As it is mid-May and summer is upon us.  My girls are revved up and ready to start the long summer days full of camps, swimming and a lot of nothing! The fact that they are growing up slaps me in the face almost everyday.

Ella bridged from being a Daisy Girl Scout to a Brownie Girl Scout.  She is extremely proud of this  and the fact that her first overnight camp will be this summer.

Meg went to sixth grade camp.  She climbed the Alpine tower and is planning on zip-lining this summer.  Adventure awaits her for sure.

Mita is furiously making plans for becoming a sixth grader that include playing soccer and the cello.  She will have to be at school at 7:30am next year, and while she thinks it is no big deal, I am dreading getting her up that early!

Enu, in Fourth grade, hit the jackpot for field trip years and has been busy running around the state visiting Amish Country (not a real country mind you), the high school FFA ( a different world) and has plans to visit the State House soon.  She is ready to rule the intermediate school next year in the fifth grade with NO other sisters to bug her.

Goodbye 2011-2012 school year. May we have a long, long summer full of fun times, empty afternoons reading in the shade and popsicles. Lots of popsicles.

   

Sunburned from camp!

 

Our Team's Zone Of Clean Up

Yesterday our local community organization had a pick up some trash day. Of course it was 40 degrees and raining! We had 11 braved souls, kids and adults, show up from a few local Girl Scout troops.  They were indeed troopers and we had a lot of fun in the wet and cold!

Here is a short video we did for a contest:  Girl Scouts Earth Day 2012 Check it out!

 

Mita wrote up a little something for this special day:

 Earth day is not just another day.  It’s a day that we think about the earth and how fragile the earth is and how we can make it better or improve more. Here are some ways you could make the environment better below:

  * Recycle cans, papers, plastic, glass,
  *  Reduce the amount of water you use like taking, shorter showers take a shower instead of a bath.
  *  Reuse paper on the back instead of throwing it away and getting a new one.                                    *  Conserve the amount of light you use ( turn off the lights you have on when you leave your home or room.
* Turn off your car when you’re in a long line at a fast food place.
* Turn off your TV when you’re not watching
* unplug a cord when you’re not using it

 

 

Okay. So I wrote that this is a movie review and a rant. I will rant first.  I know I am not the coolest mom ever.  Or the coolest mom. Or a cool mom.  But I am a mom and I did fork over close to $50 yesterday to take my two oldest darlings to see The Hunger Games. Nevermind that I would have seen it anyway if they hadn’t wanted to watch it because I am in love with this book series.  Gas, tickets, popcorn aren’t cheap. You would think I would get one lousy picture of my girls having fun at the movies…..noooooo. Not one picture of them in front of the movie poster, in the theater, posing with tickets. Nothing. I took a picture of my lonely little ticket to remember the day.  Maybe when Catching Fire comes out I’ll not take them unless they sign a contract saying they will pose for one picture.  Don’t they know that these events are the memories of their childhood? Don’t they know that they need to have them documented in photos so they will have hundreds of Shutterfly books to look through with their own children, my grandchildren, to show what an awesome mom childhood they had? Enough of the rant and on to the review.

I’ve read enough book series turned movie franchises to know that it is impossible to put everything from the book on the screen. The movies would be five hours long. I would still pay to see it, but apparently the movie people don’t know how die-hard readers can be!  The Hunger Games the movie was close enough to the book to please me. I can excuse the few missing characters, though I miss them.

If you have not read the books and only seen the movie the way Katniss gets her Mockingjay pin is not correct, and it loses some of its value I think in how she obtained it.  In the books Cinna is one of my favorite characters, he is very flamboyant, yet supportive.  The movie Cinna is certainly supportive, kind and him and Katniss work well together, but he was lacking in some of his charm.  Except for his eyeshadow, he wasn’t that WOW as he was in the book.

What I loved about the movie. Woody Harrelson as Haymitch was great, I enjoyed his portrayal.  Katniss was the Katniss from the books,  I think she nailed it.  Peeta was perfect, Gale had a small part in this first film, but I feel he is going to be perfect in this role.  I hate the whole Team Gale/Team Peeta thing. This is about Katniss!  She is not a prize to be won, she is a stand alone person.  Trying to tell this to my giggly girls is aggravating.

The violence in the movie was PG-13 for sure.  It was really hard to watch children kill children. The books can be hard to read, but as I am a visual person, it was hard to watch.  I questioned letting Mita and Meg see it on the screen.  They had read the books, I’ve tried to discuss the issues with them as they read them. I still don’t know if they get the entire picture, but I feel they are on the right track.  I would be hesitant to allow a young tween/teen see this film if they hadn’t read the books and started digesting the whole fight to the death theme of the books.  I don’t think murder should be glorified.

The theme of The Hunger Games being a reality TV show is very important for this upcoming generation especially.  It shows how real live human beings can be turned into mearly characters to play with. Watching the behind the scenes people come up with dogs, fires and darkness to add to the games appeal is reprehensible and yet it rings a bit to close to home.  Reality TV is not reality. We see people turn into diva monsters all the time for a few minutes of cheap fame.  A great discussion starter with the kids about the realities of reality TV and how human lives should not be treated lightly.

I  encourage parents to read this series if they have kids reading or watching them! If you want to learn more about them Scholastic has a great site to check out.  Have you read the books and seen the movie?  Did you allow your tweens or teens to see the movie? What are your thoughts.

Here is Meg’s blog about the movie. Notice how much time she spends on Peet and Gale! Arghh!

 

Watching the girls grow up is downright amazing.  I’ve said in the past that when they are small you are so exhausted and tired of saying “no”, of doing the diaper thing, the potty training thing, the sharing thing that you tend to not pay attention or appreciate fully the gains. You are just  happy to be through them.

As they get older and the achievements are more out of the hygiene realm, watching them grow, learn and become who they are meant to become is nothing less than miraculous.  I have found that every morning they come out of their rooms one step closer to adulthood and it makes me want a pause button in some ways and an applause button in other ways.

Where did Meg, long-legs Meg, get her confidence?  Both Hubby and I didn’t have great self-confidence growing up, yet she is strong, solid and humble in her self.  I’ve had teachers and other adults tell me how kind she is and how she isn’t a braggart in her accomplishments.

Mita. My dear Mita has blossomed into a young woman (seriously, have you seen her?!). She is quiet and works so hard. She is reading up a storm and is a straight A student. Straight A’s for a child who four years ago knew no English!   Her room is her castle and she loves to clean it and take pride in her appearance. The outfits she puts together dazzle and are stunning. How does she make sweats look glamorous?!  Her heart. Her heart has had more sorrow than many have had in a lifetime, and yet she is healing.  She gives me spontaneous hugs and I love yous. She calls me Mommy sometimes.  I love to just stare at her. She doesn’t like that so much though!

Enu. Enu is the child who is teaching me patience and perseverance.   She is growing by leaps and bound physically and emotionally.  She is finding herself slowly, but it is happening. She is great with young kids and as of right now she is helping me watch my niece. She will be a great babysitter in just a few years. Her smile is contagious, and she really is quite funny.  It will be great to watch her harness her energy in the years to come.

Elle.  Elle is my elfin fairy for sure.  She is now seven and  I look at what Meg was like at seven and they are so different yet alike.  Elle is becoming very funny, almost a dry sense of humor in some ways. Her comebacks make Hubby and I look at each other and smile. She can take care of herself  just fine in a pack of four sisters!  She still plays with toys, which makes me sooooo  happy.  For Christmas she got an iPod and a Lalaloopsy doll and she will walk around playing with both at the same time.  She still cuddles which makes me think she will always be a cuddler! Yeah!  My baby reads. My. Baby. Reads.

Watching my girls grow is truly a pure delight.  I am overwhelmed with how fast everything is going. Meg is talking about college (of course she has always talked about college, but now I picture it happening!).  Hubby and I find ourselves talking about a third car for the girls to share.

I know that talking about your kids growing up is a well-worn topic. I’ve heard for years how it goes by quickly.  It makes me ache that this is so true but at the same time I love, love, love watching them learn, grow and burst into the world.  If I have anything to do with how wonderful these children are it is my greatest honor in life.  My work is done, everything else is a bonus.

 

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Hubby got down the Christmas decorations on Thanksgiving afternoon per our normal tradition.   The girls carried the boxes in from the garage and I opening up a lid on the first box. On top was an envelope that said “Time Capsule 2010″.  Hmmm. My hand writing. Wow what a great idea! I’m so glad I thought of that, and then forgot it?!

So once all the decorations were up (the kids did an awesome job by the way, it is great to have kids who are old enough to actually help with things!) we sat down and I read the letters.  They were simple questions like:

What was your favorite song in 2010?

What was your favorite movie in 2010?

What do you remember most about 2010:

What do you hope happens in 2011?

It turns out that none of the girls’ predictions came true, Elle doesn’t have long hair and Mita didn’t get to go to Washington State.  We did make it to Chuck E. Cheese as Elle had hoped for and Meg did get to perform more in 2011 between her choir and being in Children’s Letters to God.  Enu did not get to spend the night for a week at her friends house, but she did  start doing her hair better!

A nice moment for us. I think this year I will add a few more question and have Hubby and I do one to.  I am going to add this to our Advent activities (Oh yeah, haven’t started planning those yet either.)

I wonder if I will forget next year?  Maybe I should go back and see if I blogged about my idea?  Echinacea anyone?

 

April 16th, 2008  Hubby and I were in a cab driving through the streets of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Our guest house was far from our agencies home and I was a bit car sick.  Stop and go is the normal for driving in developing nations. A lot of horns blowing, strange and wonderful smells in the air. I kept wanting to speak in Spanish as all my senses thought I was in Peru again.

I had put on a long skirt that day with a shirt with 3/4 length sleeves. The outfit was well-thought out as it is considered rude to expose your knees and your elbows in Ethiopia. Kids can get away with short sleeve shirts, but not women.  I didn’t want to shock my new kids with bad manners.

My new kids. It was finally time to meet Mita and Enu. Two years into the adoption process, three months from first seeing their photos and it was all coming down to right now. I was worried they would cry and beg not to be taken. I was worried they might be mean and aggressive in their fear.

We pull into the alley with our agency’s sign “AAI” hanging in front of large metal doors and I felt a wave of anxiety. The guard lets us through and we do into the office. The compound is what I expected, lots of dirt and metal familiar to us with our experiences in Peru. What was different was that this time we would be taking two of the child as our own, not just playing with them or helping them. They were to be ours.

The Canadian director took us to Mita and Enu’s class. She stepped inside for a moment. I was waiting for the music to start playing, this is the dramatic part right? No music. To little girls step out.  Smaller than I had imagined. They smiled bashfully and gave us a hug, immediately calling us mom and dad. I was pleased of course, but know that they were taught to do this. They had no idea that mom and dad were Enat and Abba.  So trusting, yet really they had no choice but to come with us.

Their grimy hands in mine, they took me to see their bunk.  One little bed without a pillow in a room with at least eight other bunks.  One small cubby held all of their belongings.  Enu looks at me with pride when she shows me her family photo album.  I cried behind my sunglasses.  Pictures. My heart broke and sang at the same time. More than I had asked for. I had prayed for one picture of their mom. I got so much more.

Hubby worked on paper work while we hung out in the office.  I couldn’t talk with them, nor could they will be. We all seemed content, just a bit awkward maybe.  Mita and Enu were not the names they went by, they were more family nic names and we weren’t the family that used them. My mind shifted to change the names I had dreamt about, talked about and written for several months.  Already a change in expectations and we were thirty minutes into our new lives.  That set the pace for the next few years.

I don’t look back on that day with music. I remember new love and timidness.   The adoption was over.  The rest of our lives were beginning.

 

The first picture I ever saw of my girls.

A recent post on BlogHer inspired me to write about meeting my daughters for the first time.

I remember Meg being put in my arms shortly after giving birth to her. I said “I know you now. I know you now.”  I was in awe that I was finally seeing my daughter face to face after carrying her for those many months.  I didn’t even know if she was a boy or a girl, I just knew I loved her and that she would be perfect and that I would be the perfect mom.  I had such high expectations for us. Well, after twelve years neither of us have proved to be perfect, but I really know her now. Every freckle, every scar, every pre-teen look she gives me. I know who she is.

It was pretty much the same when Elle was born. Though I knew she was a girl and I knew neither of us would be perfect. I felt enormous love and thanksgiving when she was born.  I was an experienced parent who knew that it would go fast and that we would make it through just fine.  My expectations weren’t as high, I just wanted to enjoy her.

I first saw Mita and Enu’s pictures in January 2008. I was so overjoyed to have a referral. I was so happy to see their faces.  I was so ready to put the love I already felt to two little faces. I got to read school reports and health reports. I had put personalities to them just by their pictures. I bought them clothes and dreamed about meeting them.

Then we were there.  The director took us to their classroom and brought them out to us. They were so small, so scared but happy.  I now know they were happy because they had been told this was a happy thing. They really didn’t have a clue what was going on, the concept was just to big.  Mita has told me when they were introduced to us as mom and dad she thought they had painted her Ethiopian dad peach!

The hugged us, held my hand, showed us the bunk they shared and their personal belongings.  Enu handed me something that I will be forever grateful for. She handed me family pictures.  Baby pictures, pictures of them growing up with their mom, dad and grandparents.  This album has allowed me to talk about what they looked like as a baby, it has let them see how loved they were by their parents. It is a true miracle that many international adoptees don’t have.

So there I was hugging two little girls who were strangers to me, but not.  I felt relief, happiness and a bit of now what? They knew very little English, I knew even less Amharic and yet we were a family. They looked at me, I looked at them. We were in a bit of limbo at that time I now realize.

One of the things that sticks out in my mind most is that Mita was sucking on the seatbelt buckle in the taxi. I was so grossed out, but didn’t want one of my first actions to be a correction. So I let her suck it (not wear it mind you!).  I would have never let Meg or Elle have done that, but I knew them. I still didn’t know Mita.  This is not a bad thing to admit.  Adoption is different from giving birth, adopting older kids is way different from giving birth.  They had an entire six and eight years of life that I didn’t experience with them.

Much like the birth of Meg, I had a lot of expectations for Mita and Enu, but I had learned that expectations can change and that can be a good thing. Much like with the birth of Elle I was ready to live in the moment.

What is different is that I don’t know where every scar has come from. I don’t know when their first steps were taken or when they started getting teeth.  I have no idea what the birth stats are or even the correct date of birth.  This things don’t really sadden me as an adoptive mom as I know that their Ethiopian mom and dad got to see these moments and from the pictures, I know they enjoyed these moments. What does make me sad is that if the girls decide to have kids of their own, we won’t be able to compare when things happened.

After three and a half years, I can say that I know my girls. I just don’t know everything.  I never will.

These last seven hundred words cannot give you a great picture of what happened during that day visually, but it does show what was going through my mind.  As this is NoPloPoMo and I am to stretch my writing, I am going to attempt to write this post again, but make it more about the actual meeting. We will see how that goes!

 

 

 

 

The planning of Halloween is more fun for me than the actual Trick or Treating. I love planning with the girls, looking for the good deals and finding the perfect costume.

This year Meg was…well I don’t know what her costume was, but she was cute. Purple and black with a funky hat. Very twelvish! It was all about the candy for her.

Mita wanted to be a bumble bee. I was thrilled that she wanted to dress up. She has never really embraced Halloween and the two previous years she didn’t wear her costume at the last-minute. This year she wore her costume, but put on a sweatshirt the whole time so I never saw the whole suit and of course she didn’t let me take a picture :(

Enu wore the same costume as she did last year, Tiana. She looked beautiful, but this year is definitely the last year for that costume! It was snug to say the least.  On our second round of Trick or Treating she went as a golfer.  Girls change their minds a lot it seems.

Enu as a golfer

  My baby is almost seven. This year for Halloween she dressed up as Rapunzel. She loved dressing up and her outfit was completed by a Gecko and a frying pan as well as a smaller Gecko and small frying plan. If you have seen Tangled, you will  understand the frying pan thing.  She is still excited about the costume.  How many years will I have left with her excitement? How long will it take for her to say M &M’s correctly?

Ella as Rapunzel

As I write this the girls are trading their loot. Heavy negotiations going on. It brings back memories of my brother Josh and I when we were little.  The fun part was trading and pulling one over on him!   Of course in about a week I will combine all of the candy into one pile to save space, but they seem to have forgotten that fact right now.

I wonder about next year. Will I have only two costumes to plan for?  I guess there is always the grandchildren in 20 years!

 

 

 

 

 

Meg and Mita are in a play this week. Children’s Letters to God will be put on by our local children’s theatre.  This is Mita’s first play and Meg’s third. Meg loves it. Mita says she will not do another one, drags her feet for practices and moans a lot…but at practice she seems to adore it. Hmmn. It will be interesting to see how she does for the performances and if she will think all the hard work is worth it.

It is amazing how differently siblings handle things. Meg is in stealth mode. She eats, sleeps, goes to school and golf and then it’s all about the play. She loves it. Period.

Enu and Elle are not loving it so much. They hate running sissies back and forth to practice. All they do is mumble about how boring it is.  Yet I think they are going to love the actual show.  I know they will love it.

Tech week is basically very long, late practices every night before the show.  Last night the girls got home at 10pm.  We will see how they get up this morning. Tech week is fast food week, spend a ton in gas week and no time for anything week.  It is hard on the family no doubt.  Hubby says we are taking a break after this from the theatre.  I agree with him, but do so love to watch them stretch themselves, learn and have fun.

As a family with four kids we really try not to over-schedule our lives. We want the kids to have free time to play, read and just be kids.  Now that  Meg is in middle school, we are seeing an increase in activities that she wants to explore.  I encourage her to explore but not all at once!  Being in a performance such as the kids are in right now is a real stretch for us. One that we decided to go with this time around, but know that we cannot maintain this pace if our house is going to remain standing, with clean laundry, clean hamster cages and sane parents!

I will be ready for it to all be over, but I will treasure watching them on stage.

What activities does your family participate in that push the limits on family schedules, money and sanity?  Is it worth it or are you toning it down a bit?

 

(email me at fouragainsttwo @ gmail . com if you want info on tickets)

 

 

Art Credit

 

I am not a crust-cutter, a mom who cuts off the crusts for her kids who are picky and wasteful. I don’t judge crust-cutter mothers and fathers, I just am not one myself.  Or  I should say I wasn’t one.

To say that Mita and Enu have dealt with a lot of changes would be an understatement.  They have gotten used to a new family, country, culture and food in the last three years.  They are still a bit picky with the food and while I understand that , I don’t (or didn’t) cut off the crusts. I have always felt it was wasteful and if they wanted to take them off they could do it themselves.

Well a few weeks ago I went to Mita’s school to eat lunch with her. I noticed that the first thing she did was pull of the crust of her peanut butter and honey sandwich.  She pulled so much off that she didn’t even have a full sandwich anymore.  I then decided that maybe it was less wasteful to cut of the crust for her.

So I did. The next time I packed her lunch, I trimmed the crust off neatly so that she would have a full sandwich. As I did this I was happy that I was making a concession to my normal stickler ways. I felt that this could even bring us closer together. A bit of bonding over a sandwich (adopting older kids makes you think of everything in bonding terms!)

Mita storms in the kitchen after school and hands me her lunch box with an apology. She says I threw away all my trash but the crusts, I just forgot.  I look at her and say What crusts? I cut them off for you. Her response was between an Oh really and a huh on her way out of the room.

So much for my big change in ways!

 

 

Photo Credit

 

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#8 Mita

Mita is my second oldest daughter. While Elle is my Joy, Mita is my hero.  She has come through such adversity in  her ten years of life.  Most people would given up or been sour on life by now. Mita is thriving with her sweet smile and her streak of stubbornness.

She has been my little girl for just under three years now. She is no longer little though and while that makes me sad at times, it is amazing watching her grow into the beautiful women she is meant to be.

I love you Mita and hope you will someday understand how much.

 

I can remember getting together with the neighborhood kids when I was around seventh grade and all of us writing and practicing a play.  Our play was not totally an original. We were doing an episode of Family Ties.  I think I was Mallory, but I’m not sure anymore. Anyway, we were ignoring that fact that this show was a sit-come and we made it more a drama-tragedy. 

Our plot was that the father, whats his name, was on a airplane about to crash and we were acting out his last thoughts of his family.  Now that I think about this, it’s funny  how morbid we were!  We never acted out the play, but had a lot of fun for a few days messing around with it.  That was the extend of my theater experiences, except for taking Drama I as a freshman in high school and I don’t want to remember that.

My daughters are much more into the acting mode. Meg has two plays under her belt with our local theater and is currently in a Children’s Choir with Mita.  The four of them together always equals drama so I wasn’t surprised when the plays started in our house.  They are fun, and goofy and at times all they are is a bunch of giggles. But I have noticed that some never make the “stage”.  Here is a skit that I just loved that never came to be performed for Hubby and I, due to extensive cast changes (the neighbor kids joined and confusion ensued to the point where they would rather play on the trampoline!) but I wanted to share it with the world.

I have kept in the typos and only changed the names to protect the innocent!

The Story of a Nightmare

 

Scene one

(Elle in bed with a teddy bear)

Mita: Juile did you brush your teeth?

Elle: yes

Mita: Did you set your clothe for tomorrow?

Elle: Yes

Mita: I will tuck you in before I go to bed.

Meg and mita: dreaming x 4.

Scene Two

(Elle wakes up)

Elle: Mommy where are you?

(Silents)

LOUD NOISE

( Enu comes in)

Elle: screams and runs out the door.

Enu chases her on and on.

Scene Three

Elle and Enu run in.

Elle: screams

(Green Frog and Pink bird run in to see what’s the matter.)

Meg: Run Juile while I distract him

Mita: follow me

Scene four

Elle: where where are we?

Mita: are in the Basement where no stuffed animal is brave enough to get us.

Only the Green frog and me have ever gone down here before

This is our hide out from the brown bear and other bad stuffed animals.

 Enu: I will get you someday and eat you all like stuffing

                                                                 And chicken.

 Scene five

Elle: are you ok?

Meg: I am fine. I should be asking you are ok?

Elle: yeah I am fine thanks you guys I wouldn’t live if it wasn’t for you.

Mita: ohh it was nothing in fact it is our job.

Meg: Yes it is we are soposed to tell kids that they are just bad dreams and you can control them if something horrible is going to happen.

I have to say that the spelling of the word “Silents” and the quote “I will get you someday and eat you all like stuffing And chicken.” need to be copyrighted! And what does dreaming x 4 mean?

Photo Credit

 

Meg won Honorable Mention for the 5th grade.

This was Elle's first year for Chalk on the walk.

Tes kissed up to the judges with saying school was cool!

Enu drew a farm and loved bringing home a new bucket of chalk!

For more Wordless Wednesdays check out this link.

 

This has been a bit of a busy week.  Most of our weeks entail me running around, mind you, but we had some major events this week.  Major for us, anyway, the world didn’t stop spinning and CNN didn’t call.  We did however, have two girls Fly Up from Brownies to Junior Girl Scouts and it was Elle’s last day of pre-school today.  Definitely a time for pictures!

Meg later helped Enu get into her new Junior (green sash).

Mita wouldn't put on her sash, but liked the flowers!

The Flying Upceremony in Girl Scouts can be a simple affair or a major ceremony. The leaders for Mita and Enu planned this ceremony perfectly. There was food, goodie bags, some official ceremony of the pledge, the promise and a song and of course the girls walking across the stage (pretend bridge) receiving their badges and pins they earned over the last year.

Elle attended her last day of pre-school. Last day EVER!  She starts Kindergarten in August and will be a full-time student for about two decades.  She is excited of course, but I will miss our days at home with just the two of us.  Don’t tell the other girls, but sometimes Elle and I would just watch TV or eat popcorn after the kids went to school. It was like having our own little Neverland, where she didn’t have to share with her sisters and I didn’t have to make her share! Here Elle is after I picked her up today.  They did clown face-painting as a last day of school activity.

Not to leave Meg out…she had to decorate a potato as a book character this week.  She choose to make a Hermione Grainger  potato (big surprise there!).  Hermione Potato Head was dressed in purple netting for the Yule Ball.  I failed as a mother and didn’t get a picture taking of said potato before Meg took it to school. No big deal you say?  Just take one when she brings it home from school?  I would if some potato mashing bully hadn’t wrecked poor Potato Hermione at school!  Ruffians.  Anyway, Meg is confident she can repair her creation, so I may have a photo in the next few days!

How was your week?

Photo Credits Mandy W. 2010

 
Mita and Miley

Mita and Miley

I’ve officially earned the Bad Mom of the Year award…and it is only March.  I was just looking through my posts and realized that I did not write about Mita’s birthday.  My second baby in double digits and I did not share this with the world!!!

Celebrating your child’s birthday can be bittersweet as we watch them grow up so fast, and long for them to stop growing, yet we are so proud of what they are doing and who they are becoming.  This is our second birthday with Mita and she has changed so much in the last two years.  She is becoming a young lady with a beautiful smile and a shy heart.  I missed her first eight birthdays, but her Ethiopian mom and dad were there to watch her grow at that time.  Adoption makes your family bigger in so many ways, and I feel a special connection with her Ethiopian parents.  I am honored to have the privilege of watching her ninth and tenth birthday and feel so blessed that she is my girl.

On February 16th Mita turned ten.  There was no school that day and she had a couple of friends over for some fun.  Grammy made her a Miley Cyrus cake (I cringed at the thought, but I have been told not to make everything a battle :))  She got a new BLUE digital camera/MP3 player.  Blue is the best color in the world to my girls right now.  No more pink and princesses for them :(

IMGP5697   IMGP5738

 

 

 

 

             Happy belated birthday my Mita!

 

 

 

Photos by Mandy W.

© 2011 Four Against Two Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha