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We’re Back!!!

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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]


The 5th Birthday is Done

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Yesterday morning, before we left for Kyle and Owen’s “School Birthday,” as I was cutting up two large containers of strawberries to go with two sets of 24 cupcakes for two classrooms full of kids, I was reminded of how much more work it is to have twins. Now that we have Meera, and are experiencing life with a baby who is not a twin, my awareness of the twin-related-stuff has risen to a whole new level. Everything is just so much more with twins. More, literally. But more in a sort of figurative sense too. Since K & O arrived on the scene here I’ve always thought that twins are not just ‘times two,’ they are infinitely more than ‘times two.’ The whole of twinship is so much larger than the sum of the parts. I simply cannot imagine triplets or quadruplets, or — heaven help them! — Jon & Kate Plus 8 sorts of scenarios. I guess you do what you gotta do. And you do get used to it. But really, it is a lot. I go for long stretches of time now when I don’t really think too much about twin stuff. But then a day like yesterday comes along and I’m just sort of blown away, once again, at not just the fact that I have twins, but at all that is wrapped up with that. But today, all I can feel is relief that our 5th birthday for twin boys is finally over. I mean, the 5th birthday is a biggie to begin with (for the past five years I’ve been hearing parents talk about how big the 5th birthday is, and now I know!), but with twins — and larger-than-life twin boys at at that — well, it is all just kind of over the top. And yes, I take full responsibility for definitely doing it that way (it is just my nature; I do nothing half-way… especially my boys’ birthday!), but it is also just plain big, period. And now, after a week-long-birthday-marathon, it is finally done. Thank goodness because I don’t think that any of us could take it much longer. But amidst all the frenzy and hype and never-ending-excitement that was the 5th Birthday, there were moments of peace and quiet and reflection. This was the first year that K & O really fully totally got it (which is why, after all, the 5th birthday is so big for kids). They completely understand now that we celebrate birthdays to mark the annual date of a person’s birth. They also understand quite a lot about their own histories and birth stories. And in Waldorf schools, kindergarten birthdays (ages 5, 6, 7 or so), are deeply revered and during those years each child receives a very personal ceremony to honor and reflect upon the day of their birth. Kyle and Owen’s teachers did a truly magnificent job of telling their birth stories with both a sense of honesty and a sense of joy (not an easy task for a teacher with a situation like K & O’s). And Kyle and Owen handled it beautifully (which is a lot for a five year old: to have their closest peers truly hear about their stories of Haiti, adoption, loss, and gain). It was all so incredibly moving and brilliant and beautiful that I have a hard time putting words to it. But I will say this, the “School Birthdays” were the perfect way to end a crazy 5th-Birthday-week. And at the end of it all, I think the following little story not only epitomizes the 5th Birthday that we had, but also epitomizes why, for me, it is all worth it~~
We used the ‘5’ cake candles many times over the past week. Sticking them in leftover pieces of cake, in bowls of ice cream, and — on the morning of their actual birthday — in blueberry muffins. K & O have blown out those candles at least five times now and each time they’ve done it with gusto. They know to silently “make a wish” before blowing out the candles, and I’ve seen them stop and pause (clearly ‘wishing’) before blowing them out each and every time. But yesterday morning, for whatever reason, before blowing out the candles, they both said aloud the wish that they had been re-wishing each time they’ve been blowing out those candles for the past week. And hearing it made me pause and remember how much it is all worth it.
Kyle: “I wish that I can have this good family forever and ever.”
Owen: “I wish that I will have my beautiful brother for always.”

Blueberry Pancakes for Supper

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We’re smack in the middle of the Marathon Birthday Week. It feels like the never-ending birthday. Not to mention, it is also a crazy work week for Braydon and none other than Final Exam Week (grading, grading, grading, and wrap up the entire year) for Heather. Oh, and there is also the little detail of Meera now coming down with a runny nose/cold. And it has been raining for the past six days straight. Great. Life is just a tad too full here right now. We’re still trying to unwind from the Bigger Than Big Birthday Bash (not easy to unwind from something like that!), but making that even more challenging is that we sit in limbo because excitement is holding constant for two boys about to turn five on Friday. As they remind us daily, May 8 is their “Actual Birthday” and that is also their “School Birthday.” (which means “cupcakes for school” sits amongst about a zillion other items on my never-ending NEEDS TO GET DONE ASAP list). I feel like we’re in a crazy revved up airplane right now, just circling in the sky together in a small enclosed space, just waiting to land. Tonight we made blueberry pancakes and bacon together and the five of us tried to get grounded at the mid-week point. It was successful; the evening was soothing and emotions seemed to stabilize just a bit… which is good. We need all the grounding we can get right now. On a separate note: Meera loved eating her first-ever blueberry pancakes tonight but we think that her oh-so-fair-skinned baby face-and-hands might now be permanently stained bluish/purplish (the photo of her above was taken after washing her up).

K & O’s Bigger Than Big Birthday Bash

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K & O’s 5th Birthday Party was on Sunday. It was crazy fun. Crazy, crazy fun! We started this annual birthday bash the year they turned two. I was struggling to get past my own sadness over the emotions of their birthday. Of course, I’m happier than happy that they were born– I mean, obviously— it isn’t hard to celebrate the day of their birth! But in the beginning it was a challenge for me, as an adoptive mom, to not think a lot about the fact that I wasn’t there on the day that they were born, and that they were in the very difficult circumstances that they were on that day. Their birthday was full of mixed emotions for me. For me, their first birthday was a real struggle. I was weepy and emotional and still grappling with trying to sort it all out in my own mind. But a year later, the year they were turning two, they were really coming into their own, and we made a deliberate and conscientious decision to use their birthday as a way to truly celebrate that they were thriving. We chose to do it up big time and throw a huge birthday bash for all of our friends. It was a turning point. It made their birthday pure fun. It isn’t that I don’t still think of the sadness and loss related to that day. I do still think about that. And at this point, Kyle and Owen know enough to think about that too. But we have found a way to make their birthday very, very special and absolutely full of genuine joy. I am proud that for Kyle and Owen we have created a very positive association with the day of their birth. I hope that in the years to come, as they understand their own histories at deeper and deeper levels, that the happiness that is associated with their birthday celebrations will carry them through some of the tough times that probably lie ahead as they put their own stories together more and more in their minds. So, for the time being, we go all out for their birthday. It is a bash. A double bash. We do it big. Really big! And this year it was bigger than big!!!

56 kids
47 adults
6 drummers
2 photographers
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= 111 people at the party

  • 1 dreary, drizzly, gray day
  • 111 very happy party goers
  • 2 birthday cakes frosted with big orange 5’s
  • 1 pinata filled with 250 lollipops
  • 3 big buckets full of juice boxes, chocolate milks, and “squeezy drinks”
  • 2 gallons of Rum and 9 jugs of juice and 12 limes for the adults-only rum punch
  • 1 huge moonbounce with a 2 lane slide inside
  • 2 minor injuries but, (amazingly), 0 serious injuries
  • 1 drumming troupe
  • 40 pair of drumsticks for kids to bang on 60 various buckets, cans, and containers
  • 75 party hats
  • 30 helium balloons, 40 regular balloons, 16 punching balloons
  • 1 gigantic pile of presents
  • 50 bags of Smartfood and 50 bags of Sunchips and 1 huge container of pretzels
  • 10 candles total on the 2 birthday cakes
  • 2 super duper best ever grandparents
  • 2 happier than happy parents
  • 1 party lovin’ baby
  • 2 could-not-be-happier, turning-5-year-old, gentlemen hosting the best birthday party ever

P.S. When we started throwing their Big Birthday Bash in 2006 I got one of my graduate students, a great amateur photographer, to come document it for us with photos. He did an awesome job of it (and Braydon and I could fully enjoy the party without having to worry about snapping photos). My student graduated and moved to NYC, but has come back each year to do the photography. This year he brought another photographer with him too. As soon as I get the photos from them I’ll post more to the blog. For now, he just sent me the one above as a little photographic appetizer. :)

Snapshots of a BIG Weekend

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MorMor and MorFar arrived Thursday afternoon for one of the biggest weekends of our year — Kyle and Owen’s Birthday Party Weekend. The boys have been counting down the sleeps to this day for weeks now. I do not think that their birthday could possibly be any bigger of a deal to them. And let’s face it, twin boys turning 5… really, it doesn’t get much bigger than that. And now, finally, the long anticipated time is upon us! My parents arriving Thursday marked the start of a week-long marathon birthday celebration! And, of course, amongst the birthday events we also have a ton of other stuff going on too. Miscellaneous snapshots of the past couple of days:

Friday, 8:12 am: MorFar and the boys are ready to head off to school. Papi left the house at 5:30am for a big work meeting in the city. So, special day!– the boys get to have MorFar drop them off at school! (obvious note: Red Sox)
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Friday, 10:41 am: MorMor and MorFar head out to Grandparents and Special Friends Day at River Valley Waldorf School… complete with picnic baskets and picnic blankets and coffee (!).
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Saturday, 7:04 am: The boys opened their birthday present from MorMor and MorFar at 7:00. Here they are riding it in the garage just minutes later! (click to enlarge)
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Saturday,9:02 am: While playing baseball in the driveway, Owen slammed one right into the Pitcher’s (a.k.a. MorFar’s) right eye. Nice. Nothing like getting a black eye from playing baseball with your four-year-old grandsons (yes, they’re still technically four until May 8, and yes, I’m in denial that they’re turning five). Here’s MorFar with ice on his eye. The ice and some ibuprofen served him well— the injury is now barely visible (we’re shocked because, based on how it looked when it first happened, we thought for sure this would be a really bad shiner).
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Saturday, 9:21 am: Meera is not yet walking independently, but is quickly becoming very mobile. She gets more and more mobile by the hour. The past couple days she’s made tremendous progress.
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Saturday, 12:56 pm: Little Miss, Braydon, and MorMor at MayFaire at the boys’ school.
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Saturday, 2:43 pm: MayFaire– Kyle picks a surprise from one of the Pocket Fairy’s pockets.
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Saturday, 6:41 pm: Watching the Kentucky Derby. Meera already in bed asleep.
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Saturday, 10:48 pm: Things are in good shape for tomorrow~~~
the Bigger Than Big 5th Birthday Bash.
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Filth…

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Ok, seriously… this is what Owen’s shirt looked like at the end of the day yesterday. The photo doesn’t even do it justice. And here’s the thing: When he put it on that morning, it was brand new. Yes, brand new. Never before been worn. According to Margie (who has been doing professional childcare for over 15 years, and has cared for literally hundreds of children), in her expert opinion, Owen is truly the messiest, muddiest, dirtiest, filthiest, hardiest player ever. In her words, “I’ve seen a lot of kids — boys especially — play hard. But these kids, Owen in particular, play real hard!” She says she’s never seen anything like it. It is also her opinion that our only hope for this shirt is to “soak it good and long in BLEACH.”

har·dy 1 (härd) adj.
har·di·er, – har·di·est
Being in robust and sturdy good health.

Random TidBits

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Just a few minutes ago we heard Meera crying loudly on the monitor. I ran up there to see what was going on (she had gone to bed at 6:30 and had been sound asleep since then). I found her in her crib ON HER BELLY!!!!!!!!!! She had rolled over!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! She rolled over! I’m pretty sure she was crying because she couldn’t figure out how to get back over onto her back to go back to sleep (since, after all, she has never slept in any position other than her back, ever). I rocked her back to sleep and then laid her down on her back again. But, anyhow… MEERA ROLLED OVER! Age 11 months + 1 day, Meera Grace finally rolled over! Photo below taken yesterday– I was working in my office at home when Margie started calling to me to come in to the kitchen quick to take a picture– Margie had never done that before. I ran in there wondering what was happening that warranted the photo op. And this is what I found (below). I wasn’t sure exactly what the big deal was, but Margie was standing there, unable to contain her delight, insisting that Meera looked “absolutely adorable” in this dress and sandals (that Margie had picked out and dressed her in), and she insisted that we get photos of it. So, there she is, Little Miss Roll Over, All Dressed Up With Nowhere To Go, In The Pink Dress and Sandals.

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Owen and Kyle continue to be obsessed — and I do mean obsessed — with airplanes and baseball. It is all baseball and all airplanes all the time. And I do mean, all the time. Photo below taken a couple of mornings ago at the breakfast table (Owen drinking his morning smoothie).

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Kyle and Owen are not obsessed with candy. They can take it or leave it. Don’t get me wrong, Owen loves chocolate. But he’s such a food snob when it comes to chocolate. Hersheys? Whatever. Godiva? Can’t resist it. The Easter Bunny left mostly the Hersheys variety. And then there’s Kyle… He just doesn’t like candy period. The Bunny did I fabulous job (in my own opinion) of finding all sorts of cute candies of the not-chocolate-variety. Lots of tempting little Easter Basket treats sure to excite our Ky Ky. But did Kyle like any of them? No. None of them. The photo below was taken a few days after Easter. Each of the boys laid out all of their Easter candy on a plate and sorted through it all, getting a good look and taste of it. They each ate a few pieces, then the plates were quickly abandoned. The plates-of-candy then proceeded to sit on the kitchen counter for the next 12 days. Untouched. Until finally, yesterday, I dumped all of the candy in the trash. Today neither of them even noticed that they were gone. Note to Easter Bunny for 2010: No need for candy in the baskets, maybe just one Godiva chocolate bunny.

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Peter and the Wolf has been big around here for quite awhile now. Braydon sits on the floor of the family room, turning the pages of the book, while the music plays along on the stereo, and the threesome sit there captivated. All three Johnson-McCormick bambinos love it.

Meera Grace 11 Months Old

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Today our baby girl is 11 months old. One year ago I was so pregnant and just two weeks from my due date with my doctors telling us it would be “any day now” and all of us consumed with full anticipation. And now she’s here, in all her glory, filling us all up with her larger-than-life-sweetness every single day. She has the four of us wrapped around her little finger, and she has us wrapped around her little toes and her little nose and her baby blues and her tushie too. Seriously, this girl has us hooked. In the second photo down from here, the one with Meera in the wagon, she’s wearing our favorite t-shirt. You can’t really read it in the photo, but it says, “President not Princess.” And man, oh man, does that say it all. This girl, at least for now, is no princess — forget the frills and fuss; she commands with her simple presence alone. She is all president. There is no quivering bottom lip here, if she doesn’t get what she wants she simply demands it (a shriek, a pounding of the fists, a kick of the legs) and within seconds she’s got her brothers (not to mention parents) running to her rescue. Anything she wants, she gets. And it is easy to do because this little president knows how to choose her battles. She chooses wisely, and she chooses rarely, but when she chooses — watch out — do not stand in her way… because if you do… you are standing in the way of her big brothers, and trust me, they don’t let anything stand in their way. Watch out world, here they come. And this threesome means business. I did not think it was possible for their bond to get tighter, but they continue to amaze me with their three-way-tie. They are tight as a knot right now. This month they’ve really come into their own with the development of new games that are now for three (instead of two). Peek-a-boo is the current game of choice. A napkin, a towel, a sweater, anything will do. It is always initiated by Little Miss. She covers her face and waits –silently and patiently– for someone to notice. Before long she’s got everyone playing along. K & O love it. They’ll say “where’s Meera?” 100 times without ever getting tired or bored, each time the question is asked with the most dramatic flair of sincerity possible. “Where’s Meera? Where’s Meera? Where’s Meera?” Then, eventually, she’ll pull the thing off her face to expose a huge grin and a big giggle. “Oh! There she is!!! There’s Meera!” and then it goes again. Again, and again, and again. Much of our dinner-time is spent doing this. Every night. But she’ll do it anywhere and everywhere that she might come across a piece of fabric that is suitable (on the sideline of the t-ball field, for example). Another dinner-time-routine that has become very popular around here is something I like to call “Ms. President Claps”; we’ll all be eating and talking and she’ll be sitting there quietly minding her own business as her brothers dominate the scene (as usual) and then suddenly, out of nowhere, one of us (usually Owen) will notice that Little Ms. Prez is calmly and confidently clapping like crazy and smiling ear-to-ear waiting for everyone to stop everything and look at her. Soon enough all five of us are sitting there, forks put down on the table, everyone clapping and smiling and looking at Meera. After she’s had her fill of our full attention she’ll go back to eating. And then we all continue on wherever we had left off. Speaking of dinner… she is quite the eater. She’s pretty much done with baby food. She sees the little glass jars and immediately shakes her head “no” until we take it out of her line of vision. She’ll still eat baby-food green beans and, her favorite, spinach-and-potatoes, but otherwise, forget it. Instead she wants the real thing. Current favorites: bean and cheese burritos, any kind of pasta, pizza, cheese sandwiches. This month she’s tried (and loved) miso soup, chicken korma, pad thai, cheese-and-refried-beans-quesadillas, tortellini, smoothies, french toast. She loves grapes and strawberries and kiwi fruit and cheerios and mozzarella cheese and, of course, bread of any variety. And we can now confirm, with total certainty, that she’s a salty girl, not sweet. Salty, salty, all the way. Little bits of salted pretzels, salted cashew nuts, salted tortilla chips… the saltier the better. Bring it on! This past month Meera has started a funny little quirk that neither of her brothers ever did when they were babies. She gets highly attached to a random object for a day (or two, or three) and will not let go of it. For 2-3 days there it was a little wooden toy maraca. She had to have it in her hand at all times. She ate with it, slept with it, got her diaper changed with it. For like 60-70 hours! Another time it was a random rattle that she had not previously ever shown interest in. And those are just a couple of examples. She doesn’t do this all the time, but in the past month there have probably been 4-5 episodes of this. And she will scream if you try to take away whatever-the-object-of-the-moment is. She has also become very attached to Braydon this month. Now that she is fully bottle fed we’ve migrated over to Braydon, exclusively, doing the night feedings and handling any night wakings past midnight. This is something with did with the boys too, and we firmly believe that this is a major mechanism that promotes bonding with child-and-Papi. Since they are just so organically attached to Mama (for lots of reasons, including the fact that I simply spend more time with them), the night-duty is a way to foster and promote the deep bonding with Braydon. And in our family, it works. Really well. It worked extremely well with K & O (they still call out for Papi in the night when they wake for any reason), and in the past month we’ve seen it really start to take root with Meera. She is Papi’s Girl. And, of course, she’s Mommy’s Girl too—- she loves loves loves her Mama. Developmentally, she’s cruising along (literally and figuratively). She is big-time into standing up, holding on to anything she can find and moving along it (couches, tables, chairs, walls). She is very close to being able to pull herself up on her own now. She wants to stand– and only stand– all day every day. Still no crawling. Still has not rolled over (!). She’s talking up a storm. A quick sampling of a few of her new words this month: “kitty cat” (as opposed to simply ‘kitty’), “button” (2 syllables, clear as day), “bottle all done” (3 words as opposed to just 2), “fan” (that tough ‘ph’/’f’ sound followed quickly by the ‘nnnn’ sound— a linguistic act not easy to do when you’re not even 11 months old). This month she got two new teeth — which brings her to a grand total of 8 (four on top, four on bottom) after lots of drooling and chewing. And she had her first lousy bought with a stomach flu (nasty!). But she handled that like she handles most everything — like a champ! She’s our girl. And she’s loving life. We cannot believe she’s almost a year old. We only have one more month to savor life with a baby-baby-under-1… and believe me, we’ll be savoring every minute of it.














Pat’s Lawnmower!

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Pat and Amy are our closest neighbors. They are not the closest in proximity (although they are close; their house is directly behind our’s, and our properties share a border in both of our back yards), but they are definitely our closest-neighbor-friends. I have never blogged about them before… which just goes to show how inaccurate a portrayal of our life our blog really is. Anyway… we’re the kind of neighbors that you (or, at least, we) wish all neighbors were– people you can call to help move a couch to a different room, or check in on your cat while you’re out of town, or come over for a bbq. They are good neighbors. Pat and Amy are closer in age to our parents than to us, but they never had kids of their own. They –Pat especially– have sort of taken our kids in as their pseudo-grandchildren. And this works out just great since we have no family in the area. They are good people and they’ve been very good to us– and to Kyle and Owen especially. Since the moment we brought the boys home they’ve been rock solid for our kids. And they have given advice, been there in a pinch, and ‘gone to bat’ for us on many occassions. Amy is a nurse and has always been a great resource for us whenever we have had kid-related medical stuff to deal with. Pat is a retired pilot (of all things! what could K & O possibly idolize more than a “real pilot”?!)… and one of the great things about Pat is that he is a real ‘Man’s Man’ and yet he has a definite soft spot for kids. This is just about the perfect combo when dealing with Kyle and Owen. They love that Pat will pick them up and throw them around whenever he stops by. They love that he will talk sports talk with them. And most of all, they love his tools (of which he has many)— especially his outdoor lawncare tools– especially his ride-on-professional-guage-lawnmower. When they hear Pat mowing his lawn they stop everything to run to the border of our property and watch. And every once in a while Pat will invite them over and give them rides on it. Today was a lucky day for two lucky boys! They were out in the sandbox playing when suddenly they heart Pat’s lawnmower. They ran to watch him. And sure enough, he let ’em on! They each got two “rides” and it was, for them, spectacular! I just happened to have the camera outside with me, so for the first time I managed to get some photos of the boys and Pat’s lawnmower!