Weekend Moment :: Mute Math Concert

Waiting for our credit card to be unleashed from the parking garage machine.
Mute Math One

Still waiting…
Mute Math Two

MUTE MATH!!
Mute Math Three

Drummer Darren King is sickly insane.
Mute Math Four

Finally, standing at the back of the House of Blues, where we watch the encore and decide to give our next child the middle name of Blue.
Mute Math Five

Happy Weekend, everyone!

Guilty pleasure

This household has the sniffles. I woke up Wednesday with a bad cold, which I passed on to Poppy, which she passed on to her father. So I apologize for being so lax with my posting on here. It’s just that I’ve been so busy SNIFFLING.

While curled up on the couch under the heavy hand of Sudafed PE this week, I searched the INTERNETS for some good old television to watch. Three nights ago I found Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman on Youtube. You have no idea how happy I was to find the first complete season! I used to watch this show religiously with my whole family on Saturday nights. If you’re not familiar with the show, than I’m sorry because what I’m about to say won’t make any sense. But if you were a developing, young, hormonal pre-teenager during the airing of this show, then rejoice with me when I say SULLY IS ALWAYS THROWING THAT AX! I forgot how much I used to want Joe Lando to ride up on a white horse and sweep me away to the Colorodo fronteir via about 1868. Swoon.

After an episode or two of Dr. Quinn, I even got Jacob sucked in. He left for work on Thursday with strict instructions NOT to watch any episodes without him. What’s that I hear? The faint cry of my husband cursing this website for telling all of his most appalling secrets? It’s true. We are watching Jane Seymour act her little heart out together, almost every chance we get. It has become a disease of sorts.

So in case you were actually wondering what we’ve been up to, that’s it. Sniffling, snuggling, and watching some really awful, addicting TV.

Weekend Moment

I snuggled in bed and talked with my husband until 3AM on Saturday. I love my best friend.

Boom!

My favorite part of this video is seeing the fireworks light up the faces of my two buddies.

To Jacob

Tomorrow is Jacob’s 27th birthday and I’m not sure I’ll get a chance to write this post during the course of tomorrow, since I will be busy being his slave, changing all the poopy diapers, letting him sleep in, and all that jazz. I am still going to see if I can get out of changing all the diapers. Maybe if I package it as quality “father-daughter” time?

Jacob,
Happy birthday, Honey! I love you. I love everything about you. Your slowness to anger, your hot body, your voice, your forgetfulness, your romantic ideas, your sticky-note trails, your eyes, your hair, your scratchy face. I love the way you love me and Poppy, and how you try harder every day to show it. When you mess up, you always vow to do better the next time and I love that. You are so good to us.

You are twenty-seven now, which means you are considered “late twenties” and but a mere three years away from “you-know-what.” Enough quotation marks already – you’re OLD! Hooray! The older you get, the more your old-man qualities shine through. The way you complain about noisy neighbors and bad driving – I just love it.

We have a lot of adventures ahead of us. At times it’s hard to see the goodness in every situation, but we can both admit who’s better at that. Your optimism and never-give-up-attitude drive me to be a better person. Thank you for being afraid to stay in one place too long. I can’t wait to see what this year holds for you, for us.

I hope tomorrow is a great day for you. Poppy and I will do our best to show you how awesome you really are, and how much we love and appreciate you. In fact, she will poop a great poop just for you. And I will wear a nice bra.

Love,
Leanne

Because there’s always something to laugh about

Happy weekend, everybody!

Weekend Moment

Diane & Dad

This is my uncle’s beautiful bride Diane and her father walking down the aisle on Saturday in one of the most touching weddings I have ever witnessed. The happy couple had a lot to celebrate. After still being single well into their forties, Michael and Diane found a lifelong love in each other and it was a first marriage for both!

It was the most beautiful sight watching Diane, a grown woman, acting like a giddy young bride and walking arm-in-arm with her very elderly father. I cried the moment I saw these two enter the sanctuary doors. Did he ever think he would live long enough to see his almost 50-year-old daughter get married? Did she ever lose hope that she would be able to walk with her daddy down the aisle on her wedding day? This picture just shouts “dreams fulfilled” to me. And what a precious moment to be a part of on the weekend that my little family would be celebrating it’s first Father’s Day. As I compared the images in my head of Jacob with Poppy and Diane with her father, I couldn’t help but notice the striking juxtaposition. The mark of time is drastic, but the love is the same. A father’s love never fails. A father’s love is sweet and precious. A father’s love is boundless and ageless. A father’s love is very, very good.

Jacob & Poppy

Happy Father’s Day

Fathers day

DSCF0292

DSCF0291

Fathers Day

Fathers Day

Fathers Day

It makes me happy when…

My husband sings and I feel like the only one in the audience.

Why my husband deserves a Nobel Peace Prize

After I about pulled out all my hair (well, the rest that’s left after postpartum baldness) over the mess that was our entertainment “center,” Jacob orchestrated a little surprise for me when I woke up Sunday morning.

Before & After

And now I watch The View in peace.

BEST HUSBAND EVER.

It makes me happy when…

A perfectly horrible day is topped off with a snuggle and some Mario Kart.

A day in the life

I have always wanted to do a day in pictures, but really lacked the motivation to lug my camera around. When I went to bed last night, I was full of intention and decided Wednesday, June 3rd would be the perfect Day in the Life kind of day.

I started rather late today, sleeping right through Jacob’s alarm, shower and good-bye kiss. I got up around 9:30am and Poppy was still fast asleep next to me. I sneaked off to see if my darling husband had left anything in the coffee pot* for me.

clock

coffee

*note the adorable sticky-note from Jacob

With coffee in hand, I decided to get myself ready for the day. The basic essentials to my morning beautification include mousse, foundation powder, and mascara. I go from flab to fab in about one minute, flat.

beautification

me

About halfway through my coffee, I hear Poppy talking to herself in the bedroom. I am greeted with big smiles. She is the happiest girl in the morning, just like her mama.

good morning!

While Poppy eats breakfast, I open my computer and check email, Facebook and my Goggle Analytics account. Another surprise from the sticky-note monster!

note

Facebook

breakfast

After we finish our morning snuggle (by far the BEST part of mothering Poppy), Belle and Poppy plop down to watch some Angelina Ballerina. I take advantage of this quiet moment to flounce around in front of the mirror in my new, braided-strap dress for my uncle’s wedding in three weeks.

Poppy + Belle

Angelina Ballerina

new dress

After this, we need to get energized so we blast my new YELLE album and have a dance party. Nothing like some French techno pop to get you moving in the morning. All this dancing makes Poppy spit up, so she’s out of her pajamas and into some play clothes.

YELLE!

YELLE!!

On the changing table

After lunch, we head out to get (more!) coffee and visit the baristas at our neighborhood Starbucks. We drive up to the window and all the green aprons crowd around to peek and wave at Poppy. Mama sips a yummy soy caramel macchiato and we head over to Grandma’s house for a visit.

Starbucks

When we arrive at my parents’ house, we are greeted by Petey and the whole family. Even Dad (Grandpa) is there!

Petey

The family

After playing together for a bit, my mom offered to watch Poppy while I went shopping for some GLAM accessories for the upcoming wedding. My new shoes are gold, Poppy’s are not.

Playing with Shawn

GLAM!

We hung out with Grandma some more, then headed home. I snapped this red paint dripped on a brick house because I thought it looked pretty interesting.

Poppy

Red house

When we got home, Jacob surprised with me some beautiful flowers. He got a lot of husband points today, don’t you think? I arranged the flowers while Poppy got a bath.

Flowers

Bath time!

After a riveting game of BABY BURRITO, in which Jacob wrapped Poppy up tight in a blanket and swished her back and forth and back and forth, the two exhausted buddies did a bedtime snack.

baby burrito!

burrito blur

bedtime snack

Now, Jacob and I are snuggled on the couch watching So You Think You Can Dance, our summer favorite. It has been a great day, and I’m glad I got to share my glamorous lifestyle with ya’ll. Perhaps you’ve always wondered how gangstas kick it…

A Sunday moment

Inspired by Erin’s Earth’s Best Sundays, I’ve decided to challenge myself (and anyone who wants to join me) to find one moment each weekend to treasure, to acknowledge, and to share.

This week, I’m sharing the beautiful and yummy soy latte macchiato that my husband made for me after letting me sleep in until 11am.

Coffee

{} P.S. {} Jump in folks! Make Weekend Moment your own thing – a picture, a poem, a reflection, a story. Link back to this post so we can get others to join in too! Happy Weekends!

And that’s how we do it in OHIO

Jacob: Sweetie, if you are going into the kitchen, will you please get me a Guinness out of the refrigerator?

Leanne: If you’re going to ask me to do that, ask the right way please.

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Woman, get me a beer.

Of motherhood and demolition

I’ve kept pretty mum lately about personal things since Poppy’s birth [a period that is in fact still HERE and NOW]. I’ve shared a lot of photos, snippets of new motherhood, and the happy tale of the birth. As things appear around here, motherhood rocks. It seems full of adorable moments, quiet reflections, fun baby giggles, and refreshing walks in the park. And trust me, sometimes it is. Every day is a real, tangible blessing that I wouldn’t trade. So don’t hate. I know what miracle I’m living.

I have, however, been ruminating over the idea of sharing another side of the last three and a half months. I kind of feel like I give the wrong impression of what this whole thing is like sometimes. It’s one thing to say things are “crazy” or “out of hand” on any given day, but it is an entirely different thing to open up and say that sometimes, no matter how blessed or miraculous, motherhood is cataclysmic.

[cataclysmic ˌ\ka-tə-ˈkliz-məl\adj. a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition]

When Jacob and I got pregnant the first time, a baby now lost, it was an accident. An overzealous anniversary celebration, if you will. We were surprised, speechless, and a little bit whatthefuck? We had been married just one year. I had a great job, he had the luxury of a freelance career, we had two kitty cats and no money. We were living the life! Our marriage was really strong. Prior to getting hitched, we always fought. Somehow when we got married everyone relaxed and we really liked being room/soul mates.

For the sake of brevity, I’ll skip ahead and say that two months after getting pregnant, our baby died. We were really, really crushed. The day of my D&C, we looked at each other and said that we still wanted a family. We were not really ready, but we WANTED it and it felt right. I still think that’s the best decision we ever made. I’m not kidding, there was no preparation, no real reason – just little Poppy-to-be knocking at the door.

Fast forward a year later and I give birth to Poppy Anne. The first four weeks of her life are a whirlwind. I can’t even remember them – seriously. I have only the photos to prove they even happened. Oh, and a bloody bra from the first days of nursing to remind me NEVER TO HAVE A BABY AGAIN. Kidding.

I can’t even begin to tell you the changes in my life, my marriage, my body since Poppy has come.

My body. My poor, poor body. My stomach is covered in stretch marks from navel to Neverland. My boobs pretty much decided to warp into giantly uneven, awkward torpedos of death. And let’s not even talk about the baldness or the fact that, because of permanent hip-widening, I will never again wear single digit jean sizes. Does that grieve anyone else?

The changes in my marriage? My life? Jacob and I were shoved into new roles immediately after Poppy was born. Mother and Father. Say what? I stayed home from work, he got a full-time job. I suddenly found myself folding laundry, making food, cleaning. Readers, I DO NOT CLEAN. I DO NOT COOK. I am notorious for being a bad housewife. Jacob married me because I tell good jokes, not because I know what pasta primavera is [I don't]. Since Poppy, I have felt very trapped by these four walls. Some days I wake up deeply depressed. I have cried several times late at night and rolled over to tell Jacob “This is not what I want – it’s boring. It’s hard.”

Jacob, in the same way, has struggled to try to fit into a new thing called fatherhood. I can’t speak for him, but I can say that similar feelings of futility and what-the-hell-are-we-done-with-another-stupid-pointless-day-already? creep up frequently. You might know the same sense, definitely not linked only to new fatherhood, that is the rat race, the rhythm of Western life. It can suck the spark right out of you.

Jacob and I have had huge, major fights in the last three months. Fights that end with “I’m not happy. I want something else. Are we even on the same page?” These are scary questions to ask your spouse. S-C-A-R-Y. Without further disclosure of our personal crap, I will just say that our marriage took a hit. Divorce is not an option. Neither is living forever unhappy. What we have concluded is that we need LIFE in our lives. We’ve got to do things we like doing, even if they don’t fit into “motherhood” and “fatherhood.” For example, I like music. So instead of folding the laundry this morning, I cranked up The Doors and rocked out with Poppy in front of the sub woofer. The laundry still sits in the dryer I think. [I'm kinda afraid to go in the laundry room ever again].

My point, since this is getting too long, is that having a new family member who requires every ounce of who you are to survive and thrive, is hard work. Motherhood is nothing like I imagined. No one could have even prepared me for it if they tried. Not the sleepless nights and constant feedings and all that shit. That’s easy and like, whatever. The hard part of all this is figuring out who I am. This little girl defines me. I am her MOM now. Our family has THREE – father, mother, daughter. But, our family also is unique and we are unique as individuals [alright, BORG reference over]. We dance to our own beat. We suck at some things [like working and cleaning and living beautifully], but we excel at others [like quoting movies, playing outside and talking shit about the government].

My entrance into motherhood, and Jacob’s into fatherhood, has been nothing short of cataclysmic. It has been a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition. Just about everything has fallen apart since Poppy has been born.

And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

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