Showing posts with label Friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friends. Show all posts

Monday, September 29, 2014

We Can't EVEN - a.k.a. "A Feeble Thanks"

Y'all.  I can't even.

Sweet Snap from Eliz's bff.

Can't wait to wear our Hayes Bear shirts! XOXO MLE

(Yummy surprise on our doorstep from my sister's best friend.)


A church sister read about my disdain for washing/sorting socks... so she brought new ones.  HA!

Sweet Snap from one of my BFFs and her BBF (beautiful baby face).

Since our last post about Hayes' seizures, and even since we'd mentioned our concern about his 'spasms', we've been

overwhelmed

with an outpouring of love, prayer, encouragement, and generosity.

I'm not even posting pictures of the cards Hayes has received, the personal texts, Facebook messages posts, tags, and re-posts, retweets, phone calls, updates on shirt sales from our sister Elizabeth, faculty e-mails, and shout-outs we've been getting from ALL OVER.

I need better words.  I need better words to be able to say "Thank you... thank you, so much."  Those words seem feeble.

They seem feeble when I want to say, "You've transformed my recent "Please, please, please" prayers into "THANK YOU, Thank you!" prayers."

They seem feeble when I am bombarded (bombarded in the best way - like an over-abundance of cupcakes... or a battering of butterflies) on all fronts - Facebook, email, Instagram, Snapchat, text messaging, voicemail, real mail - by encouragement and assistance for Hayes.

Our family, friends, colleagues, employers, church family, friends of family, family of friends, friends of friends, (etc,) and STRANGERS we've never met have come to our aid by praying and showing support for Hayes.

I am so thankful and brought to a new mindfulness of the power of helping - and the many, many ways we're blessed in the current time to be able to help.

Y'all.  I am so guilty of not reaching out all the times when I have the power and ability to do so.  I think it takes a great courage to help someone.  It takes courage to say, "I love you and I'm thinking about you.  Whatever you need, I'm here."  THANK YOU for the courage you've shown in reaching out to us, for thinking and praying for us.

I am so thankful for social media.  What a wonderful instrument it can be in the arena of giving!  What an awareness it can raise for a family's needs!  What a way someone can feel able to help, when he or she may be too far to away make a meal, pick up a kid from daycare, or visit someone at their home.  I know this because I've watched social media help others, and now it's helping my family.

So, someone get on it.  Invent some new jargon that will echo the language, the hope and relief and happiness of my heart when I think of you all.  Then say that to yourselves, from us.

Pre-balded Hayes and semi-naked Knox.


And the Bear himself?  He's been in pretty good spirits since leaving the hospital.  We've ALMOST got all the glue used for the sensors off his head despite daily baths and various product attempts (no, I'm not joking - it is incredibly stuck and the amount of scrubbing it would take would cause a sore on his scalp, and I'm still not sure he's forgiven me from the haircut trauma I caused him last week).

His seizures seemed to stop while the ONFI was in his system, but beginning on Friday, he started having seizures again.  Today he probably had the most seizures I've ever witnessed him having.  Please keep him in your prayers.  We are going back to Cook's on Friday for a 30 min EEG, but we will have to wait to reconvene with our neurologist (also at Cook's) until next Wednesday, because they couldn't get those two appointments together on such a short notice.

AND YES, Knox is wearing Pull-Ups.  I really doooooooon't want to talk about it. (Potty training is hard. While you're on bended knee re: Hayes, would you mind sending up a quick one for K on this front?  95% kidding here,  That's 5% serious.)

We love and appreciate you all.  Good night.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

What's Wrong with Baby Hayes?

Dearest Blogfans and friends,

I have totally been avoiding you.  Somewhere in between this moment:


and this one:


I began to experience the seedlings of fear and apprehension about Hayes and his development, and I didn't want to talk to anyone about it.  And since these fears were so linked in my mind with Hayes himself, it was really hard to talk to anyone with the 'new baby' subject off-limits.  I withdrew from friends, I haven't blogged.  I didn't even share my fears with my husband until I couldn't contain them anymore and bombarded him in the middle of a school day with a torrent of terrified text messages.

While deciding how to write this post, I hesitated upon an approach: Ugly and honest?  Purely medical jargon?  Spiritual?  Optimistic?  We're going with a mix... all of the above.  For the past twenty-four hours I feel like Koby and I have been choosing a mindset (because that is the singular beautiful thing in one's own control) as if a couple might shop around for a new car - considering all the angles, for a new car can either bring a family comfort or stress; it will keep them moving against all odds or leave its passengers broken down in unfamiliar territory.

Back to my fear seedlings, their origin.  This voice is the dramatic, emotions-based voice: I was afraid there was something we'd be discovering about Hayes from the moment I held him for the first time.  Perhaps it was the residual feelings of paranoia remembered from his first in-depth ultrasound when the doctors found choroid plexus cysts.  Maybe it was a mother's intuition, but it probably wasn't.  Maybe it was pure pessimism.  But in any case, instead of the peace and fulfillment I thought I'd feel holding him for the first time, I felt panic.  Koby left the room to get me food and I frantically began searching every inch of Hayes, looking for the something that was making me feel this way.  I never told Koby about this moment of terror I had (until recently) because I was embarrassed - who acts like that in the first moments of her son's life?

But Koby came back and I smiled, we left the hospital.  Hayes grew, and the feelings went away for the most part.

Until he turned about two months old.  Hayes was doing a few things that concerned me - his eyes were crossing more than I remembered Knox's ever doing, and seemed to be crossing differently to me.  Knox's seemed to cross when his little eyes were tired of doing all the new things they were trying out - when Hayes' eyes crossed it seemed like his preferred M.O.  At Hayes' two months check up the doctor asked if he was tracking objects with his eyes, and I said 'yes' without thinking.  As I drove home I began to think, He doesn't track objects very often at all, I don't know why I said that.

When I took his two month pictures, I felt like he should have been holding his head up better.  I referred back to Knox's pictures and thought Knox seemed tighter, more rigid, whereas Hayes wasn't holding himself up at all. 

But if there is anything parents, doctors, friends, strangers off the street, etc. will tell you it is OH MY GOSH NEVER COMPARE SIBLINGS TO EACH OTHER DON'T START DON'T DO IT.  So I ignored it.  Sort of.  Not really. 

The fear really took a step up at three months.

 
Hayes' floppiness seemed to increase, or maybe it was just all the more noticeable as he grew in size and weight, but not in tone.  I kept pleading with my inner demons, appeasing them with the thoughts that Hayes would miraculously catch up with other babies and suddenly begin to hold his head up in time for the four month milestone marker that was looming ahead.  He'd start to make eye contact and track objects and reach for things and all the rest...

But he didn't.  And I began to exist in a state of what I'd call functioning panic.  (This is still the Emotional Voice speaking.  We'll get to the much calmer Medical Voice in a minute.)  A few days before his four month birthday, it suddenly hit me: Hayes wasn't going to hold his head up, he wasn't going to catch up.  He was going to miss this milestone and I was a mom who was going to freak out about it.  I was going to be the one who insisted something was wrong.  And so I brought Koby into my little circus of fear and Googling.  (Curse you, Google.)



And so I scheduled Hayes' four months check up with the doctor and began making a list of the concerns I'd be ready with when the "And is there anything you're concerned about at this point in time regarding Hayes' development" question came.  Literally, a list.  And I hated it so much, this list lying there covered in things Hayes couldn't or wouldn't do, that I started a 'Can Do' list on the back.

When the appointment came I was too embarrassed (and didn't want to mispronounce) the things I had already diagnosed Hayes with courtesy of Google: hypotonia (low muscle tone) and strabismus (crossed eyes), so I just calmly read off the more pressing worries from the list.  More important that day was addressing Hayes' RSV, which is a virus that attacks the respiratory system.  Our doctor didn't seem concerned about Hayes' inability to hold his head up (even though in my head I'm thinking HYPOTONIA! LOW MUSCLE TONE!) but did refer us to a Pediatric Eye Specialist in Fort Worth to check out his vision.  Maybe the doctor didn't want to immediately jump to the most dramatic cause behind Hayes' symptoms, like I had done.  For a few days I (and every one else who knew what we were doing at this point) felt better, but then the old demons came creeping up behind me.

It's funny, how we try and talk people out of their feelings.  Since yesterday I've marveled at it - I don't think it's wrong, necessarily, I just think it's human.  We tell babies "Don't cry, don't be sad," we tell toddlers "You're okay," and we tell ourselves and each other a whole host of things to persuade us apart from our feelings.  After the routine check up with our pediatrician, Koby felt calm, but I was worried.  And I tried to get him on board with my feelings.  I don't think I did it on purpose, I just did it.  Since yesterday, I've been the (relatively) calm one, and Koby felt the same disconnect I did - Why can't she just feel the way I'm feeling about this?  How can she think these things, look at it this way?  I know I often felt like I wanted to shout in peoples' faces "This IS a big deal, I DON'T think it's going to be 'okay'!"  I'm left to wonder, do we ever react the way we should?  Is there a certain set of feelings we should feel under certain circumstances?  Or are those feelings so transient, fickle, and dependent upon such a variety of factors that the only thing that matters is how we handle those feelings?  (Parable of the two sons, anyone?  We'll get back to that in the Spiritual Voice portion of our program.)

Enter: Medical Voice.  Yesterday was our appointment in Fort Worth with the Pediatric Vision Specialists associated with Cook's Children's Health Care System.  I was excited and nervous in equal measure.  Maybe not equal measure.  But more excited than one should be about having to take their infant in to get his vision checked.  I was ready to get the ball rolling - ready to considerably fine-tune my Google searches.  Ready to begin understanding why my son won't hold his head up well, won't look at things. 

I went half hoping that they'd fit him with a pair of baby eye goggles, maybe patch an eye, and we'd see miraculous and immediate improvements.  I think at one point I really sort of believed that would happen.  But when the doctor diagnosed him with Optic Nerve Hypoplasia, I don't think it shocked me as much as he might have thought it would.  Indeed, it's a bombshell, but when the mother has already considered a thousand times there might be something wrong with her son's brain, it isn't the blindsiding force it could be otherwise.

Here is what I can tell you in my own words about ONH from just over 24 hours of research.  (Bless you, Google.)  Optic Nerve Hypoplasia (ONH) is a abnormality of the nerve that connects the eyes to the brain.  This condition occurs when the nerve doesn't form correctly during the first few weeks of pregnancy (meaning it is a congenital defect).  There is no known cause, although some prenatal issues could be risk factors.  ONH can affect either or both eyes (usually both) and its effects can range from mild vision loss to zero light perception (total blindness).  Because it's an issue having to do with the brain and more specifically, the middle section of the brain, other neurological disorders can be present including but not limited to, motor function, developmental delays, hormonal issues, mental retardation, and other things.

This is essentially what the doctor told me, plus or minus a few points.  The questions I immediately asked were typical, "Was this a result of brain trauma or as the brain was developing?" (Brain developing, it's not my fault or anything I did or didn't do, yadda yadda) and "Based on what the nerve looks like now, how much will he be able to see?  If he doesn't improve from this point onward, will he be legally blind?" (We can't tell at this point, wait and see, yadda yadda.)  We're scheduled to have an MRI on April 9 to explore Hayes' brain and see what other, if any, abnormalities or defects are present.  Still to be scheduled is an appointment with a pediatric endocrinologist who will assess his hormonal levels to determine if they are functional or abnormal.  Based on the doctor's appraisal, his ONH seems to mild and judging by the fact that he is thriving, he may not be suffering any hormonal deficiencies at this time.  (Although they may present themselves at any point.) 

Here's what I can tell you in my own words about ONH after my son being diagnosed with it about 24 hours ago: I hate it.  I wrestle with the thought of "This is unfair for my baby".  (Note: these are my Ugly Thoughts, not Koby's.  He won't entertain this one with me, and for that I commend him.)  I wrestle with jealousy - after all, I work with dozens of children whose brains formed perfectly during the 6th and 12th prenatal weeks.  I  know you always hear stories of these wonderful people afflicted with all sorts of terrible things who are never once heard to ask "Why me?" and I guess those people are all better than me.  To me, it's completely logical to know that no, it's not fair for a baby to have its brain develop incorrectly for apparently no reason whatsoever and thus suffer a range of mild to severe symptoms every day for the rest of his life.  It just sounds juvenile and petty to call something unfair.  And that makes me incredibly angry on Hayes' behalf.  Koby and I haven't even begun to discuss the big, ugly questions like What if Hayes is severely mentally handicapped?  What if we have to pay for costly hormonal injections to give him each night to ward off dangerous and life-threatening hormone deficiencies?  What if he never gets married because of his condition?  We don't even talk about the little things.  What if he can never throw a baseball with us?  What if he never knows what his brother looks like?  What if I can never show him how to write his name?

I won't even get into the guilt of birthing a baby with a congenital brain defect - for all the 'you couldn't have prevented this' comments out there, there will always be the illogical but wholly real nagging feeling in the back of the mind.  Illogical, yes; counter-productive, of course; ever-present, indefinitely. 

You might think less of me after reading all that, but I'm choosing to err on the belief that I'm allowed some ugly, visceral thoughts because I intend upon acting in the right.  Nevertheless, shut up, Ugly Honest Voice. 

To my credit or discredit, depending upon whom you ask, I have always tried to think of things from the 'other side'.  While part of my brain screams "How on earth is it fair that this baby's brain developed abnormally?", the other, logical and Spiritual Voice tells me "Why not this baby over any other?"  My baby, my family, me - we are no better or more protected from these things than any other human on the planet.  What right do I hold that grants me a pain-free, hardship-free life?  In fact, yesterday I found myself thanking God that I had a car to drive to a Pediatric Vision Specialist less than two miles from my home who could diagnose my child on the spot.  I even thanked God for Google, which filled in the gaps left after the five minute conversation I had with the ophthalmologist.  And though we have to wait a month for it, I am genuinely grateful I live in a country where I have access to MRI technology, I have insurance that will (hopefully) cover (some of) it, and amazingly, miraculously, wonderfully, I have a loving husband who will be a encouraging, supportive and Christ-like dad to a child with special needs.  I have friends and family members who are heroically stepping up to help me with my own special needs during this time.  Hayes has a brother who is kind, compassionate, loving, thoughtful and protective of his younger sibling at the age of 20 months old.

And then, I have Hayes.  He is my sweet baby.  Now that I've been enumerating my worries and fears and 'can'ts' about him, can I please tell you about HIM?  He's my happy boy, the patient younger brother who endures Knox's proddings and times of over-helpfulness with a coo and only very occasionally, a quiet cry.  He is so strong and beautiful with his reddish blond hair and dark blue eyes that I cannot believe there are things misfiring under his perfect skull.  His hair might be curly - if not he's definitely going to suffer chronic bedhead with hair growing in so many directions at once.  His one request is to be held at all times, but if you're unable, it's okay.  His favorite is lots of kisses on his cheeks and neck.  He likes milk at room temperature and has been known to spend ten minutes smiling and laughing instead of drinking.  He's big and full of the most delicious baby rolls you could imagine.  He deserves the very best.

Koby and I have been filtering through our thoughts and feelings, sorting out which ones will work and which don't.  We're still choosing which ones will help us operate our mindset like the good family car, steadily moving us forward one day at a time.  I grew up privileged - I never knew what it felt like to be in a family living from paycheck to paycheck.  I never saw a family member battle a disease, depleting their strength and living from day to day.  I've never thrown myself at God's mercy and known what it was like for His joy to be my strength.  I'm sure I thought I did, but this is new.  This season of my life is showing me what that means - how the Lord can be my strength.  The value of the Daily Bread, the Grace that can carry a person when her strength reserves are depleted.  In short, I have never lived day to day in any sense barring the obvious but easily forgettable fragility of my own mortality.  But now I am having to learn what it means, spiritually, economically,  mentally, and otherwise. ( I am speaking for myself, but I think Koby would echo me here.)

We appreciate and covet your prayers for Hayes, but if I seem vague or overly positive or negative at any time that you might talk to me over the coming days/weeks/years, just know it's because I'm tweaking my mindset.  I'll get it right eventually.


Monday, April 16, 2012

The Big D 5k -or- The Day I Took A Nap


This past Sunday, Melissa and I braved the thunderstorms and ran in the Big D 5k at Fair Park in Dallas.  Leading up to the race was a time of training that proved somewhat comical, at times frustrating, and always rewarding.  Sometimes the reward was really tight hamstrings.  Maybe one day I'll take you through the finer points of my training experiences. But I digress.



AWESOME THINGS ABOUT THE 5K

  • I am related to the person who crossed the finish line fourteenth out of about 900 people.  Coincidentally I am also the person related to the person who finished top of her age group at about 22 minutes, who also happened to be the third female to finish.  Bravo, sister.
  • It didn't rain.  Well, it did.  But it rained before we started and after we finished.  Not so awesome for the half-marathon and marathoners.  But they're crazy anyway, so I'm sure a little bit of freezing rain didn't bother them.
  • I finished faster than I had been training, thanks to being stuck at the front and starting out like a bunch of crazy hamsters let go from their cages.  See also "Not Awesome Things About The 5k"
  • Melissa waited for me at the finish line (she may have ran the course again, I don't know) and said she almost didn't see me cross the line because she was looking for a "small white girl running really slowly in a white hat".  What she wasn't looking for was a tiny woman with a backwards hat running like a maniac for the finish line, and thus nearly missed my triumphant ending.
  • Hearing about Melissa grabbing one of those little water cups from the sides and pouring it all over her head, only to realize it was red Powerade.
  • Winning first in the category Melissa and I invented for myself.  I'll let you know what it is as soon as I've worked up an important-looking certificate.



NOT AWESOME THINGS ABOUT THE 5K
  • Starting at the front.  This is bad because a.) the front people take off like a stampede of escaped mental patients (including my own mental-patient of a sister) and b.) I don't belong in the front.  For the full first mile, 197 people passed me and I passed not one person.  This depressed me for awhile.  It's not good to be depressed during the first mile of a three-mile run.
  • Two of the 197 people to pass me were nine year old girls, and they stayed past me.
  • Watching people throw away the little water cups in the wind (I know they're supposed to) so that the cups blew away where no one would probably pick them up... and knowing I shouldn't stray from the course to pick them up myself.






AWESOME THINGS ABOUT THE WEEKEND
  • Spending it with sister.
  • Seeing Belinda Williams.
  • Seeing the ghost of the Red Rider.
  • TAKING A NAP.  
  • NYLO Dallas-Las Colinas.
  • Food choices other than Mexican.  Though I still picked Mexican one day.  It's just nice to have the option.
  • Coming home to see my family.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Post #11, 12 and 13 of 29

It's Monday, I've sucked it up again with the whole "post every day" thing, but here's what's new: we spent a happy weekend in Austin with my family (sans a Pack 'N Play for Knox - NOT recommended) and got to visit with some of my college friends at a couples shower for my friend Marie, who is pregnant with her second baby.  It was great to see Abby, Meagan, Caroline, Hayley, all their respective spouses/boyfriends/offspring and of course, Marie...

Marie is one of those friends who's become like family to me.  One of those friends who I wish lived closer, so our kids could grow up together.  Maybe one day.

The morning of the shower I headed over to Marie's house to take some pictures of her baby bump.  Marie is on strict bed rest because of pre-eclampsia, a condition that caused her daughter Lyla to be born at 32 weeks.  She's currently at about 32 weeks with new baby Wyatt, and so we're all praying that she's able to stay pregnant as long as possible to avoid another lengthy stay in the NICU.  Anyway, we popped into her backyard, bribed Lyla with some jelly beans and snapped some non-strenuous photographs.



I can't wait to finish editing the rest of these pictures... two beautiful models = fun and easy work.  Check out www.paintsandpistols.com to see some more photography... and some exciting things are going to be happening with P&P Photography soon, so stay tuned.  Not telling yet.  It's a surprise.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

2011: A Year in Review

Sometimes it can be overwhelming: how much God blesses me.  I'm married to my best friend, we have a beautiful son, we love our jobs and a T.J.Maxx was just built in Abilene.  Or I just discovered it.  Either way, it's spectacular.  You may not feel that last thing fits in with the others, but then again, you may not understand my love for discount shopping...

It's safe to say that, of all my years (1986-present), 2011 has taken the cake.  To be fair, since Koby and I started dating in 2007 every year after has been the best so far.  (I think that says a lot.)  I'm a firm believer in visual aids, so here's some proof that 2011 was pure heaven.

In January I painted the fox picture that would be my first subconscious indicator that the Blob would be a boy.  We celebrated Koby's birthday in Abilene with his whole family at Lytle Land and Cattle and we began the search for a new house.


House hunt successful!  During Super Bowl weekend in February, Koby and I took a leap of faith and made the move from Sweetwater to Colorado City.  I began to experience insatiable hunger.



Ah, March, you were a great month.  We found out that our little baby was a baby BOY while surrounded by family and friends at Knox's Gender Revelation party... it's probably one of my Top 5 memories of all time.
Koby and I departed on a Tennessee vacation (birthday present courtesy of Koby's thoughtful parents) the day after our party.  We really appreciated the FOLIAGE in Tennessee (it was green) ... actually it was just nice to see trees as well.  Definitely a place we want to revisit.

In April I noticed that I was becoming stupid, we unveiled KNOX as a name possibility, and I turned 25.  Oh, and I looked like this.
May brought the end of school and the next day my best friend Belinda got married.  It was special to be a part of her wedding day and I felt accomplished not to have keeled over in all my heftiness in the 90 degree heat.
My husband also scored his dream job in May.  Joy abounds!

In June I taught the 'Daring Drawings and Curious Colors' Art Camp at the Grace Museum for the second year.  It's one of my favorite summer-time activities.  I dare you not to laugh as you read about how one of my little campers felt on 'orange days'.  Ah, and I began to be very impatient to meet the Knox man (who was still unnamed) and Koby ever-so-happily said farewell to his temporary time in the oil field.



On July 10 Koby and I celebrated our one year anniversary.  I don't really have any good pictures of that because every time I'd set up the self timer on the camera and then try to 'run' away, my waddling would shake the house, thereby shaking the camera and messing up the picture.  We lived each day thinking "any day now" ... and Knox finally came one day before his estimated due date.  The 20th of July, 2011 changed our lives.
August meant back to school - Koby started his first year of teaching at the Elementary school as the P.E. teacher, working also as the 7th and 8th grade offensive coordinator for the football teams and as an assistant to the varsity football team.
In September, Koby and I found ourselves juggling infant-raising, careers and coaching.  We also visited Midland when Koby was in friends' Derek and Kim's wedding.
BUSY was the theme of October.  I traveled to Alabama to be in my high school friend Helen's 'dream wedding' status-worthy ceremony and suare, then Knox and I visited Abilene for ACU's homecoming celebrations and he met some of my DT sisters.  Koby and I also enjoyed festive dress-up days at our respective jobs.
Koby and I spent Thanksgiving in Throckmorton in November.  I think it's pretty cool that we can all get together to do things like take four generations pictures!
Aunt M (Melissa, who hates being called Aunt M) had some basketball games in Abilene the weekend following Thanksgiving.  Koby, Knox and I watched the games with Poppa Layne... I'm so glad Knox was there for some games during Melissa's last ever season of basketball!


In December, Knox turned 5 months old and somehow escaped the stomach virus that got Koby, his dad, our childcare provider, her husband, two of the kids at Knox's daycare, and me... thank goodness.  We traveled to Graham and Throckmorton for Christmas and since I'm too lazy to re-upload those pictures, you can make an easy click and see them a few posts ago.
Phew! Did we really cram that into 365 days?! This post took me surprisingly longer to put together than I'd anticipated but it was completely worth it - I got to relive the highest points of an incredible year. The Andrews' have big dreams, ideas and hopes for this upcoming year: I think it's going to be unprecedented in joy and love.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

We Heart ACU












Knox stepped  foot on our alma mater's campus for the first time today...  well. not literally.  But he was there.  DT Homecoming Breakfast with old friends, and then the ACU Homecoming Parade with family as well.  Knox is a trooper and a saint of a baby.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Wedding at the Gulf


One of my best friends got married in Alabama this past weekend.  And I must say Helen did a FABULOUS job planning her wedding, not to mention being a stunning bride! 

It was hard to leave Knox - every time I thought of him while I was away my heart genuinely hurt.  BUT there isn't anything I can think of that could be more worthy to steal me away than watching a friend get married!  And I do love to travel.


I had to leave the house at 4 in the morning to catch my flight to Mobile by way of Houston.  Needless to say, when I arrived (the standard two hours early) it was fairly empty.  Right after I took this picture a mom and her little boy walked up and I nearly cried watching them interact, already missing Knox terribly.


Hmmm, this view can cure some blues.  Gulf Shores is AWESOME.  I spent most of my time in Orange Beach.  I can safely say that with each trip, West Texas is becoming less appealing...


It was so fun to be a part of Helen's day and I LOVED getting to know Devon and Liebelei, her best friends from college, better. We had a great time before, during, and after the wedding.  It makes my heart happy to meet people who love the people I love.


I didn't get a ton of pictures from the weekend because... well, it's just hard to take pictures with a DSLR when you're dancing your little bridesmaid heart out  :-)



Things didn't go as smoothly on the way home - Koby told me on Saturday that it'd been rainy all day (I was a bit jealous that I was missing the perfect read-a-book weather) and apparently it headed to Houston on Sunday.  Which delayed my flights for hours and eventually one ended up being cancelled.  At that moment I realized how much I really missed my little family.  The thought of being away from Knox and Koby for ANOTHER WHOLE DAY made me want to curl up under the airport chairs and cry.  Luckily, one of the airport employees had already reserved me a seat on the last flight to Lubbock that night when it looked like I wouldn't make my connection.  And thus I avoided a mommy melt down.


While I was gone, Knox's wonderful Lovie came to stay and help out since Koby would be spending most of his time with football.  She kept me sane by sending regular pictures so I wouldn't have to send the "What's he doing now" text every few hours.  Here's my smart boy checkin' himself out on her computer.

Let's hear it for friends and family!