Monthly Archives: May 2009

once you’re a parent…

Once you’re a parent, you’re always a parent.  You can’t hide it under a hat.  You can’t put it away in a drawer, or place it in a closet. 

A child sitting at a nearby table at a local restaurant leans too far back in her chair, and you gasp to yourself, afraid she’ll fall. Put your hand to your chest, “oh gosh!”  

She’s not your child. 

But you’re a parent… forever.

Once you become one…

You. Are. Always. A. Parent.

This realization has hit me with full–force.  A brick wall.  Unstoppable and unbreakable.  

Spending the morning of my birthday walking for March of Dimes, but more importantly, walking for Maddie was just what I needed, as a parent.

I’m not a big “birthday person” but apparently Maddie’s mom, Heather, is because the night before the walk she left me this message on twitter…

@MyBottlesUp: You’re walking tomorrow for Maddie AND it’s your birthday? I am so, so touched. Birthdays mean a lot to me. Thank you SO much.

This message that Heather sent me has resonated with me for days…  the fact that she took the time to say this, to express this to someone else, a stranger/friend, when she and her husband, Mike, are grieving, going through their own tragedy, astounds me.

And I haven’t been able to write about it, until now. 

When I fathom what their days have been like since their precious Maddie’s passing, I am at a loss…  I can’t do it.  My mind comes up with images of meals being dropped off, friends stopping in for hugs, roller-coasters of tears and laughter as they remember and reminisce, and make their own mark

What do you say? 

What do you do?

It has taken me days to attempt a blog post for something like this.  I don’t even “know” them, in the traditional sense that one “knows” someone. 

I have posted pictures on Maddie’s Flikr link.  I have made it known to everyone who needs to be told that we showed up, our team made it, here’s what we raised, etc…

Our team never fully met up.  Some of us met in the parking lot, under bridges, hiding from the rain.  Some of us called each other’s cell phones, wanting desperately to catch up to the other person, but falling short.  Timing was just off.  But that didn’t matter. 

We are parents.

We were there for Maddie, for Heather, for Mike…  for the Spohr Family as a whole.  Friends and family alike.  We were there for the teams around the country that have united for this family in grief, collecting pictures, remembering, and making new memories. 

We are united. 

And that’s what children do… bring people together… show and experience unconditional love… without fear, without judgment.

When you’re a parent, you watch your child(ren) teach.  Teach themselves, teach you, teach other kids, other people…  teach adults.  In my 1 year of experience as a parent, I have been taught that these “things” are things one should already know, like how to share, or how to say “please” or “thank you” but once you’re an adult, those things often get forgotten. 

The good gets left behind so easily for the convenient.

Maddie’s smile, whenever I see it, reminds me of the goodness in all of us.

That was why I walked. 

I walked for her smile.  And while I struggled to celebrate, continuing to fathom the pain that Heather and Mike are enduring on a daily basis…  I tried, (Maddie, I tried!) really hard to celebrate being a parent!

Because, apparently, you made a ton of people smile with your smile, and laugh with your laugh.

And how great it is to be a parent to a child like that… 

Heather, Mike, you did that.  Because, when you’re a parent, that’s just what you do… the very best that you can.  And you will always be parents.

 Always.

feed me

not yet ready to write about yesterday’s walk for maddie, i sit at my new mac book (paul’s birthday gift to me, hell yea!) and ponder what to post…

i’m asking moms on twitter what they feed their 1+ year olds and how often.  here’s why… now that jackson has turned 1 and we’re “supposed to” be saying buh-bye to the bottle (which should be something you would think i would want to celebrate), i find myself not knowing what to feed him.  i feel like he is at this strange stage in eating where he’s over the whole jar-food thing, but still learning the concept of table foods.  
and then there’s snacks, which baffle me entirely.  we’ve never had the luxury of giving jackson snacks because we’ve always been told by his specialists to have him on a strict feeding schedule so that he’s hungry enough to get the bottles in.  back in the day, the bottle and its contents were the focus (side note: good grief, how far we have come!)  needless to say, jackson hasn’t been the snacking-type, until paul’s cousin introduced jackson to goldfish a couple months back, and opened all our eyes to the glory that snacking can bring.  thank you, heather!
so, once one has a 1 year old, a toddler, a little person who is no longer a “baby,” what do you feed them?  and when?  how much?  and how often?  do you prepare your own foods?  do you purchase prepared foods?  how long did you do jar-foods (if you did them at all)?  how did you end your child’s relationship with the bottle?  do you look for calorie-content (cuz your kid is a string bean, like mine) or nutritional value (making sure the best of ingredients are listed on the label)???
i could go on and on with the questions that i have about feeding our magoo.  and yes, we have asked our pediatrician, who has given good insight… but i’d rather hear the real advice from the stay-at-home parents themselves.  call me crazy.
please, share with me what you feed your child.  answer every last one of those obnoxious and overly-analytical questions i have listed above in a comment or email to me.  because there seems to always be somethin’ ya know?  once you get a handle of one thing, somethin’ else happens and you need to be ready to adjust again. 
i need help adjusting to toddler-hood.  i just got used to having a baby.

for maddie… in pictures

i don’t have words right now.  i have pictures to offer in lieu of words.  i will write when i am ready.  but for now… for heather… for mike… for maddie… i offer these..


the only words i do have are yes, that is the poopy diaper we had to change pre-walk, in the backseat of the car.  and yes, paul left it on top of the car during the walk, so that post-walk it was still there, waiting to be disposed of.  and finally, yes, these are the only words i have right now because when i’m feeling uncomfortable and not knowing what to say, the first thing that comes to mind is “shit.”

2 days left… $200 to go!!!

this is my FINAL plea… “My Bottle’s Up for Maddie” is at $800!!!

WOOHOO AND YEA YEA!!!!

2 days left until the walk… i want $200. i want $1,000 by sunday, people!!!

MAKE IT HAPPEN!!!!

for updates on how heather and mike spohr are coping these days, check out their blog...

as for us, we received our Maddie t-shirts yesterday from Meghan. i opened the box she had shipped to us from the west coast, knowing what i would see when i opened it…

this is what stared me back in the face. and as the tears came, so did a smile, because i know, i know, that sunday will be filled with more tears and more smiles.

i can’t wait for my birthday… and to share it with this precious girl.

DONATE!!! thanks.

*UPDATE: we are already at $850!!!*

**12:30 pm WE HIT $875!!!**

***4:02 pm WE ARE AT $955!!!***

****MAY 2nd 8:15 am WE HIT $1020****

THANK YOU THANK YOU!!!

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