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The little things

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Maybe it’s twins, maybe it’s just Heather, but wow is she incredibly well prepared. Whenever you turn around, what ever you need is there. But it’s also more than that.

Today, we were in the car with K&O coming home from Target where we had done a massive diaper & wipe run to restock supplies. It was dark, around 5:30 and the boys were getting a little hungry. Kyle spoke up “Mommy, what’s in your bag?” He repeated the question several times until Heather figured out that he meant the glove compartment.

Owen then chimed in, “I want Goldfish”. Heather’s response: “Ok baby, here are some goldfish for you.” Wait – where did that come from? She pulls a ziplock of Goldfish out of the glove compartment and hands them to him.

Kyle says, “I want bananas.” Heather replies, I only have banana chips baby, do you want those?” And hands him the banana chips. Huh? Wait – did he know that and was asking because he knew, or she got lucky?

I don’t know, but this happens all the time. From a diaper that happens to be on hand at the right time (like an accident in the store), to an extra set of clothes for when that diaper wasn’t fast enough, to a sippy cup with the right juice, to a hat when it’s cold.

But here is the real kicker:
1. Organic, no sugar added banana chips
2. Whole grain Goldfish
3. 100% juice, JuicyJuice
4. Some of the coolest clothes any one can wear (I wish I had half their style)
5. Preemptive readiness for any situation

Healing the "Primal Wound"?

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After lunch on Saturday Kyle was sleepy and fussy. I scooped him up and carried him into the family room. With my little boy sprawled out on our couch and sucking his thumb, I patted his back gently, whispered sweet things into his baby boy ear, and stroked his soft forehead until he fell asleep. I watched Kyle, as he was lying there so peacefully in the afternoon sun, and I couldn’t stop thinking about it: “The Primal Wound.” [If you’re unfamiliar, click here for some background on this.] A bit later Braydon carried Kyle, asleep, up to his own bed while I brought Owen to his bedroom. As I held Owen tightly “like a little baby” (his request: “Mommy, hold me like a little baby?”), and rocked him to sleep in the rocking chair, I was thinking about it again: “The Primal Wound” — Can I heal it? Can I soothe it? Can I help ease that ache that might be (probably is) deep in my little boys’ souls?

The general idea of Nancy Verrier’s ‘primal wound theory’ is that all adoptees — whether adopted in infancy or late in childhood — experience extreme trauma as a result of their birthmother separation/relinquishment. Verrier’s basic stance is that adoptive parents can help to heal this “primal wound” in their children through empathy and compassion (and primarily through not denying its existence). There is a lot of controversy about this in the adoption world. And I’m not sure where I stand on it (specifically, I’m not sure if I 100% believe that all adoptees have this so-called “primal wound”/separation trauma)… but I can tell you this: rarely does a month or week or even day go by that I don’t think about what my boys have gone through. I cannot speak for other families, and I cannot speak for Kyle and Owen, but I can say that from my own pespective — in my heart — I believe that my babies have experienced a basic (Verrier can call it “primal”) trauma. I don’t for a second deny that is their reality, or forget that.

I remember thinking about it a lot when we first brought our babies home. They were eight months old and in rough shape. I remember regularly sobbing at their cribsides as I watched them sleep. I could barely contain my excitement and relief and joy with the fact that they were finally here, safe in my home, real breathing alive little human lives. Yet at the same time I felt such anguish for them, such grief, such deep sorrow, for what they had gone through in their tiny little lives. Although we had only spent one week there, I had seen enough in Haiti to have an idea of the kinds of traumas my boys had suffered. I had a deep mournful pain in my belly; an intense sense of grief for them; a fissure in my soul. I can remember feeling incredibly strong as Braydon and I would hold it together enough to rock our babies as they’d wail in the night. I didn’t know before then how strong we (each of us individually, and us as a pair) really were. I remember Braydon watching me, and me watching Braydon, in the middle of the night as we’d each take turns sitting on the floor with a partially-broken-baby in our arms rocking forward-and-backward as we whispered, “we know, we know, we saw it, we saw it, we’re so sorry you had to live through that, we wanted to get you sooner, we are so sorry it took us so long to get to you, we are here now, we are here now, its o.k., its o.k., let it out, let it out, tell us all about it, we’re listening, tell us all about it, we’re listening, tell us what you have lived through.” The baby would cry and cry and cry. We’d finally get one to sleep and then the other would start — that grieving, yearning, soul-wrenching depth-of-night wailing — and we’d take turns with the rocking and soul-soothing and empathetic baby-whispering. With time some of those feelings have mellowed (for all four of us), I think. But from time to time those deep feelings flood back.

Saturday afternoon, as I watched Kyle and Owen drift off to sleep, those feelings were flooding me. Mostly I think about what it must have been like for them, and what it is like for them, and what it will be like for them. But I also think a lot about my relationship with them and with that “primal wound” that may very well lie deep within each of my children. I think about whether I can pour enough love salve into those deep cuts so ease their pain. I think about if it is possible for a mother to connect soul-to-soul so soulfully with her child that she can help him transcend his original trauma. I think about what it must be like to have your first mother — the woman who you grew inside — relinquish you at birth, even if for the most legitimate reasons. I think about what it must be like to spend your first months in an orphanage in Haiti. I know I can never make up for it. I know I can never fix it. I know I can never change it. But I wonder if it is possible for me to pull some of the ache out of their hearts, to tug the insecurity out of their little minds, to absorb some of their anguish for them so that some of it can soak away. I wonder if my babies will ever be able to comprehend that in my own heart and soul and mind I love them and care for them and desperately want them more than 100,000 other womens’ love and care and want combined; that in my own heart and soul and mind I love and care and desperately want them more than enough to make up for any single birthmother’s original heart-wrenching necessity to relinquish, enough for any single orphanage’s utter deprivation, enough for any single country’s desperate impoverishment. I wonder: Can I heal the “primal wound”? I think about this when I rock them in the darkness, and hold them in their sickness, and watch their delight in daily living. I think about this when I consider their past, and when I am fully present in the moment, and when I ponder our family’s future.

In our first few months home with the boys we performed a little ritual for them daily. Each morning when we’d go to get them out of their cribs we’d enter the room with incredible gusto — we’d bound in visibly exuberant and cheerful (jumping up and down, arms waving, huge smiles): “Good Morning Boys! Oh Owen! Our baby! We’re sooooo happy to see you! Kyle, you’re our baby! We are so glad you’re awake!” And we’d lift them out of their cribs smiling brightly and looking them in the eyes. Then we’d immediately walk to the windows and pull up the shades. No matter what the day (rain, snow, sun, fog), I’d enthusiastically announce the same thing while looking out the window with them: “It’s a BEAUTIFUL day for Kyle and Owen!!!” They were eight months old, they’d never heard english, they barely knew us… but I wanted them to sense it: to sense that it was all for them. I wanted them to know that we were so happy to see them, that we were so glad that they were alive, that we desperately wanted them. Still this little ritual is performed in our home each day. From time to time now we’re in a rush, or we just simply forget, and the boys remind us: “Open window Mama!” And I pull the shade and say it: “It is a BEAUTIFUL day for Kyle and Owen!!!”… and they grin ear to ear — a just-waking-up-groggy-barely-alert-baby-grin. It doesn’t mean that their wounds are all healed. It doesn’t mean that their traumas are erased. It doesn’t mean that they will ever truly know how much I love them or care for them or desperately want them… but it is a little reminder that home can heal.

I do not believe that love conquers all. I do not believe that love solves all problems. I do not believe that with enough love all will be o.k. I do, however, believe that home can heal. There is healing in home. I’m unsure if “the primal wound” really exists. And I’m unsure of whether it can ever truly be healed. But in these moments of my daily parenting I am sure that there is no mother on earth who has ever loved or cared for or desperately wanted her child more than I love and care for and desperately want mine. And in the long run of the life of a child, that has to count for something. We have to believe that. If we didn’t believe that, we wouldn’t be the family that we are.

Milestone: First Movie in the Theater

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It was a rainy Sunday today. We decided to take the boys to see Charlotte’s Web — their first “real” movie — like, in the theater! This was a big day for us… one that Braydon and I have looked forward to for a long while. The boys did not disappoint! They were true movie lovers. Mesmorized by the huge big screen, sat on our laps perfectly the entire time, ate popcorn and drank lemonade like pro’s. Lovey Lion and Sheep and Hunny Bunny got to go with us too. Here we are in the lobby of the movie theater:

Waters-JohnsonMcCormick January Dinner

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Dinner Table
Kyle, Owen, Manny in Wagon
(note that Owen is sweetly kissing Manny’s head & Kyle is as happy as any little boy could possibly be!)

Tonight was our January Waters-JohnsonMcCormick Family Dinner. For the history of this click here. It was a great night for our families, as usual. :)

Friday is Trash Day

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{NOTE: Due to a Blogger.com complication, this post says that Heather wrote it, but actually it is posted by Braydon}

Regular readers know there is a whole history to this whole garbage truck/trash guys thing (for example, click here & here & here).

This morning I was putting out a mess of boxes (we cleaned our basement last weekend and the boxes I had collected as “official box collector” had to be thrown out finally) when the BFI truck rolled into our neighborhood. The boys came scurrying out in their PJ’s to go see, and tore down to the end of the driveway.

By the time I got there, Owen was already chatting it up with the guy who throws the trash into the back. I encouraged O to do “cool” (where you hit your fist on the other person’s fist – also known as “pounding”) with him – which the guy loved – he was beaming and laughing while Owen hit his fist to the guy’s fist. Then Kyle came up and did the same thing. It was a riot.

Then the boys got the joy of all joys – watching him throw the trash into the back of the truck. “Papi – you see that throw in the truck? You see that?” And “wow! you see that?!?!” And jumping up and down when the compactor crushed the trash – “Papi, you see that trash truck?!?! wow – what’s that?” (in response to a cracking sound of trash being compacted).

The guys honked the horn as they drove off, capping the whole glorious experience in a meaningful “hooooonk!” that K&O loved. We carried the trash can back down and had to have it go “bump bump” off the end of the drive way.

When we were done, we dusted our hands off and said “all done!” Another Friday trash run completed successfully.

First Snow of the Season

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We’ve been having a very mild winter season… which made the First Snow of the Season all the more exciting. Even though it was just a dusting, and even though it melted almost immediately, K & O were entranced with the snow as it fell. I forgot to post these on Wednesday, the day they were taken.

"What’s Your Name?" "Claire."

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Photos from dinner at Carrabba’s
This post is really about two things: 1) eating out in a restaurant with Kyle and Owen last night, and 2) a funny “quote of the day” by Owen…

Last night, as a little token of our gratitude for all she’s done for us in the past week, we took my mother out for dinner at one of her (and our) favorite family-friendly/great-food-yet-a-chain-restaurants: Carrabba’s. Like any three sane adults would be, we were somewhat (o.k., I admit it- VERY) nervous about taking our twin two year old boys to a “real” sit-down restaurant. Yes, we eat out with them quite a lot… but usually at places like Panera or Baja or McDonalds (click here to see a post I wrote in October about eating out with twin two year olds). It is hard to explain it until you’ve actually done it, but just trust me on this one: bringing K & O out to eat is nerve-wracking at best. Let’s face it, even eating a meal with them at home (even our own home) can be nerve-wracking. Cups and silverware go flying (sometimes a genuine “accident” sometimes *not* so much!), they sing loudly, they “organize” their food in little piles all over the table, they like to joke around with each other and their other table-mates in all sorts of ways, they wiggle, they squirm, they burp a lot, they slurp, they get frustrated with spoons so they use their hands and then suddenly need to hug you tight with foodstuff all over their hands and faces and clothes (so now it is all over you too), they eat fast, they eat slow, sometimes they decide they don’t want to eat at all, if you’re not watching closely enough they’ll try to “paint” with their yogurt or milk or soup (or whatever!), they ask constantly for ice-cream (Owen) and Fig Newtons (Kyle) and vitamins (both of ’em), they laugh wildly, they have very active imaginations (“Hey! I know! You see this bowl?! This bowl is my motorboat— you hear this loud motorboat’s motor? Hey! STOP carrots! You have a red light carrots! O.k., carrots! Light is green carrots! Go carrots! Go in my mouth now carrots! Yay carrots! Hey! You see this fork? This fork is my chainsaw! Watch me start my chainsaw motor! Rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr! Watch me cut my avacado with this chainsaw!”) Etc., Etc., Etc. Need I say more???
Anywhoooo………
Last night we really wanted to take my mother out to Carrabba’s. We had never taken the boys there, but my mom loves their pastas (as do we), and we wanted to at least try to do something nice for her (since god knows she’s done so many nice things for us in the past week).

We arrived at 6:00 and were told it would be a 30 minute wait. My mother’s immediate reaction was we should leave. That really says something about my mother: she knows our boys very well. Also, given that she was at the end of a whole week with them, she was justly tired and understandably frazzled — but not deliriously so (as Braydon and I are 24×7). She had the presence of mind to at least know that a 30 minute wait was unreasonable for our little party of five, and that we should just get out of there quickly while we still could (the boys even still had their coats on!). She actually admitted later that when she heard “thirty minute wait” she had thought “let’s find a McDonalds.” But Braydon and I were insistent: “No! We really want to take you out to dinner! No! We are going to wait for a table!” She looked at us like we were crazy, and then she manned her station in the waiting area with Owen on her lap.
By some miracle we got through the entire 1/2 hour long wait totally beautifully. Our boys were like poster-children for eating out with toddlers. They were quiet, calm, well-behaved. Kyle just wanted to suck his thumb and be held by me, cuddling and snuggling the entire time (surely to the envy of most women in the place, who if given the chance would probably pay good money to get that kind of affection from a beautiful young child at the end of the day! – I know I definately would if I didn’t get it for free!). And Owen — the little extravert that he is — just hung out with MorMor and Papi and proceeded to enchant all of the other guests waiting for tables. Us three adults were thrilled and shocked! Things only continued to go wonderfully. I’ll just cut to the chase here: We got our booth and two booster seats, we had a full civilized meal –drinks (chocolate milk for the under-3 crowd, sangria for the 3-and-over crowd), appetizers (the best calamari), salads (adults only – the boys wanted nothing to do with it), and entrees (just for the record: K & O loved their penne with alfredo and fresh romano) — the boys were absolutely perfect angels, and all five of us had a delightful evening. Shocker of all shockers! We were most amazed. [Not quite inspired enough to try it again tonight, but maybe we’ll take them to Carrabba’s again sometime in the not-too-distant-future… which, honestly, is a lot more than any of us thought we’d be saying the day after!]

After a lovely dinner experience we were all getting up to leave. My mother and Braydon and Kyle were in the lead; I had Owen. I was a little distracted because I was trying to check our booth to make sure we hadn’t left any hats or mittens behind… and before I can stop him, Owen has walked right up to the people at the table closest to ours and he’s gently tapping the man on the arm. The man turns to him. Owen, in the sweetest cutest way imaginable, says, “What’s your name?” As I’m just getting close enough to snatch Owen up into my arms (to try to restrain my little social butterfly just a bit), the man says, with a big grin, “James.” Owen smiles widely, so pleased with himself, then looks the woman straight in the eye, and so sweetly and pointedly says, “What’s your name?” She says, “Angela. What’s your name?” And Owen, again, so pleased with himself, says, “I’m Owen.” Well, that was it. My boy was in his groove. And there was no stopping him. In order to avoid a major meltdown/tantrum the only way to get out of that restaurant was to let him do his thing — he proceeded to ask every single person we passed, “What’s your name?” To which every single person we passed responded (with huge grins and delighted giggles) by kindly stating their name. Many also added on the polite ending: “And what’s your name?” To which Owen would sweetly and proudly state, “I’m Owen” each and every time. Well, suffice it to say, he had charmed half the restaurant (including half the waitstaff, the bartenders, and the hostesses) by the time we got through the door. A couple of people in the bar area actually got up from their barstools and purposefully walked over to the door just to be able to position themselves firmly in Owen’s path in order to receive one of his adorable, “What’s your name?”‘s. Owen, of course, happily obliged them. Since my mom and Braydon and Kyle were ahead of us, they had all been out of the restaurant long before Owen and I emerged onto the sidewalk. As we walked toward the car, with Owen in my arms, I was proudly explaining to my mother how gosh darn CUTE my boy had just been. I said, “Owen, say it to MorMor.” And Owen, cute as a button, says — looking my mother right in the eyes — “What’s your name?” And my mom of course responded, “MorMor!” I said, “Mom, now ask him his name!” So my mom says to Owen, “What’s your name?” … and Owen … rather than respond right back “I’m Owen” as he just had about 20 times in the restaurant, just sits there, paused, silently thinking to himself. After a long silent pause, Owen looks my mom right in the eye and responds firmly: “Claire.”
?????!!!!!!! Who the heck is Claire?! Not one person in that restaurant had said the name Claire?! Not one person at daycare all day was named Claire?! We have no friends named Claire?! ?????!!!!! My mom and I cracked up in hysterics over Owen’s antics for about the zillionth time in the past week.

Good behavior from my twin two year old boys in restaurants is worth a pretty penny!
Owen’s sweet sociability charming-the-socks-off all of our fellow diners is worth even more!
But… Owen’s hysterical little sense of humor: PRICELESS.

That boy is quite the character!

Own house

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This morning we all got up a little late (see post below), which was nice; I had spent 4AM-7AM on the floor in Kyle’s room since he awoke in the night and couldn’t get back to sleep; poor little guy.

We were sitting in the playroom this morning, I was on the couch with Kyle on my lap, Heather on the floor with Owen on her lap and MorMor in the chair. Kyle looked up and said “I want to sing songs; mommy, crying?” I had no idea what that meant, but Heather did. She started singing, mid-way through a song:

/the other night dear, when I lay sleeping/
/I dreamt I held you in my arms/
/when I awoke dear, I was mistaken/
/and I hung my head and I cried/

/You are my sunshine, my only sunshine/
/You make me happy, when skies are gray/
/You never know dear, how much I love you/
/Please don’t take my sunshine away…/

After she finished, Kyle said: “Mommy, what happened?” Owen was listening intently at this point. Heather replied: “That mommy, while she was waiting and her babies were in the orphanage in Haiti, she had a dream. She dreamt she was holding her babies in her arms. But when she awoke and they weren’t there, she was crying. Then Mama and Papi went on a big airplane up in the sky and went straight to the orphanage to get their babies”

Owen chimed in: “Kyle Owen Mama Papi went on a biiig airplane up in the sky.”

There was a pause, and Kyle said very thoughtfully:

“Kyle in own house now.”

Guest Blogger: MorMor

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MorMor & Owen in NYC on Saturday
MorMor & Kyle in NYC on Saturday

~ ~ ~
MorMor is guest blogging today! This is her second time posting to our blog (for her first time, click here!)… Today MorMor writes:
——————————————————————————

How can I describe the Johnson-McCormick household? In a word – LOVE. This family LOVES each other. Braydon very often gets tears in his eyes he’s so moved by how the boys act (like giving hugs to each other and sharing everything) or by what they say which almost always comes straight from the heart unprompted (many, many times a day we hear “I love you mommy, I love you Papi”, and I get to hear “I love you MorMor” too!). Heather’s sweet talk and cuddles with each of them warms your heart, by example these boys know how to feel and express love.


A few things from my trip here this time are:

  • Hearing the boys remind each other to be “gentlemen”. Which means no screaming at the table, no throwing food, etc. which in this house is a miracle if any one of us makes it through a meal in clean clothes!
  • Watching the boys march (and I mean a stomping march) through the house with Owen blowing a huge horn with his cheeks puffed up just like Louis Armstrong, and with Kyle playing his beloved trumpet.
  • Waking up to one of the twins coming into my room and saying “Get up MorMor” and being very excited myself because I got to sleep until almost 8 am – YES, 8 am! The boys are totally off schedule this week with Heather on semester break and working from home. So they get to go to bed a little later and sleep in. This is really nice for me because when I’m with my granddaughter, Sadie, she can often get up and be ready to play as early as 5:30 am!
  • Hearing “No, I cannnnnn’t”……… they both say this when they don’t want something. No I can’t stop playing to get in the car to go somewhere, no I can’t have milk in my cereal, no I can’t go poops on the potty (Kyle), no I can’t stop playing and get ready for bed (Owen). And it’s said in all sincerity, with no temper tantrums or fussing, just the plain truth! No I cannnnnn’t!
  • Watching them talk to each other when they don’t know we are observing them. Kyle will say “Owen chainsaws” and then they both switch toys to the chainsaws and begin playing (always within inches of each other). Or Owen will say “Kyle, wannnna go on the bump, bump slide?” and they do. It seems like they always oblige each others request. Twin activity is amazing to watch.
  • “How about……………… ice cream?” About half way through every meal Owen will say it. And he says it with his hands out, palms up like he’s really just had a unique thought that we all will want to do! Too cute!

It’s been a great visit; I leave tomorrow but am making plans to come at the end of February. I love being here and can’t go too long between visits. I love these little guys so much. Who ever thinks it’s biology that makes a love bond between parents and kids or grandparents and kids is so wrong. I often hear “She’s MY MorMor” and they point at me with big smiles. Nothing can be better.

"Nope!"

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K&O have really taken to hide & seek. Which means that I count to ten (sitting on the stair), while they go and hide together. Then I call out “10! Here I come, ready or not, I’m going to find you!” and go find them. I go searching around and pretend to not see them, despite their giggling and squirming. When I don’t see them, I look in a spot and say “Nope!” and do that until I run out of spots where they are not. Sometimes they can’t stand it anylonger and say “Here I am!!!”

But when I do “find” them, we all scream like crazy men and I grab them, pick them both up and tickle them – lots of laughter all the way around.

Tonight, when it was my turn to hide, I hear “10! ‘EreI come, re’ee or not! I’m uh uh ghona finooo! And then as I hear them looking for me (I was around the other side of the couch), I hear “Mama?!? Where’s Papi?!?” and then… “Nope!” “Nope!”

I laughed and they found me!