed with everything baby, so it was fitting that they each received a baby doll with a stroller at home to match.
Clearly surviving a year of two gifted climbers, creative and resourceful artists, opportunistic sprinters, unrelenting hair pullers, jubilant water lovers, and incessant nudes deserves more than one night of celebration. Thankfully there is plenty of rich, chocolaty cake left over to get us through a few more nights. Maybe next year we'll only need a cake of the yellow variety. We can only hope!

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Baby Dan's Wedding

This week, we traveled up to Utah for the wedding of my youngest brother Daniel. Having not flown for a year, Braden and Emmry were beside themselves with excitement. They had a wonderful time hiking, playing with cousins, dancing at the reception, and gourging on candy in the groom's room. By the end of the reception there was an all out party, with pajamaed kids line dancing with the adults. Ryan and I felt that we must truly be on the brink of middle age when the Electric Slide was not on the program.

The wedding itself was wonderful. Ryan and I felt extremely blessed to be together in the temple with all my siblings, their spouses and my parents. Though we cannot fully comprehend the blessings the Lord promises us when we are sealed in the temple, Thursday felt like a little glimpse of heaven.
So what could possibly spoil a trip back home for a wedding? Not the flight with both babies crying, "Mama," the squabling kids, or toothpaste smeared into Grammy's new rug. No, at this point we take all that in stride. Perhaps it was finding the freezer had been left open upon our return home.