Bridal Veil Falls and Football

 

Since the first week we were in Utah was pretty hot down in the valley, we went for a short excursion up the much cooler Provo Canyon with Grammy. It was such a lovely fall morning. Having lived in California for almost a decade now, I’d forgotten how much I love a real autumn! IMG_2406

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It’s always more fun sporting our Ute gear when we’re in BYU country.IMG_2385

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Feeding the fish at the base of Bridal Veil Falls. IMG_2391

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Samantha was not cooperating for a family photo…

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My girls. Amelia on the left and Samantha on the right.

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After the falls, we went to a small park down the canyon and the girls entertained themselves by throwing rocks and sticks in the river.

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Collecting more rocks.

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Moving on to recreational rock climbing. Yes, we went through a hundred boxes of Hello Kitty bandaids this trip.

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Meanwhile in Oregon… Jake and his brother, Jarom, were also enjoying the beautiful scenery on their boys road trip. I have no idea why anyone would want to drive from Boise to Eugene, taking a million “detours” to the coast and through national parks on the way, particularly after just having driven from California to Utah, but they seemed to have a great time. Boys. Go figure.

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In the evening, we all anxiously gathered around to watch the Utah Oregon game, which turned out to be perhaps the greatest Utes game of all time. To say Samantha, Amelia and I were jealous we weren’t there with Jake and Jarom in their seats on the 10th row midfield would be an understatement. Still can’t believe we missed that game.

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Red in a sea of green.

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62-20 yeah!

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Fall colors and football– what could be better?

Lots of love,

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Utah Trip Week One

The day after my 20 week ultrasound appointment, our family loaded up in the car (including Bandit!)  and made the annual trek to Utah. Since we hadn’t been to Utah at all this year and we won’t be going back for Christmas, we turned it into an almost three-week stint. Jake drove us out to Utah, flew back to California for the majority of our stay to make sure things weren’t melting down at the firm and to complete some flooring projects I asked to be done before the new baby gets here, and then flew back to Utah the weekend of Sarah’s wedding to drive us back home.

This was the first time since the girls were about 9 months old that we made the journey during the day instead of driving through the night while the girls slept. I’ll give credit where credit is due– Samantha and Amelia far exceeded my expectations. We left during naptime and they slept the entire four hours to Vegas, at which point the two hours to St. George was the worst of our trip. Between the girls and myself, we had to make about 10 stops in that two hours just to use the restroom!

We had planned on stopping over in St. George for the night, but after eating dinner and letting the girls run around for a bit, we decided to grit our teeth and make it the rest of the four hours. After fair amount of screaming protests to get out of the car, the girls conked out and slept most of the way to Grandma’s, where we all collapsed in our beds at about 1 a.m.

When the girls woke, they didn’t waste any time exploring all the “new” stuffed animals, toys and books at Grammy and Grandpa’s. We spent a good portion of every day playing in Grammy’s backyard, which was relaxing for me since I could supervise them from the comfort of the deck. It was great not having to load up to go to the park every day– I just opened the door and let them loose in the backyard.

Playing with the hose and pretending they were “piggies” in the bath was a favorite activity most days.

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Hooray for 29-year-old playsets! I had fun as a kid on this thing and I’m glad the girls can now enjoy it too.

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Bandit lost about ten pounds on this trip just running around the backyard, barking at all the people biking on the back trail.

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Amelia loved making sand pies.

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Jake hung out with us for one day before flying to Boise to meet up with his brother and take a boys road trip to Oregon for the weekend before flying home to California. We sure missed him!

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Before Jake left, we visited the horses.

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It’s not really the country, but it sure felt like it compared to what the girls are used to.

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Wide open spaces!

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My parents had some friends staying with them while we were there who had a Basset Hound-Lab mix named Tesla. He and Corgi-Lab mix, Bandit, made fast friends and were constant border patrol companions around the backyard.

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Samantha enjoyed some trial runs on her flower girl hair-do for the wedding. The girls’ hair used to stay curled into ringlets without much effort, but the past summer, it’s gone more wavy instead, so I did some experimenting.

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Samantha creates a nap time mat for her stuffed animals.

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More backyard fun with Grammy.

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One of the girls’ favorite books right now is We’re Going on a Bear Hunt. All the rocks and trees in the backyard provided them the perfect landscape to hide and pretend to be bears.

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Helping Grammy pick tomatoes from the garden. The tomatoes did not make it inside without getting eaten most of the time!

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Lots of love,

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The Swim Nazi

This summer, Samantha and Amelia took swim lessons from Ms. Conni (a.k.a. the Swim Nazi), a former head diving coach for UCI and private swim coach for the local nationally ranked swim team, the Nadadores. The Nadadores consistently send kids to the Olympics, so I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that their coaches mean business, hence the “Swim Nazi” nickname.

I had heard of Ms. Conni before from friends and people from church whose older kids were on the Nadadores, but had no idea she taught toddlers until I saw my friend, Crystal’s, 2.5 year old swimming like a fish at our neighborhood pool. Crystal herself had taken lessons from Ms. Conni when she was a toddler and now her little Kennedy does too.

I didn’t have any hope of getting in for the summer since I was told the Swim Nazi filled up her classes for the year once registration went out in January, but I contacted her anyway and was so happy to grab the last two spots in her very last session, even though we’d only get to do 10 lessons with her.

I heard from multiple parents that I should be prepared to cry– a lot– during the first few lessons after hearing stories of the Swim Nazi throwing babies in the pool while parents watched in horror, but it was nothing like that.

Samantha awaits her turn.

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Ms. Conni was awesome and Samantha and Amelia immediately took to her, although I could see where the nickname, “Swim Nazi” came from. She was waaaaaay harder on the parents than she was on the kids. She would demonstrate a skill to work on, like how to get the kids to float on their backs, and then every few seconds would yell at us, “Not like that! How do you expect her to float when you are holding her neck like a crane?!!”

I was yelled at a few times for using the phrase, “under water.” “THAT CREATES A NEGATIVE CONNOTATION! USE THE TERM, ‘GETTING OUR EYES WET!”

Ok, whatever.

She consistently yelled at people for saying “Good job!” and instead commanded us to describe exactly what the kids had done right and then say, “You did it!” The girls still love to proclaim, “I did it!” whenever they feel they’ve accomplished something.

The Swim Nazi even doled out parenting advice. “WHY ARE YOU PHRASING THAT AS A QUESTION?” she chastised Jake when he asked Samantha if she could swim to the edge. “JUST SAY, ‘Show me how you can swim to the edge.'”

There was one older child who had a really hard time letting go of his mom the first lesson and screamed for the first 15 minutes. She simply gave him some time to scream, and then swam over to him and yelled, “EXCUSE ME. STOP.” And he did! We were in awe.

Lessons were not for the faint of heart or for parents who couldn’t take criticism, but the girls thought Ms. Conni was fun (getting to play with pool toys and blow bubbles after the lesson won them over) and I loved that she spent most of the time teaching the parents so that we could practice with the kids outside of class.

I also loved that Ms. Conni was a total– well– Nazi– about pool safety and all of our lessons were geared around that. In the past, we’ve put the girls in “fun” group lessons where we mostly swam around in circles singing Ring Around the Rosie. While those lessons were fun, the girls didn’t nail down many real skills.

The only downside was that since the only time slot we could get into was 5 p.m., the girls were always completely exhausted and hangry afterwards, not to mention my preggo self.

During one of her hangry moments, Samantha threw a complete tantrum at the end of her lesson. Ms. Conni simply came up to her and said gently, “We have to be quiet so that we can find the kitty cats.”

I was totally floored when Samantha stopped mid-scream and immediately became curious about the kitty cats. Apparently, this stuck with her, because even now, if I tell her to be quiet, she will talk about finding the kitty cats. Total genius.

I told Ms. Conni that I would love to hire her to follow me around all day and give me parenting advice!

The very last day of our session was safety day and Samantha and Amelia were required to jump into the pool with street clothes and shoes on, the idea being that many drownings happen when kids fall in the pool by accident. The girls hated every second of swimming with their clothes on, but even with all that extra weight, they passed with flying colors.

On the last day, they were allowed to jump off the diving board, which I didn’t think the girls would be interested in. Samantha surprised me by begging to go off. She actually did a few little jumps on the board before leaping into the pool, where Ms. Conni was waiting to make sure she did her back float successfully and help her reach the edge. It was awesome to see her fully clothed, leaping into the pool, coming up for air, getting to her back and then swimming to the edge of the pool.

I didn’t get the first jump on video, but we did get her back float. Not very pretty, but she did it! Not bad for ten lessons.

After watching her sister, Amelia decided she REALLY didn’t want to try the diving board, but Jake tossed her in anyway. She asked to go a few more times after the initial shock wore off.

We will be back for round two next year!

Lots of love,

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MY Baby Sister

Samantha and Amelia have been so excited all summer about their new baby sister about to rock their world on or around February 11!

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Between the pregnancy, home renovations, visitors, and normal toddler summer fare, June through August has been a complete blur. Although I feel light years (LIGHT YEARS) better than I did with the twin pregnancy, I did experience some nausea and queasiness June through August, mostly in the afternoon/evening hours, which meant I was pretty much useless after about 5 p.m.

Let’s be real– I’m still pretty much useless after 5 p.m., but at 18 weeks, the nausea has subsided completely, so that’s something.

Like I said, I really can’t complain at all considering this has been an absolute CAKE WALK compared to how I felt when pregnant with the twins. I’m still completely traumatized from that pregnancy.

At this point (second tri) with the twins, I was on modified bedrest and was still constantly nauseated well into month 8. During the first trimester with the twins, I threw up multiple times a day, felt horrible in general 24/7, and had really intense round ligament/stomach pain the entire pregnancy due to my body stretching so rapidly to capacity.

This time around, I’ve maybe thrown up a handful of times total sporadically, and have had absolutely no pain besides a little back pain when I sleep. Total piece of cake, for which I am extremely grateful.

Although I really can’t complain about this pregnancy at all, I would like this baby to know that this pregnancy has not been without issues, however minor. During the summer, all my monthly meal plans went out the window real fast. I didn’t want to smell food, hated looking at pictures of food, loathed thinking about food, and had to really get myself pumped up to attempt to cook food.

If I tried planning anything even a day in advance, I would usually have to scratch it about an hour prior to dinner because I was either A. Too tired to cook it or B. It sounded absolutely disgusting. So, meals around here have really suffered. I don’t think the girls are complaining about eggs and toast for dinner too often, though.

I can’t stand to be around chicken, all veggies except salad, and although we’ve been surviving on easy stir fries all summer, I threw one up last week and now can’t stomach that either. Sad face!

I’ve been subsisting on Lara Bars, coconut milk yogurt, meatballs, salmon, salad with hard boiled egg, and non-citrus fruits. My saving grace during the hot months has been coconut milk ice cream, which I usually eat in secret in my room so that the twins don’t see me eating it and beg for some. I feel like I have a secret food addiction!

Most disgusting craving: Del Taco hard shell tacos. Oh my goodness, even typing that sounds so awful. The first time I asked Jake to bring home some Del Taco for dinner, Jake just stared like I had gone completely nuts. “Really? Not even marginally-healthier Chipotle?”

“NO. IT HAS TO BE DEL TACO.”

The girls, of course, never complained. So strange, but I have a few other friends who also claim they had a Del Taco craving addiction during pregnancy. They should really start marketing more to pregnant people! Mercifully, I haven’t craved any Del Taco fix for a while now, but am still pondering if hell truly has frozen over because that would be the only reasonable explanation for me putting that in my mouth.

With the twins, I was constantly starving, always wanting to eat, and throwing up a good portion of anything that made it down. This time around, I was hungry throughout the summer, but nothing ever sounded good. To be sure, the former was much worse, but it was still not fun feeling hungry and not being able to come up with anything palatable, even with Jake and the girls helping me brainstorm.

My only other minor complaint this time would be pregnancy insomnia. Just like I was when pregnant with the girls, I’ve been waking up several times during the night, usually to go to the bathroom, except that I often can’t get back to sleep after 2:30 a.m. I’m too tired to read or go on the computer, so I just sit there for hours until my two very talkative alarm clocks announce they are up for the day.  I’ve been taking full advantage of nap time, have been crashing super early at night and haven’t been able to wake up as early as I used to. Hence, the lack of blogging this summer!

Also, when I was feeling queasy, the thought of doing anything remotely requiring brain cells (reading, getting on the computer), was not appealing, so I’ve spent a great deal of time just enduring by doing nothing. I’m worried the girls are going to have all these memories of mommy just sitting on the bed staring into space while they are out swimming and at the park with daddy!

The other casualty of the summer trimester was getting my new food blog up and running, which was disappointing for me. In the spring, I had worked on and photographed 50+ recipes that were all ready to go on my food blog. All that came to a screeching halt once food became my enemy during the queasy first few months.Fortunately, things have been on the upswing energy-wise and I’m hopeful that I’ll be able to restart that project again.

Bottom line: not without issues, but night and day from the twin pregnancy. So thankful.

The girls were so silly taking these pics. IMG_1855

Biggest difference between this pregnancy and twin pregnancy:

I am no longer treated like a celebrity! I got so used to going in every one to two weeks for an incredibly detailed ultrasound with the twins, flexible scheduling with my perinatologist who only saw patients with multiples, and being able to waltz into L&D any time I had the slightest notion that something was wrong and having nurses drop everything to assist me, that this time around feels really unexciting!

No special treatment here. I’m just with my regular OB and mostly go in for routine blood work, a few ultrasounds here and there, and dopplers to listen to the heartbeat, which I never had with the twins, since every appointment was an hour-long ultrasound.

There’s also been a noticeable lack of personal questions from complete strangers this go around. No more, “Were they conceived naturally?” (Eye roll. “Not that it matters, but yes”).

No more cumbersome explanations about how yes, twins do run in the family as Jake has one sister with one set of twins and another sister with two sets, although none of this matters in our case since A. Twins run on the maternal side and B. Only fraternal twins have a genetic link in families and ours are identical.

Not even any detailed accounts of how their sister-in-law’s second cousin’s childhood neighbor had twins too. I don’t really mind the questions, but it is nice to be incognito this time! #singletonlife

Our most memorable appointment thus far:

Having the ultrasound tech proclaim at our 13 week appointment that this baby had the longest legs she’d ever seen! She took about 15 pictures for us of the limbs because she thought they were awesome. Another tall girl? We shall see.

Despite Jake referring to the baby as “he” ever since we found out I was pregnant, we found out that we’d be having a girl at our 13 week appointment in early August. There’s a gender blood test (blows my mind that this is possible!) that they offer through our insurance. It wasn’t available when I had the twins, but now you can have it done as early as seven weeks.

I opted to do the blood test later, at 12 weeks, and we were planning on finding out the results when I went in at 13 weeks. However, the ultrasound tech, after discovering we didn’t yet have the results of the gender blood test, really wanted to be the one to tell us since she, “Never gets to give anyone exciting news anymore!” She had apparently never been wrong in 35 years, either.

After she told us it was a girl, she went to the back to grab the blood test results to confirm, and lo and behold, she was right! Despite his future suddenly becoming a lot more expensive, Jake was excited. I was overjoyed as I love having girls and feel that it’s easier territory for me at this point. This little one will have no shortage of clothes as I still have items with price tags on them that were never worn due to the twins growing out of everything so fast. Not having to buy any clothing this go around is a huge plus!

The girls’ reactions:

I wasn’t sure if Samantha and Amelia would really get what was going on, but ever since we told them earlier this summer, they have been noticeably ecstatic about the prospect of a baby sister. After finding out it was a girl, we let the twins pick out some outfits for the baby. I have never encouraged shopping with the girls and rarely go with them, but it’s apparently in their genes, because they adored looking at all the mini clothes and accessories.

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The girls find my growing bump fascinating, and after teaching them that hitting the belly was not ok, they have been super good about stroking it and rubbing it nicely. Their favorite thing to do now is to point to my bump and say, “Baby in tummy! Can’t see it yet! Will come out soon!” They especially love to announce this at the top of their lungs to complete strangers at Costco.

So excited!

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The sillies. IMG_1868

You mess with our baby sister, you mess with us. IMG_1862

Samantha and Amelia have always enjoyed playing with dolls, but even more so now that a real one is on the way. I will often catch them “swaddling” their dolls with blankets, even though I have no idea how they know how to do this, unless they have residual memories of me swaddling them. They love pushing dollies in their stroller, feeding their dollies, and reading to dollies. I think they will be great big sisters! At least before they figure out they have one more cute human being to compete with their toys and my attention. IMG_1895A constant argument at our house these days goes along the lines of:

Samantha: “MY baby sister!”

Amelia: “No, MY baby sister!”

Samantha: “No MY baby sister! WAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHH!”

They really do fight over everything, unborn sister included.

I have anxiety attacks thinking about digging up the 10+ bins of vacuum-packed baby clothes stowed away in the attic. I’m sure the girls will have a blast going through all their old baby clothes, especially the shoes. Shoe obsessed does not even begin to describe these girls.

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Such sweetness all around!

Lots of love,

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