Two years ago, we began the journey of adding one
plus two to equal three.
Last year, Baby Bear (my nickname for Caeli – to the
rest of y’all, she’s Caeli-bug or Li-Li) began multiple therapies with our
now-good friends at Kidsource to catch up and in some cases, get ahead of her
testing age.
Today, she’s finding herself into some of everything
– digging through boxes on the floor, opening kitchen cabinets that we never
baby proofed, climbing on the night stand and ottoman,
and otherwise being more adorable every day even when she doesn’t care for
bedtime.
It’s pretty safe to say I’m livin’ the dream as
Caeli Elise’s daddy.
A few of you may need to come down to the Dub Shack
to be witnesses to the family dance-offs every other Saturday afternoon in the
kitchen (Hint: my kid has way more
rhythm in her pinky finger than I ever will in my entire stiff body – thank God
her mommy has moves) or wait for one of us to share videos of us singing in the
cars.
It
seemed like a dream when the Lord brought us back to the city of Zion.
Psalms
126:1
When the Lord brought Israel out of bondage in
Babylon after a period of around seventy years, the people were exceedingly
overjoyed at going back to Jerusalem. Not only were they on their way home, but
also King Cyrus financed their return journey by sponsoring and encouraging it!
Never had there been a moment like it in history and in all likelihood, it will
never repeat itself again. Imagine if the President-elect actually followed
through on deporting legally-born and/or naturalized citizens (which I pray he
is never that cruel, but the rhetoric is a different story and the nationalists
out there are craving blood. Enough of the political thought – this is supposed
to be a happy post) and funded their safe travels to their homelands.
Coming home to Bryant whole was a dream come true,
let me tell you.
As a NICU dad, those 146 days of having to visit
Caeli in her incubator only to leave at the end of each day and once July 20,
2015 rolled around on the calendar, tears streamed down my eyes as my wife and
I latched in the car seat for the very first time to complete our family. She
has had one hospitalization (croup, double ear infection) since and has been a
dream child through it all largely remaining healthy outside of the common cold.
Her resolve is legendary at 21 months of age; God gave us a special child to be
great in a world that is merely okay with being good. In addition to the
climbing and running, Caeli is a good communicator for her age who loves to
read and be read to. She’s not just
strong: She is #CAELISTRONG.
Prematurity Awareness Day is November 17 – take a
moment to remember all of the little angels who spent their entire short lives
in the NICU as well as those who have had complications that eventually brought
them back to the PICU.
We rock that purple because of the twins born eleven
days apart.
We sport that purple because of Caeli’s first friend
Freeman and in his eternal rest, share his legacy in Helena once the playground
opens.
We stunt on ‘em in purple because of our little
graduates (and bigger ones) have already been amazing in words and feelings
beyond our vocabularies.
Thanks to all of the parents we’ve befriended along
the journey – Diana and Julio; Misty and Will; Shay’s niece (born two hours
after Caeli) and her family in Stuttgart; the Estes family from Vilonia;
Nytalya and James; primary nurses Lorrie and Emily; the support groups at both
UAMS and Arkansas Children’s Hospital; our church and neighbors in Springhill
Manor; and everyone who had a prayer, gift card for food or gas, a kind word,
or encouragement via text, message, phone call, read, shared, and commented on
the Dad Chronicles or stopping by my office at work to relate their own
stories.
Together, we wear purple to observe the day our
babies got an early head start on life and the commonalities we share for the
rest of our lives by livin’ the dream of parenthood.
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