Monday, October 26, 2009

Noah's birthday portrait


Noah has the distinction of being THE middle child out of five. He has an older sister, an older brother, a younger sister and a younger brother. You could say he gets it from all directions.

On report card day last week Noah yelled from the family room, "Mom, Daniel said I get an F in existing!"

Emma had an eye doctor appointment a little while ago. The rest of us were in the waiting room, cleaning up the toys we'd enjoyed while we were there. During the cleanup Luke threw a toy at Noah's head hard enough to draw blood, right there in the waiting room. I don't know if that's worse than the (full) sippy cups that Luke chucks at Noah's head every so often - we'll have to ask Noah which he prefers.

I was excited for Noah's birthday to come around so we could celebrate him for a day (or three, the way it happened to work out - party on Saturday, real birthday not 'til the following Monday...). I think he really enjoyed it!

We all love you, Noah--even the members of Team Fulkerson that hurl insults and heavy objects at you! Think of what a strong person you'll become...






countdown



Dan has 35 weeks left in his fellowship. The kids and I hope to count how many DAYS he has left during this fall break. Maybe we'll get it done tomorrow! ;)

Leah is 5 weeks old - and getting balder by the day. I'm thinking hats...


Monday, October 19, 2009

countdown



Dan has 36 weeks left in his fellowship.

Leah is 4 weeks old!

Today is Noah David's 7th birthday! Happy Birthday Noah! Hopefully I will remember to post some "big kid" pictures of him soon, but today I can't resist posting some of my favorite baby Noah shots. How the years fly.

Sorry I can't credit the photographer - a lady (whose name I no longer remember) took great pictures in one of the rooms of her home on the Air Force base where Noah was born. If any of my Misawa friends knows her name, please remind me! I feel guilty using her images!

Saturday, October 17, 2009

4 whole weeks




God sends you what you can handle, right? Leah has, so far, been our easiest newborn.

By far.

She sleeps for 5 hours at a stretch during the night. Let me just say that is UNHEARD OF with previous Fulkerson babies.

She can be put down sometimes without screaming the moment her back hits the bassinet -- so novel!

She loves her swing, too. We haven't had a baby who liked the baby swing since 1998.

We have all enjoyed her so much these past four weeks! The other kids argue over whose turn it is to hold her. Dan's even been bonding with Leah from Texas! She is fussy in the evenings when we Skype with him, but when we hold her up to the computer screen she quiets down, looks and listens. I truly think she knows his voice. It's really cool!

Here are a few pictures we took yesterday, in honor of Leah's four-week birthday. :)

Monday, October 12, 2009

great expectations?



A very wise friend once told me the secret to her level of calm. This friend (who happens to be the mother of four, three of whom are triplets) says

high expectations = low serenity; low expectations = high serenity.

I loved this and started applying it to my life. Immediately.

Now, is it a bad thing to say I have low expectations? Fifteen years ago I would have been appalled at the very idea! As a student (and eventually a teacher) I would say that high expectations are the key to getting people to do their best work! Why should anyone purposely have low expectations ?

Here's why. We've been on this merry-go-round before.

Elementary-aged kids have school projects out the wazoo. First-graders take a loooong time to read a book out loud (no matter how loudly the baby in your lap is screaming). Two year-olds are destructive and cooperate the least when you need it the most. Babies scream the loudest when you need for them to be the quietest.

If you expect these things to happen then you're not surprised or disappointed!

If, by some miracle, things go BETTER than you expected, well, then it's been a great day.

Yesterday afternoon was the perfect example. A neighbor (also the mother of a two year-old) called to invite Luke over to play for awhile. He smiled and was excited....until she came to the door to collect him. He refused to go with her, saying STAY AT LUKEY'S HOUSE. Of course Lukey's house currently had one child with a fever camped out on the couch, another child painting a homemade salt-dough map of Indiana in the next room while his brother waited patiently for me to find something for him to paint too; and a screaming baby in a sling around mom's neck. Never mind that the kitchen counter wasn't visible and everyone was starting to get hungry. I invited the neighbor and her daughter in to play for a few minutes, hoping that Luke would cooperate ...

You already know how this goes.

The two year-olds fought non-stop over the same toy. The sick kid kept coughing, reminding us all that we're exposing neighbors to germs. The brother that was waiting to paint was forgotten, baby continued to scream. The twist I wasn't expecting was for Luke to stick his finger up his nose and start a huge gusher of a nosebleed, causing him to need a complete change of clothes (not to mention a new load of laundry and a floor mopping for mom). Then the kid who was waiting to paint fell down the stairs.

Friends from church dropped by briefly to bring us homemade soup and a rose (on behalf of Leah's birth, a tradition in our congregation). Luke grabbed the rose and took off. Not thirty seconds later it looked like the photo at the top of this blog entry. I guess Leah should get used to her gifts being presented in pieces.

Our kind neighbors and friends didn't say a word about the chaos. I'm guessing they won't believe me the next time I insist that we're fine---because thanks to all of the prayers said on our behalf, we are.

Well, the prayers plus my seriously low expectations.

Special thanks to Maureen, the source of my mantra. :)




countdown







Dan has 37 weeks left in his fellowship.

Baby Leah is 3 weeks old! :)

Hope you're all staying healthy! We're keeping the hand sanitizer manufacturers afloat all by ourselves around here!

Cheers,
Team Fulkerson

Monday, October 5, 2009

countdown


Dan has 38 weeks left in his fellowship.
Leah is 2 weeks old. :)

Have a fantastic week, everyone!

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Cheer, cheer for old Notre Dame!

I can't remember how Dan managed to get this photo, but this is our own Dan with (then football coach) Lou Holtz.

In Lou's office.

At Notre Dame.

Cool, eh?

Fall Saturdays always make Team Fulkerson long to be back in South Bend, Indiana.

Go Irish!