From Charlotte Street

We live on Charlotte Street. We live in the city. We love our neighborhood. We love our boys. Our house is usually a wild mess; full of wrestling children and flying footballs. We are so far from perfect and so thankful that we don't have to be because we serve a God was and is perfect for us.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Bram 2 Months

Bram 2 Months


Stats:
weight 14 lbs, 97% percentile (He's a chunk!)
length 22 3/4, 50% percentile
head circumference 15 1/2, 25% percentile

Skills:
*Bram started smiling around the 8 week mark
*good head control
*sweet sweet temperament
*can pull legs up under him
*turn head from side to side while on tummy

Struggles
*sleep- wants to be held! I don't blame him I love cuddling as well, but it does make it tough to get sleep in our house! Just this week he started going to bed in his bassinet with a good routine around 9:30pm! Great progress! After that it is all over the place.
*keeping him safe from his big brother! Titus loves him so much that he wants to squeeze, lick, and step on him! :)

We love you Bram Mac. 

Thursday, September 6, 2012

heart melted



My big boy, Titus, started Mother's Day Out this week. I know it's only one day a week for 5 hours, but when you've spent almost every day together for his entire TWO YEARS of life that seems like a long time! It was a long time. I missed him a ton...and Bram and I got a ton done around the house. What I got done around the house is not the point. The point is that my baby is not a baby any more. He goes to school now. 

Last week we to the church where he goes to MDO for about an hour so that he could meet his new teachers and get familiar with his new classroom. Titus enjoyed it but seemed hesitant. He's a people person, like his mama, so I knew once school actually started that little extrovert would LOVE it! 
And he did love it! The note his teacher sent home said that he had a GREAT day! The picture up above is of him the morning before he left for his first day! I'm sure we will take many more "first day of school" pictures on this porch. :) 
When I came to pick him up he gave me the painting he made for me. It melted my heart. My baby is a big boy now...

and maybe a future artist. 

A week in the life...

A week in the life of T and B...

August 26th- September 1



Thanks to a gift from Grandma Gigi, Titus got to try water color painting for the first time. He didn't really understand the concept, but he loved the mess! He got paint all over his shirt and hands.

One day we took the whole day to just relax around the house...we rarely do that! I was reminded how fun it is to have a day to not worry about being anywhere and just focus on hanging with my boys. I learn so much about them when we slow down and get some QT! My favorite part of that day was playing cars and dinosaurs with T man. He has really become a little boy! He races his cars and sets up the dinosaurs to watch the show. It's adorable.


On Thursday we were REALLY excited for the weekend to start (Matt works Sunday-Thursday), so Titus helped me bake some cookies to try to allure Matt to come home a little early! It didn't work, but he did enjoy the cookies when he got home.

OH and this handsome man turned 8 weeks on Tuesday of this week. He's a pretty special boy. He spends most the day eating...if you can't tell.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Mercy Project


Hopefully some of you can take the time to learn a little more about the Mercy Project Today! Watch a video or check out a link. 

There’s an estimated 7,000 children who work in the Ghana fishing industry. Some of
these children are as young as 5 and 6 years old.  All of these children are slaves.
–Mercy Project

Today many in our country will take a day off from our jobs to celebrate the social and economic achievements of American workers.  No matter if we’re celebrating at home or at the beach, we’re entering into a tradition that has largely been shaped by Labor Unions - organizations that are dedicated to protecting workers’ interests and improving their wages, hours, and working conditions.  Today as we lounge around or hang out with friends and family, we’re not only celebrating hard work, we’re honoring fair, ethical working practices and the laws that prevent discrimination, abuse, and child labor in our country.  Without these laws in place (and enforced), the most vulnerable members of society suffer.  Who are the most vulnerable? Children. 

Today as we’re celebrating the systems in our own country that strive to prevent injustices like child trafficking and child labor, we’re mindful of the many child slaves around the world who are unprotected and the organizations, like Mercy Project, who are working to free them.

As a mother, it’s difficult for me to imagine my children working 14 hours a day, 7 days a week.  I’m unable to wrap my brain around the thought of my children engaged in long, hard days of physical labor, eating one meal a day, and then falling asleep at night on a dirt floor filled with other slave children.  Yet this is the daily reality for kids who have been trafficked into the fishing industry in Ghana, Africa.  As with much of Africa, there is a great deal of poverty in Ghana. Unfortunately, this leaves many mothers in an unimaginable position: sell their children to someone who can take better care of them or watch them starve to death. Most of the mothers are told their children will be given food, housing, and an education. Instead, the kids are often taken to Lake Volta where they become child slaves and their mothers never see them again.  Thankfully, Mercy Project is working to break the cycles of trafficking around Lake Volta by providing alternate, more efficient, sustainable, fishing methods for villagers – ultimately eliminating the need for child slaves.  Because of the work Mercy Project is doing in Ghana, the first group of children will be freed this month from Lake Volta.
VIDEO

We invite you to watch this moving, 10 minute documentary about the issues surrounding child labor and trafficking in Ghana and most importantly the hope Mercy Project is bringing to children and entire communities in Africa.  Mercy Project is the only NGO working on Lake Volta addressing the injustice of child labor and child trafficking at its root - by strengthening the Ghanaian economy and eliminating the structures that cause the demand for trafficked children.
Whether these ideas of child labor, child trafficking, and modern-day slavery are new to you or you’re aware of these injustices, but need to hear some good news every once in awhile, we invite you to become a part of what Mercy Project is doing in Ghana.  When Mercy Project frees their first group of children this month, we can all celebrate together.


Learn more and get involved by –

• Watching Mercy Project’s short documentary. [link provided below]

• Following Mercy Project on Facebook. [link provided below]

• Connecting with Mercy Project via Twitter.  [link provided below]

• Spending some time on Mercy Project’s website.  [link provided below]

• Sharing about Mercy Project’s work in Ghana with your friends.  [link provided below]

Although child trafficking, child labor, and the unstable economies that result in these injustices are a tragedy, we’re grateful for what Mercy Project is doing to protect the vulnerable and for allowing us to be a part of this story.   While we’re commemorating labor laws and ethical work in our own country today, we invite you to follow along on this journey with Mercy Project to protect and free children in Ghana.


Links You May Need

Link to Mercy Project’s Website: http://mercyproject.net/

Link to the documentary - http://youtu.be/b4Dwv5KbMYI

Mercy Project’s Facebook Page - https://www.facebook.com/mercyproject

Mercy Project on Twitter - https://twitter.com/mercyproject

 
Extra Information
In case you get asked questions or simply want this information for yourself –

Is Mercy Project a 501c3 non-profit organization?
Yes! We are recognized by the IRS as a non-profit organization, and all donations made to Mercy Project are tax-deductible as per allowed by the law. We send year end tax statements to each donor every January.

Is Mercy Project affiliated with a religious organization?
In short, no. But we were founded because we believe that this is the kind of thing that God wants his people to be doing. We are passionate about connecting people with this incredible chance to help the kingdom come here on earth as it is in heaven. That being said, we are proud of the fact that many, many of our supporters do not share our religious motivation but believe in us and our passion enough to want to be a part of it. That means a lot to us, and we work very hard to make sure anyone who wants to be involved can find a place.

Great Quotes
The ultimate test of a moral society is the kind of world that it leaves to its children.”
-- 
Dietrich Bonhoeffer

"...in serving the best interests of children, we serve the best interests of all humanity."
-- 
Carol Bellamy

“When the lives and the rights of children are at stake, there must be no silent witnesses.”--Carol Bellamy

"God does not want us to merely give the poor perfunctory help, but to ponder long and hard about how to improve their entire situation." -- Tim Keller in Generous Justice  

If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. -- Abraham Lincoln

An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.  -- Martin Luther King, Jr.