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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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To my husband on Father’s Day 2017

6.18.17

Dear husband,

It’s Father’s Day. The kids made you cards. Evan complained that Ashlyn’s once again was better than everyone else’s and made theirs looked like garbage. I made you blueberry pancakes for breakfast but had to make the kids all chocolate chip ones because they didn’t want blueberries and it look so long that I barely got to sit down before kids were finished and forgetting to clear their plates. We were a few minutes late to church, and the kids fussed afterwards about avoiding any “conversation traps” so they could get home to argue over…I mean admire…the new kittens. Our picnic was moved inside given that it was so hot and our dining room was about 5 degrees cooler. The food was awesome though; I hardly minded Lydia crying over not having enough alone time with the kittens.

I hope you enjoyed your day, your perfectly imperfect Father’s Day with two teeny kittens frolicking in the sunroom and 4 not-so-teeny kids, 1/2 of whom give me lip about taking their picture. It was good, not because of any real significant moments but because of lots of insignificant ones. That’s kind of where most of the good stuff seems to be anyway.

I’m not going to tell you you’re the best father in the world; I wouldn’t even know how that role is measured. But, I will tell you you’re the best father for these four. Lydia said whenever she wants to wrestle, you wrestle her. Drew said whenever he wants to go to Goodwill to find something for a project or wants to make something and needs your help, you make time for him. Ashlyn said that whenever one of them isn’t happy, you cheer them up. Evan said that you agreed to new kitties—which I interpret as even though you weren’t thrilled about the responsibility and commitment of new kittens, you said yes because you knew it was what he needed. You may not be the best father in the world; I don’t know what that means and who would want that title anyway? You, my dear, are the father they need. You are the father I need to be by my side. And, as Lydia worded it, “I love you more than any father in the world.”

Thanks for loving them and loving me everyday in spite of days that never seem to go as planned and a little poo outside the litter box…metaphorically speaking, of course…

 

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: Mark, Traditions, why can't they just stay little forever

Spicing it up

11.7.14

Remember that time you gathered your things and tiptoed out of the back of a classroom hoping no one would notice because you discovered you were in the wrong class?

Sit back down. You aren’t in the wrong place. This is not the typical post you find here, but it’s written for you.

It was September 26th 16 years ago that we gazed into each others’ eyes and promised to love each other until death do us part. The vow hardly seemed necessary because at that moment, seemingly nothing could make us part. We couldn’t get enough of each other. Four children, career changes, lots of bills, an adoption and more than a handful of grey hairs later, our googly eyes can see things a bit more clearly. We now know that this thing called marriage that we thought was the most natural thing in the world for us to do is really, really hard. The toothpaste on the sink and socks on the floor have nothing on the pressure that parenting challenging children can put on our relationship. When our buttons are pushed and we’re so exhausted that we can hardly hold a cohesive conversation at the end of the day, those early years of marriage (and all the excitement of them) seem like a very long time ago. Parenting, especially intentional parenting of children from hard places, has a way of magnifying all things ick in our lives. And, sisters, that can put out the fire faster than a six year old in front of a birthday cake.

We committed to be husband and wife until death do us part, not children do us part. I’ve learned a few things lately as I’ve dug my heels in here in this partnership.

  • Don’t be content in a rut. There have been times I’ve thought my expectations were simply too high and that I needed to just learn to be okay with where we were. When I find myself hearing those words in my head, I know I’m headed in the wrong direction. Being content with being disconnected may seem like like the right thing to do, but it breeds passivity that is relationally destructive. If things are not where they should be, that’s okay. But, I know we can’t stay there.
  • Make room for each other. There was a time that we only had room for each other. But, four kids take up a lot of room. Attachment takes up a lot of room. If I spent as much time considering our attachment as I did my daughter’s attachment, things would look a lot different. Now, that room, that space in our hearts and in our minds and in our days isn’t going to happen unless we make it happen. We have to plan out time for each other and be willing to put other things aside to be with each other and consider each other even if it feels sorta awkward because it’s been too long since we did or even if our to-do list is still mocking us. If we don’t put things down and intentionally look up at each other for a little bit, we are going to be in a perpetual disconnect that looks a lot like that broken attachment cycle we know all about.
  • Be bold in sharing exactly what you need. Maybe he knew my every thought early on; but, even Prince Charming is not a mind reader. I cannot assume that because he isn’t giving me what I need that he doesn’t want to. He may just not know what it is that I do need. And, it is not fair for me to hold it against him that he doesn’t. I have been learning to ask him how I can love him better and be bold in telling him how he can love me better. I don’t say it with judgment against him; I say it more with the underlying message of, “I know you love me but I think I’d be able to know that more readily and feel it more fully if you _________.” Sometimes it amazes me that after so many years of living in the same home and sleeping side by side that we can both still be learning how to love each other better. But, I guess it shouldn’t amaze me because we need different things in different seasons. As things change, I know we need to grow with each other and fight against growing away from each other.
  • Be willing to initiate. I am really good at complaining and feeling slighted when I feel like my husband is not paying enough attention to me while being completely unwilling to initiate something to pay attention to him. I have learned that he may not be moving towards me because I’m consistently unintentionally sending him the message that I want to be left alone. When I take the initiative to write him a note, send him a text to say I’m missing him, make some sort of move towards him instead of isolating myself, things change. I want to be together and I want to be connected; I need to be willing to initiate some sort of closeness to him physically or otherwise to make that happen. It doesn’t all rest on him. Specifically with regards to the spicy kind of initiation, when I’m really not feeling it, I pray for something to change within me, for whatever walls that are there to come down, for the energy I need, for the ability to focus and feel. He honors those prayers. And for those of you familiar with all the brain chemistry stuff from all those adoption books you’ve been reading, check this out: sex gets your oxytocin, serotonin, and dopamine flowing which not only makes you feel happy but also increases your desire for more connection both physically and otherwise. The way He’s created us makes sex meet our needs. Yeah, just do it applies here.
  • Remember what was without bemoaning what is. Our 7th grade son came home with some interview questions he had to ask us for a mysterious class called “family sciences.” “How did having children impact your finances? your time? your career? your friendships?” He didn’t think he’d get full credit if he only wrote: [insert laughter here]. Children changed everything. We had found our new normal with three children and then we brought home our youngest from China, and everything changed all over again. Things we did before, we couldn’t do anymore. Before our daughter from China came home, we had this awesome deal with another couple with kids the same ages as ours. One weekend, they’d take our three for a big sleepover. Another weekend, we’d have our three and theirs for a sleepover. After we adopted, that deal was over; we couldn’t leave her. We learned that we  had to capture the spirit of what we used to enjoy within the context of our new normal. Rather than trying to do it the exact same way and being disappointed and discouraged that it’ll never be the same which could lead me into a pattern of “what ifs,” we learned that we need to do things differently but in a way that engages what it was that we did enjoy and then be in the moment and simply enjoy it even though it looks different.
  • Share but don’t overshare. I have a few kindred-spirited friends who hold each other accountable to how we’re loving our husbands. We are willing to ask each other harder questions (Are you making room for your husband in all the busyness? Are you being bold with him? Are you initiating relationally? physically?). We answer while never disparaging our spouses or sharing anything that would dishonor them. We take a break from talking about discipline and kids’ sales and food issues and getting little ones to sleep and encourage each other to be intentional wives.

We are their forever families, yes. But, Lord willing, those children will one day leave our homes to have homes of their own. And, when they do, I want the two of us to still be standing here, forever side by side, hand in hand, with grey hair and laugh lines with a love for each other that is way deeper than I thought it would be when we took those vows back when he and me became we.

I’m glad you didn’t sneak out the back door.

 

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: Mark, parenthood

5 things I want my husband to hear on Father’s Day

6.15.14

Fathers day
1. I appreciate you, and I mean that. 

I know it’s cliche. I appreciate you. But, I want you to know that I really do. All the little and not-so-little things you do, how you made time to mulch when I obnoxiously mouthed off about how embarrassed I was by the mess in our front yard, how emptying the dishwasher has become part of your morning routine, how you started making kids’ lunches when I complained about it being my least favoriting task of parenthood, how you put together play lists of the kids’ favorite songs, how you get up first to get a child a drink…there’s so much you do that you never get thanked for. Know that I appreciate you for doing those things even when there are no thanks.

2. I’m glad you aren’t good at multitasking.

You seem to think it’s a good thing that I’m a master at multitasking. But, truth is, I love that you aren’t because when you’re with the kids, you’re with the kids. You aren’t thinking about 10 other things, replying to an email, taking a picture that will soon show up on Instagram, cleaning the room you’re in, texting your BFF, checking off to-do list items and adding to the list, and making dinner. You’re simply with the children, wherever they are. I know I’ve complained more than once at your response to the question: “What did you do while I was gone?” But, please know that I really do admire your ability to let all else become simply background noise that disappears when you’re with our children.

3. You are the best at what you do.

There is no one else who can do what you do the way you do it. You are courageous, driven, and committed. You listen well. You study well. You teach well. You encourage well. You are just the man to do the job before you professionally and in leading our family. And, I will tell you that over and over and over again privately and publicly until you are red with embarrassment.

4. You make me want to be the best at what I do.

All of what I have seen in you makes me want to be more. You make me want to stretch myself, take more risks, study more, give more. Your passion begets my passion. Your steps forward urge me forward. Your confidence helps me put aside my fear. Whatever God has for me, I want to do it all as well as you have done what God has called you to this year.

5. Our children are blessed to have you.

I know you are not the perfect parent; there is no such thing. You and I are learning as we go, making mistakes together. Some days, I know it seems like we’re making more mistakes than earning jewels in our parenting crowns. But, these four children who live under our roof for a season would not be the children they are today or the adults they will become without you. They are blessed to have you as their father, a father who loves the God who gave them to him and would go whatever distance is required to make sure they have what they need and sometimes simply to give them something that will make them smile.

Happy Father’s Day.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: Celebrations, Mark

love starts here

5.7.14

loveshartsherechina

He’s just about packed. One suitcase is full of clothes. One is full of all sorts of random supplies and gifts ranging from chocolate and freeze dried astronaut ice cream to a pair of overalls and a straw hat (that both fit him, mind you) and about 40 copies of If You Give a Mouse a Cookie. I wonder what airport security will think when that bag is scanned.

The family will pile into the minivan with those bags ever so slightly under the weight limit tomorrow at 7am. We’ll drive about 45 minutes to the airport where we’ll point out some big planes in the sky to the kids, talk about where they are heading, remind them all again where Daddy is going and why, and then we’ll say goodbye for 2 weeks.

Without even turning off the engine, we’ll hug and smile. I know I’ll tear up because that’s sorta my M.O. We’ll probably roll down the windows as we pull away so the kids can yell out one more goodbye to Daddy and all the other people entering that terminal at 8am. Then, we’ll go back the exact way we came, back to our day, to school, to goldfish crackers, to the playground, to our routine.

While Mark is there on the other side of the world, leading a team of 12 to a university, I’ll be in two places in one time. I’ll be home going to softball games, helping with homework, and eating ice cream (yes, I bought 5 containers of ice cream for our main food source just to start us out…), but I’ll be there too.

We may have met at a camp in Glen Spey, NY in August 1997 and declared our love for each other shortly thereafter. But, China? It’s where we fell in love again. It was there that we fell in love with a people and a place and each other and His call in our lives all over again. Some people’s second homes are at the shore; our second home is across the globe. We have our favorite restaurants complete with names we’ve made up to identify them since we cannot read or say their actual names. We have our favorite snacks and even specific clothes that always seem to go there with us. And, one day, who knows when, maybe we’ll travel there together at the same time again.

For now, it’s his turn. His turn to go work hard, love well, lead others to do the same, and play a lot of charades.

 

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: China, Mark, posts I can't really tag

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