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big family

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Double or Nothing

November 5, 2022

The past 3 months have among the strangest of my adult life, so you’ll have to excuse my lengthy absence here. I’ve also been the recipient of a bizarre and profound circadian rhythm shift which now has me waking most mornings in the 5’oclock range and exercising for an hour before anyone else is up. I guess I have sobriety to thank for this? Or the desperate pursuit of solitude in the life of a mother of many children who are now around all the time. So far, everyone more or less respects my sacrosanct pre dawn territory and mostly stays in their rooms until closer to 7. It’s glorious, confusing, and very, very dark.

The falling back of this weekend should have the lovely double effect of solving the darkness while simultaneously ensuring that Benny awakens to take his morning bathroom constitutional at 5 am instead of 6, so something to look forward to for all.

What else? Well, I will say that homeschooling does not leave much in the way of margin for other intellectual pursuits, at least not along the curve I’m learning on, so in the spare moments where little is demanded of me, I offer to the universe very, very little in return. A little light scrolling of the tiktoks to watch other people organize their refrigerators. Reading on my Kindle. That’s about the extent of my brainpower capacity most days, and so writing has been cast utterly to the wayside.

There’s also the small matter of my being 18 weeks pregnant. I suspect that has something to do with my dwindling post prandial energy reserves and early, early bedtimes these days. Oh, and did I mention there are two?

Yes.

Yes indeed.

Cast your memory back to my last post if you will and cackle a bit with me as we reminisce about how I tossed aaaaaaall my baby gear and almost immediately felt a little off. Cackle with me or at me, but you can’t say I don’t deliver entertaining content even after all these years.

So, yeah, babies number 7(!) and 8(!) incoming late March/early April. I’ve moved from intense exhaustion and by far the worst nausea I’ve ever felt to ravenous hunger and alarming weight gain, so things are clipping along just as one might expect.

We’re so blessed, so overwhelmed, so tired, and so grateful. I’ve never been so intimately aware of the body of Christ as a real, physical, spiritual presence in my life as I have these past 4 months. We’ve had meals dropped off, prayers sent up, kids driven here and there, and just an absolute tsunami of support from our family and friends. Do the neighbors think we’re insane? Most assuredly. Do I care at this point? That’s a no from me, dog.

Let me back up about 9 weeks and tell you a little bit about how we found out. I was already having a rather intense first trimester and had made a few comments about feeling so bad that something had to be different. “You’re almost 40,” people helpfully pointed out, which, I can tell you, does not feel the same as 28. It just does not.

I was also feeling just a little bit overwhelmed by our still very new homeschooling experiment, now layered over with a solid 3 to 4 hours every afternoon of me lying facedown on the floor trying not to vomit up coconut water, the only palatable foodstuff of the moment.

And then I started bleeding.

It was not an insignificant amount of blood, and, having experienced nothing more than the very lightest of spotting with my last 5 pregnancies, it was scary. I called my sister, Dave, and finally a dear friend who has had several miscarriages of her own, and I asked her to coach me through what was coming. To her immense and everlasting credit, she dropped what she was doing and came straight to my house, hugged me and prayed with me, gave me some practical directives for what the next few days and weeks might hold, and bought all my kids dinner.

My doctors’ office told me to come in the next day around lunchtime for an ultrasound to confirm what was happening. I continued to bleed a little bit for the rest of the night, but by the next morning it had stopped. I’d talked to enough friends at this point to know that miscarriages can take days or even weeks, so I assumed I was just in the earliest stages of that and would find out more from the ultrasound.

We waited nervously for about a half hour in the waiting room before being taken back. I remember leaning over and saying to Dave at one point, “the baby is either fine, already dead, or twins.”

We both stared at each other and I immediately was like WHAT I DON’T KNOW WHY I SAID THAT and he was like yeah, I don’t know why you said that either. But foreshadowing, dear reader. Foreshadowing.

The ultrasound tech told us she would be starting with my anatomy first and getting “a nice look at my cervix” before moving on to the pregnancy. But I swear the minute she flipped that thing on, I saw something weird on her monitor. Two black open spaces where there should be one. She spent just a minute or two making measurements of me and then moved the wand.

“There’s baby,” she said, pointing to a small and seemingly unmoving little shape on the screen.

“Um, does baby have a heartbeat?” I asked pointedly, wondering if we were all on the same page as to why I was in the exam room.

“Oh yes, 155, looking good.”

Dave and I exhaled in huge relief which lasted approximately 4 seconds.

“And there’s your other little nugget right there,” she smiled, moving the wand and waving her hand as the second little image blurred into focus.

We stared at the screen and then at each other, jaws dropping.

“Oh…my God…” I stammered out, assuring Dave and the highly entertained ultrasound tech that I was not calling upon Him in this moment in vain. “OH MY GOD. WHAT. WHAT? TWO? TWINS?”

The next several minutes were a blur of suspected but entirely unintended blasphemy on my part and eventual scrolling of the phone on Dave’s part.

“Are you texting someone?” I demanded, causing Dave to sheepishly raise his screen for me to see.

“No, I’m on Redfin.”

I laughed because dear reader, my second and third thoughts after oh my dear sweet Jesus are you sure were definitely “how old will I be when they graduate high school?!” and “We have to call R (our old school’s principal) and see if there’s room to send the kids back.”

So to recap, the baby was fine, the baby was doubly fine, in fact, and mom and dad commenced immediately freaking out about extremely shallow and practical matters asap.

In the last 2 months as the news has sunk in and the belly has popped out, we’ve realized that a move is neither practical, feasible, or honestly all that necessary at this stage in the game. And as for the school question? Still TBD. We’ve mostly loved homeschooling, but I’m not naive enough to think being 40 and postpartum, likely surgically, with 2 newborns and 6 other kids to take care of is a recipe for domestic bliss or academic competence. We shall see.

Oh, and all that bleeding? “Oh, yeah, probably nothing. Maybe a subchorionic hematoma that cleared up on its own. Just one of those things that happens with twins sometimes.” <— the first of many such statements to have come into my life during this bizarre and wonderful turn of events.

And so my new mantra in life, gentle reader, has truly become “I control nothing.”

It’s been a trip, and we’re not even to the halfway point. Please pray for us, for our little nuggets, and for a boring and uneventful rest of the ride.

O Jesus, I surrender myself to you, take care of everything!

P.s. If you’ve ever considered becoming a patron, before, well, I can pretty much guarantee all proceeds will be transformed directly into diapers. Click away.

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A New Season

April 24, 2019

Remember those heady days of early blogging when the mommies – and the blogs – were plentiful? I was messaging with a writer friend this morning, reflecting on what an unusual and also extraordinary thing it was to be part of it at the beginning, to be one of a handful of Catholic women fumbling around with a blogspot dot com at what felt like the advent of the era of digital self-disclosure and the birth of online community.

I remember having to explain myself to people in real life that I also had real friends who I’d met online but, uh, never actually met in person. It was a little weird! Not anymore, though.

Those were the days, weren’t they? Truth be told I still love it when one of the OSB cranks out a low key day in the life post (I’m looking at you, Bonnie, Christy, Kendra), and while I don’t write many of them myself lately, it’s not for lack of affection for you, dear readers; it’s just that I’m starting to feel a little bit like I’m wearing the wrong size shoes. The self disclosing and rambling that once came so naturally now feels a little bit, I don’t know, over the top?

Part of it is being a mother to kids who are older.

Not older kids, because with my oldest nearing only nine, I’m not exactly out of the elementary years over here, but just being a mother to kids who can read has changed the rules of the game, big time. Not that they read my blog, nor do I expect they’ll ever want to – not the boys anyway. Just that something feels “a little bit not good,” as one of my younger siblings was known to say, when I identify one of them by name, like I’m chipping away little by little at their privacy or autonomy or something.

Funny stories about public nudity and diaper explosions are great when they feature feral toddlers as their stars, but older kids require more nuance, more deference, and more privacy.

The other thing is this: I feel disingenuous sometimes. Like I’m here on the other side of the computer screen handing out advice and tbh I’m just figuring things out as I go along.

I really don’t look to style myself as any sort of expert on anything, except maybe painting things which were previously thought un-paintable, so I feel a little sheepish sometimes when I do write about more serious stuff. A sort of existential angst like, gosh, I hope nobody thinks I have this all figured out.

I don’t. Have anything figured out, that is. And the older I get and the more kids we add, the less certain I am of anything. Things that were set in stone with babies one through three went out the window when Luke the Verb was born. Still more fat was trimmed away (not literally, alas) when Zelie made her debut. (Buh bye breastfeeding, don’t let the door hit you)

And I’m certain that come late November, this year, things will shift once again when we discover whether or not kids are cheaper by the half dozen.

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Not where you thought I was going with this, right?

It’s true, we’re expanding our crew, and he or she is due to make an appearance right around Thanksgiving time.

So forgive me if the blogging becomes more…unreliable.

To anticipate a few questions, if I may:

Yes, this baby was “planned”. Well, planned in the sense that we knew we were opening ourselves to the statistically higher probability of conception. There’s always a chance, you know? I sort of hate the language around ‘trying/not trying,’ even in NFP circles. The older I get and the more kids I have, the less certain I am that we’re in control of anything in our lives, much less our fertility.

THAT BEING SAID, Marquette has been a godsend for us. As dwellers on the extremely, very, intensely fertile end of the spectrum of fertility, we found a method that helped us truly appreciate and understand our physiology. The challenge, in fact, gradually shifted from “oh my gosh could we please get some breathing room” to “gosh, we really have this down to a science now…and it’s up to us to discern whether we have grave reason to avoid.”

Guys, I just never thought I’d be there. I went from “delighted yet overwhelmed young mom” to “bitter and slightly panicky middle experience mom” to “relieved and also awed-by-responsibility” older mom, all in the span of three (3!) different NFP methods. I’m so grateful we stuck it out and found a method that worked for us, because it was hard.

And NFP is still hard. There is a reason the Church gives it to us as a means of recourse, but not a requirement. Can I go so far as to say that NFP is probably not good for every marriage in every season? But also, that it can be the saving grace of some marriages in some seasons? Catholicism has a funny way of holding seemingly irreconcilable things in tension like that, does it not?

Anyway, to make a long story longer, we were confident enough with Marquette to actually get to a place of “wow, we could actually be done having babies,” which caused us to consider the question, repeatedly, over a number of months “are we done having babies?”

And, well, I guess the obvious by now answer is: no.

I don’t take my fertility lightly. What felt like a crushing burden in my early thirties feels like a solemn responsibility in my later thirties.

At the end of the day, even this, our fertility, isn’t ours to rule over. God entrusts us with certain resources and asks us to make good with them. For whatever reason, God has called us to accept the challenge of parenting a larger family.

As a girl who never dreamt of having tons of kids, it feels strange and mysterious and also a little crazy. I don’t smile with obvious joy when someone reacts strongly to us in public. Honestly, lady at the Y, I’m just as surprised as you are. And not because I don’t know how it works, but because I know exactly how it works, and even had a pretty good handle on maintaining the status quo, and He still asked for more!

Oh, and one more question I’ve gotten. Ages! Our oldest will be 9 when this baby comes, so the lineup will be 9, 7, 5, 4, and about a month shy of 2. Yes, that’s crazy. But no, I don’t homeschool. So to have ages 4 and up in school, at least part time, will be a significant game changer.

I hope you’ll bear with me as I navigate this new season and look for a new balance irl and online. I’ll never stop writing because, apart from having many babies, I truly believe it is something I was put here to do. But things might change in the coming months, a lot or a little. One bigger change? I’ll be writing more feature pieces like this one and this one for CNA. I’m thrilled and a little intimidated to be stepping into the role of legit journalist, and it’s a responsibility and an honor I don’t take lightly. I can’t wait to share more stories like these with you guys.

In the meantime, I would love your prayers for our little baby, and also for couples who are still struggling with their fertility. We could easily be back in that place after this baby comes; I know nothing is as static as we’d like to believe. I have so many friends whose arms ache for babies who haven’t come, for babies they’ve held and lost, and from the weight of holding as many babies as they’ve been asked to hold