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BAMBINOS

The Big Bounce Birthday Bash of 2014! (1 of 2)

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  • Number of Guests: 137
  • Cakes: 3
  • Total Birthday Candles: 26
  • Bounce Houses: 2
  • Pinatas: 3
  • Bouncy Balls: 300
  • Balloons: 90
  • Gallons of Rum Punch Consumed: 6
  • Faces Painted: many
  • Requests for Balloon Figures Granted: loads
  • Fun Had: much
  • Memories Made: unquantifiable

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Every year I go crazy with birthday party planning for the bambinos. As with most things I do, if I’m going to do it, I’m going to do it all the way. The birthday parties are big, even for me, and I absolutely adore the entire process of throwing these shindigs (Kyle and Owen’s birthday parties have a huge history (backstory here); and of course Meera’s do too (remember the Fancy Pink Tea Party when she turned 3?!?!). This year, breaking with tradition, we decided to do something different and throw one huge party for all three of our May-birthday-bambinos. Kyle and Owen and Meera were thrilled with this idea (they all agreed, “the bigger the better!”), and I was too (planning one is easier than planning two!). So we went for it. As usual, I went all out.

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My parents came to help, as they always do (thank God for them! and thank them for putting in the hard work and for putting up with my crazy-birthday-party-nonesense!). Whatever happens down the road of life, one of the fondest memories I will always remember are those nights-before-the-birthday-parties, having drinks and blowing up balloons with my fabulous parents.

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The morning of the big bash, the bambinos were ready to party! In anticipation of the big event we had shopped so that they could each pick out a brand new outfit just for the occasion (that has become an annual tradition for us). They felt like a million bucks, and I think that is a good thing. It is good, every once in a while, to feel like a rockstar; like the world is your oyster; like your mom adores you in a way that defies your imagination; like your whole community is coming together to celebrate nothing but you — just you — and you’re the grand star of the show, the center of attention, the coolest kid around; the reason for the celebration, the life of the party. You definitely wouldn’t want a kid to feel that way too often (we do have to stay grounded), but… once a year?… well, that’s fine (actually, good) by me!

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Soon, our guests started to arrive, and total complete happy chaos ensued! The next three hours were some of the best three hours of the bambinos’ lives. Bouncy houses, face painting, custom-made-balloon-art, and unlimited popcorn and punch! I mean, really, what’s not to love about that?!?!!!

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(for post 2 of 2, click here)

The Big Bounce Birthday Bash of 2014! (2 of 2)

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We sang “Happy Birthday To You” three times. Three wishes were made. Three sets of candles were blown out. It was “strawberry shortcake cake” all around (vanilla cake, with fresh strawberries in the center, and whipped cream “frosting” — thank you Lehigh Catering!)

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By the end of the afternoon we had three overdone, overstimulated, overexposed bambinos and one completely tired puppy! This is the telltale sign of a good party: pure and utter exhaustion! There were no goody bags or party favors at this party (unless you count the bouncy balls that poured out of the pinatas)… but instead, we gave a gift to each and every parent: an early bedtime that night for every kid who was at that bash — kids who were way too tired to put up a bedtime battle (you wouldn’t believe how many thank-you emails I received from grateful parents! now that’s the party favor every parent wants!).

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Most importantly, I had three bambinos who went to bed that night grateful, appreciative (I wouldn’t do this if they weren’t), thrilled-beyond-belief with their party, and happy. Deep in their souls I am 100% certain they felt special and adored. I am not the world’s greatest mother, I screw up plenty, and I do lots of stuff badly, but once a year I do something really, really right. And it is moments like this that let me know that is the truth:

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There is no doubt that The Big Bounce Birthday Bash of 2014 will go down in our family history as one of our best birthday parties ever.

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Aunt Sarah and Uncle Jon

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Kyle, Michael, Meera, Sarah, Owen, Jon

It is a pathetically quiet Friday night on campus. We’re the only ones here! The students have long gone, and we’re so over the peace and quiet, already so ready for them to come back! We miss all of the Sayre students so much. But a few we miss terribly.

Tonight I’m going through the birthday party photos from last week (big post on that soon to come!). This one almost made me cry when I saw it. It is pure love that we have for these three. Sarah was our Head Gryphon* our 1st year on campus (and we got to know and love her boyfriend Michael very well too). And Jon was our Head Gryphon this — our 2nd — year (his girlfriend Marissa we also adore, but she couldn’t make it to the bday party). We couldn’t invite a whole slew of students/alum, so we had to limit it to just these very special ones. And so they were invited, and they came, and they partied down with the bambinos like only they can. And they continue to amaze me with the awesomeness of just who they are.

To say that we absolutely love these three is an absolute understatement. Sarah and Jon are more like the bambinos’ aunt and uncle than like family friends. They go way beyond simply people who used to be our Head Gryphons. They will ALWAYS hold a very special place in our hearts. And we look forward to many more celebrations with them in the years to come.

*Note for non-LU folks: Gryphon = RA

Meera Turns 6

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Today Meera Grace turned six years old. It seems that in a blink of an eye she went from being born, to being six. How could six years possibly have passed by so quickly?

This girl is all sweet surprises. She was a surprise from the start, unexpectedly and perfectly completing our family. And in six short years she’s packed in surprise after surprise after surprise. She’s made us pause, reconsider everything, and she’s changed us. For the better. A Girlie Girl to the Nth degree (who would have ever thought it?! — that we — Braydon and me — would have a pink-loving, dress-and-skirt-only-wearing, sit-quietly-for-hours-playing, all frills-all-the-time, stereotypical-in-so-many-ways-GIRL!). The way that she’s made us re-think everything we thought we knew is the biggest surprise of all. She fundamentally challenges us, and she foundationally shifts us — all with flair and fashion and a feathery lightness about her that makes her hard to not adore. She has taught me more than any other person on this planet ever has. She changes us, and we wind up better for it.

Meera is all sweetness and grace, yet a powerful willful challenger of the status quo. She’s keenly aware of all around her, yet easily enveloped in her own highly imaginative mind; she refuses to wear pants 99% of the time, yet is the fastest runner in her kindergarten class; she’s all sugar, yet can dish out the spice. We could not be more proud of who she is.

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As is our tradition, she got to choose dinner. She chose a Brazilian Steakhouse (churrascaria) restaurant that she loves. It was Classic Meera: dressed in pink, and wearing a skirt (of course), with perfectly matching shoes, carrying a handbag and a doll (a doll with matching outfit, no less), the girl chowed down on a ridiculously large amount of steak — the more rare (pink!!!!) the better — and she delighted in having her “6” candle placed atop a pile of mashed potatoes instead of on a cake. That’s our girl!

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For her birthday she wanted two things: 1) an American Girl doll, and 2) anything-and-everything Calico Critters. MorMor made sure she got #1. We went with MorMor and MorFar for our first-ever trip to an American Girl store, where Meera got to pick out her first official American Girl doll. So the Johnson-McCormicks have now officially entered that world (Kyle and Owen remarked, “Wow, this store is for Meera what Dicks Sporting Goods is for us!” Yes, precisely.). Meera picked out her doll, and about 100 items that Makayla (the name Meera chose for her) most definitely needed, and in the end Meera could not have been more pleased with the whole entire thing. American Girl Doll sidenote: I was surprised — as in, jaw-dropping shocked — as I watched Meera confidently and self-assuredly pick out her doll… a doll that was not pale skinned and straight-blonde-haired, as I would have expected… but instead a doll that would be the exact mixture of her and her brothers — a doll with light creamy brown skin and black curly hair — a doll that would be the look-alike of many black-white-biracial kids). In retrospect, of course, I should not have been surprised by it. But I was. Of course. Because my girl always surprises me.

Her end-of-the-bed present this morning was an embarrassingly large amount of Calico Critters anything-and-everything. We know her, and we know she’ll spend endless hours playing with those toys. So — surprisingly enough — we don’t even feel guilty about spoiling her with an over-abundance of everything she wanted.

Of course — surprise! surprise! — the real hit of the day was her brothers’ gifts. After all that American Girl and Calico Critters frenzy, it was her brothers’ gifts that really hit the sweet spot. Carefully chosen, Owen gave her a Barbie with hair she can comb-and-brush-and-spray-and-color-and-curl-and-straighten, and Kyle gave her a Tinkerbell that can really fly. Those boys know her. Nothing about her is a surprise to them. Nothing whatsoever. Which, is, yet again, another surprise to the three of them’s mother.

She chose mango-orange ‘push-up’ ice cream novelties for me to bring for her kindergarten class birthday treat at school. She didn’t want cupcakes because “all the kids bring cupcakes on their birthday.” So, she chose ice cream — her favorite food on earth. And she wanted me to read a book to them — which I did — and she chose one of her favorites, The Berenstain Bears’ and Too Much Birthday. And she, and her friends, all loved it.

She was a beaming and thrilled new 6-Year-Old today, and throughout the day she kissed and hugged me many, many times and whispered things that mothers dream of their children saying to them. Things like, “This is the best birthday ever!”; “Thank you Mommy!”; “You are the best mommy ever!”; “I am so glad I got you as my mommy!”; “You are the best mommy in the whole entire world!” etc. It is ridiculous how sweet and adorable and generous she is.

She is an abundance of riches and gifts to us. She is nothing we expected and everything we needed. She’s the icing on the cake, the butter in the mashed potatoes, the pink in the steak. She’s our girl and even though she’s six now, she’ll always be our baby.

Happy Birthday Meera Grace!

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Mother’s day for Mothers

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mothers day kidsMotherhood is one of those confusing areas of life that people work really hard to categorize in simple ways or at least describe in one sentence. Some people say motherhood is love.  Some say joy. Some say it’s scary. Some say it’s hard work. Some say it’s rich and full. Or exhausting. Or heartbreaking. Or exhilarating. Or infuriating. Or maybe it’s about not doing what your parents did, it’s about giving your kids the ability to fulfill their potential. And maybe it’s about just getting through day-today.

And of course, it actually defies any kind of real categorization, since I know I have heard Heather say all of these things at one time or another (and I am sure I’ve missed about a million different things she has said or thought or that I have observed).  Motherhood and mothering are all those things and so much more.

Mothers are the key to life. They are how we all come into the world. And what they do at that moment determines everything.

Meera sometimes is confused and asks if she was adopted.  But what she has articulated is that although Heather is her biological mother – in some kind of interesting distinction between becoming a mother and motherhood – Heather also adopted her. Meaning, although Heather is her mother biologically, Heather chose also to be Meera’s mother.

To me, as a man, who has no right to assume anything about being a mother and has no real insight into what it takes to be a mother, I can only really see one thing.  I see Heather choosing Motherhood every day.  Every moment of every day. She chooses to face every aspect of being a mother, at every moment.  That is huge.

Not every woman can choose to go down the path of motherhood – even if they give birth and become mothers. Not all women who choose Motherhood can give birth either. For those who can give birth and who can choose motherhood, I have such tremendous respect, admiration and appreciation.  For those mothers who give birth, but are unable embark on the road of motherhood, I have a different kind of respect, admiration and appreciation and profound humbleness. For those mothers who can’t give birth but choose motherhood, I have total admiration and respect.

In years past, as we would celebrate Mother’s day, I tried to guess what Heather would like for a gift and surprise her.  I often did the traditional American, upper-middle-class things: jewelry, brunch, flowers, fancy thing.  9 years later, I now know it’s just better to ask.

Mothers day Donation

Heather is not a “fancy things” kind of woman when it comes to Mother’s day.  This year she asked for three, very simple things:  1. a new watch band for a watch I gave her years ago (of course it got delayed)  2. a hike with a picnic with her family (we’re doing that today) and 3. a donation for mothers in Haiti.

The Livesay’s have put together something wonderful. It’s far more than just a way to honor a mother. It’s a way to help give mothers the ability to have a healthy birth and help them determine the best thing for their new babies.

Happy Mothers day

We donated to Heartline in Honor of Mother’s day, and if I may be so blunt, so should you.  Every mother deserves a healthy birth and the help they need to determine the best options for their babies.  There are lots of ways to give.  You can choose your own – the mechanism is not so important as just doing it.  We chose Heartline since we have a tie to Haiti.  You can see how the Livesay’s put it together here.

Now – with most things related to children and motherhood, stuff does not go smoothly.  I wanted to capture a beautiful picture of my kids holding a picture of our donation.  Last night I tried to take the photo and to call it a disaster would be a huge understatement.  Many tears were shed (by mother, father, and all children). There was yelling and frustration and anger and exasperation and resolutions on how to be better. We even decided to give up on taking the picture all together.  Meera’s response was this drawing of me taking a picture of the three kids.  It broke our hearts.

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So I took photo at the top of this post this morning.  It is my three beautiful children giving their mother the one thing she wanted.  A way to express the appreciation for mothers everywhere, the work they do, and the very difficult choices they have to make every day.  From our family to all mothers, thank you for the hard work you do and the choices you make.

And this is just a funny photo of my favorite mother on earth giving love to her dog.

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Happy mother’s day to all mothers. And a big happy mother’s day to my one-true love, Heather.

 

 

 

Photo of the Day: Happy Birthday/Frappuccino Week

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A few years ago I discovered that for one week each week in May — during precisely the week that is also Kyle and Owen’s birthday week — Starbucks has their annual “Frappuccino Happy Hour Week” (1/2-price-Frappuccinos between 3-5pm). The rest of the year we generally do not, ever, drink frappuccinos. So this week is an annual treat for us — and I always get a kick out of the fact that it happens to fall during K & O’s bday week. Kyle gets strawberries and cream; Owen and I get caramel crunch; Meera goes back and forth between vanilla and chocolate chip. We did it three times this week after school. $8 for 4 frappuccinos — you can’t go wrong! But by the end of the week we are so done with the sticky sweetness, and we are happy to wait another year for it to come again (today 2 out of the 4 of us didn’t even come close to finishing ours). Happy birthday; frappuccinos!

Kyle & Owen’s 10th Birthday

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  • The end-of-the-bed present was just what you wanted: a remote control airplane that could actually fly and that wouldn’t get wrecked within 2 minutes of you playing with it.
  • Your sister gave you a whole slew of balsa wood airplanes.
  • You were thrilled with your gifts!
  • We went to Dunkin’ Donuts on the way to school, which we’d never done before, ever.
  • Kids get to bring in a special birthday treat to celebrate with their class at school. We’ve always called this the “school birthday.” This year you chose your current favorite sweets — from Lehigh Catering (!) — blondie bars (Owen) and lemon bars (Kyle). I wasn’t there, but according to all reports these treats were a big hit!
  • Mommy and Papi picked you up from school so we could go straight to a nearby park to try out the airplane. It flew awesome! and it didn’t get wrecked!

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  • For the past many days you’d both been deliberating and debating what to choose for your birthday dinner. I’d have made you anything you wanted, or we could go to the restaurant of your choice. You really struggled with this decision this year; you just could’t figure out what you wanted.
  • But I knew, all along, what you’d really choose — if you had even thought it would be an option (but for obvious reasons — it is 90 miles away — you never thought of it as an option). So, in the car, after school pick-up, we announced, “You only live once! And you only turn ten once! We know what you’d choose for your birthday dinner if you could really have what you really want!” You both looked at us in total confusion. And then I said, “We’re going to Joe’s Shanghai!”
  • The look on your faces with that announcement were priceless. “We’re driving to Chinatown?” you said. You could not believe that your crazy parents were going to do this. Drive to NYC, on a school night, just to eat dinner at Joe’s Shanghai?!?!
  • But oh yes, we did that.
  • You were even more surprised when your crazy mother pulled out candles and a lighter, and turned your soup dumplings into a pseudo birthday cake with ten candles on top. It caused quite a commotion as the tiny, packed restaurant caught on to what was happening. The servers all gathered around, chuckling and whispering, thrilled and amazed at this development (many of these guys recognize you, as you’ve been going to Joe’s Shanghai since you were babies, and they LOVE to see the passion and enthusiasm with which you eat their dumplings). We sang Happy Birthday to You, along with most of the restaurant guests and servers. And then you made wishes, and blew out your candles, and proceeded to eat soup dumplings with gusto and flair.
  • We set a new family record: 6 baskets of soup dumplings! FYI: the two of you alone ate at least 4 of the six.
  • After Joe’s we walked down the street to get Chinese mantou (sweet buns, with condensed milk). We got them to go — for the car ride home.

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  • At home, we got Meera straight to bed… while you rode your bikes like little maniacs, a million miles an hour, in the pitch dark, enjoying the first night of having campus all to yourselves (students are gone for the summer; their move-out-deadline was 9:00 that morning).
  • We ended your 10-year-old-birthday on Sayre Lawn, with our annual birthday sky lanterns, and gratitude to your birthmother.
  • It was a beautiful, dark night. We watched the sky lanterns float up and away for a long, long time. Until we couldn’t see them anymore. And you were 100% sure that those sky lanterns went all the way to heaven.
  • You had an awesome birthday!
  • xoxoxoxo

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Ten Times Two: May 8, 2014

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Ten years ago today, in a medical clinic on the streets of Cite Soleil, in the city of Port au Prince, in the country of Haiti, on the island of Hispaniola, amongst the Greater Antilles, of the West Indies, deep in the Caribbean — two boys were born.

Their birthmother was a strong and courageous woman. She was beautiful in the most true sense of the word. Her face was full and round and there was gorgeous strength to be seen in it. And she overcame all odds and obstacles to deliver healthy twin babies. The fact that she did this within circumstances which make it an absolutely extraordinary, almost unexplainable, feat, is an enormous accomplishment.

And then, according to trustworthy sources, Yolene Badio did what she was determined to do: despite the gravity of everything that everyone knows about motherhood and pain, she let those babies go — an act of pure love and bravery. She knew she could not take care of them, and she wanted for them a better life. This isn’t a fairy tale line made up for the sake of protecting precious little hearts. This is the true story; the facts as we know them. She really did it, and she did it fully, and she did it selflessly. And we will, forevermore, be profoundly grateful for her acts of love and her brave commitment to the future of her boys.

Within 48 hours the two babies — beautiful brown-skinned boys, with big huge dark brown eyes, heads full of jet-black hair, hungry as can be, with miraculously strong and healthy bodies and minds — newborn infants with twenty fingers and twenty toes between them — these perfect beings with nothing, nothing, in the world but each other — these twin baby boys were in the care of a passionate Haitian man, the director of a Haitian orphanage, an orphanage scraping together every bit of a thing they could find and muster in order to keep young souls alive.

And then, according to trustworthy sources, Rock Cayo did what he was determined to do: despite desperate circumstances of profound deprivation, he made sure that those babies were kept alive, and he kept them as well as could be, and he made sure that they would be placed in what he believed would be the best family for them. He loved them like sons, and he was convinced, deep in his heart, that they were something very special. He was sure of himself, he was sure that these boys would become great Haitians, and he was sure that they would go on to do great things in this world. On those points he had clarity. And we will, forevermore, be profoundly grateful for his acts of love and his brave commitment to the future of his boys.

Within 9 months, after much waiting and too much missing, after too many near-misses and close-calls, after not enough food and not enough holding, after too little stimulation and too much yearning, those boys met their mama and papi. And that mama and papi already knew what was most important for that moment: the axis of their world had shifted, the center of their universe was now clear, and their whole lives had led up to that union.

And then, they did the most powerful thing they’d ever used their lives to do: despite the enormity and complexity of the situation, they took those babies on forevermore. Despite the heat rising from the pavement of Port au Prince, despite the endless bureaucracy of international adoption potholes and loopholes, despite the pain of loss and grief, and the debilitating guilt of privilege and power, they took those 8-month-old twin baby boys on an airplane and flew them to Miami. And we will, forevermore, be profoundly grateful to the country of Haiti, its people, its roots, trees, and branches, its resilience, and its many individuals who, in large and small ways, acted out of a sheer commitment to the future of our boys.

Almost ten years later I’m at a Little League game. I find myself holding a six-week-old baby of a poor, Dominican-American mama. And for some unknown reason she decides to tell me her fresh story. A story she hasn’t yet told, at all, to anyone. And she tells me of how she had planned to relinquish her baby, and she tells me of who she had picked to adopt him, and she tells me many details of her thoughts, feelings, worries, beliefs, hopes, and fears. And she talks for a very long time. And she tells me that six weeks ago, when her baby was born, she changed her mind, and she couldn’t go through with it, and she kept him and she devastated the dreams of the couple she had chosen. Her words are like a waterfall of a story, pouring down, and I feel like the steady rocks along the cliff, flooded by the cool crisp rushing water. I am there to hear her. And in her face I see the round full gorgeous beauty of Yolene. In her eyes I see the dark brown passionate clarity of Rock. In her body I see the whole of Hispaniola. I hug her and I thank her.

And it is only now that I am dizzy from the whole experience. Light headed, no longer the rocks under the waterfall, but now — instead — feeling weightless and airy and overcome by the enormous complexity of it all.

I know now, in ways I didn’t ten years ago, how intricate and arduous and fragile and precarious the web of adoption is. I know now what I could not have known then.

May 8th, 2014. We are at home in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. It is 5:50am and I am too excited to sleep. It feels like relief and pressure all swirled up together: they are ten. Double digits. A whole decade. The period of young childhood is over. A new era begins. We are here. I whisper to Braydon, “They are ten.” He whispers back: “Yes, they are ten.” We both know what this all means.

We hear them, and we know them inside-and-out so we know that what we hear is pure happy giddy joyfulness. They are the birthday boys and they come bounding in holding a large and expensive remote control airplane above their heads — it is their end-of-the-bed present; their birthday gift from their mama and papi. It is what they wanted. They are beyond delighted.

They stop for just a minute: “What time were we born?” Kyle asks, with Owen right there too — as curious for the answer as if he had himself asked it. “We’ll never know,” I say, as calmly and confidently as I can muster. Owen says, “But we know for sure that it was today, right? For sure, May 8th, right?” I say, “For sure. We know that for sure.” “Phew!” they say in unison. “Jinx!” they say in unison. “Double jinx!” they say in unison. And they crack up laughing, and they are now elbowing each other and jabbing at each other, and off and running they are, still with the plane gliding carefully over their heads.

They are boundless energy, all noise, big boys, Haitian through-and-through, dreadlocks bouncing, brown eyes beaming, sharp minds, strong bodies, resilient to their roots. They are gorgeous faces and passionate eyes and the whole of their story. They are Kyle and Owen. And they are their birthmother’s sons, their orphanage director’s pride, their root country’s hope, and ours forevermore.

We are grateful.

We surprise them with a trip to Dunkin’ Donuts before school. It is special because we’ve never, ever done this before: donuts before school. Their little sister wants to stand between them and the three of them are about as happy and joyous as anyone could ever imagine three kids to be. I only notice later, when I look at the picture, that you can see the “North Face” logo on the boys’ jackets. And somehow that changes the picture for me. Now I see in it more clearly what I know is the truth: the privilege we’ve given them, the power they can ride, the incredible opportunities we’re propelling them with. Despite the challenges they face and will, the layered foundation of power and privilege is there too. It is always there, but in the photo I see it more pronounced. It is a gift we are giving to everyone in their web and everyone in their story. It is a very small gift in comparison to what we’ve been given.

Theirs is a unique and complicated story. It is multi-faceted and multi-dimensional. It is hard to try to tell it because it is so rich. It can only be told in pieces and thin chapters. But on their tenth birthday, it seems, some of the story should be told. It is a story of loss and gain, and it a story of so much more.

Happy 10th birthday to the most incredible and inspiring two humans I’ve ever known. You are a shining light. And you make us all proud.

Love, mama

Photo of the Day: Fond Farewells

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The past few days have been bittersweet as we say goodbye to so many of our friends/neighbors/students who are, slowly but surely, finishing their exams and moving out of their Sayre apartments at a steady pace. Some of them are particularly hard to let go. Before moving onto campus, never would I have thought we’d get so attached, nor could I have predicted how heart-wrenching it would be to have to say goodbye each spring. Some of them will return to campus in the fall (including, luckily, all four of these awesome young women; four of our favorites from this year). Others will graduate and go on, out into the great big world. They are all fond farewells.

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Photo of the Day: Sunday – Go Kart Racing with the Petschs

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Shelli had a stroke of brilliance and decided we should all go go kart racing together. The big day was Sunday. Holy heck this was such a riot! The J-Ms and the Petschs had a blast at the racetrack! Meera was too young (in exchange for being a good sport, and cheering the rest of us on, she got compensated with the special honor of being the only kid who got to have ice cream). The rest of us — Zoe, Lori, Shelli, and Kyle, Owen, Braydon, and me — all got to try our hand at go kart racing. Crazy fun!

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