Archive for the Being a Mom Category

Twins, Twins Everywhere!

Jun 6th, 2009 Posted in Being a Mom, Just for Fun | no comment »

halstead-twins1

Here’s an article from the Copperas Cove Leader Press in @ 2003.

By KRISTAN HALL
News editor –
Halstead Elementary is overrun this year. Overrun, not with varmints, but with twins. Halstead has eleven sets of twins enrolled this academic year, a record number.

Aubrey and Alyssa Odum are seven-year-old twins who were born five minutes apart. Alyssa, who is older by five minutes, likes being a twin. “It gives me someone to play with,” she says.

Nine-year-old twins Breanna and Breonne Ande like being twins as well, though Breonne does admit, “Sometimes my mom calls me Breanna instead of Breonne.” Breanna is older by one minute.

Identical eight-year-old twins Maria and Anna Joseph love being twins. Says Anna, the younger twin – by one hour and one minute, “I love being a twin because when our brother is being mean, we still have someone to play with.”
Maria adds that it’s easier to talk to other twins. “Plus when you need to find one twin, you already know what she looks like,” she reports.

Although the girls say they aren’t mistaken for each other very often, Maria did pretend to be Anna once. “One time Maria told her teacher she was me,” says Anna. “It was funny,” giggles Maria. Until mom found out. Will Maria pretend to be Anna again? “Maybe not,” she says.

While eight-year-old twin Nisha Davis likes being a twin, her younger, by 11 minutes, sister doesn’t. “They always get me and her mixed up,” she grumbles. The duo are fraternal twins.

Identical five-year-old twins Hannah and Joanna Legare are often “mixed up” as well, they say. “I’m not Hannah,” states Joanna, the older twin.

Devin and Dane Parsons are the only twins that have one boy and one girl in the set. Eight-year-old Devin only likes being a twin sometimes, but loves being in a school with so many other twins. “You can make other twin friends,” he declares.

Other twins attending Halstead are four-year-olds Sebahn and Ayanna Baxter, four-year-olds Ryan and Aaron Brumels, six-year-olds Sydney and Taylor Phillips, five-year-olds Ashley and Asia Hemphill, and seven-year-olds Celia and Sonia Leslie, all identical.

Halstead Principal Coley Howell likes having a school full of twins. “It’s wonderful to have so many different sets of twins,” he states. The most sets of twins Halstead has ever had at one time is six, he says. He adds that the twins’ parents have been wonderful to work with.

Car Wash Blues

Apr 2nd, 2009 Posted in Being a Mom, Just for Fun | one comment »

car-wash-picture

After a drive to Houston last weekend, our family van was covered in bug guts. So after picking up all three children from school, we headed over to our local gas station to buy slushy drinks and a car wash.

This is our favorite car wash, as it’s “touchless,” and does a great job, even on the tires. I punched my purchase code into the machine, but had to wait for a truck in front of me before I could proceed. While we watched the truck being washed, we were laughing, because every time the strong water jets made a pass around the truck, everything in the bed of the truck would fly into the air, (to include a large box and styrofoam inserts) and then settle back into the bed or around the car wash bay.

When the wash portion of the cycle was finished, a very sheepish soldier stepped out of the truck and started picking up all the things that were strewn about the bay. He tossed them back into the bed of his truck and drove toward the powerful dryer, which was already working. Once the dryer hit the bed of the truck, all the stuff flew out again. The soldier drove off, oblivious to everything he’d left behind.

The green light went on for me to “Drive Forward,” but I was afraid the big box left in the middle of the bay would get hung up under my van. So I told my 13-year-old son, Daniel, to hop out and go move the box for me. Daniel willingly complied, and ran into the bay.

Whoops! As soon as he entered the bay, the tire wash sensors triggered, and powerful jets of water hit Daniel from both sides, knocking off his hat and giving him a thorough soaking!

The look on Daniel’s face was priceless! He must have jumped three feet in the air when those jets hit him. The girls and I laughed so hard we couldn’t catch our breath. Daniel got back into the car, soaking wet, with teeth chattering from the cold water.

Now I understand what a “touchless” car wash is! No car required.

Where are the video cameras when we need them? That would have made it onto America’s Funniest Home Videos for sure!

Family Mission Statement

Jan 29th, 2009 Posted in Being a Mom, Loving My Savior, Ministry | no comment »

After reading Voddie T. Baucham’s book, Family Driven Faith, and Stephen Covey’s book, 7 Habits of Highly Effective Families, Marc and I decided to come up with a family mission statement for 2009. We took a little “dad and mom” retreat to Austin, and came up with our plan.

I saw a good review for Baucham’s book at fellow blogger Deb Burton’s site. Her passion is to help families realize that their children are their biggest mission field.  I shared my family mission statement with her, and she was gracious enough to post it to her blog (for all the world to see)! Yikes — that accountability thing!  Since she posted it, and advertised it the day before, I’ll let you see the article and our statement at her website:  Here’s the preview article:  The Greatest Mission Trip You’ll Ever Take.

Here’s the link to our  2009 Mission Statement.  How strange to link to someone else’s blog for our family stuff!  But I do want you to see her wonderful blog and all the resources she provides.  Isn’t it wonderful to belong to the family of believers?  Have you considered a coming up with a family mission statement?

So far we’re doing really well — except for the getting kids to eat fruit daily thing!family-in-silhouette

Out of the Mouths of Babes

Dec 28th, 2008 Posted in Being a Mom | 2 comments »

kansas-junction-city-011We’re a military family, and have often lived in the town just outside an Army post. While we were assigned to Fort Riley, Kansas, every time we drove on or off the installation, we had to pass through the downtown area, which had a row of strip clubs.

The kids were old enough to read, so it was hard to shield their eyes from signs that screamed “Nude Dancers Nightly,” or “Different Strippers Each Night!” I would try to distract them in some way every time we approached that area of town.

One of the clubs was called “The Top Hat Club,” and had a picture painted on its large plate glass window of a top hat, a walking cane, and folded gloves over the cane.

Our son, who was about 11 at the time, thought the picture was of a magician’s tools – with the cane as the magic wand.

He asked me so many questions about the place that I gave up deflecting them, and finally said, “Honey, I hate to have to tell you this, but that’s a place where men pay to see naked ladies.” He said, “WHY would they want to do THAT?” Totally flustered with the whole thing, I said, “I don’t know.”

All of a sudden, a knowing look spread across his face, and he said, “I know why men go there!

In horror, I said “You DO?”

My sweet boy said, “I get it now. They go in and pay their money, expecting to see a magic show, and the people trick them and show them naked ladies instead!!”

I was so glad that he had answered his own question in such a sweet and innocent way.

He’s 24 now, and we tease him mercilessly about it.

Consequence of Lying

Dec 28th, 2008 Posted in Being a Mom | one comment »

Saint Patrick may be the patron saint of Ireland, and March 17th may be the day for celebrating his miracles, but for our family that holiday will always remind us of the funny thing that happened on March 18th!

Our second child, Mark, was born on Saint Patrick’s Day. Every year I tried to come up with some special way to celebrate his birthday. Sometimes it was green icing on sugar cookies, other birthdays were toasted with green punch. His 6th birthday fell on a school day, however, so I settled for a store-bought cake, festooned with bright green icing, which we shared with his friends at daycare.

On March 18th, Mark had a physical exam scheduled, so I went to his school to pick him up for his appointment. I decided to take him home first, so we could quickly grab a bite to eat.

On the way home, my little guy (who couldn’t say his “R’s”) said, “Mommy, I left my backpack at dayKO (daycare) today, so my teachO let me walk to dayKO to get it. Then Miss Patty at dayKO let me walk with it back to school!”

I said, “Honey, that’s can’t be true! Those teachers would never let you walk all by yourself for a mile.”

“Oh no Mommy, I’m telling you the twuth! It weally happened!” Mark said sweetly, to which I replied, “Okay Mark, I’m going to call your teacher at school and ask her if this really happened.” All of a sudden, Mark got a sickly look on his face, and got really quiet. He whispered, “Don’t call my teachO Mommy – I WAS lying.”

The rest of the way home and halfway through lunch I think I said everything that’s ever been said about the evils of lying. Mark just listened, nodding his head, and promising he would NEVER lie again. As we finished lunch, I said, “Okay honey, go potty and we’ll head for your appointment.”

About five minutes later, I heard Mark yelling from the bathroom, “Mommy, come quick! Mommy, come quick!” Fearing that he had hurt himself in some way, I ran to the bathroom with my heart pounding out of my chest.

Mark was standing by the toilet with his pants down, pointing into the bowl.

“Look at my poop Mommy! Look at my poop! IT’S GWEEN!” Sure enough, his deposit was bright green, which made me think of the bright green frosting on the cake he’d eaten the day before.

I said, “Mark, you know why your poop is GREEN don’t you?

With big, remorse-filled blue eyes, he looked up at me, nodded his head slowly, and said, “Yes, Mommy, my poop is gween because I LIED!”

What a Mother Thinks

Dec 7th, 2008 Posted in Being a Mom | 2 comments »

I love you so much.

There is no way I can possibly put into words

how proud I am of you.

You’re absolutely beautiful.

Sometimes when our eyes meet,

it’s like gazing into a reflecting pool.

I see in you glimmers of my past.

Do you see in me hints of your future?

You are everything I ever prayed for.

I love you more than you will ever know,

more than you will ever ask.

There’s nothing I wouldn’t give for you,

nothing I wouldn’t do for you.

You are my daughter,

and I will always love you with a love so immense, so eternal…

I could never find a way to squeeze it into words.

by Robin Jones Gunn

I heard this poem on the radio several years ago, and it brought me to tears. Here’s the rebuttal poem, also by Robin Jones Gunn:

What a Daughter Thinks

My mother doesn’t understand me.

She never has,

and she never will.

:)


Cortico-Basal Ganglion Degeneration, Mom and Me

Nov 12th, 2008 Posted in Being a Mom | 12 comments »

I’ve never been very close to my mom. I suspect there are multiple reasons for this, some of which were visited upon her by the sins of her mother and her mother’s mother. Consequently, we’ve never been buds. Now I’m working hard to be a good mom.

I’ve never really corresponded with my mom. Her idea of a letter was to clip an “Ann Landers” column and send it to me with a one-line note. My idea of correspondence was to shove a Christmas card into a box of packages waiting to be mailed. Now I send my adult kids one-line emails. That needs to improve.

I’ve never liked the things my mom likes. She’s crazy about jewelry; for me it’s one more thing to think about when getting dressed. But when my dad divorced her, she sent me her West Point miniature engagement ring, and her wedding band. Now that’s something I liked to receive.

I’ll never fully understood my mom. I’m a singleton and she’s an identical twin. It seems identical twins can’t “leave and cleave,” since they’ve been “married” since the womb. My dad once said “never marry and identical twin – you can’t compete.” Now I’m raising identical twin girls. I hope I raise girls who don’t visit this sin upon future husbands.

I’ve never lived close to my mom since leaving for college at 18. And I’ve never returned to the nest, except for occasional visits for Christmas. After we had five kids, my mom came to us, about once a year, or once a birth, whichever came first. She was a big help, especially with the twins. Now she’s lives 20 miles away at assisted care. That’s close.

I’ve never talked on the phone much with my mom. She would call once every two months whether I needed it or not. I would call in the intervening time, mostly out of guilt. When we talked, I controlled the conversation by my rude behavior, telling her I’d heard her stories before. Now I’m very aware of how my daughters and I communicate.

I’ve never been as brave as my mom. She’s dying an agonizing death in which she knows what’s happening to her, symptom by symptom. Her “death by brain loss,” is like being fully aware that you have Alzheimer’s Disease, and are trapped in the body it produces without the resulting memory loss. Now I think about the treasure of good health and a sound mind.

I’ve never been fully sympathetic to my mom’s plight, even though I’ve been fully aware of her disease progression. Now she has every horrible effect the disease produces. I’ve been told she’ll die in less than a year. I’ve just enrolled her in hospice. This is CBGD:

Cortico-Basal Degeneration by Dr. Basil Ridha, Dementia Research Group
This is a rare progressive neurological disease that causes disturbance of mental processes and motor skills. The disease is named after the areas of the brain that are principally affected. Cortico refers to the cortex, which is the outer layer of the brain, and basal refers to the basal ganglia, which are deep structures in the brain that control motor skills. In these brain regions, there is more significant loss of brain cells than in normal aging. Corticobasal degeneration can present in many ways. It can affect mental processes such a memory, vision perception, speech, organizational skills, personality and behavior. It can also affect motor skills causing rigidity, tremor, clumsiness, limitation of eye movements, involuntary movements, odd posturing of limbs and difficulty walking. A specific symptom that may be present in corticobasal degeneration patients is the ‘alien limb’, where a limb seems to move without control in a mind of its own. In all these movement abnormalities, one side of the body is affected more than the other.

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke:
There is no treatment available to slow the course of corticobasal degeneration, and the symptoms of the disease are generally resistant to therapy.

I’ve been whining about my mom lately. She’s frustrated and confused. She’s irritable and depressed. She’s yelling at her caretakers and cussing at them. She’s belligerent. When she laughs she chokes. When she cries she chokes. She’s incontinent. She’s very large and hard to manage. Her money is paying for caretakers. Now I eat with her twice a week and play dominoes. My role is small.

I’ve also had an incurable disease. My mom’s known it all along.

I’ve been a baby – my mom’s baby. I was large and incontinent. I didn’t walk until I was 18 months old and weighed 36 pounds. My mother carried me, changed me, and loved me. Now others are doing that for her.

I’ve been a druggie. Just like CBGD, that can affect mental processes such a memory, vision perception, speech, organizational skills, personality and behavior. It can also affect motor skills causing clumsiness, involuntary movements, odd posturing, and difficulty walking. I was frustrated and confused. I was irritable and depressed. My mom never stopped caring for me, cooking for me, or loving me. Since I straightened out 35 years ago, she’s never reminded me of my past. Now she tells me she’s proud of me and that I’m the daughter she always wanted.

I’ve been belligerent. In the days of my horrible disease, I yelled at my mom and cussed at her. There were no paid helpers during that sickly time of my life, just my mom. I was incapable of fixing myself, and there was no cure. My mom provided my assisted care. Her role was large. Now I’m grateful.

I’ve been cured. My disease had a shorter name than CBGD. It was S-I-N, and I nursed it for 30 years, until I met the great physician, healer, comforter, counselor, and friend. This doctor, Jesus Christ, not only healed me, but He forgave me, and gave me a new life. I introduced my mom to Him several months ago. Now it’s time for me to be close to my mom, the one who gave me life, before it’s too late.

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