I'm hesitant to call it a tradition yet, but we went out with a big group of friends again this year to Spooner Farms to pick pumpkins. This also signifies that we are close to our big Halloween party! [flickr_set id="72157636520949283"]
Cleveland Rocks
After visiting with family and friends in Indiana, we drove with Amanda's parents to Cleveland, where I was on the schedule to speak at Content Marketing World. Our first stop in town was at The West Side Market.
The cool thing about the market is it had a European feel that the Italian in me appreciated. Not much like Pike Place Market.
After checking into our hotel, we explored the city a bit during our first night.
I went to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for a conference pre-funk while Amanda and her parents explored more of downtown.
While I was working the conference, Amanda and her parents toured the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, which Amanda says took three hours! She said it put the EMP to shame.
After the conference we caught up with our friend Cari Lyle. Cari lives in Seattle but we hadn't seen her in months, so naturally we made time for each other when we were halfway across the country.
Cari in her natural habitat, taking shots.
The next night we did some more night exploring.
Cleveland was a really nice city, far exceeding my expectations. But there's no place like home.
An Indiana Summer
We spent a long weekend visiting family in Leo, Indiana, a few weeks ago. In addition to seeing loved ones, the Grabill Country Fair was in full effect!
On our first evening we went to the fair with the Reynolds boys to get leather bracelets. It's a festival tradition to get them. But first, fried cheese!
That's Trec on his dad's shoulders.
Creed and Trec contemplate bracelet designs.
Amanda's bracelet with my name on it. You're supposed to get the name of your significant other.
Daisha had to stay home with their daughter Navy, but we visited them after the fair.
Here are some photos from the parade on Day 2.
Amanda with our niece Abby and nephew Mason.
I shamelessly took photos of Amish whenever I could. I am so fascinated by their lifestyle.
We walked back through the fair after the parade to get Abby and Mason their bracelets.
This is the biggest pork tenderloin sandwich I have ever seen.
Yes, I wore pink shorts in Indiana.
After all that healthy eating, I needed a healthy dessert to-go.
We went back to the Reynolds estate and saw Brinn.
The next day we saw Jenny and her kids Phoebe and Henry.
Our time in Indiana was short but we saw a lot of people. Our last stop was at Amanda's grandparents house to drop off her parents' dog Teddy.
Teddy is the most loved grandchild.
Then we were off to Cleveland with Amanda's parents for some sightseeing and a work conference. That's all in the next blog post.
Lake Chelan 2013
Praying With Our Dog, Coping with Infertility

(Note: I wrote this a couple of months ago. I have surgery next week.)
โYou are an infertile couple,โ the doctor at Seattle Reproductive Medicine told us.
Her simple statement confirmed our assumption and summarized our emotional evolution the past 22 months spanning excitement, anxiety, confusion and frustration.
In times of crisis, itโs easy and selfish to ask God, โWhy me? Why us?โ But thatโs exactly how I responded.
I also confided in our dog, Gianna. She's good at providing support and keeping secrets.
The infertility is my issue. Amanda tested normal. My results showed low testosterone and low sperm count. Multiple tests confirmed it. I also have a varicocele (think varicose vein) behind my left testicle, which may correlate to my condition, the doctor says. Hopefully it does. A surgery in October will confirm that one way or the other.
I am writing because we know that our family and friends have wondered about us. We shamelessly want to be parents. I'm not tired of people asking us when we're thinking about having children. I'm tired of lying that "we're waiting" for this or that to happen in life. We're not. We just can't get pregnant.
I am also writing because infertility -- and similarly personal and painful topics like miscarriage -- is not often discussed. In a personal crisis, you don't want to feel alone. This is one of those private, embarrassing and seemingly rare topics that you can only find solace about in your partner and the anonymous Internet. Of course, infertility isn't so uncommon or Seattle Reproductive Medicine wouldn't have a healthy business and all of those comforting statistics about how common infertility actually is.
This has been the greatest challenge I have ever experienced.
Because I want to be a Dad.
Because my wife Amanda deserves to be a Mom.
I don't have any particularly unique qualifications to become a father, but God designed Amanda to be a great mother in her mind and heart. Amanda has a degree in early childhood development and has spent most of her professional life as a nanny, youth educator and teacher to mothers and fathers. She's overqualified for the job.
This is the woman who picked me up on our third date in a Volkswagen Jetta station wagon with three โ yes, three โ car seats in the back row. That was intimidating! At the time we met, she was nannying for two families and a combined three boys all under the age of 2 years. One of those parents later told me, โYour wife taught me how to be a mother.โ
When I went back to Indiana to meet Amanda's family and friends, I met our niece and nephew -- who Amanda adores -- and found that nearly all of her girlfriends had two children; many of them have at least three today. Our wedding attendees were mostly children by that math, and Amanda insisted we have a giant table down the middle of our reception hall loaded with coloring books and crayons.
Here in the Seattle area, a lot of men marry women who are equal or greater breadwinners or are highly motivated professionally. Children come later, if at all. I fell in love with a woman who is highly motivated to be a stay-at-home Mom, and we've designed our life around that. Call us old-fashioned.
I bought a four bedroom house before we married to grow into. Amanda transitioned out of nannying last year to take a break from childcare before we started our family. I made aggressive professional moves to get in the dream job that could support both of us.
I pulled the classic husband-delay tactics, too. We have a cat, dog and two chickens that are the partial result of my wanting to delay the inevitable and just enjoy being a married couple. And we have. We battled about if we could make a Europe trip before Amanda got pregnant because she was not going to Tuscany if she couldn't enjoy the wine. We were that sure of things.
Then, month after month, nothing happened.
It's a lot like the movies -- staring at a lot of pregnancy tests, figuring out the timing of conceiving, reading books, reading articles online, getting invites to friends' baby showers and seeing newborns in social media streams at an exponential rate. It's a comedy.
You start to notice pregnant bellies when you're trying to conceive. I guess it's like when you shop for a car and start to notice the other cars on the road. I like to think we're being good sports. We have our emotional breaking points from time to time, but to date we've kept that private until now (Hello, world!). We've never been discouraged by watching friends get pregnant or seeing their updates online. We're elated! If anything we are that much more happy for them. We like babies!
Sex also becomes a funny thing. We're no less romantic, but we're more scientific. I've heard of sex becoming stressful and unromantic for couples who struggle with infertility, and the Lord knows I'll move hell to make sure that doesn't happen.
Oh, the irony of spending all of those years trying not to get pregnant, right? We talk now about how we should have started having unprotected sex immediately, which I'm sure past-me would have been game for!
Going to the fertility clinic is a trip. I can't help but look at the other people in the waiting room and wonder how long they've tried. I'll see a woman walk out of the clinic and wonder if she just got pregnant in a back room by a simple procedure. The doctors are performing miracles, creating life every day.
I weave in and out of this anthropological reflection to deep, emotional caverns that I didn't know existed. It's all part of coping, I guess.
Some days just fly by. Others are totally draining. Something random will remind one of us about our situation, we share that with each other privately and we cry together. Sometimes it's just a YouTube video of a baby eating a lemon or it's stumbling upon "What to Expect When You're Expecting" on Netflix (great movie, by the way). Sometimes it's nothing but a flash-flood of suppressed emotion. I apologize to Amanda often, especially when another month passes. I struggle knowing that I can't help my wife land her dream job.
We're comforted by knowing the cause of why we're infertile, but it also doesn't provide a clear solution. Will things just happen for us eventually? How should we plan financially for assisted pregnancy procedures? Should we consider adoption? We've explored these questions to varying degrees and we're open to all the possibilities.
For now, we have a plan and steps to take, at least to learn if I can be fixed.
And symbolic accepting our situation, Amanda took a job nannying again.
Every morning and every night when we feed our dog, we pray together as a family. Not at the dinner table, just there in the kitchen where Gianna's food bowls are. It's a new tradition. Gianna processes it as "sit and stay" for a food reward. When we ask her to pray, she sits obediently while we fold our hands and bow our heads.
We thank God for our beautiful, generous life and family and friends, and we ask for a child.
We'll keep on praying.