Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Moving In

I mentioned in my previous blog entry that we moved to Georgia. It was a bit of an ordeal- we knew Kyle had orders to Fort Gordon for, oh, a year or more before the actual move, but knowing where you're going and actually getting there are concepts worlds apart when the head of household is a military member. As Kyle's tech school graduation came close, we began to plan the move, which included looking for housing. Many military families choose to stay in some kind of temporary housing upon arrival at a new duty station so that they can tour houses, apartments, military housing, etc., before choosing their new abodes. Not the Wilsons. I had to be all difficult and get a work-from-home job about a month before we were set to move.

The job is awesome. I'm a social media moderator, which means I play on my computer all day and call it work am the filter through which new content passes before it reaches certain companies' social media venues. I make sure the things people post are in keeping with the guidelines set to maintain the company's professional, social image. Yep. Good stuff. The best thing is that I do this from home, so I can work in pjs if I want to, and my commute is from whatever room in the house I find myself five minutes before work starts to the computer. It's a very portable job, but surprisingly it made our move quite frustrating.

I had my work schedule a month before our move. I had three convenient days off during which I could make a three-day trek across the country with Kyle and Damien. What I needed was an assurance of high-speed internet with which to report to work the day after arriving in Georgia. And every day for a week thereafter. Which meant that we had to a) stay in a hotel until we found a house (temporary military lodging being entirely unable to guarantee any kind of internet connection in its facilities); b) give up my job; or c) choose a house from a distance, sign and scan the lease never having seen said house, schedule internet installation for the day of arrival in Georgia, and thereby solidify my three days off as the ONLY possible options for our move. So of course, we chose plan C, knowing full well that creating a set, concrete schedule is just about the worst thing you can do to yourself when the military is a factor in any of your decisions. It made things scary.

Our fears were realized when Kyle was attempting to outprocess: he was missing one signature. One little nom de plume from the commander was absent from one piece of paper, and he couldn't leave Texas. But we had a signed lease, with a take-posession date. We had internet installation scheduled. We had hotel reservations for our travel. I had a work schedule. So we (Damien and I) left San Angelo without Kyle. The next morning (in Dallas) my cell phone rang. It was Kyle: "Well, I got my signature. I fly into Augusta tomorrow night at 11." Isn't that just the way of things? Damien and I had a lovely mommy-baby drive to Grovetown, Georgia, and 12 hours after arriving we picked up daddy from the airport. I always poke fun at Kyle, telling him he just wanted to avoid the drive so he made up the signature story so he could fly. Let's just say, Damien is less than angelic on the second and third days of long car rides.

Anyway, that was back at the end of February. Our household shipment? You know, the one with furniture, washer and dryer, all our dishes and most of our clothing, that one? It got here last week. The Air Force is real quick on the uptake. :D We've been slowly making our way through the many (MANY MANY MANY) boxes of STUFF. I almost wish that they could have brought my piano, the washer and dryer, Damien's bed and dresser and a few other odds and ends and then just continued on down the road to the dump with the rest of it. I'm wondering now if it's a good rule of thumb that if you don't remember owning most of your stuff when you see it again after 6 months (we got packed up from Monterey in November, if you recall), you probably have TOO MUCH STUFF. Fortunately we were able to give a LOT of the bigger stuff away, and we have a two-car garage to house all the trash. The City of Grovetown only allows one trash can per household, and won't pick up any trash that doesn't fit in said trash can each week. Lovely. Because, you know, that works out really well when your kid fills half the can with soiled diapers in the first three days of the week. He's a BOY, PEOPLE.

Random observation about moving: I am by no means an environmentalist cheerleader. You'll never find me at a Greenpeace rally, nor will I advertise for the Baby Seal Salvation Front on my t-shirts, and I have even been known, at times, to purchase paper plates. I am simply and certainly an advocate for moderation, economy, general respect for the world and smart living. But even I, the occasional-butcher-of-the-environment-via-the-purchase-of-disposable-cutlery non-activist, am alarmed and distressed by the vast amounts of unnecessary paper used in packing our things. We're talking... SOCKS. WRAPPED IN PAPER. It honestly struck me as such a gross overuse of resources, such an unnecessary compilation of flat-out TRASH, that I might even be moved to write to someone about it, if I can figure out who. End rant.

So we're almost entirely moved in, after nearly two months. Three boxes left to unpack, and I already know they mostly contain wall decor for which I have yet to choose locations, so I'm not in a hurry. After watching out for the washer/dryer hardware/hookups in every box, I was finally advised to check INSIDE the washer and/or dryer for said hardware, and there it was in the dryer. Smart placement, because, you know, I was going to OPEN the dryer at some point without having yet been able to hook up and use the washer. *massive eyeroll* As it turns out, though, Electricity, that drama queen, is far more needy in Georgia than in California and requires four prongs on her dryer plugs, as opposed to the currently installed three, and so I must go yet another day without laundry; Kyle couldn't find Home Depot. He hasn't been into town as much as I have yet to get his bearings.

That's the story of our move-in to Georgia, random and boring as can be. Cool things are going on, like Damien's developmental assessment/speech therapy, my tummy-tuck referrals, going to the Atlanta Opera (!!) this month, Kyle being on eternal casuals (the lovely waiting game before he can actually do his job, not really very cool but quite boring), etc. But those are another boring blog post for another time.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Thanks, Kenmore

The California Wilsons are behind. Mostly because we haven't lived in California for four or five months now. We went TDY to Texas for a few months and inhabited a teeny tiny apartment. Close quarters are fun because they are easy to clean, but that's one of the few benefits of living temporarily in a tiny apartment without one's belongings or room to turn around. Happily, we have completed that phase and moved on to Georgia. We are renting a beautiful little three-bedroom house. Little, that is, until it's time to vacuum. We moved in about a month ago, bought our vacuum about a week ago, and I finally put it on my checklist to get it out of the box and USE it today.

Taking care of Damien, Kyle, the house and now a calling and a full time job means that I need checklists for the first time in my adult life, just to keep track of things and make sure I don't forget to get my tasks done. Actually writing it down has made me realize, however, that I've always made mental checklists, separating the "need to dos" from the "want to dos" for the sake of prioritization. Today as I was vacuuming (one of my "need to dos" for the day) I realized some things about myself. My new Kenmore vacuum is smarter than me, apparently.

Let me tell you about this vacuum. It has a feature called "inteliClean" composed of four lights of varying shades: red fades to dark orange, to yellow, to green. As you vacuum, the power of the vacuum automatically adjusts based on the level of dirt in the carpet- you know the floor is clean when the light turns green. It sounds simple enough. Honestly it's sneaky and divisive. Kenmore must have known how obsessive I am about such things, and that I would be absolutely unable to tear myself from the vacuum until every spot of carpet in my home merits a green light. Tricksters.

Anyway, as I was vacuuming, I realized that I wish I had inteliClean for every aspect of my life. How much better would my performance be at my job, as a wife, as a mother, as a ward music chairman, as a homemaker, if I constantly had a blinking notification of the thoroughness of my effort hovering over my head? I think I get too caught up in getting the things on my list checked off. I do things adequately and efficiently, but I think I miss out on the satisfaction of living thoroughly. I could vacuum my entire house in 15 minutes if I could ignore the lights, and check the task off my list for the day so I could move on to things I like more. The funny thing is, when I spent the time it took to make my inteliClean happy, I actually enjoyed vacuuming. I got a little thrill out of making the light change colors.

Today is more than halfway over, and I spent a lot of it working and cleaning. I have probably missed opportunities to excel, to exert a complete effort, to be not just good enough, but as good as I can be. I've checked a lot of tasks off my list, but I think a lot of my "need to dos" are going to change into "need to do betters." Silly vacuum, showing me how to live my life. I'm going to install a mental inteliClean. Tomorrow I will do my best to vacuum until the light turns green.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Big Changes

It's been a long time since I updated this blog, but I thought this warranted a blog entry rather than a Facebook mention.

This is me around the highest weight of my life. I can't be sure, because it's very hard to find pictures of me from that timeframe, but this is close:

Photobucket

I know "before" pictures don't usually look like this, but I chose this picture deliberately instead of one where I look miserable, because I wanted anyone who reads this to know that I was happy with my life in general at that time. I've been overweight as long as I can remember. My first distinct memory of realizing that I was bigger than other girls my age is from walking home in second grade, looking down at my thighs and being embarrassed. I even remember the horrible flower-print leggings I was wearing that day.

Over time, I learned to make other aspects of who I was the priority, and what people noticed about me. That worked through elementary school, even middle school (since I was homeschooled, heaven knows it wouldn't have worked had I been daily subjected to the mentalities and behavior of 12-year-old girls). It didn't work in high school, but I convinced myself that the cruelty was entirely a deficiency on the part of the cruel, and I bore no responsibility for it. In this manner I continued, and when I met Kyle, who has always been able to look past my weight and love me despite it, I was content to be exactly who I was (physically) for the rest of my life.

Then I had Damien. The funny thing is, I lost weight in my first trimester, only gained 36 pounds total in the next two, lost 20 in childbirth and took off the other 16 nursing in the first month of his life. Once I recovered from my C-section, though, my weight went on a steady incline, and 10 months after D was born, I wore a size 24 gown to Kyle's Air Force ball. It wasn't the dress size or the number on the scale that started to bother me though- it was my little boy, starting to crawl and then to walk, and the constant pain and fatigue that held me back from interacting with him as he deserved. And then it was the cravings and the complete lack of willpower; the absolute inability (I thought) to stop eating those Oreos, or to have only one serving at meals.

I had to stop lying to myself. What good would a caring personality do, if I couldn't sustain my energy through the day to care for my infant? What good are thrift and economy, if my willpower over spending in most areas is overcome on the candy aisle? What good is my optimism for my husband's career, if I am likely to suffer and quite possibly die from weight-related illness quite early in life, and leave him alone? The qualities I have worked so hard to develop in myself are fine and good, but my failure to maintain my body, the Temple I have been gifted, was holding me back from some of the most important things in life, in very material ways.

We bought an elliptical. We got rid of the junk food. We took walks together. We carefully monitored meal portions. With all the love and support in the world my amazing husband tried to help me in every way he could, and nothing helped. My weight continued to climb. Finally, I made the decision that has been hardest for me to follow through on of any I've ever made: I was going to see a doctor and talk to him about my weight. It was something I had masked for so long. It was a problem I had pretended didn't exist, and I was going to walk into a doctor's office and say "I'm fat. Help me." Saying the words would make it real. I couldn't pretend it wasn't a fact anymore. The biggest blow to my confidence that I have ever taken was to admit to my husband and my doctor (both of whom already knew quite well) that I was fat.

I have had family members who struggled with weight and its related health issues who have undergone gastric bypass surgery, and I decided to ask my doctor to refer me to a surgeon for more information. He told me I was too young, but did not refuse me the referral. The following month, I attended the surgeon's preliminary seminar and decided that this was the right road for me. It was still such a daunting task to tell yet a third person face-to-face that I was fat that it took me three months to make the appointment after the seminar. My insurance took another 7 months to approve it, and on 4 August, 2009, I had a laparoscopic gastric bypass.

This is me today.

Photobucket

Photobucket


14 dress sizes ago, I thought I was happy. The fact is, I truly was. But I had no idea how much my weight was holding me back. I still want people to notice my personality first- that is the beauty I seek. But now I can wear Damien out, instead of the other way around. Now I can make it through 12 hours of chasing my Terrible Two around and still be smiling when Kyle comes home from a long day at work, in need of some cheer. Now I can say no to cookies, and food is no longer the focus of my day. I am so blessed to have had the opportunity to have this surgery. It has changed my life, in some ways that I anticipated and others that were completely unexpected. I still have work to do, and it will never be finished: I have had to alter my entire lifestyle to reach these results, and will have to keep up these changes to achieve and maintain the end goal, but I finally have the willpower and the drive to do so.

I'm grateful for a wonderful family who has supported me through this. My husband is the light of my life, and my strength when I would falter. My mother has been there for me in every step, willing to drop everything if I needed her. Damien has obliviously given me the motivation to keep it up just by being D (he helps me get my exercise too!).

Next step: Photography lessons! I definitely didn't take the before, and the afters are lacking intensely in quality. :D

Saturday, March 7, 2009

How can someone BE so cute?

Sleeping:
Photobucket
His new talent- making kissy faces:
Photobucket
Photobucket

Damien's Bubbles

I wondered if D would like bubbles, so I bought some to blow for him at Target. We took them home, and he LOVED them. However, I was getting lightheaded to the point of falling over before he was getting tired of playing. So we went BACK to Target, and got a bubble blowing machine. It advertises itself as being capable of blowing thousands of bubbles per minute, and it was TOTALLY worth the $8.88 we paid for it! Here are some amazing pictures of D playing in the bubbles:
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket

I have been informed...

... that it is no longer Christmas. So. Here's Valentine's Day.
We're not big fans of the holiday, so we didn't do anything. I am, however, a big fan of cute pink pastries, so here's the cake I made:
Photobucket
Actually, I made it, and it was consumed, the day before Valentine's Day. So we really, literally, did nothing FOR Valentine's Day. I just wanted to show off my adorable cake.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Merry Christmas

...Lift up your head and be of good cheer; for behold, the time is at hand, and on this night shall the sign be given, and on the morrow come I into the world...

nativity Pictures, Images and Photos

Merry Christmas to all! Last night as we read the Book of Mormon account of the first Christmas, we realized how grateful we are to live in a world and a nation where we can safely proclaim our belief that the Christ-child came to the world to be a light unto it, to walk as we should and to suffer and die that we might live eternally with our Heavenly Father and our families. Kyle's position in the military takes on greater meaning as we read the stories in the Book of Mormon of men who defended their homes and their wives and their children; men who fought to defend their lands and their freedom, only to be threatened with death if Christ did not come. We imagined the anguish of the faithful, waiting eagerly for the sign of Jesus' birth, each night disappointed as the sun fell below the horizon and darkness taunted them as did their oppressors. With what agony they must have anticipated the day the wicked had set for their executions, should the signs predicted by Samuel not come to pass, and with what joy, relief and exultation they must have witnessed a night without darkness, and a new star that shone with a declaration of the truth of the things they so firmly believed. It was the Star of Life for them, arriving perfectly in time to save the lives of their beloved families, and testifying that the baby Savior was born. Perhaps all was calm in the stable in Bethlehem, but we believe the Nephites in America must have rejoiced merrily. For that reason, we wish those we love, and all the world, a very Merry Christmas.

To those with whom we so dearly wish we could have celebrated this Holiday season:



And to everyone:



Pictures of Damien et al to come, but for now, to all, a good night.


Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Families Can Be Together Forever

Emilie Nicholson
28 October, 1926-30 November, 2008
Photobucket

Kyle's Oma rejoined her husband on 30 November, 2008. Kyle loves her very much, and remembers her independence, her spark and her sense of humor. He wishes that he could have spent more time with her, and that she had had the opportunity to meet Damien and me.

We have faith that we will meet with Oma Nicholson again. We believe that through the resurrection of Jesus Christ and the eternal plan of our Heavenly Father, all human beings will have the opportunity to be resurrected and reunited with their families if they so choose. Because of our faith in the Plan of Happiness, our hearts are lifted up, and we know that this parting is only temporary and that we will have the opportunity to rejoice in the Kingdom of God with all our family members who have gone before us one day.


Happy Birthday to Me

I realize this post is long overdue, but I am finally going to put up a photoblog of my birthday. It was a wonderful day- Kyle did a great job planning it!

To start out with, he handed me directions to somewhere and told me to be there by noon on my birthday. It turned out to be...

Photobucket

A one-hour deep-tissue massage! It was wonderful.

When I got home, I found this:

Photobucket

And this:

Photobucket

...taped to the walls on either side of the door. Yes, taped. Kyle said he'd rather get teased for taping my presents to the wall than for his messy gift-wrapping jobs. My parents had previously given me one of these:

Photobucket

...so that I could buy myself my birthday present from them, and I got three Christmas CDs by

Photobucket

Kyle took me to

Photobucket

...for dinner, and then we came home and played games with Noah and Kassie, who made my birthday cake. Which I didn't take pictures of. Which was stupid.

Anyway, it was a wonderful birthday!

As a random bonus, here are a few pictures of Damien in his toy basket.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Friday, November 28, 2008

Thanksgiving

Happy day-after-Thanksgiving to all! We had a wonderful first married-and-in-the-same-geographic-location Thanksgiving together. We celebrated with our friends the Lubbens and had enough food for the four of us to feed 12... Or four for the next week, which is more likely. Here are some pictures of how the festivities progressed:

I made the pies on Wednesday to save oven-space:
Photobucket

The boys on Thursday, waiting...
Photobucket

And waiting...
Photobucket

And waiting...
Photobucket

Our very fancy (Walmart card) table:
Photobucket

The bird (a la Kassie):
Photobucket

The full spread:
Photobucket

And a bonus- Gangsta Claus (as Kyle calls him) after dinner:
Photobucket

We are grateful for home and family, good food and good friends, and to be surrounded by great examples of Christianity and goodwill toward men in our lives. We are grateful to have found each other, to enjoy a loving marriage, and to have a beautiful, happy, cheerful son who gives light to our lives.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Birthday Cake? What's that?

Damien had his first birthday cake on Wednesday. It took him a while, and some help, to figure out what the point of cake was, besides painting with the frosting, but once he got the hang of it he was pretty pleased.

Here was the masterpiece in one piece:

Photobucket

He wondered what to do with it for a while:

Photobucket

He decided to turn it over:

Photobucket

He got some assistance getting started:

Photobucket

He inhaled it:

Photobucket

And then he got going:

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

The finished product:

Photobucket

And then he got a mischeivous look in his eye...

Photobucket

...and took off on a sugar-induced rampage that lasted until 1:00 in the morning. He ran around the house (literally ran, something he had not previously attempted) picking up and throwing toys; each time he threw one he would look me in the eye and YELL. Not words, just AAAAAAAAUGGGGH!!!

Awesome.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

A year in pictures

Ok, I know it's been a while. A long while. But SOME PEOPLE decided to get rid of all their networking sites, so now I have to update here too! I wish everyone I loved would pick one site and stick to it, so I didn't have to update MySpace, Facebook and a blog, but life is tough and I'll get over it. :D

Anyhow, today is 19 November, and it's Damien's birthday! One year and eight hours ago he was surgically removed from my womb, and it's been an awesome year. I'll throw down some pics for ya! :) In the last year,

Damien was born:

Photobucket

Kyle came home from training to meet his son:

Photobucket

We took our long trek across the western US and moved into our storage shed... er... house... here in Seaside:

Photobucket

Damien learned to crawl:

Photobucket

We had our first wedding anniversary:

Photobucket

And our first Air Force Ball (Damien didn't go, but he wanted to be in the pictures):

Photobucket

Damien had his first Halloween costume:

Photobucket

And learned to walk:

Photobucket

Today, Damien is a year old, and we have a year to go here in Seaside!

Photobucket

Many things have happened in Damien's first year. He is the happiest baby that ever was, and we are so grateful to have him. Our lives are wonderful; we couldn't ask for anything more at this stage in our marriage. We are blissfully content.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Damien plays the piano





Apparently, Damien is going to be a musician. Look at him, totally rockin' out, man! :)