Friends, I can hardly believe this day is here, but it's true. Our Klaudia has graduated from high school. She has gone from cute baby to precocious toddler to sassy preteen to polished young woman before our eyes, and we couldn't be prouder of her. I can't wait to see what adventures she will have in the next few years!
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
preschool graduation
Saturday, May 16, 2015
on the trail
Summer is off to a weird start for us. Mike has had mandatory overtime almost every Saturday, plus we've had soccer (and now baseball!) practices and games to work into the schedule. It's been pretty busy. There is always a ton of stuff to do around the house too, but sometimes, it's best to just take the boys and run off some of their energy. So this afternoon when Mike headed off to the salt mines, the boys and I set off for the Greenway Trail. It was Henry's first really long ride, and he handled it like a total champ -- except at the end, when he was tired and thirsty. I honestly didn't think he would last very long, so we didn't take any water or anything. Whoooops. We made a couple of stops along the way to check out the river, ran into a traffic jam of sorts, climbed a big hill (well, not me, but somebody had to stay at the bottom to take the picture!) crossed many bridges, stopped at a playground, and 90 minutes later were back home guzzling ice water. Now to fill the rest of the evening...
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
end of an era
We did try to take some selfies beforehand, with mixed results. Here are the best two:
Saturday, May 09, 2015
mother's day eve
Dear boys,
Tonight I tried to tell you a story, and I messed it up. I waited until late at night, when you were at your most fractious, and I made it too long to hold your interest for the grand finale, but the truth is that even if I had made it the perfect length and told it at the perfect time, I probably still would have messed it up, because that's the way it goes with the really important stories. And since this was the story of how you made me a mom, and how having you took us from being a happy family of two to being a complete family of five, it's right up there with the most important stories of my life.
I hope you will remember that even though the story was long, it was joyful and full of laughter. How silly we were to have thought we wanted a girl. How we changed your middle name, Liam, because that first day you were so grumpy and had such a furrowed brow that you looked just like Grandpa Okie. How we didn't tell anyone your middle name, Max, until after you were born -- because naming you for my dad was really important to me, and I didn't want to mess that story up either. How you surprised us, Henry, by deciding to join us a month early so you could have the luckiest possible birth date. And how every day, no matter what kinds of school/sports/work/stuff we have going on, I look at you and marvel at your personalities, your quick and quirky wit, the things you love and the things you hate. I think about the wonder that you have brought to my life, and I hope that your lives will be wonderful too. I think about all the things we ever hoped for our children to be and have, and I'm so thankful that the things we hoped for most are exactly what we got: healthy, strong children who have the best parts of both of us.
The part I didn't get to tell you, the part I probably should have led with, is this: We aren't perfect parents, and you aren't perfect sons, but we're perfect for each other. I love each one of you so very much, and I'm so very happy that I'm your mom.
But don't worry -- I'll tell you the story again next year, and every year after that. And when I get through, you will know it without a doubt: You are seen. You are known. You are loved.
Mom
Tonight I tried to tell you a story, and I messed it up. I waited until late at night, when you were at your most fractious, and I made it too long to hold your interest for the grand finale, but the truth is that even if I had made it the perfect length and told it at the perfect time, I probably still would have messed it up, because that's the way it goes with the really important stories. And since this was the story of how you made me a mom, and how having you took us from being a happy family of two to being a complete family of five, it's right up there with the most important stories of my life.
I hope you will remember that even though the story was long, it was joyful and full of laughter. How silly we were to have thought we wanted a girl. How we changed your middle name, Liam, because that first day you were so grumpy and had such a furrowed brow that you looked just like Grandpa Okie. How we didn't tell anyone your middle name, Max, until after you were born -- because naming you for my dad was really important to me, and I didn't want to mess that story up either. How you surprised us, Henry, by deciding to join us a month early so you could have the luckiest possible birth date. And how every day, no matter what kinds of school/sports/work/stuff we have going on, I look at you and marvel at your personalities, your quick and quirky wit, the things you love and the things you hate. I think about the wonder that you have brought to my life, and I hope that your lives will be wonderful too. I think about all the things we ever hoped for our children to be and have, and I'm so thankful that the things we hoped for most are exactly what we got: healthy, strong children who have the best parts of both of us.
The part I didn't get to tell you, the part I probably should have led with, is this: We aren't perfect parents, and you aren't perfect sons, but we're perfect for each other. I love each one of you so very much, and I'm so very happy that I'm your mom.
But don't worry -- I'll tell you the story again next year, and every year after that. And when I get through, you will know it without a doubt: You are seen. You are known. You are loved.
Mom
not to be left out ...
Check out the happy face of a boy wearing his first pair of contacts! I'm not sure how this will ultimately work out, but the optometrist agreed that he is probably ready to try them, so we got one box for each eye just as a test. I think they will come in really handy for sports, but my prediction is that he won't bother putting them in (which is of course very hard for him right now) on a regular basis for a while yet.
Saturday, May 02, 2015
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