Saturday, October 24, 2009

Thank You Mayo!



Thank you all for your kind, kind comments on my last post, they are so needed right now! I'm tearing up tonight reading them, so happy to finally be home after a 16-hour day at the hospital! Don't ask. Even though it has been such a long day my heart is still pained thinking about not being an official Mayo RN anymore. Besides the fun money it provided what I will really miss is:

*My patients
It is truly an honor to be there in what often is a persons most trying moments. I have learned so much about myself and grown so much taking care of these people. It's hard to be a cancer nurse, organ transplant nurse and not get involved and grow to love them. I believe I will be a better mom because of what I have learned being a nurse.

*My dear friends
Something happens between people that truly bonds them in a way when they work so hard to achieve the same difficult, sometimes intense goal) These friends have really been a second family to me and have cared for me in some of my lowest moments. You have also made me laugh harder, dance crazier, and sing the songs from the Sound of Music more then when I was a teenager (although I never sang those songs as a teenager). I love you all.

*Pushing myself harder physically, emotionally, and mentally all in a day than I ever have anywhere else. Although something tells me I may be doing more of this in my future.

*My fantastic Mayo Insurance
I have never had it so good medically before. I believe Mayo will always be my #1 choice for quality health care. What a blessing that turned out to be the last few years! Most recently the very appreciated adoption reimbursement! Thank you Mayo!

For all of those reasons and the fab cranberry chicken salad in the cafeteria I will miss you Mayo!

Friday, October 23, 2009

Ch Ch Changes!


So....I QUIT MY JOB!!! Yes tomorrow will be my last scheduled day to work. I am going "supplemental" after tomorrow. Basically I will only be working a little here and there, maybe only twice a month! Just enough to keep my license and skills current. Sorry, if I work with you and haven't told you yet, it has been a long and hard decision for me to make.

Steve and I have always planned for me to stay home with our kids one day. We have always had a four door car, lived in at least a 2 bedroom home, and only made financial decisions that Steve could support on his own without me working. Still, it is a huge change for us and for me, more specifically. I have been in a little bit of shock making this big change, "little bit" would probably be an understatement. I absolutely love my job. I love being a nurse and I even more love being a nurse at Mayo. I love just about everything about it. In fact there is very little I would change; like I would move Mayo to Mesa and be able to be in two places at once. At home with Z and at work with my patients. I love both so much except I love being at home with Z just a little bit more.

The first night I met Norma one of the questions she asked me was whether I would work or stay home as a mom. I answered as we had always planned, "I'll be staying at home with our kids." It's all I ever wanted really and what I have wanted long before I wanted to be a nurse. But life had other plans for me and becoming and working as a nurse has been a dream I never knew I had. One I never knew I would love so much. Working at Mayo has been even better, its an ideal place to work as a nurse. However, it's a season in my life I feel has passed. Now is the season of motherhood for me. It has been a bitter sweet change at times.

So to celebrate my new season I went fabric shopping the other day. I am all stocked up to make Z into the cutest, scariest little pirate for Halloween, I wanted him to be Michael Jackson in Thriller, SteveO said "no way." So it's going to be a pirate. Plus in memory of the stockings my grandma made for her kids and my mom made for us, I bought red felt! I can hardly wait to see the new versions kicked up a notch hanging on my mantel! I will post a pic, I promise!

So with the job, goes the "fun" money I used to provide. Which means goodbye to my monthly massages, my extra gym membership with the pool, my twice a month housekeeper (yes, its true...a little secret I have kept; Julia and crew I will and have already been dearly missing you), and most painfully leaving is my obsession with Banana Republic and Nordstrom. There, its all out there, all my quiet little secrets I have told almost no one! I have felt a little ashamed about all of it but have loved every bit of it.

Dear Z,
I love you very, very much. You are worth every bit of personal sacrifice and comfort I am giving up to be with you full time.

Love,
Your New 24/7 Mommy
XOXO *Kisses to your adorable plump cheeks*

Saturday, September 5, 2009

THis Day Is Here


I can hardly believe that this day is really here. I remember the first time I thought about this day and what it might be like. I was in a hospital bed on the floor where I work. Steve had left a few hours before to get some rest at home. He was trying to work, come visit me everyday and still keep everything running at home for when I would return. He was tired, but he sat with me, took me on walk around to all the places I usually went as a nurse. And we talked.

I was coming to the end of an 18-day stay and was finally beginning to feel better from what can only be described as the worst physical pain I had ever experienced. Little did I know the emotional pain was around the corner, waiting for me, and the Lord mercifully let me experience these two pains separately from one another. For that I am incredibly grateful.

We talked about our plans to adopt even though we had just found out my body would never and could have never carried a child. Again, the Lord had blessed me all those years of desperately pleading for a baby by not putting one in my body. But I knew we would adopt even before all this had happened. Before surgeries to discover what problems may exist in my body. We were in the temple together with some of our family, and I knew that day.

But on this night in the hospital we talked about when we would start the paperwork. We decided in a few months, after the current storm of our lives had blown over a little more and I felt strong again. We talked about what our child might look like, where they would come from, and how we hoped the baby would not have my feet or Steve's pale skin. We were excited and we talked about many different possibilities of babies. We laughed and held each other and dreamed. Then he left for home.

I lay in that bed, in that dark room I had only known with lights on and thinking of what I needed to accomplish while in there. Now it was my home. And I thought of this day. I thought of being in the temple with our baby, sealing that baby to us for eternity. I thought of how strange it would feel to take a baby into the temple, a place where usually only adults go to make covenants with the Lord. I thought of how everyone would know what we were doing there just because we carried a baby through the halls and how they would smile at us. I thought of our family and friends and the joy I knew they would feel too as they witnessed our little miracle be sealed to us on that day. But most of all I thought about the overwhelming joy and happiness and immense gratitude I would feel that the Lord had granted me most heartfelt desire. A baby. Forever sealed to me and to Steve.

This day is here.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

So many things to talk about!


So many things are going on in our crazy life right now and I love it all.

First: My brother Mac returned home from his mission to Oakland, California! Two years went by both slowly and very quickly for us while he was gone. He is the same but different in some ways as well. Z warmed up to him immediately (surprise, surprise). It has been great to have him home for a little over a week now. We really look forward to spending some time in the temple with him in a few weeks when we have Zad sealed to us.




#2: Z turned 6 months! He just gets bigger and happier the older he gets. Sometimes he just breaks out into big belly laughs at the littlest things. He grunts so I grunt back, he squeals and I squeal back, then he just cracks up; I just love it! Every morning when he wakes up I hear him talking to himself and I head in to get him. He hears the door open and just goes crazy kicking and squealing with a big grin waiting for me to pick him up. It's as if seeing me in the morning all disheveled and sleepy is the greatest part of his day (at least that's what I think). It is actually slowly converting me into a morning person.

He is in the 75% for weight (at almost 20lbs.), 85% for height (Steve loves this), and 95% for his head (he is a smart boy, you know). He rolls over and scoots around the floor, grabs his feet and chews on his toes, babbles, and eats lots of cereal and veggies.









#3: Norma, Steve, and I seem to be on the speaking circuit for adoption and all of its aspects lately. We spoke at a regional adoption conference on Saturday. It was a conference for adoptive couples who are currently in the process of adoption. Norma did a wonderful job. She first spoke with her mom and sister Monica on experiences a birth family goes through when placing a child for adoption. I find myself just marveling at how amazing this family is over and over again. They truly leave me in awe as I listen to their story of finding adoption as an answer to all of their prayers, and then Norma's unselfish choice that I know broke her heart. What I find even more incredible is how the Lord continues to heal her heart. Each time I see her she seems to be more content and happy with her decision to place her son with us. This is so comforting to me as I have spent so many nights praying that her life will always be as happy and as fulfilling as He can help it to be. She is a hero to me.

My dad also spoke on Saturday as an adoptee. His experience is quite different from most adoptions, especially compared to those of today. I always enjoy hearing him speak and it was so nice of him to fly down and share his story with so many people.

My dear friend from nursing school, Jody came to speak as well. She is a stellar pediatric nurse who came to teach on new born care. It's rare that adoptive couples are present during the whole hospital shpeal on caring for a newborn so her information was very needed and appreciated.

Finally Norma and another birth mom, Cami spoke on open adoption, a topic that makes many adoptive couples nervous, as it did us at one time. It's surprising to look back and realize how much our views of open adoption have changed, a 180 from where we started. To me, this is the area of adoption that not only requires a great amount of faith but also holds with it some of the sweetest blessings. Most people think of it from the side of the birth mom and the benefits it holds for her: seeing that her baby is happy and healthy, reaffirming that she made a good choice, etc. But from our side of things it brings so much peach to see that she is happy, doing well, progressing with her life, happy with her decision of us as his family. From where I sit now, I see very few negative aspects of having an open adoption. However, I feel that such a good relationship with Norma has been born of both sides moving forward with caution and consideration for one another but mostly just a love for each other and faith that Heavenly Father cares for all of us equally and desires us all to be happy.

The conference was wonderful and I think we were all pretty exhausted afterward. With so much emotion involved with telling our stories and hearing those of other birth moms and the families they have chosen; it felt like an emotional marathon that lasted all day. Steve, Z and I crashed hard that night in Flagstaff.

Yes that's right, after the conference we headed to Flag to hear Mac give his homecoming talk in church. My dad was gracious enough to fly us up and then back Sunday evening. It really saved us a lot of time and energy we did not have. An hour in a plane sure beats two and a half hours by car, plus we skip all the traffic; its wonderful. Every time we fly with my dad I think, Steve really needs to finish pursuing his license. Besides Z loves to fly as well, happy as a little toad!

#4 We are getting ready to celebrate our 14th, yes FOURTEENTH wedding anniversary! I can't tell you how old this makes me feel but 14 years with Steve and I don't regret one of them yet!! He really is amazing. I have a doctor that I have seen many, many times over the years since we have been married, Dr. Shahon. He is a wonderful urologist, who has seen me in both some great and really bad times. Even now when I see him he asks how Steve is doing and I say, "He's the best!" To which Shahon responds, "You always say that." But what else can I say, Steve really is the best. I don't expect every one to think that, especially if they think their husband is the best, but really Steve is the best and since you are not lucky enough to be married to him, you will just have to take my word for it.

These past few months in having Z has revealed a whole new side of Steve. For any who know him, you will know that he does not typically do very well with change. Especially change that comes quickly. In fact, he really trys to avoid sudden changes. So being chosen to be parents and then becoming those parents in a little over 48 hours might be considered by some to be a "quick change." I however, revel in quick change, almost like being on a roller coaster. "What a great ride," I think and then afterwards look back on the coaster and think, "What was I thinking, that looks terrifying, I just did that?"

To my great surprise, Steve has reveled this time. Not only during the weekend that we met Norma and then welcomed Z into our lives but has continued to shine over the past 6 months. I end many days thinking or saying, "I thought I would be better at this whole mother thing." Then I think, "Why aren't you struggling more with all of this change? You are the one that usually freaks out and I get to be the calm, comforting one." Anyway, to say the least, he has been the calm one and it has been wonderful. I love watching him play with Z, or feed him, or rock him to sleep, or bath him, or carry him around talking to him about everything in site.


#5 We are preparing to host not two but three families (Steve's, Norma's, and mine) over Labor Day weekend for Z's blessing and sealing. We are so excited to have some many people in town. Most of Steve's family has never met Z or Norma and her family. Several people that we don't get to see very often are coming. We realized I while back that Z loves a crowd, the more action and people to watch the better. He just loves all the excitement and seems to enjoy a lot of attention. We think he takes after me in this way. People, people, people, we love people. Watching him grow and develop is starting to reveal just how much he is like us. He is very curious like Steve. He studies new things constantly, new sounds, lights, objects, and he watches us do everything. It's so fun to watch him and show him new things. Just today I was playing on the floor with him showing him the handles on our armoire and how they worked while he watched in fascination at the sound they make.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Blessing and Sealing


So now that everything is final we are planning Z's sealing and blessing. If you are reading this we invite you to his blessing on Sunday, September 6, at 1:30pm at our chapel. The address is 2618 N. Lindsay Rd. Mesa, 85213.

We hope to have all of our friends and family join us this day. If we work with you at Mayo or Schwab we would especially love to have you with us. The blessing takes place during our regular church meeting beginning at 1:30pm with all of our congregation present. Because it is Labor Day weekend we expect there will be lots of extra seats. The meeting will finish at 2:40pm and we will be serving lunch/dinner at our house just after this meeting.

If you are unfamiliar with blessings for babies, here's a quick explanation. Babies born in The Church of Jesus Christ of Ladder-Day Saints (Mormon church) are typically given a blessing within the first few months of life. It is performed usually by the babies father or other special man in the child's life who holds the priesthood to perform such a blessing. Steve will be performing Z's blessing. Several men (usually grandfathers, uncles, special friends of the family) who all hold the priesthood form a circle while holding the baby in the center and the father blesses the child. At this time the name the parents have chosen is formally given to the baby and then a blessing is pronounced upon them. Typically a blessing consists of good health, righteous living, and other gifts or blessings the father may feel moved by the Holy Spirit to bless the child with.

If you would like a better idea of what to expect in a typical LDS Sacrament meeting you can go here.

We will also be sealing Z to us that same weekend on Saturday. We will be doing this in the LDS Mesa Temple. Again if you are unfamiliar; a sealing is an ordinance or ritual performed in temples to create eternal families. We believe that marriages performed in temples are blessed with a sealing power that allows the marriage to continue on after this life.

Children born to parents that have been married in the temple automatically inherit this sealing and they are blessed to be a part of that family after this life, forever. However, when children are adopted or a couple goes to the temple to be sealed after they are already married the children must have this sealing ordinance performed to be a part of the family eternally. Thus the statement, "eternal families" is something we believe to be true if the family has had this performed in the temple.

We are very excited, as is Norma, to have Z sealed to us forever. In fact, Norma will be accompanying us in the temple that day along with some of our closest family and friends. We are looking forward to seeing a lot of family and friends that weekend.

If you would like more information about sealings or blessings of the temple, this is is a great youtube video. You can also visit Mormon.org to have any questions answered via live chat. Or just ask me!

Thursday, July 9, 2009

ITS FINAL!!!!!


He is officially an Owensby! We can hardly believe it. Today, July 9, the adoption of our precious, happy son is final! We were really expecting the judge to tell us that we needed to take some further steps to make it all final. We had done things a little different as far paperwork with the birthfather goes...but it went off as planned. We stated our names, introducing ourselves and then we were sworn in (something neither one of us has ever done). Our attorney asked me several questions; ie: will you state your full name, date of birth, date of marriage, if Steve was my husband, please state your address, the date we received our son, if we were living in the same place we were when we received him, if I was related by blood to Z, and if I believed adoption to be in his best interest. He then asked Steve the final two questions and if what I had stated was correct.

That last question was hard for me, sometimes especially after spending last weekend at Lake Powell with Norma and my parents; I see her as being able to be one of the most capable mothers. In fact, she would be more than capable, she would be great. The fact that she has sacrificed so much of herself to see he has everything she has always dreamed of for him proves that point even more. I can only hope I would do the same for someone I loved that much.

Having everything go so well and maybe because we are still a little tired from The Lake we both just started to tear up as the judge was saying, "All legal paperwork has been filed correctly and meets all requirements for the state of Arizona. The state of Arizona recognizes the adoption of ZPO (he stated his name) as final on this day the 9th of July, 2009." We looked at each other with tears in our eyes and then at our little boy who sat in daddy's arms quiet and content to look at whomever was speaking.

We were there with only our attorney and caseworker so we just hugged them and cried. Again I was overcome at what a miracle this has all been. Us, Steve and I as parents, officially now, it seems almost unreal. Even though the everyday routine of having him has pretty much set in now (it has been over 5 months) it is strange to step back and believe we are really here. Parents, what does that mean? Its overwhelming to think about at times.

We went out to lunch with our bundle and walked into the restaurant telling everyone we were "parents." Then we had to explain that our adoption was just made final so they would stop looking at us with that weird look. We just sat at the table with tears in our eyes, kissing over the table throughout lunch, and making plans for his blessing and trip to the temple!!!

Can I just say that after all the waiting we did, there are SO MANY exciting things you get to do when you adopt. It's like the celebration just keeps going and going! I am thankful for the bits of down time in between but for anyone who knows me, I always love having another party or reason to celebrate!

Just a little peek at Zad's first trip to Powell!

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Poor Z!

Please know that while we have not posted pictures on here for a very long while it is because we are enjoying so much time with our Z boy! Our court date was changed to tomorrow. Tomorrow is the BIG DAY, hopefully all will go well in court and he will be officially ours.

In the meanwhile and to celebrate our upcoming day tomorrow and our recent trip to Lake Powell (his first) this is what we have been serenading him with tonight. We will let you decide who is dumb and who is dumber!



Lake Powell pics coming soon!