Silver Lining: TWINS
Showing posts with label TWINS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TWINS. Show all posts

April 14, 2017

the twins at nine months


They're totally not nine months yet. But they'll be nine months in a few days, and we all know I do these updates so rarely that I might as well count it! A few fun him and her facts about these twins I love so much (basically it's one big case for nature over nurture).

Him: two big bottom teeth
Her: one tiny tooth barely poking through

Him: one bite every 5 minutes
Her: shovels food in with two hands

Him: content to sit there
Her: crawling everywhere

Him: rolls over sometimes, if necessary
Her: never stops moving

Him: huge double-dimple smiles
Her: nose-scrunching grins

Him: wearing 18 month clothes
Her: wearing 6 month clothes

Him: loves bathtime
Her: loves bathtime

Him: loves to snuggle in the morning
Her: straight for the bottle please

Him: early bird
Her: night owl

Him: gives the cutest hugs
Her: way too wiggly


Him: pacifier all night long
Her: pacifier all night long

Him: eats anything
Her: hates avocado and banana
I sure love these kiddos. Happy 9 months to them!

March 17, 2017

a gallery wall for the twins' nursery

I've wanted to attempt a gallery wall for years and years, but it always seemed way too intimidating. Like, you have to collect stuff from different places? Over an extended period of time? And you have to make sure none of it matches but all of it coordinates? And you have to place everything in a pattern that looks eclectic but has actually been meticulously planned out?

It seemed too complicated for me, which is probably why I've never made one until last week in the twins' nursery.

I didn't actually start out with a plan to make a gallery wall. I just came across the "this is my happy place" sign at Hobby Lobby, and something about the simple colors, white space, and cute sentiment totally grabbed me. I brought it home, propped it up on the top of the twins' dresser, and thought, "Hey, this would be great as part of a gallery wall."

So I did it! It's not perfect, and I had surprising amounts of stress while sorting through all the decor I owned (and a few pieces I bought) and deciding where to put everything. As it turns out, even on a gallery wall that's supposed to look a little random, I kept gravitating toward right angles and straight lines and even spacing. So apparently I'm 100% left-brained when it comes to decorating.

 Can you even believe these cute animal prints? Alyssa from Alysstrations was kind enough to send them over, and holy cow I'm in love with all of them. I honestly can't decide which little animal is my favorite, and I love how they bring a little more youth and whimsy to this wall.



I have plans to stain this ampersand one of these days. It's on my "To Do Eventually" list. But also I haven't accomplished a single thing from my To Do Eventually list since I got pregnant with twins, so at this point it's safe to assume it will stay unfinished forever.
I've been surprised how much of a difference this wall makes now that it's done. The entire room seems more put together and larger.

It almost makes up for the fact that one twin sleeps in a beautiful large white crib, and the other one sleeps in a pack-n-play in the corner. Proof:
Here are my purchase sources, in case you're wondering where something is from:
Dresser - IKEA
Lamps - Target
Noise Canceller - Amazon (link here)
Happy Place poster - Hobby Lobby
White shelves - Target
Ampersand - Hobby Lobby
Animal Illustrations c/o Allystrations
Clipboards - Hobby Lobby
Square Frame - Hobby Lobby
Yellow flowers - Target
Green succulent - Target
Plant on dresser - IKEA
Arrows - Hobby Lobby
Clock - Walmart
Cactus print - an original from a "warm-up" by the talented Art Ellie
Teddy Bear - Claire's bed... can't remember the original source


So there it is! Now that I've done one gallery wall, they seem less intimidating, and a cheap way to cover a large space. Who knows, I might even get up the courage to attempt another one sometime. I'll put it on my To Do Eventually list. ;)

PS If you're in love with these animal prints like me, head over to my Instagram for a giveaway. Super easy to enter, and hey, nothing beats free prints shipped right to your front door. :)

March 1, 2017

Q&A about daily life with twins

Today I wanted to answer all your questions about the logistics of twins. I asked if anyone had questions last week (two weeks ago?) in my Instagram Stories and got lots of really great ones. Every mom's experiences and preferences are so different, but this is what works for me and my family. The twins are seven months old right now, and we quite like them. Here's how we make it work without going too crazy.


Babies are time-consuming. How do you take care of two at once?

I keep my twins on the same schedule.

Keeping the twins on the same schedule was the number one piece of advice I got from other twin moms while I was pregnant. It's the only way I stay sane.

We were firm about keeping the twins on the same schedule from when they were one month old (when my extra helpers went home). If they're on different schedules, I get frustrated because I am holding or feeding or changing or playing with a baby alllllll day long, and literally nothing else gets done. So they eat, get changed, play, go to bed and wake up at the same time. If I'm already changing one diaper, it only takes a minute to change a second diaper, and if I'm already taking the time to feed a baby, it's no problem to feed the other one at the same time. 

How do you feed two babies at the same time?

I use this twin pillow! (Seriously, every single twin mom needs one. The twins have spent hundreds of hours in this thing since day one.) They both lay in it and drink their bottles. In the beginning, I pumped and switched off which twin got formula and which got breastmilk, but now they're fully on formula.

When we're away from home, I just sit on a couch with one twin on each side, each of their heads up on my lap and feed one bottle with each hand.


How do you bathe two babies at the same time?

I don't! They get bathed one after the other. Just the thought of keeping two wiggly babies with terrible muscle control in the same tub at the same time makes my anxiety spike. So they get bathed separately while they're still young.

RELATED: OUR TWIN PREGNANCY VIDEO ANNOUNCEMENT

Do they still sleep together? Do they wake each other up?

They slept in the same crib until they were four months old, when they started kicking and rolling on each other and waking themselves up. The snuggles were cute, but getting a good night's sleep was cuter. ;) Now they sleep in separate cribs in their room. Actually, one is a crib and one is a pack-n-play pushed into a corner. #twinproblems

It still amazes me that they rarely wake each other up. Last night Addie started screaming bloody murder at 4 a.m. when she couldn't find her pacifier, but Link just kept snoring four feet away from her. It's all they've ever known, so they're great at sleeping even when the other one is making noise.

What's the hardest part about having twins?

This changes all the time, and I'm pretty sure my husband would have a different answer, but for me the hardest part is leaving the house.

Whenever I want to go anywhere, I have to pack a diaper bag for two babies, change two babies and find socks/ jackets/ blankets to keep them warm, put them both into their carseats, and then carry 34 pounds of baby (almost 50 pounds if you add the weight of the car seats) plus a diaper bag out to the car, where they each need to be clicked in to their car seat and have their car seat cover adjusted. Plus I have a toddler who needs help going potty and putting her shoes on and likes to run away on the way to the car.

Then I get to wherever I'm going and repeat the whole process in reverse. It's especially hard when my husband is out of town. The other day I really needed to go to the pharmacy, so I had to do the entire process with three kids just to drive down the street for two things. It took half an hour and I was sweaty and grumpy by the time I got home.

The good thing is that taking kids out only gets easier as they get older. Right?

It's also hard not comparing my twins. It's easy to exaggerate their traits when compared to one another. It's also easy to think that one twin is behind developmentally just because they haven't reached a milestone their twin has reached. The fussy one vs. the easy-going one. The fat one and the tiny one. The one who can crawl and the one who isn't even interested in rolling over.  The high maintenance one vs. the low maintenance one. The one with the tooth and the one without. 

For some reason I get comparison comments from strangers all the time. "Looks like this one's the hog!" or "Well we know which one is the diva!" It kind of bugs me. Babies develop at different paces and that's okay. I hope the comparison comments stop by the time they get old enough to realize what people are saying.

What's the best part about having twins?

You guys, I love having twins so much. Every single high you get as a parent, you experience double. The matching outfits pretty much kill me with cuteness. When both twins smile at you, or smile at each other, or make funny faces while eating avocado, or just have fun playing together on the carpet - it is the best. They are built-in playmates and best friends, and it's so much fun that they have each other.

Other best parts: all the wonderful comments you get (everyone comments all the time and I love it, although if you're less extroverted than me you might not appreciate this as much), the preferential treatment you get, the way people let you off the hook for everything because you have two babies, and the free stuff and discounts you get with twins.

In fact, the other day I got sad for my toddler because she didn't have a twin - someone to always be with and play with and snuggle with. Ha!

What did I miss?
Other questions you have?
Leave a comment - I'd be happy to answer!

February 13, 2017

dressed to the nines (+ tips for matching and coordinating your kids' clothes)

This is a sponsored conversation by Carter's. All thoughts and opinions (and my love for this brand that makes up 80% of my childrens' wardrobes) is my own.

We've had a week of warmer weather here in Arizona and it's making me feel like spring and summer already. (Although as a matter of principle I refuse to turn on the air conditioning in February, heat wave or no heat wave.) It's been warm enough inside my house that I've been putting away the thick footie pajamas and pulling out the lighter cotton ones so the twins don't get too warm at night.

Just thinking about the twins and their darling warmer-weather clothes has me excited for the upcoming hot season. After a winter of subdued colors and long sleeves, it's fun to transition to all the bright, light and happy things. 

And speaking of fun springtime outfits, I can't get over this set I bought for the twins. I love the crisp white of Addison's lace dress, and the underplayed stripes and ginghams of Lincoln's dress shirt. Add the fun red pants and the bow tie (that bow tie peeking out from his tiny fat face!) and these children are ready for the Easter egg hunt at the White House.
But seriously, aren't they cute?


The above picture is how they spend their days lately. Addison is always rolling everywhere (including right on top of her twin), and Lincoln isn't even phased by it. He's mostly just interested in lying there looking handsome while his twin rolls all over him. 
 They still try to hold hands all the time, and it's still in my top three favorite things about having twins.
BOW TIE. 
Link's entire outfit can be found here (I love that it comes in a set - all the work of matching and piecing the outfit together is done for you), and Addison's dress can be found here. Link's shoes are here, and Addie's shoes are here (although they are missing in these pictures because her feet are somehow still a size 1 and I bought a size 2).

As I mentioned here, I rarely match the twins (the exception is their shoes, which are all coordinating and all neutral so I never have to worry about it). On a day-to-day basis, they wear whatever is comfortable and clean. But I do really like to coordinate their clothes. Coordinating outfits between a boy and a girl who wear different sizes was harder than I originally thought. Here are some basic guidelines I follow for coordinating my kids' clothes (I do this with my toddler too).

TIPS FOR COORDINATING CLOTHES BETWEEN CHILDREN

SHOP THE SAME STORE
This is my number one tip. If you find red pants at one location and are trying to find a shirt with red stripes at a different store, I can almost guarantee the shades of red won't be a match. This is why literally 80% of the childrens' wardrobe is from Carter's. You can find everything there. It's a one-stop shop for everyday basics, dressy outfits, layette sets, shoes, and everything in between.

BUY ENTIRE OUTFITS
One thing I love about Carter's is the huge selection of entire outfits. The work of finding a top and bottoms for one person is done for you. It cuts down the amount of coordinating you need to do by half because you can buy the whole outfit at one time.

FILTER BY SEASON
Another thing that makes coordinating so much easier is to filter by season. Carter's has tons of darling denim and lemon clothes for spring, so if I want all three children to wear denim and lemon, I can just shop the spring line and I know the shades will coordinate beautifully, whereas it would be hard to find something from last fall (yellows are very different in the fall) that matches with a springy yellow skirt.

PICK 2-3 COLORS
Speaking of denim and lemon, I always pick two or three colors I want in the kids' outfits and stick to those. In the outfits above, I chose white, blue, and poppy red for the twins. Narrowing down colors makes it much easier and less overwhelming to find coordinating outfits.

BUY MULTIPLE SIZES
If you're matching clothes between sections (toddler and baby, for example) it can be hard to find the right sizing. Darn those babies that outgrow their clothes so often. ;) I buy the bigger size first (my toddler's 3T outfit) because I know that will fit her for one entire year. Then I pick out my coordinating outfits from the baby clothes section and buy them for whatever season I want them to be worn. Once I bought the same baby outfit in two sizes, because I wanted my daughters to match through several seasons. They matched from July to November last year and it was darling.

Now is the time to stock up on warmer clothes for the upcoming season. This spring, think supersoft indigo knits, dip-dyed fabrics, eyelet ruffles, and that denim + lemon combo I love so much. The Carter's February baby sale will be held from 2/21 to 3/6, and here's a coupon you can use online or in-store for 20% off until March 6. Plus there's a HUGE President's Day sale going on right now!

And here are some pictures of a matching outfit I do have for my twins. I LOVE rompers on children (only one piece of clothing, which makes it super easy to coordinate both twins), and I'm positive the twins will be wearing 90% rompers this summer. These ones are lightweight, patterned in a neutral, and have darling bears on the bums. What more could you ask for?

But seriously. The bear bums! I love it.

Do you coordinate your children's clothes?
Match them?
What tips and tricks do you have?
I always hear to get everything in a neutral,
but I think there are much more bright and colorful 
ways to make that happen.

February 1, 2017

It's only Wednesday. Have some cute pictures of my kids.

Last night, I was legitimately excited that the next day was Friday, which meant I had almost made it through the entire week. And then I realized it was only Tuesday. ONLY TUESDAY. Not even halfway done with the week. Ha. This has just been one of those weeks!

In case you also need a break from, you know, everything, here are some cute pictures of my kids. Go on. Keep scrolling. It's much more fun than doing the dishes.

You guys, this is my all-time favorite picture of the twins. I love Link's huge grin, Addie's tiny perfectly posed hand, her little toes sticking up in the corner, and their exact same eye color (probably the only trait they share besides their birthday).
 This girl hasn't stopped moving since November. She rolls around the floor all day and then rolls around her crib all night. And she's three seconds away from crawling, even though she barely turned six months old. She's our crazy, lean, strong, dainty, tiny darling girl.
 Link does about fifteen laugh-out-loud funny faces per hour. He is such a ham. He also gives award-winning hugs, is majorly obsessed with eating his rattle toys, and is the most ticklish baby I've ever met.
Oh, just trying to hold hands like always.
Claire snuck in there while I was taking these photos because, "One snuggle mommy, I a good sister." So I guess she had forgotten about earlier that morning when she decided the babies should be awake and went in to scream, "WAKE UP!" in their faces twenty minutes into naptime. (Never promise that you can go to the aquarium as soon as the babies wake up. It backfires!)

And now some pictures of Claire and I. We went to a farewell talk in Gilbert last Sunday and found ourselves with happy babies and a few extra minutes on our way home, so we went for a little walk in the sunshine. It was unexpected and glorious.



Claire and I went for haircuts last week (thank you for all the fun comments as I documented Claire's first real haircut on Instagram Stories, by the way!). When we were almost done, the stylist remarked that she had basically given us matching haircuts. Minus the bangs, it's totally true. I'm not complaining.

And there you have it. And now that it's Wednesday we're officially halfway through the week. We can do this!

January 17, 2017

the greatest surprise of my life

I'm a planner. Big decisions in our house are always thought out, discussed at length, usually a pro-con list is involved, and then my poor husband has to wait while I go back and forth about our choice a million times, and then I finally decide and we move forward.

Choosing to marry Sam was a decision that took forever to make (actually, Sam was 100% on board two weeks after we started dating, and it was me who needed much more time). Choosing to start a family was another choice that took months to make, and literally hundreds of late-night discussions and prayers and seeking guidance from people whose opinion we value most. Quitting teaching for now - same process. Choosing my husband's grad school program. Choosing to move our family to Arizona. To raise my husband's little brother for two and a half years. All these big choices in our life took months and months and months to decide.

Which is why I keep thinking about what happened a little over a year ago. The day we had the biggest surprise of our lives and learned we were having twins.

It's one of those moments I think I'll always remember. I knew I was pregnant - and had been SUPER sick. This pregnancy felt SO different (read: harder in every way) from my last, so I thought it must be a boy instead of a girl this time? I also started showing at 10 weeks, which in hindsight was another fairly obvious clue.

The ultrasound technician was just so casual when she broke the news at my first ultrasound. Within five seconds, when everything on the screen was still grainy and blurry and grey to me, she said in an offhand manner, "You're having twins."

I laughed at her. "No I'm not," I assured her.

One second passed in silence while I stared dumbly at the screen. Then another one. Then another one. Then my brain caught up.

"Are you serious?! I'm actually having twins??! There are two babies in there?!?!?!? You're serious?" This went on for at least 10 minutes. I was crying and laughing and half sure it was some sort of elaborate trick.

More of the same absolute disbelief and shock and happiness continued when Sam and I called and Skyped our parents that night with the big news. And then we were up until midnight thinking about how crazy our lives were about to be. And then we both ended up awake again at 3:30am, lying in bed thinking about it more.

Because twins? They were NEVER on the radar. Nobody in my family has twins. We weren't using fertility drugs that increase the chance of twins. I thought about having twins the same amount of times I thought about the quadratic equation or how often luxury cars should be serviced or political elections in Indonesia. NEVER! I never think about any of those things, and I never ever seriously considered having twins.

For a major planner like me, it was a big scary thing. An incredibly exciting and happy thing, and something we didn't take for granted, but a big and scary thing nonetheless. Nothing had been accounted for. It was not in the plan, and all the implications were new and scary and huge.

Everything changed.

We had to move. We really liked our two-bedroom apartment with the tall ceilings and the huge patio, but the thought of three small children on different sleep schedules sharing the same bedroom was just too much. So we moved to a place with a third bedroom.

We had to buy another car. We literally could not fit three carseats in the back of our Corolla (you should have seen us out in the 107-degree heat with three carseats trying all possible configurations though - it was a valiant effort), so we bought a van.

Sam changed his internship. He was looking at some really alluring out-of-state summer internships for his graduate program, but when we learned that we were having twins right in the middle of the summer (with insurance that only worked in-state) he dropped those leads and found a local internship instead.

And that's how the rest of my pregnancy went. It was a whirlwind of prepping everything, changing everything, and surviving modified bedrest. I couldn't wrap my mind around how to hold two infants at the same time, let alone how I was supposed to care for them (plus a toddler who would be barely two years old) while my husband was gone all day.

In short, a lot of time was spent stressing and planning for the worst and just trying to get through a terrible pregnancy. There were moments when I felt overwhelmed with love and excitement for the miraculous blessings that babies are, but to be quite honest my feelings were usually more practical, preparatory and pessimistic.

And then the twins came, and I got the biggest surprise of all.

I love it.

I love having twins.

Like, I really really love it.

I had forgotten how sweet the newborn smell is. I had forgotten how sweet the squishy, warm, cuddly newborn stage is. I had forgotten how much babies sleep when they're brand new.

Discovering the tiny, strong, amazing, different personalities that my twins had from day one was nothing short of amazing.

I also had so much more help than I had planned for, and that made all the difference. With my first, nobody ever came for more than an hour to help (we only had one child then and lived in the same state as our family so we saw them more often overall). With the twins, I had family staying with me around the clock and helping for the entire month of July, almost all of August, and a good chunk of September too. It was so fantastic. I got more sleep with newborn twins and a toddler than I ever had with my first simply because of all the great help I had.

It was also crazy how much more confident Sam and I felt as parents. We worried so much less about the tiny things. We already knew each other's parenting strengths and weaknesses and philosophies. Things like figuring out how to use a breast pump or how to bathe a tiny human with no muscle strength weren't huge deals because I had done it all before.

I had no postpartum depression this time around, and that right there has made the biggest difference of all in how I perceived and handled and felt about everything.

Was it still hard? YES. Very hard. Everything that's hard about having a baby is twice as hard when you have twins. Trying to plan our schedule around their naps (or else powering through naptime and dealing with two very fussy babies), trying to get a toddler to adjust to two babies who constantly need mom, trying to get the twins on the same schedule, trying to get one twin to sleep through it when the other twin fusses, and dealing with double the diapers and bottles and messes and spit up and sleep deprivation are all very real struggles.

But even so, even in the hardest of moments -- when all three children are crying, the floor is littered with spit-up rags, Sam won't be home for hours and hours, and I would sell my soul for one twenty-minute nap -- even then, I surprise myself with how much I love my twinners.

I can't imagine life without them. I can't even imagine them coming as singleton children, a few years apart. I can't imagine them not having their other half, their built-in best friend, their snuggle buddy, and the only constant they've ever known.

I love that they still hold hands all the time. I love that strangers are way more friendly and kind and talkative when you're out with twins. I love how different my twins are. I love that they balance each other out completely. I love that Claire has a brother and a sister. I love their tiny perfect little bodies and gummy grins and budding personalities.

So I guess the biggest surprises can also be the best ones. That or I should constantly brace myself for the worst so I'll be pleasantly surprised when things turn out better. ;)

Happy almost-six-months to my darling Lincoln and Addison. You are my greatest and happiest surprise.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...