5.30.2011

Memorial Day

I love small holidays. Sure, I love Christmas and Thanksgiving, but I ESPECIALLY love celebrating small holidays... going to fireworks on the 4th, having a cookout on Labor Day, having an expensive dinner with my cute husband on Valentine's Day. I was bursting with happiness today for many reasons.... My husband is a soldier for the greatest country on the planet. He provides for Ellie and I in ways that are unspeakable- financially, emotionally, and patriotically. His service has truly changed how I feel about the Unites States. Our life is simple and little, but chalk full of happiness and giggles. We cherish the moments that many don't and the sharp taste of distance keeps us together when all seems [and has seemed] lost. The Army has taught us the romance of being alone thousands of miles from home, the reality of stressful jobs and long hours, the pain of being involuntarily separated, and the beauty of true marriage. That is, marriage that requires two people to work together without pride. With Andrew serving in Afghanistan, all these thoughts have raced through my head over the holiday weekend. Thank God for the United States of America. Thank God for our President. Thank God for teeny little hands that stroke my face and a voice that says "Mama." And thank God for a patriotic, Godly, and devoted husband and father.

Our Memorial Day started with a trip to see Mimi and Aunt Lisa. EB was happy to christen their new coffee table...

Then to a cookout with Andrew's family!
Cuties! Jenna, Brooke's girlfriend, and Brooke


Nap. Yeah.


Strawberries and bakes beans on a sunny day!
Then we skipped over to Uncle Michael's for some games and yummy food from Miss Debbie. Honestly, such a fun day. Such a fun, fun day. :)

Potamac Concert Band

They rock.
They rock so hard.
They rock so hard that they make my baby do THIS:

Sunday in the Park is such an incredible and fun program- I hope that if you're reading this, that you GO! A few snapshots of our fun:




Ducks!

A favorite pasttime- feeding the ducks. A new favorite- visiting a cemetary during Memorial Day weekend. Something about all the flags makes me gaga.







New fridge!

My in-law's 25th wedding anniversary is this year and Andrew and I decided to celebrate early.... With a new fridge! Considering that their old fridge was 20 years old [WHAT?!], it was high time. I didn't get many pictures of their inital reactions, unfortunately, but here is our new addition!


Dad K telling the Sears guy how to install the new beauty... because he doesn't know AAAAANYthing about it. :)



Testing out his new best friend!
And, to think, all they had to do was be married to each other for 25 years.... ;)

5.26.2011

Forget you, Afghanistan!

Can I have my best friend back yet?

Ellie's Birth Story

Because this blog came after Ellie's most exciting escapade [yet!], I never recounted her birth story to my readers. I wrote this on October 19th, three days after she was born, on an Army wives forum that I frequent [www.armywivesforums.com].


Ellie Brooke was born on October 16th, 2010 at 12:28pm weighing 7lbs, 11 oz and measuring 21 inches long. The easiest way to tell my horror story of a birth experience is by time, so enjoy!

October 15th
All morning:
Woke up with contractions here and there. Pretty normal, not necessarily alarmed.
Noon: Started with fairly consistent 7-8 minute apart contractions
Noon-4pm: Did some homework, still having contractions, still not super concerned. I had regular contractions a few times over the past few weeks and they would subside after a few hours.
5pm: Realized that I was half moaning through every contraction and they were 5 minutes apart... Whoops!
6pm: Left for hospital. Tripler is about 30-40 minutes from my house so we headed out, stopping at Taco Bell on the way.
7pm: Nurses checked me. At 3cm, 75% effaced. The nurse told me to go home [30 minute drive each way] and said I'd probably be back at around 1am [6 hours later]. I was absolutely POSITIVE that Ellie was coming so Andrew and I went to the car and sprawled out.
By 9:30: Andrew is BEGGING me to go back to Labor & Delivery. I've only been in the car for about 90 minutes and didn't think they would take me seriously, but I was dyyyyyying through these contractions.
10pm: Second check by nurses. In 2 hours I've gone from 3c-6cm and she's at zero station.
10:30pm: First check by doctor. In 30 minutes, I'm from 6cm-8cm. In the 3 1/2 hours since I first arrived at the hospital, I've gone from 2cm-8cm. I've had zero pain medication and am absolutely going to die. Literally. I am convinced that my uterus will explode. I ask for an epidural but they say Charlie the Epidural King is busy and probably won't make it....
11:30: CHARLIE ARRIVES. This may be even more momentous than Ellie's birth. The heavens parted and I saw the light!
October 16th
Midnight:
Not feeling anymore contractions, but the epidural has slowed my progress. This story is sort of seems like a reason NOT to get an epidural, but as you'll realize later- epidural or not she wasn't going to be a vaginal birth.
2am: Given a quick shot of Pitocin to try and regain momentum.
2am-6am: Andrew and I both take a much needed nap. Letting the Pitocin work and just relaxing. Without this nap, I wouldn't have made it through everything. Take their advice, Moms! REST.
6am: First hour of pushing... I am not really getting the hang of it. I can feel the contractions mildly, but I'm not pushing correctly.
7am: Still pushing.
8am: Still pushing.
9am: STILL PUSHING. Doctor comes in, checks me, and realizes that Ellie isn't positioned correctly. They think she's just facing incorrectly... Yeah, right.
10am-10:30am: Still pushing. They would give me breaks here and there, but I am a crying, hot, horrible mess. I've been in 4 or 5 different positions and for some reason she will NOT come down further into my cervix.
10:30am: Lord and Savior Doctor Correra comes in and suggests a c-section. My somewhat pushy nurses keep mentioning a "beautiful vaginal" birth and so I keep trying.
By 11am: I am ready to consent to anything. Get this girl OUT. I stop pushing and start trying to nap- I am exhausted and really NEED a break.
at Noon: They realize that Ellie's heartbeat is dropping and fast. They rush me to do a c-section. I, unfortunately, feel all the prep and some of the tugging before they start the procedure. I am eventually fully sedated and sort of miss the next parts.....


After she's born they tell me her umbilical cord was wrapped around her neck twice and preventing her from getting into the birth canal. Also, she is mostly transverse and would have likely ended up as a c-section anyway.

A few points to be made here: Though a vaginal birth is certainly preferable for many women, DO NOT make that your only option or cling to the idealism of it. I pushed for almost 5 complete hours because a) I wanted a vaginal birth and b) all the support around me kept motivating me. At some point it's okay to say stop. It's okay to WANT a c-section. Also- get pain medication. I know, it's a personal choice, but duuuuude. It's so much more enjoyable and the epidural was the only reason any part of Ellie's birth was enjoyable. After getting the medication, I sat up and talked to Andrew for a bit and enjoyed the last few hours of being a single gal. That time is really special and important to me.
All in all- She is beautiful and wonderful and sweet and hilarious. I won't say that the entire experience was "worth it" once she was born... It was horrific and traumatic and I would NEVER do it that way again. But, she is awfully adorable and I can't say she wasn't worth at least some of that pain. I had a really scary birth and I can honestly say that I am glad it's over and I do not miss a thing about being pregnant.
She is the absolute proudest accomplishment of my entire life and I am humbled to be her Mama. Look for fun updates from Babyland in the next few weeks! More pictures to follow when I'm not a lactating, sticky baby lollipop.

I am so emotional and reminiscent tonight. How is my little baby up standing and bobbing around?! I mentioned that I "do not miss a thing about being pregnant"... All lies. At 3 days post-partum, it was true, but now I would be pregnant with quadruplets if it meant I got to feel little feet flutter inside my tight, round belly.

5.23.2011

Baaack at home

Seriously, my life is crazy. I have school, a baby, a deployed husband, etc, etc, etc, etc, etc, etc, etc. My to-do lists are never finished and I tomorrow's day STARTS at 7:15. Not, rolling out of bed at 7:15. Like, I have got things to DO at 7:15. Help me, please.

That said, today was wild. Brooke had an ortho appt and we grabbed CiCi's. Darwin escaped last week and when he returned home, he had a broken leg and we went to the vet to have that taken care of-- Which means a cast for 6-8 weeks and an overnight stay tonight. I had to go to Grandma's, the post office, yadda, yadda, yadda. A few snapshots and then I'm out!

Ellie loves pizza!

Darwin at Vet


Oh, and some basket time. Whatever. THINGS ARE SO OUTRAGEOUS AND CRAZY.

MORMON BEACH EXTRAVAGANZA 2011

My dear friend, Alicia, and I set out for Ocean City last week with one intention- have the best, most amazing, super fun weekend with our mutual dear Michael. Did we succeed? Um. Yeah. Obviously.

We left Wednesday night and met up with Michael and some of his friends around midnight. Poor Ellie was so tired, but being the superstar she is, she put her game face on and won the room. No. Shock. Then we headed to the hotel and cuddled in for the night. Then, as explained below, we had a strange fire drill situation and a second one around 2:30 that afternoon. Blah, blah. So! Fast forward to the fun!

Thursday was our beach day and after lunch, Ellie and I grabbed a nap. Then we went to Michael's house for some necessary Tony DiPaolo-ing. Yes, that is a verb.



Construction toys for my little princess
Friday, we drove to Assategue after a failed attempt to visit Frontier Land. We were so lucky to see the wild ponies and enjoy some seriously private beach time. Michael did some mole crab digging and reading to Miss EB. There may have also been copious amounts of ice cream consumed, but I can't speak to that.





[Whirlwind weekend, right?!]

Saturday was spent cleaning Michael's Church meetinghouse and driving to Dover for the Philadelphia Stake Conference at which we was a speaker!!!! Though this was not the original intention of this trip, I think we were all so pleased to be apart of his big night!

Driving to Dover
T-Rex also terrorized the Boardwalk that evening--

On Sunday, we went to church and then headed home. I know, we Mormons have boundless energy. We also spent about 5 1/2 hours of our trip doing a church-related activity. Yahhhh.

The weekend was so awesome. I felt blessed to spend such quality time with Michael and made a beautiful new friendship with Alicia. There are few times that I have sought out a friend so fervently, but she is one of those. It is a pleasure to have friends that love you, your baby, and want nothing but the love of Heavenly Father for you. Thank you for the fun, guys!! :)

Parents keep child's gender secret

Parents keep child's gender secret

May 21, 2011
Jayme Poisson
STAFF REPORTER

 


“So it’s a boy, right?” a neighbour calls out as Kathy Witterick walks by, her four month old baby, Storm, strapped to her chest in a carrier.

Each week the woman asks the same question about the baby with the squishy cheeks and feathery blond hair.

Witterick smiles, opens her arms wide, comments on the sunny spring day, and keeps walking. She’s used to it. The neighbours know Witterick and her husband, David Stocker, are raising a genderless baby. But they don’t pretend to understand it.

While there’s nothing ambiguous about Storm’s genitalia, they aren’t telling anyone whether their third child is a boy or a girl. The only people who know are Storm’s brothers, Jazz, 5, and Kio, 2, a close family friend and the two midwives who helped deliver the baby in a birthing pool at their Toronto home on New Year’s Day. “When the baby comes out, even the people who love you the most and know you so intimately, the first question they ask is, ‘Is it a girl or a boy?’” says Witterick, bouncing Storm, dressed in a red-fleece jumper, on her lap at the kitchen table. “If you really want to get to know someone, you don’t ask what’s between their legs,” says Stocker.

When Storm was born, the couple sent an email to friends and family: “We've decided not to share Storm's sex for now — a tribute to freedom and choice in place of limitation, a stand up to what the world could become in Storm's lifetime (a more progressive place? ...).” Their announcement was met with stony silence. Then the deluge of criticisms began. Not just about Storm, but about how they were parenting their other two children. The grandparents were supportive, but resented explaining the gender-free baby to friends and co-workers. They worried the children would be ridiculed. Friends said they were imposing their political and ideological values on a newborn. Most of all, people said they were setting their kids up for a life of bullying in a world that can be cruel to outsiders. Witterick and Stocker believe they are giving their children the freedom to choose who they want to be, unconstrained by social norms about males and females. Some say their choice is alienating.

In an age where helicopter parents hover nervously over their kids micromanaging their lives, and tiger moms ferociously push their progeny to get into Harvard, Stocker, 39, and Witterick, 38, believe kids can make meaningful decisions for themselves from a very early age.

“What we noticed is that parents make so many choices for their children. It’s obnoxious,” says Stocker.
Jazz and Kio have picked out their own clothes in the boys and girls sections of stores since they were 18 months old. Just this week, Jazz unearthed a pink dress at Value Village, which he loves because it “really poofs out at the bottom. It feels so nice.” The boys decide whether to cut their hair or let it grow.
Like all mothers and fathers, Witterick and Stocker struggle with parenting decisions. The boys are encouraged to challenge how they’re expected to look and act based on their sex. “We thought that if we delayed sharing that information, in this case hopefully, we might knock off a couple million of those messages by the time that Storm decides Storm would like to share,” says Witterick. They don’t want to isolate their kids from the world, but, when it’s meaningful, talk about gender.

This past winter, the family took a vacation to Cuba with Witterick’s parents. Since they weren’t fluent in Spanish, they flipped a coin at the airport to decide what to tell people. It landed on heads, so for the next week, everyone who asked was told Storm was a boy. The language changed immediately. “What a big, strong boy,” people said.

The moment a child’s sex is announced, so begins the parade of pink and barrage of blue. Tutus and toy trucks aren’t far behind. The couple says it only intensifies with age. “In fact, in not telling the gender of my precious baby, I am saying to the world, ‘Please can you just let Storm discover for him/herself what s (he) wants to be?!.” Witterick writes in an email.
**
Stocker teaches at City View Alternative, a tiny school west of Dufferin Grove Park, with four teachers and about 60 Grade 7 and 8 students whose lessons are framed by social-justice issues around class, race and gender.

When Kio was a baby, the family travelled through the mountains of Mexico, speaking with the Zapatistas, a revolutionary group who shun mainstream politics as corrupt and demand greater indigenous rights. In 1994, about 150 people died in violent clashes with the Mexican military, but the leftist movement has been largely peaceful since.

Last year, they spent two weeks in Cuba, living with local families and learning about the revolution. Witterick has worked in violence prevention, giving workshops to teachers. These days, she volunteers, offering breastfeeding support. At the moment, she is a full-time mom.

Both come from liberal families. Stocker grew up listening to Free to Be ... You and Me, a 1972 record with a central message of gender neutrality. Witterick remembers her brother mucking around with gender as a teen in the ’80s, wearing lipstick and carrying handbags like David Bowie and Mick Jagger.

The family lives in a cream-coloured two-storey brick home in the city’s Junction Triangle neighbourhood. Their front porch is crammed with bicycles, including Kio’s pink and purple tricycle. Inside, it’s organized clutter. The children's arts and crafts projects are stacked in the bookcases, maps hang on the walls and furniture is well-used and of a certain vintage. Upstairs they co-sleep curled up on two mattresses pushed together on the floor of the master bedroom, under a heap of mismatched pillows and blankets. During the day, the kids build forts with the pillows and pretend to walk a tightrope between the mattresses. On a recent Tuesday, the boys finish making paper animal puppets and a handmade sign to celebrate their dad’s birthday. “I love to do laundry with dad,” reads one message. They nuzzle Storm, splayed out on the floor. The baby squeals with delight.

Witterick practices unschooling, an offshoot of home-schooling centred on the belief that learning should be driven by a child’s curiosity. There are no report cards, no textbooks and no tests. For unschoolers, learning is about exploring and asking questions, “not something that happens by rote from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays in a building with a group of same-age people, planned, implemented and assessed by someone else,” says Witterick. The fringe movement is growing. An unschooling conference in Toronto drew dozens of families last fall. The kids have a lot of say in how their day unfolds. They decide if they want to squish through the mud, chase garter snakes in the park or bake cupcakes.
**
Jazz — soft-spoken, with a slight frame and curious brown eyes — keeps his hair long, preferring to wear it in three braids, two in the front and one in the back, even though both his parents have close-cropped hair. His favourite colour is pink, although his parents don’t own a piece of pink clothing between them. He loves to paint his fingernails and wears a sparkly pink stud in one ear, despite the fact his parents wear no nail polish or jewelry.

Kio keeps his curly blond hair just below his chin. The 2-year-old loves purple, although he’s happiest in any kind of pyjama pants.

“As a result, Jazz and now Kio are almost exclusively assumed to be girls,” says Stocker, adding he and Witterick don’t out them. It’s the boys’ choice whether they want to offer a correction.
On a recent trip to High Park, Jazz, wearing pink shorts, patterned pink socks and brightly coloured elastics on his braids, runs and skips across the street. “That’s a princess!” says a smiling crossing guard, ushering the little boy along. “And that’s a princess, too,” she says again, pointing at Kio with her big red sign.
Jazz doesn’t mind. One of his favourite books is 10,000 Dresses, the story of a boy who loves to dress up. But he doesn’t like being called a girl. Recently, he asked his mom to write a note on his application to the High Park Nature Centre because he likes the group leaders and wants them to know he’s a boy.
Jazz was old enough for school last September, but chose to stay home. “When we would go and visit programs, people — children and adults — would immediately react with Jazz over his gender,” says Witterick, adding the conversation would gravitate to his choice of pink or his hairstyle.
That’s mostly why he doesn’t want to go to school. When asked if it upsets him, he nods, but doesn’t say more. Instead he grabs a handmade portfolio filled with his drawings and poems. In its pages is a booklet written under his pseudonym, the “Gender Explorer.” In purple and pink lettering, adorned with butterflies, it reads: “Help girls do boy things. Help boys do girl things. Let your kid be whoever they are!”
*
Storm was named after whipped winds and dark rain clouds, because they are beautiful and transformative.  “When I was pregnant, it was really this intense time around Jazz having experiences with gender and I was feeling like I needed some good parenting skills to support him through that,” says Witterick.
It began as a offhand remark. “Hey, what if we just didn’t tell?” And then Stocker found a book in his school library called X: A Fabulous Child’s Story by Lois Gould. The book, published in 1978, is about raising not a boy or a girl, but X. There’s a happy ending here. Little X — who loved to play football and weave baskets — faces the taunting head on, proving that X is the most well-adjusted child ever examined by “an impartial team of Xperts.”

“It became so compelling it was almost like, How could we not?” says Witterick. There are days when their decisions are tiring, shackling even. “We spend more time than we should providing explanations for why we do things this way,” says Witterick. “I regret that (Jazz) has to discuss his gender before people ask him meaningful questions about what he does and sees in this world, but I don't think I am responsible for that — the culture that narrowly defines what he should do, wear and look like is.”

Longtime friend Ayal Dinner, 35, a father two young boys, was surprised to hear the couple’s announcement when Storm was born, but is supportive. “I think it’s amazing that they’re willing to take on challenging people in this way,” says Dinner. “While they are political and ideological about these things, they’re also really thinking about what it means and struggling with it as they go along.” Dinner understands why people may find it extreme. “Although I can see the criticism of ‘This is going to be hard on my kid,’ it’s great to say, ‘I love my kid for whoever they are.’”

On a recent trip to Hamilton, Jazz was out of earshot when family friend Denise Hansen overheard two little girls at the park say they didn’t want to play with a “girl-boy.” Then, there was the time a saleswoman at a second-hand shop refused to sell him a pink feather boa. “Surely you won't buy it for him — he's a boy!” said the woman. Shocked, and not wanting to upset Jazz, Witterick left the store.

Parents talk about the moment they realize they would throw themselves in front of a speeding truck to save their child from harm, yet battle the instinct to overprotect. They want to encourage independence. They hope people won’t be mean. They pray they aren’t bullied. No parent would ever wish that for their child.
On a night after she watched her husband of 11 years and the boys play with sparklers after dark, Witterick, in a reflective mood, writes to say we are all mocked at some point for the way we look, the way we dress and the way we think. “When faced with inevitable judgment by others, which child stands tall (and sticks up for others) — the one facing teasing despite desperately trying to fit in, or the one with a strong sense of self and at least two 'go-to' adults who love them unconditionally? Well, I guess you know which one we choose.”
*
Diane Ehrensaft is a California-based psychologist and mother of Jesse, a “girlyboy” who turned his trucks into cradles and preferred porcelain dolls over soldiers when he was a child. Her newly published book, Gender Born, Gender Made, is a guide for parents of nonconforming kids. She believes parents should support gender-creative children, which includes the transgendered, who feel born in the wrong bodies, and gender hybrids, who feel they are part girl and part boy. Then there are gender “smoothies,” who have a blended sense of gender that is purely “them.” Ehrensaft believes there is something innate about gender, and points to the ’70s, when parents experimented by giving dolls to boys and trucks to girls.
“It only worked up to a certain extent. Some girls never played with the trucks, some boys weren’t interested in ballet ... It was a humbling experiment for us because we learned we don’t have the control that we thought we did.”

But she worries by not divulging Storm’s sex, the parents are denying the child a way to position himself or herself in a world where you are either male, female or in between. In effect they have created another category: Other than other. And that could marginalize the child. “I believe that it puts restrictions on this particular baby so that in this culture this baby will be a singular person who is not being given an opportunity to find their true gender self, based on also what’s inside them.”

Ehrensaft gets the “What the heck?!” reaction people may have when they hear about Storm. “I think it probably makes people feel played with to have that information withheld from them.” While she accepts and supports Jazz’s freedom “to be who he is,” she’s concerned about asking two small boys to keep a secret about the baby of the family. “For very young children, just in their brains, they’re not ready to do the kind of sophisticated discernment we do about when a secret is necessary.”

Jazz says it’s not difficult. He usually just calls the baby Storm.

Dr. Ken Zucker, considered a world expert on gender identity and head of the gender identity service for children at Toronto’s Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, calls this a “social experiment of nurture.” The broader question, he says, is how much influence parents have on their kids. If Ehrensaft leans toward nature, Zucker puts more emphasis on nurture. Even when parents don’t make a choice, that’s still a choice, and one that can impact the children. When asked what psychological harm, if any, could come from keeping the sex of a child secret, Zucker said: “One will find out.” The couple plan to keep Storm’s sex a secret as long as Storm, Kio and Jazz are comfortable with it. In the meantime, philosophy and reality continue to collide.

Out with the kids all day, Witterick doesn’t have the time or the will to hide in a closet every time she changes Storm’s diaper. “If (people) want to peek, that’s their journey,” she says. There are questions about which bathroom Storm will use, but that is a couple of years off. Then there is the “tyranny of pronouns,” as they call it. They considered referring to Storm as “Z”. Witterick now calls the baby she, imagining the “s” in brackets.For the moment, it feels right.

“Everyone keeps asking us, ‘When will this end?’” says Witterick. “And we always turn the question back. Yeah, when will this end? When will we live in a world where people can make choices to be whoever they are?”
jpoisson@thestar.ca

5.19.2011

We're headed to Ocean City!

Gooooooodbye, Flintstone!

And THIS is a wrapped up Burrito Girl last evening...
Fun times here in OC where we had an 8am fire drill and Ellie was crib-less. Ahh. Otherwise we're having a rockin' time, the trip was so smooth, and we're off to the beach!!

Quote for the fire drill: "That's what's wrong with us Mormons... When we're given directions, we follow them."