Showing posts with label Change is Hard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Change is Hard. Show all posts

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Goodbyes are never easy

It's been about a month since the puppies moved away.  Most days, we do pretty well.  The kiddos only ask about them now and then, and we've adjusted to life without dogs.

But every now and then, it's like a sucker-punch to the gut.

Brad's been traveling a lot for work, and I've been staying up late doing school work and finding my first grade bearings.  Yesterday, I was checking on the little lovelies, and I came back down the hall towards my room, when I caught myself looking forward to seeing my puppy dogs all curled up in their beds, snoring and sighing away.

And then I remembered that they were gone, and it made me cry.  Randomly, after a month, just standing in the middle of the upstairs hallway like, "Where in the world did that just come from?!"

I missed their smell.  Not the wet-dog smell or the bad puppy breath smell, but that warm, sleepy fur smell that was here when they slept next to my side of the bed.

I guess I got used to having the extra company when Brad was away, and now it's just so very quiet once Jack and Hannah are in bed.

I texted our friend Joe today to let him know to give them kisses from me, and he sent me this picture of Gracie-girl:


Isn't she just so perfectly beautiful?

Belle was in the picture, too, but she heard something as Joe snapped the picture, and she was off!  Sounds just like Belle!

When it's really hard and I miss the girls so much, I think about how Jack hasn't gotten blotchy in three weeks.  About how he rarely sneezes.  About how soon he'll be able to come off of his inhaler.

And I think, I can do this.

For that boy?  I would do anything.

*****

Also, while Hannah is loving her old school once again, she is not loving the policy of no binkies allowed in the two's room.  Mama's having a hard time, too, but I try not to let her see that.  Today, I hid her binky when I dropped her off, and when I picked her up, and she asked me for it, I told her I didn't know where it was.  That it went bye-bye because she was such a big girl, and she doesn't need it anymore.  She was very unhappy.

But eventually she got over it and started playing.  She asked me again before bedtime, and she cried a little when I put her down for the night, but everyone's right - it's time.  I know this.  I just hate to see that little girl sad.

She fell asleep after only a few short minutes.  I scurried around, found all the binkies and hid them away.  I cannot go backwards this time.  I cannot.

Please don't let me.

If fact, if someone could come over here and hide them from me, that would be wonderful.

Seriously.

Just don't throw them away.  At least not the pink one - I need it as a keepsake.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Mama Bear Has Spoken

It's been a tough couple of days, but we are here and we are happy.

Today, our babies returned to their former daycare.  After three weeks of trying to make it work and trying to help Hannah adjust, I decided that it just wasn't the place for us.  Hannah has never been more miserable, and in my mommy-gut, I was just not impressed.  In fact, I was completely underwhelmed.  And every day that I went in and Hannah still didn't have her name or her photo on her cubby made it worse.  When I dropped Hannah off Thursday morning, yet again not in her own classroom and with a teacher that she was unfamiliar with and didn't know her name, I made the decision to call our old school to see if they had space for our little lovelies.

Thank goodness, they did.

Within twenty-four hours, new job and all, I had pulled them out of their current school, prepared an emergency contact list for the change, emailed Jack's kindergarten teacher so she would be aware of where to send Jack after school, called the front office, packed their school materials, and had taken them back to where they belong.

When we walked in this morning, the teachers and staff cheered and welcomed us with open arms.  Free of charge today!

Hannah was upset when I left - I knew she would be.  Too much has been going on, and she doesn't feel settled.  And I get it.

But when I got there this afternoon?

She was smiling and playing outside with her friends.  Sans lovey and binky.  She had a wonderful day - ate her whole lunch and napped like a doll.  She is happy.

And Jack?  Jack was like a mini-celebrity when he got back to the school after kindergarten.

He and his "girlfriend" Lola were once again inseparable.

They are so happy.  And so am I.

My job?

I haven't worked this hard in years.  But like I said, I am happy.  I feel fulfilled - I am doing something that really matters to me.  I am surrounding myself with little ones who, for the most part, are eager to learn. I realize the weight of that responsibility, but it makes me feel good.

It's what I was meant to do.

I appreciate your patience while I find my bearings in a new job and new grade level:)


And when I'm not working?  I'm soaking up these little ones.  Forgive me.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

We survived...kind of

Well, we survived our first week back to school.  Jack and Hannah started their new daycare last Monday when I went back to work.  Originally, I'd planned to send them twice a week from the beginning of August to get them in the swing of things, but we were having so much fun together, and I didn't want to take them to school while I was home.  I decided we'd all start together - that no matter what, the first day would be stressful for all of us.

It wasn't too bad.  The timing went well, and we all made it on time.  I was so proud of Jack, not a single tear, and he didn't really go into his own classroom right away because it was so early in the morning.  Hannah didn't do quite as well.  She was very upset and cried.  She's cried every morning since, and she whimpers at night if we talk about school.  Her lip quivers when we pull into the parking lot in the morning.  Friday was her splash day, so I got her dressed in her swimsuit.  When we pulled into the parking lot, she asked, "We go pool?"  I felt so bad that she'd gotten confused.  My heart just broke.

Today wasn't any easier.  I'm trying to give it time.  I'm not thrilled with our new place yet, but change is hard, and I need some time to adjust.  Jack seems happy, and Hannah's happy when I get there.  Just not when I drop her off.  At all.  It's so hard to leave her there when she's so unhappy...

The other problem?  Hannah came home with a runny nose on Friday, and she wasn't feeling well all weekend.  She woke up with a fever on Saturday morning, but she seemed to get better as the weekend progressed, and today she was able to go to school.  Being exposed to all those other kids always seems to bring the sniffles, but such is life.  The rest of us seem to have gotten by unscathed.  Fingers crossed.

In other news, Jack tried to bribe Brad with a quarter tonight, and Hannah, when asked, "Who's the prettiest little girl in the whole wide world?" answers, "Hannah did."  They make me smile.

Today is Belle's seventh birthday, and we sent her a birthday video.  Joe said their ears perked up when they heard our voices, and then I felt bad.  I hope we didn't get their hopes up or confuse them.  I miss them.

Oh...

and I have a new job.  I start tomorrow.  I'll be teaching first grade, and I'm super-excited.  Also a tiny bit scared since parents come Thursday, we meet students on Friday, and school starts next Tuesday.  You'll understand if I'm away from the blog for a few days, no?

Wish me well - I'm going to need it!


Monday, August 12, 2013

Our Puppy Dogs

Our house feels unbearably quiet and empty.

And yes, I know we have a five year old and a two year old, so that seems impossible, but it's true.

I mentioned that Saturday was a sad day - that's because it was Saturday when Brad drove Gracie and Belle to their new home and handed them over to their new family, a very nice man named Joe that we've come to know over the last several weeks.


Putting our puppies up for adoption was a very long and painful decision, but it finally came to the point where we knew it was the right thing to do.  And not only for us, but for Gracie and Belle as well.  Before we had Jack and Hannah, we had Gracie and Belle, and we doted on them like they were our babies.

Truth be told, it is harder to dote on dogs when two little kids become involved.  You have less time, energy, patience, and money - and their lives changed.  They weren't by any means miserable or mistreated, so please don't misunderstand me.  They just didn't get the same level of attention that they were used to getting before Baby Jack came home from the hospital that very first day.

And while they haven't always been in a crate during the day, once we moved into our new house and I just couldn't put toys away every day before work, we had to crate the dogs.  Otherwise, they would chew on tiny, toy pieces.  They were jealous, and this was how they showed it.

But they were oh-so-good to us.  To our babies.  To our family...  Very loyal, very loving.  Never aggressive.


The year that Jack turned two, he had a very rough winter.  He started wheezing, and we ended up having to visit an allergist and putting him on an inhaler and allergy meds that he's taken every day since before he turned three.  He just recently turned five.  When we had him tested for allergies, dogs did come up slightly, but he was so young and they couldn't be sure.  Dogs and horses.  And seasonal allergies.  The girls didn't seem to be an issue for Jack, and so we let it go.  We believed it was the brutally cold temperatures that he had to play in during his daycare hours.

But what the allergy tests did do, was they heightened my awareness to Jack's reactions to certain things.  For example, I began to notice that when he played on Gracie and Belle's beds, that he would get red and blotchy.  Or if he sat in his bean bag chair that Belle also slept on at night after Jack was in bed, Jack would get little bumps on his arms or face.  He would sneeze a lot in the morning or after playing with the girlfriends, and we started to worry.  And over the course of a few years, Jack's reactions to the girls seemed to be getting worse.

Jack had certainly overheard Brad and I talking about the puppies and his allergies over the years, but I never really noticed exactly how much he thought about it.  One day, I was driving in the car with Jack and Hannah, and I was telling them about how much I love them, and how lucky I am to have two happy, healthy children, when Jack announced that he wasn't healthy.  When I asked him what he meant, he mentioned his allergies and the puppy dogs.  And my heart sank.

We love Jack and Hannah more than anything else in this world, and we would do anything to protect them from danger or harm of any kind.  I just never thought that might involve putting our puppy dogs up for adoption.  A few weeks ago, we made the decision to post the puppies on a Shih Tzu rescue site.  Against the suggestion of the site to list the animals separately, I posted Gracie and Belle as a packaged deal and within hours we had several interested parties.  I wanted to back out.  I didn't.


We weeded through a couple of interested people right away, but that very first night, a man emailed me and asked for as much information as I could give him about our puppies.  We began an email strand that is still going on to this day.  He'd had two Shih Tzus of his own up until about a year ago when he went through a divorce and his ex-wife got custody of their dogs.  He's been looking for a year for a pair of pups to love and take care of, and then he found ours.

Over a couple of weeks he asked a million and one questions about our dogs, and we were happy to answer every last one.  We believed that only someone with the greatest heart would know what questions to ask and he knew.  He's retired and doesn't want anything to do with our crate.  Brad went to meet him, and we knew that day that we'd found the person who was supposed to take care of Gracie and Belle from here on out.  We made the arrangements and decided that in order to make it easier on the kids, Brad would drop off the puppies and all of their belongings, and I would stay home with the kids.




Saying goodbye was not easy.  In fact, it was quite brutal.  Mostly because the kids seemed somewhat oblivious and unattached, but Brad and I were a wreck and trying at the same time to not push those feelings off on the kids.  We took some family pictures and gave them lots of cuddles (and half a pound of roast beef, each), and then they were gone.


Lucky for me, I hadn't showered yet, so I was able to cry my eyes out in the shower without the kids seeing.  But then I had to pull myself together and go on with our day.  I took them to their new school, Hannah napped, and then we went to the store and to Chik-Fil-A for dinner.  I randomly teared up all day long, embarrassing myself at every stop we made, but I couldn't help it.  I was a mess.

Their presence is missed.  I didn't realize all the tiny things I would miss every day, but I do.

On Saturday, I tried to take a nap, but I couldn't sleep.  Gracie and Belle always napped next to me, and even if they weren't on the bed, I could hear them sigh or snore or stretch and it was comforting.  And now they aren't here.

No one barks when we pull into the garage.  When we come home, we aren't rushing to let them out of the crate.  The space in our office where the crate used to be?  It feels huge and empty.  It looks wrong. I'm going to have to do something with that space, and soon.

When I would go get Hannah up from her naps, Gracie would follow me and jump up against her crib. Now Hannah doesn't look out and say, "Greasy wake Hannah up."  She doesn't seem to notice our routine has changed, but I do.

When Hannah dropped some steak on the floor last night, no one lunged to get to it first.

These things make me sad.

Do Gracie and Belle know how much we love them?  Do they think we deserted them?  Are they happy?  Will they remember us and our babies?  Will we ever see them again?

My heart is broken.

I don't think I've been this sad since my grandpa passed away, and that was nine years ago.

Our kids?  They seem much better than we expected.

Sunday morning, Hannah (who by the way, became best friends with the puppies the week before their departure) looked around asked, "Where Gracie go?  Where Gracie and Cuddlebug?"  I told her that they were at their new home, and she seemed perfectly fine with that answer.

Only tonight Jack came up to me and said he missed the dogs.  I told him I do, too.

The only thing that helps?  Gracie and Belle are happy.  They are getting so many rubs and walks.  They have constant companionship and aren't competing for attention.  Joe is cooking them food and sharing popsicles for dessert.  The girlfriends are getting so much love.  We are so very thankful for our new friend, Joe.

And Jack seems to be sneezing less.

It is for the best.  I know this to be true.

But oh-my-goodness, it sucks.


Monday, July 29, 2013

the end of an era

So basically it was much easier to celebrate and see Grammy and Grampy's new house than it was to say goodbye to their old house.  As of tonight, they are completely out.  They've turned over the keys to the new owners and driven away for the last time...and it makes me sad.

The kids and I went over today to help them get a few last minute things, and I took some pictures of the empty house while we were there.  I got a little choked up...it's not easy to say goodbye to the house that you grew up in - that holds so many memories...
  • visiting the house while it was being built through the winter
  • starting high school
  • running up the front steps the day I got my driver's license
  • coming home from high school graduation to my Grandpa waiting in the kitchen
  • coming home from college on the weekends
  • running up the stairs and into my sister's room the day I ran back into Brad
  • my bridal shower
  • writing my wedding vows in the living room
  • spending my last night in that house the night before our wedding
  • throwing the surprise party for my parent's 25th wedding anniversary
  • telling my parents we were pregnant
  • my baby shower
Really - the list goes on and on.  And that's not to say that there aren't unhappy memories, too.  There are plenty.  I'm sure every house/family has them.  But I love that house.  And I will miss it forever.



{They were so embarrassed I made them pose for this picture, but really it was necessary.}


Goodbye, home.