by Catherine | Feb 6, 2013 | Faith, Family, Marriage
Losing our baby Thérèse changed me. Some of the ways are obvious, and others sneak up on me and take my breath away. Although it was the most painful experience I have ever gone through (and am still going through), I can’t thank God enough for giving our family that precious, little, innocent saint. I think about her a lot, and I pray to her throughout the day as I wash dishes, play with the kids, or do the countless mundane tasks that make up my days.
Sometimes, I’ll get a little reminder that if things had gone differently, she would still be with me. In my tummy. Kicking. We would be anxiously awaiting her arrival on her due date, May 20, 2013. For whatever reason, it wasn’t part of the plan–His plan. I still don’t understand the plan or even pretend to wrap my mind around it. Instead, I’m learning to stop planning, controlling, and allow God to take my roller coaster ride up and down and up and down. For this Type A Martha girl, that is no easy task! Good Father that He is, God knew I needed to learn to let Him take the reigns.
On November 2, All Souls Day, we learned on ultrasound that our precious baby was dead. I started to miscarry at home the evening of November 4. As things progressed and my blood loss became dangerous, I ended up having an emergency D&C in the wee hours of the morning on November 5. The next weeks consisted of regaining my strength, getting a blood transfusion, squeezing the stuffing out of Jane and Walt, and busily preparing for hosting Thanksgiving. I was grateful for the distraction of a major holiday!
A week before Thanksgiving at my two-week follow-up appointment after my D&C, my OB said that my exam was normal and that I was healthy. He gave us the all-clear to resume marital activities, but he recommended waiting three months before trying to conceive again. The thought of waiting three months was agony, but wait we must. He said to anticipate my cycle returning 4-6 weeks after my D&C. We decided not to start charting again until that time came.
A few nights after my follow-up OB appointment and before my cycle returned, Philip and I cried our eyes out after the kids went to bed. We talked about missing Thérèse, how much we loved Jane and Walt, and how much we desperately wanted to have another baby. We held each other and said we were ready for another baby whenever God would send us that blessing. That night, we decided we to open ourselves to the possibility of a new baby, as unlikely as that would be. After that night, we said we would follow my doctor’s instructions to avoid a pregnancy for three months.
Thanksgiving came and went. We made plans to gather our family to pray the Glorious Mysteries of the Rosary for Thérèse on December 9. The week of the Rosary, something wasn’t right. I was moody and weepier than I had been, my breasts were leaking colostrum, and I had some abdominal cramping. Noooooooooooo, I thought. This must be from the miscarriage. My body must be hanging on to the hormones, and it must take awhile for all of the pregnancy symptoms to subside. Still…
December 4, exactly one month to the day after I started to miscarry Thérèse, I told Philip that it was crazy, but that I thought I might be pregnant. We decided to take a pregnancy test to confirm that we weren’t. Before I took it, we discussed the possibility that a positive did not necessarily indicate pregnancy, but that the residual hormones from my previous pregnancy with Thérèse could create a false positive. With this in mind, I went to take the test. Instantly, the test was positive. I had to take a picture so that I would still believe the results long after the test faded.
“Oh, God,” I prayed, “Please guard my heart and give me the strength to accept whatever this means.” Just like any other time I took a pregnancy test, I brought it out to show Philip. We cried our happy tears, and we instantly told each other not to get our hopes up. It was well after office hours, so I waited to call my OB until the next morning.
First thing in the morning, I called my OB’s office, and I asked to speak with my OB’s amazing nurse. I’ll never forget her for hugging me in the ultrasound room when we found out that Thérèse had died and for helping me through the whole process. Let’s call the sweet nurse Allison.
“Allison,” I said, “I took a pregnancy test, and it was positive.”
In her usual calm manner, she said, “Oh…well…did you have unprotected sex?”
I felt like a promiscuous teenager answering that question. “Yes…but only once!” I said.
“Well,” she laughed, “that’s all it takes!”
As I expected, she was careful with her words from there. She instructed me to come in for a blood draw to check my HCG levels. “Then, you’ll come back 48 hours later. If the levels have at least doubled, that indicates that you are pregnant. If the levels don’t increase that much, it indicates that you may have some retaining fetal tissue, or you may just have some residual hormones.”
I couldn’t wait, so I went in to the lab that afternoon, December 5, before the kids’ naptime to get a blood draw. The results came back hours later, and I got a phone call from Allison.
“Your HCG level is ___.” I can’t remember what the number was. I said, “Ok, so translate for me. What are we working with?” In typical Allison fashion, she said, “Well, it’s elevated. So, it’s hard to say for sure at this point. We’ll have to wait until your 48-hour blood draw to know for sure. It’s definitely in the range for a positive pregnancy test, but we won’t know for sure until after your second blood draw.”
So, I went in for my second blood draw on December 7. It was a Friday, and I was so nervous that I wasn’t going to get the results before the weekend! Right before 5, Allison called.
“Catherine? It’s Allison. I have the results of your blood test. Your HCG level is ____.”
The number was much, much higher than the first test. It had more than tripled!
“So, what does that mean?” I asked.
“It means I think you’re pregnant. Congratulations!”
“Really?! Really?! Oh my goodness. I can’t believe it!” Of course, I was trying to keep myself composed over the phone, but I was sobbing at this point.
Allison told me to make an appointment for an ultrasound at 5 weeks to confirm the pregnancy. I thanked her, she congratulated me again, and I hung up the phone.
Then, the weight of it all sunk in.
I’m pregnant.
I got pregnant two weeks after we lost Thérèse.
We are having a Rosary for Thérèse in two days.
It was a bizarre time emotionally. We wrestled with sharing the news with our families at the Rosary, but we decided to wait until we could see a heartbeat on ultrasound and confirm that everything was okay. So, we had a beautiful day celebrating our baby Thérèse in prayer. The day was even sweeter knowing that I could ask for Thérèse’s intercession for her baby brother or sister. “Please,” I prayed. “Please, I don’t know if I can take losing another baby right now. Please let us keep this baby.”
The days c…r…a…w…l…e…d by until my ultrasound. The day finally came, but I ended up having to reschedule because of a snowstorm. By the time I had the ultrasound, I was nearly 6 weeks along according to our estimates.
I confided in a friend what was going on, and she offered to watch the kids so that Philip and I could go to the appointment by ourselves. We didn’t think we could endure hearing that we had lost another baby with them in the room.
The same ultrasound tech that told us Thérèse had died was performing this ultrasound. I told her I was nervous and that I wanted to know exactly what I should anticipate seeing on the screen before we began. “We think you’re only 5 weeks and 6 days, so it’s probably too early to see a heartbeat, and the baby will be very, very tiny.” I prayed to the Blessed Mother to give me the strength I needed to endure whatever she told us. Before scanning my uterus, she examined my ovaries and looked over everything else to make sure it was as it should be. My right ovary showed signs that it had recently ovulated. Good! Oh, the waiting was agony. When the image of my uterus came into view, we instantly saw a tiny, tiny baby. Then, I noticed the fluttering. “That’s the baby’s heartbeat,” said the ultrasound tech.
Philip squeezed my shoulders.
Tears streamed down my cheeks. It was difficult to see the screen.
The baby’s heartbeat!
We had never even seen Thérèse’s heartbeat!
This baby has a heartbeat!
The baby is okay!
I’m really pregnant!
The ultrasound tech took some measurements and took the baby’s heart rate. The baby measured just 3mm and had a heartbeat! Amazing! The baby measured right on target with the dates we provided my OB. Without an LMP (last menstrual period) to date the pregnancy, my OB had to rely on the information that we were only together once two weeks after my D&C. If I ovulated two weeks after my D&C, that would coincide with the date we gave him. The ultrasound confirmed what we thought was impossible–we got pregnant with this baby two weeks after we lost Thérèse.
After seeing the heartbeat on ultrasound, we decided we would announce the news to our families at Christmastime. After the ultrasound, Philip and I went to get a bite to eat in the hospital cafeteria. I’ll never forget the date of the ultrasound (Friday, December 14) because I watched the news about the Newtown, Connecticut shooting come on the cafeteria tv as I waited for Philip to pick up our order.) We were numb from the news. We couldn’t believe we were really pregnant, that we saw a heartbeat, and that all signs pointed to everything being okay.
I popped into the restroom on our way to the car. Then, the unthinkable happened. There was blood. I told Philip I thought it was probably from the ultrasound and that I’d call my OB if it got worse. It got worse as the day went on, but it eventually went away. A few days later, I had another bleeding episode. This time, I thought for sure that the baby was gone. I called my OB, and they had me come in
on December 21 for another ultrasound to check on the baby. Despite the bleeding, all was well. The first bleeding episode was likely from the ultrasound and a little implantation bleeding. We’re still not sure what caused the second bleeding episode, but it was short-lived and considered normal first trimester bleeding. Ugh! I thought I was losing the baby every time I saw blood. I thought I was re-living losing Thérèse.
With the good news that all was well with Baby, we told our families around Christmas that we were pregnant. They were as surprised as we were, but they congratulated us and assured us of their prayers for this baby.
I had another appointment January 10, and Baby looked great on ultrasound. After that appointment, I started to absorb that I was really pregnant. I was cautiously optimistic, but I wasn’t ready to share the news with the world yet.
I didn’t have another appointment until January 31. I was nearly at the 12-week mark, so it was supposed to be a quick appointment with a check of my vitals and a quick listen to Baby’s heartbeat on the doppler.
Days before that ultrasound, my good friend (the same friend who watched the kids for the first ultrasound) met me for dessert. She asked me how I was doing and mentioned Thérèse. Instantly, I burst into tears. I realized I hadn’t even asked myself how I was doing in a long time and that I was so preoccupied with this pregnancy that I hadn’t allowed myself to grieve, process, or do much beyond get through the long days with “morning” sickness, Philip’s rotten schedule that month, or worry about the unknowns with this pregnancy.
After I got home from my dessert date with my friend, Philip and I had a great talk on the couch and checked in with one another emotionally for the first time in probably a month. That’s how it is with good friends–they prompt you to make your marriage better. Philip and I had been so consumed with the holidays and just being in survival mode that we had put the grieving process on hold. Thank goodness for good friends that help put us back on track!
Philip and I held hands on the couch and cried as we talked about missing Thérèse, worrying about this baby, and being tired of residency’s crazy hours. I confided in Philip that I was convinced there was something wrong with the baby and that I was ready for the worst at my ultrasound. He said he understood why I was worried, but he reminded me of all of the positive signs we had from previous appointments that pointed to things being okay.
When the ultrasound rolled around a few days later, Philip was able to come at the last minute because of some very sweet attending doctors on his rotation. God bless them! Thank goodness he came because it was a stressful appointment. My vitals all looked good. When it came time to listen to Baby’s heartbeat on the doppler, the appointment got scary. I prayed the entire time my OB scanned my belly with the doppler. After searching for two minutes, my OB couldn’t find a heartbeat. Very calmly, he said, “Let’s go across the hall and take a peek on the ultrasound.” Those were his exact words at my 12-week appointment with Thérèse before we saw that she had died. I told myself that the baby was gone.
We settled in to the ultrasound room, and the image on the screen came into view. Instantly, we saw a perfectly formed little baby with a fluttering heart. In fact, he or she kicked off of my uterine wall throughout the exam and made it very difficult for my OB to take any measurements. Baby’s heart rate was right on target (161), and Baby measured 11 weeks and 5 days–exactly how far along I was that day! I told my OB how nervous he made me when he couldn’t find the heart rate. He assured me that my chances of miscarrying after that appointment were very, very low, and that Baby looked great. He said to feel good about things, and I finally believed him.
After receiving confirmation that Baby was okay and that everything looked great, we decided to share the news with the rest of our friends and extended family. We posted this picture of Walt getting an “Eviction Notice” from the nursery on Facebook. He was ready for his morning nap, and we took his pacifier away, so it was easy to capture a sad pout from him.
Since November, I’ve felt that my life has been in a holding pattern. Not a day goes by that I don’t fear losing Baby, but I’m finally allowing myself to make an emotional connection. I’m finally finding myself thinking about Baby as a part of this family and imagining him or her with us in August.
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12-week belly shot |
God is teaching me each day to relinquish control, live in the present, and trust. I’m learning to trust that He will guide the roller coaster ride I’m on through all of the scary twists and turns to a safe return home. Some days, I’m white-knuckled and feel as though I’m going to be sick (some days literally!). Other days, I allow myself to enjoy the rush as I anticipate the next curve. Losing Thérèse taught me that our lives are completely out of my hands. God will give. God will take. God will be there to love me through it all. I need only entrust myself and our family to Him. The trouble is, I forget this reality and fall into the trap of thinking our lives are in my control. Usually, God swiftly returns me to my knees where I belong when that happens.
I am so grateful for the gift of my Catholic Faith throughout these last several months. Without the belief that our baby Thérèse is a saint in heaven
that can intercede on behalf of our family, enduring losing her and thinking that we were losing this baby would be unbearable. I can’t help but think that without Thérèse dying, we would never have the precious baby growing inside of me. It is bittersweet to think that this baby is due three months after Thérèse would have been born. My greatest hope as a parent is to get our family to heaven. Thinking that we already have one member there is all the incentive we need to keep working toward that goal.
I’m reading Kimberly Hahn’s book Beloved and Blessed. She recounts a conversation with her son, Joseph, when he realized his mom miscarried two babies before him.
“How soon did the baby die before you conceived me?”
“Joseph, I miscarried just weeks before we conceived you.”
“So if that baby had not died, I wouldn’t be here, would I?”
“No, Joseph.”
Joseph thought for a moment, and he shared this profound thought: “Mom, I’m sorry the other baby died, but this way you get to have us both!”
I love everything about that passage! How lucky am I that I get to have BOTH my saint Thérèse in heaven AND this precious baby growing inside of me?! Amazing!
So, I’m getting on with the business of remembering that we are blessed and that God want us to be happy. Sure, I’ll continue to grieve and cry for the baby I never held, but I’m not a bad mother for being happy or even for forgetting about Thérèse from time to time. After all, God’s taking care of her. She’s in far better hands with Him anyway!
Meanwhile, the precious babies we already have are helping me to remember just how blessed we are. The day after my ultrasound, Jane was looking at my belly as I got dressed.
Me: Did we get to see Baby yesterday on the tv?
Jane: Yes.
Me: Wasn’t the baby so cute?!
Jane: No, Mama. The baby isn’t cute.
I was momentarily saddened by Janie’s response. Of course the baby was cute! Perhaps this was just a little sibling jealousy coming out.
Jane: Babies aren’t cute; they’re perfect. Pets are cute, Mama. Babies are perfect.
Out of the mouths of babes! She’s right, you know. What a supreme blessing and honor that humans are made in the image and likeness of God. Regardless of what lies ahead with this pregnancy (or any pregnancy), the babies are perfect because they are made exactly as God intended–with an immortal soul that He hopes will be returned to Him. If we get to keep this baby, Thérèse taught me the time will only be “on loan,” and that it is my job to return all of my babies to their Father. I know she will help me to do just that.
I hope I make you proud, Thérèse! I miss you everyday. Please pray for us.
by Catherine | Sep 14, 2012 | Faith, Family, Marriage, The Homefront
August was a dry spell for me–emotionally, physically, spiritually. I’m calling September my recovery month!
Philip, amazing husband and pediatric resident, was working a month of nights. Despite all of his best efforts to make the month a painless one, it was difficult. If this makes any sense, I felt like a married but single mom. Philip needed his rest during the day, did his best to spend a few hours with me and the kids between naps, and left for the hospital in the late afternoon. The evenings were long, and after the kids went to bed, I was left to my own devices–to do some housework, bake, or prep the next day’s meal. When I was feeling less than industrious, which was more often than not, I wasted too much time on the Internet, read, or indulged in the occasional pity party.
I developed a lot of bad habits that month. I neglected my afternoon prayer during the kids’ naptime. I justified it, telling myself it was important to take a nap with Philip and spend some time with him that way–even if we were just sleeping next to each other. I stayed up way too late in the evenings, playing on Pinterest, checking Facebook, or reading articles online because I struggled to sleep without Philip home. I let the kids watch too much television. I justified it because, for that month, I was a single mom who was just doing the best she could. Looking back, it’s downright terrifying how easily I could justify all of those lies to myself.
Fortunately, for me and my family, the month of nights is over, and we’re getting back into our refreshingly normal, ho-hum routine. With our routine back in action, I’m trying to drop my bad habits (vices) and trying to build some good habits (virtues)! My hope is that these good habits, or virtues, will become such a part of my life that the next time a difficult patch (like a month of Philip working nights) hits, I’ll be better prepared.
The key, so far, seems to be “feeding the meters” of all areas of my life by giving them a “time-in” each day. These focused, dedicated segments of time to the different areas of my life are paying off in big ways. It seems counter-intuitive, but when I give as much of myself as I can to all areas of my life, I have more energy, and I end up accomplishing more.
I plug my spiritual meter by coming to God in dedicated prayer time. He’s never outdone in generosity! Not only do I usually walk away with a much-needed reality check, but He multiplies my time, and I almost always complete my daily do-it list after dedicated prayer time. Someday, hopefully soon, I will have enough self-discipline to wake up before the children and start my day with this dedicated prayer time.
I plug my children’s meters when I give them lavish affection, read an extra book before nap/bedtime, put a spotlight on their good behavior, embrace the mess of a new craft/baking project, or get down on the ground and join them in play. When my children receive more time-ins during the day than time-outs, I’m rewarded as a parent in two major ways:
- They return the attention with their own lavish affection.
- They “run off the fumes” of our time together and allow me to get a few things done after our time-in.
I plug my own meter emotionally by giving myself real breaks throughout the day. I thought I was getting a lot accomplished by constantly multitasking. I’m getting much more accomplished when I tackle each project one at a time and give myself two 10-minute breaks in the day (one before lunch and one before dinner). I spend my break time reading inspiring articles, checking Facebook, or adding pins on Pinterest. Rather than leave the laptop computer open on the kitchen counter all day, I created new technology boundaries. The laptop can only be open for a few reasons:
- I am taking one of my two (AM & PM) 10-minute breaks.
- I am reading a recipe online while I am making dinner.
- I am returning e-mails or other online correspondence for no longer than half an hour.
- I am blogging (with no other windows/programs open) after I complete my prayer time.
I keep my laptop closed so that I don’t see incoming e-mails, Facebook notifications, etc. I leave my daily do-it list on top of the closed laptop so that I have a visual reminder that I have other things I need to accomplish during the day before indulging in these online distractions. With my built-in breaks and a closed laptop, I don’t feel the temptation to keep up with e-mails, Facebook, Pinterest, etc. I know that I can take my break when I need it, and the time will be spent exclusively on enjoying it. With the built-in breaks, I don’t get burnt out doing everything else during the day. Without the breaks, I was getting burnt out by lunchtime and would have what I call a “Bad Mama Moment.” A “Bad Mama Moment” is doing something like losing yourself in a half an hour of Pinterest while your kids stare at the television because you haven’t taken a break all day. To keep my “Bad Mama Moments” as few and far between as possible, I set a timer for my AM and PM breaks. When I hear the timer go off after 10 minutes, I’m able to close the laptop and get back to the work of the day refreshed.
I plug our marriage meter when I help Philip to “rejoice in the wife of (his) youth.” When I do that, I am remembering to fill his meter before the children’s meters. When I make a nice meal, give him a warm welcome home, show genuine interest in his day, give him affection, suggest we do something other than watch television, and keep a firm bedtime routine with the children, I am showing Philip that I love our children, but that he is still my first priority. With self-discipline on my part, we are able to have nutritious, home-cooked dinners at least 6 nights out of the week, and the kids are asleep by 8:00 so that we can have an hour or two together before bed. With that dedicated time one-on-one, we have more energy to fill our spiritual, physical, and emotional meters together. Our prayer life together is back in full-bloom, and we feel more intimate physically and emotionally.
With the help of some truly amazing girlfriends, I am learning that it is a good, beautiful, and often necessary thing to take a break or ask for help. For example, one sweet friend brought over a coffee and watched the kids this morning so that I could run a few errands by myself. I felt like I was on vacation! When I backed out of the driveway in my minivan all by myself, I felt dangerous listening to the music a little louder than usual and luxuriously looking at clothes for myself. When I came back, the kids were happy to see me, I was refreshed, and we read every single book we checked out from the library this week before naptime just because. The time apart from each other was good for all of us, and my friend was happy to help out because she knows I’ll do the same for her whenever she needs it.
This same friend and her husband do a monthly date night swap with us. One night each month, each couple has a chance to go on a date while the other couple babysits. The babysitting couple brings their kiddos over to the other couple’s house. The kiddos play together until bedtime, and the visiting kiddos return home with their dad. The babysitting mom stays until the couple returns home. Both couples get one free date night a month, and the kiddos have another chance to see their buddies. It’s a win-win for everyone involved!
For now, this plugging the meters approach is working to build good habits in my daily life. My prayer life is better, the kids are happier, our marriage is flourishing, and I am much healthier physically and emotionally with the fun of friendships and real breaks throughout my day.
I’m still a work in progress, and I will be until the day I die, so in no way am I doing a perfect job of filling all of my life’s meters on a daily basis. Some days, I’ll do a great job of filling one meter but completely neglect others. I’m learning that everything else seems to fall in place when I keep my spiritual meter fed. God helps keep all of the other meters in perspective. So long as I’m showing God that I love Him and show the people He put in my life that I’m trying, it’s a good day.
by Catherine | Sep 14, 2012 | Faith, Family, Marriage, The Homefront
August was a dry spell for me–emotionally, physically, spiritually. I’m calling September my recovery month!
Philip, amazing husband and pediatric resident, was working a month of nights. Despite all of his best efforts to make the month a painless one, it was difficult. If this makes any sense, I felt like a married but single mom. Philip needed his rest during the day, did his best to spend a few hours with me and the kids between naps, and left for the hospital in the late afternoon. The evenings were long, and after the kids went to bed, I was left to my own devices–to do some housework, bake, or prep the next day’s meal. When I was feeling less than industrious, which was more often than not, I wasted too much time on the Internet, read, or indulged in the occasional pity party.
I developed a lot of bad habits that month. I neglected my afternoon prayer during the kids’ naptime. I justified it, telling myself it was important to take a nap with Philip and spend some time with him that way–even if we were just sleeping next to each other. I stayed up way too late in the evenings, playing on Pinterest, checking Facebook, or reading articles online because I struggled to sleep without Philip home. I let the kids watch too much television. I justified it because, for that month, I was a single mom who was just doing the best she could. Looking back, it’s downright terrifying how easily I could justify all of those lies to myself.
Fortunately, for me and my family, the month of nights is over, and we’re getting back into our refreshingly normal, ho-hum routine. With our routine back in action, I’m trying to drop my bad habits (vices) and trying to build some good habits (virtues)! My hope is that these good habits, or virtues, will become such a part of my life that the next time a difficult patch (like a month of Philip working nights) hits, I’ll be better prepared.
The key, so far, seems to be “feeding the meters” of all areas of my life by giving them a “time-in” each day. These focused, dedicated segments of time to the different areas of my life are paying off in big ways. It seems counter-intuitive, but when I give as much of myself as I can to all areas of my life, I have more energy, and I end up accomplishing more.
I plug my spiritual meter by coming to God in dedicated prayer time. He’s never outdone in generosity! Not only do I usually walk away with a much-needed reality check, but He multiplies my time, and I almost always complete my daily do-it list after dedicated prayer time. Someday, hopefully soon, I will have enough self-discipline to wake up before the children and start my day with this dedicated prayer time.
I plug my children’s meters when I give them lavish affection, read an extra book before nap/bedtime, put a spotlight on their good behavior, embrace the mess of a new craft/baking project, or get down on the ground and join them in play. When my children receive more time-ins during the day than time-outs, I’m rewarded as a parent in two major ways:
- They return the attention with their own lavish affection.
- They “run off the fumes” of our time together and allow me to get a few things done after our time-in.
I plug my own meter emotionally by giving myself real breaks throughout the day. I thought I was getting a lot accomplished by constantly multitasking. I’m getting much more accomplished when I tackle each project one at a time and give myself two 10-minute breaks in the day (one before lunch and one before dinner). I spend my break time reading inspiring articles, checking Facebook, or adding pins on Pinterest. Rather than leave the laptop computer open on the kitchen counter all day, I created new technology boundaries. The laptop can only be open for a few reasons:
- I am taking one of my two (AM & PM) 10-minute breaks.
- I am reading a recipe online while I am making dinner.
- I am returning e-mails or other online correspondence for no longer than half an hour.
- I am blogging (with no other windows/programs open) after I complete my prayer time.
I keep my laptop closed so that I don’t see incoming e-mails, Facebook notifications, etc. I leave my daily do-it list on top of the closed laptop so that I have a visual reminder that I have other things I need to accomplish during the day before indulging in these online distractions. With my built-in breaks and a closed laptop, I don’t feel the temptation to keep up with e-mails, Facebook, Pinterest, etc. I know that I can take my break when I need it, and the time will be spent exclusively on enjoying it. With the built-in breaks, I don’t get burnt out doing everything else during the day. Without the breaks, I was getting burnt out by lunchtime and would have what I call a “Bad Mama Moment.” A “Bad Mama Moment” is doing something like losing yourself in a half an hour of Pinterest while your kids stare at the television because you haven’t taken a break all day. To keep my “Bad Mama Moments” as few and far between as possible, I set a timer for my AM and PM breaks. When I hear the timer go off after 10 minutes, I’m able to close the laptop and get back to the work of the day refreshed.
I plug our marriage meter when I help Philip to “rejoice in the wife of (his) youth.” When I do that, I am remembering to fill his meter before the children’s meters. When I make a nice meal, give him a warm welcome home, show genuine interest in his day, give him affection, suggest we do something other than watch television, and keep a firm bedtime routine with the children, I am showing Philip that I love our children, but that he is still my first priority. With self-discipline on my part, we are able to have nutritious, home-cooked dinners at
least 6 nights out of the week, and the kids are asleep by 8:00 so that we can have an hour or two together before bed. With that dedicated time one-on-one, we have more energy to fill our spiritual, physical, and emotional meters together. Our prayer life together is back in full-bloom, and we feel more intimate physically and emotionally.
With the help of some truly amazing girlfriends, I am learning that it is a good, beautiful, and often necessary thing to take a break or ask for help. For example, one sweet friend brought over a coffee and watched the kids this morning so that I could run a few errands by myself. I felt like I was on vacation! When I backed out of the driveway in my minivan all by myself, I felt dangerous listening to the music a little louder than usual and luxuriously looking at clothes for myself. When I came back, the kids were happy to see me, I was refreshed, and we read every single book we checked out from the library this week before naptime just because. The time apart from each other was good for all of us, and my friend was happy to help out because she knows I’ll do the same for her whenever she needs it.
This same friend and her husband do a monthly date night swap with us. One night each month, each couple has a chance to go on a date while the other couple babysits. The babysitting couple brings their kiddos over to the other couple’s house. The kiddos play together until bedtime, and the visiting kiddos return home with their dad. The babysitting mom stays until the couple returns home. Both couples get one free date night a month, and the kiddos have another chance to see their buddies. It’s a win-win for everyone involved!
For now, this plugging the meters approach is working to build good habits in my daily life. My prayer life is better, the kids are happier, our marriage is flourishing, and I am much healthier physically and emotionally with the fun of friendships and real breaks throughout my day.
I’m still a work in progress, and I will be until the day I die, so in no way am I doing a perfect job of filling all of my life’s meters on a daily basis. Some days, I’ll do a great job of filling one meter but completely neglect others. I’m learning that everything else seems to fall in place when I keep my spiritual meter fed. God helps keep all of the other meters in perspective. So long as I’m showing God that I love Him and show the people He put in my life that I’m trying, it’s a good day.
by Catherine | Aug 17, 2012 | Marriage
|
“Foreshadowing.” Walking downtown on our wedding day as an older couple approaches. |
My little trip down memory lane to our first date made me think of the thrill of our new relationship and the butterflies from our first kiss. Seven years later, we are no doubt more in love with each other than ever. The depth of our love for one another and the intimacy that we feel physically, emotionally, and spiritually far surpasses the love we felt the day we professed our wedding vows.
However, both Philip and I will readily admit that the passion that came so easily in the beginning of our romance needs more coaxing (and even plotting!) these days. Philip has a hectic schedule as a pediatric resident. His hectic schedule translates into long hours on my end as a stay-at-home mom. Our limited time together coupled with the physical and emotional demands of raising young children, our limited finances, and our culture’s demand that our children be our top priority could be a recipe for disaster.
I’d be lying if I said that residency has been a breeze and that I love every moment of it. However, this testing time has been the source of many blessings in our marriage. I wrote in a previous post that our limited time together actually taught us to move through problems faster, get to “I’m sorry,” and spend more time together.
In learning how to be more effective communicators, we are also learning more about each other’s love languages (how each of us wants to receive love). Not surprisingly, most people show love toward others the way they want to receive love. Dr. Gary Chapman, author of The 5 Love Languages, has a website dedicated to teaching about the Love Languages. The 5 Love Language are:
- Words of affirmation
- Quality time
- Receiving gifts
- Acts of service
- Physical touch
Philip and I took the online assessment to find out what our love languages are. Here are our results:
|
Philip is on the left, I am on the right |
According to the 5 Love Languages site, most people usually fall in love with people who have completely different love languages. Not so with me and Philip! Despite independently taking the assessment, we scored almost identically. After discussing our results, it was obvious that we value words of affirmation most, then quality time, and physical touch third. Acts of service scored fairly high for me, a little lower for Philip, and receiving gifts was the lowest score for both of us. Basically, it looks like we prefer to be loved in all of the ways except for receiving gifts!
We talked about how each of us shows and receives these different love languages. We are both happy with how one another is using words of affirmation and quality time to express love. Together, we decided that we both need to do a better job of using the love language of physical touch. The 5 Love Languages site sums up Physical Touch like this:
This language isn’t all about the bedroom. A person whose primary language is Physical Touch is, not surprisingly, very touchy. Hugs, pats on the back, holding hands, and thoughtful touches on the arm, shoulder, or face—they can all be ways to show excitement, concern, care, and love. Physical presence and accessibility are crucial, while neglect or abuse can be unforgivable and destructive.
To sum up our discussion on physical touch, I asked Philip to use physical touch more often, especially in non-romantic ways. Philip asked me to use physical touch more often, especially in romantic ways.
I am reading Kimberly Hahn’s Chosen and Cherished: Biblical Wisdom for Your Marriage. She has tremendous insight into building intimacy and trust between the spouses. A few of the chapters in her book are giving me insight into why Philip and I are feeling so differently about physical touch. She has this to say about the challenges for young families:
One of the difficulties moms with small children face is that, by the end of the day, they have been touched and touched. A woman may feel that she really does not want any more physical affection that day. Yet her spouse has not been touched all day. She needs to be responsive to him, especially if touch is his primary love language.
YES! Although we both value physical touch, by day’s end, Philip and I need very different things physically. He comes home, anxious for a big kiss and conversation. He hasn’t had a hug or a kiss since he left that morning. I, on the other hand, have been touched all day. Feeding, changing, and loving little ones is a very physical job. By day’s end, I am thrilled to see Philip, but a big make-out session is usually the last thing on my mind. I wish I could say that my first impulse is to land a big wet one on him when he walks in the door. Unfortunately, I got into the habit of brushing off his affection and asking him to help corral the kids while I get dinner on the table. If I’ve spent the last thirty minutes prepping dinner with one toddler at my feet and another asking a question every ten seconds, it’s not enticing to have a touchy husband lingering while I’m stirring something on the stove. All I want physically is a peck on the cheek and to hear the words, “C’mon, kids. Let’s get out of Mom’s way and play in the family room.”
Philip, sweet husband that he is, usually conceded to this being his homecoming and made the most of it. After our conversation about love languages, I realized that I’m not doing a good enough job of initiating romantic physical touch, especially for his homecoming each day. Kimberly Hahn beautifully calls us to imitate Christ serving His bride, the Church, by serving our husbands.
This is the call to follow Christ to serve rather than to be served. It means affirming your spouse, even when you feel unappreciated. It means asking him what you can do for him, expressing the love languages of gift giving or acts of service, even though you are tired from serving your children all day.
After talking with some other mothers with young children, I learned I am not the only one who struggles to make my husband’s daily homecoming a beautiful experience. One of my friends said that her grandmother gave her some advice that has stuck with her. She said to give your husband a 90-second kiss everyday when he comes home. This sounds simple enough, but, really, when was the last time you greeted your husband with a 90-second kiss? Go ahead. Set a timer. Even if you don’t feel “into it” when you start the kiss, surely by the 10 or 15 second mark you’ll remember that you two “still have it.” Philip tells me to keep taking that friend’s advice!
Kimberly Hahn’s mother went to a lot of effort to make her husband’s daily homecoming special.
My mom prepared for my dad to come home from work. About fifteen minutes before he arrived, she put on fresh makeup and perfume, changed her outfit if it was dirty, and brushed her teeth. She was ready to greet him.
I know that this is tough when you are making dinner and caring for little ones. However, welcoming your husband home sets the tone for dinner and the evening.
Little by little, I am trying to adopt this practice. When Philip calls from the hospital to say that he’s on his way home, I announce to the kids, “Daddy’s coming home! Let’s get ready!” I brush my teeth, freshen up my makeup, and change my clothes if they’re dirty from the day. We tidy up the family room if it needs it. If I have the time and remember, I light a candle or pour each of us a glass of wine.
To ensure I have this time to get ready before Philip gets home, I’m doing a few things:
- Give the kids only 1 small snack a day after their afternoon nap around 4:00 p.m.
- With 1 small snack at 4:00 p.m., my kids are still hungry for dinner, but they’re not soooooo starving that they’re cranky for dinner and can’t wait for Philip to get home
- Save the kids’ tv time for dinner making time
- This way, they’ll want to watch their show at this time and won’t be tempted to wander into the kitchen or need me
- Work smart, not hard. Don’t make this already stressful time more stressful by making dinner preparation take longer!
- Do the meal prep work the night before or during naptime
- Crockpot recipes make dinnertime nearly stress-free
- Oven recipes are great because you can wash dishes as dinner bakes
- Freezer friendly meals are your friend! Double your recipes so that you can freeze the extra one and any leftovers.
Philip didn’t know I was doing all of these behind the scenes things, but he loves his new homecomings. They’re not always a Norman Rockwell picture, but I am happy to say that the extra effort is helping to set the tone for our evenings. When I have the house, the kids, myself, and dinner taken care of enough to give Philip a warm welcome home, it makes for a much happier evening. The 90-second kiss doesn’t hurt, either!
The kids love it, too. 2-year-old Janie absolutely adores “getting ready” for Daddy to walk in the door. She watches me reapply my makeup and always has to get her own fresh chapstick. 15-month-old Walt follows us from room to room and shrieks when Monty barks to tell us that Philip’s car is pulling in. When we hear the garage door open, the kids run to the gate at the top of the stairs to greet Philip. After Philip and the kids have their moment, Philip and I can have our big welcome home hug and kiss.
It sounds so simple, and it is, but dropping everything to prepare for this moment and give Philip a real welcome home kiss shows him that I still value physical touch and that he is my vocation. The kids relish witnessing the love between us, too. As we’re smooching, Janie always says, “Awwwwww, Mommy and Daddy love each other!” She usually ends up between us, squeezing me and Philip together to get in on the love fest.
Not surprisingly, Philip loves the change. He’d much rather have a wife excited to greet him than the old me who would brush off his attempts at affection at the stove and point him toward the kids. When I try to serve Philip’s real need for physical touch when he walks in the door, he in turn is more willing to serve my genuine need for space and a little silence as I finish making the meal. Kimberly Hahn wrote about a mother’s need for silence at the end of the day:
Even though many women tend to talk more than men, if your children have talked to you from morning till night, you may crave some silence.
My children were great conversationalists from early on, saying wonderful and cute things. By day’s end I had listened a lot. Scott (her husband) would ask, “Do you want to listen to a tape? Or do you want me to put on some music? Do you want to talk?”
My response was, “No, I just want to sit on the sofa for about fifteen minutes and be quiet, with no one touching me and no one talking to me.” After I drank in the silence, I would find Scott in his study and enjoy our conversation. If the need for listening was urgent, however, I relinquished my “right” to do things the way I wanted and instead focused on serving my beloved.
After Philip changes, he takes the kids with him downstairs or they play in the family room so that I can have a little breathing room. I crave silence by day’s end, and Philip knows this. Giving me a little space to cook and work in silence while he plays with the kids helps me to recharge and to be a better conversationalist over dinner.
We think everyone else wants to be loved exactly how we do. Learning that Philip and I don’t have the same needs at the end of the day and finding out how we can best love each other is changing the tone of our evenings together. Little by little, these small changes are helping to bring back the spark that came so easily in the beginning of our romance. Philip and I are still twenty-somethings, but these little things are helping me to be the wife of Philip’s youth from Proverbs 5.
“Let your fountain be blessed, / and rejoice in the wife of your youth, / a lovely deer, a graceful doe. / Let her affection fill you at all times with delight, / be infatuated always with her love” (Proverbs 5: 18-19).
|
Philip, seeing me for the first time on our wedding day as I walked down the aisle |
by Catherine | Aug 17, 2012 | Marriage
|
“Foreshadowing.” Walking downtown on our wedding day as an older couple approaches. |
My little trip down memory lane to our first date made me think of the thrill of our new relationship and the butterflies from our first kiss. Seven years later, we are no doubt more in love with each other than ever. The depth of our love for one another and the intimacy that we feel physically, emotionally, and spiritually far surpasses the love we felt the day we professed our wedding vows.
However, both Philip and I will readily admit that the passion that came so easily in the beginning of our romance needs more coaxing (and even plotting!) these days. Philip has a hectic schedule as a pediatric resident. His hectic schedule translates into long hours on my end as a stay-at-home mom. Our limited time together coupled with the physical and emotional demands of raising young children, our limited finances, and our culture’s demand that our children be our top priority could be a recipe for disaster.
I’d be lying if I said that residency has been a breeze and that I love every moment of it. However, this testing time has been the source of many blessings in our marriage. I wrote in a previous post that our limited time together actually taught us to move through problems faster, get to “I’m sorry,” and spend more time together.
In learning how to be more effective communicators, we are also learning more about each other’s love languages (how each of us wants to receive love). Not surprisingly, most people show love toward others the way they want to receive love. Dr. Gary Chapman, author of The 5 Love Languages, has a website dedicated to teaching about the Love Languages. The 5 Love Language are:
- Words of affirmation
- Quality time
- Receiving gifts
- Acts of service
- Physical touch
Philip and I took the online assessment to find out what our love languages are. Here are our results:
|
Philip is on the left, I am on the right |
According to the 5 Love Languages site, most people usually fall in love with people who have completely different love languages. Not so with me and Philip! Despite independently taking the assessment, we scored almost identically. After discussing our results, it was obvious that we value words of affirmation most, then quality time, and physical touch third. Acts of service scored fairly high for me, a little lower for Philip, and receiving gifts was the lowest score for both of us. Basically, it looks like we prefer to be loved in all of the ways except for receiving gifts!
We talked about how each of us shows and receives these different love languages. We are both happy with how one another is using words of affirmation and quality time to express love. Together, we decided that we both need to do a better job of using the love language of physical touch. The 5 Love Languages site sums up Physical Touch like this:
This language isn’t all about the bedroom. A person whose primary language is Physical Touch is, not surprisingly, very touchy. Hugs, pats on the back, holding hands, and thoughtful touches on the arm, shoulder, or face—they can all be ways to show excitement, concern, care, and love. Physical presence and accessibility are crucial, while neglect or abuse can be unforgivable and destructive.
To sum up our discussion on physical touch, I asked Philip to use physical touch more often, especially in non-romantic ways. Philip asked me to use physical touch more often, especially in romantic ways.
I am reading Kimberly Hahn’s Chosen and Cherished: Biblical Wisdom for Your Marriage. She has tremendous insight into building intimacy and trust between the spouses. A few of the chapters in her book are giving me insight into why Philip and I are feeling so differently about physical touch. She has this to say about the challenges for young families:
One of the difficulties moms with small children face is that, by the end of the day, they have been touched and touched. A woman may feel that she really does not want any more physical affection that day. Yet her spouse has not been touched all day. She needs to be responsive to him, especially if touch is his primary love language.
YES! Although we both value physical touch, by day’s end, Philip and I need very different things physically. He comes home, anxious for a big kiss and conversation. He hasn’t had a hug or a kiss since he left that morning. I, on the other hand, have been touched all day. Feeding, changing, and loving little ones is a very physical job. By day’s end, I am thrilled to see Philip, but a big make-out session is usually the last thing on my mind. I wish I could say that my first impulse is to land a big wet one on him when he walks in the door. Unfortunately, I got into the habit of brushing off his affection and asking him to help corral the kids while I get dinner on the table. If I’ve spent the last thirty minutes prepping dinner with one toddler at my feet and another asking a question every ten seconds, it’s not enticing to have a touchy husband lingering while I’m stirring something on the stove. All I want physically is a peck on the cheek and to hear the words, “C’mon, kids. Let’s get out of Mom’s way and play in the family room.”
Philip, sweet husband that he is, usually conceded to this being his homecoming and made the most of it. After our conversation about love languages, I realized that I’m not doing a good enough job of i
nitiating romantic physical touch, especially for his homecoming each day. Kimberly Hahn beautifully calls us to imitate Christ serving His bride, the Church, by serving our husbands.
This is the call to follow Christ to serve rather than to be served. It means affirming your spouse, even when you feel unappreciated. It means asking him what you can do for him, expressing the love languages of gift giving or acts of service, even though you are tired from serving your children all day.
After talking with some other mothers with young children, I learned I am not the only one who struggles to make my husband’s daily homecoming a beautiful experience. One of my friends said that her grandmother gave her some advice that has stuck with her. She said to give your husband a 90-second kiss everyday when he comes home. This sounds simple enough, but, really, when was the last time you greeted your husband with a 90-second kiss? Go ahead. Set a timer. Even if you don’t feel “into it” when you start the kiss, surely by the 10 or 15 second mark you’ll remember that you two “still have it.” Philip tells me to keep taking that friend’s advice!
Kimberly Hahn’s mother went to a lot of effort to make her husband’s daily homecoming special.
My mom prepared for my dad to come home from work. About fifteen minutes before he arrived, she put on fresh makeup and perfume, changed her outfit if it was dirty, and brushed her teeth. She was ready to greet him.
I know that this is tough when you are making dinner and caring for little ones. However, welcoming your husband home sets the tone for dinner and the evening.
Little by little, I am trying to adopt this practice. When Philip calls from the hospital to say that he’s on his way home, I announce to the kids, “Daddy’s coming home! Let’s get ready!” I brush my teeth, freshen up my makeup, and change my clothes if they’re dirty from the day. We tidy up the family room if it needs it. If I have the time and remember, I light a candle or pour each of us a glass of wine.
To ensure I have this time to get ready before Philip gets home, I’m doing a few things:
- Give the kids only 1 small snack a day after their afternoon nap around 4:00 p.m.
- With 1 small snack at 4:00 p.m., my kids are still hungry for dinner, but they’re not soooooo starving that they’re cranky for dinner and can’t wait for Philip to get home
- Save the kids’ tv time for dinner making time
- This way, they’ll want to watch their show at this time and won’t be tempted to wander into the kitchen or need me
- Work smart, not hard. Don’t make this already stressful time more stressful by making dinner preparation take longer!
- Do the meal prep work the night before or during naptime
- Crockpot recipes make dinnertime nearly stress-free
- Oven recipes are great because you can wash dishes as dinner bakes
- Freezer friendly meals are your friend! Double your recipes so that you can freeze the extra one and any leftovers.
Philip didn’t know I was doing all of these behind the scenes things, but he loves his new homecomings. They’re not always a Norman Rockwell picture, but I am happy to say that the extra effort is helping to set the tone for our evenings. When I have the house, the kids, myself, and dinner taken care of enough to give Philip a warm welcome home, it makes for a much happier evening. The 90-second kiss doesn’t hurt, either!
The kids love it, too. 2-year-old Janie absolutely adores “getting ready” for Daddy to walk in the door. She watches me reapply my makeup and always has to get her own fresh chapstick. 15-month-old Walt follows us from room to room and shrieks when Monty barks to tell us that Philip’s car is pulling in. When we hear the garage door open, the kids run to the gate at the top of the stairs to greet Philip. After Philip and the kids have their moment, Philip and I can have our big welcome home hug and kiss.
It sounds so simple, and it is, but dropping everything to prepare for this moment and give Philip a real welcome home kiss shows him that I still value physical touch and that he is my vocation. The kids relish witnessing the love between us, too. As we’re smooching, Janie always says, “Awwwwww, Mommy and Daddy love each other!” She usually ends up between us, squeezing me and Philip together to get in on the love fest.
Not surprisingly, Philip loves the change. He’d much rather have a wife excited to greet him than the old me who would brush off his attempts at affection at the stove and point him toward the kids. When I try to serve Philip’s real need for physical touch when he walks in the door, he in turn is more willing to serve my genuine need for space and a little silence as I finish making the meal. Kimberly Hahn wrote about a mother’s need for silence at the end of the day:
Even though many women tend to talk more than men, if your children have talked to you from morning till night, you may crave some silence.
My children were great conversationalists from early on, saying wonderful and cute things. By day’s end I had listened a lot. Scott (her husband) would ask, “Do you want to listen to a tape? Or do you want me to put on some music? Do you want to talk?”
My response was, “No, I just want to sit on the sofa for about fifteen minutes and be quiet, with no one touching me and no one talking to me.” After I drank in the silence, I would find Scott in his study and enjoy our conversation. If the need for listening was urgent, however, I relinquished my “right” to do things the way I wanted and instead focused on serving my beloved.
After Philip changes, he takes the kids with him downstairs or they play in the family room so that I can have a little breathing room. I crave silence by day’s end, and Philip knows this. Giving me a little space to cook and work in silence while he plays with the kids helps me to recharge and to be a better conversationalist over dinner.
We think everyone else wants to be loved exactly how we do. Learning that Philip and I don’t have the same needs at the end of the day and finding out how we can best love each other is changing the tone of our evenings together. Little by little, these small changes are helping to bring back the spark that came so easily in the beginning of our romance. Philip and I are still twenty-somethings, but these little things are helping me to be the wife of Philip’s youth from Proverbs 5.
“Let your fountain be blessed, / and rejoice in the wife
of your youth, / a lovely deer, a graceful doe. / Let her affection fill you at all times with delight, / be infatuated always with her love” (Proverbs 5: 18-19).
|
Philip, seeing me for the first time on our wedding day as I walked down the aisle |
by Catherine | Aug 12, 2012 | Marriage
I’m sure our kids will want to hear about it down the road, so I figured I ought to write as many details as I can remember while I still remember them!
In March of 2005, my sophomore year of college, I headed downstairs for Monday night dinner at my sorority house. I happened to sit at a table with my pledge “baby” and a few of the other women in the freshmen pledge class. As freshmen, they lived in the dorms on campus, while the older members of the sorority lived in the house or off campus.
We talked about our upcoming summer plans, and I mentioned that I was going to be a cabin counselor at a YMCA summer camp. Immediately, the girls who lived in the honors dorms made a connection.
“Isn’t Phil working at that camp this summer?”
“Yes! You have to meet Phil!”
“Oh! Wouldn’t they be so cute together?!”
“Oh my gosh, yes! You two have to meet!”
They told me about this Phil, a sophomore in the honors dorms, who was also going to be a cabin counselor at the same summer camp. They told me what he looked like, where he was from, where he went to high school, what they knew about his family, that he was Catholic, etc. etc. By the end of dinner, there was a lot of giggling, and they were planning our wedding. They left the sorority that night, promising to mention me to him and to insist that we meet.
As I was studying that night, I took a break to check Facebook, a relatively new social networking site. I had a friend request and message from mystery man Phil from the honors dorms. (To make this move seem less lame, I must say in his defense that I didn’t have a cell phone at the time, and I only had a phone in my sorority room with an answering machine. No one except my family called that phone because it was so hard to get a hold of me, and I don’t think the girls even knew that number to give him.)
Phil said that the girls at dinner told him we were working at the same camp that summer and that we should meet. We exchanged a few messages throughout the week, mostly making fun of ourselves for “meeting” online when we could walk a few blocks over and introduce ourselves. After finding out that we both love Scrabble, Phil suggested we meet that Saturday morning. He’d walk over from the dorms to my sorority house to pick me up, and we’d get to know each other over a game of Scrabble, bagels, and coffee.
It was Holy Week, and neither of us admitted it until after the fact, but we caught glimpses of each other across the Newman Center at the Holy Thursday Mass. My pledge “twin” pointed Phil out to me several pews ahead, by himself, singing the processional hymn. Several months later, when I admitted I saw him before we met, he told me that he saw me with my pledge “twin” on my way back from Communion. I love that we saw each other for the first time at Mass and that neither of us was aware that the other one was watching us. Our first glimpses of each other were of the other one in prayer. Having seen him doing something as intimate as praying took a lot of the pressure off of our first date.
Saturday rolled around, and my roommate and pledge mom helped me get ready. (Oh, how nice it was to live with women who would dress me and do my hair and make-up!) I refused to call it a date, but the entire sorority house seemed to know about it! The doorbell rang, and by the time I made it downstairs to meet Phil in the entry, several of my sorority sisters were gathered along the banister and in the tv room off the balcony, talking about the guy who was there to pick up Catherine. Luckily for me (and Philip), we were meeting on Holy Saturday morning, so most of the girls were gone for Easter weekend, and we were spared the large audience that an evening date would have had! A few of the girls whispered to me as I made my way downstairs.
“Good luck!”
“Have fun!”
“Aw, he’s so cute!”
“I can’t wait to hear all about it!”
Philip was pretending to be busy looking at whatever was sitting on the foyer table when I came down the banister. I know he was nervous because the first thing he said to me after he saw me and said “hi” was, “Do you have the dictionary?” (He had told me in one of his Facebook messages that he had a travel Scrabble game, and he asked me to bring a small dictionary.) I was so caught off guard! “Um, no, I forgot it. I’ll be right back!” You can imagine the faces when I ran back upstairs to my room and ran back downstairs with a dictionary in my hand.
Extremely out of breath, I made it back downstairs. At this point, I was convinced that Phil was a clone of the Colin Firth character in Bridget Jones’ Diary, Mark Darcy.
He was all business, and he didn’t show any facial expression except for a perfunctory smile. Now, I know that he was just nervous being in the foyer of a sorority house with all eyes upon him. Poor guy!
Once we made our way out the front door, we never stopped talking. Our conversation paused only to order our bagels and coffee before sitting down to our game of Scrabble. Phil insisted on paying and opened every door. He wasn’t trying to be smooth, but he did it deliberately enough to show me that that was how he thought things should be done.
In between playing our Scrabble tiles, we had the most wonderful conversation. We talked about our interests, hobbies, families, faith, quirks, future plans, mutual friends, made fun of the other person’s Scrabble playing abilities, and whatever else popped up. Every now and then, one of us would have to sit silently as we plotted our next move on the Scrabble board, but the silence wasn’t at all awkward. I asked him if he went by Phil or if anyone called him Philip. He said that most people call him Phil, but that his mom, a few relatives, and our mutual friend, Kristin, call him Philip. I asked if I could call him Philip, and he’s been Philip ever since.
It’s a good thing that things were going well, because Philip’s dad popped in to get some coffee on his way to his office and happened to walk right by us. So, I guess you could say that Philip introduced me to his Dad twenty minutes into our first date! I’ve never asked him, but now that I know him as my father-in-law, I wonder if he was in a hurry that morning or if Philip gave him a look that said not to be chatty.
The date started at 10:00 a.m. when Philip picked me up at the sorority house, and we didn’t get back until mid-afternoon. It was the longest Scrabble game in recorded history! (For the record, I won.) Philip walked me back, and a few of our mutual friends in the sorority visited with us in the foyer. After awhile, they left us to have the clincher first date goodbye moment. Philip said that he had a lot of fun and I said that I did, too. He asked if he could have my phone number. I gave him my room number (remember, I didn’t have a cell phone at the time), and he said he would call me to get together again soon. I said I would like that a lot, and he gave me a big hug before leaving.
Once the door shut behind him, I noticed that my cheeks hurt from smiling so much that whole day. I immediately ran up the stairs to my pledge sister Kristin’s room. (Remember, she’s the mutual friend who calls him Philip.) She was in a God Teens group with Philip in high school and wanted the report on our date. I remember laying on her bed, gushing about every detail. I told her, “I’m going to marry that guy!”
I left town the next day to spend Easter with family, and I couldn’t stop thinking about Philip. When I got back to the sorority house on Sunday night, someone told me that there was something in my mailbox. When I looked, there was a plastic grocery bag and a card. Philip had made an Easter card for me with the help of his younger sister, Maddy (who, if I’m doing my math right, would have been 4). I still have it. The plastic grocery bag was full of Easter candy. It was probably just some extra candy that Philip swiped from his house, but I really appreciated the sentiment. My parents were living across the country at the time, and Philip knew I wouldn’t be seeing them that year. Silly as it may be, the chocolate eggs and pastel M&M’s made me feel less homesick. That small surprise was the first of many to show me that “Phil” from the honors dorms was the right guy for me.