Category Archives: my thoughts

My Birth Rant

 

I need to write a rant in response to a comment I often get when I attempt to contribute to a conversation about childbirth.  They say, “Jen, you were just made to have babies.”  It’s a kiss off though, not at all a compliment.  Sid gave me the best comeback last night, “Really, you don’t have a vagina?”  But seriously, why do women want to reject my experiences?  Why do they want to separate themselves from me regarding this, alienate me, really?  At the very least, why aren’t they open to what I might have to say?  One more question, why does it seem as though so many Christian women want to acknowledge God in every other area of their lives, but ignore His influence over the area of childbirth?

 

I did have 4 uncomplicated pregnancies and births, but that doesn’t mean I didn’t experience the general challenges the average woman faces.  And when you work with a midwife, she explains exactly how to make sure you stay low-risk so that you are less likely to encounter complications.  That wasn’t my “just made to have babies” body, I cooperated with my midwife as she supervised everything from my stress level to my protein intake and blood levels.  There are numerous variables that contribute to staying low-risk and I have to mention that I have a friend who endured traumatic, life-threatening complications that resulted in premature induction, which could have been avoided if her ob-gyn had been keeping an eye on certain factors, or intervened earlier when symptoms were manifesting.

 

I am convinced that birth was no easier for me than it is for the average woman, I have heard of painless birth, and I did not have that.  I was scared of birth, all four times, because it is tremendously difficult and there’s that “unknown factor” too. But my fear led me to fill my mind with tools (I specifically remember Googling “pain management techniques” when I was pregnant with my first, knowing I wanted a homebirth [because I was scared of the hospital]), positive birth stories, prayers and I cultivated an open attitude to what I might endure in my births.

 

Guess, what? If you talk to me about birth and let me tell my stories, you will hear about the intensity, my screaming (for real screaming, not roller coaster screaming), back labor, my attempts to deal with such overwhelming sensations and thinking I would lose my mind and not recover if I had to make it through yet one more contraction, but you will also hear about my children and husband comforting me, the Lord giving small gifts to help me relax and move on to the next stage, as well as what I learned about opening my body through my mind and the gentle language I coached myself with.  You will hear about Ina May Gaskin and her books and you will hear about Susan Scott Gill, my genius-midwife.  I have heard stories of the most difficult and traumatic births, I have been in the delivery room with one laboring mom on her second epidural, vomiting from her shot of demerol and with another just before and just following her c-section, I have heard stories of disappointment, loss, infection and illness.  I take them all in, I feel that those stories should be granted as much space in my perception of birth as the positive ones.  Yet, I think it unwise to fail to acknowledge the fact that negative outcomes in women’s birthing experiences are significantly more common among conventional hospital births, than natural, birth center and homebirths.

 

My message to women about birth is simple.  It will be the most intensely challenging physical experience of your life – in most cases – and you will (most likely) wish it to be over sooner than it is, but if you give yourself over to God’s will for your experience, when all is said and done and that most perfect little person is finally in your arms wriggling, making its precious little noises and causing a full on upheaval of everything you’ve ever known because you’ve never loved like this, you will look back at your birth and God’s grace will be undeniably woven throughout, no matter what challenges you faced.  It takes openness, it takes a heart fascinated by God’s design for birth and it takes a willingness to endure physical agony (but with an end and for a purpose).  That’s how I see birth, NOT that I’m “just made to have babies.”

 

If anyone wants to hear more from me regarding birth, that’s why I created this website!  Poke around, if you don’t find what you’re looking for and/or if you want prayer for your birth, I would love to pray for you, email me!  bouquetofparentheses@gmail.com

 

 

 

Yesterday

Yesterday.

Yesterday Junie and I went on a date. We both looked forward to it all day long, I love how I can feel pressure to make it fun and make a really cool memory with her (or any of them on these dates), but then when we get out on our own, it’s all about her and me and it’s wonderful just because all of my attention is on her. I have nothing else to do but be with her. Her essence completely fills the June mold under these circumstances. She is herself through and through with no influence from the others causing her any kind of tension, she is at peace and she shines. I love that, and I just love her so much!

First stop Toys ‘R’Us for the special toy she has been wanting for a long time. She earned it. I told her the Bible store was next door and she agreed to go look when I told her they have tiny pink Bibles, hee! It was big chain Christian store and just being in there did something to me. I used to work at Joy’s Christian Bookstore in San Juan Capistrano, I was in charge of the greeting cards. It was fun when it didn’t cause a wave of fatigue to wash over me, just looking in “my” section. I even used to get that weird thing where words lose their meaning when you’ve looked at them too long. I didn’t recognize “father,” fat-her?  Or “mother,” moth-er.  It made me feel funny.

Without the occurrences of the fatigue and semantic satiation, being back in that element was really, really comfortable, peaceful and pleasant. I hadn’t expected it to be since my spirituality now runs in stark contrast to so much of the material for sale there. But there were the Bibles. Aaaahhhh, I love Bibles. I used to get to engrave them. One time I messed up on one and it was the last one we had of its kind, the customer was going to have to wait for us to order, receive process and engrave a brand new one. Joy didn’t even get mad at me or the situation! I never messed up again. I took pride in getting it exact. You can’t leave the stamper down too long or the gold will spread and the letters won’t be clear. In tattooing they call it “blown out” when the needle is put in too far and/or stay in the same place for too long and the lines get thick and blurred.

I wanted a new Bible last night, but didn’t buy one. We did get the tiny pink New Testament for June and later in the car I filled in the presentation page. “Presented to: June Elise Stankovits; On: October 25th, 2011 (I almost forgot the 2 in 25th, but I squeezed it in); By: your loving mother; On our wonderful date! I heart u so much!!

We walked on over to Best Buy after that and got Sid and Jonny their video game and movie, then it was back to the car to open Junie’s Minnie Cash Register, that very special toy. As we sat in the car checking it out, she was so happy and content to be just there -she could have pickedanywhere to go- I became tense with the need to be productive. Sid asked us to bring home ice cream and dinner. I hadn’t been feeling great, so I wanted a comforting, light dinner and as I tried to decide on what to eat, exhaustion settled into my entire brain, slowing it down and locking the drawers to some of my vocabulary files. June asked me to play. I didn’t want to play, I wanted to get just the right food and get home. I became emotional and knew I needed to let go and play. We took things out of my purse, June rang them up with the scanner thing on her new toy and I paid for them with Minnie money and a Minnie credit card.

 

I wanted to cry and I didn’t know why. I looked out the window, toward the sunset, and while I couldn’t see the sun at all, somehow it was reflecting brightly off of some palm fronds high on a tree. At first it reminded me of golden tinsel, as if someone had dropped bunches of it into the fronds and there it hung, flickering and shining in the breeze. I pointed it out to June. It overwhelmed me with its beauty and then I perceived the effect more like the fronds had been lit with fire and the tips of them were smoldering. It was amazing. All my cares evaporated. I wasn’t going through anything very grave, but I was going through something and then suddenly I wasn’t and then I cried for the peace and wonder.  June didn’t want me to cry, she even cried with me, so I stopped. I had my camera and so I did my best with my super zoom to capture the smoldering fronds. Haaaaaahh (that’s supposed to be a peaceful exhalation).

 

We played some more. Rung up more of the contents of my purse, hand sanitizer, my wallet, a teething toy, a Transformer, a little bottle of lotion and my cell phone.

The fronds burned into my soul. When June was ready, we buckled in and headed out.  I made it peacefully through Sprout’s getting salad stuff and ice cream and stuff, June had a nice time because she was in the stroller, she loves to ride in it and usually Indy is the passenger. It was all normal, but I felt different, though still exhausted and hungry, I was okay. At home I had that feeling of my cup running over just looking around at my children, at Sid. It’s that feeling of such utter contentment that you think maybe your going to die soon cause you must be getting closer to the Ultimate Peace.  Haaaaaahhhh. I was patient in that state, and loving, and fun and happy, so happy. What keeps me from being in this state all of the time? Unconscious living? Forgetting to direct my awareness and attention to God? Overfocusing on what isn’t done yet? I think so. Lord let those palm fronds stay alight in my heart reminding me to look to you. Let me always be the woman, mother, wife and Jennifer, that I was last night. She was so beautiful.

Sid snapped those and I’m so glad he did!  : )

Rambling

I wrote the following yesterday.

Sid is getting ready to leave tomorrow for Japan for 10 days.  Well, one day heading out, one day heading home, so 8 days that we won’t see him, I guess.  Too long.  Traveling with my husband was once the great joy of my life.  Now hanging out at home with him and our children is.  I have chosen to mother in a fashion, and have enough children, so that my caring for them has to usurp every other endeavor of personal interest I might pursue (except for things I can do in short spurts of time at home, and/or with my children, such as sewing, reading and origami), and I am continually passionately committed to this choice.  But it does sting at such a time as this, as Sid prepares to go to such a wonderful, enchanting, delicious, interesting, beautiful, kind land as Japan.  I know because I have been there.  At least I’ve been there . . . or does that make it harder?  He’s flying first class, there’s enough room in first class for me too, and enough for me to lie down.  I used to love flying everywhere!!  The thrill of anticipation when the stewardess would announce our descent rivaled the thrill of riding the Viper roller coaster at Six Flags in my young mind.  And not because of the physical aspect of the landing, because of the expectation that where we would be landing would surely impart to me an abundnace of life and learning and love, in my time there and I would always come home a different girl than I left home as.  I miss that so much.  But I love life with my kids and I believe strongly enough in the way I’ve been doing things for these last 10 years of my mothering.  I should add that I do know many a wonderful mother that choose both, children and travel.  Together and separate.  It is my personal choice not to leave my younger children for longer than the hours contained in a single day, so leaving home without them isn’t an option.  And with Sid working for much of his trip, it doesn’t seem reasonable for me to take on day after day of four kids, on my own, in a foreign land, including a nursling (that dear sweet nursling of mine!).  Although, writing that now, it does have the feel of the grand adventures of travel I enjoyed as a young girl!  Surely I am capable of such a task, surely we’d all learn so very much, and rely on one another, and get stressed and recover and flourish and expand and come home new people.  Why oh why are we not going??  Oh yeah, Sid could obtain exactly 1 first class ticket for $700.  One day we will all go, not flying first class, but we will go, and we will have a real good time.

 

There have been many trips Sid has gone on solo before this one, and surely there will be more, but I’m feeling the feelings more intensely this time, I believe, because next Friday, October 7th, will mark the 15th anniversary of Sid’s and my wedding.  He’ll be in Koenji, I’ll be in Santa Ana.  (Have I mentioned how proud I am of my man and that his tattoos are in demand all over the globe?)  I’ve tried to come up with some romantic and symbolic thing we can both do on that day to acknowledge our relationship, but as with every other anniversary, it’s significance is diminished by the fact that the wonder of Sid and I is in every day we spend together.  We find so much joy in each other’s company.  So if we could just get the kids to bed that night, mix up some form of a fizzy juice/vodka drink to share and then watch Mad Men on the couch, that would be perfect.  But okay, maybe I just didn’t apply myself enough to the task of figuring out some romantic thing we could do together, then I could focus on that now instead of how sad it feels that we’ll be apart on what is a super cool landmark in our lives together.  I guess its significance isn’t completely diminished.

 

Whenever he’s gone, I vacillate between wanting to take it super easy so I can check out emotionally, somewhat, and wanting to take on big, interesting tasks to make the time go faster.  Rearranging furniture is always fun, or redecorating.  This time I’d like to build an outdoor stone masonry oven and begin the trials for finding our family favorite backyard bread recipe to pass down through the generations.  Or build this cool wooden table with nesting benches I found the plans for online, that looks easy enough, and then get one of those big tents from Harbor Freight and erect a veritable “living room in the orchard” for us to hang out in.  I know very well that these things aren’t likely to happen.  I know I should focus on mustering the enormous patience, kindness, goodness, self-control and all the other fruits of the spirit I want to embody for the children while Sid is gone.  Because surely that is not my default setting when my love is so far away from me, under those circumstances my default is more along the lines of pissed, snappy, whiny, are those the vegetables of the spirit?  Ha ha, the rotten fruits?  The weeds and thorns, I suppose.  Anyway.

 

I recently found exactly 4 letters I wrote when I was nine years old.  They are written on stationary from a kibbutz my mom and I stayed in when we travelled to Israel with Grandpa’s church in 1987.  I have many, many fond memories from that trip, it was one of the ones I referred to in the above paragraph about loving to fly.  The letters were written to each of my siblings and they each highlighted different events of my trip, based on who the letters were written to.  I told my brother Mike about things I had climbed while in Israel, he and I loved to climb.  I told my brother William about a crusader fortress I toured, where there were holes in the upper parts to pour boiling oil onto any invaders.  I wrote to simpler, shorter letters to my 2 year old twin brother and sister, based on what I thought they’d comprehend.  These letters tell me so much about myself and my relationships with my siblings at that time, and they cause me grief too.  It would be 6 more years before my parents would divorce, and that family unity that pervaded my letters would be challenged, and eventually defeated as we all scrambled to find that feeling of family and home wherever we could.  Some of us turned to substances, others to friends, others of us – me – turned inward.  I feel so cut off from that young girl I was, writing those letters to my best friends, as my siblings surely were at that time.  I was nine and I wrote well, I would love to meet nine year old me, now.  I would tell her how special she is.  That she is obviously a bright, interesting and loving girl for her age.  I would tell her that those things will always be a part of her and to always nurture them, never believe that she isn’t those things.  At least that little girl was never forsaken by Jesus, even if His messages to her weren’t loud enough to always comfort her and convince her of her worth.  Surely that nine year old little girl is still very much who I am, even as a mother.  Loving the connection with my kids, nothing more satisfying than sharing stories with them that I know they will like.  Interested in history, I talked about the places I went in my letters with clarity, I obviously liked the stories about the places we’d been, as I would surely love them today.  I also see my own children in the nine year old me, I told my brother about all the cool stuff I got to buy in Israel, a necklace a pen and an eraser.  And I highlighted that the hotel maids put candy under the bedspread for us.  My kids love buying stuff and candy!  Just like every child.  My kids enjoyed hearing me read my old letters almost as much as I enjoyed revisiting them.  What a thing this life is.  Here I am, almost 34 years old.  I never expected to get this old!  Honestly, I just never imagined it until like, maybe two years ago!  And I am happier than I ever thought I could be considering all the drudgery I’ve offered my time to.  I am definitely blown away by how much I love living with, growing and learning alongside, teaching and witnessing the unfolding of - my children.  What a life!  I’ve feel I have been given another chance at unity within a family.

In the Garden

We’ve got some food growing in our backyard.  I am experimenting to see what I can successfully grow and in the coming years I hope to grow just a few things really well and maybe get to eat them all year with the help of some preserving, dehydrating and freezing.  This year’s food is more abundant than last year’s, but still sparse.  All in all I’m satisfied.

 

I tried to grow a three sisters (corn, beans and squash) garden again, but the corn did even worse than last year.  (The pole beans are supposed to vine up around the pole-like corn.)  It was a bummer to admit defeat on the corn front and I only did so the day before we left on a motorhome trip.  Since the tendrils were already searching, I needed plan B-poles pronto.  Dried sticks which the recent strong winds had delivered from the trees to the ground have worked well and held up much better than I expected and I love the way they look, although I do wish the beans had a more complete network of support so that they could reach their most fruitful potential.  Oh, the gardening-social analogies, you just can’t garden and not have life lessons confirmed along the way.

Beans

Squash

Tendrils

Tendrils fascinate me, how can there not be a brain behind something that searches?

Snap Pea

 

Snap pea flower

 

A drop of water in a weed

 

Swiss Chard from last year, on its way out.

I had to photograph it, it has provided many a nutritious leaves for us in the past few months.  It looks so stately and monumental against the sky.

 

 

And a seesaw we built 2 weeks ago!

We had so much fun on the one at Caspers Park, I talked everyone into building our own.  It needs some slight redesigning (more weight toward the fulcrum), but is working well enough for now and provided some education to throw into the kids’ files for the end of the year paperwork.

 

<3

Stankovits Vacation 2011, day 1 – Randsburg

Even though I’m still in the midst of my weblogger identity/existential crisis (It’s called bless my birth, but it’s time for me to leave my own birthing season behind.  So, why am I here?  Who am I writing to/for?  And for what reason?), and an even worse, sucky keyboard crisis (at least it can’t get ruined from crumbs or liquids, the snack cabinet is directly above the computer desk), I am nonetheless going to share our recent vacation, with pictures and entries from my vacation journal. Onward ho.

May 12, 2011
We are in Ridgecrest, in the parking lot of the Walmart, haha. I like when country folk call their Walmart *the* Walmart, and I feel a little like country folk whenever we’re out of Orange County. It’s early morning, 8-ish and we’re all up, dressed, coffee-ed and fed! I slept amazingly well and awoke with Indy around 5:30. Sid is trying to figure out what’s wrong with our rig. It lost so much oomph going uphill yesterday, maxing out at 38 mph with the pedal to the metal (petal to the meddle? ha). [We have since had the motorhome fixed, it was the resignator, and to my understanding the resignator is what manages the turbo booster.]

Yesterday we explored the Yellow Aster Mine in Randsburg. It was an active mine from the 1890s to around 1933. It was so excessively cool! Sid was best at identifying what the different parts of the machinery and structures were and did. He was most impressed by a super, crazy-deep mine shaft. There were wooden frames every two feet or so, they looked as if they were holding the shaft open, all the way down and there was a very tall building built around the opening. And I’m almost certain this was the Yellow Aster Mine, like 99.99999%, but I’m so used to everything at a site like this being gated, fenced, managed, regulated and with signs everywhere that I do feel that 0.00001% doubt. In our ghost town books the mine in Randsburg was the Yellow Aster Mine (look what I just found!!), so you decide. We really liked that it isn’t managed by any parks or historical societies, it was amazing seeing things as they were, touching them, walking dangerously close to, and even into, them.

The whole mine area was incredibly spooky, various strange noises constantly made our heads turn, eyes search and minds puzzle as to their origins. The wind literally moaned as it rushed over the hills, through the ruins and around us, casting our hair wildly about. There were these certain desert plants up there with skinny components arranged like geometric sculptures. Some of them were still green, others were dry and woody, well the woody ones rubbed and clicked loudly in the rushing wind, like gypsies clinking their coins, demanding acknowledgement of their presence. It was hard not to feel unwanted up there, like someone didn’t want us there. That feeling made us want to leave and stay. So interesting. I’ve never been to a place like that before.

A lovely wildflower meadow, where? you ask . . . Why, in between the Outdoor World parking lot and the freeway, of course.

Outdoor World

"It's comin' right for us!"


That's a tent-cot full of cute

Avie Oakley





The mine outhouse, so cute

Oh, chute!


I wanted a better picture down in, but I was scared to get any closer. Next time I'll take the time to summon my courage

The view up from the crazy-deep shaft

This is inside the stamp mill building, apparently, since I didn't know what was what, I didn't actually photograph the stamps, they were just around the corner, behind that cabinet on the left, darn. This mine had a 100 stamp mill, according to our books, but I don't see how 100 stamps could fit over there. Later in our trip you'll see a pic of a cool 3 stamp mill. Anyhow, the stamps crush the ore and the debris goes down, while the gold ends up on those ramp thingies

check this out……………………………. and this

There's June and me

I love this pic!! Think that sign coulda had anything to do with those feelings I was having, about someone not wanting us there?

The miners used that car to transport the gold . . . just kidding. This site brought the Dr. Destructo out in Jonny =)

It has curb appeal, love the wrap-around porch


 

catch up

Oh wow, it’s been so long. Not that anyone’s asking, but my reasons for not blogging for so long are quite simple. The demands on me in this season of my life make it more difficult to notch in the time to blog. But another factor is that I used to mostly do the blog on Saturdays and now Saturdays are my breadmaking day. I’ve been making those two loaves of whole wheat Tassajara bread every week, and if my family didn’t love it so, so much, I might give it up! It’s time-consuming and the kneading is physically demanding to someone so out of shape as I. I’m getting soft in my mid-thirties :) Sid works on breadmaking day, so I usually have Indy in a hiking backpack carrier on my back, which adds to the exertion, you know? Anyway, I have even experienced some tension over creating this post right here that I’m doing right now. I kinda want to give the whole thing up just to eliminate yet one more source of tension in my life, but I really like doing/having this blog. Having more than doing, though. So, nowhere to go but onward, yes?

Let’s catch up a bit so that I can hopefully share more recent stuff sometime soon.

*We celebrated Aveline’s 7th birthday!! And boy is she 7! She and I went on a date up to the American Girl Store at The Grove.

We made a stop at Sid’s mom’s house so Ave could open her present.

Aveline and her beautiful Grandmother.

American Girl shopping, oh yeah!

Mom-daughter time was so cool. I can’t remember the last time we spent time alone, aside from the here-and-theres we grab amongst the others.

We went to D-Land to celebrate with her cousins, as well. So fun! She loves Tower of Terror!!

*We also planned and prepped for a motorhome trip. We’ve already gone and come home from the first leg of it, athough we didn’t plan for there to be multiple legs of it at all. But the motorhome’s resignator is hopefully good as new and we’ll be heading out again this week. (More on that first leg later.) Luckily preparing for this trip turned out to be very fun in itself, even if we didn’t make it as far as we thought we might, so here are some pics of the prep.

Enjoyed a great deal of these on our trip! I like to pretend I’m roughing it by manually grinding the coffee beans, and using the french press, but I heat the water over the LP stove in our rig! I want to be more adept at campfires, I’m truly working on it.

The lower two titles proved indispensable in our hunt for and exploration of what’s left of some of the old mining towns. I can’t wait to share those experiences here!!

Good stuff, these.

Sadly, we didn’t make it far enough North to go on a proper Bigfoot hunt. Fooey.

*There’s that bread I’ve been missing out on blogging for. I have to report that that is so far, to date, the only thing I have cooked/baked that every member of my family has eaten a ton of every time I make it. (That makes it sound like I’m a horrid cook, huh? Well, I don’t think I am.) At least there’s one thing =). And I do hope to add more foods to that list.

*Now I’ll leave you with some fun photos that the Jonster and I took of ourselves and each other . . .





Phew. That was extensive. Next time, Stankovits CA Desert Ghost Town Tour and Lake/River Downtime.

death by song

I don’t know that I’ve ever loved a song like I love this song (actually I’m sure I have, but this is the one I love right now). I’m still discovering Alex Ebert, he’s probably my all-time fave. I hope he’s making music for many more years.