A Wife Loved Like The Church

Posts Tagged ‘Julia Mabel

Seriously, I normally take one afternoon/evening when I’m feeling talkative and write like 100 posts (ok, ok, maybe not that many) and schedule them all out. Anywho, this week all the posts missed their schedules, so I had to go in a manually update them. The whole point is so I don’t have to log on, but whatever.

Well, this post is in real time.  We took some pictures of Julia in her St. Patty’s Day outfit. Note: She had on a really cute green dress earlier in the day. But, she took off her diaper during her nap and well… let’s just say we had to change outfits… and her bedding.

dsc_00022

Signing "more".

Signing "more".

Signing "eat"

Signing "eat".

Signing "please", which is also trying to say when she signs.

Signing "please", which is also trying to say when she signs.

Signing "all done". She

Signing "all done". She gotten really lazy about using both arms, despite our best efforts to reinforce it.

For several months now, we’ve s-l-o-w-l-y been potty training Mabel. There’s no pressure and I try to make it as easy-going and fun as possible. She seems to really be enjoying herself and gets a big kick our of the whole process. 

Well, last week I was sitting on the couch going through the mail, when Julia came up, grabbed my hand and began pulling (she’s learned to do this recently when she wants me to “follow” her). I got up, thinking she wanted me to play, when she lead me to the bathroom. She started pointing to the potty and grunting. I took off her diaper, sat her on the seat and lo and behold, she pooped and peed!! Can I just say, I am one proud mama?!? 

I realize we’ve still got a ways to go, but what a great first step. Makes me think our goal of being diaper free by November/December is pretty realistic.

dsc_0033

Sorry, can't figure out how to flip the image. But you can still tell, she's pretty proud of herself.

Sorry, can't figure out how to flip the image. But you can still tell, she's pretty proud of herself.

Inwardly: I am stomping my feet, yelling “NO, NO, NO!”.

We spent two blissful weeks of Julia napping 3-4 hours a day.

After daylight saving began, she started waking up later (Thank God!) and we thought we’d be able to skip her morning nap and just do one long afternoon nap. 

How long you ask?

Today: 30 minutes.

Beautiful! Just what a mama always wanted.

Oh, and I burnt the cake I was making. 

“You keep track of all my sorrows. You have collected all my tears in your bottle. You have recorded each one in your book.” Psalm 56:8

Julia has been sleeping like an angel this week. She’s taking 1 1/2 hour (or more!) naps twice a day. As this never happens on a consistent basis I am LOVING it. Granted I’ve already told myself 1) she’s in a growth spurt (which explains the massive amounts of food she consumed last week) 2) don’t get use to it. 

This afternoon I put her down a little early, hoping she’d be up in time for playgroup and because I was d-r-a-g-g-i-n-g. I laid down and within 5 minutes heard her fuss. I told myself to give her 10 minutes, that if she didn’t stop I’d need to get up and let her play till closer to 2-2:30 before getting her down for a nap again. Next thing I know I was sleeping. Then she woke up. Without a second thought, I jumped up and went in her room.

Can you say silly mommy?

Clearly Julia took this as a sign that it’s time to wake up. But she’s only be down (not even sleeping) for 30 minutes. I let her sit on the potty for a few minutes, then put her back to bed. She cried for about 5, but has been quite now for the last 30. Hopefully I’m in the clear. Granted she won’t have much wake up time before the other kiddos arrive, but hey, at least she’ll be well rested. 

And as for me… I would have thought I’d learned my lesson by now. Never go into her room until I know for sure she’s actually awake and not just talking herself back to sleep. Silly, silly mommy.

Can I just say single moms amaze me? Never, ever could I raise Julia without Jonathan. I can’t even begin to fathom the idea. Kinda like the thought of eternity, my mind just can’t grasp it.

Jonathan makes me laugh. A lot. He has a sense of humor that is completely off the wall, and fits me to a tee. One of the greatest things about him, is that he usually sees a funnier side to things. He is willing to be a goof in order to lighten up the situation. He laughs even if something really isn’t funny, but it forces you to see just how ridiculous the something was to begin with.

In my opinion, an essential part of mothering is having a father who fathers. A man who doesn’t care that he’s worked all day, that his favorite NBA team is playing, that he has read Goodnight Moon a million times this week, but is willing to show love to his kids.

I didn’t have the best relationships with my dad or stepdad. I don’t recall having consistency between us, and even to this day I feel a little awkward talking on the phone, or even in person, to my dad. I was always envious of those girls who had the dad of all dads. You know the ones, they got flowers signed “Love, Dad”, had daddy-daughter dates, or received phone calls “from dad, just saying I love you.”

But I have to admit, Jonathan makes up to Julia, what I lacked in a father. He delights in her, takes pride in her, and down right thinks she’s the greatest thing since sliced bread. He truly is a daddy.

God’s foundation of family is meant to stay complete. Death, of course, does separate it. But over the past century divorce has moved in at an alarming rate, tearing families apart, separating daughters from daddies, sons from mothers. And in this, a lot of joy has been robbed from moms, who now find themselves faced with single parenting. The biggest problem is, women alone can’t raise a child. Sure, I spend more time with Julia, and in some ways know her better. But Jonathan is essential in her life. At times, even more than me. 

So, for all us married with children, let’s rejoice in our spouses! Let us thank God for the man that he gave us. Let us find joy in knowing that even if they absolutely HATE changing those poopy diapers, they absolutely LOVE us and our children.

Do you have reoccurring dreams? Ones that keep coming back over and over. Maybe the scene changes, but the plot stays the same? I found a few months into Julia’s life that I dreamt every night about her crying. The dream itself was different (the location, the people, the situation), but one thing was always the same: Julia was crying. I remember telling my sister, Shelly, that I literally could not get a break from this girl. She cried in my conscience and subconscious. 

Last April we were in the throws of a nearly two month battle of crying-it-out. One night I awoke to screaming for the third or fourth time in mere hours. I can recall thinking “Seriously, God, what do you want? I will literally do anything for Julia to sleep.” His response? Grace.

Grace is a tricky thing. Everyone wants it, no one wants to give it. 

When someone is upset with me because of something I have done, I will go to great lengths to fix the problem. This is especially true of my close relationships. I will push and push, but if I actually do send someone over the edge, I am frantic to mend the situation, even if that involves groveling on my part. But, boy watch out if I’m the one pushed. I’ll remind you of that time way back when, when you forgot to call to say you were running late and so we missed the previews at the movie. I mean, come on, the previews are my favorite part of going to the movies. You are so, so unloving. I will grace you not.  

Kids need lots of grace. They are little sinners, acting on what comes best to man – sinning. Now that doesn’t mean that they should be allowed to act on every single impulse that comes to mind. No. But, at the same time as a mom, I should remember that Julia is only 15 months. Of course she’s going to meltdown. Of course she’s going to boycott the same food she loved just this morning. Of course she is going to fail, over and over again.  No reason to get upset when a toddler acts like, well, a toddler. *Disclaimer: Just cause I say it, doesn’t mean I always practice it. Many, many times I get frustrated that Julia is acting like a toddler. Especially when it’s over an issue we’ve dealt with (and I thought we understood) a hundred times… in one hour.

We walk in amazing grace with our Father. I mean, in all reality I deserve hell. Literally. I am challenged to allow my daughter to feel like she walks in the same grace in our relationship. That I can realize that she will fall short, but that I have grace to cover her. That I can see past all the sins, all the nastiness of man, and love her because she is mine. And more importantly, she is God’s.

Julia and Jack

Motherhood is a journey that, once started, never stops. I have heard it said that even long into a mother’s empty nester years, she still plows down the path of being a mom. Much like marriage, mothering doesn’t stop until death. Even though our society would have us believe it stops much, much sooner.

Recently (ah, heck, let’s be honest, since the get go), I’ve been struggling with finding true joy in mothering. Please don’t get me wrong, I love, love, love Julia with all my heart. She lights up my life in a way no one else ever has. She makes me laugh, she makes me smile, she truly is a delight. But, these delightful times don’t last forever. She doesn’t always laugh, doesn’t always smile. She throws fits, she can be demanding, clingy, cranky, loud, a crybaby, she can change from happy baby to “evil” baby in a matter of seconds (or milliseconds). And it’s in those moments that my joy is fleeting. Those days where all we seem to accomplish is survival, and all I can do is keep from throwing myself on the floor and crying right next to her.

Julia has never been a quite, content baby/toddler. Literally within the first week she started crying, and it seems like it has never really stopped. We may go weeks with sunshine, followed by weeks of gray clouds and rain. Currently, we are in a gray clouds and rain period. It all started about 3 weeks ago. Julia started “losing it” one afternoon. Every mama trick I’ve learned didn’t seem to do me a lick of good. I prayed for the clock to speed up so Jonathan could come home. The next day seemed pretty much the same, followed by a day of constant crying (no joke, she woke up crying and cried all day until church started, BEAUTIFUL!). If you’ve ever been around a crybaby, you’ll know that it is stressful. Every one is on edge, every one is ready to jump out the window and go running down the street screaming. When this goes on for weeks, the stress just keeps building.

It’s no accident that one of the fruits of the Spirit is JOY and not happiness. Joy is long standing. Joy is knowing that when the day is done, you really do want to do it all over again. Happiness is the feeling I get when I eat at Cold Stone. It’s fleeting. Once that Love It size mint ice cream with multicolored sprinkles is gone, so is my happiness about the ice cream. 

So how do we find joy?

Through prayer. 

Every day I wake up between 5:15 and 5:30. I use this time to read my bible, journal and prepare myself for the day. About half the time I actually get “alone time”, while the other half Julia decides to wake up early. I can get easily frustrated when the latter happens, but I brace myself with prayer. Nothing long and drawn out, usually just a few mumbled words spoken between coffee, tantrums and Curious George. But they are always sincere. “God be with me today”, “God allow me to see your grace and to show your grace”, “Thank you for my life”, “Thank you for your mercy”, “Give me a heart to love my daughter”, “Direct my mothering”. 

I wish I could say that prayer fixes all the issues. That once I pray, magically Julia’s attitude is better, that we frolic in green fields and she takes 2 hour naps. But it rarely happens. Usually the situation stays the same. She keeps crying, keeps not napping, and life continues as though my words were useless. Yet, I know they weren’t. Slowly inside my spirit God changes me. He reminds me of His goodness, His grace, His love. He reminds me that joy isn’t an mint ice cream feeling, but a long abiding, self sacrificing attitude. He keeps showing me why I do what I do, why I must stay on His path, and that eventually there will be a reward.Julia Mabel

It seems lately that I have the start of several really good blogs, but then can’t manage to make them last. So, in an attempt to rid myself of bloggerblock, I just figured I’d through together a random post of all the things I’ve been thinking.

– Last night Jonathan and I went to see Marley & Me. Seriously, this is one of my new favorite movies. Granted I cried through the last half, it was still so sweet and reminded me a lot of my two puppies. Oddly enough, I really thought that I would be more sad because of Judah, but it turned out to pull at my heart strings with Jack and Mabel. See, I find in Mabel the same enthusiasm, the same love, for Jack that I had for Judah. So, when Marley passes away and the oldest son mourns his loss, I saw what life will be like for Mabs when Jack passes on. I know that it’s inevitable, that all living creatures die, but it doesn’t make it any less painful, any less sad. But, I take comfort in knowing that her life will have been forever changed because of Jack.

– I’ve started to feel Dubya Dos pretty regularly now. I’d say at least twice a day, if I sit still for a few minutes, I get a few jabs and kicks. This is by far my favorite part of pregnancy. However, I’ve become increasingly less comfortable at night and have started sleeping with a gazillon pillows – which makes me thankful (or maybe it makes Jonathan thankful) that we upgraded to a king size bed last summer. 

– God’s been dealing with me on some personal issues. I guess you could say I’m being refined by the fire. Some of it seems easy enough, but there are some deeper tougher issues that I’d like to just ignore… forever. Alas, it doesn’t work that way, and I find myself daily being challenged to surrender my thoughts/feelings over to Him in order to gain truth. It’s like eating something healthy that you don’t like – you know it’s good for you, you just don’t like doing it. 

– My sister-in-law and I had a conversation this past week about motherhood. More specifically about joy in motherhood. I find that often I can say and act like being a stay at home mom is this sacrificial act. Now, don’t get me wrong, it is, but it’s also a privilege. I don’t think I stress that last part enough. God has given me the ability to bare a child, to stay at home in order to be her primary caregiver. That’s pretty much amazing. My heart, my attitude, my demeanor needs to reflect that more. In Marley & Me, Jennifer Aniston’s character gives up her job to stay at home with her children. In one scene she’s at her breaking point; everything is going wrong, her youngest has colic and she’s ready to give up. But then she says something that hit me: She made a choice. She chose to stay at home, she chose to leave behind her career for her family. And while it was harder than she ever imagined it would be, she still signed up for the job, and if she could do it all over again, she’d still pick her kids. Amen sista!

– I think I’m ready for spring. I love the winter, but I’m at a point where it sure would be nice to take Julia to the park and enjoy sitting in the warm sunshine.

See more at Wordless Wednesday.

Dear Sarah,

Right now the world is your oyster. Well, not really, but you feel like you’ve discovered some new amazing world-saving idea. Cloth diapers. Sure, they are great. There are some benefits that you will love. But let’s face it, you need to know the cold hard truth. Who better to lay it out for you then you yourself. Older (only a little) and wiser (actually, that’s debatable).

Here goes; When Julia starts pooping like a crazy woman, you will think cloth diapering is the stupidest thing ever. Seems hard to believe, because right now Julia’s digestive system is as it’s always been. This will change. And you will suffer the consequences. Thankfully you (or do I need to say “I”?) are stubborn as a mule, so despite daydreaming about stopping this insanity you will push forward. In fact, you will set your mind to clothing the need baby (which, I should for warn you, comes sooner than you think).

I know you have a pact with Jonathan that you two will not travel with cloth. But, you will. Rest assured, it will be easier than you think.

Always have a diaper handing when you go out. I cannot stress this enough.

Start buying all of Julia’s pants for six months older than she actually needs. The truth is, your daughter will have a ghetto booty thanks to cloth. I suppose she should live it up, since this will never be the case again.

This coming winter will be lots of fun. Julia will really enjoy playing in the snow, however, be aware she doesn’t like snow on her face. A word from the wise, layering in cloth = impossible. Don’t even try it. You will get half way through bundling Julia up before you will need to strip her down to put on a disposable so that all her clothes actually fit over her bottom.

It’s going to be an adventure. One that you will find yourself doing alone more than you know. Julia will get a couple of gnarly rashes, but you’ll find a trick for preventing them. Oh, and it turns out, Jonathan can’t really handle poopy cloth diapers. Who knew?

Love,
You