11.07.2019

love life!

so much to be grateful for.  so much about life to love!


JAMES:
loving the dental hygiene we have to do with sponge swabs
finally doing tricks on command: shaking head "no", bye bye waves and clapping hands
lights up when we read a book
thinks hazel and cora are the most hilarious
has 3 new teeth that came in all at once overnight
loves ground-up grilled meat and yogurt
obsessed with balls

CORA:
saying "what the heck-oats!" and other things that just crack us up
cutting up post-it notes to make "money'
writing "letters" to people and mailing them
drawing people with crazy hair and long eyelashes
wearing her sister's clothes (they're the same size now, so it's all shared!)

HAZEL:
full of curiosity about the world and always asking questions
her best friend kylie and her new school
reminding me every. day. that she wants to go to scooter jungle for her birthday
building legos
throwing paper airplanes

MOM:
playing pubG at night with John
dreaming up renovation plans
not having to cook dinner 'cause mimi is in town

JOHN:
having yummier dinners because his mom is in town
stealing nerds from the girls halloween haul

11.01.2019

halloween 2019

Hazel insisted on being a unicorn this Halloween.  We all followed suit.




click here for: Costumes of Halloweens past 

just me and my unicorn baby


obsessed.
repeat after me.  you do not have a favorite child.  you do not have a favorite child.  you do not have a favorite child.

10.21.2019

james got a new heart today

It's a weird thing, the day/night before you go to the hospital.  It seems like you are savoring every second, just in case.  Savoring every little thing he does, and in disbelief about who you're about to hand him over to.

So grateful that everything turned out okay.  I am writing this now, 2 and a half weeks post discharge with a baby boy that is sleeping with a "fixed" heart.  I pray he won't need further intervention in his life, or at least not much of it.  

Morning of surgery:  Stressed out parents, blissfully unaware baby boy hopped up on Versed.

The photo I took as they wheeled him off.  I did not stop crying for the next four days.

 This is one of the first photos I took on that day.  Poor baby boy.  He was extubated in the evening.  


This is the photo we sent friends and family, with this message:

James is stable and out of surgery.
All the details for those that want them:

The surgeon did not use a conduit, which is wonderful news! Bad news is the pulmonary valve was not functional. He was not able to spare it. So James will need a valve put in at some point. Dr. Starnes thinks around age 8-10.

James is very sleepy still from the anesthesia. Goal is to slowly wean him off the ventilator and take his breathing tube out sometime this afternoon or evening. He is on one heart medication while his heart adjusts to his new anatomy and will gradually be weaned off of it. All normal.
We are so grateful for a good outcome so far. He looks peaceful right now, which I am grateful for. Thank you and keep those prayers coming.



That evening's update:

Breathing tube out. After they took it out they sat him up and he cried like I’ve never heard him cry. So sad. He is in pain and hungry but being so brave! Sucking on his binkie like there’s no tomorrow. Praying for pain control tonight, as I’ve heard the first 24 hours are the worst.
His vitals are looking normal for someone with a recent TOF repair. His heart rate isn’t as elevated, and the venous return in his heart is still a little low but looking better.
Spoke to the cardio attending who thinks James may not need a valve for many years (good news!) but time will tell. I’ve been so impressed with CHLA! The whole team is wonderful and quick to respond to our concerns, to James, and help him progress along.

Overwhelmed with gratitude for the many prayers we have received. Thank you for being on James’ team. I have received so many texts, messages, and words of encouragement. If I didn’t respond back, just know I am grateful and that you have bolstered me up today, doing something I truly didn’t have the strength for alone.
Most importantly, we are so grateful for our Father in Heaven, who truly answered our prayers with miracles today. He is blessing James perfectly and we need only trust in Him and His plan for each one of us. God is good and loves us all so much.

8.08.2019


Been meaning to post this for forever, but life got in the way.  A couple things.

Island Park was a dream. One of my favorite parts was floating the snake river with my people. Behind us is Sawtelle Mountain, where John asked me to marry him. It’s wonderful to go up every year and tell our girls that story. I think about those 9 years since and know that we are so incredibly blessed. It’s hard to realize all the good when you’re in the thick of tantrums and trials; helping these little people through their individual challenges, but they are such a joy in our lives. I have been thinking about what a sacred privilege and blessing it is to be their mother. Nothing comes close to it. If nothing else, James’ diagnosis has given me a clarity about what is important, it's our family, plain and simple.  That $300 it's going to cost me to register my car?  NBD.  

It's a perspective I pray will never go away.

Also, we bought a house.  It was a stressful thing.  It's not our dream home, but it is a dream having our own washer and dryer, another bedroom and bathroom, plus so much extra space!  Now to pray the market keeps rising (as it historically over the years always does, especially in LA).  With this comes a ward change (even though we only moved about 5 minutes south), and a school change (which has been hard on Hazel, but she's been rallying!)  I am just so grateful for our Father in Heaven always watching out for us.  Another thing I'm learning is if I didn't have the knowledge of Him lovingly watching and guiding us, I think I would collapse under the pressure of 'what ifs".  Adulting is scary, especially when there's risk involved. 

And that's where John comes in.  What would I do without him?!  When I'm spiraling, he just helps me stabilize.  It's like his superpower.  Anxiety creeps in constantly these days, with all the change and James' heart.  John talks me down, always.  

And melatonin helps me sleep.

7.10.2019

I realize I am so very blessed to make the following statement; but here we go.

Sometimes I forget that James has a severe congenital heart defect.

I will go about my regular life, complaining and worrying about the most insignificant things.  The days seem normal, really.  And then, it knocks the wind out of me as I look at him and suddenly remember that he has a lifelong illness.  That he will need, at minimum, one life-saving open-heart surgery.  And as much as I fight against the thought, I know that this is not something that can be fixed and I will never have to worry about his health again.  I will always worry.  Even if his correction goes as planned, we will always be waiting for the next shoe to drop.  This is a lifelong challenge. 

The crippling anxiety at what he is going to have to endure and go through sets in.  And those petty thoughts I was just having about my girls refusing to eat their dinner don't seem quite so important.

I am grateful for the newfound perspective.  I am broken for all those wonderful moms and dads that are waiting to be reunited with their angels in heaven.  I know that we are one of the lucky ones, and that there are families that are even luckier than us. 

When we chose to come to earth, we knew that the heartaches of mortality, including imperfect bodies, was part of the deal and would be well worth the pay day.

Elder Holland sums up my feelings pretty well:

"There is no shortage of suffering in this world, inside the Church and out, so look in any direction and you will find someone whose pain seems too heavy to bear and whose heartache seems never to end. One way to “always remember him” would be to join the Great Physician in His never-ending task of lifting the load from those who are burdened and relieving the pain of those who are distraught.
Beloved friends, as we unite across the globe each week in what we hope is an increasingly sacred acknowledgment of Christ’s majestic atoning gift to all humankind, may we bring to the sacramental altar “more tears for his sorrows [and] more pain at his grief.” And then, as we reflect, pray, and covenant anew, may we take from that sacred moment “more patience in suff’ring, … more praise for relief.” For such patience and relief, for such holiness and hope, I pray for all of you"

5.31.2019

love life


hazel:
phonetic spelling
lining her stuffed animals, marshall and clarice, just perfectly as she lays down for bed
reading books to cora (i strongly approve of this)
playing zelda BOTW, but handing me the controller every time she runs into a scary bad guy
hot buttered toast
coconut paletas

cora:
costco pizza (still)
making cookies
making mom blow up the kiddie pool and then refusing to play in it
make hazel play in the kiddie pool with her in 62 degrees
begging to go to disneyland and the playground every day
hiding under the desk when she's worried she'll get in trouble (she frequently does... she is wild and destructive ;)
during prayers, "bless us about baby james.  bless us about mommy and daddy.  bless us about not having bad dreams..."

james:
still being the most perfect, happy baby
napping for 40 minutes, five times a day (this isn't my favorite)
kicking wildly during bathtime
getting ingrown toenails like it's his job
sucking on his two fingers
blowouts that defy the laws of physics

5.25.2019

a birth story

i was pretty good about writing down hazel and cora's birth stories.  and here i am, 4 months later, finally sitting down to write James'.  in fairness, my labor with him, as well as my hospital stay, were more difficult both physically and emotionally.  it is finally now that i can write about it all without sobbing uncontrollably.  but i'll just start at the beginning.

i basically never went to sleep the night before he was born.  i maybe slept from about 10pm - midnight, at which time i woke up with suddenly painful contractions.  after a couple hours i woke john, and told him we better get to the hospital.  

that first picture on the left is me, in labor, at 2am.  

they sent us home because i wasn't progressing, and we were home by about 7am.  my mom and the girls were up, and my mom was surprised to hear that i was in labor and we had been gone most of the night.  i told her how i was basically dying and it didn't make sense because labor wasn't that horrible until later for me with the girls, and i wasn't even progressing and she goes, "i bet the baby is posterior."  that's what i had thought too, but having her say it made me accept it.  this was going to suck.

cue me laboring on the exercise ball and in the bathtub in all kinds of crazy positions until i felt like now, i could go to the hospital.  john was hesitant.  he didn't want to go all that way and get sent home again, but i insisted.  and, to his surprise, when we got to the hospital i had progress from 2 - 7cm dilated.  they admitted us, i got an epidural, but not much progress happened until the doctor came, realized i was posterior, and put me on the peanut ball.  james was born within the hour.
after a little nursing and skin to skin time, they took james to the warmer to get weighed, measured, assessed, etc.  the pediatrician came in and listened to his heart.  she came over to let us know that she had heard a heart murmur, but that there was no reason to be concerned yet; it could be that the PDA hadn't closed yet.  she ordered a chest x-ray to get a clear view of the heart, lungs, etc.  she ordered an echocardiogram for the next day.  i had a mild amount of concern but wasn't too worried.  our baby was here!  he looked to perfect and healthy.

 it was about 8pm when we finally got to our postpartum room, so the girls got to come the next morning and meet their baby brother!  wow it is so special.
cora lasted about 15 seconds holding him, but hazel surprised me and held him for at least five minutes!  

 the pediatrician paid us a visit, and examined the baby.  she told me that james probably had a heart defect, since usually the PDA has closed by now, but she could still hear the murmur.  with the sleep deprivation, hormone crash, physical exhaustion and everything else i was feeling, i couldn't remember the name of a single heart defect.  but there was an immediate feeling of dread as i looked up different type of congenital heart defects.  i prayed that it was either a VSD or ASD, even though at the time, the idea of ANY CHD was almost more that i could bear.  

late that morning the echocardiogram was done.  it took a long time, and i remember looking and the ultrasound tech's face.  wanting to ask her if she saw a heart defect.  but i waited patiently until a couple hours later the pediatrician returned, and told me to expect a call from Dr. Tan, a cardiologist.  she explained very briefly, "your baby has a ventricular septal defect"
Dr. Tan called while the pediatrician was still in the room, so she left when i answered the phone to speak with him, telling me she would return.  Dr. Tan was so kind, patient, and wonderful.  he answered all my questions.  at one point i accidentally hung up on him from the crappy hospital phone, and he called me right back immediately.  i cried the entire phone call.  i asked him for a basic, "best case" and "worst case" scenario.  at the time, he told me best case, james' defect will close on its own.  worst case, he will need open heart surgery.  it's a little silly to me now to think about my reaction then, because then, that seems like the worst possible thing - for my newborn baby to need open heart surgery!  since then, we found out his true diagnosis is tetralogy of fallot.  not only is his defect more severe, and will definitely require open heart surgery, but it will require lifelong cardiologists check ups, valve replacements, and potentially multiple open heart surgeries.  while all this is heartbreaking for me as a mom, it is a miracle that james has grown to be so healthy.  it is a miracle that he hasn't needed intervention yet, and that he is gaining weight and thriving.  i know it is a blessing from our Heavenly Father.

because of the delay with the echo and his diagnosis, james' circumcision was postponed until the following morning.  we were able to go home a couple hours after the worst thing i have volunteered my child for as a mother ;)  seriously, changing that diaper for a couple weeks was so sad.  

we told the family about james' diagnosis soon after we got home from the hospital.  those first few days were just as wonderful, tiring, and special as they were with the girls, but there was an added sadness, anxiety, and uncertainty.  i cried constantly.  i didn't talk on the phone to anyone.  i basically snuggled my precious newborn and protected him with all the fierceness that a mother can.  for awhile it felt like it was too much to bear.  my knees buckled at every thought. but then i was buoyed up - i felt so much strength that first sunday after he was born, when all of our family fasted for us and baby james.  i needed that strength so much. 

since then we have gotten a more critical diagnosis, a surgeon, and a plan.  we have met in person with Dr. Tan and Dr. Starnes, who i love, trust, and who have helped me feel that it will all be ok.

in all of this, i have been grateful for friends and family who have reached out in support, who have pointed us in the direction of others with babies with CHDs, or who they themselves have children with a CHD.  it was a comfort to look at the instagram post of my SIL's cousin, who has a baby with HLHS.  reading her instagram posts was overwhelming at first, but more recently, she has been a welcome example of strength.  she has shown me that even though our instinct as mothers is to protect, and handing your child over to that surgeon goes against every instinct, it is also the bravest thing you can do.  she has looked toward each surgery for her baby as an anxiety inducing blessing.  because, after all, even though there is anxiety and worry, there is also great hope and joy.  our babies are our greatest blessing.

About the time when we were told that James would need not only one, but two surgeries, I was at a lower point than I ever thought I could be.  I was still fighting and praying for the miracle I wanted, and not the miracle that the Lord knew that James needed.  It was in that desperation that I prayed constantly, but I didn't know for what.  I re-listened to the conference talks that spoke to me most; Brooke Hales and Sharon Eubank.  Sister Eubank said something that made me cry, hurt, and finally submit my will to Heavenly Father's.  She said, "When expectations overwhelm us, we can step back and ask Heavenly Father what to let go of".  It took me some time, but I finally let go.  I have learned that the Lord loves James, just as much, if not more than I do! He will do everything that He can to bless him (and us) perfectly.  

I have felt the spirit tell me many times that "everything will be okay".  When the anxiety comes, I remind myself that "everything will be okay."  I have seen James thrive and realize that that is a HUGE DAILY blessing from Heavenly Father.  I pray it will continue, but I know that He desires to bless us, and will do so in His perfect and infinite wisdom.  James is in the Lord's capable hands.  "and secondly, he doth require that ye should do as he hath commanded you; for which if ye do, he doth IMMEDIATELY bless you."

2.15.2019

happy valentines day from these little lovers!

 with a barely 3-week-old baby, we decided to stay in and make it special by ordering a heart-shaped pizza from valentino's.  we spent the night snuggling each other and watching a movie.  


1.25.2019

baby boy is here!

baby boy arrived yesterday at 4:21pm
7 lbs 11 oz and 20 inches
no name yet
we are so in love!

1.09.2019

what do you like about your sister?

i asked each of the girls this question: what do you like about your sister?  their responses crack me up.

cora: i like about her playing toys
m: what else do you like about your sister?
c: nothing else.


hazel: she's so so nice and sweet
m: anything else?
h: whenever she has a flower in her hair, i think she's pretty.

look at those chubby baby toes in the sand! ^^^  i. die.
excuse me while i print these and put them ALL OVER MY HOUSE