Monday, April 13, 2009

Happy Easter





Happy Easter to everyone! We were so blessed to spend the weekend with Rosie, Jonathan and Ian. The kids enjoyed playing in the river on Friday, having a yummy Easter dinner on Saturday made by Jonathan and Rosie, and all of us worshiping together at church on Sunday. It was so wonderful t0 have the kids with us in church and us all being together.

Special times and special moments. Rejoicing together that Jesus really loved us THAT much and sacrificed himself so we could be united with him forever...then he came back to life on Easter. How amazing. I'm so thankful.

Thanks, Rosie and Jonathan for such a special weekend! We really missed Aunt Charlotte and Mom, I hope you feel better, Charlotte! The girls LOVED seeing Papa again! Thanks for coming! More pictures to come of our weekend!
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Easter 2009




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Down by the River





The kids had a BLAST throwing rocks in the water. One after another. They could have stayed there all day, and had we known, we would have just packed dinner. Despite the river being freezing cold, they could have cared less as they waded further and further out to pick up just one more rock.
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Saturday, April 04, 2009

Our local CSA



We were so excited today to stop by our local CSA (community supported agriculture) and pick up our first share of the season! Kyla is proudly showing it off, along with the pink egg she dyed yesterday at the Creehan's easter party :-)
This is our very first year being part of a CSA, and for us it is Poplar Ridge Farm about 5 miles away from us in Charlotte, NC. I have wanted to do something like this for years! Some CSA's have membership fees where you pay once a year for produce for your whole family, and then receive a share each week of whatever is growing at the time.

Pete is doing a photography barter with our CSA, so we're able to exchange photography for fresh food! Can't get much better than that :-) We're super excited. The eggs above were delicous...and so were the portobello mushrooms. The apples were probably the sweetest I've ever tasted. I don't think this was just in my head...it truely was very fresh food!

You can click on the CSA link above and it will take you to localharvest.org where you can find the CSA closest to you!
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More CSA




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Thursday, April 02, 2009

SNAPSHOTS OF MOMENTS: by Pete






Despite a really rough week dealing with Avery's 2 year old attitude plus eczema, I love to look back at the moments and snapshots of good times. Pete and I love to capture the everyday moments. It rained a lot this week, and so Pete used the umbrella as the "backdrop" for the picture. You can get some pretty amazing pictures posing your kid holding a black umbrella! I love my husband's work and his talent. He is such an amazing photographer and he has taught me so much. I love being his assistant at weddings and portrait shoots. He's so much fun to work with and has such a great eye.
I would say about 70% of the pictures that I post on this blog I take throughout the days while Pete's working. But today, Pete gets all the credit for capturing some great expressions on the girls and great angles :-)

Okay, I'll stop bragging about my amazing husband.
Instead, I'll let his website (if you haven't seen it yet) show you even more of his talent.
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Sunday, March 29, 2009

Snapshot of a Moment: Sewing





Yeaa! After sewing my first skirts ever for the girls, I just finished up my first pair of pants for Avery. I'm so excited about these pants because they were completely free, (yes, free!)...made from a white linen pillowcase that has not been in use for quite some time. The trimming was made from a cloth headband I had. I loved the fabric, but did not like the headband so much on myself. So, I used my trusty seam ripper to un-do the headband, and then used the fabric for the cuffs. These pants have many flaws because they are my first pair ever made...but they fit Avery (besides being slightly too long), and are the perfect springtime pants for her! She seems to love them too, she didn't try to change out of them all morning :-)

In progress right now is a tablecloth with sweet bluebird fabric from the etsy store alittlegoodness. Our table is in desperate need of a tablecloth that can easily catch crumbs and food and then be thrown in the washing machine. Maybe having something like this will lessen my chances of scraping food off of our table :-)

Enjoy your Sunday wherever you are!
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Saturday, March 28, 2009

Snapshot of a Moment: Rainy Day




It poured rain today.

Then, this evening before bed the sun came out, the rain slowed, and the girls
splashed in big puddles.

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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Snapshot of a Moment: Sweetness


I love how she holds her baby so tight,
nuzzling, patting it's back, and whispering
"I love you".

Ever since Avery could talk she has treated all of her baby dolls, animals
and friends with such compassion and sweetness.

This is especially true when someone is sad or hurt.

This was one of those moments.
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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Snapshot of a Moment: a visit from Papa





Papa drove down from Virginia this past weekend to visit us! Kyla loved to show and tell him everything new that she can do now that she is 5 years old. This includes riding her bike "really fast", climbing trees, hanging with her feet from the monkey bars at the park, making her bed, and doing her "job" which is unloading the flatware from the dishwasher. She is so proud of everything she can do now! Avery is also surprising us a little more every day with her athletic abilities. Kyla was not riding or couldn't seem to ride the tricycle by herself at 2 and 1/2. Now, I know that most kids can, but for some reason, Kyla wasn't either interested or didn't have the leg strength. Well, Avery will push those peddles up any hill and will not let us help her.

Anyway, back to our visit with Papa...he read dozens and dozens of books to the girls, we went out to eat and went to the library, and visited the NoDa arts district. When the girls went to sleep in the evening, we enjoyed teaching my dad the game of Settlers and played each evening while he was here. :-) Thanks, Patrick and Megan for the 100th time of letting us borrow your game. I think it's ending up at our home more than your home. I guess this is a sign we need to buy our own very soon!
Thanks, Dad, for brightening our weekend!
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Monday, March 23, 2009

Far from perfect: our lives and eczema.


It's 4pm, and it's been a rather trying afternoon with Avery. She chose to spend her nap time going in between crying for me and calling sweetly for me to come. The "nap" (which never happened) ended with me coming in her room for the 100th time that afternoon and seeing that she had managed to escape out of her buttoned mitten shirt and scratch her arms till there were little bloody scratch marks all over. That did it for me-- nap over. Time to move on for the afternoon to something else.

I have been getting emails from several mothers who run into my blog posts about our daughter's eczema. I hear the stress in their emails, and their hopeless feelings I can empathize with tremendously. I have felt just like that. I've had mothers tell me that they want to have more children, but because of the daily physical and mental stress eczema places on them, they do not want anymore kids...they don't know if they could handle caring for any others. Caring for a child with eczema takes an enormous amount of extra time and energy, depending on how severe the case of eczema.

I have written before about Avery's skin being so much better. And it IS so much better than last year at this time. But we still walk daily through the in's and out's of eczema and the "maintenance" that goes into helping keep her from a severe flare-up.

Some mothers have asked me to explain how our daughter's eczema affects life. I'm going to attempt a list here, so bear with me.

1) We spend about 1.5 hours a day putting lotions on Avery's skin. That's once in the morning, before nap time, and before bed (or after bath, if it's a bath day). Pete seems a little more efficient at this than me, so it may take him 20 minutes, where it usually takes me 30 minutes.
1st is a layer of California Baby Calendula Cream on the really red spots. Next is some Burt's Bees Diaper Rash Cream on the spots that "hurt" her. Now that Avery's old enough she tells us where she wants "butt" cream, she calls it. Then a layer of watery Aveeno Intense Relief Cream all over. We seal it all in with 100% Organic Unrefined Shea Butter. We do this 3x a day. We've tried doing less creams, but this is what keeps Avery's skin less itchy overall and less dry. Whatever it takes, right? The 1.5 hours does not include any other point in the day if she starts itching and wants her "butter" as she calls the Shea Butter. If that happens, we try to encourage her to apply it herself, and she does a slow, but good job and she knows the best where she needs it.

2) We spend about $40 per month on lotions and creams.

3) The hardest part I think for both Pete and I is that there is almost no mental break. When Avery is not in the same room that we are in, I am constantly wondering in the back of my head, "I wonder if Avery is scratching?". Because she could be perfectly happy one moment, occupied and not scratching or she could get slightly upset or stressed at something and that triggers her to scratch. Or sometime she simply scratches out of bordom. There is often no rhyme or reason. She does WONDERFUL outside our home. She rarely scratches when visiting other friends. This is very nice for us, but at the same time, it makes a liar out of us! (Not that our friends think we lie about her eczema, but they do not see what we see at home.) Distraction and active playtimes are the best "remedy" for her scratching. If she's distracted enough, her skin doesn't bother her.

4) Discpline is hard. It used to be harder, but now that she's getting older I can differentiate better between a temper tantrum or bad attitude AND Avery not feeling well because of her skin. The hard part is stress triggers itchy eczema skin. So she wants to scratch it. This means, if she wants to do something, and we tell her "no", then she will often start to scratch. It's much harder to teach a child that they cannot have everything they want when eczema is involved. Yes, it's doable, but harder. I question myself and pray almost daily on how to parent her.

5) We are very thankful for the allergy elimination technique called NAET (www.naet.com for more info.) We travel twice a week to Dilworth in uptown Charlotte for acupressure treatments for Avery. Avery's skin is getting better and better due to these treatments. Her particular case of eczema is very much directly related to her food and environmental allergies.

6) Meals and snacks are not so easy. No eggs. No nuts. Very limited dairy. (it used to be no dairy too, but thanks to her allergy treatments, we are slowly giving her small amounts and always wait to see how it affects her itching.) We also found out she has a sensitivity to wheat which can be contributing to her eczema. Hopefully this one will soon be eliminated too. I do a lot of egg-less baking around here and quick and easy casseroles (a used to be FAVORITE of mine) are not on our menu anymore. As a dietitian, I try to make her snacks and meals very healthy, full of protein and fresh fruits and veggies (as much as possible). We use a lot of goat yogurt and goat milk too. I know what goes in her body will be reflected in her skin. Plus with her dietary restrictions she needs alternatives to get whatever she might be missing from other foods.

7) Living with eczema makes me sometimes want to be gone ALL day with the kids in order to avoid scratching episodes. Other days, I don't feel like leaving the house. She's 2.5 now and a very strong-willed girl. She has a lot of tantrums when things don't go her way. When you add that with eczema getting out of the house to do something very simple can be very difficult. I know other moms tell me that it's hard to get the kids ready to get out of the house to be somewhere on time. While I might be packing lunches or snacks, getting shoes on, or telling someone to get dressed, I can turn around and Avery is scratching. So, I stop what I'm doing, put a little lotion on her and then stick her mitten shirt on her. At least with that shirt I have a temporary peace of mind that she will not damage her skin. Then, I finish what I'm doing. It takes much longer to leave the house.

8) Baths are more time consuming for obvious reasons. She will usually scratch in the bath tub at some point (usually when we get ready to shampoo her hair) and we need to quickly get her out and lotion her up. If her skin is broken from scratching at all she screams. I don't think the water must feel that good on cut skin.

9) Avery and Kyla's favorite thing to do is change their outfits about 15 times a day. Kyla started to do this at the young age of 2 and hasn't stopped since. Avery loves to do the same. Both of my girls have very strong opinions about what clothes they want to wear and these strong opinions will change about every 15 minutes depending on the day!
So, something that should be fun and normal is not fun at all for mom and dad. When Avery changes her clothes it somehow sparks in her the idea to scratch her skin. So, every time she goes upstairs I wonder if she is changing her clothes and getting ready to scratch. Thankfully with this, the older she gets the more interested she is in the outfit and less in her skin. Whew! I'm really looking to her being 3, 4, and 5 years old! 2.5 is already soooooo much better than a 1.5 year old when it comes to eczema!

So, this is still all a part of our everyday life. I want to recognize it again on this blog and hope this helps other moms know you're not the only one dealing with a child with eczema. I'm trying to focus on the positive. She's doing so much better than a year ago. The chances are she will outgrow this in another year or less. I have more sane days than insane days. But I still have those days. I pray every day for her healing or at least wisdom on how to handle it while we walk through it. I don't know why we are walking through this and have been for a year and a half. We both feel rather broken down and definitely humbled. I feel so far from perfect. There are days when I just cry because I have yelled at Avery for scratching her skin. Then I feel so bad for yelling at her. She can't help it. But I yell out of frustration in dealing with it day in and day out and the exhaustion of it all.

So, we will continue to walk through this as we PRAY to walk OUT of this trying time. We will try to focus on the good in the days. In watercoloring and playdough, in riding bikes and taking trips to the library. When we go to the grocery store, we will slip that mitten shirt on top of her clothes while we ride in the car to the store.

I needed to take this moment today to recognize what we go through because it IS hard. And every parent that ever goes through a severe bought with eczema can understand all of this. So, this post is for you.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

I think we're gonna love this.





Watercoloring.
Drawing at art gallaries.
Family art night.
Homeschooling and art.
Watching her draw and color with such spontenaity and focus.
...seeing her dream and grow.
Watching Avery copy every move she makes,
and seeing her smile all day long.
(well, I would at least LOVE to see her smile all day long :-) )

I love Fridays because we just stay home and do art most of the day and play.
Watercoloring. Knitting. Sewing. Drawing. Coloring.
No errands, no appointments.
This weekend Papa came to town and we visited the NoDa art district in Charlotte.
Kyla brought her drawing book with her and sat down in front of a picture and copied it...Kyla style.
:-)
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