The Fair Skinned Italians

Since 2005 • Happy New Year!

Girls!


A jam-packed week ahead with multiple pictures daily. Too many fun pictures for the old one-a-day rule.

4 CommentsPicture of the day • Written by Josh

Hey little apple blossom.

Nora usually eats apples with no problem. But the other day, for who knows what reason, she was firmly anti-apple.

3 CommentsMovies / Nora • Written by Josh

I KNOW you ain’t wearing the same outfit as me, Cuz.


Nice to see you and all, but…

1 CommentPicture of the day • Written by Josh

Baby Boom ’09


While we were in Atlanta we got together with some of the families from our last Bible study group. Each had or is expecting their first child this year. Left to Right: Nora (7 mo.), Lauren, Terri, Knox (3 mo.), Christina (expecting in Dec.), Molly (also expecting in Dec.), Baby Riorden (4 mo.), Kelly, McKinley (7 mo.), & Jill.

Leave a CommentPicture of the day • Written by Josh

A Remy Story

Poor Remy hasn’t gotten much FSI time lately. But fear not, he is still loved. Especially by Nora. He and she are BFF. Anytime Nora is playing on the floor, Remy’s right there. Planning a way to get close enough to launch a lickfest all over her face and hands. I’ll turn my back for one minute, pick Nora up, go to kiss her cheek and smell doggy-slobber on her face.

He’s a great, great “baby dog.” Very gentle, allows Nora to pull out clumps of fur, and doesn’t seem to be all that jealous. If anything, he’s happy for the new playmate. He doesn’t seem to grasp her abilities though. He continues to drop his tennis ball at her feet and has not given up that one of these times she’ll pick it up and throw it for him. Any day now.

Here’s a random story from this past week that I hope you enjoy.

A few nights ago, I woke up and felt the bed shaking. My first thought is that we were having another earthquake. That didn’t seem to pan out since nothing else seemed to be moving. My second thought was that Josh was moving around in his quasi-awake state. (It’s been known to happen. Remember the air guitar incident?) But no, he was fast asleep. I rolled over to check on my other side and there was a brown face locked on mine.

Of course, I gasped even as I identified that it was Remy. He was staring at me with his front paws shaking on the bed. And right then, I knew exactly what was going on. I dragged myself out of the bed, stumbled into the living room, found my purse, dug around for my cell phone, crawled under the desk to get the phone charger, plugged it in, and dove back into bed.

Because Remy’s greatest terror on this earth is the sound my phone makes when it’s dying. This is the fourth or fifth time he has done this. The alert scares him so much, he comes into our room, walks around to my side, and just waits for me to wake up. He doesn’t bark, he doesn’t paw at me, he simply trembles with an agonizing fear until I realize he’s there.

The very first time this happened, our door was shut. He jumped against it, ran his nails down it, and leaned against it until we finally let him in. He circled the bed a few times, antsy and anxious. We had watched a suspenseful movie that night, and I naively assumed that he sensed I was still tense and was eager to comfort me. He had no idea what caused the sound he found so terrifying and had no way of knowing how to make it stop.

We have both become wiser.

I’m still trying to decide if this story shows how intelligent he is, or if it reveals that he’s a little nonsensical. On one hand, he shows some problem solving that he knows how to make the noise stop. On the other hand—why on earth is he so petrified of the sound of a phone battery dying?

1 CommentRemy • Written by Lauren

Because every girl needs a string

1 CommentPicture of the day • Written by Josh

Nora loves her Panzy

2 CommentsPicture of the day • Written by Josh

Home and Back Again

It’s been a week since we flew back home. We are now recovered enough from that flight to talk about it. It was that bad. But first, the good news!

Nora had an amazing flight out to Atlanta. It was the best flight I think we could have had. We got to sit in first class! It. Was. Awesome.

And a long story that I’ll try to condense down. Josh wanted to cash in our frequent flyer miles for a ticket and it worked out that we could only use it for a first class seat. Josh figured we could send me and Nora up there and he could convince one of the coach fliers to trade seats with me.

I found my first class seat and it was already time to taxi and for take off, so I made small talk with the man who turned out to be incredibly kind and sweet to Nora. He called her a future beauty queen and complimented her hand eye coordination. (I took his word for it.)

The moment the seat belt sign was off, he told me that he wanted to switch seats with Josh so we could sit together. I tried to talk him out of it, but he wouldn’t hear of it. He packed up his stuff- including a Bible- and went to find Josh. We wrote a note to him to let him know how much we appreciated his kindness. His whole attitude was so humble and he was such a servant.

So we both got to sit in huge, comfortable seats with plenty of leg room. The flight attendants are so attentive up there. And you have leg AND feet rests! It’s incredible. Nora got to watch cartoons on her own little tv. Granted, she was distracted after 5 seconds, but still. Cool stuff.

We landed in Atlanta so relaxed. Nora did great! She slept about half the time and played with her toys the rest of the time. She was tired, but it was easy enough to find ways to keep her occupied.

We had a great, great week in Atlanta/Florida. We’ll have to post pictures from the trip soon. It was so much fun!

Then it was time to fly home. It was a night flight, leaving at 9:30 pm. First we had to drive over 6 hours from Florida to the airport. Nora barely napped in the car at all. I repeat- she barely napped at all. That meant there were two possible outcomes- she’d pass out on the plan from exhaustion or she’d be too exhausted to sleep at all and scream for hours.

Guess which one it was?
It was awful. Nora, who is almost always a very laid back baby, was screaming like a banshee before the plane had even reached cruising altitude. We couldn’t get up, so we just had to try to distract her. It didn’t work.

Finally, the seatbelt sign clicked off and we jumped up to walk with her. For the next hour, Josh and I took turns keeping her just calm enough that she was whimpering with only occasional screaming. But she was getting more and more exhausted until she hit a breaking point where she was simply inconsolable. That’s when Josh hid in the lavatory.

An hour later, I went and traded with him. Horrified that he had been in a lavatory, but at the same time, glad that something worked to muffle her cries. But I wasn’t going in there.

After trying to keep her quiet in the tiny flight attendants’ area, I gave in and also went to sit on the toilet in the airplane lavatory.

Now. Those of you who know about my….germ and general nastiness aversion, you’ll appreciate the things I did. Things that would NEVER be in the realm of acceptable in the ‘real world.’ But this was survival. Not only did I sit on the toilet lid- ew- but I actually rested my head against the wall. Against. The. Nasty. Tiny. Bathroom. Wall. Something about that small space did calm Nora down so it was worth it. I suppose. But yuck. On a normal trip to that room, I try to avoid touching anything. This trip, when the scratchy airplane blanket (that I also avoid on the average flight) fell off Nora and touched the toilet, I just picked it up and wrapped it right back around her. Earlier, I was standing right near the airplane door, where every single person on the last flight walked out and every single person on this flight walked in. And I dropped the pacifier. The one object that offered a few breaks from the screams. I dropped it. And picked it right back up and stuck it in her mouth without even wiping it on my jeans. Germs, schmerms, we had to stop the insanity.

She finally started to dose off, so I made a break for it and ran down the aisle as she started waking up. My goal was to get to Josh so she could suck on his pinky finger. That was the only way she would calm down. By the time I made it to him, she was starting back up with the kind of screams that start with the long inhale.

Miraculously, Josh was able to get his finger in and she calmed down and finally went to sleep.

( Interesting side story- At one point, the guy sitting on the window seat had to go to the restroom. Not wanting to wake the finally sleeping baby, he somehow scaled the wall, found a grip, swung over Josh and Nora, and landed in the aisle. He was a ninja, that’s the only explanation. There is no way a non-ninja could have done it. Nora didn’t even stir. And then he did it again on the way back. I stared at him with my mouth open. Okay, fine, I also gave him a thumbs up. I was that impressed.)

Nora slept the last 2 hours of the 5 hour flight.
People came up afterwards to tell us how sorry they felt for us and how they had been there, too. We, my friends, were those people with that baby.

But.
It is totally worth it. She’s our sweet girl. Though she was beyond exhausted that night. I think God was ministering to my heart during the worst of it because I thought how grateful we are to have our Nora, even when she’s hysterical. And that’s such a true thought, it had to come from God.

However, we will never be flying at night again.

3 CommentsNora / Trips • Written by Lauren

Uncle Beau


Certainly fairing much better than the last time these two met up.

Leave a CommentPicture of the day • Written by Josh

Aunt Jeanine!


And so begins our wonderful mini-vacation home to visit family and friends…

Leave a CommentPicture of the day • Written by Josh

« Newer