The trip was good. I forget sometimes how easy it is to be with H and the boys. I have all this buildup and it's just... easy. Good.
We have something other parents don't always have: a peek into our daughter's future personality. Sweet Pea has three brothers, *C*, *D* and *B*. She and D are full biological siblings and they have the same brown eyes, the same laugh, and the same prickly personality. Sweet Pea didn't immediately take to anybody in her birthfamily -- but she doen't immediately take to anyone. She isn't shy, exactly, she's... cautious. In fact, the oldest boy, C, was disappointed she wouldn't let him hug her. I had to explain that that's just the way she is.
The second day was full of swimming and fun. A couple of times I encouraged Sweet Pea to hang out with H a little bit -- when Sweet Pea wanted to jump in the deep end, I told her to jump to H. I'm not quite tall enough to catch her without going under myself in five feet of water. So she jumped to H a few times and later hung out with the baby, B, on his floatie. I could tell H was happy -- just getting to touch Sweet Pea. However, as soon as Sweet Pea figured out that H was holding her, she was done and away. H was pretty understanding -- her son, D, is the same way, and they inherit a lot of that from her. I told H she only had herself to blame. That was a joke, folks.
That night we went to H's house for dinner where we finally snapped a bunch of pictures. Sweet Pea loves babies -- LOVES them -- and even though B is over a year old, Sweet Pea tried to carry him around several times.
We got a few action shots of the kids on the bed and tried to get one good group shot. As they started to get tired, I found myself snuggling all of them except B.
On the way back to the hotel that night, DJ and I had a conversation about how the visit was going. I got somewhat emotional. It's hard -- seeing her like that, knowing that Heather must miss her so desperately. DJ sees things differently and he blew a couple of shots right across my bow, I'm not going to lie. I have some soul-searching to do about my motives.
The next day we tried to get all four kids to have their pictures taken at Wal-Mart, but Sweet Pea was having none of it. They got some smokin' shades, though. And then the moms got one snap together.
I guess I'm expecting some grand resolution, you know? I have to remind myself that we're just laying the groundwork here: laying the tracks for the future. I want Sweet Pea to know her brothers, I want her to know H. I want H to be accessible for the day that Sweet Pea has questions I can't answer. I want Sweet Pea to know she wasn't abandoned -- that H loves her, that H found herself in an impossible situation and did the only thing she could think of at the time. I want Sweet Pea to see the genuine affection between H and us, to see that we value where she came from.
There were moments, Internet, when I wanted to grab her and hold her and shout "MINE MINE MINE!" But I didn't need to. It's growing more obvious every year: we are Sweet Pea's parents. She likes her brothers, and seems to like H -- but nobody can replace her Daddy and Mommy. We've earned the titles, and we're going to enjoy them.