Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Way Back When-esday: Unrequited Affections

Dateline: February 2007
Twins' Age: 5

She-Twin has long been a fan of The Who. In her tender toddler years, she posted a picture of a fringe-jacketed Roger Daltrey over her bed (only after she doctored the photocopy a la Andy Warhol).

Finding this picture---of her making a hand-crafted valentine for the legendary front man*---warms my heart this mid-week.

(*To answer the pregnant question, of course I mailed it---at her insistence---to the management firm listed online for Mr. Daltrey. She never heard back.)

Why don't you dive into your digital files and play along with Way Back When-esday?

Seek out an overlooked snapshot or scan a scrapbook find...share an image you might not otherwise. Tell the tale and place a post on your blog. Be sure and link back to participate in the web-wide reverie...and please leave a comment when you do!



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Monday, September 26, 2011

Makes My Monday: Laugh-Inducing Lunch


Smiling sustenance Makes My Monday.

Please share what Makes YOUR Monday!
We all have so very much to be grateful for....




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Saturday, September 24, 2011

Saturday Snapshots: Autumn Advances

Last year I learned the scary cereals of my youth are now merely seasonal offerings. The equinox has passed, and Robert Pattinson has nothing on my favorite vampire.



She-Twin, He-Twin and our own in-house howler seem to agree....

How's your weekend looking so far? Do tell!
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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Way Back When-esday: Growing and Graduating

Dateline: Spring 2007
Twins' Age: 5

Half their lives ago now, She-Twin and He-Twin were moving on, leaving their much-loved Pre-K behind.

Twin affection photographed, and still felt (most of the time!), warms my mid-week.

Why don't you dive into your digital files and play along with Way Back When-esday?

Seek out an overlooked snapshot or scan a scrapbook find...share an image you might not otherwise. Tell the tale and place a post on your blog. Be sure and link back to participate in the web-wide reverie...and please leave a comment when you do!



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Monday, September 19, 2011

Makes My Monday; Tag, You're It!

A literal sweet---delicious banana bread---came adorned with literature sweet...


Along with the nutritional sustenance consumed, the insightful wisdom was as well.

Yesterday at church, the twins' Sunday School teacher kindly said to them, "I hope the repairs won't take too long, and that you'll be back in your house soon." He-Twin without hesitation responded, "Home is where the family is!"

Friends who give of their gifts---cooking, compassion, caring---all Make My Monday.

Please share what Makes YOUR Monday!
We all have so very much to be grateful for....




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Saturday, September 17, 2011

Saturday Snapshots: Settling In

All seem to be adjusting well to our new environs...wishing all a restful weekend!
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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Way Back When-esday: Sudsy Sentiments


Dateline: September 7, 2011
Twins' Age: 10

As Madeline noted in Madeline Says Merci, "A thank you spoken is a very nice token, but a thank you letter is even better." Especially when written in soap crayons, on beloved friends' shower walls.

Warmth (and washability!) between lifelong friends warms my mid-week.

Why don't you dive into your digital files and play along with Way Back When-esday?

Seek out an overlooked snapshot or scan a scrapbook find...share an image you might not otherwise. Tell the tale and place a post on your blog. Be sure and link back to participate in the web-wide reverie...and please leave a comment when you do!



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Sticklers for manners, peek at our post feature on RichmondMom.com---and please leave a comment when you do!

Monday, September 12, 2011

Pin Oak-ey Hole

Much Makes My Monday....

1.) the fact Smiley Tree has been extracted from our home

2.) the fact that neither inhabitants of the home nor those who did the dangerous work of removing the tonnage of wood were harmed

3.) the fact Double Daddy's humor is unflappable. "We used to have pull-down stairs to our attic, now we have walk-up branches."

4.) the fact the sign above is NOT a demolition order. The understatement of "very bad structure damage" is kind of amusing...

5.) the fact that despite Ben Franklin's memorable quote "Fish and visitors stink after three days," our kids were all near tears when we departed our friends' home---with whom we stayed eleven days.

6.) the fact that our insurance company, a local realtor, and family who planned to sell was willing to rent all worked in concert to get us safely in a home near our school, and in our neighborhood

7.) the fact that Double Daddy has relentlessly worked to make our new house a home...for the next 9-12 months

8.) the fact Larry dog is home wherever we are

9.) the fact that our kids handled a postponed vacation, a birthday away from "our home" and the start of their fourth grade year with grace and aplomb
10.) the fact the hugs and incredible gestures of generosity and kindness from friends seem to be more long-lived than the days of traffic slows to gawk at the architectural carnage.

11.) the fact that our home, ever-modest, is now tarped---preventing further damage until the rebuild can begin.

Please share what Makes YOUR Monday! We all have so very much to be grateful for....




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Sunday, September 11, 2011

Twin Babies. Twin Towers. Ten Years.

It was a Tuesday. Our twins' very first one.


That morning at home began much like the delirious days preceding it: a 7:30am awkward and anxious tandem nursing, followed by double baby burping and dual diapering. As a first-time mom, I was adrift in the new-parent paranoia and hyper analysis of every hiccup and twitch -- and yet simultaneously entranced by each finger movement and chest-inflating breath, times two.

My treks up and down the stairs were strictly limited by doctor mandate to once or twice a day. After helping tend to the morning's first baby maintenance session, my husband Scott was downstairs. In a tone I'd never heard him use before (and haven't heard him use since), a blend of tender concern and clear urgency, he yelled, "Honey, are you watching the news?" I quickly (well, as quickly as one can when maneuvering newborn twins with minimal body control) turned the television to the "Today" show. Shots of a blazing World Trade Center North Tower filled the screen.

In true Elizabeth Kubler-Rossian mode, my embarrassing, sleep-deprived first thought was that surely, the poor pilot must have been killed -- entirely in denial that the hub of American business was undoubtedly populated with unsuspecting workers already seated at their desks for the morning. The commentators were reporting the damage was likely caused by a small plane...perhaps a privately owned Cessna. Never, never did I think for a solitary second the inferno we were all beholding was an intentional impact. An intentional impact. Before that day, unimaginable.

Minutes later, as we watched, the second plane, looking nothing like a Cessna, plowed headlong into the South Tower. From upstairs I screamed, "Honey! Someone needs to call the air traffic controllers in NYC! Somehow they're misdirecting planes into the buildings...another one just hit! Another one just hit!"

Unaffected by the tag team of horror and twin-delivery intensified hormones, and nowhere near as naive as I, my husband knew to come upstairs and explain what was by then terrifyingly obvious to his -- and most other Americans' -- eyes. An attack, here in America.

Chaos and conflicting stories prevailed that morning. Tales of upwards of 50 planes unaccounted for and potentially in enemy hands. White powder delivered to government offices. Estimates of potentially 10,000 dead. Military planes being scrambled. The President was in Florida. The White House and Capitol were being evacuated. A third plane, and the Pentagon -- less than 10 miles away from my childhood home -- was in flames. The hijacked Flight 93 went down in Pennsylvania...charred earth the only remnant.

Within hours, New Yorkers rapidly produced flyers with photos of smiling dads, moms, sons and daughters that were hung all over the city. They were held aloft for the television cameras so that someone, anyone, might recognize the person pictured and provide the reassuring news so prayerfully sought. News that with each passing minute was increasingly unlikely to be heard. Hope-fueled optimism reigned - and slowly, against its will, waned -- in the first 24, and 48, then 72 hours. The round-the-clock rescue efforts yielding way too few -- hardly any -- occupants for the recovery areas staffed and waiting nearby.

Those heartbreaking visuals and so many others from those days are seared forever in our minds. The disturbingly twinkly confetti-like papers afloat around the plane-pierced structures. The police and fire department vehicles with their sirens blaring and their heroes aboard, racing full-speed toward an area that survival instincts would reflexively demand one avoid. Stunned people in business suits running out of buildings. Onlookers screaming, hiding their eyes, pointing, praying, crying. Victims waving -- and then beyond comprehension, actually leaping -- from the facades of the burning buildings. A personal video from the POV of being pulled into a coffee shop to escape the billowing cloud of collapse, with the audio of "thank you, thank you, thank you." Al Qaeda training camp videos with hooded practitioners navigating overhead monkey bars. The iconic antenna atop WTC1 descending slowly into an expanding column of dust.

Then, new pictures. Emerging from the horrific aftermath, a surge of patriotism. On our near-daily drives to the pediatrician's office for twin baby weight checks, ever increasing numbers of flags hung outside homes, offices, stores and from car antennae. Business marquees no longer touted "Buy One, Get One Free" or "Help Wanted;" but instead, proclaimed "We Love You, New York," "We Will Never Forget," and "God Bless America."

The most rote of routines became less mundane. 3000+ families started September 11th as if it were any other day. Re-evaluation of even the most miniscule, theretofore taken for granted aspects of day to day life seemed in order. As I dried myself after a shower, newly acquainted with the word "Taliban," I couldn't help but imagine how grateful an Afghani woman might be for my warm, thick towel. Something that could be used for far more virtuous purpose than merely wicking away the moisture from a freshly-clean new mother. An Afghan mother might have nothing in which to swaddle her newborn baby. What if a woman in this horridly repressive culture had twins? How were those women there envisioning our lives? The concept and purpose of a burqua was (and is) difficult for me to understand. In those first days with our new babies, unashamedly, I found myself not only immodestly "uncovered," but frequently bare from the waist up. Did that mean that I, a new mother of beautiful, pure, innocent twins, would be viewed as immoral? Whorish? Incomprehensible beliefs so varied from our own...felt so very passionately, that dispassionately, murderous evil could be enacted under the misguided assignation of martyrdom.

Vividly, I remember my thankfulness, that amongst so many other blessings -- in positioning the twins to nurse, they were facing me...and not the future-altering images that filled the TV screen. As an adult, as an American, as a mother, it was my obligation to face those images...and to mourn with those who were mourning.

Yet amidst the devastation, the molten towers' girders seemed to find reincarnate solidity in heroes whose stories began to emerge -- and continue to emerge today.

Forever linked to our family's personal history, Scott and I pay rapt attention annually to the documentaries, the interviews, the tributes. Each September, our emotions careen from giddy celebration on the 5th, to grave solemnity on the 11th. Then, we move on. Always remembering. Forever united, a family...micro and macro.

Gratitude. Grief. Grace.
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We will always remember the events of 9-11...and will post this piece annually on that day.
Never forget.





Friends of Twinfatuation: Thank you so very much for your thoughts, prayers and for your patience as we get settled into our new home following our Hurricane Irene forced displacement. Our internet access (and TV, utilities, landlines, etc.) is still in the processing...

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Twice the First of Fourth from the Back

Dateline: September 6, 2011
Twins' Age: 10 years + 1 day

The traditional first day of school shot of our two, with backpacks featured prominently.

Fourth grade, off to a grand start, warms my mid-week.

Why don't you dive into your digital files and play along with Way Back When-esday?

Seek out an overlooked snapshot or scan a scrapbook find...share an image you might not otherwise. Tell the tale and place a post on your blog. Be sure and link back to participate in the web-wide reverie...and please leave a comment when you do!



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Sticklers for manners, peek at our post feature on RichmondMom.com---and please leave a comment when you do!

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Makes My Monday: A Decade

At 12:34 this Labor Day Monday afternoon, He-Twin will officially turn ten.

At 12:41, She-Twin will do the same.

Ten years.


A decade of life, love and laughter with my wondrous twosome and their Double Daddy Makes My Monday*.

[*It takes a LOT more that a displacing Hurricane Irene to bring us down! To all who've expressed their concern and love---abundant thanks; we're doing well, and will be relocating to a rental home in our neighborhood this week!]

Feel free to play along/link-up with Makes My Monday!

[I apologize in advance for what will be limited reciprocal comments and posts in the next few days. Be sure and visit other MMM participants and be thankful this new week....I know I am!]




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