Category Archives: 2 Mi Familia

All things family-related. My husband and me, the children we made, the grandbebes that thrill us now. Our whole great big, loud, messy family. Love! *sigh…

1-2-3-4-5-6-7

I love you all the way to a million and back, Averikins!

Yet another pre-schooler will “graduate” to Kindergarten this year.   *sniff   Averi will be going to big-kid school in the fall.

I have been the most blessed Nonna ever because, so far, I have gotten to pre-school the first five of the 8 grandbebes.  First Gavin, then Hunter, then Guini, then, can you believe it, Gemma and this year: Averi-J.  Omygoodness, I am a lucky-lucky-lucky girl!  I imagine I will start with Amelie after Christmas, so I’ll get a school year and a half with her!.  :)

Averi and I loved that there was snow on the ground Wednesday morning, but on Thursday morning we got to go outside barefooted (as it should be!).  To count cards.  Because that is school.  Yes it is.

Look who we ran into at IKEA the other day:

 

We “schooled” a little there, too, because Averi followed the map with her pencil and matched words to signage.  Education!

Good times, no matter how you quantify it.

My little Stormie, {happy days}, my sweet

I am a WEEK late posting your birthday blog.  But…I gave you Wryder for your birthday.  :)

Well, actually Stefane and Wrex gave you Wryder and Stefane was the one who REALLY gave you Wryder, but I was there at the time and so happy he arrived to celebrate your birth – April 15 is now a wonderful day {x} two.  Take that, IRS!

In rather a similar year, you were born in a Sioux City spring – one that had been hot already and nice and included play days for your siblings in the wading pool, but then: pow!  A big wintry blast from the north caused an ice storm and that is when you decided to arrive.

Job 30.22 You lift me up on the wind; you make me ride on it, and you have dissolved me in the roar of the storm.

And though advisories were issued saying no one should be out on the roads unless absolutely necessary, you were in every way, {absolutely necessary} and so worth any and every possible risk (even though we only had to drive 3 blocks so it wasn’t wholly challenging for us – but had it been, we’d have taken it!).  You have been a joy every single day of your life.

Proverbs 10. 25 When the storms of life come, the wicked are whirled away…

I love the baby you were, the chubby little recipient of the love of three sisters and a big brother.  As a little girl, your heart couldn’t have been sweeter (“Be-member, mommy, we like to shnuggle“).  As a young woman, you are admirable and lovely in all possible ways.  You are a loving sister and auntie, everyone in the family will agree, a servant among the saints and an honoring daughter to your father and me.

And on that, I must wholeheartedly call down the covenant  blessing of the LORD upon you, for the honoring, because the fifth commandment comes with a promise {reward} and I agree with the Word of God in Ephesians 6

“Honor your father and mother,” which is the first commandment with promise: That all may be well with you and that you may live long on the earth.”

May you live long and may it go very {very} well for you, my sweet.

I pray you’ll find true, lasting (and wildly intoxicating} love and have a fabulous wedding outshone only by the madly devoted and playful romance of a marriage that lasts with zealous passion forever.  I cannot wait for you to be fruitful, filling the earth with talented and godly children, creative little bebes who are the joy and delight of their aged grandparents {hint, hint}.  May your spirit, soul and body be sanctified through and through by God Himself, the God of Peace. 1 Thess. 5.23-24. I pray you live and reign in the spiritual Kingdom of God, yes – may that go well ~ righteousness/peace/joy in the Holy Ghost!  And in times of tears, may it go well for you and may you know the Comforter intimately.  May it be well with you in being filled when you’re hungry and refreshed when you’re thirsty and I totally think you should inherit the earth (and let’s throw in making your name great in the earth – why not?). Your purity of heart will intensify your ability to see God and I hope all your mercy comes back to you by the truckloads.  May it go well with you, Stormkins – in creativity and design and ideas and use of your talents, in your singing and playing for the worship of the Lord; may it go well in your life in all the tasks and jobs you put your hand to and favor with God and men; I speak the promised well-ness over your property and your resources and your heart to be generous to the poor and the orphan and I pray the dreams I know about and the ones none of have ever heard, but have been heard by heaven, come to pass.  And I pray all this, knowing it is now released into the halls of heaven and will reverbate in your life long after I am gone.  The words are out there, now.  Can’t take them back.  You are BLESSED!  Live long on the earth – live well.

I love you, baby girl.  You were the last because we could not in any way have improved on the five we got.  We had to stop while we were ahead.  You were the completion of the first phase of the family God was building.  And I thank God for you, sweet girl.  Do you know how much you’re in my heart?  Soooooo much.

{love, mom}

 

Bailey Sophia – 2 weeks today!

Sweet little baby girl, how we love you, little bug-a-loo!

Don’t Rocky and Jovan make pretty babies?  Three girls now.  When they found out they were having another girl (and maybe just the teensiest surprised that against all odds they weren’t having a boy this time), I wrote them a letter about having three girls in a row { h e r e } and I do believe they are pretty thrilled with her!

And how fortuitous that on the day I wanted to wish bebe a happy-2-weeks-old-we-love-you wish, Stephanie (the entreprenuerial, highly-talented mommy, photographer and MayDae curator and writer – and a darling daughter to boot) released these photos of Bailey-girl, taken this week.

Lovely.

A song for grandbebe #8

Bailey Sophia, two weeks old

How do you like the world so far?

Bailey Sophia, two weeks old

What a blessed, blessed, blessed, blessed girl you are

For you have swings to be swung on ~ Trees to be climbed up

Days to be young on ~ Toys you can wind up

Grass to be lying on

Sun up above

Pillows for crying on

When you’re in love

Ponies for riding

Wind in your hair

Slides to be sliding on

Leaves in the air

Dogs to be caring for ~Love to be giving

Dreams to be daring for ~ Long as you’re living

Yes, you have dreams to be daring for

Long as you’re living

Bailey Sophia, two weeks old

What a blessed, blessed, blessed, blessed girl you are…*

We love you, Bailey-bebe! 

*Lyrics revised from the Barbra Streisand song, “Jenny Rebecca.”  Little known fact: in 1970, when my family got a TV again, Gerber, I believe, was doing these baby food commericals using that song.  There were two versions, a boy version and a girl version and they showed the life of a baby from birth to toddlerhood.  I think it was like “Jenny Rebecca, one day old, how do you like the world so far,” then, “Jenny Rebecca, 6 months old…”  You get the idea.  The names they used were in fact Jenny Rebecca and Christopher Michael and for the longest time, I had planned to use those names for my children.

Stopping to Remember

NOTE:  This ended up being a whole lot of {meandering} thoughts and really separate issues.  But one thing got me pondering another…you know how it goes.  :)

My Father-in-Law passed away just before Christmas.

He was 90 and though it was unexpected, as he was just living his life at a 90-year old gait, we had actually said our farewells last August when he travelled here to Colorado for a family reunion in Estes Park.  It wasn’t because he was sick or we are morbid, but he lived several states away and life being what it is, well, he was 90…

August.

When I hugged him good-bye for the last time, this gentle giant of a man who had become almost so fragile-thin I feared he would break, we both wept.  We hugged for a long time and I wanted my hug to tell him how much I loved and respected him and thanked him for his role in my life.  I had this everything-else-fading-into-the-distance moment of zoom-lens-present reality, knowing that the miles between us were great and the days together were gone.

Not everyone gets this.  I was lucky to feel his love and be able to share it back.  In very few spoken words and in very many unspoken, we said our goodbyes.

He went back to Washington.  I returned to my life.

Raymond Leroy Rhoades

Dad Rhoades was older than my parents by a long shot.  He and Dave’s mom had 4 children ranging in age from 8 to 18 when they decided to adopt Dave.  Then when Dave was 8, his little sister Debbie was born.  They definitely had at least 2 families.

1968

He married young, served in the army in WWII, raised 6 children, outlived 2 wives and had plenty of female companionship in his final days (he was an avid game player at the senior center) and served God {amazing servant} with his whole heart every day of his life.

He answered the phone, “Well, Praise the Lord!” And said good-bye with the promising words to meet again, “Well, here, there or in the air.”

He was a Kansas boy.  A soldier.  A railroad man.  He was in law enforcement for many years including 17 years with the Denver County Sheriff’s office.  He was a Bible teacher, a husband, a father and how many grands and greats and great-greats?  I don’t even know.  Many.  He was a father to many. {found this}

But when we parted in August, both of us crying, that parting-promise was understood. It would likely be neither here, nor there, but yes, we’ll meet again.  We will.

December.

We were doing the Nativity photo shoot in Dessa and Ryan’s backyard when we got a text saying he’d fallen and an ambulance was on the way.  He was living with Dave’s older sister and her husband.  Before the next update came, he was gone.  He had been just fine – in great spirits, he wanted to take Ray and Sharon to breakfast and when he went to his room to get something, he just collapsed.  And he died shortly thereafter.

He went peacefully, really, and quickly and I know it was a reward for the life he lived.

I was just running around photographing and videotaping my grandbebes, my reward and gift from God, and Dad Rhoades was going to his reward.  He was gone, just like that.

There was no funeral because he didn’t want a fuss.  And his large (and growing) family is spread everywhere, so now, today, is the first opportunity to hold a service. He’d decided to be cremated and this afternoon his remains will be interred at Leavenworth National Cemetery in Kansas in a Military Memorial and celebration of his life.

Then we’ll go on.  As we have been.

There is a sadness, a contemplation for a man without whom I would not have the family I have.  Yes, he was 90 and he’d lived a full, long life, but still-there is an empty place now.  And the family gathering to memorialize has stirred it in me again, like in December.

I feel sad and some might say pragmatically, “Well, he is in a better place.”  And life is hectic and the days zoom by and we weren’t seeing him nearly regularly enough anyway.  But I feel sad partly because his death didn’t stop us all in our tracks to remember – a man who was not perfect, but who lived and loved Jesus and all of us with strong love.  And there are these generations of his seed serving God today and he was just a regular man who’d serve his country and God and loved his family, but he was also the man who fathered this big group of amazing people who are spread out everywhere living incredible lives.  How will we remember that and honor that?

Dave’s dad died.  His dad.  That is a huge deal.  That is life-altering.  His quiet, loving, easy-to-cry presence is gone from us and we need to mourn that and we need to remember.

The whole system.

How do we mark grief?  Is it enough?  Are we showing enough reverence for life?  It is so strange and culturally varied, the way we “do” death.  I just want to make sure, for my kids, that we don’t just wrap it up as quickly as possible and forget to grieve and to remember.  How long should grief take?  How long should we still laugh when we think about a funny incident with that person gone or burst into tears at a recollection?

My close friend had a young son die recently and already, she feels guilty that the pain is still so strong, a mom who has lost her child.  He was taken in his prime, his early 40s, and somehow we don’t get that the mourning needs to last as long as it needs to last.  And sometimes the mourning will be loud and strong and other times sweet and quiet and full of gentle recollections, but why don’t we have a way to signify that some one has gone through loss and everyone around them should know and maybe cover their tender hearts for awhile?

I follow Rick Warren on Twitter and I am watching him grieve the recent loss (at least as much as a public figure allows us to see on Twitter) of his 27-year old son to suicide.

“Grief is a tunnel to growth,”

one Tweet read.  He is making sense of it all sometimes, with clarity. Other times you sense his deep, reverent pain,

“Some things you don’t get over;  you get through them.”

I love that some Tweets are so prayerful and purposeful, I guess you could say, “I don’t want to go back to how things were. I want to be a better man, more in-tune with Jesus, more compassionate of others.” He is determined to serve others anyway, knowing that healing that brings, too.

Our loss isn’t so unusual or unordinarily painful.  Dad Rhoades was 90.  But…What is the right way to remember and yet release?  To celebrate a life but go on without it?  Should the funeral be in the first 24 hours like some cultures?  Should it be in 3 days or 5?  And then, boom – over?  We’ve had the service now, move on.  Wouldn’t it help to somehow give the grieving hearts of those left behind a way to let it last as long as it needed to last?  We deny the mourning their mourning clothes, their sackcloth and ashes – that which discloses the season death and loss have brought. And the vibrant life once lived becomes a faded photograph with stories forgotten.

I wish there was a way, culturally, we could signify: I have lost some one important.  Please ask me about them and let me tell you their story.  Because I think it would go a long way in both honoring their lives and in healing our grief.  Our mourning could seem normal, acceptable and covered and received.

We are expected to be done mourning during the after-funeral carry-in meal.  Turn on the TV, put on some comfy clothes – get over it.

I am not agonizing daily over Raymond L. Rhoades.  But my husband’s father died, the man who adopted him into his family and treated him with care.  My husband’s father is gone, this adoptive daddy with whom my husband won a father-son look-alike contest when he was 5.  Raymond Rhoades died, him – the card-games playing grandpa, the one with the fork trick and the man passing out coins and bills with love to his grandchildren.  He was important to our family.

Our family is altered.  A father has died.

I need to be wrapped in clothing that says I am sad he is gone.  I am mourning with an eye on the day we’ll be reunited.  Yes it was 4 months ago and I rejoice in where he is and I remember his life with great love and respect.  His life is worth all the time it will take me to do so.

I haven’t said this well.  But these are things I am thinking.  Wondering.

Remembering you today, dad, with great love, always.

{wrote about it here, first} 

Riddle {what do these things have in common???}

What do one set of parents in New York + one April snow day {springtime in the Rockies, after all} + 4 cousins + making homemade cake donuts with the grandpoppa + crazy games and silly dancing + army guys + writing novels and plays in the office + messing up the playroom + way too much clearance Easter candy + mac and cheese for lunch + every single kid having to have their very own bag of microwave popcorn so they can season it the way they want it for an afternoon snack + games on phones + computer games + watching “Kickin’ It” + hauling out the guns and playing army + playing Swat team + painting wih the new watercolors + a heated game of Monopoly + making fresh butter from cream shaken in a jar + spreading that butter on toast and crackers and Hunter and Gemma both falling to the floor, near death because it was sooooo good + hugs, lots and lots of hugs + kisses, gazillions of kisses + “my turn! my turn! – a lot! + lost shoes + pink cheeks + a lot of loud and general mayhem + grandbebes at my house?

{What do all these things have in common?}  Put them all together and what do they spell???

One happy Nonni who did not mind the snow in April at all!

Here is a 2 1/2 minute look at the day…with a little help from Todd Rundgren


Ci-gar?

for baby girl

Yes.  There were balloons to celebrate Bailey Sophia.   Because they look cute in the hospital room and I knew her big sisters would wholly enjoy getting to play with them.

And of course there were tulips (coral-colored), because a bouquet of lovely spring flowers gladdens the mommy’s heart – after all her hard labor (so deserving).

But this time, I decided to make the new daddy a little something, too.  Cigars!  Yep, rolled ’em myself.

bailey sophia cigars candy

No, just kidding.  I saw the idea on Pinterest for Father’s Day and personalized them for Rocky to distribute to visitors at the hospital.

By the way – did I mention we just had our 8th *grandbebe* born on April 5?  Did I fail to tell you our exquisite and so-sweet little April-Angel is named **Bailey Sophia** and we are head-over-heels?  Well, in case I forgot to mention it, here she is.  This photo was when she was 10 hours old, fresh from her first bath.  Please note the sparkle of angel-dust as it gently falls all around her…

bailey sophia

Ok, I digress.

The cigars

So, where were we?  I got the idea off Pinterest {click here}.  and I personalized the free down-loadable cigar labels to fit our occasion.  Oh, but wait – the cigars are not actual cigars – did I say that already?  Ok – they are just those pretzel rods.  I cut about 1/3 of them off (my husband and dog ate the un-useable 1/3) and dipped the 2/3 length part into chocolate candy melts (melted, of course).  Cooled them, cut out the printed labels and used a tiny bit of tape on the back to hold them in place.

I was going to use an empty cigar box from Walgreens to place them in, but the smell of actual cigars would have infused the chocolate-covered pretzels.  No bueno.  So, I thought and I thought and I thought, and then by sheer accident, I happened across a little endcap display at Target with these plastic boxes for making “home made lunch-ables” and voila!  Perfect.

How fortuitous, don’t you agree, that I had already cut them the  exact-perfect length???  :)

Chocolate-covered Pretzel Cigars, enjoyed by young and old alike.

 

The Road Rage Crowd

Dave is having a bunch of people over for an ‘ask the author” for Road Rage tonight. He is so humbled and appreciative to have people who want to talk about it and get questions answered!   I cannot attend since I haven’t read it yet, but I have heard great things about it from many people.

Plus I have made out with the author.  Numerous times. But I won’t kiss and tell.

road rage, dave rhoades on amazon

The day he got the first copy delivered in December

Get it on KINDLE, too.

Stormie designed the cover.  She is so talented, isn’t she?  :)

Sweet Dreams are Made of This

I woke up in bright sunshine having this dream:

I was excitedly telling my mom my seedlings had popped up overnight, that they were growing like crazy.  “Of course,” my mom was saying, “anything you plant grows, honey.”

“But come and look,”  I was waving her over to a table full of trays and each was filled with healthy green seedlings of all sorts, beans, and lettuce and cabbage and peppers and tomatoes.  I looked at them and was in awe, in love.  “But mom,” I was explaining, “I just planted these yesterday!”

And I knew my garden was going to be lush and verdant and full and fruitful.  I knew the garden was going to be so good this year.

Yes, I really dreamed that this morning.  I went to check on the seeds I planted** 2 days ago – just in case.  Nothing.  Yet.  No germinations to report at this point (of course), but it was a good dream anyway.

However…

Just yesterday, moments ago, really, Dave and I had these five children.  And they have grown up and started having their own and the world is filled with these fruit-bearing, green, whole and holy human beings {our children and theirs}.  There are so many of them and the number grows.

Just yesterday {wasn’t it?}  Dave and I were in the hospital and he was keeping me relaxed, talking me through contractions, telling me I could do it and we were laughing and crying at the miracle of the moment.  Was’t it just yesterday?

No.   It couldn’t have been because yesterday, it was Rocky, our full-grown man-child, and his wife, our Jovanie, who were in the birthing room so peacefully and joyfully and exuberantly welcoming their third daughter into the world.

The sights, the sounds, the eternal rhythm of giving life, of transcendent birth…I can see them like they were yesterday for me.  And they were.  And I have planted seeds and they are popping up, strong, healthy and leafy green.  The garden is going to be so good this year.

Our 8th grandbebe, *Bailey Sophia*

She was a little late (as her poor mommy will attest), but so worth the wait! Sandy-brown hair (less than her sisters, but so pretty, nonetheless).  8 pounds, 12 ounces, 21″ long.  She is just. so. sweet.

She already has an amazing story.  There will be more pictures and posts about Bailey Sophia, you may be sure!


Just after her bath

**Already planted Bibb, Little Gem, Ruby Red and Gourmet Lettuce Blend, Chinese Cabbage, Broccoli Raab, Arrugula, and Kale, glorious kale!  :)

The Easter Ball Hunt

Tsk.  Bad grandparents.

jeanierhoades.com

We had the kiddos over for the traditional Easter Ham Dinner on Sunday.  And we didn’t have any eggs to hide.

Now, all of them had attended Easter Egg Hunts Saturday and earlier Sunday and had collected more eggs than any of them needed.  We sorta thought their parents would bring the ones they had for hiding and hunting and they sort of thought we would have some…and well, poor bebes.

jeanierhoades.com

We had just bought a spring stash of big, colorful bouncy balls to see them through the warm days of spring and summer ’13.  Resourceful little boogers that they are, Gemma and Averi devised an Easter Ball Hunt for the other kids.  They tucked the giant spheres here and there among bare-branched shrubs and then called to everyone “Come and find them.”  How cute.

easter 

Back to this ham thing…

Isn’t it weird and odd that we Christians chose ham (aka pork, aka pig), to eat for the Resurrection Celebration feast?  I mean, true, we were set free from that dietary tradition long held by law-keepers when the New Covenant kicked in, but it doesn’t mean we should just throw caution to the wind, does it?  It seems sort of bold, like saying, “Hey – we don’t have to follow Jewish tradtion anymore, because Jesus (a Jew, btw), has set us free from that.  So keep your deliciously-spiced-and-herbed slow-roasted lamb!  We choose pig.”

I just don’t know.  This may be a case of our liberties being lawful but not necessarily expedient.

Oooohhhh…Who put their peep-stick back in the bunch?

peeps on sticks

It was Rocky, of course.  He made fun of me for asking that strange question so incredulously.

easter at jeanierhoades.com

He is risen.  Risen indeed!

The Traditional Candy Bar crosses…in miniature

jeanierhoades.com

The Ladies Willing Worker Band at the Kokomo Church of God taught me to use full-size Three Muskateers Bars for making and selling candy crosses at Easter.  I made them for years.  But who really ever even eats Three Muskateers?  Anyway – I got the “snack size” and they make these very tiny versions.  It is hard to tell, but they are on 4 x 6″ photo paper for a serving tray.  That is how tiny they are.

easter jeanierhoades.com

I made 8 of everything just in case Baby Girl Rhoades came in time.  :(

a peek in the easter baskets
Being the amazing Nonna/Nonni I am, yes, there was candy, but mostly fun little toys (clothes for Kai) and salty snacks to counteract all the sweetness of the day. Stuffed animals, peel off nails and colorful hair and Guini got her whoopie cushion (she is so silly) and they all got their crosses, for heaven’s sake!

jeanierhoades.com
Lined up and waiting for seven sweet grandbebes on Easter.  Gavin (9.8); Hunter (8.5); Guinivere (7.75); Gemma May (5.83); Averi-J (5); Amelie Belle (3 on the dot) and Baby Kai (12 weeks).

Easter is THE day and I got to spend it with THE people I love so much!  How did you celebrate this year?  What are your traditions?