Tuesday, January 1, 2013

State of the Family 2013

We started this blog 2 years ago as a way to keep our friends and family informed about what's going on in our lives. In truth, we haven't been great about doing that, but I'm hoping that will change with so many things happening in our lives. A lot of families send out Christmas newsletters at the end of the year, and we've been meaning to join in that tradition. But instead of printing it out and mailing it, we've decided to just keep everything online. So here is the first of what I hope is many annual online newsletters.

Looking Back on 2012: The Year of the Dragon

2012 was a busy year for us. Kyla continued to pursue a Master's of Science in Nursing degree from the University of Texas at Austin. She is on target to complete her degree and become a pediatric nurse practitioner in the spring of 2013. It hasn't been easy on her, though. In addition to going to school full time, she's had to complete clinical hours while also working part-time at Dell Children's Hospital, even during the hot summer months.

Our beautiful black labs (Daphne and Lily) are doing well. Lily was diagnosed with an intrahepatic shunt in the summer of 2011, which caused her to intermittently seize. Our vet referred us to the A&M Veterinary Hospital to get it checked out. Instead of a costly surgery that was not guaranteed to fix the issue, we chose instead to try to manage the issue through medication and diet. We are grateful that Lily has not had any visible seizures since. Daphne continues to be in good health as well, though we are concerned that she may have arthritis as once in a while she seems to be in pain when walking.

I (Jake) got LASIK in March of this past year, and it has turned out to be one of the best decisions of my life. I continued to (slowly but surely) work toward my Bachelor's of Fine Arts degree in Communication Design (AKA Graphic Design). Ever since I quit my full time job at HomeAway in 2008 to grow my web design and development business, I've been following a general pattern of attending the Texas State University part-time for one semester a year. Due in part to fatigue of formal education and also out of the need to avoid the embarrassment of my wife getting her Master's before I get my Bachelor's, I increased my hours at school, attending part-time in spring, summer, and fall. I am now on course to graduate at the same time as Kyla in the spring of 2013. Unfortunately, my shift in focus has caused me to have to scale back my work hours.

Some respite came in August, when we forced ourselves to take a well-deserved vacation in Canada. For the better part of 2 weeks we criss-crossed Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island in a series of rental cars. We saw L’Anse aux MeadowsGros MorneOld Town Lunenburg, Grand Pré, and Joggins Fossil Cliffs UNESCO World Heritage Sites. It was near the end of our trip that we learned that Kyla had conceived our first child, a girl. While welcome news, the burden on her body made the fall semester all the more difficult to cope with for her.

We nonetheless managed to get to the winter break. We visited my family in Minnesota for a few days over Christmas before returning home for a quiet and uneventful New Year's. On our trip, we finally decided on a name for the baby: Jaedyn Amara. While we're glad 2012 is over, we look forward to reaping the rewards of our labor in 2013 (pun intended).

Looking Forward to 2013

Our New Year's resolutions mostly center around our physical health as this past year has taken its toll. I was plagued by persistent illness due to overwork and lack of sleep, and on more than one occasion was responsible for getting Kyla sick in turn. While my work habits haven't changed much over the years, my body's ability to cope with them has deteriorated. I will be 30 years old next October, and simply put: I can't keep staying up late whenever I please anymore without consequence. I spent many a late night this past fall working on school projects or work for clients. I also ate terribly, all too often resorting to fast food on my hour commute to and from school. In this coming year, I am going to try to be better about keeping a more regular schedule. Kyla (and my body) will thank me for it, and hopefully I'll be a lot more healthy as a result.

2013 is shaping up to be very eventful for us. We will welcome our first baby into our family, and we will both graduate with the degrees we have long been pursuing -- all within the span of a couple weeks in early May if all goes according to schedule. While neither of us is so naïve to think that being first time parents will be easy, we do look forward to not having to worry about school for the foreseeable future. After Kyla completes her maternity leave over the summer, we anticipate that she will be presented with many lucrative opportunities to put her new title as pediatric nurse practitioner to work. I look forward to refocusing my efforts on growing my business and perhaps hiring on a few employees to help with the workload after the baby is born. Daphne and Lily are eagerly waiting for Jaedyn!

Happy New Year, and may 2013 bring ever more blessings to you.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Jaedyn Amara

"It" finally has a name: Jaedyn Amara. The name means "God always hears," or more literally "God hears eternal." For anyone that has specific questions about how we arrived at the name, etc: this post is for you. This will most likely annoy anyone that is wanting to name their future baby or potential baby without outside influences. If that describes you, you have been warned and do not read further.

Before I get into it, I want to apologize to anyone that I secretly (and sometimes not so secretly) judged for giving their kid a pretty normal name with a nonstandard spelling. What I've learned from this process is that most popular names have been adapted to numerous phonetic systems from various regions, resulting in a whole lot of totally legit spelling variations. I've therefore come to the conclusion that most "ridiculous" spellings are probably just due to parents trying to incorporate their heritage's spelling of an otherwise standard name. I understand now, and I'm sorry.

We formally started the process of naming the baby on our recent trip to Minnesota to see my (Jake's) family for Christmas. I was against even talking about it much until we had more time and less distractions, and our trip fit the bill. We were both done with school for the semester, and I was even without my laptop for the duration (gasp). We had flights and quiet evenings alone to ponder and debate.

I wasn't really interested in just waiting for it to come to us or any other such hippy dippy nonsense. No, the decision had to be researched, systematic, and comprehensive. The most contentious of the decisions was to use a theme or not to use a theme. I am not flexible on this. I have not been rigid as to what theme we chose, but I insisted that there be a theme. One kid can't have a Greek first name the other Swedish, one kid can't have a middle name that's an adjective and the other a noun, and so on. OCD, maybe. But there it is. My kids' names will make sense together! It's pretty easy to say that when this is the first child ...

Step 1: Research / Brainstorming

We used an app that seemed to have the best database of baby names and a decent interface. We both decided to limit the pool of names by origin to our own heritages (Swedish/Norse and Gaelic) and Biblical languages (Hebrew and Greek). We went through all the names in this massive list together and picked any that interested us to go on our list of favorites. This first step probably took 50-75% of the entire process.

Step 2: Eliminate Spelling Variations

We went through our list of favorites and eliminated all but one of any names that were of the same origin and meaning but had slightly different spellings. One "n" or two; that kind of thing.

Step 3: Eliminate Duplicate Meanings

We were finding it very difficult to take the next step after we had our master list of names. Neither the app we chose for brainstorming nor any other apps that we could find had the ability to put a list of favorite names into a table so that we could compare their various attributes easily. This seems like the perfect job for a spreadsheet, but alas, I did not have my laptop and couldn't use "an approved portable electronic device" because we were sitting on a plane during a 2 hour delayed takeoff. So we old-schooled it (shudder) and actually used the back of our printed boarding passes to proceed. We picked our favorite sounding version of all the names that had the same or similar meanings. At this point we were down to 42 names.

Step 4: Rating Round #1

I cannot stress enough how important putting down ratings for each name was for this process. It saved us from endless 'I like this but you don't' exchanges. It eliminated more options more quickly than any other step of this process. Unfortunately, the app we chose to use did not have a name rating mechanism beyond just putting names on the favorites list. Other baby naming apps did have a 1-5 star rating mechanism, but a) we didn't want to transfer all of the names into another app, b) 1-5 is unnecessarily complicated in this situation, and c) there was no way to add multiple peoples' ratings. It's true that all of these deficiencies could be overcome, but we were far enough along that we just continued to use good ol' paper instead. 

A 1-3 rating from each of us was ideal in this situation. 1 = meh, 2 = likey, 3 = really likey. This system allowed us to see plainly where we really agreed, sort of agreed, and totally didn't agree. We initially eliminated any name that did not have a cumulative rating of 4+, but then we went ahead and eliminated the 4s as well. We did allow retroactive changing of ratings after we saw each others' ratings in case we changed our mind about a name in order to save or kill it. I ended up saving Amara by changing my rating from 2 to 3 because even though I wasn't crazy about how it sounded, I really liked the meaning. We were now down to 15.


Step 5: The Nickname Test

Kyla was very interested in making sure the name had a reasonable nickname, while I figured we could come up with a good one after the fact without too much trouble. Nonetheless, we found that all of them were short enough to not need a nickname or we could come up with a reasonable one, so this didn't really help.

Step 6: The Uniqueness Test

We decided that we wanted the baby's name to be pretty unique, so we gave each one a uniqueness rating. This didn't really change too much as we had been screening our initial list with this in mind. I understand the desire to not give a child a name that is so unique that nobody can spell it, nobody can pronounce it, etc. But we also didn't want to give our child a name that would be so common that she'd likely meet many other people with her same name, get confused with another person, etc. Besides, all the names in our list up to this point weren't particularly hard to pronounce or spell.

Step 7: Sanity Checks

Our list was still too long at this point. Bring on the hippy dippy stuff. I finally caved on Kyla's dislike of a common English word for a name, so we eliminated Hope and Grace. We both really like Arwen but decided that the connection with The Lord of the Rings and the timing of its theatrical releases would probably make people think that that's where we got the name from. It may be stupid, but I don't want people to think that. We also took one last opportunity to veto any names that one of us just wasn't feeling. We eliminated Jada because it was very close to Jaedyn, and we decided we liked the way the latter sounded and its meaning more. And then there were 7.



Step 8: First Name / Middle Name Permutations

With our list of 7 in hand, we were ready to start thinking about name combinations. We wrote out all the first name and middle name permutations. We eliminated any combination that didn't sound right, which were mostly those whose first name ended with the same letter as the middle name started with.



Step 9: The Initials Test

None of the resultant initials from the previous step were undesirable, so no dice on this one. Undesirable initials would include COC, CUC, DIC, FUC, GUC, HIC, KUC, MUC, NUC, PUC, RAC, SAC, SIC, SUC, and WAC.


Step 10: Rating Round #2

Next we wrote out the meanings next to each remaining combination. We went through another round of 1-3 ratings and eliminated those with lower combined ratings, leaving just 3. One of the combined meanings didn't make much sense even though it was Kyla's favorite initially. We finally settled on Jaedyn Amara because it has a pretty sweet meaning. We know that the male variation, Jayden, is a fairly popular boy's name nowadays (darn you Will Smith!), but this name has enough going for it in our minds to compensate. Besides, we can always call her Jade for short.


I scanned in all our scribblings for posterity and because we'll probably want to revisit some of these options if and when we have another girl. The name fits one of the themes I preferred: the combination roughly fits the roadmap of our spiritual heritage from Hebrew (Old Testament) to Greek (New Testament) to Swedish (Evangelical Free Church), and I think that's pretty cool. That theme should also give us enough options for the future should we have or adopt any more children.

Saturday, December 22, 2012

It's a Girl!

We found out we're having a girl! Just what Kyla and her mother were secretly wishing for. Registries for anyone inclined: Babies 'R' Us and Target.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Prenatal Doctor's Appointment #4

Everything looked "perfect" according to the sonogram technician. The baby seems to be developing on schedule. All genetic screening tests came back negative.



Sunday, November 4, 2012

Pregnancy Scare #2

Okay, so this is more of a mother health scare, which is a pregnancy scare in my book. I gave Kyla my cold, and she had it worse than I did. She got sick around 10/17/2012, and I finally convinced her to go see the doctor today. They put her on antibiotics (Augmentin) and a probiotic (Culturell). The doc also recommended Eucalyptus oil. They also detected a systolic heart murmur (apparently also common during pregnancy).

Thursday, October 25, 2012

We're Pregnant! (Officially)

Official announcement: Kyla is pregnant! I guess people say "we" to make the father sound more involved. The baby is due 5/7/2013. Look out world!





Monday, October 8, 2012

Prenatal Doctor's Appointment #2

We got our second sonogram today. We saw the baby's 4 limbs. The baby kicked for us! The heart beat was a lot better.


Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Prenatal Doctor's Appointment #1

Kyla is 6 weeks and 1 day pregnant, and we went to our first prenatal doctor's appointment. I (Jake) finally met Kyla's OB/GYN, and I like her. We saw the baby for the first time. We heard its heart beat, which was apparently a little slow. We were in examination room #21, which is the favorite number of both of us.


Saturday, September 1, 2012

Pregnancy Scare #1

Kyla had severe right side abdominal pain in the middle of the night. We decided better to be safe than sorry, so we rushed to the emergency room at midnight. We were concerned the pregnancy was ectopic. It turns out to be 3 ovarian cysts, which is apparently perfectly normal, but the doctor thinks one of them is oversized. We were at the hospital until 4am.