My baby girls are three.
Four years ago, Jake and I received the devastating news that we might never have children. Three years ago, Violet and Scarlett entered the world after much drama, as miracles of God and science. A little more than a year and a half ago, Thomas entered the world, a miracle of God alone. Five months ago, Sullivan proved that love truly is infinite after an FET. In just four short years, Jake and I went from a family of two, fearful we’d never be more than that, to a family of six… and possibly counting.
I am a somewhat older mom for the South, having had my girls at 33 and their brothers at 35 and 36. While I’d love to be 10 years younger, physically, becoming a mother in my 30s meant I got the chance to live for myself for a few years first. I got married. I got a bachelor’s degree. I got divorced. I started my master’s degree, began working out and had my own little glow-up. I spent years staying up all night having Vampire Diaries and Roswell marathons, eating popcorn and frozen yogurt for dinner. I hung out with friends whenever I wanted. I lay by my apartment’s pool. Not really one for travel, I visited Alaska and New Mexico regardless. I dated… a lot. I worked as substitute teacher, a circulation clerk, a half-time librarian once I got my degree, a full time manager, and then a teen librarian for five years. II got engaged and married, bought a house, took a trip to Colorado Springs with my husband, before Covid-19 hit. I loved my career and even went to the YALSA conference in Memphis, Tennessee. I had an entire life before my children were born. Still, I can honestly say, the most fulfilling and rewarding thing I have ever done was to be a mother.
I turned 37 last month, on the same day my blog turned 12. We celebrated by spoiling the kids with ice cream cake and donuts, taking them to the zoo, and spending all the money my dad gave me on Disney on Ice tickets. There was something for me. I personally repainted and redecorated the entire house with my farmers market earnings. Jake also bought me the full length mirror I’ve wanted for years. My Gramma and Grandpa came out to eat pizza and cake and play with the kids. The highlight of my birthday, though, was the expression on Thomas’s face the moment he saw Woody from Toy Story in real life.
Don’t get me wrong. I have my own hobbies, as evidenced by the neglect this blog has gotten over the summer. I’ve been selling baked goods and hand made crafts at the farmers market, sometimes for weeks in a row. I’m working to catch up on my family photo albums, while taking surveys and playing cell phone games to earn the money to print them. I’m trying to teach myself photography and even took a class and bought a fancy camera. I am way too into politics and have read about virtually any mainstream national and international news story you can name. It’s been a bit since I’ve played the Harry Potter Legacy game on XBOX, but I do enjoy it. I cross stitch, sew, crochet, and am currently working on a homemade family Ghostbusters Halloween costume. I also still host not one, but two, DnD games every other week. I am not a woman who neglects herself for her children. Still, they are my greatest adventure. After all those years spent reading romance novels with marriage and babies epilogues, here I am, in my Good Ol’ Days. I could not be happier.
Jake is turning 40 this weekend. At times I’ve felt mournful over the passing of time and “getting old.” Then, I talk to my grandma and grandpa and realize that this is the best time in our lives. We’re in our prime, me still in my 30s and Jake just beginning his 40s. We’re young. We’re healthy. Our kids are still young. Our older relatives are still alive. Life is crazy right now, even when I’m not painting an entire house with four under four. It’s also beautiful and I intend to spend the next twelve years chronicling it here, as well.






