Happy New Year! Let the Journey Begin

The New Years parties I attended in my youth rarely lived up to the anticipation.  New Years often amounted to little more than a farcical scramble to make plans as much to have them as to live them.  There was a status which went along with having plans.  I keep thinking this is more than just New Years.  There is still the search for direction, a need for a plan.  Once the plan is made, it’s often seen as the road to an easier better life.
I know I live that life every day.  I can’t tell you how often I think if this goal or that is met then all will be awe inspiringly great.  If we could just get the kids out of diapers, if we could just teach them to read, if we could just find the best medicine routine for me and the kids, if….So we plan, and we strive to achieve what we think will make us happier.  The funny part is “happier” seems to come not from achievement but rather from the efforts.  The achievement seems almost a reward to give us hope to keep moving forward.  It’s never enough.  Peaceful triumph is the carrot hanging from a stick tied to the carriage we pull.   
However, failing to find the imagined state of nirvana in no way takes away from the joy of the search.  The search itself is the Holy Grail.  I think one of the hardest parts of a chronic health condition is the added magical hurdle which seems to reappear in front of us every 5 feet.   It’s just more tiring.  Still, as the New Year signals a fresh start, may all have a wonderful journey this year towards what ever destinations await.   
On the family front, an immediate goal is to survive long enough for K to come home from the hospital.  I couldn’t be more proud of the kids as they film little messages for K every day saying we can’t wait for her to come home.  I love their desire for our house to be a home for her.  Still, what was originally thought to be short stay for some steroids has turned into a week with no quick release in sight.  So I go back to my Christmas wish, and I hope it holds sway for all those who belong in our home. 
Frequently of late, I find myself chuckling as the kids ask for more Justin Hines music and videos.  Of course to them he is the man in the wheel chair.  They think it’s great to see a man with obvious medical issues be so popular and good at entertaining.  I like the messages they take from his music, and watching them make their stuffed animals dance to the music while they sing along is priceless.
Happy New Year!
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Christmas 2011

If I had to list the first 10 things which come to mind when I think about this Christmas they would be:

1. Elf on a shelf: I love how my kids search for and look forward to finding him every day of the Christmas season.

2. Thank you Johns Hopkins for everything from the medical care I and my kids have gotten there to the gift bags delivered to our house before Christmas full of great toys (nominated and won a family award so kids got toys and clothes)

3. I can’t believe how many toys our kids get even when we don’t buy them much. It almost makes me feel guilty. Still, I love my kids excitement for new toys.

4. I love even more their desire to play with what they have and to play with each new toy.

5. Good grief, does every toy take 20-30 min to put together? This combined with 2 through 4 makes opening new packages an extremely time intensive ordeal. It’s an all day project.

6. My favorite present came from my mom, and she probably doesn’t even know it. For some reason, on Christmas as she sat downstairs with my 2 kids playing with toys they already had while waiting for breakfast before the mega opening session, is when I got my gift. My mom turned to me and said “You know, you and J are doing an amazing job raising these kids.” I’m not sure there are many compliments a parent can give to their child which could mean more.

7. I worry for my kids when our oldest dog Jake gets put down. At 5 and 6, they are just coming to grips with mortality which is totally age appropriate, but it doesn’t stop my worry.

8. I love that Jake still wants to go walk around the block with the other 2 dogs despite his having knee slide into and out socket a few times a day. Ouch. Still, the old windbag(usually stinky) , is incredibly loyal. We’ll miss his carpet cleaning after all the babies.

9. I hope K survives long enough for her lungs to grow healthy.  As a foster kid, she has brought out so much J and I want to grow in our kids’ personalities. She’s a good kid who has grown so much from the silent, blind blob to a commando crawling, cord pulling, screaming toddler. Go K go. Don’t stop trying just because you get a few bruises.
 
 
10. I was looking up at the Navajo sand painting in our living room hung year round in the spot above where we have our Christmas tree this year. I was remembering the story I was told about it. As I recall those paintings were originally made as prayers for healing, and the quick way to tell the difference between between one made as prayer versus one for tourist is the circle. If it is a complete circle, it was a prayer. If it is a U or some part of a circle, it was made to sell. As I was looking at it on Christmas Eve, I made my Christmas wish: Please let this prayer continue to hold sway for all those growing up around it. Amen
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Our Family's Stories of Growing Up

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