Some new feelings.

Lately it has been hard to write one big cohesive post because there are so many things that are happening and so many emotions that I'm feeling. So this post is going to be written in lengthy bullet points so that I can separate my ideas. And when I say lengthy, I mean real lengthy. So, sorry.

  • This past week has been rough in a different way than the weeks prior have been. I wrote in a different post about how I don't want to let my experience affect my happiness for other people who are having babies right now, and I feel like I've done a pretty good job. I went and visited a friend at work so I could see pictures of his babies, and our close friends brought their new baby over a couple weeks ago. But in the past few days, I have had at least five facebook friends post pictures of their brand new babies while they are still in the hospital, and it is killing me. If you are one of these people are you are reading this post, please please please do not be offended by this little bullet. I am seriously so happy for all these people and their cute babes, but the jealousy is new. I just keep thinking "they are so lucky they get to take their baby home." Not even, "they are so lucky their baby is alive and healthy," but just that they get to take their babies home. I think a big part of it comes from the fact that I'm still just home by myself, jobless and babyless, and it feels confusing. My life isn't what is should be right now, and I'm jealous that all these other happy moms get to continue their lives as planned. To an extent, I think we all are thrown when our plans get messed up, and I still haven't quite figured out how to right what went wrong. Or maybe the fact that I can't fix it is what makes it so hard. I don't know if any of that made sense, it's just hard. For a long time, roughly five months or so, we would go sit in the nursery and get excited about what was to come. But now I just go sit in the nursery and feel confused. Like maybe I just over prepared on the off-chance that we got pregnant and we never did and now we just have all these baby things sitting lonely in a room. But then I remember the hollow, empty feeling in the pit of my stomach and remember that I didn't just prepare because I'm neurotic, that we were really expecting this little life to come home with us. And then I get confused for a whole different reason, because I don't understand why we, of all the people in the whole world that become parents, including those who don't really deserve it, had our sweet boy taken from us.

  • Sorry that first bullet was a bummer.

  • I meant to write a really long post about how awesome my friends have been throughout this whole experience, but it got overtaken last Wednesday by a grief-induced post, so I'm going to do it now. When we were in Logan a few weekends ago, I was able to meet up with three of my friends for lunch. Two of them live in Salt Lake and we see each other frequently, but we only see the third a couple times a year, so it was really special. And it was even more special for me in the fact that I got to take them to see Carter. Each time Brandon and I have been to see Carter, it has always been a really somber experience. But that afternoon with my friends was different. We took up ornaments to decorate his little Christmas trees with, and even though it was really sad, we were also able to talk to him and celebrate him, and also laugh while my friends told him about life and how much they loved him. We took some pictures, and I didn't think twice about smiling. Even though it really sucks that we had to go to a cemetery for my friends to meet him, they still got to meet him and love him, and I know they always will love him. We each posted the same picture on instagram that night, but Alycia posted a caption that really speaks volumes for our friendship.

 

"My heart is so full. I have been thinking lately a lot about how much these girls and I have been through and supported each other through--4 weddings, the stress of school, broken hearts, depression, anxiety, ptsd, infertility, PPD, divorce, cancer of a parent, several moves, job changes, and now the loss of a child. Our friendship can be rainbows, butterflies, and dance parties at times, but it's also full of tears, late night talks, and shoulders to cry on. Today, it was leaning on one another and huddling around this grave as we loved on this perfect, sweet little boy. Thank you girls--your real, raw, and genuine friendship means the world to me."

 

I left Logan that night with my heart feeling so full, and feeling so genuinely grateful for these three. They were there just a few days after we lost Carter, and have been there for me whenever I need a girls night or just to talk. And it's not like they are only here now in the crappiest time of my life, but they are always there. l just don't think there are enough words to properly say how much I love and appreciate them. There's something special about real friendships that go through so much.

  • I'm still trying to figure out this whole filling time thing. I'm starting to get tired of sleeping until eight every morning (never in my life thought I would say that), but don't have enough things to do to keep me busy all day! I have this problem where when I get extremely bored I basically can't function. I don't really understand it, but I've always been that way. So when I get bored, I have just been watching tv, and that makes me more bored! It's a vicious cycle haha. But the weekdays have made me extremely grateful for the weekends when Brandon is home!

  • On that note, I have started editing my book again, for hopefully the last time. Over the summer I spent a few weeks writing to book agents hoping to get picked up, but didn't get any interest in my book. Then last week, Brandon found out that you can e-publish your books on Amazon for free! So I have decided to maybe do that, if I can be brave enough to hit submit. It's just sitting in my Google Docs metaphorically collecting dust, so I might as well do something with it!

  • Last thing, and sorry, it's kind of sad. The day we lost Carter, we had the nurse take a couple pictures of us as a family, and then someone came in to take pictures of him that night after we had left. After the shock of everything wore off, I started thinking about how we wouldn't have the opportunity for real family photos with him, not now, and not when we have a bigger family in the future. We have this big picture frame on the wall in our living room, and for so long I had been looking forward to taking out the picture of me and Brandon and putting in a picture of us with Carter. The photos of the three of us from the hospital aren't quite what I had wanted to put in there, and I didn't just want to put up one of our maternity pictures, so I contacted James Ruda Photography and had him take some new pictures of us. If you've read my other posts, you know that an airplane is our little symbol for Carter. We wanted to find an airplane to leave at his grave, and ended up finding a perfect one at Hobby Lobby. We bought one for him, one for the house, one for Brandon to take to work, and one for each of our parents. Some people who have lost children choose to hold a photo of their baby when having family pictures taken, but we have decided that this little airplane will represent Carter now, and in all of our family pictures to come.

 
 

Things I can't do.

I woke up this morning feeling mad. Confused, tricked, betrayed, angry. And I'm feeling all of these things not solely because of the fact that Carter was taken from us, but because of the things that have come after. Being angry doesn't bring Carter back, I've accepted that. But I'm mad about all the other things that have been messed up because we lost him.

These first six weeks that I've spent recovering were supposed to be filled with late nights, loss of sleep, frustration at figuring out what he wants, feedings, and figuring out our new life together. Instead, I'm left wanting for all those things. I heard our friends talk about how their new baby isn't sleeping...I'd give anything to not sleep again if it meant taking care of Carter. Our plans for holidays changed completely. Instead of staying home and trying to figure out how to cook a turkey in a crock pot, we went to Boise for Thanksgiving in our new crossover vehicle that felt all too big without a carseat in the back. We planned to celebrate Christmas at home too, cuddled up by the tree, spoiling our boy with more gifts than he needed. Instead, we're stuck trying to figure out what to do because the only thing we want to do is the one thing we can't.

Back in September, I put in my notice at work and told everyone I was planning to be a stay at home mom. They found my replacement quickly, and I even trained her for a few days. Then we lost Carter, and I was left childless, jobless, and without purpose. I was fine at home for the first few weeks-I had Brandon with me for two, and was still recovering for the third-but those first few days the week of Thanksgiving were rough. I was bored and tired of sitting at home. I had a job interview that Monday in a different department of the school I had worked in before. I figured I was a shoo-in, because I already knew the people that worked down there, and had glowing recommendations from the administration of my previous job. I didn't get the job, though. And even though I was incredibly bummed, I had applied for a job at a middle school, and thought that maybe I was meant to have that position. But I found out yesterday that I didn't get the job at the middle school either, despite the principal and vice principal from my last job reaching out and telling the middle school admin how lucky they'd be to have me. Both places told me they chose someone with more experience. The middle school called and asked if I would be interested in something part time, if something opened up, because they loved me. Talk about a stab to the heart. I was good, just not good enough.

I obviously don't expect a job to be handed to me, but I thought that after losing a child and having my world somewhat crumble, I thought maybe a divine force would make the process of getting back into the real world a little easier. Maybe not add more hardship to the suffering I've already endured. I guess I was wrong.

So when I woke up at 3:00 this morning, sad, angry, and unable to fall back asleep quickly, I made a plan for my day. A non-productive, depressing, angry plan that would allow me to wallow and soak up all the pain I've been feeling for the last six weeks. I planned to stay in bed, watch tv, not shower, not eat, not talk to anyone, and just be miserable all day. It didn't sound great, but it felt appropriate. But then I woke up for real at the glorious hour of nine am, planning to do those things, and realized that I can't. Not even that I can't, but that I don't want to. On some level, I do, but being pissed off at the world and at God isn't going to fix anything. It's not going to bring Carter back-it sure wouldn't make him proud of me-and it's not going to get me a job or a hobby or just anything to save me from my boredom; it would only make it worse. So I got out of bed, opened the blinds, fed the cats, got myself a big glass of water, and decided to write down all my feelings. Let them out instead of letting them pool up inside me and wear me down. Because you know what? Depression is the absolute freaking worst, and I'm not going to let it get me. So now, I'm going to go take a shower, eat breakfast, and figure out what I'm going to do today to get out of the house. I am stronger than I think I am or sometimes want to be. If Carter has taught me anything, it's that.

Carter's special drawing.

I think it's weird to say that I am so pleased with how Carter's headstone turned out, but I really really am. I didn't want to just post the picture and let you all see it on Facebook and Instagram, because I wanted to show/explain to you why it is so special. A few months ago, I posted this picture that Brandon had drawn for the nursery. I nagged and nagged and nagged, thinking how sweet it would be for each of our kids to have had something drawn specifically for them by their dad, and finally, he gave in. This was the result:

 
 

Isn't it so good?? It incorporated the airplanes on the crib sheet and the art that we had hung above the crib, and I was in love with it. Fast forward to the past five weeks. We had to decide what we wanted to do for a headstone, and all I knew I wanted was to see if they could put Brandon's drawing on the headstone. There just really are no words to convey my happiness with it. You guys, it's perfect.

 
 

I never thought it was possible to feel so much joy when looking at a headstone, but knowing that Carter has his dad's drawing with him all the time now just makes my heart feel so full. It's hard to have this whole room full of his stuff and know that he doesn't really have anything of his with him (with the exception of a blanket Brandon's mom made), it just gives me a lot of peace to be able to leave something so full of love permanently. 

Over the weekend, Brandon and I took a little Christmas tree to the grave site and decorated it while we talked to Carter. It was nice to share the time with him, and include him in our holiday festivities while starting a new tradition. I met my friends for lunch that day and asked them if they would want to take some ornaments up when I took them to see Carter; I had to buy another tree because they kept finding ornaments! That same afternoon, Brandon bought a couple solar lights to install at the grave. We went back that night before we left town, and I was so thankful for the solar lights. Carter is always our first stop when we get to Logan, and lately it has been dark when we get there, so it is nice to have the lights and be able to see a bit better.

I feel like this post is a little jumbled, but I've learned over the past six weeks that sometimes words can't show emotions as well as we'd like them to, which is ironic, coming from a writer. My heart just is so full. I don't even know how to end this post, so I'm just going to leave it at that. My heart is full, and I'm so grateful for the tremendous amount of love I have and have felt  through this whole thing.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Thankful.

I have to be honest, I'm a little tired of this whole radio silence thing. I kind of feel like there is an expectation for us to not be okay, so I feel like we can't outwardly be happy. And not that social media is life, but I'm tired of taking pictures of my cats on snapchat to send to friends and inevitably deleting them because maybe it's not  okay for me to be okay already. But we are okay! There are minutes where we are sad or angry or confused, but overall, we are still okay. And to all the friends that didn't receive the cat pictures, well, you're welcome. So anyway, don't be surprised if/when we break the silence. 

Despite everything that happened, we have found a million things to be thankful for. And since Thanksgiving is on Thursday, there is no better time than now to write about it all. It's going to be a long list though, so bear with me.

  • First and foremost, Brandon. This guy has seriously been my rock for the past few weeks (and years, really). I don't know what I would do without him. He holds me when I cry, works from home when I need him to, takes me to Costa whenever I ask, makes me laugh, helps me remember Carter, listens as I endlessly ramble about my feelings, and so many other things. I can't imagine having to go through this without him. He's the best support system I could ask for.

  • I'm so thankful that I am able to feel Carter's spirit so close to me. I can always feel him here, but the times that I ask to feel it a little stronger, I do. I don't know how long he'll be able to just hang out with me whenever I ask, but I'm going to soak it up while I can.

  • Our family has been so awesomely supportive as well. They listen when we need to talk, but also are okay with continuing on and being a happy family still. It would be so exhausting to just be sad or angry all the time, and I love that they don't try to make us keep feeling those things when we don't want to.

  • Close friends and not so close friends. I can't tell you how much we appreciate all the texts, comments, and facebook messages we have received since we lost Carter. It makes me so happy to see other people using his name, and the outpouring of love we got after I posted his pictures...I can't even tell you what that meant to us. I've received a lot of little gifts too, and they are so special in that they remind me of him every time I look at them. I'm obviously not going to reply to each and every message-I hope that's okay, and I feel like people will understand-but this is a blanket thank you. We appreciate you guys.

  • The cats have been so clingy and cuddly since it all happened. I'm weirdly obsessed with them anyway, but it's so nice to have a warm little body come cuddle with me when I'm feeling sad. I don't know if they understand what exactly is missing from our home, but they know when we're sad and they try to fix it.

  • I still love our doctor so much. I'm grateful for the time he takes to answer our questions at our appointments, for the questions he asks us, and the love and support we feel from him. Tragedy does weird things for people, and I feel like all of this has turned us and his office staff into a little family. I don't know, we just really feel so much love from them.

  • We bought a new car two weeks ago, and I'm thankful for it too, because it's all wheel drive and will allow us to go visit family even when the roads are snowy. The holidays are going to be hard without Carter here, so it will be nice to get away.

  • I'm thankful for the kindness of strangers.

  • I'm thankful for little blessings that have happened every day since we lost him. Even though the situation is so sucky, we have been able to recognize the little things and appreciate them for what they are worth. Someone, whether Carter or God or both, is looking out for us and making all of this a little easier to handle.

  • I'm also thankful for my mental health. Given my history of depression, we were prepared for postpartum depression, but I'm honestly surprised I haven't fallen apart. Little things like opening the blinds, showering, eating right...I'm not sure why, but they're all working. Being depressed is exhausting. I don't want to do it again. Don't get me wrong, I'm grieving, but I'm so thankful that I'm able to do it in a healthy way: grieve, recover, and go about my day, even if it's just for the next few hours or minutes until the grief comes back.

Bad things happen to good people, but I don't believe that means you should lose sight of the good things that happen, even if it is something so small as the sun shining. Happy Thanksgiving everyone. I hope your turkey day is filled with love and happiness!

 

Pictures of Carter.

You guys. Thank you so much for all your kind comments and messages about our post yesterday. Most of all, thank you for acknowledging Carter and his life! I can't even begin to tell you how happy it makes us to hear other people say his name and talk about him. I know that for me, my biggest fear is forgetting him, or having other people forget him. So just thank you, from the bottom of our hearts, for reading his story and loving him. It means so much to us.

I had so many people request to see pictures that I decided to just post a few on here. The people that went and took pictures had some of them edited, but this first one from the hospital is my favorite of him. Again, thank you for loving him, and thanks for wanting to see pictures! We love showing him off.

 
 

Carter's story.

There's a part of me that feels like I shouldn't be writing this yet. It has only been two weeks since we lost our sweet boy, so it feels like it's too soon. It all still feels like a dream. A nightmare, actually. But I'm writing it because I miss him, and I want people to know that it's okay to talk about him. And I'm writing it in hopes that it will make me feel better to get all my emotions out in words that I can't seem to say.

To tell the whole story I feel like we need to start a little earlier. About seven weeks ago, September 25th, I didn't really feel Carter move all day until really late that night. So the next morning, a Monday, I called my doctor and he told us to come in. They did a non-stress test to check his heart rate, which was stellar, then did an ultrasound to check the fluid around him, which was also stellar. The office called me the following Wednesday (the 28th) and said it looked like there were some enlarged areas of his heart, and asked us to schedule a fetal echo-cardiogram. I cried my eyes out at work that day because I had been just waiting for something bad to happen, and I thought it was finally happening. A week later (October 12th), we did the fetal echo, and the three doctors in the room said his heart looked great, and that we had nothing to worry about. Friday of the same week (October 14th) we had our 37 week appointment. The following Wednesday, (October 19th) we had our 38 week appointment, where my stomach measured smaller than it had that Friday before. So the next morning we went in for another ultrasound to check the blood flow in the placenta and through the umbilical cord. They said everything looked fine, and we saw his little heart fluttering, and got to watch him move a little bit. Over the course of the next six days, I noticed how little I felt him move, but I kind of just assumed he was running out of room in there, since I wasn't that big.

When we went to the doctor for our 39 week appointment (October 26th), the doctor asked if I had felt him move, and I just told him no. Brandon kept trying to say "but you thought you felt him this day, right?" and even though he was right, and I had thought I felt him move, I still just told the doctor no. And I think in that moment the three of us knew what was about to happen. He tried to find Carter's heartbeat for a few minutes, and there was nothing. It was the worst sound I've ever heard. Just the dead silence. I already was crying before he was halfway done listening. He helped me sit up and told me he was going to prep the ultrasound room. After what seemed like a million years, he came back to get us. The walk to the ultrasound room was awful, because you could tell he had told the nurses and other doctors what was going on. We could see the sadness in their eyes.

During the ultrasound, the doctor was blocking my view of the tv on the wall behind him. He wasn't doing it on purpose, but I could only watch his and Brandon's faces. The doctor's face dropped and he told us he was sorry, and Brandon and I just clung to each other. I couldn't cry anymore, because I had already cried everything out. I just was in shock; I had to ask him if this was real life. And I kept apologizing to Brandon, because I felt like I had let him down. After a bit, we asked what the next step was. The doctor told us he would call labor and delivery to see if we could go that night, or we could wait and go the next day, but we said we wanted to go that night. So we went home, fed the cats, put away the bassinet and a few other things, grabbed our bags, and headed for the hospital.

The whole drive there and the whole walk in we just kept saying how wrong the whole situation was. We were supposed to be pulling into the hospital on two wheels, and I was supposed to be taking breaks to cope with contractions while walking in. But instead, we were just walking solemnly in. The labor and delivery wing was so quiet when we got there, and we were grateful. It was a peaceful start to an awful night. 

Our nurse took us in and let us get comfortable, talking to us about the situation and trying to help us with our emotions. She got us some dinner, and walked me through what the night held for us. She checked me, and I wasn't dilated at all. Around 7:30 pm she gave me the first dose of Cytotech to get the process started, and said she would check me again in three hours. At eight, Adrian showed up to the hospital. At this point, Brandon and I had had enough of being sad, and were just kind of okay with what was going on, so it was nice to have another body in the room to talk to about other things. Around 8:30, Brandon's parents showed up, and again, it was just nice to have more people to talk to about other things. They stayed until just after ten, Brandon's dad gave me a blessing, and then we were by ourselves again. The nurse came in and checked me again, and I was already at a 1.5. The doctor wanted her to give me a double dose of the Cytotech then, but she decided to wait and check me again at 11:30 to see where we were. I honestly don't remember what time she came back to give me the second dose, but she didn't double it like the doctor asked. My parents showed up sometime (before or after the second dose, I don't remember, I think after) at 1:30 am. They stayed for about 45 minutes, then went to our house to sleep and try to let us sleep. Of course, at this point, the contractions started getting pretty strong. I kept trying to sleep, but they were coming every minute or so, and I legit thought I was dying haha. Brandon was sleeping so peacefully on his little couch, and I was just laying on the bed with my finger next to the nurse's button for probably a good hour. Finally around 3:30 am, I buzzed for the nurse. Our first nurse was supposed to leave at 3, but she was still there and came in with our second nurse. I asked for just a small dose of the pain meds, so they gave it to me, then left. And about thirty minutes later I buzzed them back in and asked for more meds. They checked me at this point, and I was at a 4. An hour (or less, probably) later, I buzzed the nurse back in and asked for the epidural. I had told myself that I was going to try and go without, only because I was afraid that when I asked for it they would just laugh and tell me I was only at a one, so I was just trying to be tough. But the nurse (first nurse still, and this was at 5 am, two hours after her shift ended) checked me and said I was at a five and that my water was ready to break. But the doctor told them not to break my water, so they just had to wait.

I got the epidural, which was surprisingly painless compared to the contractions I was having while he was trying to stick the needle in (being a woman is a joke). They gave me a faster acting dose, and then the regular stuff, so within minutes I was feeling pretty good. That was all around 5:30 am. The nurse came back in just after 7:00 am with our third and final nurse, who then checked me and told me my water had broke and that I was at a ten and ready to go. They went to call the doctor, and said he would be there in 30 minutes to an hour, so we sat back and prepped to meet our sweet boy. We were shocked at how quickly the whole process had gone. Our first nurse had told us that we wouldn't have a baby by seven am, but maybe early afternoon, yet here it was not even eight am and we were ready to go.

The doctor showed up around 8:15, and talked to us a little bit while they prepped the room. I have to put a plug in for him here: I love our doctor. I love him so much that I told Brandon that we are never leaving Utah because I want him to deliver all our children. And if you know me at all, you know that me saying I'll live here forever is a big deal! Anyway, they got me all situated, I couldn't feel my legs one bit and felt bad that I couldn't do much to help in that aspect. When the doctor finally sat down, the nurse would tell me when a contraction was coming, have me push for ten seconds, then take a deep breath and do it two more times in a row. I had to do three sets of three and then at 8:51 am he was there! Brandon got to hold one of my legs and watch, which sounds gross, but I'm so glad he did given the situation. They immediately laid Carter on my chest and gently cleaned him while Brandon cut the umbilical cord. I couldn't stop crying for so many reasons, but you guys he is beautiful! And he looked so peaceful.

After about ten minutes, they took him over to the little table to clean, weigh, and clothe him. He weighs 5 pounds, 15 ounces, and is 20 inches long. Once he was clothed, they gave him to Brandon to hold. It was one of the saddest, most touching things to see Brandon holding him, crying, and then to hear him say "he looks just like you." It broke my heart. We spent about an hour with Carter, talking to the doctor a bit and then having the nurse fawn over our cute boy. Our families had been waiting in the waiting room, so we had them come in and take turns holding him. I was so happy his grandparents were there to meet him and hold him for a little bit. We couldn't get over how big his feet are!! And his hair, oh my gosh his hair. He has a full head of dark brown hair that has a little bit of a curl to it. And he has Brandon's squishy lips and I love them.

We spent probably about two and a half hours with him, alternating between crying and just feeling complete joy at how perfect he is. And that is how we will always remember him: our perfect, squishy faced, skinny little babe. Sadly, his skin started to get really dry, so we called our parents back in to say goodbye, then had a few minutes with him on our own, and then said goodbye for the day.

The rest of the afternoon was spent watching Impractical Jokers and trying to rest, again alternating between crying and just feeling okay. We left the hospital that night around 5:00, because I didn't feel like staying anymore. That night, someone went to the hospital and took pictures, and also took molds of his hands and feet that we now have to hold. It's not just like a hand and footprint, they are his little feet and hands that we can pick up and hold individually, and I'm so grateful for them!

Physically, the recovery has been fine. Emotionally, it has been a little harder. The first few days I cried a lot, but we also laughed a lot and felt a lot of joy and blessings despite the situation. My parents stayed with us until Sunday, and Brandon's parents stayed with us the following Monday night, so we always had extra bodies to distract us and take care of us. 

We had a little graveside service for Carter this past Saturday. Brandon and I got to go see him at the funeral home before hand, and he still just looks so perfect. We picked out an outfit for him that Brandon's mom altered to be a little smaller than his newborn onesie he had been put in at the hospital, and the clothes still were so big on him! He's just a skinny little thing. The service was so nice though. We had a ton of family show up, which was honestly so great. There was so much love there. My dad read a letter that I had written to Carter, and Brandon's dad said a closing prayer, and that was it. We left a little airplane for him, it has become our little symbol for Carter and all the adventures he'll be taking (airplanes were a prominent theme in his nursery). Then we had a luncheon with all the family, and again it was just so great to feel all the love and support.

I wanted to write this so people would know his story. We don't know yet what happened- we're still waiting on test results-but he made us a family, and he will always be our son. I also want everyone to know that Brandon and I are actually doing okay, despite everything. Some days are harder than others, some minutes are harder than others, and when we feel like we want to be sad or angry we let ourselves be those things. But it also takes a lot of work to be sad and angry all the time, and knowing Carter, he wouldn't want that for us. We have this beautiful memory of the nine months we got to spend with him, and a somehow kind of beautiful delivery (you know, for as beautiful as those things actually can be), and I would do it all over again in a heartbeat. I want to be able to talk about Carter! I want people to feel like it's okay to ask us questions, and for them to know that our future children will absolutely know about Carter, and that he will always be mentioned when we talk about family. The situation completely sucks, and I've said that so much that just saying "it sucks" no longer covers how I really feel about it. But Brandon and I keep telling ourselves that yes, it could be better, but it also could have been worse. We were lucky to know before we delivered him that he would be born still, it gave us a lot of time to prepare and fully understand what was happening. We also are lucky to not have had an infant loss due to SIDS or something else beyond our control. Our situation sucks, but it could have been worse. And honestly, we have so many friends right now that have just had babies or will be very soon, and we don't want to feel angry or resentful towards anyone. We don't want our sadness to take away from our happiness for anyone else. And like I said, Carter wouldn't want us to do that either. 

I know we are receiving so much comfort from Carter, God, and from all our family and friends. Thank you all so much for the kind messages, gifts, and thoughts and prayers. I want you to know that we really can feel them. And I want everyone to know that we're okay. I wouldn't say we're great, but we still are able to get out of bed every day, appreciate the sunshine, and find reasons to laugh and be happy. If anything, the blue sky that has greeted us every day for the past two weeks makes me feel like Carter is surrounding us with his spirit.

I didn't want to post any pictures on here, because I don't want to force anyone to look at them, but if anyone is interested in seeing a picture, I really would love to share. He really is so cute. One of the other first things Brandon said when he saw him was "We make cute kids! We can keep having kids and they won't be ugly!" haha. I know we're biased, but still. So really, don't be afraid to talk to us about him. He's our son and we love him so much, and we want him to be a part of other people's lives as much as he is a part of ours. 

Eight days.

For the longest time, people have been asking me "how many days??" and I could never actually answer them because I've only been counting down in weeks. Then we hit Sunday, the ten day mark, and I still can't easily keep track of how many days are left. All I know is that as of tomorrow, we have one week left, and it's honestly the craziest thing.

You hear a lot of different things from people who have been pregnant: how they were super sick, how they love being pregnant, how they got as big as a house, all the weird things their body did, their awesome cravings...but nobody ever told me how fast it goes. Granted, the last three years seem like a whirlwind, and time has just flown by since we moved back to Utah, but it feels like not that long ago that I wasn't pregnant, or that I didn't really feel pregnant. The last time I remember really not feeling pregnant was April, and that was just like three days ago, right? It seriously goes so fast.

I keep trying to soak in the "lasts" of everything that happens on a daily basis, like having a family outing where the family consists of just the two us. Or the laughing loudly in bed at night without having to worry about waking up another human. Or snuggling with the kitties without them trying to lay on top of the baby that will soon take their place in my arms/on my lap/on my legs/in the crook of my neck/on my back. Since we've never had a baby before (as far as either of us is aware, anyway), we can only imagine what the changes will be like in our lives. I keep thinking about what I think it will be like, but then I remember certain realities. Like, in my head, it is just constantly dark outside and all we ever do is eat and sleep (which I know is true, to an extent). But then I remember that the sun will still rise every day, and also I have functioned on minimal sleep before, which means that I probably will be able to find time to care for myself a bit and talk to Brandon. Honestly I don't think we'll do much of anything besides stare at our little guy and wonder 1. how on earth we got so lucky and 2. what the heck we've gotten ourselves into.

A guy I work with whose wife was due 13 days after me had their baby yesterday, and I can't stop thinking about when we'll get to meet our little nameless babe. We've got all the supplies we need, and I don't think we can get any more mentally prepared, so send good thoughts our way for an early baby. We're ready for him!

Roughly 38 weeks.

I think I'm going to be pregnant forever. Baby boy seems pretty comfortable in there, and it just wouldn't be my life if for some random reason I just looked like this forever, even after he's born. I just will forever have a basketball under my shirt, and no clothes will ever fit me well every again. I can't believe we have just two weeks left (hopefully) until the big day. We asked the doctor for an estimate on his weight, and he guessed just under six pounds. If he's accurate, and if the little guy comes when he's supposed to, we're going to have just under a seven pound babe on our hands!

I was really hoping he would have been born over the weekend, to make selling our Chris Young tickets worth it. We went to the doctor on Friday and got told that I was no more dilated than Brandon was, and we still don't have the baby, so I'm pretty bummed that we sold our tickets. No Cassadee Pope, no Dan + Shay, and no baby. Luckily, we had a really fun and productive weekend to make up for it. Friday night I went and got dinner and a pedicure with friends. Saturday, we went to the corn maze, picked out pumpkins, and made caramel apple slices! We spent Sunday morning cleaning and getting the house in tip-top shape, then went and watched Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince in Imax that afternoon. And that night we bought curtains for our living room. We were both wanting to do that before the baby came, so it's nice to have it done; they make the room feel cozier and ready for winter!

Brandon is home sick today, and I wish I was there with him. Especially since I found out yesterday that my district doesn't pay out unused sick days; I'll be losing out on four :(  but it's okay! People are still finding out that I'm not coming back after the baby, and next week is my last week, so it's good for me to be here. Probably. I guess. Thankfully, tomorrow is a short day, then we don't have school Thursday or Friday for fall break! I'm looking forward to some much needed time off. 

Crying over spilled fruit.

The original draft of this post was titled "all the hormones" which basically explains the current title. Last night we went to the store to buy a few groceries, and I decided that chocolate covered strawberries and bananas sounded sooo good. We went home, dipped the fruit, ate dinner, then watched tv for a bit before we decided it was time for dessert. I had to run downstairs real quick to use the bathroom (story of my life lately), and Brandon started down the stairs right as I was going up them, and we heard a loud crash. Went upstairs to find that Milo had pulled the parchment paper down, and the fruit was all over the floor. I started to help Brandon clean it up, then just got way too sad about the whole situation and cried for literally ten minutes. I swear, these hormones are going to kill me.

Past that, I have been feeling pretty emotional about a lot of things lately. Our hospital bags are packed, so I'm excited to meet the babe and see his cute face and give him a name! We've been talking a lot about how our holiday season will be different having the little guy in our house, spending it as a family of three rather than the two of us combined with our extended family. It will be quiet and peaceful and snuggly (hopefully), and we're looking forward to the change. Despite all these aches and pains that accompany the third trimester, I am feeling really grateful for my body lately, and all the things it has done to care for and protect the baby. It really is the strangest, coolest thing. That being said, I'm super looking forward to being able to work out again. I know it will be the middle of winter, but as soon as the doctor clears me, I'm getting a gym membership and getting my butt back in shape.

These past 36 (what?) weeks have gone so fast, and there are a lot of things that have been great about them, and a few things that have just been mediocre, but I'll tell you what, I'm looking forward to not having quite so many emotions, at least not about silly things like dessert falling on the floor.

PS. Sorry all my pictures are just lame mirror selfies. I don't like asking Brandon to take pictures!!