Happy Halloween

My trick-or-treaters!

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Look Out

We were so grateful we could observe the storm from within our warm, well-lit home!

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In the Light

Thank you all for your thoughts and prayers! As of Tuesday morning, we still have power and no apparent damage to our property. However, much of the surrounding area is in the dark and some people are still losing power now, so I’m keeping those flashlights handy!

We’re praying for those affected by the devastation…may the Lord encourage and protect those along the coast especially.

Here Comes Sandy

We’re battoning down the hatches here in Connecticut in preparation for Hurricane Sandy.  It’s hard to believe it was exactly this time last year that we were hit with the freak snowstorm that cancelled Halloween and left us without power for well over a week.  Now we’re facing potentially similar power outages if the forecasters are correct.  Thankfully it’s much warmer this year than last, so at least we won’t be wearing three layers of clothes to bed!   

Jim went out for one last supply run this afternoon, and came back with an extra treat for the girls: their very own princess sleeping bags!  Now the girls are HOPING the power goes out so we can “camp out” in the RV this week.  I’m hoping some of their enthusiasm rubs off on me!

So if I don’t update any blog posts for a while, you can just envision us cuddled together in the RV, making our dinners in the microwave and sleeping cheek-to-cheek.  Family bonding time, here we come! 

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Three in a Row

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Happy Girl

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More Susie-isms

Clutching her backside: “My bum has a tummy ache.”

After returning from Arizona: “Connecticut is happy to have us back.” 

Gesturing with her thumb over her shoulder where her sibling was disobeying: “Mama, you don’t want to see this!”

After Jim asked her how often she prayed: “Twenty miles a day!”

When she wanted me to leave the room, she told me: “Go cook.”

Looking at herself in the mirror: “We’re getting taller, and Jimmy is getting lower.”

After I told her to be careful to not fall while she was roughhousing with her sister: “We won’t fall!  We’re great!”

While we were sitting in the family room and Susie nearly impaled her brother with a pencil, I told her to take the pencil into the kitchen.  She reluctantly obeyed (after several scoldings), and then stomped back in and informed me: “Mama, I want to make decisions.”  I told her that I was in charge.  After sulking a few minutes, her eyes brightened and she ran into the kitchen in the direction of the pencil.  I asked her what she thought she was doing, and she cheerfully replied, “I know!  I’m pretending the family room IS the kitchen!” 

Long Night

Danny has had some trouble with sleeping.  At night, he does fairly well, often giving me a 4-5 hour stretch so I only have to get up once in the middle of the night.  However, his naps could use some lengthening during the day.  With him waking so frequently during the daytime, I wonder if I’m actually more exhausted than I would be at night, because I’m pulled in so many directions during the daylight.  I simply can’t tend to everyone’s needs at once.  So poor Danny has to do quite a bit of fussing in his bed while I finish dinner or clean up messes.  As I’ve been feeling run down, I recalled a blog post that I drafted before Danny was born.  I never posted it for one reason or another, and so I went back and re-read it and decided to post it now.  Even though I’m currently struggling with daytime, rather than nighttime, sleep issues, I still found comfort in remembering God’s faithfulness during the “long nights” we experience.  Here’s what I had written:    

 

Nearly every evening, after Jim and I have tucked Becky into her bed, gently covered her with a blanket and kissed her goodnight, she’ll raise her head and plaintively ask, “Is it not going to be a long night?”  Our (faintly exasperated) answer is always the same: “No, it will be a normal night.  Go to sleep.”  After weeks and weeks of this routine, I found myself getting a bit irritated with the nightly question, given that she knew what our answer would be.

However, thanks to the physiological changes of late pregnancy, there have been many recent nights where I am awake for two hours at a stretch in the wee hours of the morning, vainly trying to talk myself back to sleep.  I’ve never before suffered from insomnia, and so these hours of dark wakefulness are foreign and unsettling to me.  After finally falling asleep on one of those occasions, I woke to my alarm only a few short hours later and turned over to complain to Jim, “Ug, that was a long night.”  Catching the irony of my statement, I immediately smiled and thought of my poor daughter, who although she hardly ever wakes up at night, already has a grasp of the truth that our experience of the nighttime hours greatly colors our perception of their length.

I have to admit I have some “long night” fears of my own.  Even though our baby is very wanted and will be fervently loved, I am dreading the sleep-deprivation that inevitably accompanies a new life entering our home.  I actually don’t remember my fatigue from my girls’ early days (probably because I honestly don’t remember anything from those days!), but the memories of Jimmy’s first few months are still quite fresh in my mind.  That child just did not like to sleep.  His daytime naps were erratic, and his nighttime and early-morning wakings were plentiful.  I wasn’t often able to rest during the day when he did sleep, thanks to my high-energy girls, so I felt like I was on a never-ending treadmill that kept ramping up the pace without my permission.

As a result, I’m nervous about this baby’s sleep habits.  I’m nervous about not having enough energy to care for my chatty girls AND my monkey-like son AND a needy baby.  As I bow my head in prayer, I find myself essentially asking the Lord, “I don’t know if I’m going to be able to handle these early weeks and months with four children.  Tell me, please, is it not going to be a long night?” 

While ruminating about my worries the other day, I remembered my reaction upon waking after the night of fractured sleep.  I remembered thinking it’s all about our perception of the night.  It’s what we’ve filled the hours with, or didn’t.  Just like when we have a long day, the day literally still contains the same number of hours, it just feels different because of our attitude or schedule.  The Lord is showing me that I need to dwell on His constancy, His never-changing character, His eternal loving-kindness.  When the nights feel long, He is the same as He always is.  When I am wakened out of a sound sleep by the cries of a hungry newborn and I stumble, grumbling into his room, wishing I could be back beneath my sheets, I need to remember that God is awake and ready to walk me through this time of discomfort.  I need to shift my view of sleepless nights from one of dread to one of acceptance.  Paul and Silas used their time in jail to not wallow in their misfortune, but to sing praises to God and witness to others.  Of course, I’m not equating night-time wakings to a prison sentence, but the principle remains.  How I experience the night depends largely on my perception of it.  Am I perceiving it as an inconvenience or as an opportunity to nurture my child, pray and listen quietly to the Lord’s voice?

So just like Becky is really looking for reassurance and consistency when she asks us about the upcoming night, I’m looking for the same thing when I come before the Lord.  I’m asking for my Father to reassure and comfort me, to sustain and uplift me.  And thankfully, He has promised to do just that.    

 

“The God of the good times is still God in the bad times / The God of the day is still God in the night.”

-from the hymn “God on the mountain” by Lynda Randle.             

Conference Time

We had a wonderful time at a church conference this weekend.  It was a bit of a juggling act with all the kids, but thanks to my in-laws and dear friends, we made it through and I even caught portions of a few great messages.  It was such a blessing to be among the Lord’s people!

Here’s our friend Beth holding Danny.  I don’t know who was happier – Beth that Danny wasn’t crying, or me that my arms had a break! 

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Big Grins

Who can make Danny smile?

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His Pappy and Bubba can!

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