Friday, October 31, 2008

What a night!

Buzz Lightyear to the rescue! Mom, Dad, Sydney and Buzz.
Rory and Mema, I'm pretty sure she had more fun that Rory did!
Rory ended the night by trick or treating at our house.Daddy only gave him one piece of candy...what a schmuck. ;)
Wow, for only a handful of houses, he sure did good. Guess that's what he gets for being so dang cute.
Well, Rory, err, I mean Buzz Lightyear, had a blast trick or treating tonight. Since it was his first time, we explained to him what he would have to do and say to get candy, and he had it down after the first door. We got lots of compliments on his costume, and he got handfuls of candy. We hit maybe 10 houses before he was tired, and he sure had alot to show for it! Knowing me, this candy will last until next Halloween, but knowing Micah, Rory will have eaten all of it in the next week(Daddy likes to sneak him treats).








Happy Halloween!
Rory is feeling much better today, his fever broke late last night, and he's great today, just looking forward to trick or treating, here's some of the photos I took today...






It's late, it's been one of those days. Rory came down with some kind of virus, he started running a fever yesterday, and this morning it was 102 degrees, so off to the doctor we went. Thankfully the doctor said it's just one of the many viruses going around, his ears were clear, so no ear infections, etc. So we stayed inside AGAIN today, and watched lots of cartoons, and rested up. It was nice, all three of us(me, Rory and Sydney) took a nice long nap together in my bed this aftenoon, I'm sure it was a sight! I really hope he's better tomorrow so he can still go trick or treating, he's been looking forward to it for awhile now, and so has Mema..she's going to come and go with us. AND, our pumpkin rotted again!! It was so bad it collapsed in on itself. Should have gotten a picture, it was pretty funny looking. We just have bad luck with these pumpkins. Other than that, looking forward to the weekend so that Micah can lend a hand with the kids, and I can sleep in on Saturday!! Yay!

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Little Baker

Sydney was just hanging out.Rory mixing up the dough...He did a couple and got bored...
Obviously he's enjoying the cookies.

Rory and I decided to make cookies for our neighbors today, I let Rory do most of the work(supervised heavily of course...and I put the eggs in). The cookies came out really yummy, and we had a blast making them. I love that Rory is old enough to do this kind of stuff, now. I aslo added a picture of what Miss Sydney was doing while we were baking...she was just hanging out in her bouncy seat.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

I'm fat

So I'm doing something about it!! What two babies in 2 1/2 years does to your body is amazing. The human body is a wonderful thing, I'm so blessed to be able to have the experience of carrying a child, so I can't be too hard on myself about what it looks like after the fact(my body that is). Anyways, I've taken up running. Just three or four days a week, I'm working my way up distance wise very slowly...after two weeks I am up to 1 1/2 miles of running without stopping, and I'm pretty proud of myself!! Yes, it takes me 15 minutes to "run" (more like jog) this distance, but I'm working on it, and it's getting easier, and I really look forward to it now. I have always been a water baby, was on the swim team, played water polo, etc., so land sports are foreign, and I have always HATED running, but again, it's growing on me. I think it's more just the fact that I get 15 precious minutes ALL TO MYSELF. I put on the ipod, blast some music, and get into a groove. My goal is to run 3 miles straight by Thanksgiving, so pray for me!!Anyways, I'm looking forward to a trimmer me hopefully by Christmas...can't wait to fit back into my pre-Sydney size 6's! I'm so tired of wearing stretchy pants!! (Now if only I could fit into my early marriage size 2's, but I'm not holding my breath...if your a Mother, you know it'll never happen, so stop laughing at me, a girl can dream, right?)

Monday, October 27, 2008

My pumpkin




Sydney fell asleep on her brothers floor in his blanket while Rory and I were playing, had to get a picture! Also, our poor pumpkins that we carved a couple weeks ago got so moldy within a week we had to throw them out(my fault, was just so excited to carve them, I couldn't wait...there went three beautiful pumpkins!!). Anyways, so I bought one more pumpkin and carved it myself, decided to give Micah a break this time. Hopefully it'll last until Friday!! All this hot weather isn't boding well for the pumpkins lasting. Rory told me before he fell asleep last night"thanks for carving my pumpkins face, Momma." It's funny to talk to him, he says the most hilarious stuff. I layed down and cuddled with him last night for a few minutes and we talked. I asked if he likes cuddling with me, and he said"yes, I like cuddling with Mema at her house, too." I asked who he liked cuddling with more, and he said "Mema." I asked why, and his exact reply: "because she lets me watch cartoons." I was laughing so hard I almost fell off his bed. He then proceeded to tell me that she gives him treats and pudding whenever he spends the night, and buys him hamburgers from the hamburger store(McDonalds), and donuts when he wakes up. AND he told me she gave him a lollipop out of her desk at work. That kid sure is spoiled by Mema. I guess it's a good thing I make him eat so healthy, otherwise he'd be so sugared up he wouldn't know what to do. Both kids are feeling better this week, too, thankfully!!!
OH, and an update, Sydney weighed in at 14 pounds, 11 ounces, and 24 inches long at her 2 month appointment. Her doctor put her at 95% on the charts for both height and weight. She's a healthy little girl!! To quote the pediatrician: "Make sure to lift her with your legs and not your back." Haha.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Blah











Well, this has been an uneventful week(which is a good thing). Just day to day stuff...Rory's got a cold today, so we're staying inside, which ISN'T fun at all. That boy needs to be out and running around, but since he's running a fever with his cold, we'll ere on the side of caution and stay inside until that passes. Unfortunately he missed his little friend Mia's party today, he was really looking forward to it(and so was I!!). It seems like Mr. Rory has been sick constantly as of late, Micah keeps reminding me he's a little boy who likes to stick his fingers in his mouth after touching who knows what, so that explains alot. AND flu season has started, so let's hope that stays away from our home this year...I don't need the flu making the rounds, especially with a newborn in the house.

Dad went to pick up Great Grandma Drury today from St. Louis, so she'll be here Saturday I'm assuming(they are driving back). So we'll be glad to see her! She's getting up there in age, so we want to see her as much as possible. yesterday we went to the mall with Aunt Lynnette and Kaydence, and Rory got one of those chocolate suckers from See's candy, here's a couple pictures of the after product for your viewing pleasure....also of Rory and Sydney being silly.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Blessing Day!

Rory up a tree..thanks to the help of Uncle Keith...
Kevin and Kasey Keith, Lynnette, and Kaydence hiding in the blanket...
Rory sneaking licorice..thanks for bringing that Aunt Lucretia!!

Sorry for the not so flattering shot, Mom. Don, Tara, Peggy and Tyler and Holli in the back.
Shot of a few of us...
Daddy and Sydney...Lucretia was trying to get Micah to look lovingly down at his daughter, this is what we got. ;)
Sydney in her Blessing gown.
Momma and Sydney...dang, we forgot to take pictures at church with all of us!!
Rory flexing.Sydney was blessed on Sunday the 12th. All of our family came, so it was a nice excuse to get everyone together! I feel so blessed to have my family and Micah's family living so close to us, so we can see them as often as we like(or don't like). I love my family so much!!
Anyways, after church, we all got together at a park by our house and had a picnic. Rory loves spending time with his Grandparents, Aunts and Uncles and cousins. Sydney got lots of face time with everyone, too. here's some pictures...we forgot to do a family picture outside of church, which I'm bummed about, but we got a few others...

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Just a refresher during these troubled times...

The Divine Institution of Marriage
Marriage is sacred, ordained of God from before the foundation of the world. After creating Adam and Eve, the Lord God pronounced them husband and wife, of which Adam said, “Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.” [1] Jesus Christ cited Adam’s declaration when he affirmed the divine origins of the marriage covenant: “Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female, and said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh? Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh.” [2]
In 1995, “The Family: A Proclamation to the World” declared the following unchanging truths regarding marriage:
We, the First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, solemnly proclaim that marriage between a man and a woman is ordained of God and that the family is central to the Creator’s plan for the eternal destiny of His children . . . The family is ordained of God. Marriage between man and woman is essential to His eternal plan. Children are entitled to birth within the bonds of matrimony, and to be reared by a father and a mother who honor marital vows with complete fidelity.
The Proclamation also teaches, “Gender is an essential characteristic of individual premortal, mortal, and eternal identity and purpose.” The account in Genesis of Adam and Eve being created and placed on earth emphasizes the creation of two distinct genders: “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.” [3]
Marriage between a man and a woman is central to the plan of salvation. The sacred nature of marriage is closely linked to the power of procreation. Only a man and a woman together have the natural biological capacity to conceive children. This power of procreation – to create life and bring God’s spirit children into the world – is sacred and precious. Misuse of this power undermines the institution of the family and thereby weakens the social fabric. [4] Strong families serve as the fundamental institution for transmitting to future generations the moral strengths, traditions, and values that sustain civilization. As the Universal Declaration of Human Rights affirms, “The family is the natural and fundamental group unit of society.” [5]
Marriage is not primarily a contract between individuals to ratify their affections and provide for mutual obligations. Rather, marriage and family are vital instruments for rearing children and teaching them to become responsible adults. While governments did not invent marriage, throughout the ages governments of all types have recognized and affirmed marriage as an essential institution in preserving social stability and perpetuating life itself. Hence, regardless of whether marriages were performed as a religious rite or a civil ceremony, married couples in almost every culture have been granted special benefits aimed primarily at sustaining their relationship and promoting the environment in which children are reared. A husband and a wife do not receive these benefits to elevate them above any other two people who may share a residence or social tie, but rather in order to preserve, protect, and defend the all-important institutions of marriage and family.
It is true that some couples who marry will not have children, either by choice or because of infertility, but the special status of marriage is nonetheless closely linked to the inherent powers and responsibilities of procreation, and to the inherent differences between the genders. Co-habitation under any guise or title is not a sufficient reason for defining new forms of marriage.
High rates of divorce and out-of-wedlock births have resulted in an exceptionally large number of single parents in American society. Many of these single parents have raised exemplary children; nevertheless, extensive studies have shown that in general a husband and wife united in a loving, committed marriage provide the optimal environment for children to be protected, nurtured, and raised. [6] This is not only because of the substantial personal resources that two parents can bring to bear on raising a child, but because of the differing strengths that a father and a mother, by virtue of their gender, bring to the task. As the prominent sociologist David Popenoe has said:
The burden of social science evidence supports the idea that gender differentiated parenting is important for human development and that the contribution of fathers to childrearing is unique and irreplaceable. [7]
Popenoe explained that:
. . . The complementarity of male and female parenting styles is striking and of enormous importance to a child’s overall development. It is sometimes said that fathers express more concern for the child’s longer-term development, while mothers focus on the child’s immediate well-being (which, of course, in its own way has everything to do with a child’s long-term well-being). What is clear is that children have dual needs that must be met: one for independence and the other for relatedness, one for challenge and the other for support. [8]
Social historian David Blankenhorn makes a similar argument in his book Fatherless America. [9] In an ideal society, every child would be raised by both a father and a mother.
Challenges to Marriage and Family
Our modern era has seen traditional marriage and family – defined as a husband and wife with children in an intact marriage – come increasingly under assault. Sexual morality has declined and infidelity has increased. Since 1960, the proportion of children born out of wedlock has soared from 5.3 percent to 38.5 percent (2006). [10] Divorce has become much more common and accepted, with the United States having one of the highest divorce rates in the world. Since 1973, abortion has taken the lives of over 45 million innocents. [11] At the same time, entertainment standards continue to plummet, and pornography has become a scourge afflicting and addicting many victims. Gender differences increasingly are dismissed as trivial, irrelevant, or transient, thus undermining God’s purpose in creating both men and women.
In recent years in the United States and other countries, a movement has emerged to promote same-sex marriage as an inherent or constitutional right. This is not a small step, but a radical change: instead of society tolerating or accepting private, consensual sexual behavior between adults, advocates of same-sex marriage seek its official endorsement and recognition.
Court decisions in Massachusetts (2004) and California (2008) have allowed same-sex marriages. This trend constitutes a serious threat to marriage and family. The institution of marriage will be weakened, resulting in negative consequences for both adults and children.
In November 2008, California voters will decide whether to amend their state constitution to define marriage as only between a man and a woman. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has joined in a broad coalition of other denominations, organizations, and individuals to encourage voter approval of this amendment.
The people of the United States – acting either directly or through their elected representatives – have recognized the crucial role that traditional marriage has played and must continue to play in American society if children and families are to be protected and moral values propagated.
Forty-four states have passed legislation making clear that marriage is between a man and a woman. More than half of those states, twenty-seven in all, have done so by constitutional amendments like the ones pending in California, Arizona, and Florida. [12]
In contrast, those who would impose same-sex marriage on American society have chosen a different course. Advocates have taken their case to the state courts, asking judges to remake the institution of marriage that society has accepted and depended upon for millennia. Yet, even in this context, a broad majority of courts – six out of eight state supreme courts – have upheld traditional marriage laws. Only two, Massachusetts and now California, have gone in the other direction, and then, only by the slimmest of margins – 4 to 3 in both cases.
In sum, there is very strong agreement across America on what marriage is. As the people of California themselves recognized when they voted on this issue just eight years ago, traditional marriage is essential to society as a whole, and especially to its children. Because this question strikes at the very heart of the family, because it is one of the great moral issues of our time, and because it has the potential for great impact upon the family, the Church is speaking out on this issue, and asking members to get involved.
Tolerance, Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Freedom
Those who favor homosexual marriage contend that “tolerance” demands that they be given the same right to marry as heterosexual couples. But this appeal for “tolerance” advocates a very different meaning and outcome than that word has meant throughout most of American history and a different meaning than is found in the gospel of Jesus Christ. The Savior taught a much higher concept, that of love. “Love thy neighbor,” He admonished. [13] Jesus loved the sinner even while decrying the sin, as evidenced in the case of the woman taken in adultery: treating her kindly, but exhorting her to “sin no more.” [14] Tolerance as a gospel principle means love and forgiveness of one another, not “tolerating” transgression.
In today’s secular world, the idea of tolerance has come to mean something entirely different. Instead of love, it has come to mean condone – acceptance of wrongful behavior as the price of friendship. Jesus taught that we love and care for one another without condoning transgression. But today’s politically palatable definition insists that unless one accepts the sin he does not tolerate the sinner.
As Elder Dallin H. Oaks has explained,
Tolerance obviously requires a non-contentious manner of relating toward one another’s differences. But tolerance does not require abandoning one’s standards or one’s opinions on political or public policy choices. Tolerance is a way of reacting to diversity, not a command to insulate it from examination. [15]
The Church does not condone abusive treatment of others and encourages its members to treat all people with respect. However, speaking out against practices with which the Church disagrees on moral grounds – including same-sex marriage – does not constitute abuse or the frequently misused term “hate speech.” We can express genuine love and friendship for the homosexual family member or friend without accepting the practice of homosexuality or any re-definition of marriage.
Legalizing same-sex marriage will affect a wide spectrum of government activities and policies. Once a state government declares that same-sex unions are a civil right, those governments almost certainly will enforce a wide variety of other policies intended to ensure that there is no discrimination against same-sex couples. This may well place “church and state on a collision course.” [16]
The prospect of same-sex marriage has already spawned legal collisions with the rights of free speech and of action based on religious beliefs. For example, advocates and government officials in certain states already are challenging the long-held right of religious adoption agencies to follow their religious beliefs and only place children in homes with both a mother and a father. As a result, Catholic Charities in Boston has stopped offering adoption services.
Other advocates of same-sex marriage are suggesting that tax exemptions and benefits be withdrawn from any religious organization that does not embrace same-sex unions. [17] Public accommodation laws are already being used as leverage in an attempt to force religious organizations to allow marriage celebrations or receptions in religious facilities that are otherwise open to the public. Accrediting organizations in some instances are asserting pressure on religious schools and universities to provide married housing for same-sex couples. Student religious organizations are being told by some universities that they may lose their campus recognition and benefits if they exclude same-sex couples from club membership. [18]
Many of these examples have already become the legal reality in several nations of the European Union, and the European Parliament has recommended that laws guaranteeing and protecting the rights of same-sex couples be made uniform across the EU. [19] Thus, if same-sex marriage becomes a recognized civil right, there will be substantial conflicts with religious freedom. And in some important areas, religious freedom may be diminished.
How Would Same-Sex Marriage Affect Society?
Possible restrictions on religious freedom are not the only societal implications of legalizing same-sex marriage. Perhaps the most common argument that proponents of same-sex marriage make is that it is essentially harmless and will not affect the institution of traditional heterosexual marriage in any way. “It won’t affect you, so why should you care?’ is the common refrain. While it may be true that allowing single-sex unions will not immediately and directly affect all existing marriages, the real question is how it will affect society as a whole over time, including the rising generation and future generations. The experience of the few European countries that already have legalized same-sex marriage suggests that any dilution of the traditional definition of marriage will further erode the already weakened stability of marriages and family generally. Adopting same-sex marriage compromises the traditional concept of marriage, with harmful consequences for society.
Aside from the very serious consequence of undermining and diluting the sacred nature of marriage between a man and a woman, there are many practical implications in the sphere of public policy that will be of deep concern to parents and society as a whole. These are critical to understanding the seriousness of the overall issue of same-sex marriage.
When a man and a woman marry with the intention of forming a new family, their success in that endeavor depends on their willingness to renounce the single-minded pursuit of self-fulfillment and to sacrifice their time and means to the nurturing and rearing of their children. Marriage is fundamentally an unselfish act: legally protected because only a male and female together can create new life, and because the rearing of children requires a life-long commitment, which marriage is intended to provide. Societal recognition of same-sex marriage cannot be justified simply on the grounds that it provides self-fulfillment to its partners, for it is not the purpose of government to provide legal protection to every possible way in which individuals may pursue fulfillment. By definition, all same-sex unions are infertile, and two individuals of the same gender, whatever their affections, can never form a marriage devoted to raising their own mutual offspring.
It is true that some same-sex couples will obtain guardianship over children –through prior heterosexual relationships, through adoption in the states where this is permitted, or by artificial insemination. Despite that, the all-important question of public policy must be: what environment is best for the child and for the rising generation? Traditional marriage provides a solid and well-established social identity to children. It increases the likelihood that they will be able to form a clear gender identity, with sexuality closely linked to both love and procreation. By contrast, the legalization of same-sex marriage likely will erode the social identity, gender development, and moral character of children. Is it really wise for society to pursue such a radical experiment without taking into account its long-term consequences for children?
As just one example of how children will be adversely affected, the establishment of same-sex marriage as a civil right will inevitably require mandatory changes in school curricula. When the state says that same-sex unions are equivalent to heterosexual marriages, the curriculum of public schools will have to support this claim. Beginning with elementary school, children will be taught that marriage can be defined as a relation between any two adults and that consensual sexual relations are morally neutral. Classroom instruction on sex education in secondary schools can be expected to equate homosexual intimacy with heterosexual relations. These developments will create serious clashes between the agenda of the secular school system and the right of parents to teach their children traditional standards of morality.
Finally, throughout history the family has served as an essential bulwark of individual liberty. The walls of a home provide a defense against detrimental social influences and the sometimes overreaching powers of government. In the absence of abuse or neglect, government does not have the right to intervene in the rearing and moral education of children in the home. Strong families are thus vital for political freedom. But when governments presume to redefine the nature of marriage, issuing regulations to ensure public acceptance of non-traditional unions, they have moved a step closer to intervening in the sacred sphere of domestic life. The consequences of crossing this line are many and unpredictable, but likely would include an increase in the power and reach of the state toward whatever ends it seeks to pursue.
The Sanctity of Marriage
Strong, stable families, headed by a father and mother, are the anchor of civilized society. When marriage is undermined by gender confusion and by distortions of its God-given meaning, the rising generation of children and youth will find it increasingly difficult to develop their natural identity as a man or a woman. Some will find it more difficult to engage in wholesome courtships, form stable marriages, and raise yet another generation imbued with moral strength and purpose.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has chosen to become involved, along with many other churches, organizations, and individuals, in defending the sanctity of marriage between a man and a woman because it is a compelling moral issue of profound importance to our religion and to the future of our society.
The final line in the Proclamation on the Family is an admonition to the world from the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve: “We call upon responsible citizens and officers of government everywhere to promote those measures designed to maintain and strengthen the family as the fundamental unit of society.” This is the course charted by Church leaders, and it is the only course of safety for the Church and for the nation.
________________________________________________
[1] Genesis 2:24.
[2] Matthew 19:4-6.
[3] Genesis 1:27.
[4] M. Russell Ballard, “What Matters Most is What Lasts Longest,” Ensign, November 2005, p. 41.
[5] United Nations, “Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” General Assembly Resolution 217 A (III), 10 December 1948.
[6] David Blankenhorn, Fatherless America: Confronting Our Most Urgent Social Problem (New York: Basic Books, 1995); Barbara Schneider, Allison Atteberry, and Ann Owens, Family Matters: Family Structure and Child Outcomes (Birmingham AL: Alabama Policy Institute: June 2005); David Popenoe, Life Without Father (New York: Martin Kessler Books, 1996); David Popenoe and Barbara Defoe Whitehead, The State of Our Unions 2007: The Social Health of Marriage in America (Piscataway, NJ (Rutgers University): The National Marriage Project, July 2007 ) pp. 21-25; and Maggie Gallagher and Joshua K. Baker, “Do Moms and Dads Matter? Evidence from the Social Sciences on Family Structure and the Best Interests of the Child,” Margins Law Journal 4:161 (2004).
[7] David Popenoe, Life Without Father (New York: The Free Press, 1996) p. 146.
[8] Ibid., p. 145. See also Spencer W. Kimball, “The Role of Righteous Women,” Ensign, November 1979, pp. 102-104.
[9] David Blankenhorn, Fatherless America, pp. 219-220.
[10] Stephanie J. Ventura and Christine A. Bachrach, “Nonmarital Childbearing in the United States, 1940-99,” National Vital Statistics Reports 48:16 (18 October 2000); and Brady E. Hamilton, Joyce A. Martin, and Stephanie J. Ventura, “Births: Preliminary Data for 2006,” National Vital Statistics Reports 56:7 (5 December 2007).
[11] Alan Guttmacher Institute, “Facts on Induced Abortion in the United States,” In Brief, July 2008.
[12] Christine Vestal, “California Gay Marriage Ruling Sparks New Debate,” stateline.org, 16 May 2008, updated 12 June 2008. Stateline.org is funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
[13] Matt. 19:19.
[14] John 8:11.
[15] Elder Dallin H. Oaks, “Weightier Matters,” BYU Devotional speech, 9 February 1999.
[16] Maggie Gallagher, “Banned in Boston: The Coming Conflict Between Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty,” The Weekly Standard, 15 May 2006.
[17] Jonathan Turley, “An Unholy Union: Same-Sex Marriage and the Use of Governmental Programs to Penalize Religious Groups with Unpopular Practices,” in Douglas Laycock, Jr., et al., eds., Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty: Emerging Conflicts (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2008, forthcoming).
[18] Marc D. Stern, “Gay Marriage and the Churches, paper delivered at the Scholar’s Conference on Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty, sponsored by the The Beckett Fund, 4 May 2006.
[19] “European Parliament Resolution on homophobia in Europe,” adopted 18 January 2006.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Nate's butt farm!!!

The whole family minus Mema...(someone had to take the picture!!) Me, Sydney, Micah, Kasey, Kevin, Kathryn, Jarrod, Grandpa, Rory, Ashley, Kenny, Keith, Lynnette and baby Kaydence. Micah carved these for us.
Rory was just interested in the LED light. The biggest pumpkin weighed in at 68 pounds.
Daddy, Rory and Grandpa. These are the pumpkins Rory picked out.
Me, Rory and Sydney.
Me, Micah and Sydney.Rory was running around somewhere with his Aunt.We went to Bate's Nut farm today, and had a blast. All of my brothers and sisters came, along with Grandma and Grandpa. So Rory was well entertained and well fed the entire time. We stayed all morning and some of the afternoon, and after Rory ate 2 ice cream cones, went on a hayride, picked out three pumpkins, had Papa wheelbarrow him around the entire field, and Uncle Keith spun him around for the millionth time, we decided to call it a day. Sydney slept the entire time, and Daddy and Rory came home and went to sleep, too.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Where's Sydney?


I just realized I haven't really mentioned Sydney! Well, she's a 2 month old, so not very much to say, but I can atleast get some photos of her up here, right? Boy, when you hear about consecutive children after your first getting less attention(less pictures taken, etc.), it's true!! I just can't keep up! Anyways, she's a really happy easy going baby, she loves to just chill out. Thank goodness she's the complete opposite of her big brother, because I would be checking myself into a mental hospital if I had to keep up with two like Rory. She sleeps great, has since day one, only wakes once to nurse in a 12 hour period at night. She's already set her own bedtime...8:30 and she's out. If I try to put her to bed even 20 minutes early, she won't allow it...she'll lay there in her crib and call us "Heeeeyyyyy, heeeyyyy!!!" It's hilarious, and just amazing how internal clocks work. She's growing like a weed, at her 1 month doctor's appt. she was already just barely under 12 lbs, and was just over 23 inches, so she grew 3 1/2 inches and gained 3 1/2 pounds from her birth weight. Her doctor was amazed, she topped all the growth charts. So I know she's getting the good stuff.
Anyways, the weather cooled off some today thankfully, I actually put jeans on Rory, and a long sleeved t-shirt. He hasn't worn jeans since last winter...so we had to go buy some new ones yesterday, because his old ones were high waters. Not a cute look on a little boy. I'm trying to complete my 72 hour emergency kit(I've been trying to complete it for over a year, I just went through the food that was in it and it's all expired by a year), so back to the store to replenish! With talk of santa ana winds starting back up this weekend, I want to make sure we're ready if we have to evacuate again if fires break out. We had to evacuate last year, so I'm trying to make a list of everything we'll grab so we don't have to think too hard.
Tomorrow we head to Bates Nut Farm(pumpkin patch), which is our yearly tradition since Rory was born. We're gonna pick out a nice big pumpkin. I'm really excited for Halloween this year since Rory is old enough to actually understand what's happening, and he'll get to trick-or-treat. He's going to be Buzz Lightyear. Can't wait for everyone to see him in the costume!

Rory's Bedtime snacks


Rory likes to stall before bedtime...so last night he said he was hungry(even though he had just eaten dinner an hour before). He asked for a sandwich, but I told him he had to eat it in bed...and I didn't want to hear another peep out of him. 20 minutes later, I go to check on him, and this is what I found.

Monday, October 6, 2008

My Husband

1. What is his name? -Micah
2. Who eats more? -Quantity at each meal, him. But if we added up what we ate throughout the day, probably me, I eat alot of smaller meals throughout the day.
3. Who said I love you first? -Him, he was so nervous!!
4. Who is taller? -Him by about 5 inches.
5. Who is smarter? -Umm, neither is smarter than the other, we each have our strong subjects of knowledge. But if you asked him, he would say he is the smarter one. Typical man.
6. Who is more sensitive? -Depends on what we are sensitive to. Again, we both have our seperate things. I'm more sensitive to things like homeless people, orphans, crying widows, etc. He is more sensitive to people who don't own video game systems, missionaries who get called to Provo, guys who have nagging wives and bratty kids, thinsg of that nature.
7.Who does the laundry? -Me of course...Micah doesn't sort the laundry, so that ended that.
8. Who sleeps on the right side of the bed? If your looking at the bed, me.
9. Who pays the bills? -He does, I hate doing that kind of stuff.
10. Who cooks more? -ME. Micah will cook if i ask him to, but I would get a can of chili or a grilled cheese.
11. What meals do you cook together? - Ummm, none.
12. Who is more stubborn? -Me
13. Who is the first to admit they're wrong? -Me
14. Who has more siblings? -We both have four siblings, I'm the oldest, Micah's the middle(which explains alot).
15. Who wears the pants in the relationship? - Well, that's hard to answer. I do for day to day stuff, or anything that involves the kids, but in the end, being the Patriarch, he can trump me.
16. What do you like to do together? -Relaxe, watch movies/tv, date nights, hang out with friends, some other stuff that's private, and just be together.
17. Who eats more sweets? -I only like chocolate for sweets, he likes most candy, but we don't eat alot of it.
18. Guilty pleasures? -His? Video games, disc golf, and watching football on Sunday. Mine-sleeping in, a good book, being by myself, and I love shopping when I can.
19. How did you meet? -We met at a church dance...he had recently gotten home from his mission, I had recently graduated high school, i was dating another guy, but Micah and I danced.
20. Who asked who out first? -He asked me, he knew I worked at the Gap from when we danced together at the church dance, but he didn't know which Gap, so he called a couple Gaps until he tracked me down, and asked me out. He asked me out for the following weekend(he called me on a Monday), and I told him we were going out that night instead. We went out that night and almost every night after that until we got engaged 3 weeks later.
21. Who kissed who first? -He kissed me, but it took him forver, and when he finally did, it was a quick peck on my doorstep, and then he took off really quick. I had to lay one on him the next date to make it count.
22. Who proposed? -He did...I didn't believe him when he did though because he had "fake" proposed atleast 3 times prior, so I kicked him in the leg when he got down on one knee to propose, and told him to get up...but then I saw he had an actual ring with a diamond, so I accepted.
23. His best features? -Physically? EVERYTHING. He's hot. I got a great man. I especially love his butt and his muscles...
24. What is his greatest quality?-He's a wonderful Dad and Husband. He makes me feel safe, he's a worthy priesthood holder, he's very faithful, loving, and has a great sense of humor. Sorry, I couldn't think of just one...

Friday, October 3, 2008

Our week...


We went to Coronado this evening and took the fairy back and forth across the Bay...Rory kept telling us on the way home that he loves the boat.


Rory on the climbing wall today at the park.
Rory has decided Sydney's toys are more fun than his.
Rory taking his bath...
Rory and his buds Caden and Logan .
It seems like the weeks just run into each other, they are going so fast. Here's what a typical day looks like at the Kim house...
6:15am (give or take 1/2 an hour or so)...we awaken to Rory yelling from his bed "Mommy!! Daddy!! I'm awake, come get me!(And he does sleep in a big boy bed, but still wants us to get him out of it...which is good and bad.) And if we don't get in their lickity slit, then he begins yelling at a louder decibal, therefor awaking Sydney. So Micah gets up, and gets Rory out of bed, while I have the privilidge of staying in bed another half an hour or so until Micah goes to work. Micah gets Rory his morning coffee(aka..chocolate milk), which he absoloutely has to have every morning or all hell breaks loose. Rory then proceeds to get comfey on the couch and watch a movie or cartoons for a few minutes while Daddy gets ready for work and Mommy feeds Sydney.
7am...Daddy leaves after family prayer, and Rory stands at the window and waves and yells goodbye to Daddy and all the school kids walking by and waiting for the school bus outside.
7:05am..Rory runs into Mommy's room and asks me to come play trains(or cars, or tractors, whatever he's in the mood for that day) with him. So I get up, play for a little while, and then make breakfast(usually waffles, cereal, or oatmeal, plus fruit and yogurt, sometimes eggs). Then it's figuring out what's going on for the day, showering, getting dressed, changing diapers, feeding Sydney again, etc.
10am...We're hopefully out of the house by this time. We go to the park, or play with friends at their house or ours, play group, or something of the like. Or sometimes it's just running errands for the day.
12pm...We're back home and it's lunch time. I get Rory situated with his lunch, and then feed Sydney again. Then it's play time with Rory for a little bit until nap time. Maybe an art project, maybe cars or trains again(Rory LOVES trains, he has a 22 gallon container FULL of Thmoas the Train tracks and trains and buildings...so we spend most days putting together elaborate tracks for him to play on.)
1pm-NAP TIME!!!! Yay!! Both kids go down for a nice long nap. Thankfully Rory naps great, and will sleep for atleast 2 hours every afternoon, and Miss Sydney will sleep most of the afternoon usually. So now it's time for Mommy to relax.
3:30pm...Rory wakes up, and has his afternoon popsicle. We then play more for another hour or so...until...Daddy comes home!! YAY!! As soon as Rory sees Daddy pull up outside, he automatically hides. No, not because he's scared of Daddy..we play hide and seek, Dad comes in the house, asks where Rory is(knowing full well where he is, because he almost always hides under his blankets on his bed, and he's giggling the entire time.) I always say"I don't know, where could he be?" And we go through all the places he could be.."is he in the closet?" In a muffled voice we hear "no." "Is he in the bathroom?" Again, a muffled voice giggles "No!" Etc. etc. You get the picture...
5pm...I get a break by making dinner..I take as long as possible.
6pm...We eat.
6:30pm...We start the evening wind down. Baths, pajamas, teeth brushing, reading books, reading scriptures, family prayer, and dun dunna da...
7:30pm...BEDTIME.
Sometime around 8pm, after Rory has had his night night song sung to him for the millionth time, and lots of goodnight kisses and hugs, and Sydney is fed again, and asleep in her crib, Mommy and Daddy fall on the couch and go into a comotose state. Thats' my day in a nutshell. I love it.



Rory as a fat guy.