STEVE: So, Leo, we've got to dig this hole right here.
SUZIE: Got to dig a hole.
STEVE: Yeah?
AARON: Push it down.
LEO: Bye-bye.
SUZIE: Bye-bye.
STEVE: Bye-bye.
SUZIE: OK, we're going to hide this somewhere, and we'll open it when you're eighteen.
AARON: Ready?
LOGAN: I want-
LAUREN: The time capsule is just a great way to remember everything that we've been going through.
RENE: It's something she can take with her when she grows up. She can show her children when she starts having children.
BELLA: Mommy saved all this for you.
SUZIE: I think there's something cool and very old-school about having a tactile object you can show to tell stories.
BELLA: From one item to another, they actually tell you the story of what it takes to be a parent.
LOGAN: That, that's a princess.
AARON and LAUREN: Oh, that's a princess.
AARON: For who?
LOGAN: For baby Addyson.
LAUREN: Aw.
AARON: Everything that goes in there is something that taught him something, and something that taught us something.
RENE: The flowers that I gave to Bella.
RENE: I took your Mommy on a date.
RENE: I want her to know that we're a husband and wife that love each other.
STEVE: Cool.
SUZIE: Yeah.
SUZIE: It represents that with time and patience and love, we figured out what worked for you.
AARON: Can you put this in there?
LAUREN: His Thissey shows that we allow him to have something that makes him feel safe and secure.
STEVE: Remember the doorknob story.
SUZIE: Yeah.
STEVE: Remember this?
SUZIE: You locked yourself in the bathroom, and we had to take this off the door.
STEVE: You outsmarted me.
STEVE: OK, watch out, buddy. Hold on. There you go.
STEVE: The lesson here is that, you know, we can protect him as much as possible, and then there's still going to be these moments where he's going to outsmart us. And in this case, he's going to sort of outsmart himself.
SUZIE: Put it in there.
STEVE: That's the Barston fable.
SUZIE: It is.
STEVE: Of the doorknob.
RENE: This diaper represents me and my, my fear.
BELLA: Yes.
RENE: Plug my nose with these right here, because you're stinky sometimes when you poop.
BELLA: Yes, the clothespin comes in handy.
BELLA: I think it's important for her to know, her father turns into this character when it comes to changing diapers. He pulled a shirt over his head, kind of looked like a ninja, and he's trying to breathe as he's changing the diaper.
BELLA: This is the father of the child who just pooped.
RENE: Yay.
LAUREN: What book did you put in there?
LOGAN: Pickle book.
LAUREN: The pickle book?
AARON: Wait, where are you going with that? I want to see the pickle book, first.
LAUREN: It's called the pickle book because there's a big pickle, and when Logan has to poop, he requests to read the pickle book.
LOGAN: Pickle truck.
AARON: Pickle truck? You want to look at the pickle truck?
LAUREN: For every poop, there must be the pickle book.
LOGAN: Poopie.
AARON: You went poopie?
LOGAN: Yeah.
LAUREN: Pickle book will be a really good reminder of, you know, how much teamwork and patience went into potty training Logan, and it was a long adventure. A funny one, a messy one.
LOGAN: I went poopie. Yay.
AARON and LAUREN: Yay!
LAUREN: And this book helped to pass the countless minutes and hours on the bathroom floor.
AARON: And what do you say? See-
LOGAN: See you in the morning.
AARON: In the morning?
AARON: I think it would be great for him to open when he has a family.
RENE: When she's pregnant for the first time, maybe then, you know.
BELLA: Yeah, maybe then.
STEVE: Should be part of when we kick him out of the house. We'll just give him the box. Take this, too.
SUZIE: Yeah. Right.
AARON: Maybe pass that stuff along to his son or daughter.
RENE: That's pretty cool to all of a sudden give it to her, and she's got all these neat things to look back on.
AARON: And then he can really see what it feels like to sit in the bathroom for forty minutes while his son or daughter is going for the pickle book, to try and go to the bathroom. Payback.
LAUREN: Ready?
LOGAN: Yeah.
LAUREN: One, two, three.
STEVE: Here we go. K.
SUZIE: K, let's cover it with dirt.
STEVE: There you go. Cover it up.
SUZIE: Good job.
STEVE: Yeah, good job.
AARON: Good job.
LAUREN: Whoa, this is fun.
SUZIE: I think the lesson we learned from being parents is-
STEVE: Selflessness.
SUZIE: Selflessness and flexibility.
BELLA: We're figuring things out as we go, and discovering new things that we didn't even know existed, with being a parent.
SUZIE: He has a very distinct personality, and very specific needs, and I'm proud of us that we've sort of learned how to adjust to him.
RENE: You know, everybody always says how I live for my child, but you really do live for your child.
SUZIE: Every stage, you're growing up along with them, and learning to be a parent.
AARON: I'm lucky to have such a wonderful teammate to do that.
SUZIE: Bye bye, yellow box. We'll see you in twenty years.
[AND THE JOURNEY CONTINUES. . .]
LAUREN: So, baby sister had to come early? But she's not in her room. Where is she? Where is she, buddy?
LOGAN: The doctor.
LAUREN: Oh, why is she at the doctor?
LAUREN: So, our little girl Addyson Rose was born April nineteenth, and she came a little earlier than expected. Fifteen weeks early, and she was one pound, seven ounces. And it's been a little bit of a rough time.
AARON: I'm holding Addyson for the first time. Shh.
LAUREN: She's here and she's healthy and she's beautiful, and we're thankful that she's doing so well. We love her.
AARON: Yeah, and so does Logan.
SUZIE: So, uh, we have a little secret.
STEVE: Should we tell them?
SUZIE: I don't know, you think we should tell them?
STEVE: Maybe.
SUZIE: Are you going to tell them?
STEVE: No, you should tell them. Definitely.
SUZIE: OK, well, our secret is we're, we're either stupid or naive enough to do this all over again, because I'm pregnant.
STEVE: We're pregnant.
SUZIE: Yes, we are. Yeah.
STEVE: Yeah.
SUZIE: Take two.