Sunday, March 20, 2022

White Pass 2022

Ty's company came under new ownership and with that, he was granted MLK and Presidents Day off. We took advantage of the long February weekend with a ski trip at White Pass. 

We rented a VRBO in Packwood (with what turned out to be crazy owners) and put the kids in lessons for the first time. Hazel's ski rental took so long that she almost missed hers and I (finally) agreed that it's worth it for everyone to have their own gear. 

The classes allowed Ty and I to ski solo but after two hours of getting everything situated and my boots hurting my calves, I only made it on one run before I was ready for lunch in the lodge. The kids met us there and we rallied for the afternoon, staying until the mountain closed at 4 pm. Sunday went much smoother and we got a full day of skiing in. 

Every time we get up to the mountain I feel more on board with Ty's vision of being a ski family. It really is beautiful and such a fun way to spend time together. 








Sunday, March 13, 2022

Hawaii 2022

We took a one-year hiatus from our winter Hawaii trip due to the pandemic and avoided air travel for almost exactly two years. After we were all vaccinated, we booked a trip for the following January, confident that the worst was behind us. 

That prediction didn't come to pass and COVID transmission was at an all-time high as we prepared for our vacation. We waited with bated breath as twenty of the twenty-two kids in Owen's class tested positive. Just when we thought we were in the clear, Owen ended up falling ill. He was devastated and spent the subsequent eight hours alternating between sobbing in his room and demanding that he won't miss our family vacation. 

After lots of stress and thinking through one thousand different scenarios, Ty and I decided that since everyone else was negative (within 24 hours of flying) as many of us should go as possible. Wes, Hazel, Steve, Paula, and I departed as scheduled while Ty and Owen hung back for a few days. Per the CDC guidelines, Owen was okay to be in public with a mask five days after the start of symptoms, so we wanted to get him to that point. We knew the likelihood of the rest of the family falling ill was high but felt we could safely isolate once we were in Ko Olina. Steve and Paula had been positive just a week before, so they weren't worried about transmission. We'd previously stayed in this exact condo and therefore knew there is no common space to pass through in order to access it. We committed to not using the pool or eating at restaurants; only being at the condo or on the beach a safe distance away from others. We felt confident we could enjoy our vacation without putting anyone at risk, once we were there. It was the travel portion that felt tricky. 

The way this all went down felt incredibly defeating but I also recognize that COVID disrupting our vacation is nothing more than a minor inconvenience when the virus has had much larger consequences for so many. 

Ty ended up staying negative so he and Owen were able to join us just a few days late. By the time Owen arrived, he had come to terms with the circumstances and was set to enjoy the vacation. I feared he'd have such a chip on his shoulder that it would put a damper on the week, but he rallied. Hazel had a runny nose and Wes a dry cough but neither Ty nor I developed any symptoms. 

Once everyone was together, we enjoyed a lovely week. We went for walks, basked in the sun, made cocktails, swam in the ocean, watched the sunset, found sea turtles, and a monk seal. Hazel wore her first bikini and the boys tried out their snorkeling gear. I was happy with the way my Hawaiian photos turned for the first time. 

I know I say it every year but it bears repeating; these people mean everything to me and I'm incredibly grateful for this special time together.  































 

Thursday, March 10, 2022

2022

2021 Goal Review  

  • Apply for a photography business license. Check! 
  • Start a photography social media account and post twice a month Check! 
  • Photograph 12 families Check! 
  • Decrease my FTE to 0.6. Consider other career opportunities. Check! Working less has been helpful in reducing my moral distress. I also changed up my schedule and love having Friday's off. 
  • Exercise at least 3 days a week Check! For the most part. 
  • Start running again. Didn't get to this one and I think I'm going to eliminate it from the list. I walk a lot and have decided that's good enough. 
  • Read 12 books Check! I read 15! I discovered Kristen Hannah and devoured her work. Here's the list-- Maybe You Should Talk to Someone, Burnout, The Nightingale, The Guest List, American Dirt, Such a Fun Age, Four Winds, The Vanishing Half, The Silent Patient, Night Road, Somebody's Daughter, The Great Alone, The Last Thing He Told Me, The Self Driven Child, The Light We Lost, and Winter Garden. 
  • Continue searching for a church home-- somewhere with diversity. Check! We've committed to HCC. I still wish it was more diverse. 
  • Open college savings accounts for Wes and Hazel This is #1 on my list for 2022. 
  • Become a certified life coach Nope! Still a dream but realistically not in the 2 year plan. 
  • Commit to learning and reading about race, equity and white privilege. Check! This is a life long process but I've learned a lot this year. 
  • Take a writing workshop. I didn't get to this one but will keep it on the list for 2022.
  • Ski once with the kids and once without them. Check! Ty's dream of us being a ski family has almost come true.
  • Something I'm proud of accomplishing that wasn't on the list-- Book Club! My friend, Deb, and I started a bookclub as a way to build community in our neighborhood and it's been lovely. I've made new friends and look forward to the monthly meeting. 

2022 Goals 

As I embark upon 2022, there is nothing that I want to accomplish burning inside of me. I feel proud of my photography growth in the past two years and want to continue that trajectory. Taking photos brings me joy and creates connections that I adore. Pursuing writing and life coach training are both things that I'd still love to grow toward, but for now, photography is the main focus. I remember a mentor telling me, "you can have it all; you just can't have it all right now." The older I get, the more true that feels. Here are a few things I'd like to prioritize.  

  • Learn to drive a boat 
  • Read 14 books, listen to an audiobook
  • Photography 12 families, offer mothers day mini sessions, fall mini session and summer mountain photos
  • Complete AJ business course 
  • Compile photography email list 
  • Plan social media posts on monthly basis (post twice as month) 
  • Take a writing workshop 
  • Meet with a financial planner
  • Find ways to volunteer with the kids 
  • Open college accounts for Wes and Hazel 









Tuesday, March 1, 2022

One more

It was mid-January and we were at Chris and Kari's Cove house for a long weekend. The kids were all asleep and the adults were sitting on the freezing cold patio, in ridiculous-looking wearable blankets, drinking and chatting. The topic of having more children came up and Ty casually mentioned he'd "have one more," as if that were a totally normal thing to say in a conversation. 

Backing up a few years, Ty wasn't overly enthusiastic about having a third child but agreed to it in order to fulfill the desires of my heart. Therefore, the idea of a fourth was never something I considered. From conception to birth, to babyhood, I knew each stage with Hazel was my last. When she was born, I felt whole and complete. When she stopped sleeping in her crib, I got rid of it the next week. Pregnancy, birth, breastfeeding, baby phase; done, done, done, and done. 


And now here we are, multiple White Claws deep when my husband reveals the possibility of a sequel I'd never seriously considered. I laughed it off at that moment, but spent the subsequent weeks really, truly evaluating whether or not I wanted to have a fourth child. 


Turns out, I don't. 


Which both surprises me and gives me a deep sense of peace. I have spent my entire life loving little people and dreaming of being a mom. I am incredibly grateful for my three kiddos and the completeness I felt after I delivered Hazel remains. I have everything I could ever want or need. While the idea of another baby certainly pulls at my heartstrings, truly leaning into the ones I've already got resonates in my soul. 


To be clear, there are no lists that make having a child the right or wrong choice. As I write out my feelings on why growing our family isn't right for us, I know none of these things would actually matter if I found out I was pregnant tomorrow. That being said, I spent enough time considering logistics that I want to detail them here. 


The dynamic between our three kids is so, so great that doing anything to alter that doesn't sit well. The relationship between the three of them individually and as a trio is everything I could hope for. We had them all two years apart very intentionally so that they'd be able to experience childhood together. Having another now would make the youngest four years after Hazel and nine years younger than Owen. The current three are able to do most things together and the little one wouldn't be able to participate in the same way. Had I known earlier on that having four was a possibility, I would have had two, waited 4-5 years, and had two more. 


Hazel is going to start prekindergarten in the fall and for the first time in nine years, I will have regular, scheduled time to myself. In terms of parenting little kids, this is the finish line and while these milestones are always bittersweet, I'm not looking to start over when I've just arrived. Time for photography, reading, group exercise classes, long walks and coffee dates are within my reach.


It's true that the days are long but the years are painfully short. I think there is something in all of us that will always ache for the sweet scent of a newborn, but no matter how many kids we have, that stage will never last. I made a commitment early in motherhood to consciously resist lamenting my kids' growth and fully lean into each stage. The possibility of adding to our family reaffirms my dedication to that. 


Finding ways to nurture and support littles' has always been a part of my story; from helping with neighbor kids at an unusually young age to my career in pediatrics, my dedication to loving on babies stretches beyond my biological ones. I have a feeling new opportunities for this will eventually come into the light. 


As for now, I'm here for school-age parenting and gearing up for living with teenage boys. This little family of mine means everything to me.