Sunday, August 28, 2011

Instagram-"ing" Our Life

So for the last several months I had seen people on facebook post pics using some app called instagram....well, honestly, I was a little annoyed.  I was like "just post the picture".... nothing fancy.  Well, I got a new phone and I must apologize....because these "fancy" pictures are fun.  Here is a week in instagram.

 the quietest time of the day....and the most precious
 loving the candy canisters at Sweet CeCe's
 Chocolate covered banana at Comfy Cow (yeah we are sweets kind of family....or mommy rather)
 Chillin' at Cardinal Towne
Rockin' the nautical hoodie

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Zoo, Zoo, Zoo

We spent a few hours of my day off this week with the Brown family who I talked about two posts ago.  Tedi enjoyed the water park and playing with their boys, Kenenisa and Chera.  Enjoy a couple of pics.


 Chera in orange and Tedi in yellow


Monday, August 22, 2011

City of Addis...... how will you change the world

Welcome Home Brown Family

Our friends Justin and Donna Brown had no children this time last year.  They were anxiously waiting bringing home their daughter, Zoey Hiwot, from Ethiopia while their paper work on their sons, Chera and Kenenisa, drug on in Ethiopia.  Zoey came home in December 2010 and their sons were still not here.  Into the spring of 2011, they found out they were pregnant.  Their son, Asher, was born in July 2011.  FINALLY, almost three years after starting the adoption process to bring home their sons, Chera and Kenenisa walked down an escalator in Louisville, Kentucky.  You read correctly.  They had zero children this time last year, and now they have a 1 month old, an almost 2 year old, a 4 year old and almost 7 year old.  We rejoice with this sweet family.  JT even had the opportunity to meet the boys and Zoey while they were still Ethiopia last July.  The pictures below are from the airport on Satruday night.  This is the best part of adoption....celebrating with others.

 Loving the Escalator
Tedi and Dawit....

 Justin with Kenenisa to his right, holding Zoey with baby Asher (with their friend's son)
Chera, the oldest, hugging Tedi...
 (he hugged everyone but Tedi was a little shy)

First Day of Pre-K

Who is this boy?  I am not quite sure.  There is an undeniable difference in the small child who started pre school last year.  

Our goals for school last year:
1) Learn our colors (we thought he was color blind....who was I kidding...he now knows 'tan', 'beige')
2) Share  (we are working on this but much improved)
3) Write our name (not absolutely there but getting there)

Now, a year later, he told us he liked school.  He came home and could count to ten in SPANISH today.  I think that would be his fourth language (tribal language, Amharic, English...)  His teacher, Senor Pete, taught him this.  I wish you could hear him say "Senor Pete." It was so funny and cute.  Unfortunately, I was unable to be there to take him to school...you know, that work thing.  BUT his fabulous daddy took some great pics for us to cherish.  Check out the difference.  Look what some love, some food, and some time can do for a child.  Man, we are lucky parents!


August 24, 2010
First day of pre-school


August 22, 2011
First Day of Pre-K

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Collateral Damage

I read an article the other day on a friend's facebook discussing how UNICEF is against international adoption in order to keep children in their home country. The author of the article discussed how children in these countries are often "collateral damage" for the sins and choices of adults....

....the children in the African horn, specifically Somalia, are dying because of war and fighting and famine.  I do not claim to know the politics of Eastern Africa, but as I watch Anderson Cooper's special on the healtcare and death in the region, my heart aches.  Not only do I ache watching this for the 600,000 children that are dying, the children so malnourished I can see their bones.... but I ache thinking of my own son's birthplace, his birth family.  Even now, children are being prohibited from getting vaccines, thus dying of preventable diseases like measles.  And here we are as a world.  Here we are with dead children.  Children without parents.  The drought...maybe not of man.  But the death, death from starvation.  Bono said it best on the program, "You can blame droughts on God, but famine is man made.  We know how fix this."  Children are the collateral damage in this world crisis.

....but this is not a "developing" country problem alone.  Unfortunately in my job (as a pediatric resident at a children's hospital), children are the collateral damage from our choices... who is injured in the car accident when the adult is intoxicated.  After the economy crashes and people lose jobs and tempers flair.....who are the victims....victims of abuse.  Think about it.  Every choice we make affects other people, no doubt.  However, children, the most vulnerable, are the most affected....every decision we make can affect our children, and not just our children but the ones around us... When we text and drive and wreck into someone else's car....when we are frustrated and selfish and do not tip as well as we should, the waitress may be short on her normal food budget....when we turn our back to children starving worlds away because the aren't "our children", children die. 

Collateral damage.  I do not know how to fix it but I know it is enough to make you think.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Soccer Man

I know, I know.  I have been a bad blogger.  I am not quite sure why I have been so absent because I love blogging.  I keep writing all kinds of blogs in my head.  There is one that I keep writing over and over and am sure it will be posted soon!  In the meantime, we have been busy around here...

Tedi spent the end of June and three weeks of July taking swimming lessons.  He went four days each week, and though he continues to protest that he needs his swimmies, he does quite well.  He also went to four days of soccer at Mockingbird Soccer Camp, thanks to his Granny Sylvia.  He was so excited for soccer.... Well, day 1 came with some issues.  I showed up thirty minutes early to watch to find my son not listening to the coach, ending up in time out.  (Thankfully the coach believed in discipline.)  I took him to JT's office where he got a talking to...I will admit it; I was upset.  Tedi knew it.  Well, the next day, he apologized to his teacher and his babysitter made sure he listened.  He came home that night and told me how he listened and hoped we were happy.  I do not want him to do things to "please" but he does have the kindest heart.  I love this little man and his wonderful heart! 


Tedi also went to bible school with his "favorite cousin" Grant.  He loved the Panda theme seeing as how he loves Kung Fu Panda.  The last day they made panda masks.... He and Grant were too cute even if they have looked a little bit like bank robbers! 

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Fab Friday: Organization Style

In my quest to get organized, I could not afford the wall organization system designed by Pottery Barn... So I thought I could do a few things to be MORE organized.  Though some are repetitive, at least I am trying and making an effort.  Maybe in another year, I will get there....

1) Dry Erase Board: Hanging in our kitchen is a board similar to this.  We do not keep it up as we should.  It serves more for funny quotes for friends and grocery lists....but it was a start.
2) Lilly Pulizter Agenda:  In college, I kept a planner that they gave us at orientation.  Then I stopped...but I gave my friends a hard time about theirs.  My friend and Tedi's babysitter, Taryn, is a fan of the Lilly Pulitzer agenga, shown below.  Not just are their cute designs but the insides are super functional.  I am hoping to buy one very soon....I may even steal the design of the one she picked.


3) 3 Ring Binders: Simple but so helpful.  My friend at work, Cathy, was always giving a hard time about being successfully unorganized.  Well, since I have started my research for residency, I have invested in a three ring binder.... and it has helped with containing my research and such. 

4) This Man:  Yes, I admit it.... JT is part of the reason I keep it together.  He is mosly organized at home and subperbly at work...Even tonight, he made me rearrange the living and move our desk into the living room....and made it work.  I love him, even when his organization drives me nuts... :-)


5) Google Calendar:  Until I get my hands on a planner (see above), I will settle for google calendar.  It is quite handy and even provides pop-ups on the ole' cell phone. 

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Congo T-Shirts

Our friends from college, The Borders, are adopting from the Congo.  They are amazing because they already have 2 year old twins at home!  They are running their tshirts at $15 now which is a discount.  Head over to http://borderspatrol.blogspot.com/ to get one yourself.


T-shirts are Hanes 50/50 blend.
Sizes left:
9 Large
12 X-Large
5 2XL
1 3XL

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Absent

I have not known what to write lately..... well that is false.  There has been tons to write about but I never seemed be able to put it into type.  There are times when I find writing cathartic and sharing important....and others where I need to sit upon the feelings...mulling them over in my head....times like these when I am contemplating the loss of a dear patient and another family member, witnessing harsh abuse, and trying to make life decisions, both professional and personal.  Theses combinations cause silence....that is where I have been.  Absently present in my own head.

We have not been up to much in the Henderson house otherwise......well other than me working nights (ED and moonlighting) while JT makes everything run.  He is so good to me.  I promise to blog more very soon...I have some good ideas saved up 
~nat

Friday, July 8, 2011

A Year in Pictures

This is a twelve minute video of pictures and clips from the last year. Enjoy, if you have time, because this is something I deeply cherish and want to share.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Evolution of Our Family: 1 Year Later



Our First Family Picture
July 3, 2010

One Year Later
July 3, 2011

Yes, it has been one year since Tedi came home.  Can you believe it?  We can't.  I had the last few days off so we drove to visit my mom and then my dad.  It was relaxing family time together.  (more pictures of that are too come.) My heart is so full with joy tonight....one year after bringing Tedi home.  As I tucked Tedi into bed tonight, I was overwhelmed.  Just holding him almost made me cry.  I feel asleep next to him and have never felt better.  Earlier today, I watched videos of this time last year...Tedi not even able to speak English other than Mommy or Daddy as a whisper while in the background he is yelling for me to do this or that...all in English.  People would tell us that things would change quickly.  He would speak English before we knew it.  I did not believe but oh how it is true....oh how he has changed.  I know you are thinking "Why can't she have more to say about this when she writes so much all other times"  Well....when you are here, then you will understand.  Tomorrow will be a fun video.. Stay Tuned.


Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Meeting Daddy

This is what happened one year ago today.  I was in Louisville, trying to sleep as it was 3am in KY, though I was waiting on the "call" to know JT had Tedi.  It never came because of poor service... Finally I called...(see second picture below)...Tedi would talk on the phone, and rarely does now, but to know he was there and with JT was amazing.  Our cell phone bill that week was so expensive because I could not stand to know that my son was without me... The picture below of JT and Tedi is one I will cherish my entire life.   



First Time Tedi Talked to Me.... he thought I was crazy

Monday, June 27, 2011

Cuteness

 A few pictures from his last few days with mommy.... Gotta love his Run DMC shirt (JT has a matching one)






Sunday, June 26, 2011

Erasing Hate

As I write this, JT and I are watching an msNBC documetary about a former skinhead racist with body-covering tattoos.  Tonight is the first night this special aired but the link, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036750/, (or watch the clip below) shows a clip and small article about the documentary.  Please check this out.  I find it unfathomable that such deep seeded hate exists in the heart of anyone.  It is both an eye-opening and interesting story while showing the slow redemption of someone once consumed by hate.  I also feel convicted because I am so guilty to look at someone like the man featured here, with his face covered in tattoos, and instantly judge without knowing him....knowing his story.  So while it is easy to sit and judge this man and this culture, it also forces you to look inward.  I would normally say "enjoy" but rather, this time "learn".


51 Weeks

Tedi has been in our family for fifty one weeks.  Yes, this time last year JT was in Ethiopia... (i was crying nightly and starting residency)..  Be ready for some cute posts coming up!

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Organization Wanted.....Needed

 So, let's be real.  I am not organized.  It has even turned into a joke on my NICU rotation.  I still do my work efficiently without issue, but I am not the girl with the 3-ring binder, divided into sections for each patient.  I am not the person with an organized office.  I do not have a closet system....my clothes are a HOT MESS in the bedroom floor.  Tedi's toys are pseudo-organized.  My car, well, that is a different story.  Just ask my dad. 

Well, I am trying to slowly morph into a more organized person for multiple reasons.....to pay bills ahead of time, to avoid messes on our entry table, to coordinate our ridiculous schedules, to be a better mom and wife, and to just feel better each day when I walk into our house...  Sarah had Pottery Barn catalogs and I caught a glimpse of the below pictures....  I can not afford these but they are beautiful and, in theory, they would make my organizational world better.... maybe I can piece these together, TJ Maxx and gifted style, along the way....  (but I did organize books, mail, and my bathroom storage tonight...so there is a start.  Goal for this week: clean the car to find Dr. Franco's video, put up dad's wine from the car, and organize the closet)
I will welcome these as a wonderful gift :-)



And this, or something similar, is definitely something that will be present in my future organized house.....but this is just for being "home-y" 

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Father....not a DNA-Dependent Relationship


I see so many men...well I really do not see them because they are not around.....that provide their DNA for my patients but never love or provide for them.  Yet, I meet men whose DNA composes no child and still they love them, raise them, and FATHER them.  Therefore, father is a relative term....not one necessitated upon biology but rather on love, sacrifice, and teaching.  Fathers, whether stepfathers, adoptive fathers, biological father, or otherwise, make such a huge difference in the lives of the children in which they involve themselves.  We look around at society and wonder why children act the way do....I would contend that there are a lot more single moms or even married ladies trying to do the job of a man and woman.  While us women are strong, enduring creatures, fathers, real father figures, play a unique role in a child's life, and their absence can devastate and destroy the path of a child, a culture if some intercession is not made. 


I say all of this as preface to my real point.  I, unlike so many people I meet daily, am lucky.  I have a father, a daddy, that loves me daily and unconditionally.  I have a step-father who loves me as if I were his child by birth.  I have husband who has transformed into a fantastic father.  I would like to take today's post and briefly honor the fathers in my life....


1) Bob, my step-father
My mom married Bob when I was in the fifth grade.  Tough year for any change, much less a family change.  He has been around ever since.  He showed up when I started my period at school just a few months after he joined our family, cheered at most of my basketball games through high school, and was present at my wedding.  I can think of such funny stories with Bob.....like him being brought along for many day long shopping trips with my mom or hiding the phone from us because we always left it off the hook or honking the horn for 20+ seconds as I walked into junior high school.  If you asked me to think of Bob, I would see him in a polo shirt, khakis and loafers, all neatly ironed with creases....probably playing golf, talking politics or now, being silly with Tedi.  I love him very much.... below is that very thing, Bob being very silly with Tedi...pretending to be a walrus.


2. Jimmy, my father in law
My father in law was not raised by men.  He lost his father as a toddler then his grandfather as a very young boy.  His mother also died when he was a toddler.  Raised by his aunt and his grandmother, he still became a strong man, father and leader of his house.  In his retirement, he has forfeited golfing and sleep to spend time with my son.  Never complaining, he participates in car pool and still goes to construction sites to throw rocks and play in water.   I deeply admire Jimmy for the way he raised my husband and how he loves my son. 

3.  My Dad
I love my dad.  He is the hardest working man I know and demands nothing less from me.  Maybe working these 30 hour shifts is tolerable because of what he taught me.  He had no option but to work hard.  He was the 13th of 15 children to parents that were tenant farmers in rural Tennessee.  He started working at twelve years old, the age when many now have iPhones.  He was in the Navy and thereafter began working for State Farm Insurance without a college degree.  He has worked his tail off for everything he has.  He loves me and my sister unconditionally.  He is even getting to where he loves JT, I think :-)  It is amazing to see him now as he loves on Tedi and to hear Tedi say "That's MY grandpa Kevin!"  When I think of my dad, I hear Mark Cohn's "Walking in Memphis" playing in the background. We are sitting on the boat listening to Zac Brown Band or our shared love for diet Mtn Dew or his fudge or any of his cooking really.  I hear him saying "Now sis..." or  "I'm not trying to be mean, I'm just sayin' " or "You're my girl".  There is so much I think of when I think of my dad.  More than anything I am just thankful to have been gifted with such a man when so many children are not.


4.  JT, my dear husband
This is the first year that my man and my partner is a daddy.  Together we became parents this year...not by creating a little bitty baby inside of me but adopting one of the most beautiful, fun boys I have ever met.  A perfect fit for our family.....God knew what he was doing when Tedi became part of our family almost a year ago.  JT is so patient with Tedi.....especially when I am not.  He teaches him to change light bulbs and fix vents and to tell his mommy she is pretty even when she is not and to hold doors open for ladies and to say his prayers as night and to love Jesus and give kisses and to follow directions the first time (working on this).... all of this and so much more make JT an unbelievable father.  I fall more in love with him each time I watch him with Tedi.  We did not know we could love someone so much until Tedi joined our family...making us parents and yet better people.  I love my husband so much and even more now that he is a daddy.  When I think of JT, I hear Notorious B.I.G. and Conway Twittytshirts.  I hear more loud singing and conversations.  I see my life being lived one day at a time for the rest of my days.  I see a father to more children than Tedi. 




"I used to believe my father about everything but then I had children myself & now I see how much stuff you make up just to keep yourself from going crazy." ~storypeople.com

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Eulogizing......my way.

A man I loved left the world late Tuesday night.  I met him when I was in sixth grade.  I was standing on the newly poured concrete basement foundation of my dad's house in Hustonville, Kentucky. I stood facing south (I think) watching this red headed girl about my age with her parents standing on the foundation of their house, also on Hancock Street.  My stepmother at the time was a teacher at the school in Hustonville and knew this family well.  We walked down the then gravel road and met the Luttrell family.  Both around 12 years old at the time, Sarah and I stared more at our feet than talking to each other.  We both had those bad mid-90s, for lack of a better term, "turd-roll" bangs.  It was on that day I met Steve, Sarah's dad, and her mom Cynthia.  Little did I know on that day in sixth grade that Sarah and I would become best friends, not just in junior and high school, but now as adults. 

Steve ended his long battle with multiple myeloma on Tuesday night at the young age of fifty-seven.  Ever by his side, Sarah and Cynthia sat.  As devastated and heart broken as I was to hear the news, I could not fathom the million pieces my best friend's heart was breaking into.  She, like her father, are always strong, driven and focused.  Losing him is losing her second self....and yet her best friend. 

Sarah is an only child and a girl.  Her gender did not matter to Steve.  He bestowed upon her his love of cars... I never remember the Luttrells having less than three cars at their house at any given time.  Steve's mustang, Steve's Jimmy, Sarah's Pontiac after we were 16, and then Cynthia's car, which varied between a hunter green Mercury Sable, a white mini van, and a gray Jeep Cherokee.  It was in that Jeep Cherokee that we drove to many cheerleading tournaments...me of course watching because THAT was not my thing...Steve and I would sit and complain but cheer Sarah on, nonetheless.  He also imparted his love for golf to Sarah.  Remember I said they are both stubborn....(strong-willed :-)  Well, I only golfed to get out of basketball conditioning and so that Sarah and I could hang out more.  I remember being privy to several trips to Hickory Hills golf course in Liberty, KY with Steve and Sarah.... by the end, they would be so frustrated with each other, one was throwing their hands in the air.  Yet, every golf match we ever played Steve meandered hole to hole, not only watching Sarah but me and our friend Gentry as well.....offering encouragement and pointers when our own parents could not be there.

The world took back a special man this week, though one that needed not to suffer any longer.  We will all laugh a little less because of Steve's absence but enjoy who he is by living life with his wife and daughter....by enjoying his collection of antique barber chairs and the Mustang and his manicured yard and his stories of hitchhiking while in his 20s, remembering dinner at their house with my new husband or the time JT showed up to visit without me... and Cynthia was in her robe and Steve laughing so hard at this, or explaining our whereabouts in high school multiple times...always being caught.  I will remember Steve and Cynthia (and Sarah) driving to Bowling Green, KY and sitting in 100 degree heat to watch me graduate from college.  Who does that????

I pray for their hearts' grief yet I always pray they see the deep impact that permeated wherever Steve went...the effect he had on many beyond him.  I pray that the Lord comforts Cynthia after losing a husband of many years and Sarah for the loss of her daddy during the week of Father's Day.  But I hope they know this.....Steve lived well and Steve lived on purpose.  That can not be taken back.  That is not stolen by the grave.  I loved this man and considered him family .  I write both the funny and sad of this post with a huge "I'm on call and crying would be awkward" lump in my throat.  Please pray for the Luttrells as they endure the funeral proceedings....and then try to live life.  I love these people so please love on them in your prayers. 


"I still remember the day the world took you back & there was never time to thank you for the thousand scattered moments you left behind to watch us while we slept" ~storypeople.com


Steven Randall Luttrell

349 Days....

.... is how long my son has been home from Ethiopia.  I can not believe it myself.  Within a week of coming home, we took Tedi for his first checkup with the doctor (shocker, since I am a pediatrician myself).  At that time, he weighed 36lbs and was 39 inches tall.... Going with the birth date we were given (making him three and a half at his appointment), his weight was 75% for age and height was 50%.  Yesterday, 348 days after coming home, that boy weight 43.8 pounds and was 45.5 inches tall.......meaning he was between the 75-90% for weight and >95% for height with a BMI of 15.5 (50%)...again, I am in peds so cut me some slack with the percentiles. I do plot my own kid's growth.  YES, he GREW 6.5 inches in a little less than a year.  I can not even believe it....I guess all that bone growth weighs a lot because he is still as thin and athletic as ever.  Do I think he is truly four and a half years old....probably not.... Are we sticking with that age? Yes.  We understand the Ethiopian dating system is not always accurate..... so my son will always be that kid with his height beyond the growth chart.... It is amazing what love and food can do.  I am not sure in his previous arrangements he could have managed to grow that much in one year. Before you know it, he will be taller than me.