It is hard to imagine it now, but someday these days will all be a distant blur. We won’t remember most of the specifics of the daily grind; we won’t remember most of the day-to-day routine of it. We’ll forget how simply exhausting it all is right now. I know that we’ll forget because already we have only a foggy recollection of the mundane details of our first couple years with Kyle and Owen. Heck, if it weren’t for this blog (and thus our ability to click back and see what we were doing), I would not be able to recall most all of what we were doing one year ago. Let alone 30. I imagine us as empty-nesters, romanticizing the past, remembering all the sweet but glossing over all the yuck of back in the day when we were that young couple trying to keep up with the momentum of our careers while all the while trying to keep up with the momentum of three under five. For example, one thing that we surely (hopefully) will eventually forget about this time right now is…
…Every night, after we get all three kids to bed, we come downstairs, bleary-eyed and tired-to-the-bone, to face the night shift. First on the very-long-agenda every night: clean up from dinner. Tonight was especially unpleasant because dinner involved couscous — which I actually tend to avoid serving to my darling family simply because of its mess factor. These images don’t do it justice, but hopefully they’ll at least prompt some (gory) memories for us in the years to come. As always, click to enlarge.
The past three months have been absolutely crazy with so much big stuff happening. On top of all our ‘normal’ stuff, there have been a lot of bigger-than-normal goings-on’s. For Kyle and Owen, as March was proceeding, it proved to be way too much to try to wrap their minds around it all and keep it all straight. Toward the end of March they were already coming mentally unglued trying to intellectually grasp it all. So, I photocopied pages from a calendar and wrote in just the biggest of big ticket items and taped it all to the fridge. Each night they took turns crossing off the day– Kyle on even days, Owen on odd days. It has been one big thing after another, with every day that was crossed off another big thing to anticipate around the corner. Lots of excitement building, lots of crescendos, lots of getting ready for the next big thing. Really, it has all been a bit too much for their barely-5-year-old heads to handle (not to mention the heads of the 36 and 37 year olds in the house). I feel like we’ve just lived about 12 months jam packed into the past 3. And here we are, somehow, safely on the other side. It has taken a toll but we’re still standing. I’m relieved that it is June 1. Not that we don’t have an exciting 3 months on the horizon– we do. But simply having the birthdays and the big vaca off the calendar will be a huge, huge help to the emotional wagon-load we’re pulling around here day-by-day. We need a relatively low-key summer to get ourselves back in working order. Thank goodness it is June 1.
Even though the boys still have two weeks of school left, we feel like summer has unofficially begun. Our pool is open (as long as the sun is shining and it is half-way warm out, the boys are swimming, swimming, swimming and Meera is right there with them); our sunroom is now the most lived-in room of the house; and our grill is grilling a lot more than the rest of the year. This is, definitely, our favorite time of the year. And it makes us wonder why we don’t live in a warmer climate 12 months of the year. Anyway… the real kick off to summer is when we start hanging out with friends on weekend afternoons, sipping margaritas, and husking corn. Our favorite family, the Petsch Crew, came over on Saturday and we did just that. Man, do we love them. And man, oh man, the kids were so dang cute getting the corn ready to cook. With two sets of boy-boy twins (K&O, Christian&Luis), a go-getter girl (Zoe), and a now toddling baby (M), we four “grown ups” have our hands full when we get together. But after a couple of Braydon’s true-Mexico-margs, and some of Shelli’s bean dip… all is good. Of course, as usual, Lori posted to her blog before I got to ours. 😉 See her post here.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
A Little Bit from the Blog: Meera’s First 12 Months~~
- Meera’s Born
- Meera’s First 60 Hours
- Meera Comes Home
- Meera’s First Week Home
- Meera 3 Weeks Old
- Meera 4 Weeks Old
- Meera 1 Month Old
- Meera 5 Weeks Old
- Meera 6 Weeks Old
- Meera 12 Weeks Old
- Meera 4 Months Old
- Meera 5 Months Old
- Meera 6 Months Old
- Meera 7 Months Old
- Meera 8 Months Old
- Meera 9 Months Old
- Meera 10 Months Old
- Meera 11 Months Old
- Happy 1st Birthday Meera Grace & Meera’s First Cake
My little baby is one. Not 11 months, not 12 months; one. Really, she’s just a day older than she was yesterday, but some how one is different. Â She’s gone from being our baby, to becoming our little girl.
We spent 10 days in beautiful, sunny Mexico. It was a great trip! Our longest vacation ever. Oh, so, so nice to be gone for that long! After going back and forth about it, we decided to not worry about the ‘swine flu’ and just go for it– the trip had been planned for months and we weren’t easily going to give it up. And boy were we glad we went. It was awesome. The travel was great, and much to our delight we can officially say that Little Miss Meera is shaping up to be quite a little traveler just like her brothers. She was just as easy-going of a travel baby as they always were. And, just like K & O as babies, she sleeps great on airplanes!

We split the trip into two parts. We flew into Cancun, rented a car, and got on the road for a 5 hour drive across the Yucatan. We knew it was going to be a crazy trip and we were not wrong. Not wrong at all. It was crazy. This was not travel for the weak-of-heart. The drive was on a stretch of road cut straight through the land… with nothing… and I mean, NOTHING, there. Not a thing. Nothing. For five hours. It was pretty wild. At one point we actually drove straight through a forest fire. No kidding. We stopped on the road when we realized the smoke was so thick we couldn’t see more than a few feet ahead of us. But there were only two options: go straight through it, or turn around (there were no side roads). Braydon gunned it and we sped through it with our three bambinos in their carseats. CRAZY. C-R-A-Z-Y. Here is a nice clear stretch of the highway:
Here are our great travelers livin’ it up in the back of the rental car:
The first six nights we were way off the beaten trail, in the real Mexico, deep deep deep in the real Mexico, on the gulf coast side of the Yucatan in a tiny little place (I can’t even legitimately call it a “town” because there was no town there, just a strip of land along the ocean) called Uaymitun. We rented a house on the beach— the vacation home of a wealthy Mexican family. Nobody was there. NOBODY anywhere nearby. We had acres and acres and acres and miles and miles and miles of sandy shore all to ourselves. It was surreal, to say the least. The views from the house were truly spectacular.
And the house itself was SPECTACULAR.
And the beach at the house was SPECTACULAR!
Our favorite pastime was long walks on the beach. We would see no other human for miles. We would stop to watch pelicans diving for fish. We would stop for the boys to chase crabs. We would stop for swims in the ocean. Otherwise, we’d just walk and walk and walk (and Meera would sit in the backpack on Braydon’s back chewing on shells). It was glorious and almost unimaginable.
Really, just unimaginably glorious.
And the sunrises were the best. Every morning.
About 15 minutes (driving) down the coast from the house was the town of Progresso. This is a port and fishing village. It was the real deal. This was our first trip to a non-English speaking country with the boys. It was very cool to see them have to learn to speak some Spanish (absolutely nobody there spoke any English). And they picked up quite a bit while we were there. It was also very interesting to be — all of us — in the minority. No white people. No black people. Just brown-skinned Mayan/Mexican people. And we were quite the sight to them. Anywhere we went a crowd formed (literally) and followed us around just staring. It was interesting– to say the least– to be there. And the whole experience really got the juices flowing… feeding us lots and lots of food for thought.
And this was also our first immersion in a place of deep poverty with the boys. The last time Braydon and I were in a place of such desperation was our trip to get the boys in Haiti. Mexico is nothing like Haiti, obviously, and nothing (in our minds) can compare to the experience of Haiti… but… still…. it raised a lot of questions for all of us. As it should. And as we hoped it would.
And Braydon and I discovered that immersing in a place like that is quite different when you’re bringing with you your three young children — two of whom were born into circumstances that raise a lot of questions for them that are tough (tough!) to grapple with in a place like the depths of rural Mexico. We talked a lot, a lot, a lot. And Braydon and I decided that it will be quite a while before we bring the boys back to their birthplace of Haiti. They aren’t nearly ready yet, we discovered, and that is o.k. We can wait. And we can keep talking and talking and talking.
But we spent most of our time at our little oasis of a house on the beach. And in our backyard local guys would sometimes play soccer in the evenings.
And Meera was LOVING vacation!
Another major pastime: boogie boarding! Kyle’s favorite new sport.
And coconut collecting!
And shell collecting!
And, of course, eating!!! Amazing, AUTHENTIC (and I mean, really authentic), true-blue Mexican Yucatan eating. Ceviche. Octopus. Shrimp. Fish. Guacamole. Grilled Tacos. Beans. Salted Pineapple. Cactus Salad. Lime Soup. Plantains. Mango Mousse. and the creme de la creme…
Chiles en Nogada!
And, of course, quesadillas, quesadillas, tortillas, tortillas, tortillas!
We did something that we’ve never done before– we hired a local woman to cook for us a couple of nights. We specifically requested that she make fresh, local, the real-deal food. And she did. She came to the house, bearing market-fresh groceries, and Chef Sandra went all out for us. And to top it off, she taught Braydon how to make the perfect margarita. The Perfect Margarita. Life will never be the same again!
But the highlight was, for sure, the beach. The deserted, beautiful, natural beach. Just us. For six sleeps…
bonding…
and rejuvinating with some R & R, some sand & sun, some true downtime (there was nothing to do but lay low and take it all in).
But there were some “lows” to the Gulf-Coast-Side of our trip. The local people burned their trash, as all people in their situations do (i.e., little infrastructure, lack of trash processing, no garbage trucks [imagine K & O’s surprise at that!– no garbage trucks?!!!]). They’d burn the trash at sunrise. We had one air-conditioned room that we all slept in (four in the bed, and M in her port-a-crib). And when we woke up and opened that bedroom door, we were blasted with thick smokey air. It stuck around until the wind picked up off the ocean around noon. And then… boy did the wind pick up. Another “low” was that after about 3:00 pm we couldn’t be on the beach because of whipping sand. And by 5:00 we had to be inside because of howling wind. And then there was the total isolation. We got out and about a bit, and we got a lot out of it, but we have never spent so much time alone. And four out of the five of us, it turns out, are true extroverts (getting our energy from social interaction). Guess which 4?– all of us except Braydon. And Braydon’s not really happy unless the rest of us are happy. Six night was enough. So, we were all o.k. with packing up and heading off to the next part of the trip… driving the five hours back across the Yucatan…
…to the Caribbean side. Meera’s first look at the Caribbean– her brothers’ sea roots.
But this was nothing like any Caribbean trip we’ve taken before. This was a mega-all-inclusive-RESORT. Resort with a capital ‘R’. The Barcelo Maya Colonial Beach on the Riviera Maya. Waterslides, swim-up-bars, all-you-can-eat Buffets, and all.
And, the best part: the mega pools.
A bunch of years ago, before the boys came home, Braydon and I had sort of vowed to quit all-inclusives. But now we have a new found appreciation for them. It was a true vacation for our young family. It made everything so easy breezy. And it allowed us to really focus on simply having a ton of fun together. Which is what we did. Three nights and four days of nothing but fun. Snorkeling, pool-swimming, Caribbean beach loving, cerveza drinking, ice cream eating, laughing and loving-life fun in the sun. Seriously, it was great. It was not the “real Mexico.” But it was absolutely great for what it was. And so, at the end of the 10 day get-away, we had had two trips in one: a true Mexican immersion experience, and a Caribbean resort vacation. And we got so much out of each, and soo soooooooooo much out of both.
By the end of the trip we were ready to head back to our reality, and get set to celebrate the 1st birthday of our little love bug, travel bug, happy-happy, ocean-and-pool-loving, smiley-bundle-of “que linda! que contenta! que gordita!” Little Miss.
Dear Our Dear Blog Reader Jenn,
I’ve never even met you in real life, but one year ago you were helping me with info about natural labor and delivery. And today, a year later, I can officially announce that you are the proud winner of the “Guess Where We Were” contest! We were in Mexico. Just south of Playa del Carmen for the second part of our trip. The first part was on the Gulf side of the Yucatan. You’re a real winner in our book! 😉
Heather
We are back from a 10-day vacation. Just got back, very late Tuesday night (very late!). It will take me forever to sort through all the 736 photos we took (yes, 736… are we snap happy or what?!)… and I know my mom wants photos! 😉 So, to appease my mom, and to prolong my blog hiatus just a little longer (I’m not feeling ready to start real blogging again quite yet)… here’s the game—
Where In The World Were The Johnson-McCormicks???!
Can you guess?
If you know (cuz you know us in real life), then you’re automatically disqualified. But for all other readers (if we still have any readers after such a long blog break)… the game is on! Over the next few days, while I’m sorting through the photos, I’ll post some here. You gotta guess where we were.
Winner, or winners, win nothing. But, like we’re fond of saying to K & O lately, “it isn’t about winning or losing, it is about the fun of playing” (!)
Just 1 hint: we were in one country the whole time, but spent the first part of the trip in one place and the second part in another. Can you guess where we were?!
Leave comments below.
In the meantime, Mom, and all of you out there who check in on us through this blog, — hope you like these photos!
[as always, click to enlarge]
Recent comments