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I’m not doing so bad after all!

June 5, 2012~ Etc.

*My eyes are getting really tired of looking at so many pictures of myself on here…so here are some pictures of my bebes.  They’re far more pleasing to the eye. 🙂
Our oldest daughter Adalie did something really sweet today for her little sister, and I’ve never been so proud.  Like heart-melting, teary-eyed proud.  And I think for the first time of being a parent, I thought to myself, “Whoa, we are actually doing a good job in raising good kids whom will benefit the society!  We are good parents after all!”  I always knew Jay was an excellent father, he’s far more patient than I am, but I did give myself some credit today of being a not-so-shabby parent after all.

So this is Adi & Ana with their juice cups.  They are very, very attached to their juice cups and have been drinking from it since they were about 10 months old.  It’s actually their milk cups, which they drink from it in the morning when they wake up, right before nap time, and right before they go to bed.  We’ve been trying for about a year to wean them off of their milk cups(they drink water and juice just fine with regular cups), but haven’t succeeded yet.  We’ve upgraded the milk cups to a bigger size, switched out the suction/nipple part a few times from wear and tear, including a couple months ago when Ana bit off the suction part.  We told her that this was the last time we got her a new juice cup, and if she bites off the suction part again, then that was it, and she would have to start drinking from a regular cup.
Well, tonight as she was drinking milk from her milk cup before bedtime, she bit off the suction part and a chunk of it came off.  It didn’t just happen from tonight, it was a combination of the past couple months of her chewing it , and it had it’s last straw.  Right after it came off, she ran to the corner of the living room devastated, and just started bawling.  She was so heart broken!  Two things she always asks for before napping or going to bed is her milk cup and her blankie.  She is so attached to those two things, so with one of her security item gone, and remembering what we said about how we weren’t going to buy her a new one, her little heart was broken and she cried for a good while.  Then when she slowly came back to where Jay and Adi was, Adi says to her, “AaaannnaaaAAA-!”  with the same/reprimanding voice that I use, and then she quickly says, “You can use my suction thing, Ana.”  Jay then said to her, “What are you going to use?” and she said, “I will just drink from a regular cup so that Ana can use mine.”
I was downstairs during this time with my bachelorette GNO, so I heard all this from Jay, after the girls were in bed and as Jay and I were cleaning the kitchen.  And as I was washing the dishes, I felt a gush of tear and gratitude that we are doing a good job after all.  That I’m not so bad of a mother after all.
I had lunch with my friend a few days ago and I told her how I thought I would’ve been a way better mother than I actually am.  That since my dream occupation since I was 5 years old was to be a mother, and I babysat since I was 12 every weekend, and nannied a family to 1 year old and a 7 year old every day of the summer for two years from 8-5 pm, I didn’t think it was going to be that hard, and how I was going to be this amazing stay at home mother.  But then my dream came true and I didn’t love every minute of it like I thought I would.  That the first time I got burned out being a mother, I thought I was a terrible mother for feeling so.  That being a nanny wasn’t that hard, so I thought being a mother was going to be the same.  That I saw all these mothers who said they loved every minute of it, and I felt super guilty and inadequate that I didn’t love every minute of it.  That sometimes I just need to get out of the house and have some time just for me.  To get out with my husband or my girlfriends without the kids, and enjoy being myself without worrying/tending to my kids.  To first feel like me, instead of feeling like a mother first. 
My friend also said to me, “Me too!  I thought I was going to be a way better mother too!”  And shared some of her stories with me too.
But then I guess even we didn’t know just how hard being a mother is.  How challenging and self-motivating, selfless of a job it is to be a good mother.  How it will test your patience to the maximum and stretch your capacity to be a better person in every extreme possible way.  And no one will ever know just hard it is to be a mother until they actually become one themselves.  
So tonight I felt assured and validated that all my work, effort, and sacrifice is really paying off.  That I have two really great, wonderful children.

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TAGGED: Motherhood, sisters 17 Comments

sisterly love is a sisterly love.

March 23, 2012~ Etc.

people have told me raising two kids only a year apart is harder than raising twins.  i wouldn’t know which is harder since i’ve never had twins, but what i know is that it was really, really hard.  my oldest was only 7 months old when i got pregnant with my younger one.  oh, she was still just a little baby herself and depended so much on me when she became a big sister.  she still depended so much on me and yet i expected so much from her.  and she has not let me down but have exceeded any expectation i’ve had of her as the role of a big sister.  and ana of course couldn’t be a more cuter, adorable, charming little sister that she is.  
and the best part about having two girls a year apart?  they are the best of friends.  it’s so fun to see them be interested in the same exact things, liking the same toys, t.v shows, and clothes.  it makes me so happy when i see them sharing, loving, playing with each other.  it makes me so warm when i see them take care of each other, and protect each other.  and while the first two years were really hard, it’s actually easier now since they entertain and keep each other company and are so close!  they even share clothes which is going to save a lot of money! 😉  so it was a small price to pay on my part for their endless friendship and such close relationship.  
adi said to me a couple months ago, “mommy?  i’m the big sister and ana’s the little sister, huh?  well, i’m always gonna watch out for ana and always keep my eye on her.”  
and boy, did she mean it!  the other day some kids called ana a not-so-nice name and she came to tell me what they said.  i told her it doesn’t matter what other people say because she knows, i know, and heavenly father knows that she is not what they said and it doesn’t matter what other people say.  feeling somewhat dissatisfied with my response, she went to her older sister adi to tell her what happened.  immediately, adi put on her shoes, went outside and went right up to the kids and as she put both of her hands on her hips she said, “hey!  no one calls my sister that, she is not!  if you keep calling her that, you guys are the one that is, okay?  you be nice to my sister!”  she repeated this line about 6 more times to make sure they got her point.  then they all played together happily.  i listened to the whole thing inside the house with the window cracked open, giggling and being so proud of her.  and being so grateful they are the sisters i always hoped they would be.
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TAGGED: sisters 22 Comments

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Hello! My name is Sarah and I am so happy to have you here! Here you'll find DIY sewing, DIY home building & decor, honest and vulnerable posts of motherhood and snippets of my family. We are building our dream house and will update you regularly on our whole process from start to finish and I am also starting a mother-daughter sewing series. So I hope you stay awhile!

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