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Our RV park is loaded and it is glorious. The richest portion being the vast amount of family goodness.
There are the Miraculous Moers (7)
We have the Happy Janssens (7+4)
Followed by the Rockin T Crew (7+4+6)
And then rolling in yesterday was the Ticknor Tribe (7+4+6+13)
Four families.
22 kids.
8 grown ups (heh. heh. If you can call us that)
Sara is an amazing photographer. You can check out her work here.
And after you do that, be sure and look at the fun she has captured right here in my own back yard.
I absolutely love what she sees, how she sees it and then captures it forever. Artistic eyeballs paired with an uber loving heart = super beauty.
Friday, March 19, 2010
Happenings at Hill Shade
Posted by
Christine
at
10:39 AM
5
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Labels: education at home and elsewhere, holy crap I own an rv park
Thursday, March 18, 2010
I'll try this again ...
I started blogging early this morning. It was going to be all about chia and its many health benefits and my having FINALLY tried it. I'll get to it, but here is how things began to play out ... and shift.
The boys came in and asked if they could set up one of our little pup tents in their bedroom. They thought it would be fun to play in it. Great idea. So, as they are getting everything ready, it hits me ... they are going to set up a tent, in their ROOM, in their HOUSE, to PLAY IN ... while at the same time, our kids' first family is LIVING in a tent, and it is ALL THEY HAVE.
It just smacked me in the face. Stopped me in my tracks. Not to mention, Michael shared a Facebook status of someone who ... well, they were being pretty darn exorbitant. Just put the entire world into perspective again.
I am filthy, stinking rich. Nasty rich. Insanely wealthy. I have it so very, very good. I forget, and then life reminds me.
I. want. for. nothing.
So, how is that for a morning? Then on to:
*washing the dreads
*cupcakes for Presh's birthday
*burning stuff out back in the field (uh-huh, still just looooove to burn stuff)
*staying out of Michael's hair while he was glued to the NCAA tournament
*wondering how I had managed to not pick a bracket this year
*taking back my bathroom (meaning - cleaning out every child related item)
*praising husband for walking away from the tournament and mowing the rest of the park
*enjoying snagged moments with my two new friends
*welcoming a family of THIRTEEN to the park for two days (22 kids between four families - sweetness). Check out the Ticknor Tribe!
And now crawling into my very own bed in my very own house, working on my very own laptop which is constantly connected to the entire world ... feeling blessed beyond anything I could ever dream or imagine.
Posted by
Christine
at
9:00 PM
10
comments
Labels: holy crap I own an rv park, social justice
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Blogher and Me and some Sprint 4G (GIVEAWAY!)
If you're smart, you'll hop over to my review blog and check out my $300 Visa gift card giveaway. Big thanks to BlogHer and Sprint for making this possible.
Go, go, GO!
Posted by
Christine
at
8:29 AM
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comments
Magical Milk Pic-o-the-Week

(photo by Courtney, a reader - breastfeeding her adopted son)
Posted by
Christine
at
8:04 AM
4
comments
Labels: breastfeeding
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Trauma sandwich
Yesterday, when talking to a friend (Hi, Carrie!), I began to really comprehend the amount of current trauma Mar is processing.
Mom left for longer than she has ever been gone since joining this forever.
LOTS of new people entering our lives over several days.
Annnnnnnnnnnnnnnd ... her baby sister's birthday is this week.
In reality, that birthday thing is probably the BIGGEST part of our current behaviors. They are a guaranteed trigger. Throw in the fact that the Happy Janssens brought along a perfect new bestest friend for said sister and ... ka-boom. Not necessarily KA-BOOOM! But a ka-boom, nonetheless.
She is completely stuck. Old school, rockin' the retro RAD, stuck. Will. not. talk. about. it. Constant stream of attention-seeking behaviors (tumping over things, hurting siblings through play, clogging/spilling/breaking, and last - but never the least - peeing where thoust shouldn't be peeing).
Read a great post by the Porter's, discussing how our kids cycle through the healing process: "The kids are always cycling in their progress, meaning they improve, then regress, then improve and regress and so on... "
Spot on.
I have many people talk with me with such worry - how it doesn't seem like the kids are getting better. They are. Rocky has crossed into a new and completely age appropriate "normal." He is THERE. His trauma will always cause him glitches, but it is rare that we have to have any major therapeutic interventions with him now. Mar ... not so much. BUT when you back up and look at the big picture of where she was ... wow.
She is not the same girl she was two years ago. Her dips in the cycle are significant. Yet, I can make you a list of things which are gone. I can make you another list of things which are now a part of the dips but not the everyday behavior.
This dip is kicking my tail. In this one we are back to a constant stream of behaviors. When we put her on play restriction, she then looks for a fight in any way possible by drawing in others - hoping they will feel sorry for her. I walk away. I DO the right things. Yet, my mind is always there. I am always processing where she is and what is going on - even if she has been asked to just hang out at a table!
And yet, even in this deep dip, things are better than in the past. This whole dipping thing reminds me of my first car. It was a '64 Lemans. Had no AC. Black vinyl seats. On cold days had to pop it in neutral and rev the engine at stoplights to keep it from dying. When I finally sold it for a newer car, the driver's side door would not open from the inside. I was totally Dukes-of-Hazzard'ing that puppy everywhere I went - in and out of the window. I would belly ache and complain.
Fast forward to our newly used van, which is GREAT and has AC in the front AND in the back. One little overhead light pops out of its casing and I'm all whining and moaning. Seriously? It's because I had a new normal. That first old car would get water in the FLOOR BOARD when it rained. Yup. Had to ask people to lift up their feet in the passenger's seat when you put on the brakes, because all of the water would come sloshing forward.
Not kidding.
And now I huff over a little popped out light.
You get really used to those crests in healing ... tastes of a new normal. It's nice. It feels like you could take on the WORLD. Then, along comes a dip and even though it's not the worst by any means, you have forgotten. You cry. You moan. It FEELS just as bad or worse. IT'S HARD.
So, I'm stepping back to see the big picture. I'm still VERY frustrated. I'm VERY tired emotionally. I just don't want to do another dip. Hate the dips.
We'll get through it. We always do. I'll see you guys on the other side.
(photo by krrass)
Posted by
Christine
at
8:38 PM
15
comments
Labels: reactive attachment disorder
Thursday, March 11, 2010
She'll be comin' round the mountain
We have new friends coming to mesh with us for awhile.
This crew will be here for two weeks. This crew will be here for ... oh, I don't know ... two months? They don't know either. That's why I love me some Happy Janssens.
There are still so many ways to get this dern double wide done. Four million walls to paint. Broken sofa legs. Still plenty of dead bug carcasses stuck to various walls from what we can only assume was some sort of hurricane or flood before it became a repo. Bathroom floor partially peel-n-stick tiled (some are slowly floating away from the others because they don't have a neighbor ... like they're trying to escape). My bedroom has become the catch-all of the things which should be more in the "office" area, but that area is so teeny, they are at the foot of my bed (the foot-o-the-beddy-office-area). Areas of this place are quite whickity-whack (how does one spell, "whickity-whack" anywho?).
Yet these two gals who are coming ... ahhhhhhhhh. They are so very yummy. They do not care. But then again, they do. They care about what is real and breathing. I will ask them to add to my decoupaged fireplace. Why on earth would I finish it now when I can forever see their handiwork in it?
Um, yeah. I'm totally decoupaging my entire fireplace with my old Seventeen magazines, and whatever else we can chop up and glue on. If that surprises you in the least little bit then, seriously - how long have you been reading me? Christine is cutting up magazines and gluing them ... to her WALL. And the sky is blue and dogs bark.
So, how did I get ready for the arrival of two delightful additions to our little community out here? We spent the day creating. The kids were outside painting. I was inside cutting and wadding material. It was SO FUN, and every inch of it was recycled.
Oh, how I love people. Come out for a visit. The more, the merrier. Bring a funny word from a magazine and glue it to my wall. Sure, there are safety hazards everywhere, but if you sit really still I promise you won't die.
Posted by
Christine
at
5:00 PM
7
comments
Labels: friends, holy crap I own an rv park
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Everyone has a story
One of my greatest lessons learned:
Know that everyone has a story.
If you disagree with someone or find them hurtful or offensive or they trigger any major feeling inside you ... be purposeful in asking.
Do not merely listen to their story.
Hear it.
Let it change you.
This has radically altered my life. It has brought much complication and pain, much joy and happiness. It has forced me to trade understanding for judgment and kindness for anger.
Please get very good at it so you can remind me, when I forget.
Posted by
Christine
at
6:48 PM
4
comments
Labels: following Christ, social justice
Tuesday, March 09, 2010
Magical Milk Pic-o-the-Week


"I am especially proud of our breastfeeding relationship because I fought so damn hard for it. My son was in the NICU for three weeks after he was born due to meconium aspiration. For the first week or so of that stay, he could not be fed anything by mouth - his lungs were so scarred and his breathing so labored, the doctors were scared he would aspirate if fed by mouth. So out came the (manual) breast pump and, boy howdy, you better believed I pumped those suckers dry. Every morning, I would take the milk from the previous night, pack it in a cooler and make the 1-hour bus trip to the NICU to drop off my kiddo's nummies for the day. We would hang out together for 8 or so hours and then I would hop back on the bus for another one-hour ride home and the process would begin anew. When he was finally well enough to be fed by mouth, we had a really hard time getting him latched on. I have flat nipples and my boobs are on the, er, larger side (as you can tell in the first pic - he was full-term and a normal-sized baby and my boobs just dwarf him), so it was really difficult for him to get them in his mouth. So I continued to pump. The pictures I am sending are of some of the first times I was able to get him successfully latched on and eating."
(photo by Bria who is still breastfeeding her boy - he is now 19 months old!)
Posted by
Christine
at
1:07 PM
5
comments
Labels: breastfeeding







