The Day My Babies Died

He was perfect. Yes, at fourteen and a half weeks, perfect. He had his Pawpaw’s feet and already looked so much like his big brother. At first, it was confusing. He didn’t look sick, he was beautifully formed. I kept thinking, “just put him back. He will be fine.” My mind just couldn’t wrap itself around the fact that one minute I was happily pregnant with triplets and the next minute I was holding a tiny, lifeless baby in my arms. 

A few weeks later, I found myself living the nightmare once again. In the early hours of the morning, I once again held a tiny baby who no longer drew breath. This time there were two. Two more beautiful little boys who never got to run, play, or grow old. Just like that my womb was empty and my heart was shattered. 

What I didn’t know then was that one in four women will experience the loss of their baby. While each story is unique, there is one thing we share. Those of us parenting after loss will so often be taken back to the day our baby died. A moment of joy or grief will sweep in and transport us back to that moment we lost everything. 

I’ve come to realize that as hard as I try, I can’t go back to the day before my baby died. I search my memories for that naive happiness I once felt, but it is no where to be found. When your baby dies you experience things that will forever change you. 

On the day my babies died…

Our son’s little brothers died. All of the snuggles, disagreements, wrestling matches, and hugs they would share disappeared. 

I felt my babies kick inside my womb even though they had been gone for hours. 

Milk leaked down the front of my hospital gown while I sobbed and begged for someone to make it stop. 

I begged God to take my life instead. 

My husband put aside his pain to comfort me. On the outside he was calm and steady, but on the inside he was flooded with rage and heartache. 

I sang ‘Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star’ to each baby as I held them tight and committed every detail of their tiny faces to my memory. 

A woman I’d never met covered my babies with a blanket and rolled them away for the last time as I stared in disbelief. 

A thousand other memories from that day will stay with me for all my days. 

You see, my babies weren’t all that died that summer. The “me” I was before died too. I’m not the mom, wife, or person I was before their lives were cut short. Ten years later I’m still not sure if I’d say something broke inside me or if the grief simply unleashed something that was there all along. The death of my babies forever changed me. 

In a way, I am stronger. When facing challenges, big and small, I often channel the strength I used to pull myself out of that dark, lonely time. I remind myself that whatever I’m facing could never be as bad as losing my children.  I literally survived the worst, so daily battles don’t discourage me. 

I’m also grateful for every moment I have with my children. I don’t mean to imply that people who haven’t experienced loss aren’t, but I look at my four boys every day and know without a doubt that I am blessed beyond measure. On the days that being a mom seems to be just too much, I remind myself that it is a privilege to parent these sweet little people. 

I share this now because it matters. It matters to the woman, who as I type, is sitting in a hospital bed as her baby draws his last breath. It matters to the woman who can’t get out of bed because the pain is too much. It matters to the man who is fighting for his marriage because he and his wife don’t know how to communicate with each other with the grief that is so raw and new. It matters to the older couple who wonder what their daughter might have been doing if she would have had the chance to grow into an adult. 

As I held my boys those warm, summer mornings, I promised each of them I would share them with the world. Their impact in this life is different than I had hoped, but so very important. If sharing my story provides comfort to even one person experiencing pregnancy or infant loss, then it is a story that deserves to be told. 

I want survivors of pregnancy and infant loss to know it is okay to be changed by the experience. It is okay to handle the grief any way that they see fit. Each story of loss is filled with unique twists and turns. There is no one-size-fits-all way to handle the loss of your child.

In short, I want them to know they are not alone.

That Time I Stayed Home with the Kids for Five Months

Tomorrow I will head back to work after five long months staying home with the boys. Even with the uncertainty and worry of going back to school, sending the boys to on-site school, and the baby starting daycare for the first time ever, I have felt ready. Ready to get back to being “me.” The mom of four who also works full-time. The woman who leads a building full of teachers to improve math instruction for all students. To get back to a job that I love.

So this morning took me by surprise. I have shed more than a few tears after dropping the oldest off at football practice and sitting down for one more slow morning of snuggling and watching tv with the little guys. I didn’t expect to feel so emotional thinking back over the last five months. I didn’t expect to feel so nervous to get back out into the world, but it’s all hitting me today. I have been hesitant to weigh-in on the virtual school vs. on-site school options because everyone has their own unique situation to consider. My kids are going to school because that’s where I will be. It’s also where I want them to be. Where my boys thrive and grow best. But am I nervous they’ll get sick? Yes. Am I nervous we won’t even make it a week before we are back to virtual school? Also yes. But that’s not why my heart is aching this morning.

I have done my fair share of complaining, yelling, and crying over the last few months. Staying home with four little boys from ages 1-12 wasn’t easy for this mom. Most days from March to May, I loathed virtual schooling and longed to go back to school/work. I struggled to get any work done in my job as math coach while helping the kids with their classwork, keeping the preschooler busy, and chasing an energetic and destructive one-year-old. I just wanted to be around adults and have grown-up conversations. I have worked outside the home since I was fourteen. I took short maternity leaves with each baby, but quickly returned to work because that’s who I am. I have never idealized the role of stay-at-home mom. I saw my mom do it with five kids, and I know it is insanely hard. Although my children are my world, staying home for two months in the summer is always great for me and I’m ready to go back to school each fall.

Then June and July came and went. Our days were less structured, but there were no waterparks to visit, no vacations to take and no fun adventures beyond the backyard and a few trails around town. With social distancing and keeping our family as safe as possible, it just wasn’t the summer I normally get to have with the kids. Fun summer off-work mom was more like same-old-mom who’s been on our backs for three months already. We did share some fun together, but the day in and day out of being home felt heavy most days.

So why am I sad, if we all so desperately want to get back to whatever “normal” looks like now? Because I just got to spend 5 months with my kids. Just being their mom and loving them the best way I know how. I didn’t have to entrust their care to someone else, I didn’t have to worry if they were safe or feeling okay. I didn’t have to rush home from work to scramble them from activity to activity. We baked cookies way too often, did fun home improvement projects, played in the sprinkler, and grew even closer as a family. I watched the boys pair off with different brothers depending on what their interest was that day. I got to sip my coffee while listening to their giggles and watching them show off their newest (wrestling/singing/dancing/ninja) skills. I was there to hug the four-year-old when it all felt like too much and the sadness of missing his friends at preschool was so heavy for him. I rubbed the seven-year-old’s back when the school writing assignment caused him to stress about spelling words correctly. I was there to see for myself every time the baby learned something new or said an adorable new phrase. And I was moved to tears more than once watching the twelve-year-old turn into such a grown person right in front of my eyes. He effortlessly helped me care for his little brothers, keep the house clean, and always knew when I just needed a break. He has always been a nurturer and my right hand man when Daddy isn’t here, but he grew into something much more the last few months. Despite the pre-teen moments (yes we had plenty of those too), I’m pretty sure he’s going to be a pretty good adult one day.

So today, I’m going to let the tears fall. They tell a story of the toughest, yet most rewarding parenting months of my life. Tomorrow I will put on a smile and excitedly look forward to working once again, but if you see a tear or two slide down onto my mask, just know I am a Mom who got a little too attached to staying home with her four amazing kids and needs a little time to get used to being “just Allison” for eight hours a day once again.

Social Distancing: Must Do/May Do List for Kids

Our schools just announced closure for this whole week. We have Spring Break next week, so we are looking at two weeks of being at home doing our part to “socially distance” ourselves.

I’m a teacher by trade, so I have a good stockpile of resources to keep my kids happy and busy, but I know everyone doesn’t have a great plan in place for an extended stay at home with the kids. It’s a great time to enjoy these little people, but many parents need to be able to work from home at the same time. I find the best way to keep myself and my four boys (ranging in age from 18 months to 12 years-old) sane and productive is to have a rough idea for how we will spend our time. I don’t like to plan down to the minute, and definitely feel like children need to have some choice in how they spend the day.

This is where the Must Do/May Do menu comes in. The menu I share here works well for my second grader and my middle-schooler. I will make a few changes for the four-year-old, and of course the toddler will tell me what he prefers to do (as always).

Feel free to make a copy of this and make the changes you need to best fit your children’s needs. I’m also happy to help you find resources you need or provide you with additional ideas during this uncertain time we are home. I am an elementary math coach, so don’t hesitate to send me any math questions you have as your kids work through any school assignments! Wishing you all the best!

Must Do/May Do

 

 

The Paper Bag That Made Me Cry

It was 6:27 am on a normal Wednesday morning. The kids were eating breakfast as I scrambled to fix my hair before we had to leave. My husband called for our four-year-old to head to the truck so they could make it to preschool drop-off on time. Because of preschool opening time and the time my husband has to be at work, they have to stay on a strict departure schedule each morning.

That’s when I saw it. The cute little paper bag with my son’s name on it and a note about bringing show and tell items. It sat empty on the kitchen counter. No objects of the designated color had been hunted down the night before and carefully placed into the bag so he could proudly reveal them that morning. I had three minutes to find something brown that would fit into the bag, and be fun for him to talk about with his classmates.

I can’t even remember what I haphazardly tossed into the bag that morning, but in that moment my heart just felt so heavy. In the grand scheme of things, one overlooked show and tell is meaningless, but that morning it felt like more. It felt like I had failed my child.

I try so hard to make sure everything is just right each night before I go to bed. With four kids, full-time jobs, and a household to manage, my husband and I have a lot to do after the kids are asleep every night. I move around the house for hours each night packing the diaper bag, doing laundry, checking backpacks, writing checks for lunch money, and signing reading logs. I try so hard to make sure I’m doing enough. I want my children to have everything they need to be successful, and I want them to look back fondly on the way I cared for them.

But the truth is, sometimes it is just too much.

I’ve learned over the last decade of parenting that I can’t be perfect. So why does it hurt so much when I feel like I fail? I know that with the weight I’m carrying as a mother, I’m bound to make mistakes here and there. My mind knows that it is impossible to be everything to everyone all the time.

But my heart. My heart wants my family to have the great mom that they deserve. The mom who bakes fresh cookies each week, who always has them to practice on time, and the mom who never yells at little people who aren’t getting in the car fast enough when we’re rushed.

It’s a constant battle trying to decide if I’m getting it right. I read articles telling me to “let the laundry wait, because babies don’t keep,” but there’s also the blog post saying “don’t feel guilty for cleaning the house instead of playing with your kids if it makes you a better mom.” How do I know that my enough is enough? What guarantee do I have the what I’m doing will bring my kids the happiness and success I so desperately wish for them?

Finding the balance in parenting is just hard. We all know there isn’t a rule book or instruction manual for this role. Somehow we have to just do our best, with our love for our children guiding the way, and hope that it is in fact enough. Maybe if I keep telling myself this one day it will stick.

Am I still going to rush around at the last minute to get one more thing for my son’s school project, so he doesn’t feel disappointed? Probably. Will I still stay up way past my bedtime just to make sure that someone’s favorite shirt gets into the dryer for tomorrow? More than likely.

But can I also give myself a little grace? You bet. The thing about parenting is that we try so hard to make our kids happy, but they don’t even notice half of what we are doing for them. What they do notice is that they are safe, loved, and protected. They know that we are in their corner, and will be by their side through the lowest of the lows and the highest of the highs.

My son has long since forgotten about the boring brown toy in his bag that day, but he won’t soon forget my love for him or the smile on my face when he looks back and sees me rooting for him. Because that’s always where I’ll be for my kids. Just being me. Just the way I am. Imperfectly parenting to the best of my ability.

 

If the Boxes Could Talk

Each of my boys has a special memory box.

Some of them are filled with special baby outfits, hospital bracelets, favorite baby toys, and sweet cards from their baby showers.

One is bigger than the rest because it has a bigger job to do. It holds the special tokens of a birth mother’s love. A few outfits and a stuffed giraffe that a young girl bought for the baby she entrusted to us are tucked inside waiting until it’s time for them to help us tell our son a powerful story of sacrifice, hope, and indescribable love.

Two have outfits that once fit perfectly on tiny, less than half a pound baby boys. They include tiny teddy bears that were snuggled up in the arms of my angel babies when I softly sung my first and last song to them. They also hold the only pictures I will ever have of two of my boys. Arguably my most prized tangible possessions.

And the last box stands has nothing but a little blanket inside. No pictures of my second-born son, no baby clothes, no other sweet reminders of his short life. It’s just a placeholder for the memories that are stored away carefully in my mind.

The day he was born was different. The hospital staff assigned to my care didn’t know what I needed. They didn’t know how to handle his death combined with two babies still nestled in my womb. The nurses were scared of upsetting me further, so they didn’t dress him in a tiny layette like they did his brothers two weeks later. I first held him wrapped in a medical cloth, pulled from a shelf nearby.

The hospital staff hid me away on a floor away from labor and delivery so I wouldn’t hear the cries down the hall. They did the best they could with what they knew and understood about a woman who had just lost one of her children.

No one told me to take a picture of him. Oh, how I wish they would have. It’s like a sucker punch when I close my eyes, eight years later, and the image of his face isn’t as clear as it once was. I struggle to remember the weight of him in my hands as I held him close to my chest while begging God to give him another chance.

Eventually, they would bring a sweet little blanket to wrap him in, which gave me more comfort than they could have imagined. It is the only item I have to run my fingers over as I reminisce about that day.

Merely two weeks later I was once again saying goodbye. This time to two babies who fought so hard, but were no match for the cards we had been dealt. This time was different. The nurse taking care of me somehow knew what I would need for years to come. She gently bathed our babies, dressed them in tiny clothes donated by an amazing organization that focuses on pregnancy and infant loss, and brought us beautiful memory boxes for all three of our triplets. She apologized that she was not there to do the same two weeks before. The acts of kindness she gifted to us that day will never be forgotten. One woman changed the way that day will be remembered forever.

I will be the first to say that I didn’t even know what I needed when our first baby died. It’s only now that I look back and regret how his special day played out. There is no way I could have anticipated his death, or prepared myself for that loss. There isn’t a protocol for how to handle that devastating blow.

Society doesn’t embrace pregnancy and infant loss because it’s too painful to talk about or even think about too much. No one really knows how to react when it happens. Not the people going through it, not the friends, not the family, not even the medical staff. There just isn’t one right or wrong way to walk through a loss like that.

What is important is that you show up for the people who are saying goodbye to their child. Be the nurse that goes the extra mile to show genuine compassion. Be the friend that shows up to sit in silence by the bed and hold her hand. Be the co-worker who stocks up their pantry at home with food because grocery shopping is the last thing on their minds. Call across the country to set up a meal train for your friends as they leave the hospital broken and empty handed. Ask them if they want to talk about their sweet baby. Let them know you aren’t scared of the pain they are feeling.

You just might be the person who they remember years later as they think of the kindness that was woven into the most difficult time in their lives.

Like each box on my shelf, each child has a story to tell. Sometimes we get to watch that story play out in a lifetime of seemingly insignificant moments, and sometimes one significant moment has to last a lifetime.

 

To My Son’s Birth Mom on Mother’s Day

Mother’s Day is coming up soon, and I can’t stop thinking about you. It is your first Mother’s Day as a mom after all. Nine months ago you brought a beautiful baby into this world. You held him tightly to your chest, told him how much you loved him, and placed him into my arms.

I literally have to catch my breath every time I think about that moment.

Your strength on that day, and every day since, amazes me to no end. I have no idea how you did what you did for our son. Everything in your body was saying to hold on to him and never let go, but somehow you were able to look into his future and know what he needed. You knew that the life he deserved and the life you could provide were two entirely different things.

Not many people know you are a mother. You so strongly, and bravely navigated the birth and adoption of your baby without many others knowing what you were going through. You look at precious pictures of your baby on your phone, but you do not get to share our son with the world in the same way that I do.

On Mother’s Day, no one will shower you with flowers or a handmade card proclaiming you as the best mom ever. You won’t have your baby to cradle in your arms and admire how he has your eyes and your sweet personality. Most people won’t remember that you need to be celebrated as a mother, but I will.

A mother puts her own wants and desires after those of her child. She thinks not of her happiness, but of what is best for her child. She worries about all the choices she has made, and wonders if they were best for her baby. A mother lays awake at night wondering if she is enough. She wonders if her child can forgive her for the mistakes she has made. Sometimes she wonders if her child knows how much she loves them.

You see, all of those things are what makes you a mother. The fact that you aren’t changing diapers, fixing bottles, or holding his hands as he takes his first steps, doesn’t make you any less of a mother to our son.

You gave him life, and then gave him a new one.

Your sacrifice and determination allows me to be the one that will get the Mother’s Day card this year. I will be the one collecting macaroni necklaces, flowers picked from among the weeds outside, and all the hugs and kisses year after year on Mother’s Day. But my motherhood does not diminish yours.

If I had it my way, I would shout your name from the rooftops for all to hear. I would tell them of a young woman who is the strongest kind of mother there is. I would remind them that the reason my son has a beautiful life is because you loved him enough to let him go.

So each Mother’s Day, when the emotions coming flooding into your heart, stop and remember one thing. Our family won’t just be celebrating me, we will be celebrating our son’s first mother too. Because you are a woman worthy of a thousand praises, and a lifetime of love and gratitude.

When I Hear the Word “Abortion”

For weeks my social media feed has been swarmed with conversations surrounding abortion. I’ve read articles discussing the horrors of late-term abortion, angry pleas to legislators to reconsider new abortion laws, and stories of women who ended the life of their child for a host of different reasons.

I’ve often thought of what I might add to this conversation. For so long I thought it would be Johnny’s story I would use to share my thoughts on abortion. I would tell of the beautiful, perfectly formed baby boy that I held in my arms after a mere 14 weeks and 5 days gestation. Our first tiny triplet son that I delivered at home that warm summer morning was just that…perfect. His long fingers and toes reminded me of his Pawpaw. His sweet face looked as though he was merely taking a nap. Never mind the fact that he fit into the palm of my hand. I wanted everyone to see that he was already a baby in every sense of the word even at 14 weeks. How could anyone abort their baby if they could see how “human” they are so early on in pregnancy?

That’s the story I thought I would tell. But sitting here today, when this topic is weighing on so many people’s mind, I find myself finally ready to tell an entirely different story.

Over the years I have shared about our struggles with infertility, the loss of our triplets, parenting after loss, and our journey with adoption. I have chosen to be open about every detail of my walk through motherhood in hopes of supporting someone else that might be navigating a similar path. There is one story I’ve never shared, though. I’ve never shared Asher’s story. Not the whole story anyway.

There are four words I have always left out of his story. Four words that I’ve never spoken out loud or so much as typed onto my computer screen.

I had an abortion.

Saying it, even now, sounds strange. I argue that he was one of the most wanted little boys in the entire world. I had been flat on my back fighting for his life for 16 days before making the decision. The decision that ended his life.

I had made it to 17 weeks pregnant with our remaining two triplet sons after Johnny’s passing. I had never wanted something as badly as I wanted them to survive. But in the early hours of the morning, Jaxsen couldn’t be held inside any longer, even through the stitches placed carefully to prevent his birth. I was sick. Horribly sick. An infection coursed through my body, and the babies and I wouldn’t all be able to survive the cards we had been dealt.

I’m often taken back to the moment when the doctor stood over my bed telling my husband and I that I needed to be rushed into surgery, but that our final baby would likely not survive. It plays back in slow motion now eight years later. I can still see my husband’s head solemnly nod in agreement before I blacked out.

I woke up hours later after surgery and knew my womb was empty. I wasn’t conscious when Asher was taken from my body. He is my only baby I don’t remember delivering. One minute he was safe inside my belly, and then he was gone. The weeks and months that followed were gut-wrenching, empty, and numb.

It wasn’t until months later that I even thought about what really happened that day. I was sifting through a pile of mail, when I ripped open yet another medical bill. As I read through the insane charges, I realized what I was being billed for. My abortion. I trembled in horror as I read the words. It must be some mistake. Who was playing this cruel joke on me?

You see I never really thought about the fact that my husband and I had chosen my life over our son’s. It’s true that he just could not have survived at such a young gestation, yet he wasn’t born under his own terms. A doctor removed him from my womb to save me. He was still alive and well until the procedure. Medically what I had done was just that, an abortion.

I bet that when my friends share articles about abortion online they don’t imagine the range of emotions someone like me might be feeling. When I read the word “abortion” my head starts to swirl. I question the decision we made in the hospital that morning. I know that no one looks at me, the mom of four, as someone who has been affected by abortion. Strangers could never see the pain and devastation that I carry with me always.

I know those close to me would never judge me, but I worry for women that do not have a support system. What message do these accusatory, no room for discussion articles send to women who have no choice about their child’s future. What do they say to the young woman who truly feels like abortion is her only choice?

I guess I’m confused with my feelings about abortion. I’ve never been one to judge someone for such a deeply personal decision, but I am also horrified at the thought of terminating a pregnancy without medical necessity. Am I pro-life? Am I pro-choice? My thoughts start to blur when I think about where I stand on such an important issue.

I do know that no two abortion stories are the same. I know that some might say I don’t have the right to share my story because it “isn’t that bad.” But my baby died because of a decision I made. Whether I had an option or not, I will carry that choice with me forever.

I share this story now because I think it is important. I share it for the fact that it might matter to even one other person. Maybe a mother out there can relate to my feelings of regret about the decision I made. Maybe a woman needs to know that there is life after abortion. I will carry the hurt with me always, but I have found a way to have peace and happiness in my life once again. Maybe they can too.

Most importantly, I hope to illustrate the point that maybe abortion isn’t as black and white as we wish to make it. Perhaps it is a debate with no resolution in sight. What I do know is that if we navigate the conversation while keeping our hearts open and full of love for the very people that are connected to the tiny humans we wish to save, we might just help more than we hurt.

 

A Rainbow After the Storm

In honor of National Rainbow Baby Day today, I want to share the story of my rainbows. I want to tell the world about the babies that healed my shattered heart. The little boys who saved a woman from sinking into a grief so deep that there might have been no return. I want to tell you how I’m still standing after the storm.

Eight years ago I was early in my motherhood journey with a beautiful two-year-old that we finally had after facing infertility. We had battled infertility a second time and by the grace of God I was carrying a set of triplet boys. The sun was warm on my face as I breathed in the summer air.

One day a storm started brewing in the distance. It brought with it the death of one of our triplet sons. The storm raged for sixteen long days and nights before it claimed the second and third triplet. I was strong and steady in the storm, but in the end was no match for it’s destruction.

My husband and I clung desperately to the only sunshine we could see, our two-year-old son. I’ve written before about the amazing ability he had to make me want to stay on this Earth when I thought of nothing but going to be with my angels. He was the baby that gave me a worry free pregnancy and delivery. I was naive to the hurt and pain of losing a child when I carried him. I refer to those first two years of parenting as the “before.” In the “after” he has continued to be one of the most beautiful parts of my life.

However, this isn’t his story I share today. This story is about the babies that came after the storm. The three little boys who put the color back in our lives.

Two years after losing our triplets I was in a hospital bed hearing the long awaited first cry of our first rainbow baby. We had once again faced infertility, but also a scary surgery, and nine long months of wondering if he would survive. Every morning that he was inside my womb, I put my hands on my belly and asked God to save him. I begged for a chance to deliver a living baby. In those days I would have traded anything to give my first son a sibling.

The moment I realized that our rainbow baby was drawing breath.

Our amazing rainbow baby began to heal my heart in those first moments of his life. My body hadn’t failed me this time. I had protected this baby and he was going to live. And live he has. He has continued to be a light in our lives for the past six years. He is his big brother’s best friend, and a ball of energy that keeps our house full of loud noises and excitement.

Amazingly, I gave birth to our second rainbow three years later. And guess what? Four weeks ago today, we adopted our third rainbow baby to complete our family. A woman came into our lives unexpectedly and just knew we were suppose to be Mom and Dad to her baby. So here we are with four perfect boys in our arms, and three angel boys in Heaven.

I would be lying if I said that I came out of the storm as strong as I went in, but here I am living my best life. Four little boys get to be loved by a woman who was once broken and lost, but is now standing in the sunlight once again.

Our sunshine baby, as we call our first son, and these three rainbows have put the color back into our world. You can find my husband and I shaking our heads and wondering how all this happened in just ten short years. How did we come so close to losing it all and end up with cups overflowing?

The only answer I have is that we survive the storm one day at a time. We allow ourselves to feel the pain of loss while also giving ourselves permission to feel the joy.

Our rainbows don’t negate the storm, but add hope and beauty to a story that is still being written.

HutchHiker and Friends: Tees for Your Littles

I absolutely love finding unique, fun shirts for my three boys. Unfortunately, as all boy moms know, this can be a difficult task. I have often scrolled through social media looking at adorable girls t-shirts from local shops and wondered where the great boy designs were. Now I know!

HutchHiker and Friends is an amazing t-shirt company right here in Northwest Arkansas. They specialize in making adorable, unique shirts for girls and BOYS!

When my boys are out and about wearing their HHF designs, they always get compliments on their cute shirts.

Here are some of my favorite HHF shirts the boys have:

Don’t worry girl moms…the website has tons of absolutely precious shirts for your daughters too. After all, who doesn’t love a sweet little girl with a fun t-shirt and a big hair bow?

The shirts are super comfortable as well. I have been pleased with the fit and quality of each of the shirts I have ordered. You’ll love the price too. Supporting local businesses is always great, and the fact that HHF shirts are affordable makes it even better!

The owner is super friendly and is always working hard to offer original designs that you won’t see anywhere else. HutchHiker & Friends also has a VIP Facebook group that you can join to stay up to date on the most current styles, and you’ll even find great coupon codes to save on your purchases. Follow HutchHiker & Friends on Facebook and be sure to request to join the VIP group as well.

Visit https://hutchhikerandfriends.com/ today to order a tee for your little. The only hard part will be deciding which one to get!

Guns or Roses Gender Reveal Party

When we found out we were adopting so suddenly, we had so much to think about. So many questions and concerns. Since we hadn’t even begun the process of adoption (it was merely a desire of our hearts) when we were connected with a birth mother, we had to make a lot of decisions very quickly.

The most important decision that I made was that we wanted to treat our new child and his birth, exactly the way we did with our biological children. I didn’t want to look back and feel like there were things I didn’t do for this baby that I did for our other boys.

Naturally that meant planning a gender reveal party! Even though we only had a few weeks to put it together, I think it turned out great. My mother-in-law handled the details and did an excellent job of giving us a fun party!

We love music and thought the theme was clever so we went with a Guns or Roses concept for the party. Who doesn’t love pink roses and water guns for a centerpiece?

The balloons were filled with pink or blue confetti. Three of one color and we would know the gender.

Each of us got to pop a balloon. The kids loved being involved!

Daddy popped the last balloon, but it had both colors! Moments later, blue balloons floated up from behind the house. It’s a BOY!
Adorable banner made by my sister, Laura.

Beautiful cake with blue inside!

Three boys here, three in Heaven. This summer we welcome baby BOY number seven!