Thursday, April 28, 2011

In The Name of The...

Father,

The Son,
(must touch belly button each time, or else he starts over--his own rule-- we usually average about 3 tries before he can move on to...)

The Holy

Spirit
(In this picture, still saying Ho-weeeee, before 'Peer-it)

AMEN!
(resounding clap of the hands!)

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

The Good Housewife


So you may have seen this 1955 piece from Good Housekeeping sometime in your liberal arts education in college (if not, ask for your money back-- what did you learn in Sociology 101 anyway?).  When we first saw it in Civicus in the early 2000s it seemed appalingly ridiculous.  Women treated as slaves.  Or animals.   Degrading, sexist, archaic.  And then I fell in love and got married, and here comes the big However....

HOWEVER,  now that I am a housewife, and naturally, if i'm going to be something, I want to be a good something, a few of these notes have some value to them (a few of them are still ridiculous, see the last one).  Things like "Try to make sure your home is a place of peace" or "Be happy to see him" are reasonable enough and truly speak to a homemaker's goals.  Lately I've been focusing on an effort embodied in the second tip, (I don't know if you can read this), that says, "Prepare yourself.  Take 15 minutes to rest so you'll be refreshed when he arrives [i love that part].  Touch up your makeup, put a ribbon in your hair [wow, they must be writing this just to me!] and be fresh-looking.  He's [husband] just been with a lot of work-weary people."

Since I've been staying at home for the last year (not including immediate post-partum time), I have tried to put my best face on for Cody when he comes home.  Afterall, he's the one who has to work, and I get to be at home.  I feel bad for him.  But, I also want him to know that I love him and that I want to look nice when he sees me.  In law school when we were dating, of course I would make sure that my hair looked nice, my make up was flattering and I was rockin a sweet outfit whenever I saw him.  Why should that be any different now?  I'm still in love with him, I want to impress him when he comes home and I want him to think, wow, she loves me so much she got pretty for me!  Some other things I do just out of courtesy for a person I love dearly and know well.  I know that Cody gets stressed out when the kitchen is a mess.  If I have some extra time, I make sure the kitchen is put back together after preparing dinner.  Now, cleaning the kitchen ranks exactly LAST on my favorite chore list.  I would rather do 10 loads of laundry and vacuum the entire house twice.  But, I know Cody likes a clean kitchen and I know he receives love though acts of service, so I try to keep that in mind.  (Full disclosure, this doesn't get done nearly as often as I woud like-- I just cleaned the kitchen top to bottom for my Good Friday penance. enough said). 

Back to getting refreshed for Hubby-- Sean usually wakes up a little bit before Cody comes home, and every so often he comes into my room with me as I "get ready for Daddy."  Now, I certainly don't do this everyday.  Some days Cody comes home early from the Jail and we go for a family run together, or I've just gotten back from a run when he pulls up. But, on days that I'm just putzing around the house cleaning up, etc, I like to touch up my make up, but a ribbon in my hair and but a nice(r) outfit on.  Sean's really taken to the idea, and a few of his comments lately make me wonder if we've taken it too far.  For example:

-One day I last week I woke him up from his nap and I was still wearing running shorts from our walk earlier.  He said in his groggy post-nap state, "Mommy, go put a skirt on for Daddy."  Hmm...

This one was so sweet-- we often talk about what Sean will be when he grows up, whether he will be a priest or have a family and be a Daddy.  He hasn't decided yet.  But, the other day he said, "Maybe Seannie's family will get pretty for him when he comes home one day."  The tenses were all mixed up, and I couldn't quite figure out what he was getting at, but after he said it a few times, I got it, and all I could do was hug him and think how sweet is this boy? 

Yesterday Sean saw some of our more familiar neighbors walking their familiar dog whom Sean loves, Maggie Rose.  As they were walking away from our near-daily meeting, I said, "Maggie Rose is a pretty dog."  Sean said, "Maggie Rose is a pretty black dog.  Is she wearing make up, Mommy?"

Here's to the good housewife, raising little boys who want pretty wives of their own.  Have I just contributed to another generation of sexism?  I just want my boys to fall in love with women who love them enough to want to look pretty for them, that's all.  Or they can be priests.  Or the Pope.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Wedding Fever







I don't know about you, but we're getting Wedding Fever over here!  With less than a week to go before the Royal Wedding and less than a month before the Sister's Wedding, wedded bliss is on our minds!  William and Kate have taken over nearly every station on the TV these days, and I can't seem to pull Cody away from yet another Wills & Kate: A Royal Romance documentary special every night. 

Will you watch the Royal Wedding?  Will you tune in at 4 or 5 a.m., or wait for the repeat coverage later in the day? 

Yesterday after Easter mass (hopefully photos to come, once a friend sends me hers as our camera is broken....again), a nice woman came up to me and said, "my friend and I saw you in mass, and we said how you were just like Kate Middleton!" Boy, did this ever make my day!  I was wearing a royal blue dress and a peacock feather "topper" in the British tradition.  Right after this woman complimented me such I saw that she was wearing the faux-saphire Princess Diana/Princess Catherine engagement ring.  Awesome. 

Closer to home, we are gearing up for another important wedding day in Holland, Michigan.  Sean talks about "Neece's wedding" in some context nearly every day.  He has been practicing his walk with a little blue pillow, and he and Jamesie and Uncle will be donning matching tuxedos.  I can't wait.  The Royal pages will have nothing on this little one.  I doubt if any of their outfits will include electric blue glasses which will match the wedding colors. Expect a full panorama of pictures later next month after the Royals of Baylor wedding. 

Friday, April 22, 2011

Little Big

We just had Jamesie's One Year appointment, which went well except for him screaming and trying to (belly) crawl all over the dirty floor (in just a diaper) the entire time.  Luckily, our pediatrician is exceedingly patient and has developed quite the skill of being able to talk technical-medical jargon to parents over two toddlers talking, yelling, crying, laughing, looking for cars, crayons and stealing stethescopes, simultaneously, in a 6' x 10' room.  God bless him.  Here's our littlest's stats:

Height: 32 inches: off the chart (same as Sean's height at 12 mo)
Weight: 21 lb 4 oz:  a measely 25th percentile.  The child eats meat, whole milk, whole milk yogurt, whole milk cheese, avocados, and butter incesantly.  Our doctor assured me that he's using what we're giving him, he's just using it to grow tall, not fat.  Oh well.  he's still so darn cute... even if his limbs aren't so much fat as they are blowing in the wind. 

Sean has been on a kick lately that Jamesie is "not little, he's big, mommy!"  Any time I say something to my "little baby," which is often, because, well, he is, I'm quickly corrected by his big brother.  "He's not a little baby.  He's a BIG baby."  Not a Big Boy, that distinction lies exclusively with Sean and others who can walk on their own, but a Big Baby.  Sean has a little friend named Dominic who was a baby when we first met him.  For months Sean called him "Baby Dominic"  Now he's about 18 months and can walk, and when Sean first saw him walk he said, "He's not baby Dominic, he's Big Boy Dominic now."  When Sean saw Uncle Gabriel walking on Skype a few months ago, he prayed later that night for "Baby Uncle, no, Big Boy Uncle Gabriel."  Yesterday we went over to Dominic's house for lunch, but stopped at the glasses store first.  The Lady at the Place said, "where are you going for lunch today, Sean?" and he said, "Big Boy Dominic's house."  She said, "oh, is that your friend?" Sean said, "Yes.  And Gabe and Greta are Seannie's friends." 

These pics are from Jamesie's birthday... When I brought him down to say goodnight to everyone he insisted on hanging upside down over the edge of the couch to look at micah. Beth and Meg had to hold onto his (long) legs and arms to keep him from falling, but everytime we sat him up he would fall backwards to do it again! He's just so long.


Thursday, April 21, 2011

Prayerfully Yours,

Sean likes praying, which warms our heart.  His first word was Jesus, and he has told me at different times that when he grows up he wants to be "a Pope," "a Priest," "Fr. Jeremy," and most recently, "An altar server." Last night he was in a particularly reflective mood.  He led us in prayer for grace before dinner, which was:

"Dear Jesus, Thank You for this food.  I love Greta. Amen." 

For nighttime prayers, after we go through our usual routine, we always ask Sean who he wants to pray for.  95% of the time it goes like this, "Aub, Neece, Michael..." then some variation of Meg, Tim, Jake and Lexi. Last night, however, when asked "Sean, who do you want to pray for?" he answered:

"Pray for all of the football teams." 

Hmmm....?

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

More Birthday Fun

The Groeber clan all came down to Charleston the week before Jamesie's birthday to celebrate, so we've been basking in birthday bliss for a good 1/2 month now.  Sean has been telling everyone "Jamesie's One," and actually started asking "when's seannie's birthday?"  I think we've exhausted the birthday potential, but not before I leave a few more pics of Jamesie's first cake and present experience:

For the entire week before Jamesie's "party" Sean worked on this sign every day for his art activity. I outlined the letters, and he did all the painting.  I was so impressed with his determination and ability to stay in the lines especially while wielding a 12" long adult paintbrush. 

Our 12-months of Jamesie tribute.


The boys had bff Gabe over for the party-- Sean and Gabe spent most of the time blowing bubbles and spilling bubble solution all over their clothes.


A cheeseburger for the birthday boy for dinner!  James loves meat and ate almost a 1/2 of a big-sized adult burger.  He could eat nothing but meat at every meal. 

Jamesie's special sleeping toy is a frog (named Frogger), and he has a few other stuffed frogs around, so Sean and I decided he would like a frog-cake for his birthday.  The inside is strawberry, which gave him a few bumps around his mouth, so we'll hold off on trying strawberries again for a few weeks.  On his real birthday we let him have some ice cream, but he actually really did not like it at all.  I think it was too cold for him because he just cried and cried everytime he tried it.

Oohhh... fire.  I will touch it.

yesssssssssss.

Proud parents.  I love the way James and Cody are looking at each other in this picture with such affection.  So sweet.


Jamesie, I mean, Sean and Gabe, enjoying his presents. 

I asked Sean what he wanted to get James for his birthday, and he didn't really know.  So, we brainstormed together things Jamesie likes, and sean came up with "Frogs and balls."  Very astute, actually.  So, he then said he wanted to buy Jamesie a ball with a frog on it (I am amazed by the child's imagination and logic skills).  Unfortunately, we couldn't find such a ball, so he picked out this basketball for Jamesie.  This basketball was perhaps J's favorite gift the whole day.  He lit up when he saw it and immediately picked it up, licked it (affection), held it, rolled it and drummed on it.  Way to go Sean, maybe his love language is actually gifts.

I *think* this concludes our birthday coverage. 

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Son of a Lawyer

Last night in the car on the way home from dinner:

Sean: "Daddy, there's an ambli-lance!" 
Cody: "Yeah, I see it."
Sean: "Chase it!"

I can see the back-of-the-phone-book-ad now...

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Happy First Birthday Jamesie!

One year ago we first held our little Jamesie- I can't believe it! 

On April 12 last year I had an *overdue* doctor's appointment-- first thing Monday morning.  Since the little guy was late and I was heading toward complete physical misery, I asked Cody to come with me, and said I would drop him off at work afterwards.  Well, at this routine appointment it was discovered (not by me!) that my water had broken at some point earlier!  I only had 2 cm (out of 10) of fluid left for the baby, so my doctor said, "go home and get your things, I'll meet you at the hospital-- we're having the baby!"  I said, "today?  right now?"  Although I had really wanted to avoid an induction, I was OK with it at this point b/c I knew the Baby couldn't stay in there without fluid and that we had a serious risk of infection at this point. 

We came home and while Cody gathered our bag I snuck off to have a last meal b/c I knew they wouldn't let me eat once I got to the hospital (I would later tell a nurse when I was alone with her, "I won't tell anyone if you go get me a chick-fil-a sandwich right now").  We hugged Sean as our family of 3 one last time and bounced into the car, giddy with excitement.  I texted and called all I could on the 5 minute (bumpy) ride to the hospital.  Once there, Cody carrying 2 pillows, the Bose and iPod, two overnight bags and the Boppy pillow, I told everyone we saw, "we're having a baby!"  Master of the obvious. 

We settled into our room nicely, and began the induction just after 12.  However, things did not go well, and before I knew it we were descended upon by a team of doctors and nurses, manhandling me into every imaginable (and some unimaginable) positions, saying the baby's heartrate had droppped too much-- maybe he was on the cord, or maybe the contractions were just too much.  They quickly stopped the pitocin, gave me a shot of something to stop the contractions and we waited for Baby to recover.  Later, I was told we had 5 minutes to get his heartrate back to normal, and he responded at about 4 minutes... about 60 seconds away from another c-section, which likely would have meant c-sections the rest of my life.  We were praying to St. Gerard with everything we had, and he interceded for us! I also felt the prayers of all of our family and friends we had enlisted earlier in the day--thank you!

After the first try, we couldn't try pitocin again until the operating room was available in case I had to be rushed in for the dreaded surgery.  The OR opened up around 4, so we started again about 4:30.  For the next 4 hours, we watched movies (17 Again with Zac Efron--when you're in labor you get the remote!), watched Jeopardy, did the sunday crossword puzzle, chatted on the phone, and didn't really feel much more than the Braxton-Hicks I had been having at home.  At 8:00 Law and Order came on, and I can usually easily lose an hour in an LnO episode.  But, despite the compelling drama and realistic court scenes, at 8:30 I strangely wanted to turn it off b/c my contractions had become too distracting and too intense to think about anything else.  I rocked in the rocking chair, sat on the birthing ball with cody in front of me and my mom behind me.  During the intense contractions I would count with Cody, tap my feet and my fingers until it was over, and just tried to let my body do its thing without my mind getting in the way.  It felt like knives were ripping my stomach open.  Then, after about 40-60 seconds, it would be gone, and Mom, Cody and I would go back to talking about high school, family, tennis, telling old stories, wherever the conversation had dropped off 40 seconds ago. 

During all of this we had Elton John on the iPod-- familiar enough music that I didn't have to think about it, but the lyrics were just enough to distract me.  At 10:00 pm, the doctor on call said I was about 3 cm, and I lost it, collapsing on the bed, sobbing-- how could all that work only bring me to 3 cm?  7 to go?  Impossible.  I gritted my teeth and dug in for a little longer though.  At midnight I started throwing up from the pain.  I begged someone to check me and tell me it would be over soon.  A nurse said I was 6 cm at 12:15 a.m.  At that point i begged for an epidural-- picturing myself laboring like this until the morning.  I was exhausted and literally shaking with pain-- in between vomitting.  My mom and Cody for some reason didn't believe me that I really wanted drugs.  I went to the bathroom and came out, determined to sound sane and calm, and in my most reasoned, logical voice said, "I have thought about my decision, and i stand by it.  I would like an epidural now."  by "now," I meant, within the next 90 seconds, because I am not doing this one more time. 

I sat down on the edge of the bed, determined not to look at the co-conspirators who were keeping the drugs from me until the anesthesiologist arrived.  At one point I said (in very calm and reasoned voice), "I know a lot of very tough women who have had epidurals," and "An epidural will not make my birth experience any less beautiful."  I was laying it on thick.  I dare cody to try to talk me out of it now. Vomit. 

However, while sitting on the bed waiting for the magic man (anesthesiologist) to appear, I all of a sudden felt a baby trying to come out of me.  I said, "um, something's not right.  Something is coming out of me!"  and a swarm of nurses descended on me again.  I didn't even know anyone else was in the room...it was like they had bugged the room and heard me from outside and ran in.  Someone said, "do you have the urge to push" to which I responded "Oh Yes." I heard Cody say, "my son is not coming into the world listening to Elton John," and he changed the iPod to James Taylor.  It still hadn't registered that the Baby was coming NOW, so I was still begging anyone who would listen for drugs. My mom had to explain in no uncertain terms, "there's not time, the baby's coming now!"  To which I said, "I can't do this!" She said, "yes you can!" I turned to cody, "I can't do this!" He said, "yes you can!" At this moment I was not looking for encouragement.  I was looking for someone to believe me, someone to say, "you're right, this is crazy, there's no way you can do this.  Lets figure out a better way."  Unfortunately, the nurse did not say this either.

 At this point the Resident doctor on call came in.  She was my age, with long brown hair, and reminded me so much of BFF Jamie Chioini, who was at the time chief resident of her group, and was also delivering babies.  In my laboring stupor, all I could think was, I played soccer with Jamie in high school.  She's my age.  This girl played soccer with someone in high school, she's my age.  (FYI, I would have been infinitely more happy to have had Jamie deliver the baby).  As I'm having this thought, I say to Ms. Resident, "I want my doctor." Ms. Resident then puts a plastic bag over her hands (I later found out it was to go on the bottom of the bed), and says, "I have to deliver this baby now."  Lucky for her, I had a contraction at that moment and couldn't vocalize, "oh hell no-- you are not delivering my baby into a plastic bag."  Cody read my face though and knew exactly what I was thinking. I started hyperventilating, and someone put the oxygen mask on me.  I refused to push the baby into Ms. Resident's plastic bag.  Asthma attack on the horizon.

Just then Dr. Villers, doctor extraordinaire, our savior, came into the room, with an air of relaxation and calm that changed the entire tone of the room.  Cody described it as "She could have been sitting in our back yard drinking a martini she was so calm." I figured, if she's this calm, I guess nothing is wrong.  Up to that point I was sure that I was in so much pain it couldn't be normal, an something was drastically wrong.  Dr. V said something very wise which helped me a ton.  She said, "I'm going to ask you to push and its going to hurt.  You're not going to want to push because its going to hurt, but you just need to do what might seem counterintuitive-- you're going to have to push against the pain when I tell you to."  That helped, because, oh boy did it hurt, and oh boy, i did not want to push.  I understood what she was saying, but I responded, "If I pass out, can you pull the baby out yourself?"  At that moment, I wasn't making sure they could do it if I hyperventilated too much, but that was actually my PLAN-- hold my breath, pass out, the pain is gone, they pull the baby out without any effort on my part.  Wake up, baby is here.  Dr. V responded, "I'm not answering that."  Thank you. 

I started pushing at 12:30, and Jamesie was here at 12:57.  It was honestly the quickest 27 minutes of my life, except maybe the World Cup game I saw in France in 1998--that went by really fast.  In between pushes I said to Cody, "I can understand getting pregnant again by accident, but never again on purpose." Pushing was scary (terrifying) and painful and a blur, but it happened really fast and I realized the harder I worked the faster it would be over--kind of like running a really long race.  When they put Jamesie on my chest, I laughed hysterically.  Then I cried/laughed...tears and snot and sweat all over my face, but laughing like I'd never laughed before, and shaking all over!  He was here and he was beautiful!  30 minutes later I was already saying, "next time, lets do X, Y or Z."  I didn't let anyone hold my dear boy for a good hour while I enjoyed him.  Finally they weighed him and passed him around the room-- I thought he had to be the most beautiful baby any of these doctors or nurses had ever seen.  They must be incredibily jealous of me. 

12 hours later Cody and I each wrote down our top five names--first and middle-- and passed them to eachother.  The only one that appeared on both of our lists was James Martin Groeber.  It was perfect for our sweet baby. Cody turned the iPod back on and 'Sweet Baby James' was the first song that played, unintentionally on our part.

It was a beautiful day.  I swore I would never describe that terrifying and excrutiating experience as "beautiful," but it was, and that's all I think when I reflect back on it.  That, and how blessed we were with God's protection.  I had a VBAC, with Pitocin, with a crazy exercise-induced-anaphylaxis issue.  From the moment we found out we were pregnant back in July '09, I entrusted the pregnancy to Our Lady, and asked that she shield us with her cloak of protection.  I felt her through our "beautiful," terrible, wonderful experience and today I say, Thank you, God for my little baby!


*update*: We went to mass today to celebrate Jamesie, and I told Sean we were going to say "Thank you, God for Jamesie."  A few times throughout mass he asked me "We going to say Thank you God for Jamesie?"  I said, yes yes, we will.  At the very quiet moment after the Eucharistic prayer and before we go up for communion, Sean decided, well, no one else is saying it, so I guess its up to me, and yelled: "Thank you God, for Jamesie!!!!"  That just about sums it up!