Saturday, September 1, 2012

And the Results are In...

Ok, I just have to brag. There's no other way to say it and believe me I've spent the last hour trying. I just finished the Insanity home workout program and I feel so great! I don't know how much weight I've lost because we don't have a scale here but I don't care! I look skinnier, I have actual muscle, and I've almost completely lost my baby belly! So even though I don't want to be one of those "look at me! look at me!" people, I feel I must brag about my accomplishment via photographs:


Before

After 

Final Workout Thumbs-UP!

Thursday, August 23, 2012

"Wheeeeeeen the Moon Hits Your Eye..."

Oh Italy, I love you! You were everything I thought you would be! Tasty! Relaxing! Romantic! You didn't let me down my dear little Italy. 
Ben and I have been talking about going to Italy since we first came to Belgium because...well... it's ITALY, so when Ben's boss offered to lend us his Pisa apartment for a week we didn't hesitate. It was incredible and amazing and wonderful and perfect. 

Let me break it down for you. Our trip was a week of Italian awesomeness which started in Cinque Terre. The Cinque Terre is a collections of five small towns that literally sit on the rocky coast of the crystal clear Mediterranean Sea. Historically the towns used to be pirating towns and if that isn't cool enough it was also the birthplace of pesto. Pretty cool huh? 





The cove where we took a swim...

The other city we branched out to from Pisa was Florence. Florence is a huge city in the art world. It's like the Renaissance packed into one little, very hot, Italian city. The most famous thing in Florence is Michelangelo's sculpture of the David (the David and Goliath David in case you were wondering) but the most non-famous thing about Florence is that EVERYTHING IS CLOSED ON MONDAY! So we arrived all excited to see David and this small museum which housed works by Michelangelo, Davinci and tons of huge Renaissance artists and it was all closed. So plan B was to wander the streets and go into Cathedrals to cool down which actually worked perfectly because there was a ton of art in the Cathedrals too







And last but certainly not least is Pisa itself. What a cool city! Definitely under-estimated because people think that it only has the leaning tower but it is a wonderful place to stay. Our first full night in Pisa we hit up the leaning tower and let me tell you...IT'S LEANING! I thought "Oh it can't be that bad...It's probably just a little crocked"...oh no! It's like falling over! It was incredible. We went back to the tower four of five times because it was just a cool place to see and it was really fun to watch Brooklyn run up to other tourists and beam her cheesy smile! 



And of course who can go to Pisa and not eat a ton of Pizza? I think the pizza is what Ben looked forward to the most on this trip. OK I'm sure it is. The first thing he did after checking into our hotel the first night (We had to stay the first night in the hotel because his bosses apartment was double booked) Ben went and bought not one but two pizza's even though it was already nine-thirty. My thoughts on Pisa Pizza, dang good. The rest of the trip we ate pasta, pesto, pizza and gelato and it delicious! 
So when it all boils down these are the facts. 1-Italy is cool (but not temperature wise). 2-Pisa, Florence, and Cinque Terre are really awesome places to visit! 3-The food is AMAZING! 

P.S. Every time I make Spaghetti or any sort of Italian food I always sing "That's Amore" hence the title.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Houston we have a...Toddler!

I don't know when it happened, I don't know where it happened, and I certainly don't know WHY it had to happen but it's official, Brooklyn Rae Isaac is a toddler. Here are three sure signs of toddlerhood:

1-Non-Stop: runner, climber, tumbler, and walker
2-Expert Room Demolisher 
3-Fascination with: dirt, sand, poop, grass, and everything else mom doesn't want in your mouth (including the always available, thank you Belgians, cigarette butts).

Oh and let's not forget the fourth and most noticeable sign: 

4-World Class Tantrum Thrower when items 1-3 are not allowed.

People tried to warn me that this day would come...They said "Andi, enjoy this newborn phase when she doesn't move and she cries so softly" and I thought to myself "HA! Fools, certainly they don't understand that Brooklyn is a much harder newborn than their child was and that her piercing cry curdles milk and makes hair stand on end!" They said "Andi, enjoy the crawling phase because you can outrun her and she can't get into too much trouble." and I scoffed and thought "If they only knew how hard it is to carry this baby around whenever I need to go someplace". I thought I was tired, I thought I was working hard, I thought I was trudging through the rough stuff but no I was merely strolling through the simple park of Infanthood. 

***Infanthood: a beautiful place where babies only cry when they need; food, milk, sleep, new diaper, or snuggles. A place with few rough patches, most of which are hallucinations caused by the combination of fatigue and inexperience, but mainly filled with precious simple moments of joy and peace***

Then one beautiful day while strolling through the simple beauties of Infanthood the entire world changed and I was suddenly thrown into Toddlerhood.

***Toddlerhood: a dark, strange, and terrifying land filled with mud, dirt, and messy food. A frightening place with piles of torn books and broken toys crowd the pathway and sometimes even cover up the path. A place where moms are found curled up in the corner with blank, hopeless expressions on their faces and spaghetti laced in their hair. A place of sheer horror, chaos, and mayhem.***

All of the sudden going to the park with Brooklyn is no longer a nice quiet break filled with a relaxing walks and ball rolling. It is a constant chase as she climbs every bench, walked in front of every swinging child, stood at the bottom of every slide in use, and approached every dog in sight regardless of size, shape, or infectious looking fur. Suddenly it isn't a silly game of "Don't put that in your mouth" but a dangerous game of "Can Mommy get that out before you impale her with your piranha-like teeth?" It's no longer a fun game of airplane to get food into the mouth but a war zone filled with countless thrown casualties laying across the battlefield of high-chair, Brooklyn's hair and face, Mom's clothes and hair, and down Brooklyn's shirt. 

Yes, we have a toddler. Some of you older parents will simply chuckle and say "Enjoy this time it won't last long" but let me tell you something. When you're covered in rice-cereal while sitting on the kitchen floor and watching your toddler smear food all over her entire body time stops completely. So completely that your mind shuts off and you no longer care that your child added another layer of rice cereal to your newly-washed jeans. You no longer care that she just tore five pages out of your favorite book. You no longer care that every single shelf in your house has been violently cleared and the contents thereof are chaotically scatter across every inch of floor space in your house. You just don't care. And when you get past the point of caring you give into the madness. Suddenly you're pulling books off of the shelves, you're the one throwing playing cards everywhere, you're the one eating mush with your hands and smearing it onto your child's face. It's only then, after the dust settles (or in this case the toddler's in bed and you've just spent 2 hours cleaning), that you realize just how fun it is to let loose and be a toddler again. 

So in the end, even though there's at least one meltdown a day where I'm left staring into space and wondering what my life has become, having a toddler is a non-stop party. A messy, frustrating, and exhausting party. And one day when Brooklyn's grown and dealing with a toddler of her own I'll get to be the wise chuckling onlooker telling her to enjoy the moment.


Welcome to Toddlerhood! 

Ya know those days when you just give up? This is one 
Yes, that is the "Do Not Cross" Ro
Other kids were afraid of the ocean...not Brooklyn
The WORST game of 52 card pick up (more like 165 card pick up)




Yes...that is a grocery bag
My dad described Brooklyn best when he
 called her a "Red-headed Toddler"

Yep, I still love her!


Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Vienna!

My friend Kelly did a post like so I'm officially stealing the idea! Here are the pictures to fill in the gaps.

The excited face of true music geek in Vienna
(Taken in front of the Vienna State Opera House)


Super Balcony seats at the Marriage of Figaro!




Cross "play violin in Vienna" off my Bucket List please :)


Brooklyn's first trip to the Zoo!






The Vienna Philharmonic!



Brooklyn on the way to the Concert!


Tuesday, June 12, 2012

To the World:

When I was younger and needed to blow off some steam I used to write notes "to the world". They would be filled with petty frustrations over ex-boyfriends or small fights with people who were close to me and after I had furiously scribbled on paper until the pen ripped through I would quickly tear up the paper so that nobody could read what was on my mind.
Well today I've learned something that I need to send out "to the world". Over the last week I have learned three very important lessons that I think everyone should know but nobody spends time talking about. So here it goes:

1- People care about other people. When I moved here I was scared to death about leaving my family and friends. I never thought that I would feel at home in a foreign country surrounded by complete strangers, especially since I was moving to Europe! I didn't think anyone would talk to me outside of church meetings and I definitely didn't think that people would ever go out of their way to help me. But they did. Why? Because people care about other people. I realized that when Lisa, a woman who had met me once at church, drove me to IKEA to help me buy things for our apartment. I realized that when Kelly, an au pair here, hugged me when she first met me because Ben had told her I was coming. I realized that when Regina, an African ambassador, constantly thanked me for helping her with math even though I was only doing it to make a friend. I realized that when Maureen, an American mom I met on a tram, took me under her wing because she knew what it was like to move here with a small child and she wanted to help me like Ellie (her Maureen) had helped her. These people have become my dearest friends because they saw a perfect stranger and helped them simply because they were good people.

Incredibly enough I realized it even more today with Nicki, a person I have never physically met who loaded her car with a dresser and kitchen materials, drove to my front door, and unloaded her car while illegally parked in the POURING rain just to help a fellow American. I will never forget the kindness shown to me by this woman. She was just selling stuff in preparation for her move back into the states and she heard that I was looking for homey items. After talking once she sent me e-mails about American clubs and groups I could join as well as information about Brussels I should know. She assured me that it wasn't always so rainy and encouraged me to enjoy this time. Without even knowing me she wanted to make sure that I felt at home in this new foreign country. And more amazing still was her friend Ilona who I have still never even spoken to or contacted in anyway. This woman gathered up an assortment of various kitchen items and toys because Nicki had mentioned to her that I was looking for those types of items. Two complete strangers helped me today. Why? Because people care about other people.

I see it when I'm on the tram and someone gives up their seat for the woman with the baby. I see it when I'm at the grocery store and people offer me their spot in line because Brooklyn's done shopping. I see it when the escalator is broken and a young woman offers to help me carry the stroller up two flights of stairs in the metro station. Most importantly I see it when I look at my dear family and friends who taught me and still teach me how important it is to love and care for others. People care about other people.

2-Your dreams don't need to change just because your life has. This last week I was blessed to visit Vienna, Austria. Now anyone who has known me for a while knows that I have dreamed of going to Vienna since I was 16 years old. It's the musical capitol of the world which is pretty enticing for a music nerd like myself. So when Ben and I booked a trip to Vienna I was out-of-my-skin excited. I practiced my violin 2 hours a day so I could play on a random street corner in Vienna. I looked at the opera schedule to see if there was a show I would want to see and I booked our trip so we could see the Vienna Philharmonic perform their annual Schoenbrunn Palace concert. I had everything set up perfectly and in my mind I pictured this perfect, artistic, romantic Viennese vacation.

So we packed our bags and our baby girl and headed to Vienna and for the next four days we...listened to our baby girl cry day in and day out. You see our daughter had four new teeth coming in and has never been a silent sufferer. We tried everything to calm her down, we stayed in the hotel, we went on walks, we took her to a museum where she could run around, we took her to the zoo and still she was an unhappy baby. And to top off the madness, the night of the free, outdoor, Vienna Philharmonic (ranked one of the top 3 orchestra's in the whole world) she threw up all over us. Needless to say the trip was less than ideal.

On the way back Ben and I were shot, we had had it. We both vowed never to have another kid. We both vowed that we never would take Brooklyn anywhere ever again. We felt like failures as parents and we both felt like the whole trip had been a waste. I was crushed.

It took me two days to recover from Vienna, Brooklyn, and all the crying. After two days, I began to realized that, even though the trip was ideal, I had still lived out my dream. I got to see "The Marriage of Fiagaro" performed live in the Vienna State Opera House. I got to play my violin in the same city where Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, and Strauss composed their masterpieces. I got to see the Vienna Philharmonic perform LIVE, an orchestra filled with players on a higher level than any players I ever seen in my life. It was incredible! It was inspiring! It filled me with new dreams and hopes for my musical future because I got to see such talent. It filled me with new passion and perspective because I played from my soul in Vienna and want to go back and do it again. It filled me with memories of my sweet family trying so hard to enjoy and love something that I have always had a passion for. My dream wasn't ruined because my baby girl had a hard couple of days. Sure it distracted from the moment but it didn't change reality and in reality I did play my violin in Vienna, and I did see a Mozart Masterpiece performed there, and I watched mere musicians transcend above all others and play at a level I never imagined possible. My life has changed in the last 9 years but that didn't stop me from living my dreams.

3-There's nothing more important in this life than family. The Sunday after we got back from Vienna was Regional Conference (in the LDS church regional conference is a gathering of multiple congregations who live in the same part of the world). Ben and I were both still fried from the trip but had promised some friends that we would do lunch after conference so we got ourselves to conference. I'd love to say that our baby girl was an angel but she was only happy if she was free to run around the back of the room while the conference was broadcast to the congregation. Feeling like my Ben needed more of a break from her than I did I offered to watch her during the conference, (also I felt that I could better multitask so I would still learn what I needed to). There were four speakers at this conference and though each had multiple messages in their individual addresses the one that stuck out most to me was the importance of raising children.

At first I just scoffed when I heard a speaker mention raising children because we had just had a terrible week in which we vowed never again to raise a child after Brooklyn but then as the messages continued I was filled with a peace in knowing that raising my little girl is the most important goal I can accomplish. My heart was on fire as the other talks all emphasized the importance of raising children in a loving, nurturing environment. They talked about how our children are the future of this world so we need to teach them how to care for others, care for themselves, and lead happy and productive lives. They talked about how important each child is in the eyes of their parents and God. They talked about how each child is filled with an innocent spirit that needs nurturing guidance in a world that is falling apart. And through each talk my heart just grew and grew in love for my little girl. I realized that she and my dear husband mean the world to me. I realized that as long as I am with them I am home. It doesn't matter where we live or how far we are from the people we know and love as long as we have each other that is where our home is.

Life can get busy, life can get crazy, life can get sad but what it all boils down to is how happy we are in our homes. Our families see us through the tough times and enjoy the good times with us. When we become parents we get to lead our kids through the tough times and enjoy the good times with them. No matter what  our past was, when we have kids they are what matters. Their needs, their wants, their happiness are our needs, wants, and happiness. We can work all day in an office for years and nobody would know it but if we skipped out on being a parent for one day our kids would know it in an instant. Personal goals are important and necessary because you will always be the person you are. Careers are important because they provide a means to an end. But the most important thing in this life is our family.

My baby girl needs me to be the best mom I can be and I'm going to be the best because she deserves it. My parents gave me their best and now it's my turn to do the same. This world needs to know that family is the most important thing in this life. Get married! Start a family! Love them with all your hearts! It will be the hardest thing you'll ever do but in the end nothing else will reward you more than seeing the sweet loving look in your child's eyes as you hold them tight. No money, no award, no title will ever give greater joy than having a child who loves you. I see that joy in the faces of all of my friends and all of the moms I have met here. We don't come from the same place, we don't go to the same church, and we don't have the same opinions about the world but we all love our children with all our hearts and we all acknowledge that being a mom is the greatest (and most difficult) job in the world. Our families are the most important things in our lives.

That's what I have to say world. People care about other people, your dreams don't have to change just because your life did, and family is the most important thing in this life. Thank you to all my dear friends who have taught me these lessons and thank you for my dear family who loves me and teaches me daily especially my two redheads. I love you all and hope that I can repay you for all the love and support you give me!

Andi

Monday, May 28, 2012

And We're Walking, We're Walking....

Wait for it....
Wait for it....

After months of standing up unsupported and teasing us with a few steps Brooklyn is finally walking!
While Melissa and Jacob were here in April they tried their best to get her walking, they even made it a personal goal to have her walking before they left. No luck. So after a couple weeks of sitting apart from Brooklyn and Ben and trying to get her to walk between us, we just gave it a rest for a while. We figured she was a little nervous to walk because of we only have hard wood floors and it must hurt to fall on those. So we just decided to wait. Then  two days before Mother's Day a miracle happened. 
Ben, Brooklyn, and I were talking on Skype with Melissa, Janie, and William when Janie became grumpy. Now you must know that Brooklyn loves to Skype with Janie so in order to cheer up Janie I say "Hey Janie do you want to see Brooklyn walk!?!" And of course she did, so I set the computer on the couch and set Brooklyn a few steps away thinking she would wobble just a few inches and then fall. Instead she confidently walked up to the computer squealing the whole way there. I don't know if it was the computer or Janie but she was cruising like she'd been walking for weeks. It was no turning back after that. Now we've got a waddling little baby girl! Enjoy the footage!










Monday, April 30, 2012

Brooklyn's Birthday

Well for those of you who missed it here's what happened on Brooklyn's Birthday.


That's right, a homemade funfetti cake and a sweet little chat for the camera. That's my baby girl! Happy birthday Brooklyn!





The Cake is going...

Going... 
Still going.
We eventually took it away so she wouldn't
get sick from all of the sugar