Hey
y’all! It’s Kat’s sister
again. Let's just think of this like a mini “Slices of Life,” bits and pieces of my time with the
kids in late September during my Dad’s and Amelia’s birthday week.
Here are some highlights:
On
Thursday and Friday, I honestly have no idea what we did. I’m sure this happens to parents all the time—you’re so busy, when
someone asks you what you did that day, everything’s kind of one big blur of
activity, and you really have no sense of time. I assume we had some conversations, ate some food to stay
alive, and slept, but I don’t really recall anything significant. I remember telling Katherine that I
didn’t think I could write a blog post for this trip because nothing had
happened of note (except the normal chaos in a house of four kids). Yet.
Oh wait, I do remember a
couple hilarious things on Thursday. I think Katherine already briefly
mentioned this, but the first night I was there, all of us, including my
parents, ordered in and were eating dinner at the dining room table. I said, “Nick, I was so impressed that
you ran the 5K Color Run after you threw up—I could never do that!" He said, “Yeah, and I also had to poop
for FIVE HOURS.” We all cracked
up, and I said, “Well, those port-a-potties can smell pretty gross.” He replied, “That’s why I held it in
for five hours.”
Nathaniel then regaled us
with the excitement of the day at school—some poor kid got sick and puked in
cafeteria trashcan. Nathaniel saw
it happen, but Nick said he saw it too. When Katherine asked how Nick saw it if he wasn’t in there when
it happened, he said, “Because it had happened like two minutes before and they
hadn’t cleaned it up yet.” Then
Katherine said, “But I thought you said he threw up in the trash can.” Nathaniel, filling in the narrative
gap, informed us, “Well, some of it landed on the floor.” Awesome dinner conversation (seriously,
I was dying laughing).
We
went to eat Mexican for dinner on Friday night, and since I had eaten a steady
portion of kid snacks from Katherine’s pantry and fridge all day long (like the
really bad ones, things an adult
human knows better than to eat, like Cheez-its, peanuts, string cheese, leftover
pizza, etc.), I didn’t order anything at the restaurant and sat next to Amelia
to feed her. She ate an entire
(adult, oblong) plate of refried beans and rice, plus half a cheese
quesadilla. With gusto. And then she drank eight ounces of milk two
hours later before bed. This
becomes important in the next paragraph.
I
had to change her first diaper the next day. Let’s just say, it was like taking a trip to Poop City. I was a reluctant visitor in
Pooptown. She had become mayor of
Poopville. In the State of
Gag. Yep, that whole Mexican
dinner shot right through her overnight, and there was poop all over her onesie,
up her back, and in all her creases. Yes, those creases. And she
was super-grabby with what was going on down there. Every time I thought I’d cleared a zone, she’d recontaminate
it by rubbing a poopy hand down there. It was a monumental achievement when I had her all fresh and clean, in a
clean diaper and fresh outfit.
On
Saturday, we went to a picnic at Oak Mountain park for the big boys’ karate
dojo. We threw around the football
(Nick has a helluvan arm!), Frisbee, ate picnic food, got eaten by mosquitoes or
some cousin of theirs, the regular. I took a run during the picnic around Oak Mountain Park, and it was
great. It’s a weird adjustment I
have to make when I’m back South—in Wyoming, I’m always on the lookout for
bears and moose (big things that can kill me) when I’m running—in Birmingham,
I’m looking for snakes and spiders (tiny things that can kill me). Nature can be dangerous, y’all.
We
got to celebrate my Dad’s 70th birthday and Amelia’s 1st
birthday with one party and three cakes!
It was a very touching day and evening with our immediate and extended
family, and watching Dad and Amelia blow out their candles was a moment that’ll
be etched into my heart forever.
The
big cake was Amelia’s official 1st birthday cake (which wasn’t even
cut into during the party, but it was gorgeous and huge!) The smaller white cake was my Dad’s 70th
birthday cake, celebrating his career in the Navy and continuing devotion to
it, and the “small” chocolate cake (it was still not that small, trust me), was Amelia’s SMASH CAKE.
The
older the boys get, the more their personalities become evident. Katherine and Grayson could COMPLETELY
disagree with my perception, since they’re around the boys 365 days of the year
and I’m around them more like 12, but I have noticed that Nathaniel’s pretty
steady-eddie on the emotive scale. He’s a lot like my Dad and sister. He goes with the flow (for the most part), and even if he’s upset, he’s
not that emotive about it. Nick is
the opposite. There is no question
about what Nick’s mood is; he will tell you with his demeanor or words. Jake, he’s also an open book, but his
moods aren’t as mature and multi-level as the older boys. If Jake’s happy, he acts
super-happy. If he’s sad, he pouts
or cries. Amelia’s mostly sunshine
and giggles, but she’ll give a shout out if she’s not satisfied.
One evening we were going
out to dinner or something, and I went up, took a shower, and got ready. I came downstairs, and Jake was
standing there. He said, “Where
were you?” I said, “I was getting
ready, bud.” He looked at me kind
of forlornly and said, “Yeah, makeup. I remember you said you did that to yourself.” [Last time I was visiting, I put on eyeliner and mascara one
day, and he said, “Wuss that shuff on yo eyes?”] I said, “Do you think I look better or worse with makeup,
Jakey?” He said, definitively,
“Worse.” Katherine heard the
exchange and said, “Jake prefers you au natural.” Well played, Katherine.
Every
night, Nathaniel and I would have the sweetest conversations when I came up to
get in my pjs and he was still awake. Sometimes it was way past his bedtime, and he'd be reading underneath
his blanket (one of his favorite things). When he heard me come in his room, he'd peek out and say,
"Hey." And I'd say, "Hey buddy. I'm gonna hang out with your mommy a little longer and then
I'll be back up." And
sometimes, he'd launch into telling me something he was really excited about
telling me, which could take 20 minutes, and sometimes, he'd say,
"OK," and go back to reading. I love that kid. He was the
first one who stole my heart, and that means a lot.
When they were toddlers
like Jake, neither Nathaniel nor Nick ever had any compunction about coming
into the guestroom and waking me up if I was sleeping too late for their taste
(i.e., 8:30 a.m.) They’d just barge
in and say, “Sarah Ellen, when are you getting up?” And they basically wouldn’t take “Go away, I’m asleep” as an
answer. But Jake is different. The old guestroom is now Nathaniel’s
room, and so far, he likes me crashing in his bed when I visit. So, I’m asleep one morning, and I half-wake
up hearing a plastic-sounding cranking noise right next to my head. I was lying on my side, and when I
opened my eyes, Jakey was just standing there, about six inches from my face, staring
at me, not saying a word, cranking one of his Beyblade toys. Like a kid from The Shining. (It was
actually very sweet and much less intrusive than Nathaniel and Nick’s old
tactics, but it cracked me up.) He
was basically going to stand there, bide his time, and crank his Beyblade until
I woke up. And it worked.
One big highlight of the
trip was the day that both Nick and Nathaniel pulled flips on the trampoline
and landed on their feet. I took
some credit because I coached them both about jumping high and tucking, not
worrying about jumping forward (you jump as high as you can and grab your
knees—that will carry you up and over). And they both stuck it like champs!
The last full day I was
there, I was supposed to only have the two young kids, but Nathaniel woke up
not feeling well. However, by
about 8:30 a.m., he was downstairs, eating cereal and watching TV. He didn’t seem very sick to me or my
parents. At one point, he and Jake
went out to jump on the trampoline and he came back in and announced, “I think
I’m fine now.” Uh huh. I tipped Katherine off to this
activity, and she sweetly left work for 30 minutes to pick Nick up early so
that he could come home and spend the rest of the day with us (he was none too pleased that he had to go to
school and Nathaniel didn’t, and I don’t blame him.) Anyway, we spent the rest of the day playing, laughing,
enjoying each others’ company, and soaking up the last evening of my time with
them.
Again, it’s hard to put my love for these kids
into words. I think about them all
the time, and I miss them like crazy. The only drawback, in my mind, of living in Jackson is that I’m far away
from them and the rest of my family. And that’s a huge
drawback. But it’s visits like
these that keep our relationship constant and flowing, and if they can feel and
know 1/1000th of the amount of love I have for each of them, they
must feel like the most loved kids in the world.
3 comments:
Sarah Ellen,
I didn't think your last guest post could be topped, but this was awesome! I love your story telling. Amelia's creases...hilarious. And, Jake with the Beyblade toy...priceless. Glad you enjoyed your visit!
Great post girl!
Great post girl!
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