Monday, December 27, 2010

Merry Christmas to All

Durham's First Christmas
He got a head start on Christmas Eve on the opening presents drill by getting to open presents from Grandma Bug (my mama).
This is his "smile for the camera" look. We were snapping so many pictures and this was the look he would give. Silly boy!
Opening presents from SANTA Christmas morningSuccess! He likes it!

This Christmas I am especially thankful for the simpler things in life. I am thankful for our home, our health, and the love we have for one another. I spoke in church the Sunday after Christmas on "Following Christ in Faith" and it has been such a great reminder to me of the love and gratitude we need in our lives and the focus we should have on Christ. I am so grateful for our Savior and for His Atonement and I feel so blessed to have such wonderful examples around me. This Christmas has made me more thankful for ALL of my family members and for the love and support they offer me. Merry Christmas to all! Lots of love and well wishes to you all!
Love,
Christie

Monday, December 20, 2010

If You Need a Laugh

Durham's laugh is contagious.

Sorry for the weird camera angle, but if Durham notices the camera he gets camera shy and just stares at the camera.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Five Months

Man, the past five months seem like they have just flown by! Where did my sleepy little newborn go? Now he's this big (but still little) boy that wiggles around like crazy when you try to hold him as if he wants you to set him down so he can take off running. He is dangerously close to crawling and sitting up. It will happen any day now. Hopefully I'm ready to be chasing this active little guy around the house! Only time will tell.

I love his happy, positive personality. He is always full of smiles and when he gets to laughing you cannot help but crack up. What joy little Durham brings into our lives. I had always heard that there was nothing better than being a parent, but I don't think I could have ever imagined it to be what it is. Now I can understand the love my mom has for me.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Meses, Mois, Months...

One month...
My poor little guy had baby acne all over his face, could roll himself onto his sides, and was still waking up at least once or twice at night.


Two months...
He was getting stronger and more expressive. No more baby acne and he started to LOVE bath time, splish splashing around in his baby tub. He also blessed us by beginning to sleep through the night!

Three months...
He began responding to faces I would make at him by trying to imitate me and smiling and laughing back. What a fun little game! He's super serious in the picture but his little personality has begun to show and I think we have a little jokester on our hands.


Four months...
Rockin' and rollin' and whatnot. This little dude can ROLL. He learned how to roll himself onto his belly and back onto his back a few weeks before turning four months old. The only problem is now that he can do that he tries so hard to get mobile (a.k.a. CRAWL!) that he gets upset. He laughs and smiles all the time and is a snuggly, happy boy.

This walker was his four month present. He's still a tad short for it by a good 4 or 5 inches so he can't really go anywhere, but he still likes to stand in it like a big boy and play with the steering wheel and toys on the tray. I bet once he gets moving we are going to be chasing this active boy all over!

We also took family photos the day Durham turned four months old, so stay tuned for those!

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Going Bananas on Halloween

With our three and a half month old baby monkey, Durham!
The cutest monkey I've ever seen :)


Where's Durham???
HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Baby Blessing




Everyone who would like to come is invited to Durham's baby blessing, this Sunday, September 5th at 9:00 a.m. in the Greasewood building. The address is 2002 N. Greasewood, Tucson, AZ 85745.

We will be having lunch at our house around 12:30 and you are welcome to come to that as well. We will give directions to our house at the church.

Hope to see you there!

Love,
Dan, Christie, and Durham

Thursday, July 22, 2010

We Made It - The Story of Durham

Here's the short version:
Durham Everett Curtis was born Tuesday, July 13th at 4:23 p.m. weighing in at 6 pounds, 12 ounces, 19 inches long. We went through a very scary ordeal to get him here via emergency c-section, but we are thankful he and I made it through it. We feel very blessed to have beat the odds and have a healthy baby and a healthy mama.

Here's the long version:
My doctor gave me the option of being induced at 39 weeks and considering how big and miserable I was I decided to do it. My induction was scheduled for Tuesday, July 13th so I spent all day Monday preparing to bring home our little guy possibly Wednesday. Dan had gone to work that day, but ended up leaving early because he couldn't concentrate on anything else besides the fact that his little boy would be here the next day. I made some yummy (easy) chicken and baked potatos for dinner and the grandparents came over to eat with us and talk about how we would soon get to meet our little angel.

Me at 39 weeks pregnant

The morning of the 13th, the hospital called me at 5 a.m. and said my induction would have to be postponed until later in the day because there were too many women already in labor there. So Dan and I took the opportunity to get a few extra hours of sleep and were nice and rested up when the hospital called and said they were ready for us a few hours later.
We arrived to the hospital at about 9:30 a.m. and we met our nurse, Lily. She was great from the very beginning. We immediately connected when she was telling us she was from Milan and Dan told her about his time in Spain for his mission. Then she told us she was a member of the church as well and we connected even more. She was so great the entire time, but they took her away to work in triage and gave us another nurse who was nice, but seemed kind of new and shy. Then we got the best news - they were sending Lily back to be with us because the other nurse was needed to help with another patient in labor.

Me and Lily

Dan and I were just hanging out in our delivery suite with nurse Lily then my mom arrived and the three of us were there just waiting for progress. The contractions were getting pretty painful and I had decided from the beginning of my pregnancy that when it came to delivering there was no need for me to try to be tough - I will get the drugs if they are readily available! So I got an epidural and the world became a much better place. :) I tell ya, I don't know why anyone would go through labor without one, but to each their own!

After getting the epidural I was feeling great and didn't even notice when contractions were coming. Lily was monitoring them and was kind of concerned because they would just stop altogether for chunks of time so she put in a catheter to better monitor the contractions. Not much later my contractions were becoming sporadic again so Lily decided to flush the catheter to be sure there was nothing blocking it causing it to read incorrectly. After flushing the catheter she lowered me down in bed to check my progress and that is when everything changed for the worse. I felt an immediate rush of heat in my ear lobes and felt like I was going to pass out. I said aloud, "I feel hot." This set off an alarm in Lily and she jumped up and pushed the "major emergency only" button she had shown us earlier and said "I need someone in here NOW!" Then I began coughing and I couldn't breathe. I had this pain in my chest that felt like someone had set bricks on top of my lungs, crushing them. The anasthesiologist came rushing into the room and the next thing I knew there were a bunch of other people around my bedside unplugging everything. I was semi-conscious but I remember them running my bed across the hall into the O.R., the anasthesiologist holding my hand the entire time having me squeeze his hand and a lot of other background yelling... "Get Dr. Hutchison here NOW" "Get any OB doctor here NOW", etc. In my mind all I kept thinking was that I was going to leave Dan alone with a brand new baby or completely alone with no baby and no wife because I was feeling pretty certain that I wasn't going to make it and wasn't sure if the baby would either. However, there was a feeling deep inside that I knew I needed to try to remain calm. I didn't know why but I tried to calm myself within. My doctor rushed into the O.R., scrubbed up and leaned in toward my face and said, "We're gonna have this baby now." And that's the last I remember.

I groggily woke up later (not even sure how much later) to see Dan sitting beside my bed wearing a white jumpsuit, holding my hand. Lily and the anasthesiologist were there too. They had stayed past their shift to make sure everything was fine when I woke up. At first I was really confused. I wasn't sure if I was in reality or not because I was honestly surprised to be alive. Then it hit me, where was the baby??? I remember all I kept asking about was the baby. In fact, Dan told me I kept asking the same questions and he thought I had lost my mind. "Where's the baby? Is the baby ok?" I think it was because I didn't really expect to wake up, so when I did I needed the reassurance that my baby was okay and that I wasn't in a dream. He showed me pictures he had taken of our baby when they let him come inside the nursery while they were cleaning him up. I remember I kept saying "He's so cute" and I know I made Dan show me the pictures more than once. :) Dan told me that the doctor had the baby out in a matter of 7 minutes from the time they rushed me out of the room to the O.R. The doctor told us that when they pulled Durham out he was screaming like crazy before they could even get him all the way out. Poor little guy.
Then I got wheeled out to get a CAT (sp?) scan and a chest x-ray. I wasn't sure why at that point but I was still too groggy and confused to ask many questions. Lily came with me and stayed with me the whole time. She was talking with me in the hall of the hospital and she broke down and cried and told me she thought that they were going to lose me and that she knew that Heavenly Father had been watching over me and everyone involved. She also said that someone who went through what I had just gone through should be in the ICU, not awake and getting tests done. I asked her what happened because I didn't even know why they rushed me to get an emergency C-section other than that I felt like I was dying. She told me after I told her I was hot my blood pressure shot up and the baby's heart rate decreased by over 50%. She also told me that my lungs had started to collapse, that's why I had the excruciating chest pain. She explained to me once we got back to my room that the doctor believed I had an amniotic fluid embolism, but a small one that was able to resolve itself.

I still hadn't gotten to see but pictures of my baby so after all the chaos had settled I kept asking the nurse if they could bring the baby down from the nursery so I could see him. I finally met my son around 10 p.m., nearly 6 hours after he was born. I was in love and in awe that only hours before that I was sure that I was taking my last breaths and then there I was, alive and holding a beautiful baby boy in front of me. It was surreal. He had to spend the night in the nursery so they could closely monitor me through the night, so we only got to spend about an hour or so with him.


Meeting Durham for the first time

Later that night I looked up more information about an amniotic fluid embolism and was even more shocked to be alive after learning about it. Apparently it has an 80 - 90 percent mortality rate in the women that go through it and the women who survive it usually have neurological damage. I could not fall asleep that night for the life of me. I was terrified that I would fall asleep and never wake up. They had me hooked up to monitors to watch my oxygen levels and put me on oxygen in the middle of the night because they said my oxygen levels would decrease whenever I would fall asleep. Dan said he couldn't sleep either because he was afraid something would happen while he was asleep and was scared after everything we had just gotten through.

We got the news that my scans had come back clear and that everything was fine. We had to stay in the hospital until Friday and I was so ready to come home by that point. You really get absolutely no rest in the hospital between hospital staff and visitors coming all the time so I was exhausted and ready to be home. Dan stayed with me the entire time we were at the hospital. The only times he left were a few times to run to the cafeteria to eat. He told me he was afraid to leave me. After all, the day Durham was born things changed drastically in the blink of an eye so he wanted to be sure he was with me at all times, just in case.

The doctor told me that what happened to me is extremely rare, occurring in about 1 in 13,000 women and that it should never happen to me again. She said she had only seen it one other time in her career, about ten years ago, and that the woman had neurological damage from it. I feel so blessed to be alive and not have any damage from what I went through. I am so, so thankful to be able to be here with my family and be able to see my beautiful baby grow and get to be with my husband. I know that Heavenly Father was watching over me and Durham that day and that the people at the hospital working to save us had His blessing. For whatever reason, it was not my time to go and I am so grateful to be alive. Each day with my husband and child is such a blessing that I will never take for granted.


Durham is healthy and strong. He could hold his head up when he was not even a day old. Hard to believe, but here's proof.

We love this little guy and are enjoying being new parents. He's a very sweet baby and we feel very blessed to have him in our lives.


We appreciate the love and support we have received from family and friends. We love you all and are thankful for all you do for us.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Meet the Flintstones

This is my outlet for complaining about one of the biggest discomforts these final weeks of pregnancy. I sit at a desk for 9 hours a day, which apparently isn't good for your blood circulation especially when you're nearly 9 months pregnant. It produces what I like to call FLINTSTONE FEET.

What a bummer! Right when it's cute sandal season pretty much the only shoes I can comfortably wear are flip flops. I suffer through wearing heals for three hours at church but other than that I'm stuck in flip flops. I'm ready for my little man to come out, which likely won't be anytime soon!

That's all I have to say about that.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Alright Stop ... (pause) ... Shower Time

The baby shower has come and gone and we are now loaded up with lots of goodies for our little dude. The shower was A-W-E-S-O-M-E thanks to the beautiful party planners behind it. Lillian and Kristina, what the heck would I do without you? These girls pulled off quite the party.There were friends and family...

Me and the gals from work, Alison and Angela

The couch potatos... j/k :)

A Mexican sandwich with the Robles ladies :)

LOTS of presents...
Me and the goodie pile

Homemade crocheted blanket from Grandma Lopez (Durham's great-grandma)


SUPER cute diaper cake filled with diapers, onesies, burp cloths, and toys from Whitney & Stephanie

Dan's manly backpack diaper bag from the cutest little lady I adopted as my grandma, Sister Cole

Durham's dinosaur gear from Alison. He also got lots of other cute clothes and shoes. You know he'll be lookin' fly.



Fun games and delicious jungle cake...

Chocolate cake with raspberry filling from Nadine's...yum!!


And a little photo shoot to boot!

Me, Jannie, Mom, Sky-bee

All the grandmas - Great Grandma Lopez, Grandma Jessie, and Grandma June(bug?) :)


The Curtis girls


I am so thankful for the time and effort put into this shower and for all the awesome gifts and fun company that came from it. Many thanks to everyone involved!

We are approaching the 8-month mark and so far everything has been going really well. Dan and I have completed the classes we signed up for through the hospital so now it's just a matter of organizing and setting up everything to be ready for this little dude to make his grand entrance. Dan has been talking to his baby a lot and little Durham goes nuts anytime he hears daddy's voice. :) My stomach starts moving every which direction when Dan starts talking to him. It's a fun little game. I'll be 33 weeks in a few days so it won't be long until our little family of 4 (you guessed it, Me, Dan, Lola, and Moto) will grow to 5. We can't wait to meet baby Durham!

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Silly Dogs

This morning while I was driving to work I got a call from Dan, which is unusual. He told me he had a funny story to tell me about the dogs. So here's my re-telling of it.

Dan was asleep in our bedroom and heard what sounded like chewing noises so he got up to see what the dogs were doing (I left them free to roam the house when I left because I figured they'd probably just get back in their beds). Well he found them just hanging out, not doing anything so he went back to bed. He heard the noise again so he got up quietly and tip-toed to the room the dogs were in to find them chewing on something. He said Moto was ferociously chewing on whatever he had in his mouth and wouldn't let Dan take it from him. Dan finally got him to come to him and put his finger inside Moto's mouth to get out whatever he had. He pulled and the stuff inside Moto's mouth just stretched. Then he realized, Moto was chewing gum! I don't know where they found gum but apparently they are quite the gum chewers! I'm just glad Dan caught them before it ended up stuck in the carpet or stuck to one of them. What's funny is they tried to hide the fact that they were chewing gum when Dan went out to check on them the first time. I'm sure they were just holding it in their mouths acting totally innocent. Silly dogs!

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Back in Action

First things first: please excuse my blogging absence. We're alive and well but I have just been so super tired lately that I've slacked off on the blogging. I'll just give some quick recaps of what we've been up to.


*Highway to the Danger Zone* - That's the Top Gun theme song if it doesn't ring a bell. We went to the air show at Davis Monthan Air Force Base and we had a blast. Dan's dream of being a pilot was reinforced and my dream of being a pilot by living vicariously through him was brought to life. I got a wicked sunburn and regretted forgetting sunscreen for many days afterward but it was a good time. The Thunderbirds were AWESOME and Dan bought his boy a souvenir, his very own Thunderbird F16. :) Dan + aircraft = match made in heaven. He looks good posing with it, right?








*GRASS* - Dan and I decided on a whim one day to put a *small* patch of grass in our yard. I fought the whole grass idea for awhile because I don't want to have to maintain it, but we decided our yard needed a little color. So far the dogs have only destroyed a small portion of it. Dang dogs... I told Dan I wanted to come outside and do yoga on the grass, so he demonstrated what that might look like.



*Easter* - Easter was spent at Casa de Robles this year. We had a lovely dinner prepared by Jannie and a super fun Easter egg hunt for all the kids (Skylar, Dan, Christie, Celena, June, Ray, you know, the KIDS). Tim's dogs were visiting for the day and got lucky by finding a few Easter eggs for themselves. I bet the ride home smelled nice... Mom and I took a pic by the lovely lilac bush.




*Christie Lee turns twenty-three* - Yep, I had a birthday and my wonderful husband got me this sweet cruisin' bike. I hadn't ridden a bike since the tender age of about 7 so we had to have a bike riding lesson on my b-day. I took the day off work and gave Dan permission to skip his classes to hang out with me all day. :) I'm happy to report that I can now ride the bicycle. THANKS, DAN! Oh, and this is also evidence of a much larger baby belly now.



*Just one thing missing* - A little baby boy, of course! The crib is all set up, the baby bedding all washed, the room was already painted yellow (hallelujah), and now all we need is a little baby to put in there. Ok, and A LOT of other stuff, but at least the little guy will have a bed all ready for him. I love, love, love this crib set. The animals are just so cute! Stay tuned.

Monday, March 15, 2010

It's a ... (drum roll, please)

BOY!
I'm 22 weeks now and we just found out last week that we will be having a little baby boy. We are so excited, especially Dan. We both thought it was a boy from the beginning, so who knows if that was our parental intuition or just a lucky guess. :)

Here's the best shot we got of the little guy's face.

Because he did this soon after. He put his little hands over his face! Hunt grandkids, does this remind you of anyone? :)


Little feet.


I could have stayed there for hours watching this little guy move around. Dan and I just had the biggest smiles on our faces the whole time. How exciting! Now the waiting game for him to arrive starts. :) At least I'm over the half-way hump now.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Must Love Dogs

It's no secret that I have a very large and special place in my heart for dogs. My Lola was a rescue case where I took her and her brother, Captain Jack Sparrow, in when they were at death's door. Jack Sparrow didn't make it but thankfully Lola fought hard and survived and is now a happy, playful, sweet, obedient beast who I love to death. Moto was a case where I just couldn't leave without bringing him home with me. It was puppy love at first sight and the little "brat terror" as we lovingly call him has been such a fun, spunky, sweet addition to our home.

Now, we have another canine addition. Driving on a busy street in town on my way home from work a few weeks ago, I noticed traffic in the opposite direction slamming on their brakes and wondered what the heck they were doing. Then I saw her. A very scared, somewhat wet and dirty puppy was frantic in the street, obviously lost. It had been pouring rain that day and wasn't supposed to let up any time soon and my heart just melted for this little pup. My side of traffic was backed up from a red light so I rolled down my window and yelled "Puppy, puppy!" to get her attention. She came over to my car, I opened my driver side door and scooped her into my lap just in time to take off for the green light. She slammed her little body as close to me as she possibly could the whole ride home and turned every once in a while to plant wet puppy kisses on my face. :) I have tried to locate her owners with no luck whatsoever so she has just been hanging out at our house. She will be going to a good home soon, but it sure has been fun to have this loving little meatball at our house. We (I) would keep her in a heart beat except three dogs (two of them still puppies) and a new baby on the way is a bit too much to handle at the moment.

Thank goodness I have a husband who puts up with my bleeding heart and allows me to spend money fixing my broken dogs and foster stray animals at our house!

Here's the little beauty. :)

She loves your attention more than anything. Being able to sit in your lap and smash her body as close to yours as she can is her favorite.


Moto is a little jealous that he's no longer the only puppy, but he still gets lots of attention, too!


So the requirement at our house is that you must love dogs!

On a sad note, little Barklee went to doggie heaven this week. That little guy lived to be 16 years old and lived a very good life. He went to the ranch more times than can be counted on fingers and toes, went to California, got his own double cheeseburgers or soft tacos and was an awesome little companion the whole time he was with my mom and me. It was really hard and sad to see him go, but it's a relief to know that his little doggie spirit (yes, I believe in dog spirits) is free from the prison his old, aching body was to it. I'll always love my little Barkman! My mom and I like to think that he's doing his "bullet dog" routine in heaven now. :)