The day it all stopped

I haven’t scrapbooked in five years. Has it really been that long? It seems like just yesterday I was trimming photos and laying out beautiful pages. How did this happen?

On New Year’s Eve my twin daughters pulled out all my old photo albums, all the scrapbooks. They were so curious. They pored over the pictures, asking questions. They were delighted to see their older siblings as babies. I answered their questions and flipped the pages, talking with them about each event I’d scrapped: birthdays, family outings, playdates, our daily routines. If this brings so much joy to my children, why did I stop scrapbooking? 

That was the day we went to the strawberry patch with the Mom’s Club. Here is your brother’s three year old birthday party. 

The twins were entranced. The scrapbooks gave them a sense of identity, of family history. It was fascinating to watch them form a sense of their own personal narrative.

This was the day my big brother was born. That was the beach trip. There is our old camper. This is what happened before I was born.

But then the scrapbooks stopped.

I know how this happened.

The scrapbooks stopped the day the twins were born.

At first I didn’t scrap because because I was just utterly overwhelmed. I’d hit my limit. Hard. Preemie twins + 3 older children. There wasn’t time for anything extra. Everything was a blur.

I always thought I’d get back to scrapbooking. I printed pictures of the twins first year. I kept my supplies well-stocked.

But one year turned into two years. Two years turned into four years.

Five years later and I still haven’t scrapped one single thing.

I even stopped using my Big Camera. Most of the twins’ lives have been captured on my iPhone, uploaded onto my computer and stored on an external hard-drive. I never printed the pictures. I don’t even remember what I captured.

There is no hard-copy. There aren’t even any unorganized photo albums. It’s all just whisked away, stored in some ethereal hard-drive that I’ve now forgotten how to access.

This makes me sad–especially after seeing how excited my girls were about viewing their older siblings’ scrapbooks.

It also makes me realize how quickly time passes. The days of my twins’ infancy seemed so long and tedious. I was exhausted and sleep-deprived and battling PPD. My menstrual cycle went crazy. I was sick all the time. I was barely surviving. My one outlet was writing and blogging.

And so time passed.

We haven’t even taken a real family picture in four years.

It’s like everything stopped the day our twins were born. We had no idea how having twins would change us, challenge us, break us.

But it did break us.

I stopped scrapping because other things became more important: healing. I needed therapy. I needed to take care of my breaking-down body. I needed to face my past.

And I did. I’m glad I did.

But now I want to do something to preserve our memories. Something small. Maybe I can just start by printing photos and placing them in an album.

Maybe this year I can start putting us back together again.

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  • Ariane

    Isn’t it funny how things just slip to the side and we never know we miss them until one day they pop up and bop us on the nose?

  • http://www.facebook.com/don.hendricks Don Hendricks

    Found your blog several months ago when searching for recovering fundamentalists, Your writing is totally inspirational. Re. Bible reading. I have found reading different translations and paraphrases help, as well as reading on my tablet and Kindle instead of opening a tome, seems more up to date when I read it at the same place I check the news and read blogs.

  • Sarah

    EE, you MUST check out beckyhiggins.com. Project life is the bomb. It is a super-simple memory keeping solution that is do-able—no enjoyable— for “way behind” mommas like us. No adhesive, no foo foo junk (unless you want to add foo foo junk). Best part of all—I’m working on my 4th baby’s book + #2 and #3 at the same time…and I’m not overwhelmed! Just amazed at how quickly it’s coming together, and having fun along the way. I’m so happy to “read” you again. Happy new year to you and your precious family!

  • Sarah
  • Judy Webb

    Shutterfly is the answer to all of us who just don’t have the motivation to use crimping scissors and paper scraps to create books. Upload your photos, arrange, and have them send you a professional looking book. Takes a couple of hours, very impressive and you don’t have to cut anything out.

  • http://thechuppies.com/ Kara @ The Chuppies

    What you’re giving them in breaking and healing is WAY bigger and better and deeper and wider and so much more than any scrapbooks. Let yourself rest in that…

    But I also get it…ours love to looks back through photos too.
    And I can so so so relate…

    I love the memories as much as the kiddos do, but it has to be reasonable, something I’ll actually do…which was nothing for a few years and is minimal now (but I’m happy with it).

    I just do one entry a year in a “Christmas album” (I’ll stick the link below). It actually does give a simple, snapshot overview of our lives that year…

    For the photos, I try to stick some in albums they can look through…but (and I’m probably not going to describe this well) …but what the kids love most is our two spinning post-card-holder-racks.

    If I write a little note (because my memory is terrible of dates/names) on the back of any printed photos and then put them in a clear cello card envelope, I can stick them in the the postcard slots and the kiddos can sift through them whenever they want and there’s not-supposed-to-be any order to them (which is amazingly FREEING) :)

    Side note–I didn’t “keep up” with the Christmas books.
    I stopped everything when our first 3 arrived within 3 years, but it wasn’t as overwhelming to think of going back and sticking something in for just 1 page a year. Now I can manage 1 page a year and can stay sorta current :)

    http://thechuppies.com/2011/12/if-you-arent-scrapbooker-but-you-love/

  • Jo

    So good to know I am not alone in this – 3 yrs into raising our twins, we’re still shell-shocked at how they have been so life-altering and how raising (all four) kids maxes us out every day. I’ve got a few pics in albums now, no more scrapbooks. It has changed almost every aspect of our day to day (meals, family, church, etc.) for much longer than I expected. I’m hopeful that it’s for some good though. Hugs to carrying on one day at a time, eh??? You’ve survived two more years than me!

  • Handsfull

    This makes a lot of sense – it took all your energy just surviving for a while, so you let go of the non-essentials.

    I’m the only one at my kids’ playcentre who doesn’t have scrapbooks for them… they’re on my ‘one day’ list, lol! But I have just managed to get my first ever shutterfly-style photo-book printed out, and I’m very proud of myself. It took a while for me to get my head around the software, but I got it done, fitted a whole year’s worth of pictures into 50 pages, and it arrived the day before Christmas :)
    Here’s to putting you all back together again!

  • Lindsay

    I remember those early twin days both so well and not at all. I remember exhaustion and stress and feeling so overwhelmed by it all. But at the same time it all seems a blur. Three years in and some days I still feel like that. I hear ya. My pictures sat on a computer until last year.