Friday, March 1, 2024

Leif, My Superhero, Potty-Training Warrior Boy

 

The last 72 hours, I have kept my three-year old home, and fully committed to getting him potty-trained.  I've been preparing for this time for months, rescheduled the time-off out of dread, read all the books, talked to multiple parents and came up with my whole plan of execution.  As a CEO for a healthcare company here in West Virginia, a big part of my job is managing execution strategies, and managing people.  I figured this task would be pretty straightforward after doing my homework.  Leif would be "my employee" and I would hold him accountable, give him the tools and resources he needed to be successful, and manage the change and overall positive outcome to a life of no diapers.  I found out on day one that Leif had other plans called "Screw You Mom!"

It's Friday night, we've been at this task for the last 72 hours, and we are both EXHAUSTED.   I have not been this tired since Leif was a newborn, or Tredan was 5.  The end of the day feels like I've run a marathon, but it's one of the best exhaustions I have felt in a long time.  Over the last few years, many times, I have had to keep one of the boys or even multiple boys home because of sickness.  It was never ideal, and often annoying to be honest, but I was always able to somewhat keep working and staying locked into daily responsibilities.  Potty training a self-determined 3-year old only works if you drop the phone, shut down the lap top and fully engage, so I found.

Every book in the world told me to put the phone down, put the computer away, and do nothing but play with my kid.  I remember reading all of that and thinking, "sure, but I'll still have my lap top up and I'll still be working through this."  I was wrong.  It was in those moments of zero distraction, where I learned all of his little cues, and had to become his biggest cheerleader.  I had two mess-ups on day one, where I decided to check work messages and emails, and Leif returned that distraction with taking a huge dump in his underwear and informing me of this mishap as I was glaring at my phone.  He needed me in that moment to catch his cue and I was staring at a screen.  I felt like I had let him down while asking him to accomplish what feels like the impossible.

 I started stating "We can do hard things Leif."  That became our entire mantra for the last 3 days and will continue onward as he gets better and better at this. On day one, my sweet determined boy marched straight to his room after he had been pantless for about 15 minutes, threw a diaper at my head and demanded that I put one on him.  When that one did not go on, more diapers came flying.  Normally, this would have frustrated me.  I looked at the tears streaming down his face and realized, this task I've asked him to accomplish, this goal, is INSANE.  My child has been in a diaper, the only thing he has known as a toilet for the last 3 years.  Suddenly, on a day he gets to stay home with mommy, I've told him "oh by the way, no more diapers, today we are potty training and you're going to be naked from the waste down for the next 72 hours, learn muscle control and how to hold it and get to the potty, lets do this!"

I calmly walked over to him and picked him up and hugged him tightly to my chest while he sobbed. I told him how proud I was of him, how strong and smart he is, and that he can do this.  I told him I loved him so so much and I will be here every minute as his biggest cheerleader as he accomplishes this very hard goal.  No more distractions.

Over the last 3 days, Leif and I have had multiple dance parties, super hero battles, played basketball, baseball, jumped off a couch diving board, wrestled, read books, watched avenger shows, read about where poop goes, built train sets, raced super hero cars, and had an epic battle between Thor (me) and Captain America (him).  Today we took our first adventure into town diaper free to the playground where Leif happily peed on a tree and on me, but never the less, NOT in his pants!   He took his first car ride without a diaper on and stayed totally dry.

At the end of each day, Leif is emotional and exhausted.  He has been working so so hard to accomplish a world of no more diapers.  I am so proud of him.  He's now going to the potty, totally unprompted.  We're not 100%, but what this little determined 3 year old has done in 3 short days is amazing to me.  

I'm also slightly embarrassed and more so sad, that it took the need for potty training to get me to put every device away and fully engage with my kid.  It was a reality check that while 3 is hard, its completely fleeting.  There will come a time where I'll remember holding my little boy so close and dancing in the living room and what I would give to blink myself back to that time.  I'll be sad when this time comes to an end and he heads back to daycare on Monday, but I'm so grateful for the experience with him, even if it felt like a marathon, even if my sweet boy is so tired, for he gained a new level of independence this week that I know he's proud of.  I could not be more proud!  

So to Leif, my 3-year old Superhero, I am so proud of you and in awe of your determination, your resilience and your ability to continue to giggle and dance through life's biggest challenges.  Love you buddy.






Wednesday, March 9, 2022

Dear John

 

Dear John,

Today marks 8 years since you left this world.  It's cold and raining here in West Virginia this morning, just like it was years ago.   I packed lunch boxes this morning, fed my one-year old, hugged my 8 and 10 year old in hopes they'd have a great day at school,  kissed my husband goodbye, walked the dogs, fed the cats, ran through work emails, and when the movement of the early morning finally slowed, I sat down at my kitchen table, put my head into my hands and cried.  I haven't allowed myself to cry in years.  While the absence of you has circulated my veins, been in every inhale and exhale, every step and gesture for 8 years, you have a place within me that you stay, a place I've learned over the years to keep you at bay.  These are the survival instincts one must practice when someone like you leaves because the imprint you left on me and others is real.  But this morning, you erupted with determination and a demand for my attention that overwhelmed me.   I cried for your death, how unfair it was that your life was cut short as it was truly just beginning.  I cried for my loss, how unfair it was that the person I said yes to left way too soon and so abruptly.

I miss you John.  I miss your laugh, your witty jokes, the smell of sweat and burnt wood that always seemed to stay with you.  I miss the sound of your motorcycle pulling into our driveway, all the wild adventures, your cooking, and how safe I felt with you, even in the most dangerous situations. The world just isn't as good anymore with you not in it.  I am not as good anymore.  Your departure has taken my ability to feel things the way I once did with no fear.  I am more on guard now, wondering if this will ever happen again too soon.  Knowing that it can happen, and it has happened.  In many ways I feel emotionless as nothing has ever felt as terrible as the loss of you, so when things happen in my life or in others lives and they need me, I often do not cry, I'm not even sure I truly react as there is no weight bigger than the abrupt loss of you.  I hate that I can't feel things like I once did, the numbness is still there even as life has catapulted forward.  I'm not sure if its possible for that to truly change, your death changed my make-up, the way my mind works, the way my heart feels.  Death changes everything. 

I married a man that has so many similarities to you, yet has taken me on a totally different epic adventure, and let me tell you, it is EPIC.  Three little boys lives have been saved from this adventure, and while it is aging him and I, and there is no simplicity to our situation, we both know it is what we were called to do together.  You gave that to us, you gave that to three little boys.  There will never be a good enough reason for your death John, there simply is no reason why someone so young and so wonderful has to leave so soon.  What I hope you somehow know though, is that I did something good with it and I think of you every time I look at them.  My youngest son has your name in his, and one day I will tell him all about you, as I can already tell he has the twinkle in his eyes that you did.  

I love and miss you always and forever.  Thank you for your presence this morning, for encouraging me to go outside and feel the rain, to take a walk in the woods and to keep breathing.  Thank you for continuing to teach me so much as I am still here, and for reminding me that what I've done since your departure is truly epic.  


Erin  







Saturday, January 25, 2020

A Pivotal Moment



                                                                    August 2019

 This picture was taken 2 weeks after Tristan and I took two little boys into our home.  I am many things in this picture.  Stressed, exhausted, depressed, concerned, scared, regretful, frustrated, trapped.  In my arms is a 5-year old little boy.  In just 2 short weeks, he had attacked Tristan and I multiple times a day, and at the time, this was just the beginning of many physical outburst that would only get worse and worse.  Shortly before this photo was taken, this little guy threw his head into my chest, knocking me completely off of my crouched position, sending me flying back into a wall.  I had placed him in time-out for hitting his brother at the time, and when I pulled him into the bathroom to enforce the time-out, this little guy became terrified and was willing to do anything to get past me.  He would bite, hit, scratch, scream, and destruct anything close by.   He would name call and tell us how much he hated us.  Even when he would sleep, he'd look stressed with a constant burrow.

I had not felt so stressed and so depressed since my first husband died.  It was like I was grieving the loss of my simple pre-kids life, while silently screaming over the chaos I had just invited into my world.  I lost 18 pounds within the first 4 weeks of having my two boys.  There were a few mornings where I could not even get out of bed.  One morning I had a panic attack in Tristan's arms and could not breathe.    I felt ridiculous for claiming we were absolutely adopting them after meeting them twice.  After 2 weeks I was ready to throw the towel in.  Watching this child explode over and over again and realizing I had no idea how to help him set off every alarm in my body.  I was in fight or flight and I simply wanted to flee.  While consumed in my own stress, I did not realize that this little guy was also in fight or flight and had been since he was born.  He had been fighting for years.  What I thought was just bad behavior, was actually trauma, anxiety, and total stress exploding.  Tristan and I were his 6th home.  In just 5 years, this little guy had been moved around 6 times, laid his head on 6 different pillows, been introduced to 6 different routines, house rules, expectations, etc.  He had no reason to trust us, and therefore, he was ready to fight.

2 days into Kindergarten he was admitted to a child's psychiatric hospital and Tristan and I were not sure if we would get him back or how long he would be there.  I was a wreck during this time not only because I could not stand the thought of this little 5-year old all alone in this hospital, but even worse, I felt relieved at the time.   I had taken the classes, watched the videos, read the books, I knew the definition of trauma and that so many kids in the foster care system had been through hell.  Yet having an actual child in my home where I was seeing first hand the effects of the abuse he had endured completely rocked my world.  I can't describe what it is like to look at a kid's face and just see the absolute panic in their eyes.  I was not prepared.

This child had to sit alone in kindergarten because of his outburst which made him sad.  Sometime's when I would pick him up from daycare after school he would be sitting alone at the playground while other kids played.  He did not want to talk to anyone other than his brother.  Tristan and I were hermits with the boys, only letting some of our closest friends and family come over at the time for what they may witness.  We did not take them anywhere at first except for school.  I received either a text message or phone call from the school almost daily for the first month regarding this little guy.  I was concerned, really really concerned.  I wondered if the damage was just too big for us to handle, would he be better off with someone else that had more experience than us, could we truly take on this kid and everything that came with him.


                                                                   January 2020

This is my son, almost 6 months later, 6-years old now,  a genuinely happy kid, finally being just that, a kid.  He is a wonderful soul  with a great sense of humor, kindness and drive that I have fallen completely in-love with.

I want to talk about how we got from point A to point B, for I know all too well, as a foster parent, when you are sitting at point A, you can't see anything else and the thought of actual improvement seems impossible.

At home, we took all toys out of both boys rooms and moved everything to the basement.  We boxed up about half of the toys the boys came with because we realized that too much is overwhelming for kids and tends to create havoc.  Less is more.  We limited the toys down to things that they can build or games they can play.  Play-time is in the basement or outside and that's it.  When they are in the main part of our house, we are calm, listening to music or hanging out as a family.

In their rooms we kept it for sleeping and clothes only.  They have their bed, some stuffed animals and their clothes.  There are no distractions, so when they are in there, it's for resting.  In our 6-year old's room specifically, we put a body sock and a weighted blanket, both he uses regularly.  We created a kids library in our loft, right outside of the boys rooms so every night after showers they could pick a few books to read before bed.

We boxed up the tablets they came with.  With our 6-year old especially we realized that when he had it he would escalate, and when he didn't have it he would escalate.  We stopped allowing any television during the school week and limit screen-time to family movie nights on the weekends.  Since doing this, we've noticed that the boys love having family dinner where we can all talk, and when we go out to eat they are calm, well behaved and can sit with us and chat without the need for any electronic stimulation.  Recently we have gotten into family game night which they love.

We introduced greens to the boys as a daily thing they must eat before dinner every night.  While this was a fight at first, it's not even questioned now.  Both boys have a full serving of fresh spinach every night before dinner.  We limited sugar in-take as much as possible.  I have witnessed both boys after one Dr. Pepper and I will never do it again.  Soda trick:  give your kid a seltzer and add a squirt of Stevia to it, suddenly it's "soda." We give them a fruit every morning and try to change it up (Mangos, Bananas, Apples, Pears, Grapes).  They have to eat something before they get the cereal.

We put both boys down for bed every night by 7:30pm.  Kids need a ton of sleep, especially little guys with so many big feelings.

Kids that have experienced trauma really benefit from therapy.  I absolutely love the boy's counselor, she's fantastic and has put both kids at ease, they love going to see her.

After many conversations with doctors and a child psychiatrist, we put our 5-year old at the time on some medication.  I always thought I would be one of those mom's that NEVER allows medication for my kids.  Medication can actually help your child feel better.  Again, so many big feelings for small people.  I don't think he will always need medication, but for now, as he continues to learn coping skills and how to process what happened to him, it certainly helps.

Tristan and I do not give these two an inch when it comes to accountability.  This was hard for me and Tristan had to encourage me a few times to stay the course.  I felt sorry for the boys when I first got them and I had to get over that quickly.  Feeling sorry for them was only creating a crutch for them and making excuses for things I knew we needed to work with them on to help eliminate.  It's the only way they truly stand a chance at becoming fine young men.  Through the last few months there have been many sit down serious conversations, apology letters written, verbal apologies, groundings.  When we speak with them sternly, they say yes ma'am and yes sir and while that may seem extreme, it's teaching them a level of respect that they've never known before and our hope is this will transfer to a respect for themselves.  With that, we've inputted a lot of visual positive reinforcement.  Both boys have a calendar on their door.  When they have a great day, they get a sticker on the calendar.  We started off with 3 good days in a row led to us doing something special together as a family where they got to pick the activity.  This could be as simple as going to the skate park, or something bigger like going to the movies.  My 6-year old hit his 9th day of great behavior this weekend.  He used to not be able to get through 9-minutes.

I think one of the most frustrating aspects of being a foster parent is when you witness behaviors and characteristics in a child that you feel are not a reflection of you.  These traits are not something you enabled or passed down to them.  Yet, you are tasked with carrying the weight of those behaviors, and often times having to re-wire a child's brain to understand that their "normal" simply isn't normal.

My 6-year old once said to me, "Erin, all adults hit people, it's why I hit people."  That was his normal for years that Tristan and I had to re-wire.

There is a huge need across not just the state of West Virginia, but the country to help these kids.  My state alone has over 7,000 kids in the foster care system.  These are just kids and frankly, they are no more damaged in some ways than a privileged kid who has never been told "no" in their life.  They are resilient, tough, and do not deserve the card they have been dealt.  For those that are fostering, if you are at point A, keep going, give it at least 90 days.  While not every placement is the right one, I will say that some of the best advice given to me was to give it at least 3 months.  I am so glad that I did.  If you are thinking about fostering, please feel free to reach out to me.  I will not sugar coat anything, and I'd take all of it on all over again for my two boys. 

We now have a 6-year old little boy that has not laid a hand on us in 5 months.  Kids come up to him and give him high-five's and want to play.  He is kind to his brother, he has friends at school, he participates in sports, he's a good student, he likes to share, and he tells us he loves us every day.  Tristan said to me months ago, "we have to keep going."  When I look at my 6-year old son now, I can't imagine my world without him.  I want to thank ALL of the foster moms that reached out to me during those first few weeks and encouraged me to just keep going.  My husband who said, we must keep going.  I can look back on a few pivotal moments in my life where I decided to keep going and in the end I found joy again.  This is one of them.


















Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Breaking





This is what trauma looks like at times.  An 8 year old boy, hiding under the dining room table with his face planted in his arms.  While we may originally observe this as defiance, an attitude, a revolt, this is what anxiety, stress, fear, and loss can actually look like for a child that does not have the words to express how he truly feels.


Last week I received a call from my 8 year old foster son’s elementary school teacher.  He was having a rough day at school.  My heart sunk as his teacher told me how his day was going because I knew it meant a possible rough night at home.  This has happened a few times where he goes to school and just shuts down.  His teacher who is amazing gives everything she has to motivate him, but some days he just sits there with his head down, non-responsive and unable to do the work.  Tristan and I have created a rule in our house that if our boys don’t do the work in school, or are simply unable to listen that day to their teacher, school now comes home with them and our kitchen table is now their classroom.    As I drove home that night, I was rehearsing in my head what I might say to him.   I knew my husband had him sitting quietly in his room, and the rest of the night would be homework, dinner and bed time.  Nothing fun happens at home when they waste time at school so I knew we were in for some tears and a revolt. 

  One of the hardest challenges as a parent of two boys that we basically just met is trying to find something, anything at all that they may connect with and understand that will hopefully go with them into the world and help them whether that’s at school, daycare, on the soccer field, in their interactions with others, in a job one day.  What words can we speak to them that will implant into their brains and spark a light bulb when needed?  How do we ensure they don't repeat the same cycle that they came from?  Saying to a 6 year old, “you must respect your teacher” means nothing to him.  For the majority of his life adults never respected him or his body, his feelings, his heart.  He has no idea what respect is or what it looks like.  We’ve realized in those moments that we have to take about 10 steps back before the word “ respect” can even be partly understood.  We have to model it in our marriage and in our own interactions with the boys and we are not perfect at it.  We give them controlled choices, we ask permission to play with them and their legos, we ask them what books they would like to read, we try and help them feel valued and show them that we care about their thoughts and feelings.  We go to therapy with them.  What we would expect a 6 and 8 year old to understand, a lot of times our boys simply don’t and its not their fault.  We are constantly asking ourselves if our words and actions are helping them or triggering trauma.  I raised my voice the other night with my 6 year old who was having a melt down.  My voice and body temperature escalated with his cries and "I hate yous" and my immediate reaction was to snap him out of the cry fit he was heading towards with my words.  He grabbed his newborn blanket and started suckling it with fearful eyes.  My parents raised their voice with me and I got in line immediately, we raise our voices with our boys sometimes and I think they wonder if we’re going to hurt them.  It breaks me.  It breaks Tristan.  I constantly question myself and what in the world I am doing everyday.

The night of my 8 year old’s bad day, I walked into his room and sat on the floor.  He climbed up on his bed and put his head down.  He couldn’t tell me why he had a bad day.  He knows how to do the work, he just chose not to that day.  Any question I threw his way, “Help me understand?  Are you nervous about writing?  Do you not feel well?  Are you sad?”  He had no answer which is frustrating as a parent.  Even when he is acting at his worst, when I sit there with him, I can see his brokenness and many times I have no idea how to help him.   I stopped asking questions and took a different approach.  I looked at him and told him to look at me.  He looked up and locked eyes with me and what I said next made me want to turn away and crawl out of the room.  I told him that my first husband was killed and I had to visit his body in a morgue.  I told him that he was lifeless and cold and all I had when I left was a trash bag of wet gear.  I told him that it was the saddest thing I’ve ever seen and experienced in my life and I walk with that memory attached to me like a crippled leg every single day.  I told him that when I was 8 years old my family was almost ripped apart by drugs and I got to visit my dad in a rehab facility and that kids made fun of me.  I told him that Tristan and I lost two babies and went through emergency surgeries that could have killed me.  I told him that with all of those moments in my life, the world gave me no hand-outs, free passes, get out of jail cards, nothing.  The world kept going, things were not put on hold for my short comings.  I told him that he’s a foster kid and his mother failed him and she gave him away, and the pain he must feel from that rejection and complete abandonment I cannot imagine.  I told him that even with that card he’s been dealt, if he goes throughout his life expecting the world to give him special favors or treatment, he is going to be set-up for a life time of disappointment and emptiness.  I told him the world doesn’t care and this is not the only time in his life that he will feel pain or loss.  We are in a constant state of being broken and rebuilt.  I told him that my hope for him is that one day he will help other kids because of what happened to him, that he will be an incredible husband and dad because of what happened to him, that he will become stronger, smarter, tougher, more resilient, he’ll see his creator because of what happened to him.  Being a foster kid does not mean you get a free pass at school, the school work still has to get done and like my husband always tells him, “you have to try.” I told him that I had to keep trying and so does he.  

I believe that when you take on the responsibility of another human being, you have to accept the breakage that is about to occur on your heart, mind and body.  My husband with his own brokenness came to me the other night and said, “the boys are not a reflection of me, yet I am becoming a reflection of them and their trauma, and I don’t like how I feel.”  I have felt the same way through parenting.  You can’t help but internalize their behavior which is really trauma coming out in all kinds of forms.  When you witness those moments, you start to become one with it and I know for both me and Tristan, we don’t always like who we’ve become.  We feel angry, frustrated, drained.  I start to really think about what they went through and envision the way they were treated and it makes me physically ill.  There are times we have no idea how to help them and feel useless.  Sometimes we feel like terrible parents.  There are times we feel like we’re winning and have it all figured out.  Each positive day comes with 3 set back days.   It is exhausting.  I say this as I’m flying back on a plane from a work trip while my husband has had the boys for 4 days all alone.  He is a champion.  

  I’m starting to really believe that God is drawing out things in both Tristan and I that are ugly, that were there the entire time, that need to be removed.  I believe we’re being asked to face our own demons, our own angers, regrets, sadness, our own trauma that we have probably repressed for years.  I believe when we as humans move through these moments with our creator, that we start to elevate to something higher, we draw closer to the light that put us here and things start to feel peaceful again even through the chaos of life.  I’m realizing that the only way to elevate is to break.  Breaking can feel scary because when we break we don’t always feel in control.  I am watching my boys be broken as we break with them.  I’m starting to feel that we needed them just as much as they needed us and that one day we may all elevate together.  When we’re in the trenches and trying to reason with the unreasonable it’s hard to see that but we have to see it, we have to start envisioning it and speaking truth to it.  I believe as parents we have to tell our children the truth, that life doesn’t always feel great.   Loss, hurt, regret, rage, sadness are all things they will feel over and over again, for to be a human is to feel pain.  That in those moments of pain if we can learn to sit with ourselves and to really feel it in all of its rawness, we start to elevate.

  About a month into foster care I wanted to give up on our boys and find them a different placement. I could not deal with the pain it was causing me.  Becoming an immediate parent had an effect on me that was frightening.  I lost 15 pounds, I was depressed, I couldn’t even look at our boys some mornings, and they knew it.   Tristan is the reason I didn’t give up, he coached me through the anxiety and pain and helped me sit with it and start to elevate. Through him elevating me he started to break himself.   I am so glad I didn’t quit when the pain become unbearable.  I have to keep breaking.  

  So I kept eye contact with my 8-year old son as painful as it was to tell him that there will be more moments of pain, more shifts throughout his life that will hurt like hell, yet there will be beautiful moments in his life if he allows it, if he takes all that hurt and uses it to elevate and connect to the loving source that put him here.  So as a family while we are in a season of breaking, I know that joy is coming, I can feel it coming and for that I know that we have to keep going.  We have to keep breaking.

Friday, August 2, 2019

Double Restoration


"Instead of your shame there shall be a double portion; instead of dishonor they shall rejoice in their lot; therefore in their land they shall possess a double portion, they shall have everlasting joy." 
Isaiah 61:7


I met my two sons for the first time one night during a face time conversation.  I can't explain it, but the moment I saw them, I knew they were mine.  It was like a light switch.  The desire and fear for missing out on a small baby was suddenly gone.  Once face-time ended, Tristan and I looked at each other and said, "those are our kids."  My boys are 5 and 8 years old.  They are beautiful, blonde haired, blue eyed little boys with incredible personalities.  They are survivors.  They are incredibly tough. They are my hero's.  The first time I met my 5-year old face to face, he yelled "they're here!" and jumped into my arms.  My 8-year old asked me if we would keep him forever.

Our sons are moving in with us in just 3 days.  Tristan and I have been pouring our blood, sweat and tears into getting our home and our lives ready for them for the past few months.  We're not sure what happened to summer.  We have not taken time for ourselves.   Oddly, we are fine with this.  We saw their faces and we knew what needed to be done.  Summer has been preparing for them.

Tristan and I have spent some time with our boys, including a trip to their current foster home, a trip to Fayetteville, a weekend overnight and multiple face times.  I felt so much joy in watching them have fun and experience things for the first time.  I've never felt that before.  We took them to the lake and introduced them to stand up paddle boarding.  My 8-year old who told me he would NEVER step foot in a lake was doing back-flips off of the stand up paddle board by the end of the day and asking to swim without a life jacket. My 5-year old turned to me as we paddled towards the beach and said, "this is so much fun!"  I felt something in those moments I had never felt in my life.  Seeing joy through the eyes of these boys.  Seeing the future of adventures and so many new introductions.

My boys have food anxiety.  They have a fear of physical abuse.  They wonder if we will keep them.  The things they have seen and experienced in their short time on earth are things that most adults never have experienced and never will.  Yet they are so resilient.  They still laugh and joke and play.  I've never seen them cry.  They are different then many children I have met.

I see John in my two sons.  I see the loss of my children in my two sons.  I see Tristan in every part of them.  I see my family.   I see myself.  I see God.

Foster children tend to have an unwarranted spotlight put on them.  You would be amazed at the things people have said to us.

"Do you actually plan to adopt them?  You can't possibly commit to that.  They may be violent."

"I could never do anything like that, those kids come with all kinds of issues."

"Will they be kind to your animals?"

"You're going to miss so much, first words, first steps, you're giving up all of that by not having a baby."

"You are going to inherit a boat load of crazy issues."

"Why would you not just do IVF?  Why not private adoption?"'

These are all fear based thoughts.  I know that.  My boys don't need a spot light, they need love.  They need people that believe in them and can speak truth to the fine young men they will become. Tristan and I will fight for that every day.  Their current foster parents have fought for that every day.  I know the community of friends and family we expose them to will fight for that every day.

I am about to be a mom and words can't express how much I feel God at the center of all of this.  There are so many ways to be a parent.  My moment came to me in the eyes of two little boys that needed us.  We are the definition of an instant family.  I look forward to seeing the amazing things these two will do in this broken world we live in.  I even look forward to the challenges they will put me through, the questions they will ask, the questions they won't ask, the inevitable melt downs.  I look forward to gaining their trust. Their flaws are something to be admired and respected.  We need them. 

It will be a while before we can apply for an adoption, but that's OK.  I want to speak truth to their future right now, to attach myself right now, to call them my two boys immediately.  They were never ours to begin with, they belong to something so much greater, a universal love we will never be able to provide but can only experience.  They are simply a gift that was withering the day they were born.  I want to remember that every day.

To my two sons, oh how we love you so much already.  We've been speaking truth to you, praying for you and holding you at the center of our hearts.  We can't wait to see all the incredible things you will do with your lives.  May the spot lights be off, and the love of the universe be turned on for my two sons, for they are a true reflection of the love our creator has for all of us.

Through every loss, through my own brokenness, I have been restored double over and over again throughout my life by the loving light that put me here.  It's now coming to me in the form of motherhood.























Monday, May 6, 2019

Lori


I met Lori while paddling the North Fork of the Smith River in Northern California in January 2014.  I had never been on a river as beautiful as this one and Lori happened to be in the large group that John and I joined that day.  We were still very new to Oregon and were invited to go on this trip on a beautiful winter Sunday.  It was a wonderful day on the river with so many friendly people that immediately welcomed us into the group.  Lori and I exchanged numbers that day.  I knew immediately I wanted to be her friend.  She was every person’s cheerleader that day and literally smiled through every rapid.  If someone felt nervous or gripped, you’d see Lori paddling over to them, telling them they were capable of getting through each rapid.  She had an energy to her that was contagious to others and her laugh could be heard throughout the entire canyon that day.  I needed more of that in my life.


       



Shortly after this trip, John lost his life on the upper South Fork of the Smith River.  John went missing around 12pm on March 9th.  After search and rescue called it quits around 9pm that evening, and after Jared and I called it quits around midnight, we called those within the kayaking community for help.  Lori showed up the next morning around 4am to help search for John.  She was the only female in the group of four that found him and led the rescue mission.  She was one of the main reasons that his body was recovered from the river allowing me to see him and touch him and kiss him one last time. What Lori had to go through that day, I simply could not.  Lori quickly became someone I looked up to and developed a deep respect for on and off the river as a woman that held her own.

Lori showed up at my house about a week after losing John in her beat up truck with additional girls, her ukulele, wine and ice cream.  She stayed with me for a few weeks, and did everything from walking my dog Jake to watering my plants, cooking meals, laundry, to just sitting with me in silence.    I met some of my best friends because of Lori.  In my shock and anger and grief and devastation, Lori surrounded me with strong minded women that poured their love and support into me as if we had known each other for centuries.  These women became my family out west and to this day are loves of my life.







When I felt brave enough to get back in my boat again and paddle the last river John and I had paddled together, Lori led the mission and rallied these warrior women to paddle along side me.  They all stood with me as I climbed the rock John and I had last sat together and released his ashes.  It was a moment of honor and respect from these women and the river that I will never forget.



A year later, Lori who had never mountain biked explored an epic 15 mile red wood trail mission with me in Northern California.  This was the kind of riding where you climb forever in hopes of finding a rewarding down hill.  She had no bike helmet so she wore her kayak helmet instead.  She made the entire thing look easy that day.




Lori took John with her to the Grand Canyon and made a point to spread him in the most beautiful places.


Lori took me on my first multi-day river trip on the Wild and Scenic Rogue River in Oregon.  She gave me a boat, gear, and paddled along side me in those moments were I felt John so close.  She did a 13 mile hike with me just so we could find the perfect water fall to release more of John.  Every single person on this trip made me feel like family and the love and excitement they had for the beauty all around us was something I had to get more of.  Lori always seemed to be in the center of that energy.




When I think about my dear friend, she truly picked me up off of the ground when I couldn’t pick myself up.  We had only met each other once before John’s death and exchanged numbers, yet she showed up and did the unthinkable when I could not.  She treated me like a sister and helped me feel alive again.  When breathing hurt, Lori told me to keep breathing, keep paddling, keep exploring, find my next adventure.  Lori knew how to bring women together.  She understood the importance of this incredible bond and it was something I took with me when I moved to Fayetteville.  It was something I kept close to my heart when I left Oregon.  It is a value that changed me and really made me into the woman I discovered after losing my first husband.  Surround yourself with badass women always.  I would not have survived without Lori’s love and friendship and I am so grateful for the life long friendships I made through her.  

I miss my friend.  I don’t want to live in a world without Lori.  I feel angry, empty, guilty and shocked by the loss of her.  Lori was always there for me when I needed her.  Her excitement for life, adventure and laughter was contagious.  I always wanted more of it when I was around her.  She knew how to make people laugh, yet she was the kind of friend you wanted around in your darkest moments.  To be both of those to someone is an art and takes a different soul.  Lori had that.  She was always a woman I wanted to be more like.   

Lori, I love you and I am so sorry.   You will always be a warrior woman to me and every time I walk among the trees, I’ll remember you dear friend.  I picture you now smiling, with all your curly red hair, pushing off into a river, laughing the entire way down each rapid.  We all need more of that and I am so grateful to have known your wild soul.  I love you always and forever.  





Saturday, March 9, 2019

Epic


My last vision of John was 5 years ago.  It was a quick nod, and then watching him bush whack with his kayak down to a roaring flood stage river.  I stood there in the rain until his helmet disappeared behind the last tree.  60 minutes later my life would become abruptly different.  John would be dead, but we would search for him well into the next day.  I knew before I really knew.  I mean, don’t we all?  It’s the same story every time.  Flood stage rivers are huge, contain trees, bus eating holes, implode spray skirts, are completely unpredictable, and kill people.  The river that day was climbing roughly 2000 CFS per hour.  I remember reading the gauge on American Whitewater as we drove towards the Smith that day and my fear alarm went off.  I expressed my concern to him, “do you think this is a good idea?  We have no way of knowing what its going to be like at the rate it's climbing.”  I was told to relax, to let go of my paranoia, that “THIS.WOULD.BE.EPIC.”  Every now and then I think to myself, in his last moments of life did the thought ever occur to him, “my wife was right.”  It took me a long time to admit this to anyone.  I defended him for years, “he was perfectly capable of being out there.”  No, he wasn’t, no one was, and every year on March 9th, I seem to go back to that, and then the rage I’ve buried deep into my gut ignites.  One must not stay this way for long.

John came to see me last night in my dreams.  This time he had incurable cancer.  I realized in this moment I would watch him die all over again and felt instant sadness.  When John was alive, he was terrified of getting old and eventually sick.  He constantly talked about how he did not want to grow old, and the thought of his body shutting down was frightening to him.  In the dream, he gave me all his belongings, along with a letter that he told me to read once he was gone.  He then gave me a huge hug, and told me he was going to go summit a huge mountain so he could watch the sunrise for the last time.  I begged him to stay with me, but he couldn’t, he had to get to the top of this mountain.  He said with a big smile, “it will be epic.”  I watched him leave, as I sat in a pile among all his things, all over again.

I think those that go before us never are completely gone.  I think their energy stays with us as we continue onward.  We find them in our dreams, in triggers that spark a memory, in our own frustrations or joys, they are always there.  John’s story was always going to be this, he was never going to grow old, and somewhere in his gut, I often feel that he knew this.  I think his drive to find his epic moments in life whether on the river or at the top of a large mountain drove his heart.  For the longest time I internalized this and felt that I came second to these moments.  I’ve realized over the years that this was John’s connection to his creator, to the source that put him here.  He felt his best in these moments, because it was his connection to God, to the love that no human could give him.  The visual that there is something beyond us.  He had to have more of that feeling, every day. 

While the death of a loved one can stay with us every day, there is something about a death date that can ask us to go back in time, revisit the events of that day, reflect on decisions made, face regret over words not said, find our inner rage over how quickly things were lost.   After John left this world, I asked myself, what is my version of epic?  I’ve learned with time that it does not quite look like his version, but its epic to me because it is where I find my own peace, my own worth, my own purpose, my connection to my creator.  It doesn’t involve Class 5 rivers anymore or 14,000-foot mountains, but I have a life in the mountains that brings me joy and peace and that alone feels epic to me.  I realized for years I was living a life that spoke to John's epicness, not so much mine.

A few things I’ve learned over the years...

Don’t idolize people and let them take the place of God.  They are withering and so are you, so am I.   We make great humans, we don’t make great Gods.  John was my “God” for years, and he was terrible at it, as he should be.  When we put people before the love light that put us here, we tend to feel completely lost when those people leave us.  We feel that we can’t survive without them, yet we can, and we must when they are gone. 

When something doesn’t feel right, speak.  When you have something to say, speak.  I found my voice after John died, just ask my husband Tristan.  Look at your husbands, look at your wives and speak.  When you have an argument with your partner, argue with passion and complete vulnerability, with complete openness to each other.  This is how you survive together, how you connect to something bigger together.

Love yourself.  Love sitting with yourself.  Find moments of solitude and silence every day.  If you love others more than you love yourself, you may not be able to love others without fear.  Loving yourself is not selfish, it’s essential to connect to something bigger.  Loving yourself allows your partner to see your most authentic self.  When we see that in each other, we see God.

When someone leaves this world, when they leave you and you loved them, recognize that their death is their story, it is not fully yours, it’s simply a part of your life experience.  Sometimes we have to cast off our ego to recognize the difference between those two worlds.  People use to refer to me as “John’s widow.”  I found comfort in this for a while, because I idolized him.   I realized at some point that I was never his, and he was never mine, we both belong to something greater.  We’re all here independently and the love we find for another is a beautiful part of the life experience, and that is here and now.

Feelings of anger towards others, energy towards confrontation, rage over something in the past, this puts you into a karmic cycle that you will revisit over and over again until you resolve it.  When we choose these feelings, we choose to carry that energy within us.  We carry the burden of negativity.  This affects us both emotionally and physically and it pulls us further and further away from the love light that put us here.  Cast off your ego.  Let.It.GO.  Love each other.  Love yourself.  Love your Creator.

My day of epicness consisted of a long slush snow hike with my love Tristan and our two dogs, a tag team on the much-needed cleaning of our house, lunch with some friends, and sitting in the quietness of our house by a fire.  Tristan met me wherever I decided to be today, but he didn’t carry the burden of John’s death, because it’s not his to carry and its not mine either. 

I will always and forever love my husband John.   I miss him every day, and when I’m not here anymore, I look forward to a real hug from him, wherever that may be beyond all of this.  He lived a life of adventure and it was fun to watch him connect with something bigger every time he pushed off onto a river.  He found his epicness.  I am finding mine every day.  Don't try and live someone else's epic life, go find yours and speak truth to it.