Showing posts sorted by relevance for query mother's day. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query mother's day. Sort by date Show all posts

Sunday, May 9, 2010

the terrible, horrible, no good, very bad mother's day...

For me, Mother's day started out nicely enough...
Kort woke my up early, and we went outside for another sunny, (beautiful) Sunday Picnic. He even smiled for my camera, now how nice is that? Daddy came out and ate breakfast with us. And we basked in the shunshine (as we like to call it) as a family.
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We ate fresh fruit with cottage cheese and even read some Matilda. (Oh, don't you just love Matilda?)
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Then Kort and Daddy surprised me with an awesome gift and card.
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Isn't that great?
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My boy was really excited. Can you tell?
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(In case you were wondering, it was a blender. A really awesome blender. And I really needed/wanted one, so it was much appreciated.)
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I told the hubs that what I really wanted for Mother's Day was for all of us to get ready for church WAY early and go on a long family walk before going to church. It was such a beautiful day, and I knew that Kort would be just thrilled. So, that's what we did.
It started out nice...
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Daddy took pics of me and Kort walking...
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and a very artistic self portrait to boot! (yay dad!)

Then...
Well... all hell broke loose.

Kort made a dive for a muddy, mossy piece of gutter trash (that was being swarmed by little spiders, no less) in his Sunday clothes, and daddy (in true, daddy fashion) lunged and scooped him up and away before he could get a spider bite and/or bacterial infection, and this shocked Kort, and made him really mad, which made him really sad, which made him cry. Like, really loud and really bad. This put him in a lovely mood. Set the tone...if you will. Daddy told him he was sorry and that he didn't mean to hurt him, but the damage was done. Happy time was over.

Kort then demanded that we ki-bosh my family walk idea and go to the playground instead. Dad had already told him no on the whole playground thing earlier in the day.

Do you know what a "No." from dad means to Kort?

Well I'll tell you.

It means that it's time to sneak into the master bedroom and sweet talk mom.

Do you know what mom says when her darling little blue-eyed boy sweetly asks her if we could PUH-leeeeeeeese stop by the park on the way to church? (ESPECIALLY when mom has no idea that dad already said no?)

That's right. She says yes.

Do you know how mad it makes dad when he realizes that Kort has effectively "played" us despite repeated warnings that he. should. not. "play" us? (Answer: Pretty mad, but he hides it well.)

So dad said "No, he is absolutely not going to the park. I told him no, and then he went to you and he knows he shouldn't do that."

Kort starts crying again. Harder this time. With more gusto.

I am feeling sick and light-headed.

Kort insists that we reconsider.

We tell him to stop it and be happy that we are taking a lovely family walk.

He tells us where we can go stick our lovely family walk and starts stomping around and whining and asking to go to the park over and over and over again.

We follow behind him, deflated. Irritated.

I start lecturing him about how "I just wanted to have a nice walk for Mother's Day, but obviously it's going to be Kortland's day instead" and "that his bad attitude ruined our family walk." And a bunch of other things that made me feel like a piece of bad mommy crap. Then I said a bunch of obnoxious things that parents say (and I always swore I would never say) like "Because I said so." and "One more word out of your mouth and you will be grounded."

And so it went.

Me in a pretty spring dress, tired and wretched and lecturing my crying stomping kid on a random neighborhood sidewalk on Mother's Day morning. (You're welcome neighbors.)

So, we went to church and it was more of the same. He had three (yes, three) melt downs (like, on the floor crying like a 2-year-old meltdowns) before the OPENING song was through.

I am angry.
I am tired.
I am stressed.
I have to take a horrible 3 hour glucose test tomorrow.
I have somehow managed to convince myself that this is all my fault.
I haven't exercised enough.
I wasn't healthy enough when we conceived.
I am a crappy fetus incubator.
My kid is 6, yet tantruming like a 2-year-old.
This is also my fault.
I'm a bad mom.
I am incapable of raising one of those nice children who sits quietly and colors during sacrament meeting.
I fell into the (ridiculous) trap of "Mother's Day Expectations" even though I am wholeheartedly AGAINST having ANY type of "Mother's Day Expectations."
I am an idiot for falling for this.
How did I fall for this?
You know what I always say?

"Plant an expectation, reap a disappointment."

That's what I say. (No, I didn't make that up, but I have a very wise mother who taught that goodie to me early on.) It has served me well.

Except for when I'm an idiot and forget all about it.

As Kort topped off his third tantrum, my eyes were full of tears and my heart was full of self-hatred, and it was time to leave. So I left. I stomped home (like a two-year-old) with hot, wet eyes and climbed into bed.

After fuming for 45 minutes, I fell asleep.

20 minutes later, the boys came home.

Then I come to find out that Kort was supposed to sing a Mother's Day song for me with the rest of the Primary. He was heartbroken that I wasn't there to hear it.

Awesome.

Then he wants to sing it for me now. In the living room. By himself.

Then his little (moderately tone deaf) angel voice sings the sweetest words about how great his train wreck of a mother is...

Then I am crying again.

I just love him so much.

He hugs me and I cry some more and tell him thank you.

Then I sort of think that this is the perfect Mother's Day.

Mother's Day (for me at least) is not about being pampered, honored, or praised so much as it is about me feeling grateful that I GET TO BE A MOM. Somehow, I lost sight of that.

I GET to have imperfect, sassy little people come into my life and teach me how to be a better person. To teach me how to think of someone other than myself. To push me to my utter limits and then make me grow big enough to go beyond them. To teach me grace (mostly by showing me how crummy it feels NOT to behave gracefully from time to time.) To teach me patience. To show me that life isn't always fair or anywhere near perfect, but it sure can be funny, disastrous, and sort of insanely beautiful and perfectly imperfect.

That's what being a mom is about.

And I am so lucky I get this training.
I desperately need it.
I think I sort of sucked as a person before I had Kort.
(Okay, I still suck, but at least to a lesser degree...right?)

I still have a long way to go.

But the great news?

Another little person is coming to help me. And he is going to push all sorts of different buttons that Kort never even thought of pushing. And he is going to help me be better too. And that is just the hugest blessing, don't you think?

Happy Mother's Day!

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Mother's Day Tribute...(I know, it's early)



Yes it is 3:23 a.m. this very moment, and I am up and SUPER YUCKY SICK with a nasty sinus infection. I can't breathe and therefore I cannot for the life of me fall asleep, so I have just been on the 'puter working on the Baby Monroe Logo and blog-stalking total strangers with beautiful, creative lives...

I have been doing a "no sugar, no refined flours, no highly-over-processed foods diet" for the past 3 and 1/2 weeks, and I went off of it a few days ago and my body has not been happy about the
Mountain of milk duds and
cinnamon Gummy Bears
I gorged myself on shortly following the termination of the diet! So, I pretty much feel like a
John Deere tractor is sitting on my face... but other than that -
life is generally good!
My wonderful next-door-neighbor called a few days ago and informed me that she had been asked to speak in sacrament meeting on Mother's Day, and she wanted a few women (myself included) to write a paragraph about what "their perfect mother's day" would entail... but I was raised by a mother who, even on her birthday and mother's day, never demanded or expected a whole lot from anyone, and I guess I must have gotten some of that from her (not MUCH, but some...) because I was at a loss to write anything coherent on the subject. So, here was what I came up with...(and YES, the incident mentioned in the final sentence really DID happen when Kort was 2 and 1/2!)
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"When asked to share my idea of the perfect mother’s day, I immediately dreamed of waking up in a pristine home with cupboards free of chocolate fingerprints, carpets free of abandoned popsicle sticks, and a kitchen sink that I could see the bottom of. My dream went on to include: easily finding both pairs of my son’s Sunday shoes, putting on a pair of nylons that didn’t have any runs, and actually arriving at our church meetings on time with a clean-faced child who sits quietly through the entire meeting. But, a dream such as this has never quite come to fruition— and that’s okay. Mother’s Day is not so much a day for special rewards as it is a day for renewed gratitude for the
Everyday Blessings of motherhood.
A day to remember that those fingerprints won’t always be so small, those popsicle sticks so easily forgotten, and that the kitchen sink won’t always overflow with satisfying evidence of full, and happy tummies. I highly recommend approaching mother’s day with this level of expectation, because when you choose to find joy in messes, chaos, and your child slipping away in order to make a totally nude (and totally glorious) appearance at the next door neighbor’s – you’ll rarely find yourself disappointed!"
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Thursday, May 22, 2008

May has been Busy!

Race for the Cure!

We were all extremely excited to go to Salt Lake City and Race for the Cure this year in Celebration of Nancy's triumphant battle with Breast Cancer! She was diagnosed last fall, and it has been a long hard road for her and her family. We are so grateful that she is finished with her Chemo and Radiation treatments and feeling better every day. She had an amazing, positive attitude throughout this incredibly overwhemling trial and I just wanted to say
Yay Nancy!
We are so proud of you!
Looking through these pictures from May 10th made me cry all over again when I thought of the journey this has been not only for Nancy, but also for everyone who loves her doesn't know what they would do without her!
Above: Nancy with her husband Michael and Vaughn (in the backpack)
Beth and Kenzie
Everyone in our family (including the guys) wore pink-camo bandanas,
but when I tried to put Kort's on, he said
"No! It'll make me look like a girl"
We assured him that all of the guys - even daddy - would be wearing them and that he didn't "look like a girl" but he insisted that he would. Well, sure enough - the "Build a Bear" mascot showed up and scooped Kort up in his arms and one of the "Build a Bear" employees handed a gift bag to Kyle and said: "Here, this is for her." (meaning Kortland)
Oh, you should've seen the look Kortland gave his dad! ha ha!



I loved their tags, Michael's (Nancy's husband) said "I race in celebration of my bald, beautiful wife" and Vaughn's said "I race in celebration of My mom" with a picture of Vaughn with his mom




I loved her tag.
Me, Kyle and Kort
Royce's tag
What an awesome day...
Yay Nancy!
And all cancer survivors!
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Teacher Appreciation

Kortland had his last day at Hobble Creek Learning Center's Preschool today, and we have had such a wonderful experience working with them over the past year! I wanted to say thank you to Kort's teachers (he had three who all worked together throughout the week - and he loved them all) but I didn't know what to give them. Then I thought I would make a bracelet for each of them, THEN realized that it would mean a lot more to them if Kort made the bracelets for them - so that's what we did! It was really great! I gave him and assortment of crystal, metal and white beads (so they would "match" no matter HOW he decided to string them) then when he was done with each one, I added the clasps and voila! Really simple, heartfelt thank you's from the Kortmeister himself! I packaged them in little jewelry bags from our business with personalized "Thank You" tags and a little hand-written note from Kortland folded inside of the tops. His teachers loved them, and he felt really proud that he had made them "all by himself."

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Welcome to the Family
HAMSTERY!
We arrived in Cedar Hills to celebrate Mother's Day with my family, and good ole Uncle Drew was there with a little, furry, nameless friend. Kort freaked when he saw him! Drew said that he was moving to Ferron for the summer and didn't want to take it with him and that we could adopt him if we wanted to. Kyle was less than thrilled, but Kortland and I were both stoked! I had a hamster when I was little and I really loved the experience. So, Drew told Kortland that he could choose a name for him and right away Kort said
"I know!" then walked over and whispered in my ear:
"How 'bout Hamstery!?"
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!
Love it! It's going to be a sad day when he wants to name a pet something traditional! For now, we're really enjoying the funny, obvious nature of his choices!
His cousins Zach and Lindsay are sharing in the wonder and awe of Kortland's hamster adoption. Look at that face - he is stoked!
Hamstery is a quick (that's how he got his middle name) and anti-social little bugger, so when Kort wanted to play with him, I had to take extra precautions. I put Hamstry in a big tupperware container, then put both Kort and the container in the tub! I guess it worked since we don't currently have a mystery rodent roaming wild and free throughout our home.

Introducing: Hamstery Flash Dugovic


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Mother's Day
Happy Mother's Day to ME! Kyle always knows just what to get!
(and NO, I am not a rabid Hannah Montana fan, I just think that
27 year old me + this T- shirt = Hilarious!)

Mom singing to Jack Jack
Look at that face! Uh! So delicious!
He sat with her like this for hours! So cute!
He looks so stressed - but I promise he was just way zen!
He loves his Auntie Lola - I just know it ;)

Papo with Madi and Jack.
How gorgeous are those kids? Geez!

Kort and Papo having a snuggle before we head for home.

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BASEBALL
Mapleton City has a really fun "Baseball Parade" at the start of the season. Here is Kort with his team in his coach's truck. They were all chanting: "Mar-in-ers Num-ber-one! Mar-in-ers Num-ber-one!" Pretty much awesome... pretty much.

The big game
He didn't love playing at his game all that much... okay, he HATED it! Which is sad, cause he's really good at baseball. He's the youngest kid on the team and he can hit the ball (coach pitch) on the first throw! It's crazy! But he just wants to play in the dirt and find bugs in the weeds outside the dugout...oh well!

This is Kort's definition of outfielding:
Making dirt piles and finding "cool rocks"
Hammin' it up on his way to first base.

Practice makes Perfect...
Or, really really bored and insubordinate!





This is what he would do during his ENTIRE baseball practice if I would let him- Drop sticks and rocks into a metal grate by the field!
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Alphabet Pancakes
Kort called me into the living one morning while he was eating breakfast. He pointed to his pancake and said " Look! G!"
He had accidentally made a letter G as he ate his pancake.
I thought it was funny that he noticed.
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Art City School Fair
We took Kort to the Art City School Fundraiser and he had a great time.
Kort with our cute neighbor Addie
He definitely has a thing for older women.

The blow up rides were awesome.

Rock Climbing Wall