Monthly Archive: September 2006

Madeleine Mae Lawton!

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Last night was the Tale of Two Arrivals. Our arrival home from a family vacation in Phoenix, Arizona, was paralleled by another arrival. As we awaited our plane at the Phoenix airport, my sister in law Kristin was getting settled in a delivery ward at a hospital in Omaha. I haven’t heard the full story yet, so I can’t embellish this blog entry too richly, but I know the story’s outcome.

At 12:50am on September 27, about the same time I was finally laying my head down on my own pillow in my own bed, Madeleine Mae Lawton made her way into the world. My dear big brother became a father in an instant to a beautiful 8lb, 4oz, 20.5 inches long baby girl! Congratulations to Kris and Adam!! I can’t wait to love on my first niece.

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Quick update: Kristin, Adam and Madeleine are all doing really well. Adam and Kris are natural parents — they look like they’ve been at the nursing, diapering, loving baby gig for a lifetime. And, of course, Madeleine is beautiful.

Diversity in the ‘Hood

Just when you think you are living in the city, what with your postage stamp-sized lawn and five whole inches between your house and your neighbor’s, you notice a skinned deer hanging upside down in another neighbor’s garage.

“Venison”, he explains while carving away, Johnny Cash blaring from his stereo.

You nod in agreement. And wonder if you should shield your toddler’s eyes.

Big Sky Country

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Yeah, yeah. So what if Montana came up with that slogan first? Nebraska is definitely big sky country, too.

I remember visiting South Dakota as a little girl and being somewhat in awe of the enormous sky. You could look east to west and see sky hitting the earth in each direction. Now that I’m a Midwesterner, no longer that little girl from Georgia, I have grown used to our beautiful skies. I love the open air, the clouds that transform from dark and brooding to light and fluffy within mere moments, the farm fields that seem to stretch on forever. I actually get a bit claustrophobic when driving on curvy, tree-covered roads in places like Lookout Mountain or St. Simon’s Island, as I am accustomed to our wide, open spaces.

Okay, Montana. I’ll give your your slogan back. Really, there is no place like Nebraska.

**Disclaimer: These pics aren’t the greatest (note the cut off kid in the second one), but I’m sacrificing my blogger’s pride in order to display them for the sky’s sake.

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Love Song for CNJL

I call you in the middle of the night
Ring your phone at this unexpected hour
To find my insulin.
A diabetic for almost 12 years now,
An adult, married, mother of one
And I’m calling you
Embarrassed
Sheepish
Needy

And you are there.

I hang up the phone
Insulin found (thank you, Jesus) here at home
Apologizing for waking you
Perhaps for hours as you sometimes are awake at night anyhow

And you don’t mind a bit.

I hear it in your voice
Know that tone intimately because now
I am a mother too:

For you, anything
Flesh of my flesh, heart of my heart
For you, anything.

I am an adult, married, mother of one
But I am still yours
And forever will be.

And you
You are my mother.

I love you.

Phone Conversations of 28 Month Old

“HI! A-Becca Tredway! Play at Nana’s? With the toys? OKAY! BYE!”

Hangs up. Punches a few keys. Ear to phone.

“HI! A-Becca Tredway! Gampa and Gamma, nigh-night. [Other language, possibly Mandarin.] Sleeping. Gamma, yeah, [Mandarin again]. I brush hair. Oh yeah? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yes! Ummm… Crying in bed. Yah, yah, yah! ‘kay? Gamma. Pasta, yeah, yeah. BYE!”

Continues with key-punching… More conversations ensue involving Daddy at work, scaring Noonee, Mommy painting, lunchtime plans and the bleating sounds of goats. Oh, and she likes water, milk and apple juice. Don’t forget it.

Remembering the Day, 9-11-01

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We had been back in Lincoln for about four months and were starting to house-shop. Not in a serious way, mind you, but a dreamy kind of way… Perhaps a brick home would be nice. In this neighborhood or this one? Close to our church, if at all possible. Someone, one of our parents perhaps, mentioned getting pre-approval for a home loan, so we scheduled an appointment for Tuesday, September 11 at 9:00am.

Good Morning America was on our television and I recall the program switching from planned material to live footage of one of the Twin Towers. Black clouds were billowing from the building and I wracked my brain to remember the World Trade Center from a visit to New York City when I was a junior in high school. I’ll never forget the shock in Charlie Gibson’s voice, and in my own being, when on live television a plane flew into the second tower. The plane looked teeny, unsubstantial, like a small commuter plane. At this point the newscasters had no idea what was going on, and Jeremy and I had an appointment with a bank loan officer.

Slightly unnerved by the morning’s events, we walked into the bank’s meeting room and began the paperwork for pre-approval. Sometime in the next half hour our loan officer walked back in to our room and reported that the Pentagon had been hit and that the World Trade Center had fallen. Fallen. In those moments my mind couldn’t grasp the horror, nor the meaning, of these statements. All of a sudden America, the stable safe country I had grown up in, became a war zone and it was scary. There I was, in the absolute middle of the US, and I was worried about each of my family members. I wanted to take a head count, to call each person I loved, to check up and make sure they were alive and safe and well. The feelings of insecurity, death and destruction were unleashed.

Within the next few hours, other feelings became apparent. Solidarity. Unity. Patriotism. Undying spirit. Dependence on one another and God.

I stayed glued to my TV set for who knows how long after the initial attacks. Information became my top priority and I’d turn off the news for only a few minutes in unsatisfactory attempts to clear my mind of grief. I don’t remember ever crying about it all, but I do recall feeling so shocked that tears seemed meaningless. I felt far away from the devastation in NYC, DC, and Pennsylvania—and yet altogether too close to the terrorists who had made their way to my country.

Uncle Andrew

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It’s a special time when my younger brother Andrew comes home for a visit. He now lives in Chattanooga, TN, and we don’t get to see him all that often. Considering the rapid growth of toddlers, I especially wanted him to spend some time around Livia to see what new things she’s doing and saying. Well, after going to the zoo with “Uncle Noonee” (I call him Noonee; unfortunate, but true), she’s got a few extra phrases in her vocabulary:

Baboon scare Uncle Noonee! Ha, ha, ha!!
Leopard scare Uncle Noonee! Hee hee!!

If the idea of Noonee being a name for a 6’4″ twenty-four year old doesn’t crack you up, the notion of him being scared by a baboon and leopard should. Of course, Livia also loves to talk about how the Huskers “run fast and fall down.” Indeed those brawny young men do run fast on the football field… and then fall down. Ah, life through the eyes of a two year old!

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Our Kind of Saturday

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Hope you’re enjoying your kind of Saturday, too.

Busy…

…potty-training the Wee One
baking and baking and chopping and baking some more
missing my dear friends
…eating lasagna and Frosty Dairy Desserts with other dear friends
…watching football
…loving my family, every last Lawton and Tredway among us
…wrapping up Season 2 of Veronica Mars
…going to the zoo with Uncle Noonee
…enjoying my husband and child
rejoicing with those who rejoice and mourning with those who mourn
…trying to figure out life