Archive for the ‘Ava’ Category

Candy Land!

We celebrated Ava’s eighth birthday with a Candy Land theme last Saturday. Doug and Karyl were kind to host us in Nebraska for the weekend, and we were joined by aunt, uncles, cousins and grandparents. Many thanks to everyone for making it a very special day for Miss Ava Kate!

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Ava at Eight

I was standing in the kitchen late last night, contemplating which of the pre-party tasks I could take on with so little time left in the day. I decided to work on number cookies, pulling the “8” from the tin of cookie cutters. It took me a split second to realize “9” was the only number I’ve yet to use in this set, and then “number” cookies will become hearts, or circles, or some other shape that indicates Ava is growing up far too quickly.

The thing about making number cookies is that it’s a task that provides plenty of opportunity for contemplation and reflection. Nostalgia drives the process, after all.

A few weeks ago, my mom noted that Ava wasn’t making as frequent appearances on the blog. And, it’s true—as she gets older, it’s harder to write about her in this way. She seems less a baby, less a kid, and more a person. A person who reads this blog herself, and a person who should probably have more to say about her online persona than her mother. And so, I hold back a bit more than I do with her siblings. I hope, though, once a year, she’ll forgive a few musings about who she’s becoming, and how her insistance on aging changes her mother, too.

An old acquaintance of mine recently shared a story about taking her second-born in for five-year immunizations. She reported the child didn’t shed a single tear, though quickly added she couldn’t take much credit: Her firstborn had to be held down by four nurses during the same appointment a couple of years earlier. That addendum made me laugh out loud, because in our house, it was Ava who has made her siblings seem relatively easy by comparison. Perhaps there’s something to birth order, or perhaps it’s personality. Maybe it’s because these first children—daughters, especially—know they have the responsibility of training new parents. Ava’s certainly held our feet to the fire for the last few years.

She questions our motives, executing a cutting cross-examination, and she will exploit any sign of weakness. She’s smart and shrewd and sharp-tongued. She started saying, “Because is not a reason” nearly as soon as she could talk. When she dissolves into a puddle on the floor, awash with tears, I remind her she’s eight now, and eight-year-olds most assuredly do not have tantrums. When she calms, she reminds me that eight really isn’t all that old.

She’s nearly always right.

I worry incessantly about How She Will Turn Out. I want her to be self-possessed but gracious. Assertive but polite. Generous. Inclusive, responsible, poised. Driven. On any given day, I can give you numerous examples of how I failed in helping her become this person. Bryan believes if we just love her, she’ll be all of those things and more.

He is nearly always right.

We’ve spent a fair amount of time talking about the girls while they’re away this weekend. At one point, Bryan noted how funny it is now to think that having only a baby to care for is so easy. That was certainly not how we were feeling eight years ago when we brought our first little one home. As such, I know there will be a time—probably one that involves cars, or dates, or college applications—where we say, “and we thought it was tough back then.”

To date, though, Ava at this age is my favorite challenge. She’s funny and helpful. She makes me work to be a better mom, and like her father, she forgives so effortlessly along the way. For that alone, I am truly grateful.

Ava Fix

Ava ran in her school’s fun run with her friend Kayin last Friday. They ran alongside their dads, who reported the girls kept a good pace the entire mile.

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Overheard

Ava, to Olivia: “I really liked that book when I was a kid.”

Sleepless on the staircase

Why you should let me stay up until 10 pm: A play in seven parts.

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And a couple hours (and inches) more

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From Lawrence with love…

Valentine's Day 2013

Streak!

Grandma and Grandpa Smith (or Grandma and Grandpa Lucky, as the girls have taken to calling them) and their brand new puppy, Streak, visited us this weekend.

Streak, a Blue Heeler/Australian Shepherd, is eight weeks old and just as cute and tiny and fluffy as you’d imagine. She’s named for the split of color on her face, but given the difficulty I had shooting a photo of her that wasn’t blurry, I’m going to assume the moniker has something to do with her speed as well. (Although, none of my photos of Doug and Karyl were particularly in focus either, so perhaps it’s the photographer more than the subject…)

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Ava Kate

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Overheard: Kansas Day edition

Kansas Day, which marks the admission of Kansas as free state into the Union, is celebrated every January 29th.  It’s a big deal around here, and it’s covered extensively in the local schools.

Ava: “Mom, I know what the state motto is. Ad Astra per Aspera. It means ‘to the stars through difficulty.’ LITERALLY.”

Hearing her literal interpretation reminded me of another play on the motto–one Bryan jokingly submitted as a potential tagline for his company. His idea was Ad Astra per Aspirin, meaning, of course, “to the stars through pharmaceuticals.”