altarflame: (hospital)
I've been all happy because I can sleep at night, and I can do a lot of self-motivated stuff during the day, and I feel at peace most of the time. Like my time in therapy and my months of emdr really, really helped me a lot, though there is still of course something there. I'm "channeling all my birth angst into positive change in the world" through my book writing and advocacy work. Yesterday affirmed for me, though, that I have not just some issues but an entire subscription.

*sigh*

BirthGirlz hosted this event called "Embracing the Miracle", which was supposed to be about "How Prenatal Choices Effect Who Your Child Can Become", led by a woman I hadn't heard of who comes with a certain amount of acclaim. I was like, alright, whatever, she's a noted author who's done world tours, Nancy likes her, I figured it would be a little new-agey but I do believe in bonding with your baby in utero and getting researched and junk, which is what I thought this was about. I was volunteered to make a lot of food for the event and that ended up being really satisfying. We had 30-35 confirmed guests, and I made 60 each of stuffed mushrooms, tiny fruit tarts, and little savory tarts. Let me digress for a moment because this is enjoyable: the fruit tarts were little phyllo shells brushed inside with boiled-thin apricot preserves, filled with a mixture of whipped cream, cream cheese and sugar, and topped with sliced kiwi and strawberry slivers. The savory tarts were the same phyllo shells, but the filling was onions and walnuts diced small and sauteed up in a lot of butter, then mixed with cream cheese and bacon crumbles, and I topped each of those with these fresh microgreens we got - pea shoots. They looked freaking fabulous and everybody loved it all, though I think one particular chick ate like 15 of the mushrooms which is totally cheating ;) They were stuffed with tons of onion and garlic sauteed in olive oil, lots of diced red and yellow bell pepper, tiny-diced tomatoes, seasoned breadcrumbs and cheddar cheese (I knew there would be a lot of vegetarians there). And Kristin and Michelle had brought fresh artichoke dip and HOMEMADE CRACKERS and baked bree hot and oozing out of itself and Michelle's daughters baked chocolate chip cookies and brownies and cinnamon rolls and things, everything spelt flour and raw turbinado sugar and anyway, the point is the food was the good part for sure.

I was unprepared for the actual content, which was all based upon the intro topic; "It's not birth to three that really matters, it's birth and the first hour of life". Then we got to build on that for 2 hours, with everything from contrasting slides between the warm glowy home brith pool to dramatic black and white stills of screaming babies alone on cold metal hospital scales with their umbilical cords cut too soon, to real stats and pics of how Japaense researchers have seen on brain scans that babies born by c-section actually have a hole in their neocortex. She talked about how long initial separations like Aaron had can actually cause sensory issues and how premature c-section with NICU stays, like Isaacs, can cause nightmares and high needs babies. She discussed the half life of the drugs you get during a cesarean in your newborn and how they stunt growth of the neural network and how babies turn face up as they come out, this amazing spiral, because women pull their babies up to face them with the cord still connecting. The synaptic explosion that happens when eye contact occurs in that instant. How the endorphin, oxytocin and prolactin bursts just after birth are the chemical high of a woman's entire life, and lay the foundation for the mother-child relationship.

I am not saying the half of it and I'm not GOING to, but I have rarely managed that level of dissociation. Really. I was talking and laughing with my sister or Kristin the whoooole time, and by the time it was time to go I realized my reflection was confusing me and making me mad, when I saw it in the bathroom, and that I already had blank spots I couldn't remember. I got home and tried to go right to sleep (before dinner, before nighttime, me who never sleeps) and was angry when I had to get up. I was totally out of sorts.

Grant got the kids in bed. Then he brought me my crocheting stuff and sat me on the floor between his legs (him on the couch), rubbed my shoulders and asked me questions until I had cried for a freaking hour and described all this crap to him. Then we layed together and made love and then we sat around at the computer laughing at things for awhile and then he pulled out all the him-uncomfortable-but-me-in-his-arms stops to get me to be able to sleep after I got all hysterical again about having to go back into surgery, and how my diastasis and hernia are totally worse the last week, and blah blah blah.

I woke up feeling a lot better. He is pretty amazing.

Some of the stuff the woman was saying was laughable hooey, for instance she referenced crystal babies and indigo children, and gave us a live demonstration of what orgasmic birth would sound like. <- Not kidding. She also had many annoying turns of phrase, such as calling herself a "coyote midwife" because she "sits by the hole and waits", and acting as though she tricked us all after we raised our hands to show who breastfed their babies because NO! We did not breastfeed, our BABIES breastfed! So that sort of woo helped me to disregard and tune out to some degree.

But a lot of what she said is real truth I see manifested in my kids as individuals, that Grant and I have talked about before, at length, and/or is proven whether I like it or not, and much of it is shit I take totally on myself as a burden of guilt.

I really do believe in "reparative work" after bad beginnings, and I think I've done amazingly with that and that is part of why my kids are so great as they are.

Still and all, listening to someone talk about human potential vs damaged goods for an entire afternoon had me wanting to punch her in the face.
altarflame: (Default)
Yesterday Ananda and I loaded up on sunblock, chugged a couple of glasses of water each, and rode our bikes to Aunt Laura's house to exchange dark chocolate (packed in ice) for HP and the Chamber of Secrets. Annie finished the first one and #2 is the only one we don't have here in the house. Anyway, she called Aunt Laura up first to seal this deal and then we went. It is her first bike ride involving a shoulder on a road with no sidewalk, or walking the bike for crossing major streets. It was about 6.5 miles roundtrip. We stopped halfway there, and halfway back, just to get sips of water and pour water on our heads before continuing. We also spent about 15 minutes at my sister's house before turning around, during which time she fed us whole fruit popsicles and frozen mango chunks. Because hello, weather.com was saying "93, feels like 102".

It was really good. There were quiet neighborhood streets we could ride next to each other and talk, as well as plenty of times we had to be single file in louder areas with me turning to check on her every 30 seconds or so. This is not something I could do with Aaron by any stretch of the imagination because his SID makes traffic safety sort of impossible. We take long rides, but sticking with the quiet neighborhood streets where I can yell things to him and staying on sidewalks as much as possible.

I took one of those neighborhood long rides with the two of them the day before, with Elise on the back of my bike. It's getting easier and easier to take really long rides, even with her or Jake on mine.

Sooner or later my metabolism has to take the hint.




There are so many school-type lessons I am psyched about. We've been laying kids down on this big newsprint we have a giant roll of, one at a time, tracing them, and having all of them color them in - hair, clothes, everything. Then we cut them out and put them in the hallway. Two are up so far, one is ready for trimming and hanging, and we'll do Annie and Aaron later.

I got SUGAR CUBES for our afternoon tea. Raw demerara (sp) sugar cubes. Coolest thing ever.

They're all into bees, bees dissapearing, Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD). There are a lot of documentaries about this available online.

We'll be heading up to Barnes and Noble soon to trade one of Annie's forms in for a free book, through their summer reading program. Aaron is getting there, too, I think he has almost a whole form filled out. She's working on her second one.

And I got wooden letter blocks last night to start using with Elise. We had a ton of these before that have gradually dissapeared. None of them really moved with us. I think she needs it. We've also downloaded extensive episodes of Sesame Street to turn on for the little kids whenever they are watching TV. I think these sorts of supplemental everyday things were pivotal in Ananda and Aaron learning to read and need to be here for the new crop of preschoolers, too...

I like it.




We are loving this new organic co-op we're a part of. It's AnniesBuyingClub.com for anyone who is interested and they are all over Florida, as well as expanding.

We picked up a huge box of stuff yesterday, and then Grant went out to meet with a new client who runs a farm that provides raised garden beds to people, as well as selling their own harvests to the public. She sent him home with many clear plastic containers of micro greens and a huge plastic bag of longans that the kids have been devouring.

Today Shaun and Ian, who work for the University of Florida's local agriculture extension, brought over part of a huge jack fruit for Grant.

I think we're gradually approaching the point where we don't shop at grocery stores anymore.




I have a feeling I am about to become drastically more involved with birth advocacy. This is good, because it provides social outlets and generally makes me happy. One of my friends who was helping to lead the non-profit I'm involved with is going through some personal stuff and isn't really in a position to keep up her end of it, for awhile at least.




And Grant is reading Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Catholic now, which makes me really happy - he doesn't exactly have free time for reading right now between his main job, his side clients, US, and trying to keep up with the yards during rainy season. But he's doing it and I am really grateful. No matter how good I feel about Catholicism, I don't feel at all good about dragging the whole family into it behind me based solely on my own research and discernment.

I actually don't think it would be right to do that, even if Catholicism was obviously right for us. So yeah. I am glad he seems to be moving in the same direction I am and am eager to hear more of his thoughts. It's really priceless to me that he is strong enough and respectful and trustworthy enough that I feel like I have a man who can actually lead the family - that's not something I was exposed to at all growing up, my mom was in charge of all budgeting, all discipline, all moves and final says on everything, because she seems drawn to very weak, wishy washy sorts of guys who don't have anything remotely resembling work ethic or standards - and/or are jerks who will be abusive if allowed to be. I'm grateful every day to have a man I'm comfortable with as a real head of the household because he's considerate enough and loving and intelligent enough for me to feel completely safe stepping back from some decisions and control. I am definitely someone who would naturally make all decisions and hold all control. It's almost a rush for me to be submissive on any level.

Anyway the point is just that I don't want to jeopardize that dynamic. So we shall see what he has to say about the theology and history I've been reading, and what he thinks it means for us, and go from there.
altarflame: (Minivan)
-Friday we got the oil changed in the van. Which for whatever reason took approximately FOUR HOURS. I think maybe they had to pull the engine out and tip it upside down to pour out the old oil? Yeah. So the kids and I walked to my old chiropractor, to give him BirthGirlz propaganda to distribute and solicit him for sponsorship. I got them treats from a Cuban bakery right there and was rewarded for my own resistance to sugar temptations by their A-MAY-ZING chicken fricasse, I mean damn. We discovered a Hurricane Andrew Memorial I'd never known existed and then hung out at the bookstore until it was done, at which time Laura and Frank met us at my house so we could watch Brian while they went to see HP and the Half Blood Prince. Which they loved, and Brian was pretty darn good aside from a single injury-related meltdown (over the course of 4 hours I thought that signified progress).

-We had Paige/[livejournal.com profile] likeinabook here with her three youngest kids for 3 days :) I think she really needed it, and it was nice to stay up super late talking theology, and go out just the two of us to the bookstore. That was actually hilarious; she hadn't previously been exposed to all the lustrous offerings of local, self-published Homestead authors with pixelated cover art (and I found French Women Don't Get Fat in the used section for $1). I think she also had the general reaction I do to City Church - moved by the message, impressed by the sincerity, enjoying the music a lot and then left feeling as though you still sort of need to go to church afterwards. Sidenote - I approached the cellist about the string quartet playing an upcoming BirthGirlz event and he is not only totally on board, he is apparently a "big supporter of natural birth and midwives" and thinks they may be able to do it for FREE! WHAT?!

I always love it when there are extra people here and we can bring extra chairs to the table and all sit down to dinner.

I do not love it when Elise is totally unhinged by insecurity in the prescence of a younger child and turns bully. She was seriously off her gourd that Paige's youngest was here to replace her, I was going to nurse her, Annie was going to be her sister - she actually expressed these concerns to me on a regular basis, and pushed 15 month old Clara down any chance she got. And then pulled her hair. And smacked her while she cried. She was trying to sneak off to climb in the playpen with her to abuse her, as though she were a threat from another room. I swear, she is the rottenest miracle I know, and neither lavish reassurance nor multiple timeouts were going to dissuade her.

-My Natural Parenting Group had another potluck and I. LOVED. IT. I love cooking a lot of food and taking it to appreciative people; I love having tons of yummy things OTHER people cooked with no refined sugar or white flour available, like amazing chocolate chip cookies, and seeing my kids tear into fresh homemade ice cream; I love catching up with Michelle and Kristin and feeling as though Dana and Jackie are becoming friends; I love all the kid friends my kids have; I love the FEELING of being in that house with all those like minded families laughing and talking with good music on and everybody relaxed. It's just great for me when there are strangers all around but everyone is smiling, friendly and easy to talk to. Michelle and Hubert, the hosts, are so freaking awesome and we think we're actually going to do a "whole family sleepover" soon wherein all 7 of us go to their house to spend the night, rather than just Ananda and Aaron (they have 6 kids ranging from 4 to 17).

-We got our new chicks in the mail! The mail lady was so exasperated with the chirping for the previous two hours in her truck, but seemed to think it was more worthwhile when we got the scissors and showed her the tiny fluffballs. She has apparently been driving lots of chicks around for years now, but nobody else has ever asked if she wanted to see them, which I think is crazy. Anyway I thought one of our 5 had a potentially serious problem, but with some e-search discovered she just still had her UMBILICAL CORD attached. From her yolk, in her egg, the day before! Who knew such a thing was possible? So far we've had them for 3 days and they're doing well. We've taken them outside for holding and are beginning to see personalities. I will probably post pics soon. It is way cooler, with this batch of chicks, to be able to just glance at them and tell exactly what kind they are and know what they grow up to be. Isaac has named his plymouth white rock "Rockstar"; Aaron is calling his "Harry, which is short for Harrietta and long for H"; Ananda's is Lily, I think because of Harry Potter; Elise's is "Blue" and she's being surprisingly gentle; and Jake is saying his "orpington is named Belina". Like the talking chicken in Return to Oz.

-A and A had their homeschool evaluation on Monday. It went well, they are "officially" in 3rd and 4th grades now. This particular evaluator is Catholic and sent me home with reading material (after I expressed my own interest, she wasn't being pushy). And Paige brought a small stack of books down to leave here, after reading some of my previous entries. So there is a lot of reading about all of this going down. This evaluation was An Event because Ananda, Aaron and I rode our bikes to it and it's the first time Ananda has really left our block on her bike (it's about a mile away). She feels like this whole world has opened up to her, because normally I go off on bikes with Aaron for 45 minutes at a time and she is just stuck here. Since then 1-3 long rides a day can barely satisfy her, and my legs hurt, in a good way (I pretty much always also have Jake or Elise on the back of my bike). She rides around our street half the day while I'm too busy to go. I think between being able to read really well and ride a bike the world is her oyster. ....So to speak? O_o What the hell does that even MEAN? The point is, she is experiencing what seem to her to be huge levels of independence because she can do these things.

-Grant has been what I can only describe as a surly motherfucker lately. Ok, that is actually said partially in humor and it's an exaggeration. He still does things like fix the a/c and garbage disposal promptly while we have company and babysit all 8 small children with grace so we can go out, he is awesome. But he is spending an uncharacteristic lot of time off on his own knowing he is impatient and irritable from caffeine and sugar withdrawal and not wanting to deal with things. I come find him playing video games or some other mindless distraction and say hey baby. And he acts grumpy. And I say, in a googoo gaga baby talk voice as I scratch his chin, "Ooooh, are you a surly motherfucker?" and he starts to reply back in kind and then we just laugh hysterically.

Life really is challenging for him right now, though, and I'm proud of how well he's doing. And happy to see him getting SOOOOOO many less headaches, the migraines were coming like 3-4 bad ones per week before he changed his eating, and lowgrade headaches were just constant. He took the day off yesterday and it was the first day that it was back to being just us in the house, and it was just great. We walked the four blocks over to Grant Sr's like some kind of traveling performance group...Ananda on her bike riding circles around everyone, Aaron on his unicycle, Jake riding Elise's tricycle with her standing on the deck and holding onto his shoulders, and Isaac on his scooter. I got to catch up with my old across-the-street neighbor Aracelia, who rushed out when she saw us all in what was our front yard with $25 for us to buy the kids treats with and a pen and paper for my new number and ridiculous stories of how she planted yuca in the backyard and the neighbors thought it was pot and called the police. So this 79 year old Cuban lady with her freaking garden and trees has a bunch of cop cars out front ringing her bell at 6 am. I don't even know. Two of the cops were cuban so they recognized yuca right away. So silly.

-I have craft opportunities galore. Melissa brought my sewing machine back (she had borrowed it, and then it was in her trunk when they were rear-ended by a large truck so I was afraid it would be beyond repair, but it seems fine), and my next batch of yarn for Isaac's ripple blanket came in the mail last week. I was on fire about that blanket before I ran out of supplies. But I feel as though I should resist both. *sigh* ....aside from my kids needing to be educated and sleep I should be getting at night, I am just haunted 24/7 by the obligation to write. Because I get so much urging to from birth-type people who think it's important; because it's been my life-long dream; because with the settlement long gone and Grant's job making a lot of changes and his side-jobs scaling back, we could use some extra income. Also because in the scant two hour time slot I'm allowed to write uninterrupted each week - while I sit in Starbucks with my laptop near Dance Empire as Ananda and Aaron take two classes in a row each - what gets done is really good. It's flowing. I can make this happen.

I always know I can make journal entries or fiction happen. I even feel confident about nonfiction with a poetic license and dry humor and a generally informal tone. But I was getting intimidated about the c/s book, because it has to be different. I know I can do it now, though, it's slower going but it is going.

-Perhaps the biggest thing to happen this week...my Nana has moved the fingers of her left hand, and then moved her whole left hand, and then been able to pick her left arm up and move the left toes...she's actually done the knee, and scratched her nose, and done a boxing motion of throwing punches on both sides.

THIS IS HUGE.

It gives me goosebumps. She is not all better or anything like that...they are still feeding her, she is still not seeing everything and still confused about reality. But her disposition has improved mightily and SHE'S USING HER LEFT SIDE.

I am totally giving thanks to St. Jude and Jesus Christ about this.

.......and feeling almost scarily boxed into a corner about converting to Catholicism, with regards to what is right, what is real... G and I have been talking about it a lot.

I feel scared in general that anytime I have ever been on a spiritual high, it's generally preceeded Terrible Things. I found God, and like 2 months later my mother moved away and I was left at my Nana's house. Or I just get back into studying scripture regularly, and suddenly I'm having nightmares again. I really believe in a spiritual war, and there is a certain (cowardly) comfort in "laying low", for me. This time at least I feel scared in an at peace with it, this is how it's supposed to be sort of way.



That's doins, folks.
altarflame: (wild things)
Sunday I took Ananda, Aaron and Isaac to Mass at 8:00 at Sacred Heart, then came home and the 7 of us all went to City Church. Mass included Here I Am, Lord as the communion hymn, which some people who know me in real life will realize instantly melts me into a gooey puddle. It was just a Good Thing, all around. City Church was fun for the kids - the message gave me a lot to think about. Apparently City Church is operating, as part of some branch or other of Presbyterians, under the assumption that we are living in a post-Christian America and that, as such, their primary job is to reach the unchurched locals (rather than going overseas on mission trips or catering to established Christians who are already here). They seek to do this through creating what sociologists call "the third place", i.e., what Starbucks or the sports bar is to people. This is why they have cooking classes, agnostic art hanging everywhere, and play music that is not specifically categorized as Christian, and they are taking it to the extent of saying, we will have communion and hymns at special believers-only worship services, but in the main this church is for this city, not for us in-crowd Christians. And that we Christians have to be in the culture and not segregated and a whole lot more stuff. I really do believe they're coming from a prayerful and sincere place and that they are doing something good, but I am not always sure if it is something Holy or even big g Good.

Anyway the Catholics were certainly up in the culture and reaching out to the city when they were paying my electric bill and giving me bags of groceries while I was a confused, Protestant, 19 year old single mother. Without any sermons or judgement or even the kind of proof of need that the government programs require.

I've been thinking about this kind of stuff a lot. Catholic Hospice here in the greater Miami area is a free service to people of all faiths, no strings or dirty looks attached. The Vatican has embraced Harry Potter as a story that teaches children that there is a difference between good and evil and that we all face temptations and choices, and that love conquers all and sacrifice and mothers and blah blah blah. Evangelical right-wing so and sos are the ones warning parents their kids will be led astray by J.K.Rowling.

I am, like, 5 minutes from deciding I am becoming a Catholic. I may also keep going to City Church indefinitely in addition, and supporting their ministry, because I certainly was led to God through loving people in a really liberal Protestant denomination who appealed to me as an "unchurched person". I do think that is important. And City Church IS becoming an amazing cultural center, and it's also like 5 blocks away from my house.

I've also finished reading Called Out of Darkness, Anne Rice's "spiritual confession" of her conversion, or really return, to faith. I relate to SO MUCH SHE HAS TO SAY HERE. I know what it's like to question for the reasons she did, to see the ultimate GOOD in non-Christian people with moral compasses that have nothing to do with God, to grapple with gay loved ones vs church teachings and all of it - her faithful explanations of how Christian holidays can tie in with pre-dating Pagan rituals and. Just wow. Not to mention, I read all those Vampire books, and I have made up my own fictional characters, and I can FEEL how intensely difficult it would be to LET GO of something like Lestat, just let go after 8 books and 27 years - after major Hollywood movies and a critically acclaimed Broadway musical and Fan Clubs to your idea by the dozen - and say...that's all. I'm writing for God. Most of my fans will hate it and it's not going to be nearly so easy as slipping into this dark delicious world of yours, but you aren't even real. This is real.

I'm trying to wade through copious amounts of reviews to see whether or not I should read her Christ the Lord series (so far there are two - Out of Egypt and The Road to Cana). On the one hand, I do believe she is coming from a real experience of God to make this decision to write about the Life of Christ with deep research and Orthodox theology backing up her fictional fill in details. On the other hand, Life of Christ + Fictional Fill in details = Does not compute. She's writing in first person AS GOD. The lay people and the clergy both seem split on this, as far as I can tell, some wholeheartedly endorsing and others totally against it.

Meanwhile, I've begun doing things like asking for the intercession of St Jude, patron saint of lost and impossible causes, on behalf of my Nana, and putting the Lives of the Saints on my Amazon wishlist, and trying not to project onto Grant that he sees me as a silly superstitious twit.




My Pa - my healthy, white Pa, other half of "Nana and" - came down here for a visit. It's the first time he's been back since they sold their house and moved away 5 years ago, and so he was blown away by the enormous amount of new housing and shopping and the expanded hospital and the restaurants and theater and really, there are just whole new sections of town that didn't exist 5 years ago. We have traffic now. Anyway, I spent a lot of Sunday showing him around, having lunch with him at Gusto's, and taking him to visit with Laura and Brian (Frank was on shift). Then most of Monday was spent taking the kids and meeting Laura's family and him at the zoo, where we spent the afternoon, and then having thai food. I posted pics from that zoo trip. The thai food, I do not even know, I am ADDICTED to this panang curry with lamb at Stir Moon, it's a coconut curry full of lime leaves and read chilies that I spoon all over the bowl of brown rice it comes with...*shudders of bliss*

Pa and I had some time spent talking about Nana, and he had a private trip to the cemetary to view their plots (still here from when they bought them years ago before they moved away) and go over paperwork. Mostly though I was so happy to see him able to be cheered up by his grandkids and distracted by good food and willing to laugh at jokes and things. I wish he would consider moving down here.




Monday night I had a Birthgirlz meeting. It was energizing, and exciting, and FREAKING AWESOME. I'm going to be dropping a stack of handouts out at my old chiropractor's office about this upcoming event they're having - http://birthgirlz.com/UpcomingEvents.html As well as asking him to become a sponsor of it.

AND I'm going to be talking with the bookstore family about having the next Soap Box Derby there.

AND I'm going to talk to Schnebly about sponsoring their fundraising gala, AND talk to the string quartet that plays at City Church about playing there.

AND that "Pusing for VBACs" thing I urged people to donate to awhile ago? Over $10,000 has poured in. They're hiring the litigation attorney, with enough for his retainer and a bit more - they will need more money before it's all over as it's about a $15,000 journey all told. So if you'd like to help them get through this end game with the total, here is the link - http://birthgirlz.com/URGENTActionRequired.html

And/or, if you'd like to help us establish the FIRST Mother-Friendly hospital in Miami-Dade county, you can sign this petition we're working on - Jackson South's maternal care model is currently being revamped so this is the perfect time and they are actually acting receptive, and anyone anywhere can sign this - http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/motherfriendlyinmiami/ PLEASE DO!

AND, I have to find out what if anything Nancy is going to charge us to speak at our Birth Film Festival in February.

AND, they have ACTUALLY GOTTEN A HEAD OF A LOCAL UNIVERSITY TO AGREE TO HAVE MED STUDENTS SHADOW MIDWIVES AND DOULAS AS PART OF THEIR INTERNSHIP HOURS. This is so huge, I teared up with goosebumps when I heard it. What a massive difference it could make.

And...I have to write this whole c/s book because I am tired of telling the story of why I appear to be pregnant to people who gasp with horror and urge me to please, PLEASE WRITE A BOOK ABOUT THIS.




At that meeting, my friend Michelle gave me a free pass to an advance screening of Julie and Julia for Tuesday night. She somehow got many of these. And I met a big old group of peeps at CocoWalk in the Grove to see it, and sat next to my friend Kristin and laughed my head off during the HOUR we waited for it to start because someone important who had flown in for it was late? Anyway, yeah, the movie was really good, too, and perfect for right then. I had left italian pot roast loaded with (3) onions, (25+ cloves) garlic, (3 crates of) mushrooms, broth and stock and (lots of) basil from the garden baking for hours and hours at 250 degrees after being browned in olive oil, for my family's dinner. So watching AAAaaall those shots of beef bourginon(sp?) had me AMPED to get home and have leftovers. Meryl Streep WAS that woman, she is incredible. Kristin was like, "I want that bag!" "I want that car!" etc, throughout the whole vintage looking movie, and we were moaning at the rasberry cream and recoiling in horror about the beef flavored jello that solidifies in the fridge after you boil a hoof for long enough. Good times.

Then today while Shaun watched the younger 3, Grant and I took Ananda and Aaron to see Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince. I should note that yesterday Isaac asked if he could go see it too and I told him I needed to watch it to see if it was too scary first. He said, well, what about Annie and Aaron? I told him that they are so deeply invested at this point that even if they do have nightmares for the next 6 months, it is worth it to them. Both of them were instantly like, "Yep."

They liked it. We all jumped at one point, laughed at others. I cried a little. Aaron got really sad and came out subdued. Annie was walking on air. As usual I am bemused by the spectacle of 3 previously unknown kids who can't really act getting to star in front of millions of dollars of special effects and an INCREDIBLE, widely respected supporting cast. They're doing better, though. Kind of. I was impressed with how much of the book was in it but baffled by the extraneous extra scene they threw in.

Grant and I both burst into hysterical laughter at the ridiculous New Moon trailer, but we are all psyched to see this new Where the Wild Things Are when it comes out. That trailer actually gives me goosebumps. We've been watching the old Scholastic dvd version with barely-animated book pages for years. G was actually coincidentally wearing a WTWTA shirt in the theater today.




To Conclude:
-Ananda is actually getting to a point now with daily practice where I think we can say "she knows how to ride a bike". This is so long in coming. I'm very proud of her uncharacteristic perseverance - today even when she had a bleeding arm. Well, once she got past her initial near faiting due to seeing her own blood. She walked it for about two blocks, but then rode home with me, even though her face was the wrong color.
-My left wrist has been hurting when used for anything much for a couple of weeks, but has started this new trick where it swells all the way to my fingers or hurts terribly when I'm doing nothing at all. My paranoia coupled with amateur googling has me half-convinced it's diabetes related gout, which would be sucky because, you know, that would mean I am diabetic.
-BUT. I've lost 5 pounds already since quitting sugar and white flour. And I'm being a stickler to bike or walk or somehow excercise every single day. Which aside from making me less fat can also often stop/reverse new cases of diabetes.
altarflame: (bleeding roses)
Birthgirlz, the group I recently joined and have been talking about helping, is raising money to hire an experienced attorney to litigate the state of Florida re: their policy that vbac is no longer LEGAL in freestanding birth centers. Keep in mind here that Florida has between 50-80% cesarean rates throughout the state, so MANY subsequent-borns are either going to be a vbac or a repeat c/s, and that our hospitals are EXTREMELY anti-vbac...many of you will remember my fight to even have a chance to labor anywhere in this state.

From the site:
As it currently stands VBACs at home with a licensed midwife are legal, but midwives working in birth centers are not permitted to so much as give prenatal care to these very same mothers.

You can read more about this, including non-profit incorporation details and specific statistics on safety of vbac and these particular laws - and donate (WE ARE HALFWAY THERE!!!) - here:
http://birthgirlz.com/URGENTActionRequired.html

Any amount helps. Passing on the word and reposting is also very appreciated :)




Unrelated to birth, huge for helping: the website www.lotsahelpinghands.com is loaded with resources for organizing contact information, specific guidelines and calendars for groups supporting those going through hard times. As an example, a woman in my natural parenting group just lost her husband to a car crash. She has a 10 month old baby. The group is rallying together so that one of us can spend an hour or two with her and bring her dinner each night for over a month. This website is a great tool that makes these sorts of things much easier - before someone pointed it out, there was an endless chain of emails all asking similar questions and a lot of logistical confusion.
altarflame: (MollyWeasley)
Lately, it has been in the high 90s around here from around 11-3. With a "feels like" in the low hundreds. It does this every summer, though, and you can't just not leave the air conditioned house for months at a time. If you wait until later in the day when it's slightly cooler, the bugs are out in full force, which gets prohibitive.

So today while Ananda, Aaron and Isaac were at VBS, I took Jake and Elise on a walk. We saw butterflies, splashed in a puddle, picked a couple of flowers, pointed out some types of trees, as well as how people put their boats on trailer hitches so they can pull them behind their cars to the water, noted various sorts of customized mailboxes, turned bright red, sweated, panted, and came home. All in under 15 minutes. I really, really need excercise, and I really, really hate repetetive indoor excercising...I can't stand gym-type crap you sit and do over and over in one spot, it realy makes me nuts. So, I gave Elise a snack and made her drink a lot of water, pulled her hair back from her face and stuck her in her seat on the back of my bike. The bike at least lets you have some breeze of your own making. Grant took Jake to go pick up the other kids and Elise and I did our thing.

I went pretty far. I'm sure it was more than a couple of miles, and I kept getting to that point where it hurts a lot, and then past it to where it feels good again, which I love. I've taken plenty of 30-40 minute bike rides with Aaron riding alongside. In the later part of the day. With Elise on the back (which makes it considerably harder) I usually just ride around for 15 minutes or so. In the later part of the day.

So...yeah. I was really feeling good about pushing myself and straining through it the last 10 or so minutes, today. It was over half an hour, I don't know exactly how long. She fell asleep. I rode into our yard, where Grant had gotten back with the kids awhile before, and stopped and found that it was damn near impossible to get my leg up over the bar from the far pedal so that I could get off the bike. I was like, huh. Right. Interesting. Then I was standing on two feet, and suddenly very, very nearly vomiting. The nausea just hit me all at once like a wave. Grant came out and as he got Elise off the bike I stumbled in and collapsed into a red, sweaty heap and waited to feel even moderately normal again. After he went and put my bike away, since I am a ninny, and a couple more minutes passed, he looked at me and got alarmed, saying my face "shouldn't be that color" and I got into the shower. Where it occured to me that Elise could have fallen asleep, or could have passed out from heat stroke. *headdesk* On the one hand, she wasn't pedaling, had just drank a lot of water, and like I said, there is that minor biking breeze. On the other hand, she was wearing a damn helmet (I, bad person that I am, do not wear a helmet). A vented helmet with her hair pulled back from her face. But. I don't know. *sigh*

I can't decide if,
A. I need to be like my friends Alice and Kristin and just not use air conditioning anymore, so our bodies acclimatize to the actual environment we live in (THE HORROR!) - as it is my entire life has been mostly lived in ac'd houses and cars and buildings with the heat something you just run through on the way to and from the ac
B. It is obviously stupid to do anything strenuous outside in that kind of heat, wtf was I thinking (we had sunscreen on?)
C. I am just really out of shape (which is true regardless)




I feel really productive this week. I've...

-cleaned three long out-of-control rooms of our house into spotlessness, and maintained them
-talked with Nancy and gotten her to agree to speak at a birthgirlz event, which is a huge boon for birthgirlz that caused much excitement
-studied the technique of rippling, in crochet, until it clicked in my head and I could do it without following patterns, and started a ripple blanket for Isaac (which he's been asking for, for months...)
-mailed things I needed to
-emailed long overdue things that took a load off my conscience
-had multiple opportunities to be generous and help someone that made me feel good
-made it to church as a family for the first time in way too long
-written a new short story

And we're all on a totally re-vamped early schedule because of preparing for and then going to VBS, for the first time in forever. And I'm the go-between setting up (HOPEFUL! potential...) sponsorship of the Great Green Family Festival by the winery. And we went back to the zoo and did new things we'd never done before in their Amazon exhibit, which seriously took my breath away with giant sea turtles swimming in a massive floor to ceiling aquarium and sting rays that swim up in a smaller pool so that you can touch them, and a jaguar THREE FEET AWAY FROM ME, at my same ground level, through nothing but a couple of rows of metal poles...and more. It was cool.

HUGE BOON: Grant managed to find a tutorial online and fix the dishwasher today! This is huge, I do a ton of cooking and we have a big family here...and, well, I HATE DISHES. I did enough dishes as a kid to last me a lifetime. And we have this high capacity awesome KitchenAid dishwasher we bought new when we moved in here, so wtf? They were piling up terribly over the past week. I am really thankful for WikiBooks, and my husband.

Little things...
*we found an area that has dozens of wild rabbits and field mice running around at dusk, and the kids think it's awesome. We can't get out of the van or they scatter, but we can pull up and open the side door and they just go about their business close by.
*Ananda keeps going to her dance classes in, like, shorts and tshirts, and I don't say anything because they aren't saying anything and there are a lot of other girls coming in and out of DE with similarly casual clothes on. She mostly wore shorts and tanks to class all last year, and only dressed up for the recital. Yesterday when it was time to go she came out in knee length JEAN shorts, though, hair down, and I was like, "Really? You're going to wear that to ballet and jazz?" and she was like, "Look at this" and lifted her leg up parallel with her torso so that her foot was over her head, and I was like, alright. Whatever. Talk about it with your teachers. So I went and wrote while she was in class and when I came back to get her, her hair was in a bun and she said, in a deadpan voice, "I have to get another leotard." I laughed and laughed. Apparently all three girls in this intermediate ballet showed up in street clothes with hair down today and Candace (her teacher) brought down the gauntlet. And also did Annie and another girl's hair when they each tried to say theirs wasn't long enough for a bun.
*between church, VBS (which they're all three LOVING), dance classes, Grant taking Aaron and Isaac out to the movies and a 5 hour long playdate at Michelle's that A and A had on Sunday, I am starting to feel as though I don't see my oldest kids anymore

Cut for logistical ponderings on possible travel - very boring )




PRODUCT ENDORESEMENT

We ended up going with strapless bras for Annie from Macy's online. They were $11 each, came today, and not only do they fit like a dream but still with lots of room to grow, but they are insanely comfortable for her and look like they'll last a long time. And they're totally not slipping or shifting. Also, the camisoles they sell for girls that I thought were $6.95 each? It's actually $6.95 per two pack, which is great because Annie really likes them, too.
http://www1.macys.com/catalog/product/index.ognc?ID=339490&CategoryID=25487
altarflame: (boomdeyada)
In (mostly) such good ways :D

Since the last time we talked...

+ Ananda had two dance shows
+ I've rejoined and started Weight Watchers, partially because of being inspired by the dance show to get back into this flesh and live healthy and be fit and strong...
- all of our chickens were killed in the night when a neighbor's dog dug under our fence, pulled back the chickenwire, and went to town. It was horrendous to discover, though luckily THANK GOD it was me and not the kids who found them, but then it was horrible to tell them, especially Aaron
+ We decided to get new chickens, as we know how to keep this from happening again (reinforcements, fill and possibly some hot wire, as well as talking with our neighbor) and we have this big old run and coop Grant bought materials for and built, and we're so invested in the whole idea now
+ it helped make the kids happy to help pick them out. There is still lingering sadness but it's tinged with anticipation about the chicks we'll be getting late next month. You can see the ones we picked, as adults and the way they'll be when we first receive them, here, at my flickr
+ I've become a part of the BirthGirlz "Street Team", which so far means I attended a great meeting; I'm getting Nancy on board to be a guest speaker at our Childbirth Film Festival; I'm donating to help fund an attorney who is against a new law that discourages vbac in Florida birth centers (when we have between a 70 and an 80% c-section rate throughout this state, vbac is a pretty serious concern); I'm signing a petition to help get Jackson South to become a Mother-Friendly hospital (WHICH WOULD BE HUGE DOWN HERE); I'm supplying them with different relevant links to articles and studies weekly, from my stockpile; and I've networked to get Schnebly Winery sponsoring the Great Green Family Festival (half of which proceeds go to BirthGirlz, which is incidently non-profit, as one of the two founders in charge - my friend Kristin - is running the whole thing). I feel like an actual birth activist with a network which has pulled this huge weight of guilt and fear and repression off of me - usually when I hear ANYTHING birth related (which is REALLY often), I bury all this swelling emotion away before it consumes me...this time I just started balling and went with it. Which means my book will actually get written instead of me just hiding from the material. I have accountability now :)
+ writing time
+ Annie's started her new summer dance classes and loves them
+ and she claims to actually be ready for learning to ride a bike!
+ taken Elise for bike riding
- lots more hard talks with my mom and my dad about my Nana who had a stroke and is in a rehab place not improving, my Cuban Pa who is still dying slowly, and Grandpa who did die but who's ashes are still waiting to be picked up in Key West
+ started Letter of the Week with Isaac, Jake and Elise
+ tons of schoolwork with A and A
+I sent out cards and postcards today; Heather, Sara, rl friend Kathy, rl brother Bob

Our next month is like:

-me and Annie going alone to dance classes on Tuesday evenings, I write while she dances, we talk to and fro
-me and all kids taking Annie to dance classes on Saturdays, hitting the park, then picking her up and meeting Grant for lunch
-playdate with swimming all afternoon at Kristin's tomorrow
-A and A sleepover at Michelle's Sunday night
-picking up co-op produce at Kristin's two Thursdays
-taking Ananda, Aaron and Isaac to VBS at 8:30 and picking them up at 12, all next week (THEY'RE SO EXCITED)
-free summer movies at the theater
-3 big kids and me at Stuart Little live at the Miracle Theater on June 30 (PATH fieldtrip)
-planting sunflowers and then recording bee observations for half an hour twice a week, a la "The Great Sunflower Project" - which is very cool and we've talked so much about the strange dissapearance of huge numbers of bees that my kids are really into it

And Annie? My Annie? Sheesh, I don't know where to begin. She is seriously changing right before my eyes, and as per usual, it is surprises and wonder every step of the way. She's thinning out as she shoots up. She's FOUR AND A HALF INCHES TALLER than Aaron right now, which hasn't been true since he was born. She has been demanding total privacy to change her clothes for awhile and so I should not have been so (inwardly) surprised as I was to learn it's because she's got...new...changes. *sigh* It is not some big deal at all and I didn't act like I even noticed anything, but I've been going around to Grant and to Laura when out of earshot, ever since, like, "PUBIC HAIR WHAT HOW IS THIS POSSIBLE?!" Meanwhile I hope she doesn't see through my casual ruse. My poor awkward daughter, who is actually gaining dance poise and some will remember how she's been setting off my gaydar for years now and I've wondered if she'll have internal conflict with her faith and how I'll deal with her theological questions about sexuality when and if that time comes. Well, we were talking the other day about names and baby names and middle names and I said, "Isn't it so weird to think of how if you get married you could have a DIFFERENT last name?" and she, without missing a beat, asked me, "What do lesbians do about their last names when they get married?" I just told her they can keep their own name or hyphenate or switch it like anyone else. But inside I was like "SEE?! YOU SEE?!" I dunno.

We're doing good, though...I feel closer to her, communication-wise, than I think I maybe ever have, which is good. I keep getting scared that we're careening (sp) towards this volatile transitional period of her life without enough ease and trust filling up our days. Today at least I feel like we're doing well. She's sick to death of math for dyslexic reasons with place value and carrying mistakes that I think will come together with practice just like her reading skills did. She burns through ABEKA language work like it's just fun. We laughed a ton in the grocery store alone together, today.




Some of you will remember BALD Jake. Right? A few months ago? Bald Jake and Afro Isaac? Well. They've switched. You can see pics of this and so much more by clicking the cut below, BUT! You should push play after you do and listen to the song while you look at the pictures. Because I was listening to that song as I edited and uploaded them and it was perfect.

Golden Children )

May 2017

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