Wishing you all a warm and tasty holiday!

Thursday, November 28, 2013





While Law of Bambi is on vacation this week, I wanted to let everyone know that we hope you have a happy and thankful holiday!

This season I have been thinking every day about how thankful I am to have this amazing husband of mine and our two gorgeous (albeit rambunctious) sons. I'm thankful for ALL of my wonderful family - those by blood, by law, and by the grace of kindred spirits. I'm grateful for being fortunate enough to travel and spend the holiday with my husband's truly sweet grandmother as well as staying for an extended visit over the next 10 days to spend time with her as well as my mother in law. I'm humbled by how wonderful my life is. My oldest son is picking up words and communicating more every day, working to overcome his speech delay and it has been so rewarding to watch him learning so much. My youngest has taken to walking over the last few weeks like a fish to water, and watching the two of them bonding is one of the most adorable things I've ever gotten to spend my days watching. I'm thankful for having the opportunity to work in school and move closer to my dream job. I've especially been grateful for the networking and connections I've made to some amazing people through social media like the great program in Brooklyn educating students and teaching them the art of hip hop and MCing, Rhyme Factory. Or the fantastic local urban garden program in Cleveland I recently found out about, Green in the Ghetto. There are more but I'm so excited for all of the things I will be able to newly support and learn from in the coming year. 

Hoping you all enjoy a wonderful holiday weekend with your loved ones, stay warm & enjoy some delicious food!



Simply Grateful.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

GRATITUDE There is ALWAYS Something to be GRATEFUL for (Cottage or Beach House Wall Art Photography Inspirational Quote Thankful Rene Marie)
Buy this beautiful print from Beach Cottage Life on Etsy

Today I wanted to just quickly say how thankful I am to have the family and life I am so privileged to wake up with every single day. I grew up with amazing parents - I realize their true worth with more certainty with almost every passing hour. It's crazy to me that they never killed me or my sisters for all the stunts we pulled. Those sisters of mine are beautiful women who continually teach me more about myself and who I want to be. They are miles away from me now but never waste a minute before they let me know how much they love and miss me and my family. Each of them has a place in my heart that no one else on Earth could ever fill. 

With Thanksgiving coming this week, who are you grateful for? Have you told them how much they mean to you?

In the season of gratitude.

Friday, November 22, 2013

For my first official post, I thought I would begin with something I have a personal connection to and it's personal for several reasons. First, I know the family in question and have known them for half of my life. Second, I'm a parent.


When I found out I was pregnant with my oldest son, it was not planned. My husband and I were shaken with shock and an overwhelming fear of failing the child we didn't even have yet. We were terrified that we weren't ready and had no idea what our life would be. I went through a troublesome pregnancy, fraught with hyperemesis gravidarum (severe morning sickness), gestational diabetes, hospitalizations, endless amounts of bloodwork, and finally an emergency c-section after 14 hours of labor due to what we discovered was preeclampsia. At the end of it all, we were given a beautiful and perfectly healthy baby boy - and we fell in love. It wasn't an overpowering surge of motherly bond, but a simple and matter of fact event where I finally met the child who I already knew so well. We'd already been through so much together that nothing else needed to be done. My first words to him were, "Hi, Buddy." Since then, I've learned that none of us are perfect parents and that there is no way to be prepared for a child nor is there a perfect time to have that child. It's always hard, it's always exhausting, and it's always truly awesome. This is not the simple, casual kind of awesome - parenthood is the formidable, breathtaking, awe-inspiring kind of awesome.
 

So let's start here: in August of this year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported that it will cost an average of $241,080 for a middle income family to raise a child for 18 years (you can read about it here). That doesn't include the cost of college, nor does it cover the fact that often now kids don't move out until their early 20's due to the economy, job market, and student debt. Now imagine if, each of us, upon deciding that the expense, the stress, and the responsibility of becoming a parent was worthwhile - had to sign up on a waiting list to go through a rigorous approval process where an outsider will deem whether you're prepared and fit to become a parent. Imagine that once all that was over with and you were finally given approval, you then had to pay an additional $50,000 up front to be able to have your child. All so that you could realize what many believe as an inherent right in life as well as one of the greatest joys in life.


That's what couples go through every single day when they have to tread through the waters of adoption. My friends, Adam & Megan Martignago have worked, struggled, and endured for almost five years to have and adopt their first child and become parents. Over the course of about three long years battling with many miscarriages, tears, and infertility issues, Adam and Megan chose to begin the adoption process so that they could become parents. On April 24th of this year - after many false hopes and prayers answered, "Wait," - they met their son, Luke Roper. He is beautiful, he is adorable, and he made them a family. With every passing day, Luke steals a little more of Megan and Adam's hearts, however, they still struggle to pay the adoption costs so that Luke can finally be fully and legally their child. There is a mountain of debt looming before them, and along with those costs, they are still working to afford the cost of living and raising an infant son. It's a hard balance to strike when you're working so hard to pay your bills but at the same time don't want to work too hard or you might miss out on the beauty that is your child's one and only first year.

 Adam, Megan, & Luke

I write this all because I believe that at this time of year more than any other, we become aware of our responsibility to help others. We become aware of the gift that is family. In this season of gratitude, humility, and love - won't you please join me in helping this family who so deserves to be unburdened from this weight. Amidst all of the joy, wonder, and sublime bliss of spending time with your own family this holiday season - share some of that with another family in need; a family who wishes, more than anything, to become whole.


You can donate to Adam & Megan's GoFundMe site here. You can also share this story with your own friends and family by clicking the share buttons at the bottom of the post. Over the coming weeks and months, I'll continue to post about the Martignago family and share with you how they're doing and the progress that is being made on their journey to finalizing their adoption of Luke Roper.

If you would like more information about the Martignago family here are links to their various websites which you can follow too:

The Operation Eventually Facebook Page
The Martignago Family Blog
The Martignago Family Adoption Fund

Thanks for your help, and have a wonderful holiday!

The Law of Bambi: An Introduction

Friday, November 22, 2013

Around six years ago, I used "the Law of Bambi" in conversation with a friend while discussing peoples' general need to remember how to be nice and kind. The Law of Bambi refers to a quote which is specifically said by the little rabbit Thumper, but is inferred to be a sort of family rule in the Rabbit household: "If you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all." To me it has always meant that we should live our lives in kindness and look to help and serve others when we can.

My mother is an amazing woman who spent her life serving others and doing whatever possible to help those in need around her. I have watched her sacrifice her time with family as well as her own wants and needs, even when everyone around her says it's not her problem to worry about. More than any of the hundreds of lessons and values I have learned from her, she taught me to have a giving heart. Not to look for what you might receive in return for helping, but just to help those who need it simply because you can.

That's what the Law of Bambi is to me. It's realizing how much we so readily do and spend on ourselves and our own interests, when we could give even just a little of that to someone in need. When we think nothing of spending $5 on a cup of coffee or that twice a month manicure, it's time to notice that we have a little extra cash on our hands that would lend mountains of help to someone working to put food on the table, or keep the heat on in winter. There are people everywhere who need a little help making their way, and I believe that if my family is capable, we should help.

This blog is going to cover many things - there are already essays and entries I've written in the past few years on the 'Personal Favorites' tab writing about parenthood and living with gratitude, and I'll also be writing about kindness, positivity, and many causes that I find and believe deserve as much help as we - the vast reaches of the internet - can give them.

Let this be a place where you can come to receive a spoonful of sugar and a reminder to share what your fortune. The more you give, the more you get.
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