Throughout the
year, I have penned numerous thoughts via the Dad Chronicles. While I think it
is unlikely that I’ll ever turn the series into a paperback book, I do have my
blog to serve as an ebenezer of my daughter’s first year of life and the
progress we have made together. Was every day easy? Hell no, but parenthood is
hard work even with beautiful ten-month-old girls like mine. Does she make it
worthwhile? Yes, in ways none of us would have ever expected or dreamed.
Moreover, I’ve noticed a shift in my own day-to-day life, routines, and
priorities.
When did the
shift happen? Let’s say it was somewhere around July 20 when Caeli finally
graduated from the NICU, but it could’ve been a lot sooner or a little later.
I’ve not always been the most conscious of myself, so your opinions may vary.
Nonetheless,
the shift seems to clearly be for the better.
One thing that
has happened is I have let you into my life a lot more intimately than I would
have even this time last year. As my wife can attest, there are few people who
can micromanage a message like me; telling the tale should have thawed the
perceived ice wall I had placed between some of us. Even in my most honest
moments, I only told you what I wanted you to know and little, if anything,
more. [Sidebar: A lot of people know my
name, the city I live in, where I attend church and my employer, and precious
few other things; sharing my story about Caeli and my marriage to Chastity for
the past several months is certainly outside of the norm]. I am still guarded
about my wife and daughter as expected – and even now, it seems that people
look forward to picture day which is the 13th of the month.
Another shift
that has come from writing the Dad Chronicles is that I no longer have the
desire to stay at work for extra shifts, and from what I observed when I came
back from my most recent vacation, I do not have a want to continue working the
night shift. The extra money is cool, but two things have transpired along the
way: 1) the tax man is going to really
beat me down; and 2) I was missing out on significant events. Fortunately, I
was home when Caeli said her first word: “mama”. She said “dada” the other morning when I was leaving her grandparents’
house to return home and sleep. We’re currently working on learning how to
crawl, and with this gifted child, that won’t take too long.
Man, my life
has shifted more than a semi driver who cannot “jake brake” in a small town.
It’s also
strange that I have gotten more use of my English degree from Henderson in the
past few years blogging than I ever did teaching sullen ninth- and
tenth-graders the nuances of the English language or roaming around the
Appalachian Mountains with groups of tweeners for roughly sixty hours per week
developing team building skills and becoming more cognizant of both nature and
the sciences alike. I’m glad I got out before Common Core sunk its claws into
school districts and inept politicians nationwide as the standard for learning.
A third shift
(not funny, I’m still working the graveyard shift after all these years) comes
from having to really concern myself with a helpless being who sleeps, coos,
poops, eats, pees, cries, smiles, laughs, and plays. Once I found myself
becoming decent at getting Caeli dressed and a ‘poop-ologist’, I didn’t feel as
overwhelmed as I did in the NICU even after asking every dumb question under
the sun because I simply did not know the answers.
I also ran
from the discussion about having children not that long ago, but I guess chalk
that up to trepidation.
I’m not a
perfect parent by any means (ask Chastity) and I may have ruined anyone from
babysitting our daughter in the foreseeable future, but one thing I have
shifted into is how much I love my little family and what I will do for them.
Joshua 24:15 states “Choose ye this day whom you will serve, but
as for ME and MY HOUSE, WE WILL SERVE THE LORD.” I use that as the
primary Scripture for how the Armstrong Household operates and hopefully am an
okay enough example of what is being commissioned for me to do.
I shifted from
dude to dad, traveler to homebody, workaholic to…well, not quite one who can
turn down overtime easily, and maybe I am not as nerdy as I once was. The days
of living on the fly are long gone, replaced by deliberate thoughts and
long-term decisions that potentially can affect multiple generations down the
road, so I better get that part right.
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