On Fatherhood…

My first “life” lesson was probably on that of fathers. Mostly because mine was absolutely nowhere to be found, in a very small town where a chunk of his family still remained. While those remnants of family members worked hard to slander my girlhood name- my father never managed to come rescue me as I wished he would. 
 Lesson learned: I’m worth nothing if even my own father refuses to love (or even meet) me.
The funny thing about life lessons though, is they keep evolving.
I dreamed of him saving me from my step father and his lust for me. 
Lesson learned: If I am worth anything at all, the only worth is in sexual things
When life intervened and I ended up in a group home, I imagined my father riding in {looking quite a lot like Joe Penny, circa mid’80’s}and dadding me in the way that a dad should dad his daughter. {yep, I did just make a verb. It’s allowed.} When i was fifteen, however, my birth mom grew weary of me placing my complete-stranger of a father upon a pedestal and she sent him a letter. He replied, to me, with pages and pages of beautifully penned words of love. 
Pedestal earned. My daddy loved me. My daddy wanted me. 
Two years passed before I would meet him- an event which no one bothered to emotionally prepare me for. I completely shut down/withdrew during the few hours we had together. Honestly I remember none of it. Later, though, when word got back to me that he was disappointed in me and wished he hadn’t met me- I completely lost my compass.
Lesson learned: I was a disgusting, repulsive girl. I would never amount to anything. 
Roughly six years later, I was a twenty three year old divorced girl who had just had a complete hysterectomy. I was a little overwhelmed and making some fairly self destructive choices. One night, on a long car ride back to Boise from my foster parents mountain home, my foster dad (whom I just call dad.) Told me of his love for me. He touched on disappointments in choices I had made, expressed deep seeded concerns he had and recounted how he had been the one (as in, one and only) to sit, wringing his hands, in the waiting room while I’d had tumors removed. (The hysterectomy had not been scheduled. Cancer had been the giant fear that day.) He talked about shared holidays and the eleven years he’d spent daddying me and how blessed he felt by the trust I had given but that he wished I’d really give in and trust him more. 
Lesson learned: I was a blind fool. I had a dad. An amazing dad. Blood was irrelevant. 
Three years post that car ride conversation, my father made it known (via his wife) that he wanted another go at things. He felt crippled in his insecurity but wanted to really make things work with me. Except they didn’t work. Around my husband’s very crazy work schedule (he traveled, a lot) and my youngest’s school and special needs routine- both Chw and i felt like we were moving mountains to treck the 6 hours south to spend quality time getting to know them. Though I had grown up a lot, I had enough self respect to know that I’d take time with opening up and very openly communicated that, to which both he & she had claimed complete sensitivity and understanding. 
But they were not sensitive. 
And they were not understanding. 
They kept score of my multitude of imperfections and each trip down there, which led me to opening up more and more of my brokenness and love, became some catwalk for their secret judging and score keeping to commence. 
On my 29th birthday, via a string of hateful emails my father’s wife spoke for both of them as she attempted to insult me to my core and shatter me. Though the shards of her hatred did hurt, I was (thankfully) able to see her words for what they were. She’d never taken the time or made the effort to truly know me. To truly know us. The only person their words deeply wounded was my attachment disorder daughter who loved them and still, six years later, wishes they knew and loved her. It was her their rejection hurt. A tiny child who’d already been hurt so much by the time she made it to our family… 
Lesson learned: Their loss is indeed the most significant. My father hole was no longer a gaping canyon. 
{sidenote: we spent the entire next day riding roller coasters and playing in the ocean. I thought, not one little time, about them. There was no heaviness… second sidenote: For years, following, I did include them in our Christmas card list. This was always for Genny. She still, though I don’t understand it, loves them. In the grand scheme of her life with us- they hold but a blip. Because she’d never had “grandparents” before them, though- that blip made a pretty big impact. I regret giving them that power over her. They didn’t deserve the gift of her love…}
After another six years, I look at my husband. I look at this man who hasn’t blinked an eye over my inability to birth a little us. He adores our kids and I know him, I know his heart. He physically could not love them more. I look at my dad, (from a distance, as he lives in Kansas and I haven’t seen him for over a year) and I know the man he is. Such a good man… An amazing man. I look at our friends, and the men we know. Men who love and work for their children. Men who know basic things like their children’s favorite colors and bigger things like their fears and secrets. 
Lesson learned: Fatherhood is as much a verb as it is a season. Without the action, canyons are made. Real men were born to be real dads… Every guy’s got a sperm count, but it’s the heart to care about following through with that- which matters. 
EVERY child deserves to have a loving, attentive and selfless father. (even me). 
EVERY man does NOT deserve to be a dad... 
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A celebratory update…

Last Thursday I blogged about a special birthday and I received a few sweet comments and quite a few more dear emails about my daughter, your daughters, motherhood, etc… It was so sweet, and touched me so much that I felt like I couldn’t not share how we chose to celebrate! 
1} We had a brunch on our fine china, complete with dangling 21’s, and 21 fresh cut roses. 
2} Dangling 21, like I mentioned…
3} Chw made mushroom and pepperjack omelets, toast and we did a fresh fruit plate. 
4} I made her my first EVER Tiramisu. (It’s her favorite dessert) 
5} a 21st birthday brunch wouldn’t be right without champagne for mimosas! 
6} Isn’t she lovely? She had a great birthday! :) 
Thanks for your notes and well wishes! I’m truly, truly blessed… 
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Genny’s attempt to repair the economy with her isms, while plundering us into debt…

Towards the end of last week, Gen went to a party where Gen proceeded to break her hand.
Ok. It’s not exactly broken, but it is fractured…
We didn’t know that however. Everyone seemed to be calling it a severe sprain, so we sent her on her merry little way to a Girl Scout retreat, where she (against everyone’s orders) proceeded to be a total kid with her hand and use it anyway. (Of all the nerve!)
So, back to the ER yesterday, for more X-rays resulted in them sending her home with an even-more-severe sprain diagnosis.
Then they called later with the news… And a good Orthapedist referral.

And it all kinda sucks because, well, she’s in a lot of pain and her hand is pretty ugly and purple and puffy… And, it also kinda (a lot) sucks because we have the worlds crappiest insurance. It covers nothing. At all. In fact, why we pay for it monthly is beyond me. So yeah…
Not that my twelve year old really comprehends the amount of new debt she has incurred. I mean, when she hurt her hand- she laughed it off and then KEPT going on the slip and slide. FOR HOURS. Everyone believed she was fine, so no one felt the need to call me. After hours of slipping and sliding, she then decided how awesome it would be to play tether ball.
They are pretty sure she escalated her injuries substantially by not discontinuing her jolly-good-time.

And as frustrated as we are about this, we are so grateful she’s ok. I mean, with her level of play and refusal to heed common sense, her body’s communication of severe pain or our (and the doctor’s) good advice- she could have ripped an arm off if no one had intervened and that would have sucked a lot worse than several thousands of dollars in medical bills…

Which segways me into a little something we like to call gennyisms…

Because her favorite saying, which applies to this ENTIRE severely overpriced weekend applies, is:

Later doesn’t matter. I’m having fun now so leave me alone. hmmm.

Some sweeter, but WAY OVERUSED ones are:

Awe! She is super cute. {Insert having just seen a dog, cat, animal of almost any kind, elderly woman, baby, toddler or little girl. If you can imagine how often we come across one of the above- either in real life, on the internet, or television- every day- than you can imagine HALF of how much she says this. Plus, we have 2 dogs and I swear even they get sick of hearing how cute they are.}

OHHH! He is super cute. {See above explanation substituting he for she.}

I feel so bad for him/her… {while watching a movie, tv show or reality tv competition such as SYTYCD. Last week during one two hour episode, we counted. She said this FORTY SEVEN times.}

But they are a person. {This follows hysterical sobbing, while watching movies where an animal is hurt or sad. Usually there is a human character who has been also injured or sad and we always ask her- because it’s fun- why she never gets sad about the person while becoming nearly suicidal over the animal…}

*GASP* I did not do that/eat that! You can call daddy and ask him, he’ll prove it. {of which, of course, he never proves and she is 99% of the time guilty. still I hear this daily.}

I’m going to go get into my bajamas. {yes, she’s 12.}

Can I get a very small drink? (at bedtime.)

Can I get just a little bit more? (seconds at dinner.)

Can I watch just for a tiny few more minutes? (a movie, past bedtime.)

The girl LOVES her adjectives…

She also says the word Actually, a ridiculous amount…

And, though there are millions more, I’ll close with these:

This my favorite movie! Well, maybe my third favorite. {and she will proceed to name thirty other movies, in order… and when we mention a movie she forgot, she will get flustered and start over. This is a 30 minute luxury that follows nearly EVERY movie she watches.}

Weekly conversation:
G- I think we should eat at McDonalds (which we don’t).
me- why?
G- because it helps the economy and creates jobs.

No. i’m not kidding…

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Twenty-One {a love letter}…

Dearest Amanda, 

Today is your twenty first birthday… A milestone {when you are 21} for things like a grown up ID, bars, clubs, partying, and all around different things than it will when you are looking back on it one day… Like when you are 31… 
On this day I bequeath to you a list of twenty one amazingly fantastic things that I love and admire about YOU!

  1. You know exactly what you want. When you get it into your head, you work super hard to get there.
  2. You have passion. 
  3. You live. You do not sit around waiting for something in your life to happen. 
  4. You don’t pretend to be something you aren’t. Because of this, it has occasionally cost you certain things or relationships… BUT– 
  5. You acknowledge that, though it may be a sad loss- you are mature enough to realize that it is their loss and you are better off without them. 
  6. You have an amazing heart and when you truly love someone, you do so with a love so huge and selfless…
  7. You embrace laughter. You laugh with your entire soul, and you do it often. 
  8. You take care of your car. Maybe you’re later than you feel like you should be, when it comes to some maintenance things- but you still do them. 
  9. Your shoes… Specifically heels and boots. Wow. I love my feet too much to ever try such footwear, therefore I can live vicariously through your boldness! 
  10. Even when you may hate your job, you stick it out. Even when you are treated like crap, or underpaid- you go to work everyday and you do your job to the best of your ability. 
  11. You are grateful. Not many people, your age, really “get” gratitude. Usually in it’s place is entitlement.
  12. You eat peanut butter on your pancakes. I mean, come on… how is that not the BEST way to eat pancakes??? some people just don’t get it.
  13. You are generous. Easily one of the MOST generous people I know…
  14. You are an amazing big sister… To Gen. To N & T/J…
  15. You are authentic. There are moments when you obviously feel like being 30, and you act it- while their are moments when you feel like being 10 and you embrace it with all that you are. 
  16. You aren’t afraid to try new things. Which goes along with- 
  17. You have a tremendous spirit for adventure and travel. I hope you hold on to things, (and your drive to accomplish them) because this can fade in time and I’m prepared to nag you forever- so that it doesn’t… 
  18. You listen to people, and accept others, when they need a non-judgmental ear.
  19. Your love of kids. It doesn’t even matter whose kids- you are just naturally gifted with them and love it… 
  20. You are a true overcomer. In every way you adapt, taking the good and moving on. I am so proud of you for this!
  21. I love that you love and accept me. I’m grateful. I’m flawed and don’t deserve to be your mom- but that doesn’t matter to you. 
I hope that it’s a beautiful day, and know that I am celebrating you- even in the moments today when you aren’t with me. I love you!

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