Relay for Life 2008

acs1.gifMay 27: The last few years, my brother Joe has participated in Relay for Life to raise money for the American Cancer Society.  He’s working on it again this year, so if you’re interested in supporting cancer research, click below to see how you can help.

Hello all!   This is Joe, Althea’s youngest brother.  De Forest, the town I went to high school in, has an annual Relay For Life (an event organized by the American Cancer Society) every June.  It’s a pretty big event.  Team are made up of  10-15 people, and each person on the team agrees to try and raise at least $100.  Then, the day of the event rolls around and everyone comes together at the high school’s track.  The event runs from 6 in the evening until 7 or 8 the next day.  There is a candlelight ceremony and talks from cancer survivors.

The event has been running in De Forest for 10 years or so and has raised over a million dollars since its first year.  A friend I’ve had since first grade formed the team “Carpe Diem” and so I am raising money for the team.  If you’d like to donate, feel free to send any dollar amount ($10 or $25 as a suggestion) as a check made out to the American Cancer Society to:

Joe Babler
4575 Dennis Drive
Madison, WI 53704

You can also donate online directly to our team.

The event will be held on June 13th.

Furthermore, I can purchase luminarias that they line the track with at the event and write “In Honor/In Memory” of anyone that you would like.  It’s $5 per bag.  Just send along any names that you want.

Thanks!

Joe

Sylvie at 3 1/2 months

hairbow.JPGMay 27: Sylvia is so engaged and so aware…I just am amazingly in love with her!  The last week or so, I find myself making regular mental notes of things I want to post about her.  So here’s a stream-of-consciousness update about Sylvia.

  • This little girl is strong.  She’s been holding her head up well since about four weeks.  She’s been standing strongly for at least a month.  Of course, she wobbles all over the place, but she has been able to support her own weight since early May.  I’ve had the exersaucer out for her to stand in, and she’s getting now where she can (at least somewhat) purposefully turn herself in a circle.  She’s able to move toys if her hand is on them, but she still has some steps to make before she’ll be able to have the muscle and brain coordination to grab an object that she wants.
  • I’ve moved her up to the size three diapers.  I feel like that means that she’s a huge person now.  We’ve been using disposables although I have the cloth ones right under the changing table.  Maybe soon I’ll start integrating them in:)  We moved up to size three when she started having “blow-outs” from both legs and the back of her size twos.  Fun stuff.
  • She wants nothing to do with her swing.  In fact, I should probably give it back to my friend.  She starts “singing” the moment I put her in it.
  • On the other hand (and I almost feel like I should whisper this so as to not break the spell), she’s not so angry in her car seat any more.  After that long, horrible ride home from the Twin Cities a couple weeks back, our driving experiences have been nearly pleasant.  I’ve been bringing a soft blanket-y toy for her to hold, and we’ve done several across-town trips without any crying.  This is dramatic. This is stunning.  I would be so happy if she got over the carseat=torture idea.
  • She rolled over twice…with assistance.  Late last week, I had her in the middle of the bed on her tummy and she rolled into the mattress valley where I sleep.  She’s getting squirmy-er and more interested in being mobile each day.
  • She adores her brother…and her dad.  Andrew loves to hug and kiss and wildly embrace and “dance” with Sylvia.  She has a large tollerance for his physical demonstrations of love, and I can tell from how her face lights up that she things he’s just the bees knees.  We tell him to watch her face to see if she’s OK with what he’s doing, and that seems to work pretty well.  When he makes her cry, he gives her soft kisses and says, “I’m sorry, Sylvie ba-dilve!”
    When Bryan comes home, Sylvie’s face lights up, and both her dimples jump out.  She’s doing the open-mouth grin when she’s really happy.  And seeing her dad makes her really happy!
  • She’s waking up a couple times in the night.  Usually I feed her around 10:30 before I go to bed.  Then she eats at 1 and 4.  The last few days, she’s been sleeping a bit later…maybe 7 instead of 6.  Then she’s usually awake for an hour before taking a two hour morning nap.  She’s been sleeping in her crib except when I’m too exhasuted in the night to nurse her in the rocking chair and bring her to bed instead.  While I’m still kind of tired some mornings, she’s pretty good about eating in about 15 minutes and then going straight back to bed.
  • I use two white noise machines to help her sleep.  For naps and when I put her down at night, I usually nurse her and then lay her down awake.  I turn on Mom’s sleep sheep with the waves sound and then I turn on the noise machine that I bought just for her.  She often falls asleep without a peep.  It helps that she’s using a pacificer.
  • She’s wearing a wide range of sizes of baby clothes.  She still fits in most of the 0-3 month, although they are a little snug.  3-6 month fit her well, and she can wear quite a few 6-12 month items.  This is the heyday for adorable little baby girl clothes!  I’ve just started putting her in pajamas at night.  Before this, she just wore her clothes because it seemed silly to change her again.
  • Sylvie doesn’t spit up.  She’s probablly urp-ed about 10 times ever.  Sometimes she gets kind of drooly, but that’s mostly when she tries to fit her fist in her mouth.
  • Sylvie cries most when she feels she has been offended.  Like if I bump her on something or I don’t repsond to her cries fast enough or I ignore her when she asks to be removed from the @#$% car seat.  When she is offended, she cries really gustily.  It can be a little breath-taking
  • If we’re walking and she’s in the front carrier, she’s almost always happy.
  • She’s happily passed around to loads of different people.  As long as she’s not too tired or hungry, she’s an amazingly social and radient little person.

So that’s a little picture into Sylvia at 15 weeks.

Three years later

May 27: I’m glad Maretta and Kyle got married on Memorial Day weekend.  It gives us a new association with the weekend, and I think that’s a good thing.  The last several days, I keep finding my mind floating back to Memorial Day weekend 2005, when Mom was first diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.

I no longer am stuck reliving and thinking through those last weeks of Mom’s life.  For almost six months after she was gone, my brain was doing some sort of a backward coping thing…I thought back each of her last weeks obsessively, most especially the really hard conversations, the gut wrenching shifts.  I think that at the time we just had to do what needed to be done and there wasn’t really the time or space to be sad or reflect too much.  So I reflected afterwards.  It was kind of a relief when my brain decided it had worked through, say the week of August 6 enough and we could move back to the week of July 30.  Then I got back to the end of June, and these days, I don’t think about last summer much at all.  I find I can think about the bigger picture much more. For quite a while, I couldn’t even really remember or focus on memories before Mom got sick.

On the Thursday before Memorial Day, 2005, Mom went into the doctor to check on what she thought was a bladder infection.  She called me from the hospital at work and said, “I’m in the hospital, but don’t worry…they’re just checking on what I think is a bladder infection.  You and Bryan can stop by this evening if you’d like.”  The next day (May 27, 2005) when they did a catscan, they started using the word “mass” to describe a blockage that they found in her pancreatic duct.

I remember climbing into bed next to her before one of her tests, and I asked if she was scared.  “Not scared,” she said.  “Just sad.”

Today three years ago, I was just beginning to read about pancreatic cancer.  It’s a horrible disease to learn about.  I remember thinking, “This can’t be happening,” over and over.  At one point, Bryan came over while I was reading, and I remember showing him some of the charts of median life expectancy.  He didn’t believe it.  It was just too terrible to comprehend.  I recall reading this exact passage:

Median survival from diagnosis is around 3 to 6 months; 5-year survival is much less than 5% With 32,180 new diagnoses in the United States every year, and 31,800 deaths, mortality approaches 99%, giving pancreatic cancer the highest fatality rate of all cancers and the fourth highest cancer killer in the United States
amongst both men and women.

The upside of our story is that Mom got over two good years after diagnosis.  I was eight months pregnant when she was diagnosed, and Mom lived long enough that her grandson remembers her.  We had so many good times in the last years, and I’m grateful that we all had time to say goodbye.  But it still just totally and completely sucks.  And this weekend, which I always think of as the turning point between spring and summer also became in our lives the turning point between “ordinary” and “coping with cancer.”

I’m glad that it’s now also the weekend that Maretta and Kyle got married.  It’s such a lovely time of year.

Is this what normal feels like?

lookalikes.jpgMay 27: Andrew is napping this afternoon.  Sylvie woke up just as I was putting him down, and she is now rather happily perched on my lap as I type.  It’s nice to be able to type and kiss bald baby head at the same time.  I’m sitting here in the relative quiet and feeling a sense of a new existence.  Like I’m at the ocean’s edge, and the tide all went out and I’m seeing that the starfish-filled tide pools are a very different landscape from the waves that were present a few hours ago.  Life post-wedding; life with two kids; life not going to work at Gathering Waters; life being a full-time mom (with no immediate wedding planning) in the summer.

Yesterday (Memorial Day) I really unwound.  Bryan was Mr. Accomplishing, mulching garden beds, cleaning the gutters, staining planks of wood to make a picnic bench.  Me?  I read a Barbara Kingsolver book and sorted through bags of 6-12 month clothes, pulled out 0-3 month clothes that are too small, and in general re-organized Sylvie’s dresser and closet.  I should mention again that I LOVE baby clothes.  I love touching them and folding them and creating new outfits.  And I love putting them on my little ones.  I think I decided to dive into clothes because it most certainly did not need to be done.  And I wanted to do something that I didn’t need to do.  The last couple weeks have been quite full of prioritized lists, so it felt good to pick an off-the-list task.  Plus, I now have new things to put on my sweet princess pottywottykins.

My co-worker Pam goes back to work today.  Her daughter Mercy is a week younger than Sylvie, and so her first day back at work makes me quite aware that I am not going back to work.  I’ve got to say, though, that while I miss seeing my co-workers and thinking critically and having conversations that don’t involve kids and doing work that I really think makes Wisconsin a better place, I don’t really miss my job.  It’s summer, and I get to be outdoors with the kids and have Andrew give me big hugs and say things like, “I’ll love you forever, Mommy.”

Last night I wrote up a list of meals to make for the week, and this morning the kiddos and I went to Woodman’s.  They are remarkably good shoppers, and Andrew is even tending to leave the house cheerfully (AMAZING).  Sylvie is happy in the front carrier, and we happily shopped together, purchasing over $200 worth of food.  Good heavens, I must be crazy.  On the other hand, I’m making lots of meals that will have leftovers, and I’m not eating out much for lunch any more.  Because I am slightly compulsive and type-A, I made a Woodman’s shopping list laid out like the store is to try to streamline the shopping process.  Feel free to copy and use yourself if you’d like.  These are the kinds of things I do when I don’t have a job:)  Oh, and my dad made a very similar list when I was a kid, so I come by it genetically.

Heather and Michael and Evelyn were in town for Maretta’s wedding, so I got to see them all, if only quite briefly.  I’m going out to DC in August for Kacy’s wedding, and I’m hoping to spend significantly more time with them then.  Evie is soooo cute and tiny.  Just one month old:)

My stream of consciousness is faltering, and Sylvie would like me to interact with her now.  The muffled explosions emanating from her nether regions may need to be dealt with on the changing table as well.  Have a happy summer!

Fist set of pictures from the photographer

brideandgroomoutdoors.jpgMay 25: We’ve gotten to see quite a bit of the bride and groom today.  This morning, we met at Terry’s and watched as they opened up their wedding gifts.  I have a sort of post-race euphoria going on.  Seeing everyone so content and glowing is a real treat.
This afternoon, our little clan went to a local park to attend my friend Sarah’s birthday party.  We brought several of the table boquets from the wedding reception, and it was fun to get to share their prettiness with more people.
Maretta and Kyle stopped by our house a few minutes ago.  They spent some time getting things from Dad’s house and then went to visit Michael and Joe.  They’re being quite generous with their newly-wed selves:)  Tomorrow they head up to St. Paul to spend a week honeymooning in their own new apartment.
Late last night our photographer, Dick Baker, sent me a big, early set of photos from the wedding.  Thanks Dick!  You can find them in the gallery.

My sister is married!

brideandgroom.jpgMay 24: I’ve got a new brother:)  Maretta and Kyle were married today, and everything was simply beautiful.  We’ll be getting photos from the photographer in a week, but for now I’ve uploaded around 50 pics I took from the day.  I also posted pictures from the past couple days of getting readiness.
From start to finish, the day was just lovely.  The day dawned sunny.  All the lilac bushes are in bloom, and it seemed like warmth and bird songs and spring color were filling the world.

Maretta, Laurie (her maid of honor), Marilyn (Kyle’s mom), Pam (Kyle’s sister), and I met at nine this morning to get our hair made all pretty.  I stopped by the reception site (Nakoma Country Club) to check on things, and it all looked just beautiful.  So many pretty flowers, silver and white, and green-bedecked tables.  We all had a fun time getting ready together, and then the ceremony began at 12:30.
Terry and I walked Maretta down the first half of the aisle and then Dad walked her down the rest of the way to Kyle.  I’ve uploaded the wedding program for your reading pleasure.  The hymn “For the beauty of the earth” really kind of did me in.  It was a beautiful ceremony.  Kyle cried, they both laughed; at one point, Maretta gave a two thumbs up to the congregation.  They sounded so true and monumental saying their vows, and they both looked so young and happy and fresh and in love.  I couldn’t have wished them a more beautiful ceremony.
The reception was a luncheon buffet, starting out with some mingling and nibblings and greetings.  It was a lot of fun to meet many of Kyle’s relatives, and with the stunning daylight streaming in the windows, we all ate and drank and laughed and enjoyed that post-wedding happy feeling.
Sylvie traveled around the room…I think I only held her when she needed to eat, and I barely heard a peep out of her all day.  She was a jolly, dimply smiling girl.  Andrew fell asleep on the car ride to the reception, so he spent the first part of the reception angelicly sleeping on a sofa.  Then he had fun munching on the yummy food and playing with his aunts and uncles.
We sent the couple off with a cloud of bubbles, and they then went on a carriage ride for an hour.
Our clan headed over to Terry’s after the reception, and the bride and groom stopped by after their carriage ride to say hello.  What a lovely day.  I am so bushed!  It went so well.  Most importantly, Maretta and Kyle are now hitched, and they can begin their lives together.  What an amazing thing.

The wedding is in two days!

May 22:  Maretta and Kyle’s wedding is in just two days!  I’ve been having a good time franticly coordinating details.  Maretta is such an easy bride, and everyone involved is so laid back and wonderful…it’s been a fun event to organize.  We’re expecting 150 people.  Maretta had her hair trial today, and we went makeup shopping for her this afternoon.  The groom and his guys (including Bryan) are out having fun tonight.
My to-do list for tomorrow is much shorter, and mostly includes getting my toes and fingernails painted and visiting with Heather and Michael and their new baby and then doing the rehearsal and the rehearsal dinner.  Yay!  Next week is going to feel like a vacation:)

Maretta is a graduate!

graduate.JPGMay 19: It’s hard to believe that Maretta has completed her education at St. Kate’s!  It seems like just last year that we were dropping her off for her freshman year.  It was a beautiful day.  Michael, Joe, Becky, Dad, Terry, Marilyn and Bob (Kyle’s parents), and our family of four were all on hand to celebrate this milestone.   Most of us weren’t able to attend the actual graduation (Maretta only had four tickets), so we watched it on TV from her dorm room.  She graduated Cum Laude with bachelor’s degree in theater.  We’re all really proud of her!  Way to go, Dolly!  Now that she’s graduated, moved out of her dorm room, and “moved” into her new apartment, the next step is her wedding.  No problem

Pictures from the weekend are in the gallery
.

The big Three-Oh

rugby.JPGMay 19: On Saturday, my sweet guy turned 30!  That’s a big birthday:)  The previous Friday, he and a couple friends went to a Brewer’s game and had a great evening tailgating and watching the Brewer’s pull out a win in the final moments of the game.
On his birthday, we drove up to Minnesota for Maretta’s graduation.  First, though, we made a stop in Northfield where we had lunch at Hogan Brothers. MMmmm.  Carleton was holding its annual rugby reunion, so we went up to the rugby fields and spend an hour or two watching a rugby match and chatting with old friends.  Bryan played rugby for a few years in college, and it was fun to watch him hold Andrew and show the little guy a few scrums.
Then we drove the rest of the way up to St. Paul and got to see Maretta and Kyle’s new apartment on Grand Avenue.  It’s really a fun place for them.  I’m so excited that they get to start their life together!  We went out to dinner with my family and Kyle’s parents, and we had rhubarb dessert (my mom’s yummy recipe) for Bryan’s birthday cake.  It was an action-packed day, and I’m hoping to get to take him out soon for a dinner just him and me.  It was a beautiful day for a birthday.  Happy 30th, honey!

May days

olrichpond.JPGMay 19: We’re back from a full weekend in St. Paul.  Andrew is in his room, and Sylvia is sleeping (on and off), and I’m crashed on the chair amidst a very messy living room.  I have no thoughts for supper.  I can’t imagine (at the moment) having the energy to clean up the kitchen from lunch.  What I’d really like to do is nap, but I just can’t ever seem to nap, so instead I’ll hang out on the computer and hope that Sylvia keeps sleeping (there she’s crying) and Andrew remains happy in his room for another hour.
Bryan’s parents are on vacation in Israel right now.  They are on a tour with Chuck Swindoll.  The itinerary says that they are currently in Jerusalem.  I’ve also discovered a video blog of their tour, which is neat to see.  I imagine they are having an amazing experience!
Maretta’s wedding is in five days.  SO Exciting!  If I weren’t so tired at the moment, I’d call her to see if she wanted to come over to plan out details with me, but perhaps we’ll work on those kinds of things tonight.  It’s going to be a lovely event.
Pictures from the last week are in the gallery.

Last week, we we went to Olbrich, where I took some cute pictures of the kiddos in the gardens.  Friday was Terry’s 60th birthday, and Saturday  was Bryan’s 30th birthday.  On Friday evening, Michael, Tom, Terry, and the four of us met at Tenney Park for a picnic of shrimp po’boy sandwiches and gingerbread for dessert.  Andrew enjoyed playing in the playground, and we all walked down to Lake Mondota to watch the sun set.  It was a nice evening.
Andrew’s been getting injured quite a bit these last days.  He has a mild laceration on his foot (stepping on the edge of a piece of sheet metal), a huge yellow and brown bruise on the side of his neck (tripping on my foot and flying into a metal bench head first), and a cut and bruise on his forehead (climbing around in the car and falling on the corner of a wooden mirror frame).  I really do try to be a good mother:)  This past weekend he had a blast climbing around some low trees, and I was impressed at his recent levels of climbing prowess.  He’s a neat kid!
Sylvie is up now, and she is sitting on my lap goo-ing, ahhhh-ing, and playing with her hands.  She recently has discovered her hands, and let me tell you, they are cool.  You can hold one with the other, you can try to shove both in your mouth at the same time, and then there’s the fingers!  It’s all very amazing for a little girl.
On the drive home from St. Paul, I read several chapters of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s book Farmer Boy to Andrew.  He seemed to enjoy it, and it’s pretty cool to think that he may be old enough to start listening to chapter books.  I’m excited about the possibilities!
Spring is fully here.  The lilacs have started blooming, the daffodils are all done, the tulips are past their prime.  It’s time to do a second lawn mowing, and we’ve planted some new perennials.  May is just about my favorite month, and I’m sad to know it’s nearly half over.  Luckily, I love all the spring and summer and fall months, so there’s a lot to look forward to.  May is something special, though!