Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Tagged

I've never done this before, but I do so love to make lists of things... :0)

Five things I was doing ten years ago:
1. Being an extra in my junior high school play, "Bye, Bye, Birdie"
2. Having a crush on every boy I knew
3. Trying to learn how to speak Spanish from Sra. Curzon
4. Working at Dairy Queen  (I think...maybe it was a little less than ten years ago, but close)
5. Being a truly "great" ninth grader  

Five things on my "To-Do" list for today:
1. Buy milk and bread at Smith's
2. Give Grace a bath
3. Go to the bank
4. Wash all white clothes
5. Call Ellie about how to start Grace on rice cereal

Five snacks I love: (so hard to limit it to just five...)
1. Starbursts
2. Skittles
3. Pink Mints
4. Caramels
5. Conversation Hearts

Five things I would do if I were a billionaire:
1.  Have a house but no mortgage
2. Have a nice car but no car payment (are you sensing a theme....?)
3. Buy clothes that really look nice on me--that I pick because of the look and fit 
instead of the price
4. Travel a lot with Spencer
5. Help people   

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Bardsley Family Top Ten of 2008

Though this may seem a strange thing to include in a top ten list, Spencer and I look quite fondly back on the time we spent on our very own house treasure hunt.  Actually, when we finally found the one we currently live in, I felt a little let down that the search was over. This is because when your budget for home buying is quite small, you end up being shown a lot of very...interesting domiciles (Spencer...this word is for you!).  You would be surprised by how many homes we walked into (of course nobody was living in them...) and laughed out loud at what we found.  The following photo is of the bathroom in our favorite "basement" (man-hole) of a house we were shown.  The basement had its own separate entrance and we figured that the wife shut her husband in there when she was mad at him.  (Sidenote: this was actually counted in the house info as a "finished" bathroom)

9.  Spencer and Anna became the returning champions of the HBA (Home Builder's Association) Annual Christmas Party Dance-Off 
Yes; it's true, folks.  After our triumph last year (which brought into our lives the Ipod touch that has been Spencer's constant and beloved companion ever since...), we returned and showed all of the middle-aged HBA-ers how to "shake it" yet again.  Or...ballroom dance, as it were.  Please remember that we are not the champions because of our amazing dancing skills.  We are the champions because we were once again the only ones who "kind of" knew how to waltz, cha-cha, and disco.  And...because Spencer can break dance.  This year we won a $100 Visa gift card.  Hooray!  (Sidenote: We actually got first place and a half because they had to gave first place to a lady (and her husband) who was 8 months pregnant and did a cartwheel on the dance floor.  No fancy dance step can compete with that.)

8. Spencer and Anna celebrated their 2nd wedding anniversary   
Thanks to Aunt Emily Merkley, we were able to spend the entire day of December 27th together doing things that having a baby with us would have made impossible.  We went sledding in the morning and discovered the joys of sliding down hills in black garbage bags.  (I, for one, will never go "sledding" with anything else.) Then we went out for lunch at the Olive Garden, did a session at the Salt Lake temple, and walked around Temple Square a bit.  After that, we headed back to Provo for dinner at Red Robin and finally caught a late showing of Twilight.  Spencer is a good sport.  It was wonderful.  It was my first full day away from Grace and the first time anyone else ever put Grace to bed besides Spencer or I.  Ironically, Grace responded to this change by sleeping from 7:10 p.m. until 9:00 a.m. the next morning.  We're thinking of hiring Emily on as Grace's full-time nanny.  (the following pictures are of us at Red Robin, us in the exact same spot we were exactly two years ago to the day, and us while sledding)
    




7. Spencer was called to be in a bishopric of a BYU singles' ward 
 Best things about this: the wonderful people in the singles' ward we attend AND having one of the two babies in the ward (the other counselor and his wife also have a baby) instead of one of the 500 babies in the ward.  Worst things about this: having to attend church on campus again; having to ascend the 5 million stairs to get the Joseph Smith Building AND having church at 8:30 in the morning.  :0)  Really, this has been a wonderful experience.  The ward was overwhelmingly kind to us when Grace was born (homemade dinners for TWO WEEKS!) and they have taught us so much.  

6. Jacob,Whitney, and Landon Bardsley's Sealing
Hooray!  Spencer and I were so excited and happy to be able to be with them this day.  It was also great to see Spencer's out of town sisters, April and Esther, that weekend.  Hooray for wonderful occasions that bring about little family reunions!

5. Sam and Emily Neil Merkley's Wedding
Yet another wonderful occasion to bring about a family reunion.  The whole Merkley family (including the Warnicks and Bardsleys of course) was able to be together for the reception in Layton and then head down to Mesa for the wedding.  And...just to add a little extra information, one of Sam and Emily's early dates (as in at the beginning of their relationship) was to our reception.  :0)    






4. Spencer became a rugby star
  Back in February (or March?), Spencer met someone from the UVU rugby team in one of his classes.  The guy invited Spencer to come out and see what rugby was like and...the rest is history.  Spencer became a starter on a team for a sport he'd never played.  He's just that good at sports.  I don't think there exists a sport that doesn't love Spencer.  At any rate, with Spencer in tow, the UVU team did better than they had ever done in the history of the school.  They ended up finishing 2nd in the nation for division 2.  Spencer traveled (with a very pregnant Anna) to Albuquerque, NM, for the semi-finals and then to Palo Alto, CA, for the finals (without Anna).  
I became a rugby aficionado. Of sorts.  I do recall that the first game I went to was in Salt Lake City and it was freezing cold and snowing the whole time.  But...I giggled my way through the entire game.  I had just never seen a sport quite like rugby.  It seemed to me to incorporate elements of soccer, football, basketball, and...cheerleading.  :0)  I loved it.  
And now, Spencer carries with him a very distinguished rugby battle wound just under his right eye.  He collided with two other players in an effort to get the ball.  One of them ended up with a matching battle wound under his left eye.  They stitched Spencer up (seven stitches) on the side of the field as play continued.  Ah...rugby.
    





3. Spencer and Anna bought a house
As you can see, the actual buying of the house does rank higher than searching for it.  :0)  I've already written enough about this aspect of 2008 in a previous post, so I won't go too much into it.  We are still loving our house and taking full advantage of the hot tub in the backyard and the fireplace.  We have used our home warranty plan frequently and are still praying that our dishwasher, water heater, furnace, and refrigerator break down irreparably within the next few months.  We're getting used to the three girls who rent out our basement (the noise barely phases us these days) and are just slowly trying to advance with our house "to-do" list.  

2. Anna graduated from BYU
In April, I graduated with a bachelor's degree in social work with a minor in Spanish.  Hooray!  I exited BYU with a much different degree than I thought I would.   The original plan had been to major in history teaching with a minor in geography. But, I'm happy with what I did.  For the last eight months before I graduated, I did an internship at an elementary school in Saratoga Springs.  I worked with teacher-referred and parent-referred kids who needed help with things like social skills, anger management, classroom behavior, coping skills and self-esteem.  I loved it.  It was hard, because I wasn't shadowing another social worker.  I had to figure everything out for myself and pretty much completely come up with my own plans for groups, interventions, and classroom presentations.  It took a lot of organization and footwork, but it was really good for me.  An added bonus to my graduation was Sam graduating at the same time.  We got to sit through commencement together.  :0)





1. Grace Elizabeth Bardsley was born (Stats: July 31st, 7:31 p.m., 8 lbs. 15 oz.)
This easily was the highest point of 2008.  Though adjusting to parenthood and figuring Grace out hasn't been easy, it has in every way been worth it.  We adore her and we'd like to believe that she adores us as well.  She's now five months old and quite possibly the cutest baby on the planet.  :0)  She enjoys growling, putting everything around her into her mouth, and has recently taken up shrieking loudly in an effort to practice her singing voice.  She feels like rolling over is overrated and only does it on occasion--just to prove that she can.  She's getting quite good at sitting up.  Her favorite act is standing on Spencer's hands, showing off her balancing ability.  She has a wonderful laugh and gives pretty much everyone a smile just for looking at her.  And...we love her.     


Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Official baby owners

Once Grace found this ornament, it was over.  She would not look at the camera for anything.  And...notice how she's balancing by herself?  Hooray!  She probably fell over three seconds after this picture was taken.
Our Christmas tree is very Grace-sized.









Practicing sitting up.
      


Wearing the Christmas dress Aunt Emily bought her.


Grace loves watching Spencer build fires in our often used (but unfinished) fireplace.



As far as Grace is concerned, there is nothing about feet that is not appealing.



Grace can't get enough of this little ball.  It was left in our house by the previous occupants.  I washed it, and now it provides endless entertainment for her.

And last, but not least, our mantel.  I'm really trying to be Christmas-y.
      

Monday, December 8, 2008

Or maybe she doesn't...

This past week we took Grace to an ENT whose perspective on her little breathing problem was quite different than our pediatrician's.  He stuck a little tiny camera up her nose and down her throat and proclaimed that the problem was acid reflux.  He came to this conclusion because the camera showed that her throat was really irritated and swollen--due to all the acid coming up from her stomach, I suppose.  I wonder if maybe it also had to do with a camera being shoved into it against its will.  :0)  
I had mixed reactions to the news.  First, I felt proud.  I had always felt that Grace had acid reflux.  Whenever I read anything about the symptoms of it, it seemed like Grace manifested each and every one of them.  Thinking I was just being a neurotic, paranoid mommy, I didn't give much credence to my personal diagnosis.  When the doctor did, I had a moment of pure joy thinking that I actually DO have intuition (and inspiration) where Grace is concerned.  
Hooray!    
Secondly, I felt silly.  When I was in high school, one Saturday morning I woke up early with (what I deemed) severe stomach pain.  I went up to my parents' room and told them of my stomach woes.  Seeing as my dad had not too long ago been operated on for appendicitis, he rushed me to the ER thinking I had the same thing.  I agreed readily to go along with this because I am always perfectly willing to believe that my health problems are more serious than they really are.  It could be just a dash of hypochondria or...maybe just a flair for the dramatic.  Call it what you will.  :0)  At any rate, I came home just a few hours later with my tail between my legs.  
Turned out, it was just gas.  
For some reason, Grace having acid reflux (which is quite common it seems...everyone I know is coming out and telling me that their niece, friends' child, brother, sister, dog, etc. had it) feels the same to me.  No, it's not some rare, malformation of her windpipe; it's just baby heartburn.  
Third, I felt relieved.  Acid reflux is treatable (whereas I can't imagine tracheomalacia would have been) and we've already seen some improvement, we think.  So, we're happy.  Now I just have to get down how to give her the medicine.  For some reason, I keep squirting it all over her instead of slowly expelling the liquid from the thingey (baby medicine dropper?) like I always mean to.  Grrr.  I blame the thingey.  Since, as we all know, I am a wonderful, intuitive mother.  He, he.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

"Tracheomalacia"


Definition: Tracheomalacia in a newborn occurs when the cartilage in the windpipe (trachea) has not developed properly. Instead of being rigid, the walls of the trachea are floppy. Because the windpipe is the main airway, breathing difficulties begin soon after birth.  Congenital tracheomalacia is very uncommon.  

Symptoms    

  • Breathing noises that may change with position and improve during sleep
  • Breathing problems that get worse with coughing, crying, feeding, or upper respiratory infections
  • High-pitched breathing
  • Rattling, noisy breaths

Outlook (Prognosis)    

Congenital tracheomalacia generally goes away on its own by the age of 18-24 months. As the tracheal cartilage gets stronger and the trachea grows, the noisy respirations and breathing difficulties gradually stop.

So...Grace has this.  Luckily, her doctor didn't seem too worried about it at all.  We are scheduled to see an otolaryngologist (that means an ear, nose, and throat doctor--hooray for a new vocabulary word, though I wish I could have learned about it under different circumstances) on December 2nd to make sure that there aren't any complications.  I wasn't worried about it at all until I stupidly decided to look up "tracheomalacia" on the internet and found all of the possible serious complications.  Silly me.  Now I'm a little worried.  

But...I've decided to continue having Grace's care in the hands of professionals instead of turning it over to the internet.  I read that in the Reader's Digest once--doctors hate it when you trust the internet more than them. :0)  So...we're hoping for the best.  I think everything should be just fine.  It's just kind of scary to have a doctor tell you that your cute little baby has any kind of problem that is hard to pronounce and has more than ten letters.  Scary mommy moment number one.  Our doctor said that her having this explains why she has not been gaining a whole lot of weight.  Everyone who sees her says she is so small and many have asked if she was a preemie with a low birthweight.  And, uh, we all know she was exactly the opposite.  Yeah.  

Grace is still just as cute as ever and is laughing a lot these days.  She also makes these really sweet little gurgling noises when she's happy.  We love those.  And...she rolled over for the third official time tonight. Hooray!  She's great and we love her.  More to come... 

      

Thursday, November 6, 2008

It's a good thing I've never been interested in drugs...

I am a candy addict.  There's no use in tip-toeing around the cold hard truth.  :0)  I have been this way as long as I can remember.  I would like to present the following facts as proof of this assertion.  When I was a kid, my Halloween candy never lasted more than 2 days, tops.  I was always so envious of friends of mine that made it to Easter still having Halloween candy to munch on.  How they did it was beyond me.  I couldn't resist the stuff!  I couldn't understand (and still can't, really) how they could know that a delicious package of Starbursts was sitting next to some wonderfully colorful and tasty Skittles in their drawer and not pounce on the both of them.  A mystery!
And then, there were the friends of mine whose parents actually kept candy in plain sight in their house! (instead of in various hiding places throughout the house--all of which I was very good at finding)  These friends could walk past the jar of candy canes or bowl of Tootsie Rolls and do nothing!  They didn't take one or two and then stash three into their pockets for later!  Once again, pure mystery to me.  I've theorized that because I grew up in a candy-deprived household (meaning there wasn't constant easy access), it has made me all the more obsessed with it.  So, had there been candy strewn all around my house, maybe I would be a very different woman today.  Or...I would have just been a very fat, cavity prone child.  :0)   
Also, I remember my parents trying to teach us how to save our chore money.  We were instructed to not spend our money until we had at least five dollars.  I guess the idea was that the waiting would make us spend our money all the wiser.  Oh, you can just bet that as soon as I had five dollars, I was riding my bike to the local candy store (King's, at the time) and buying five bucks worth of Necco's, pink mints, Sugar Daddies, and Sweetarts.
And don't even get me started on the joys of holiday-specific candy!  Those are my hardest times!  Easter jelly beans, candy canes, conversation hearts, candy corn....ah!  I'm in heaven.
To this day, I have a hard time going into the grocery store and not exiting with a package of Starbursts, Mentos, or caramels.  I remember as a kid thinking (honestly, I really did think this) how wonderful it would be to be an adult and be able to have an unlimited supply of money to buy as much candy as I wanted.  That seemed to me to be the most appealing part of adulthood.  Forget independence, car driving, marriage, child raising....It was all second to absolute candy buying power!
Luckily for me, Spencer is not a crazed candy addict (though he too had a sugar deprived childhood--I guess that blows my theory).  This helps me to find some sort of balance in my crazy candy world.  However, much to my enjoyment, I have recently found something that Spencer "binge" eats.  Swiss Rolls!!  Never having been a big pastry eater myself, I am happy to let Spencer eat the majority of the box whenever one ends up in our home.  I grin as I watch him down 2 or 3 packages in 15 minutes or so.  I guess misery (or candy bingers...) love company.  I'm afraid my sweets obsession has begun to rub off on him after 2 years of marriage...he's been coming home with Swiss Rolls much more often than before.  :0)
  At any rate, I think I have a propensity to addiction.  Hence the title.  There have been many times in my life when I have decided to give up candy for a month or two.  And, I am proud to admit that I have been successful.  But...as soon as I'm done with my candy fast, I jump right back into eating as much of it as possible.  I sincerely believe that I took up marathon running simply for the benefit of being able to eat as much candy as I wanted without seeing the effects of it in my hips.  :0)  To bad my metabolism has decided to change...
Just recently I have begun a new candy fast.  Three nights ago I told Spencer that I wanted to avoid eating candy of any kind until Thanksgiving.  We even shook hands on it.  And then he sneakily tried to include ice cream, popsicles and any other kind of sweets in the deal.  Ha!  Yeah right!  There's no need to get ahead of myself here.  :0)  
I just wanted to report that since that day, I have been stone-cold candy sober.  Thank you.     

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Happy Halloween!

We dressed Grace up as a bunny rabbit for Halloween.  She wore the costume three different times: at Spencer's work Halloween party, at a Halloween party thrown by a sister from my mission, and almost to the friends' home where we spent Halloween evening (we took it off before we got there so she would stop crying).  She hated it every time.  It was as if she was saying "bah humbug" to all fun Halloween activities.  Little grump.  Someday she'll dress up and like it!  Following is a rare picture of her wearing the costume and not crying.  I'm pretty sure this was accidental and that she would be angry if she knew we caught her looking content while in the bunny costume.
She was, however, okay with wearing a "trick or treat" onesie during the day.  Victory!

  Happy Halloween!