12 Weeks

Lame blogger here. It has been weeks since my last entry. (WordPress has a new layout too) So much has happened and Gavin is so big!

1064837_10151697760024082_2093349182_oHe is the strongest little boy. He can hold his head up. He loves the bathtub. He and Eunee lay on the couch and take naps together. Gavin has begun rolling from side to side. He has found his thumb (although he holds it in place with his other hand and sucks so loud you can hear him across the house)

Best of all, he slept 7 hours for the last 2 nights. I am thinking we may actually have a routine established (I can not believe!)

We went on our first family trip (ill blog about it tomorrow). 3 days was definitely long enough. We were pooped after.

I’ve been home during the day trying to figure out how to balance housework, baby time, me time and well just plain being functional. I am semi successful, but definitely still trying to figure it all out.download

What are the most important things you learn as a parent?

That you will not do it perfectly and that is not the goal. That kids remember how they felt more than what they were given. That the hard seasons pass. And that showing up consistently matters more than any individual parenting decision you will ever agonize over.

How do you balance parenting with everything else in life?

Imperfectly and continuously. The balance shifts rather than stays fixed. Some seasons are work-heavy, some are kid-heavy, some are partnership-heavy. The goal is not equal distribution but intentionality about where attention goes and honesty about when the current distribution is not working.

What advice would you give to parents considering a major life change?

Talk to your kids honestly and earlier than feels comfortable. They handle truth better than they handle sensing that something is happening but not knowing what. And ask for their input even on decisions that are ultimately yours because being heard matters even when the outcome is not what they wanted.

How do kids adapt to big changes?

Better than most parents expect, especially when the adults around them are honest and stable. Kids take emotional cues from their parents. If the adults are anxious and secretive, kids become anxious. If the adults are clear and calm, kids adjust. The hardest changes are the ones parents are not settled about themselves.

What do you wish you had known before having kids?

That each child is entirely different and what worked for one will not reliably work for another. That the early years are harder and faster than anyone tells you. That the goal of parenting is to gradually work yourself out of a job. And that being present is more rare and more valuable than being perfect.


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