Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Sail Away With Me...

****GIVEAWAY CLOSED - Congratulations Gina!  Email me your contact info at TakingItOneStep@gmail.com!***

It's GIVEAWAY time!

As many of you know I'm a Thirty-One Gifts Independent Consultant.  Thirty-One Gifts is an amazing company focused on celebrating, encouraging and rewarding women through offering quality products and an outstanding opportunity to become successful.

And did I mention how ridiculously cute?


As a kick-off of the New Fall Catalog and a soon-to-be send off of Summer, I'm giving one lucky reader this Sailboat Icon Coin Purse!  With zipper closure and lobster claw clip it is the perfect addition to any beach bag or lunch tote.

 


How do you win?  It's EASY!

Go check out our Fall Catalog and come back to tell me
what your favorite product is and how you would use it.

That's it!

Contest will be opened through Saturday August 6th at 11:59pm.  Winner will be announced Sunday!  Good luck!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Yesterday.

For about a week or so I've been meaning to call my Dr.

Obviously, since I waited an entire week I didn't feel like it was that big of a deal, but I finally remembered to do it yesterday.

And they wanted me to come in immediately.

Yesterday I sat in a waiting room while listening to them scramble around, trying to figure out why their computers weren't working.  I sat there and worried that this was going to take longer than my allotted hour lunch.

Yesterday they sent me for a sonogram.  They were worried that it may be something more.  I drove over to the clinic worried what I was going to tell my manager.

I sat there and waited.  I sat there and worried.  I worried about who was checking my files, whether or not our client needed something and I wasn't there to handle it.

Yesterday I had a Doctor say "We don't know what it is, we need more tests."

I sat there in my gown.  And I worried.  Only now I wasn't worried about my job and what was or was not happening in my absence.  I was worried about my little boy and what would happen if this went from "We don't know..." to "I'm so sorry..."  I worried about my husband and what would happen to if this changed our life from happiness to heartbreak.  I worried about my family and what would happen if...

Yesterday I did a lot of worrying, a lot of thinking. 

Now I'm focused on today.

Monday, July 25, 2011

It's Things Like This That Make Me Smile

A few days ago I was stalking perusing Facebook land when I came across a status update from a girl I was friends with in high school {she also coincidentally lives down the street from me, but that's a whole other story}.

She was thanking those that had helped her recently collect gently used formal gowns that she would be bringing down to North Carolina in a few days.  These gowns are intended for girls ages 13 - 21 that are patients at  Levine Children's Hospital.  These gowns are intended for children that are sick.  These gowns are intended for those that may never be able to attend a "real" prom.

Instantly I wanted to know more information.  My friend shared with me The Sandbox, an organization focused on serving the individuals and families that are facing challenging circumstances and obstacles in their lives, both emotionally and financially due to terminal disease and/or circumstance.  One of their current projects was that of The 1st Annual Evening of Stars - a Prom for the children who are patients at Levine Children's Hospital.

So I went downstairs and dragged out my prom dress.  I dragged out my bridesmaid dresses.  I dragged out everything and anything that could possibly make a young girl feel the thrill that is slipping into her first prom dress and feel like a princess.

I had been holding on to these dresses out for the pure sentimental value of it.  I remember my Senior prom like it was yesterday.  I remember wearing that gorgeous blue ball gown in my dear friends wedding.  But I think I'm going to remember the thought of making a sick child feel beautiful a whole lot more.

Please check out The Sandbox to learn more about how you too can help.  I know I'll be looking in to more programs like this at our local Children's Hospital, and I urge you to as well.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

A Night At The Park

Last night we went down to the park where Mama-Pajama was holding her weekly show.  Kids are everywhere playing with toys, instruments and more.

I'm not sure who had more fun, Keagan or myself.


While the music was playing (I will have Itsy-Bitsy-Spider stuck in my head for days by the way) he would run over to the playground and be the dare-devil child that I love and fear!


Did I mention the sprayer?  Because it was like 90 degrees out too.  And he was hot.  And wanted in the water.  NOW.


At least he cooled off.


One thing is for sure.  He is getting be a little man, and the kid knows how to make me smile.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Today Was a Rough Day

Any day that starts at 2:00am can't be headed for greatness...and that may be the BIGGEST understatement of the year right there.

Sunday Randy, Keagan and I met some of the family at Old Forge - Enchanted Forest to spend the afternoon having fun in the sun and the evening in a quaint one bedroom cabin (thankfully, each of us had our own cabin because that?  Wouldn't have been pretty.)

Has anyone seen any glaring foreshadowing yet?  No?  Read on.

Our little family had so much fun.  Taking Keagan on his first water ride, watching him play in the wave pool running back and forth in the surf with a huge smile on his face and playing with his cousin was fantastic.  Sure, he hadn't taken a nap.  Sure, he'd been up since 6:30am.  Sure, I was in dire need of coffee.  But all in all, we were having a blast.

Later that evening we sat around the fire eating hot dogs, watching the boys play and pick raspberries.  We were amazed that he was still going and even more amazed that he was in such great spirits.  Randy finally tucked him into bed around 10pm (VERY late for him) and we crawled into bed ourselves shortly after, completely blissful and exhausted.

And then the screaming started.

Did I mention we were in a one-bedroom cabin?

Did I mention Keagan is STILL going through a mommy phase?

Need I go much further?

By 5am (yes, three hours later) I was exhausted and on the verge of tears.  I was vowing to walk out of that cabin with little tufts of my newly highlighted hair gripped in my two hands.  I was ready to call it quits.

He finally curled up in bed with me (after he banished Randy to the much smaller twin bunk bed across the room because GOD FORBID HE BE SHARING A BLANKET WITH DADDY!) and slept.

It was short-lived, but he slept.  We all slept.  But it didn't make it any easier, it didn't make it any better.  Now we had an over-tired toddler at a water park...and it's raining.  The car ride back was brutal as he screamed that he wanted Cheeze-Its (which were residing in his lap), he hit the dog and threw a full sippy cup at my head.

I know these days are few and far between.  I know that he is only two and yes, he was so tired.  But these days right here?  These are the days that make me feel about as defeated as any human being can ever possibly feel.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Prince - The Universal Symbol for Cool

Today I spent five and a half hours in a car with a co-worker whom I don't really know all that well other than the fact that he is from Brooklyn, is married and has children in their 20's.

Needless to say, I was worried.

What do you talk about for five and a half hours in a car with someone you barely know?  Heck, I have a hard time making conversation with Randy for the 45 minutes it takes us to get to Gram's house on the weekends!

But I digress.

We made it to Rochester until I turned on the ipod.  I'm not going to lie, I skipped over songs that I was, quite frankly, embarassed to have him hear.  I mean, come on.  NO ONE needs to see me rock out to The Thong Song.  No one. 

So there I am, skipping over songs {Glee soundtrack anyone?} when Prince's Kiss comes on. 

I'm mortified.  I mean, I love Prince.  Love.  Him.  But now HE is going to know I love Prince.  And can't you just hear the water cooler talk now?

I quickly go to skip over yet another song when he says "You can keep that one on..." and starts singing along and rocking out to it.  With me.  In our rented Ford Edge.  The two of us found common ground in what can only be called one of THE best songs of the mid-80's {granted, I was oh...5 when it came out and he was...well, quite a bit older than 5} but still.  We owned it.

So we bopped along for the roughly two minutes of greatness, totally in sync, totally jamming.

I didn't have to resort to talking about the weather until Buffalo, and for that Prince, I thank you.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Where's Your Mommy?


This 4th of July we took a family trip to the beach.

Sidenote before I get to my story – people watching at the beach?  Priceless.  If ever you need a boost to your self-confidence that is the place to go. Well, there and the State Fair.

Anywho, so we’re at the beach and having a grand old time while I get sunburned and Randy gets sunburned and Keagan plays in the water laughing and giggling and splashing.  We’re having so much fun, our little family, when up walks this adorable little girl, who informs me she is three and wants to play with Keagan.

Mommy was VERY proud when Keagan shared his bucket with the little girl and even prouder when he laughed hysterically when she splashed him with water.

We’re in the water for a good 30 minutes while the kids are playing together when I realize this little girl?  Yeah, she’s all alone.  In the water.  By herself.  No parents in sight.  Three years old, in the water, by herself, chilling with two adults that she has never seen before in her life.

Now, I’m sorry and maybe I’m a little over-protective BUT, if I saw my kid being chatted up by two adults I didn’t know you can pretty much guarantee I would make my presence known ASAP.  Not to mention, THEY ARE IN THE WATER.

But no.  No adult.  Not in the water.  Not on the shore line.  Nada.

I asked her where her mommy was to which she answered “Over there, somewhere…”  I scan the shoreline once again, to no avail.

Now I’m worried.  And I’m angry.  Who does this?  Who puts their adorable little girl in a swimsuit, points them at the water and pretty much walks away?  WHO DOES THIS?

So, while Randy and Keagan continued to play I went up to the lifeguard stand and let them know that this little girl is by herself, in the water with no parent in sight and could they do something about that?  Thank God they are proficient at their jobs.  Quickly they sent another lifeguard out to talk to her and to walk the beach looking for her people.

From our chair I watched as this lifeguard and the little girl walked the beach.  I watched for almost 20 minutes as they combed this not very large beach looking for someone, hoping that any minute I would see a frantic parent come running up to her, clutching her to her chest, half terrified that they had lost their precious child.  For 20 minutes I watched and waited.

Finally they must have found who I can only assume were her big sisters who were tasked with keeping an eye on their little sister.  Not 10 minutes later she was on her own again.

This poor child.  Is this a foreshadowing of what is in store for her?  To walk alone on a beach with no one wondering where she is?  To not be cared about enough to even have a life jacket on while playing in a lake alone?  It made my heart heavy to watch her walk back and forth on the beach with the lifeguard looking for the person that is supposed to love her more than life itself to no avail. 

Selfish as this sounds, it made me realize that I am a good parent.  That I am the parent standing in the water watching over her own, and those around her.  It made me realize that even on my worst days; I’m still a great parent.  I’m a great parent because I know that I could never point my child at the water and say good luck.  I’m a great parent because the alternative is too horrifying to imagine.  If only there were more great parents.

3:15am

3:15am.

That's what time my child woke up this morning.

3:15...A.M.

I should preface this by saying, I know I'm lucky.  Keagan has consistently slept through the night since around 8 months old.  He has consistently gone to bed between 7:30pm and 8pm and most days we have to wake him up to get ready for daycare.

I get it.  I'm lucky.  I'm lucky because a lot of parents don't get that.

Unfortunately, the fact that he DOES usually sleep through the night made 3:15am REALLLLLLY difficult to see.  It made it even more difficult when the reason he was losing his mind was that he wanted his sippy cup.  That was sitting right next to him.  But he couldn't see.  And he didn't remember it was there because he also didn't take a nap yesterday and fell asleep on Randy's chest while reading Otto Goes To Bed for the 80th time since Thursday.

So I'm tired.  And I'm cranky.  And I'm in dire need of an extra-large caffeinated drink like nobodies business.

But you know what?  I know when I go in to wake him up for daycare this morning he'll smile that ridiculously cute smile at me, giggle a giggle so similar to mine and climb up into my arms like a little koala bear...and all will be right with the world. 

Hopefully I can juggle my coffee with the 35 pound koala bear on my hip.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Breakthrough


I kind of fell off the face of the planet.

Not really...but really.

For awhile there I was doing so well.  Writing at least a post a day, making my readers laugh, posting pictures of the midget.

Then it seems like it all came crashing down.  There isn’t any one particular straw that broke this camel’s back.  It was a dang haystack.  And I was the needle.  Good luck finding that.

The other day I came on to search a recipe that I knew I had posted a couple of years back and I saw that my last post was from almost three months ago, and who the heck is that little boy, surely he isn’t my little man that is toddling all over the place yelling “To Infinity…and Beyond” (or at least a garbled version of that) and swinging in the big boy swing.  Surely it hadn’t been THAT long since I’d taken some time to write something, anything.

But it has.  I’m ashamed.  And you know what?  There has been a notable difference in me, in my “real” life since I stopped writing.  And not in a good way.

There are many things that I have shared on this blog over the years.  For Christ’s sake, I postedsticks THAT I HAD PEED ON for the entire world to see.  But I always stopped short of sharing what I have, for a very long time now; felt was too much to share, especially knowing that I have family that follows.  I didn’t want to be bombarded by questions, thought differently of, or be worried about.  I didn't want to be judged.

That choice to not share is what lead to me not posting, lead to me getting touchier and touchier with my husband, lead me to wanting to scream every time my son had a temper tantrum.  Without an outlet to share I bottled up all these feelings and have since taken them out on the two closest targets, my two loves of my life.

How is that good?  It’s not.

My dear friend Miranda at Not Super…Just Mom is actually why I’m writing today.  Miranda has, from the very beginning been very open and honest about her struggle and survival of PPD.  The other day she wrote a post about slipping.  After a hellacious day she was done.  She needed a break.  She needed a hug.  She needed reassurance that she was not only a good mom, but a great one.

And she got it.

She got it from her friends.

She got it from her readers.

She got it from her family.

She got it because she put it out there.  She wrote about how hard of a time she was having and how she felt and what she needed.

Reading that made me realize that my bottling up and not talking about my own experience wasn’t helping me; if anything it was hindering me and making things worse.  It made me realize that I can’t get support from anyone if no one even knows I’m struggling.

Because I am.  And I have been for almost two years now.  I remember the day I said to my husband “I think I need to talk to my doctor about going on meds,” and he looked at me and said “I agree.”  Wake up call much?  For months I had been struggling with it all, trying to figure out how to be super-mom, super-wife, super-everything and for months I kept disappointing myself and feeling that I wasn’t good enough and never would be.  And for months I took it out on Randy.

Finally I called my doctor.  I sat in her office and cried.  I cried for the months of feeling like a failure.  I cried for the months of being so angry at my husband and having no idea why.  I cried for the months of just wanting to run away, turn back time, just let go.

I cried because I was depressed.  I know that now.  It wasn’t that I was a bad wife.  It wasn’t that I was a horrible mother.  I cried because, like so many other women out there I had a condition known as Postpartum Depression.

I left her office that day feeling like a weight, albeit a small one, had been lifted off my shoulders.  Along with a prescription I had strict orders to exercise, take “me time” and to talk.  I followed these orders for quite some time.

And then I stopped working out.

And then I stopped writing.

And then I started snapping at my husband for every little thing and thinking I must be just a horrible mother because who else but a horrible mother would let their child have a nervous breakdown at the thought of a juice box that didn’t have Lightning McQueen on it?

It hit me last week that I hadn’t worked out in months.  I hadn’t really taken “me time” in awhile either, and I hadn’t written anything or talked to anybody in a real long time. 

It hit me that I needed to stop this before it lead me down that dark path any farther.

So this week I went to Zumba for the first time.  I’ve never had so much fun burning a ridiculous number of calories before.  This week I went to Target, by myself, just to walk around.  This week I wrote.

This week, I’ll start to feel better. 

Sunday, April 10, 2011

It Was A Good Day

This weekend, Spring finally came to Central New York.


It was quite sneaky about it...tossing in a snow storm just days before.

But the sun still came out, as promised, Saturday morning.


And it was beautiful.

This winter has been a rough one for me for many different reasons, none of which I can even begin to put in to words yet.


But the sun still came out, as promised.

These past few months have been a whirlwind of obligations, training, run here, do this.


But the sun still came out, as promised.

Just seeing my son smile like this has helped me to turn a corner out of the cold, dreary winter...



And in to the sun.