Showing posts with label T1 mama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label T1 mama. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

What we pack checklist

Hey, Loves!

I have been having a blast making videos for


Haha, it makes me giggle - whenever I say it, I think of Shark Week lol

Anywaysies. So, today, I am sharing a video about the stuff we take with us, and I wanted to provide a "more comprehensive list" of what we keep in the van with us.



I don't think it is possible to make an "all comprehensive list", but these seem to be the most important things that we would keep on a checklist to remember we had with us...

  • clothes
    • 5-7 favorite outfits
    • 1 for opposite weather
    • jacket
  • shoes
    • flip flops
    • tennis
    • water shoes
  • bathing suits + towels
  • linens
    • 1 set
  • park quilt
  • bathroom supplies
    • shower bag
    • daily hygiene bag
    • pampering bag
  • laundry hamper
  • laundry supplies
  • door hook
  • coolers
    • big - all cold
    • medium - daily/snacks
    • small - insulin
  • reusable bags
  • nonperishable foods
  • personal stuff
    • whatever fits in our space
  • port-a-potty (more on this in later video)
  • important paperwork
  • extra Diabetic supplies
  • portable ipod dock
  • jumper cables
  • extension cords
    • orange
    • long household
  • power strip
  • window shades
  • headlamps/flashlights
  • water jugs
    • drinking water
    • cleaning water with a sports top for pressure
  • water bottles
    • drinking
  • baby wipes
  • bag of dishes
    • plates
    • bowls
    • silverware
    • cutting knife
    • cutting board
    • big bowl - we eat lots of big salads
    • measuring cup/spoons (for my diabetic daughter)
  • dish soap + brush
  • slide-locking “ziplock” bags (used for EVERYTHING)
  • grocery bags (for trash, dirty clothes transport from shower area)
  • sharps container
  • fabric spray + air freshener
  • incense + lighter
  • hairrope box (or whatever supplies you may need for work)
  • extra hooks + tabs (for the curtains - always have extras on hand)
  • hand broom (for sweeping floors)
  • first aid kit (personalized - we don't carry random stuff we don't use)

Tomorrow, I will be sharing a video about what we keep in our storage and some tips on deciding if storage is right for you.

My biggest love + my biggest joy,

Friday, August 15, 2014

Vanpacking - my newest business venture

'Ello, Loves! ♥

I don't know if you know yet that I have been leveraging our vanpacking adventures to find a way to empower families to live more self-directed lives, by growing a business that revolves around helping families live road bliss more - be that full-time, part-time, road trips, day trips, whatever. If folks want to live on the road, I want to help them spend more time on it :)



I have started making videos as both "how to"s and "how we"s + I am now offering road trip bliss mentorship. Also, I am working on some sort of self-paced e-book/e-course type product! Wahoo!!

It is incredibly exciting to be sharing more of our life with interested folks, and inspiring the next waves of families who want to live on the road, or even helping folks already on the road live more bliss (through helping them through the learning curves), which I have done for several mamas :))

I am still new at making videos, and I hope they will always feel cozy and easy - a reflection of our life on the road -, but I also look forward to learning more about how to make the videos and maybe invest in some video editing apps or software to make them more informative + professional-like :) Wahoo!!!!!! for new learning opportunities :)

I have been on quite a journey with our gypsy status so far this year, from preparing to launch my gypsy caravan subscription on New Year's to a couple days later having CPS telling us we HAD to live in a house due to my daughter's new-onset diabetes, and everything in-between since.

We have lived on my mom's farm with goats and dreamed big homestead dreams, and we have celebrated our 3-year Nomadiversary back in our van.

I had the suspicion that we could live very safely on the road with her new diagnosis, and I am so grateful to have found a diabetic specialist (an endocrinologist WITH type 1 diabetes) who affirmed that completely. People with type 1 diabetes do AMAZING + INCREDIBLE things everyday - this is not a life sentence to misery, but an opportunity to get more creative + care for our family in new and exciting ways.

My littlest LOVES our road life, and THAT is our barometer - not an outside source who doesn't know what they are talking about. 

Having said that, we are excited about the gyspy-homestead hybrid lifestyle we are leaning heavily toward right now. This was another reason I was questioning my gypsy status. Until I had an awakening that resonated YESSSSSS so deeply:

I will always be a gypsy, regardless of whether we have a hOMebase.


Because we will always be planning our next road life experience. We will always be free to move in the ways we feel called. Being a gypsy is about way more than whether we are in a house sometimes or not - we embody the depth + wholeness of the lifestyle and way of being. We are always open to change.

Not to mention, historically + globally, nomads/gypsies hunker down for the colder months and whenever their needs call them to. That doesn't make any of us less a gypsy.

As soon as I had that realization, the business ideas just started flowing through me.

So, this week, I shared videos about how we have made our van our hOMe - we shared videos about picking the right vehicle, our bed, privacy, storage, and personalization.

Next week I will be sharing videos about "stuff" - what we take with us, what's in our storage, what we got rid of, how that process worked for us, and how we keep it down to simplicity (aka organization + constant simplifying).

I have at least 7 more weeks full of ideas, and I welcome ideas for more videos/themes.

If you want to follow these videos, you can either subscribe to my YouTube channel, or if you are on Facebook, you can "like" + follow my Gypsy-Om page, where I post the videos each day, along with other gypsy-esque stuff :)

And it doesn't stop there.

Seeing how crystal-clear it is to grow a successful business from this Vanpacking stuff helps me see more clearly how I can finally grow a successful business from my other Life Design stuff that I want to offer. I realized (again) that that is what it all basically boils down to for me... Life Design. I am all about it. I am fierce about living it, and I am thrilled to help others do it.

The world needs more blissful people in this world. It creates the kind of magic that I want to live + live around.

Wow, I could seriously talk about that ALL DAY.

Anywaysies. SO.

I hope you enjoy the informational videos + ones like this:


 
All my love,

Sunday, June 1, 2014

waking from a nightmare

My Loves ♥

I have been absent.

I have been fighting a big fight.

An hour after my last post about taking leaps of faith like a badass, CPS showed up at my friend's house, armed with allegations of medical neglect and a Sheriff, and took my kids.

I fought for 7 weeks to get them back, and now I have been fighting for the last week to recover from the experience.

Words cannot describe the hell I have been through, the trauma my children have been through, and I hope to be able to share more of it with you soon, when I can find the words, when reliving it to describe it doesn't leave me sobbing in a puddle on the ground.

It's a story that needs to be told.

What I can share is that after fighting tooth and nail for the truth to be revealed, my children were returned to me, the case dismissed, and we have no further CPS/court involvement.

Instantly. Like "poof".

Well, kinda like "poof", except for my family reeling in the aftermath.

That legal "poof" is incredibly rare. I owe the victory to Truth Revealed. And I feel like I live an epically charmed life for all of the blessings that fell into place to make this a reality. I had HUGE support from my Facetribe and a seriously dedicated team of magic-workers who helped plug me in to the resources that made this happen.

Not all families have that, and my heart breaks for them. I cannot imagine having gone through all of this without the constant ears and shoulders, encouragement, kindness, love, perspective, help, and ability to allocate such huge tasks that were set before me to such competent incredible beings.

I know this happened to me, to open me up to be more available to the families I look forward to serving.

This experience has transcended my life and my life purpose.

I hear I just leveled up.

A warrior forged by the fire of the phoenix.

Again.



Braver-er, wiser-er, heartier, take-no-bullshit-ier.

I broke. I was broken. I was shattered into heavy heavy pieces, trying to figure out how to live each moment.



I sunk deep. I tapped a deep inner source. A fire grew in my belly.

I touched the tangible primal inside me. I have raged against the night sky and in my mind and deep into the earth. I hear the primitive call of my tribe howling at the moon - my people calling for me. I feel the wild protector growing alive inside me. I feel my calling to not only help families design intentional lives but to help them prepare to protect it, because what is the point of a life intentionally designed if it can be ripped from you in a moment's notice for no good reason.

New lessons on being proactive and advocating for myself, when I used to cower. Love and kindness and peace are great, if they are a choice. But they are not powerful when they are a default of fear. And how can this be translated into helping my community?

Crystal clarity on relationships - specifically, the healthiness of certain relationships - in my life. And a "take no more shit" policy on people who mistook my kindness for weakness.

This warrior is what has transcended from the hardest thing I have ever gone through in my life. And there is more to me right now. I am bold, but I am also soft.

The trauma breaks my heart every day, and it sometimes cripples the empath in me. It takes some serious healing mojo to recover from something that big, especially when you feel like you have zapped your resources just to get through. How do you ask for more afterward?

But I must.

My children and I are free and clear, legally, but not emotionally or financially - our financial needs are overwhelming to me right now, after the financial waste of my resources CPS's hoops created for us. So, I set up a bit-o-fundraising, for beloveds and their beloveds who might have the heart and means to help heal us further.

This is me refusing to feel helpless in this destruction, refusing to sink into the depression of feeling "stuck" and "unable to..."


I look forward to offering my services again soon, to families, to mamas, to women, to brothers. Who could use an emotional midwife, a life design guide, a sacred mentor, and so much more.

I suspect, once I can taste my freedom, I will feel ready for that job again.

For now, what I am offering to my community is a legal service that is a buffet of legal equality, including the service that would have protected my family from the trauma of this experience. I am absolutely delighted to share this with my people, and if you want to know more about it, please feel free to contact me. This service is a win all around - it's an incredible company, offering an incredible service, to oh-so-deserving people ♥

This first post updating you all has been the hardest, and I am sure now that the dam has opened, the flow will come out easier ♥ I look forward to filling you in with the details as I can ♥

Saturday, January 18, 2014

this new life

Hey, Beloved ♥

I'm still working on the moon intentions post, but  first, I just have to share how incredibly excited I am for this new chapter of our life.

It's been growing, and this morning it is bursting!

I remember living in our last little house and dreaming wildly about all of the incredible details of living on the road.

We got to live those.

I say that with so much gratitude and so much fullness in my heart.

And since we can't live on the road now, I am dreaming wildly of living in a little home-not-on-wheels again :)

For more of this hOMe eye-candy, come check out my Pinterest board
I'm excited about living in a house, in our own little house, or apartment. Some funky little spot that's gonna be just perfect for us.

I'm excited about things like my oldest having her own room and enabling her to get to decorate it (!!), and my little ones having a playroom filled with toys. I'm excited about finding furniture and filling our new home with things from the funky little thrift shops and yard sales of the sweet little beachy community we are heading to.

I'm excited about having a bookshelf again and filling it with a library of books about our favorite things, and baskets (!!!) overflowing with arts and crafting supplies again.

I'm excited about having plants all over my house and flowers outside.

I'm excited to have a kitchen where I can brew our own kombucha (I am currently growing our own scoby and gathering supplies to start our first batch this next week!!), and I can live and grow my family in a way that is more even aligned with my green-sustainable values, ways that we weren't able to do in the van.

I look forward to cooking and baking, to finding ways to nourish my whole family in our new food journey.

I look forward to easy daily rhythms of doing dishes and laundry and mopping floors.

Words cannot describe how excited I am to sew at will again. OH.MY.GOSH.

And garden and compost. Maybe backyard chickens.

I have been tucking all of my homestead favorites away in a hope chest in my heart, and now I get to unpack it. And I will have a big giant space in life to grow it all into!

And I will be close enough to visit my mommy and her goats and little farm every week. And we will be here when she is overloaded with goat babies in a couple months! OH.MY.CUTENESS.

I am excited about finding a T1 (type 1 diabetes) tribe in the beautiful little community we will be in. This community is my people - artsy, spiritual, beachy, hippies who have always melted me at parks and the library with the way they interact with their children ♥ A community of people who eat like we do and love like we do and share our values. This community healed me once before, and I look forward to it nourishing me while I start growing this new chapter of our new life.

I am excited about staying in this one community for longer than a few weeks, about knowing our way around to all the places and things that light us up - farmers markets, parks, the library, a sacred beach, women's circles, unschoolers.

I look forward to our beloveds coming to visit from all over the country. Come see us! Come stay with us now ♥

I'm excited about finding our way to still travel. Day trips. Long road trips. This gypsy spirit is not done, and we don't need to be. When we are ready, we will find a way to hit that road again.

And until we are ready, we have a whole life buffet before us in our new home, continuing to grow and live in the ways that nourish our hearts, our souls, our bodies. Ways that are authentic and intentional.

What an incredible, beautiful opportunity to get to live another part of our life that we love so much, too. A beautiful mash-up of gypsy and homestead.

Oh, I can't wait!!

Will you take that journey with me? ♥

Saturday, January 11, 2014

A New Story

There is this big incredible story unfolding in my life. A story about a new way of living healthy, a story of living our values even when we are being challenged in new ways, a story of growing our life in new and exciting ways.

There is also another story. One I really need to tell.

This is the very raw story of a mama whose 4-year-old daughter just got diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes, after ending up in the ER in DKA (what happens right before a diabetic coma).

I feel the need to share this. I want to share with the people who love us, the depths of what I am experiencing right now, and I hope that our story will somehow be retold or remembered, to help other mamas going through all of this.

Before a week ago, I never would have known how serious Type 1 Diabetes (T1, from here out) was or what a mama and a family went through.

I know there will be parts that are different, but it's all the same story - overwhelm, love, light, fear exploding everywhere, questioning ones values, trying to learn a whole new way of living in a way that doesn't kill your child or mess up your other ones.

But it started in a hospital.

As I watched my baby get hooked up to machines and tubes. As I had to help hold her down while they stuck needles in her arm and she screamed for them to stop, that it hurt. A baby who was barely conscious. And then to watch her lay on a bed, a completely different version of herself. No light, no pizzazz, no sparkle, just sunken eyes that rolled back in her head, a skinny body where there once was chunkiness and mooshiness. Laying in a huge foreign bed. My little baby.

The doctor said diabetes. No way, I said. How could that be possible? She is only 4. It can't be that.

It is.

Blood sugar (usually around 90) now 882.

I am blown away. All these moments from the recent past coming up, like a video montage, times I had heard the word or mentioned how much water she was drinking or how often she had to pee. Maybe it was the soda I gave her because I thought she had a flu. Maybe it was the Christmas candy. What could I have done to prevent this? What was this going to mean for our life?

And then she gets transferred to a hospital we hear has a great pediatric unit. No wifi. No way to connect with my outside support. All just me. It has to come from within, and I don't know where to drawn from.

New hospital. Nurses and doctors making choices without my ability to even help. All I can do is sit there and watch them do things to my baby's body that I would never do to her or wish upon my worst enemy.

Times she wakes up and tries to pull out the IVs, and I have to try to comfort her, but she is not her. She scoots away from me, instead of cuddling me. Being close to me is uncomfortable for her. And so I sit next to her bed and hold her little hand and try to just be present.

All the researching is going to have to wait. Since there is no wifi, I know I am meant to just be present with her, learn everything I can from the nurses, every single thing they are doing.

Me, who has feared and not appreciated the medical model of health and wellness. Now I have to completely trust them with one of the most treasured and vulnerable pieces of my heart. And now I am learning a language I never thought would come out of my mouth - I am speaking medical supplies and medication and diagnoses. My mouth astounds me.

Staying present with her.

Staying present with doctors and nurses who I have to send all of my love and gratitude to, even while they sometimes interact with her in a way that tears my heart open. Staying present while I sit in another room and explain why I don't see it as helpful to roughly tell her to wake up and squeeze your hand while she bawls her eyes out because she is so tired and so worn from the ordeal and just got back to sleep.

Staying present with social workers and CPS who don't understand our lifestyle at all. Having to defend things they have no clue what they are talking about, as they put me in a box that is not mine.

The fear that they can separate me from what matters most to me in the whole world because they don't understand me or see our greatness and sameness.

Because that fear feels very real as I am already experiencing a serious separation of almost everything I know and love.

Almost a week in the hospital, away from my 6-year-old son who has been attached to my hip since birth, who has never been away from me - we homeschool, I am a single mama. I am his source. And I worry every moment about how he is doing. Knowing he is with his godmother and her family and my oldest daughter, but knowing he doesn't have me, and I don't have him. And my baby's first intentional words were asking where he was.

Being faced with the fact that our little trip out here for the holidays is going to be a much longer stay. Knowing that my world just turned upside down. No more living on the road for me. No more living in our van. So, what does that mean? And where do we do it?

I am so incredibly blessed.

Blessed that I am who I am, so I could shift this internally to not be the end of the world.

Blessed for the T1 mamas who contacted me on Facebook to load me up with support and info that I could screenshot and read in my room.

Blessed for my mom raced out the night we were admitted, and took it upon her to be my babysitter. She filled me up in ways I needed, and I could not have imagined being able to do that without her calling me everyday and coming to visit (4-hour roundtrip trip for her) as often as she could.

Blessed to know my older kids were safe and very well.

Blessed for the incredible pediatric nurses and pediatric team (nutritionist, child life specialist, etc) that were so good to me and my baby through all of what we went through.

Blessed for the huge outpouring of love, support, and healing vibes being sent from all around the world to us.

Blessed that when she became coherent, she was so easy about everything. The nurses were astounded by how she just sat and watched and didn't even flinch, much less resist.

Blessed to be able to flow, in trying times, with grace and elegance.

Blessed for the sentence in a packet they gave me that assured me this wasn't my fault, that there was nothing I could have done or not done differently.

Lots of tears. All the time. Times when I felt great and simple and on top of the world, and times when I seemed faced with an enormous job and responsibility that I had no idea how I was going to be able to do.

Triggers of mine. Oh, so many of those.

Tired of being in the hospital. Missing my kids like freakin crazy. Jaja starts getting resistant.

Now, I have to physically restrain her so they can give her a shot I know she is going to have to get for the rest of her life, every day, no exceptions. She is asking for a break, and we can't give it. My insides are screaming that this is wrong - there is another way. But the nurses don't get it or have time for it, and the doctors have other priorities.

I am weighed down so much. So heavy. I race down to the coffee shop a couple floors down every time I think my baby will be okay alone in the room, and I grab a few minutes of connection, usually with my super-resource and super-support of T1 mamas. A couple times with my own personal emotional sources. I have lots of work to do.

Because I know that she is picking up on my cues, on my energy about all of this. And I want to just keep myself clear that I am just her pancreas now. That's all. It's not bad, just different, and of course, since this is my life, open up to trust that this is happening for reasons that are going to expand us in ways we are going to love and appreciate.

Finally, we get to go home.

To finally adjust to our new life as we know it, with our family, in the comfort of familiar surroundings.

Every moment in the hospital was so emotionally intense, no matter whether it was "good" or "bad".

Now, we could be home.

Unexpected pressure suddenly. Anxiety at the mere mention or thought of food. What if I don't do it right? What if I do the math wrong? Every piece of food now holds the pressure of whether it can kill her or not.

Food! Something we have never been serious about (intentional, yes, but not serious), and something we can't live without.

And now I have to lean on my friends so much - my friends who I am staying with, and anyone else who can possibly give me support and help in any way. That was already an issue of mine.

And how am I going to afford this? The pharmacy gave me syringes with a bigger guage that hurts her, and she has to get a minimum of 4 shots a day - 4 shots she is already terrified of, 4 shots of trying to find a balance of between honoring her feelings and honoring what her body needs.

Every moment is still so intense.

We ended up back in the ER, because she threw up (which is a warning sign of danger for T1s). Barely home for 24 hours, and back there again, wondering how long this stay will be and how life will ever feel "normal" again.

Scary every minute.

So outside of myself.

Needing SO much help.

Every thought is on her food, her shots, her appointments, CPS adding pressure to all of this.

Anxiety through the roof sometimes.

Moments. Deep breaths. Remembering who I am. Holding my own hand. Accepting people reaching out to me. Intentionally remembering and re-exploring my truths.

This is a whole new world. A new story. And we will be pros before I know it. The opposite of anxiety, for me, is trust.

I am so grateful for being where I am with this, so early. As far as acceptance and trust.

Of course things are going to work out.

This is just our new story.