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Our beloved Alex came last night to babysit so that Braydon and I could go out for dinner for a long overdue date night. We try to do date nights pretty regularly — and always have — but for the past few months Little Miss has been cramping our style. So we were especially happy to get out together alone. And K & O were very happy to have Alex come last night. When I first announced the plan to them, however, they were pretty perturbed. They were annoyed that Mommy and Papi were going out to a restaurant without them (since they love restaurants so much). I explained (like I always do) that Mommy and Papi love each other very much and we need to be able to have some “alone time” together every once in a while, just us, nobody else. “Plus,” I said, “we’re going to a Grown Up Restaurant.” I had never tagged that part on the end before and it caught their attention. “Oh!” said Kyle, “a Grown Up Restaurant? Only grown ups are allowed there?” “That’s right,” I said. “They don’t let kids go there?” asked Owen. “Not really,” I said. (We were going to our favorite wintertime date night restaurant, Blue, and it genuinely is not a kid-friendly restaurant). This concept — of a “Grown Up Restaurant” — seemed to make the whole idea of us going out without them more palatable. Pondering this new idea, Kyle asked, “What do they have there?” [meaning what kind of food] But before I could answer he quickly jumped in, “Wait, I know, it is a caffeine restaurant, right Mama? They have caffeine there.” Owen chimed right in: “Yes! That’s right Kyle, it is a caffeine restaurant! Caffeine and wine. Right Mommy?” I said, “Yup!” And that was it. From that point on there was no complaining about us going out without them. By the time Alex arrived they were waving us out the door to go get our caffeine and wine. ;0
- a “headbird” = a quarter (as in the coin; not ‘heads or tails’ but ‘head or bird’)
- a “flying sausage” = a flying saucer (as in the type of sled)
- a “barracuda” = a big wave (as in ‘the big kahuna’)
- an “invitation party” = a party that you get invited to via a formal, on-paper, invitation
- a “big crunch” = a big chunk of parmesan cheese (note: parmesan cheese only; if speaking of any other type of cheese –or any other of anything for that matter– they say, a “big chunk”)
- “lickitty” (as in, “Let’s make it lickitty!”) = to stir up your ice cream until it is liquidy/soupy
(for a couple examples of other posts on K & O’s twinspeak click here and here)
This morning we had a two hour snow delay for school. We got about 4 inches of wet snow. In New England this would be a joke, but here it’s not. And honestly, I was slipping all over the road. Of course, the boys had insisted we take the back way, so maybe that was it. Or maybe it was that we were playing “On the road again” at full volume and singing along. Who knows.
MorMor was here for five sleeps. Five sleeps = five glorious days of help and camaraderie. Anyone who has been reading this blog for awhile knows about MorMor’s visits. Having her here cuts our work in half (at least) and doubles our laughs (at least). Mostly the work involves her doing tons of things around here that we don’t even know need to be done (seriously). Mostly the laughs involve us cracking up at how insane it is around here all the time (seriously). Seeing our life through her eyes makes us laugh our tushes off round the clock. She’s let in as a true insider (so she sees it all), and yet having her here allows us to see the craziness-that-is-our-life through the eyes of an outsider-looking-in. It is hard to explain. I don’t think I do our life justice on this blog. I don’t think I’m able to represent just how CRAZY –in so many ways, on so many levels– it really is around here. The stuff that goes on is just off the wall. You’ve just gotta see it to believe it. And MorMor sees it. So we laugh and laugh (or else we cry).
Anyway~~~ this trip involved much sewing. Ever since they started at the Waldorf school the fall before last, K & O have an inability to keep a pair of pants longer than 3 months MAX without getting holes in the knees. I am not kidding. We cannot get a pair of pants to last longer than about 12 weeks. So MorMor brought her sewing machine this time to patch up ten (count them, TEN!!!!!!!!!!) pair of K & O’s pants. I’ve tried just about every brand of boys’ pants on the market. They are not tough enough for these boys. MorMor wants to try Carhart next — and she plans to buy some pants to test out ASAP. We shall see. In the meantime, she was patching up knees like you wouldn’t believe. While she was at it, she gave the boys their first sewing lessons. Now that was interesting (we laughed and we cried during that one).
She cooks for us too whenever she’s here. I know, I know, we are beyond lucky. One of the things she made this time was lamb stew. The boys loved it. Kyle, in particular. He devoured his first bowl and then enthusiastically requested that he have “lamb suet” (he insisted on calling it ‘lamb suet’ instead of ‘lamb stew’…. ??????) in his lunch at school the next day. And he ate every last drop from his thermos at school (and believe me, I packed a lot in there). Lamb suet was a huge winner!!!!!!! (Among lots of other things she cooked too). Whenever MorMor’s here, though, the big excitement where food is concerned (at least for K & O) is ICE CREAM. Lots of ice cream eating goes on when MorMor’s here (and pretty much only when MorMor is here). This time, MorMor gave Meera her very first ice cream. I have pictures of MorMor feeding K & O their very first ice cream too, when they were babies. Meera didn’t like it nearly as much as I remember the boys liking it. But she’ll learn to love it. MorMor will be sure of that.
Oh, and did I mention… when she’s here she sets up office in the guest room and MAINTAINS HER JOB TOO??????????????????!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Tomorrow we will celebrate our 4th Adoption Day. And it is on our minds.
In our house, Kyle usually wakes up first and comes to snuggle with Braydon and I in bed. He is such a sweet sweet sweetie pie. Anyone who knows Kyle well will attest to this: he’s a dreamy cuddly love bug, sweet as can be (sometimes excessively so!!!). The other morning, he snuggled into our bed, as usual. Bleary-eyed and still half-asleep, holding his Honey Bunny close, he looked into my eyes. Just staring at me, his big brown eyes peering into mine, his very first words of the day were, “Mommy, why did you pick me?” I was stunned. Because we have never talked about adoption in terms of “picking” someone. We have talked about how we “chose” to adopt, and we’ve talked about how K & O’s birthmother “chose” for them to be adopted, but we have never implied that we “picked” Kyle and Owen nor told stories of other adoptions using that language. And the truth is that, unlike many Haitian adoptions, we did not “pick” K & O; we said we’d take any baby and then waited for a referral. We were matched with K & O by our agency and the director of the orphanage. So, lying in bed, half-asleep myself, my mind was quickly jump-started, and then spinning fast, with Kyle’s question.
H: What do you mean?
K: When we were in Haiti with the birthmother. Why did you pick me?
H: Because we wanted you.
K: Oh.
H: Why did you pick me?
K: Because I wanted you.
I understood Kyle’s question better a few days later. He was up on the kitchen counter trying to get something out of the cupboard. A photo on the side of the refrigerator caught his eye and he called me over to look at it with him. It is a photo sent to us three years ago by an American couple who went to K & O’s orphanage to get their son. In the photo the couple are sitting on steps, surrounded by about 40 kids from the orphanage. K & O know what the photo is.
K: Look, mommy, there are lots of babies.
H: That’s right.
K: But you just wanted us.
H: That’s right.
K: Because you dreamed about us everyday.
H: That’s right.
Recently, sitting on my lap after dinner, Kyle whispered in my ear, “When I was in my birthmother’s belly I was just wishing and wishing and wishing you’d come get me.” I responded the same way I always respond to these types of comments from my boys, “We came as quickly as we could,” I said. “But I was waiting for you for so long.” “Yes,” I said, “and we came as quickly as we could.” “Yes,” said Ky Ky, “but it wasn’t quick enough, we needed you and you weren’t there.”
Another day, before school, Kyle ran up to me and whispered in my ear, “I will live with you forever!!!” And then ran off to put on his boots.
A couple of days ago, playing in the playroom, out of nowhere, Kyle asked, point-blank: “Mommy, why did you adopt me?” We talked about it a bit and then he said, “Before I was born, when I was with God, I saw you and Papi, and I told God that I wanted you to be my parents.” This is all very interesting, especially because we have never talked about God as playing a role in our adoption. Although many adoptive families do talk about it that way, we have not. We don’t talk about it having been “God’s plan” or about us being “chosen by God to be together” etc., etc., etc. We have always been very matter-of-fact about the adoption process as we see it, in a very simplistic, age-appropriate way. But Kyle continually puts God into the picture.
For the past month or so, Kyle has been saying basically the same prayer every single night at bedtime. Huddled together, I hear him say this: “Dear God, thank you that I can have this mommy and this papi. Thank you for giving me this house. I really appreciate it God. Amen.”
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