Monday, June 23, 2014

She Said YES!

Jordan asked and McKenna said yes! 

On June 14th Jordan and McKenna were officially engaged!  

We haven't met McKenna yet but we did meet her via Skype 
a few days after they got engaged!  Gotta love Skype!
They will come for a visit in July so we will meet McKenna in person then. 
We are very much looking forward to the visit!
In the meantime.....

This is Jordan and McKenna in the summer of 2013 in California

At General Conference in Salt Lake City, Utah in April 2014


Engagement day, June 14, 2014


So the wedding planning begins! 
December 27, 2014
San Diego California Temple
San Diego California

I got a call from McKenna's mom the other night and we talked for quite a while. It made me laugh that almost the first thing she said to me was, "You are at a real disadvantage. I've read your blog and I know everything there is to know about you and your family and you know nothing about mine!"  BWHAHAHAHAHA!!!

Jordan had told me that McKenna's mom (a.k.a. Sue) had Googled his name and the results showed my blog and she began to read about us. My first thought was, "Uh oh." :) 

So come December we will all be one big happy family so read away, Sue! :D





Friday, June 20, 2014

Fabulous 29

Fabulous 29....

No, not my age but how many years Tim and I have been married!



Twenty nine years ago today we began the journey of our life together and what a wonderful journey it has been!

(Insert rambling mushiness here)

Oh, how I do love this man!

May we always remember....


Happy 29th Anniversary to us! 

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Looking Through Windows

Ahh, spring. Throw open the windows and welcome the breezes that make the curtains float! It's that time of year where I feel like I need to "spring clean" to freshen up things that have been neglected a little too long. :) 

I've been trying to figure out where to begin with the cleaning I wanted to get done. I can kind of overwhelm myself thinking about all I want to get done but I had to begin somewhere.

Today I decided to begin with the living room windows. I don't usually begin with windows but it's always good to shake things up, right? Annah helped me get the curtains down to get them washed and then I began cleaning the blinds. First I dusted them and then I washed each slat, one by one. I was a little astonished at how dirty my water began to get as I cleaned! As I continued slat by slat I was glancing out the window and I began to notice how dirty my windows were and I wonder how I didn't notice that much sooner. I actually felt a little embarrassed that they had gotten as dirty as they were! As I thought about that I was reminded of this 2 minute video that I saw a while back called, "Looking Through Windows". 


While I continued to clean I began to think about that video and the fact that in the past two months I have received 2 letters from two people that I have known for a long time. Without the details, both of these people had not treated me very well in two separate incidences and both of them had done a lot of soul searching and felt the need to apologize to me and ask for my forgiveness. One incident happened about 6 months ago and the other happened 5 years ago. 

What a wonderful example this is to me of being able to be humble and ask forgiveness when we realize our behavior has not been very Christlike. I am grateful for the example of these two good women who have reached out seeking forgiveness that I was more than happy to give. 

Yeah, all that from my dirty living room windows. I think I should begin with my windows more often. :)

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Jacob and Mozart

Several weeks ago I happened on this picture of Jacob back when he was younger and took piano lessons. I discovered the picture in a notebook of music that he had from that time. I was so glad that I took the time to look through the notebook before I pitched it because I would have gotten rid of an awesome picture of Jacob!


When Jacob came for Easter dinner we showed him the picture and he immediately said it reminded him of the picture of Mozart as a child. I didn't recall the picture so he pulled up the image from the internet to show me....


Yup, Mozart indeed! :)

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Am I Smarter Than a 1st Grader?

In February I began working at an elementary school as an assistant to a teacher who is called a Behavior Coach. She works in a program called PASS which stands for Positive Association for Student Success. We work with kids who have behavior issues to redirect their behaviors in a positive way. I tell people that every day my job is to be on a peace keeping mission. :)  

Last week the teacher I work with was not there. She had planned for a sub but the job was not picked up by anyone so I was on my own. It's usually a big job for both of us and now with her gone and no sub to help it was an even bigger job for just me. The day actually didn't go too badly. I did have one student who had to come into the PASS room to just chill for a while and get their behavior under control. 


When a student comes in for a negative reason it is typical that they stay in an area on their own to regroup and then when that is accomplished we talk with them about the behaviors that made it necessary for them to be in the PASS room and how they can make different choices next time. During their settling down time you have to be able to see them but you also don't want to just sit there looking at them and giving them attention as that usually just prolongs their negative behavior. So, it is important to have something to do so that you don't need to look directly at them or interact with them but they know that you are still sitting right there waiting for them to get it together.

The day I was handling PASS by myself and had a student in the room I had to find something to busy myself. I was sitting at the teacher's desk and looked around at what I might be able to do, avoiding eye contact with the student. Nothing was obvious to me but the computer. I thought, "Oh I'll just pull something up on the computer to keep my attention." Keep in mind that I don't use Apple computers except occasionally at school so it isn't second nature to me like it is at home. I looked at the computer and wondered if the teacher had left it on so I moved the mouse to see if it would wake it up. 

Nothing. 

Rats.

Not wanting to interact with the student but wanting to look busy, I didn't want to disclose the fact that computer was off and I didn't know how to turn the thing on. Remember, I have no real experience with Apple computers and this one was an all-in-one model so there is only a monitor and a key board. I casually felt around to see if there was a button somewhere but I didn't find anything. I thought I would just begin typing on the keyboard to make it look like I was doing something. I began to type just like I would if the computer was on. I felt silly but I didn't want the student in the room to know that I really had nothing to do. 

As my finger flitted over the keyboard in pretended accomplishment, a voice from across the room said, 

"Do you want me to help you turn that on?"

It was the voice of the very student who I was trying to seem occupied for! I had all I could do to not laugh out loud at his question and mustered a, "Nope, I am good."  

"But it's not on. Do you want to me turn it on?" he asked. 

BWHAHAHAHAHA! 

"No, it's okay," I replied, "I've got other things I can do." 

Are you wondering what grade this student is in? 1st grade!

BWHAHAHAHAHA!  Even funnier, I know!

Artwork compliments of my father when he was a child.

Friday, May 2, 2014

Destination: Florida

I can't believe it is May already! It seems impossible to think that it was a month ago already that our good friends Sam and Amy invited us to go with them to Pensacola Beach, Florida. What a wonderful time we had spending 9 days just bumming around and relaxing!


First-timers on the beach! :)

This was first time that Abigail and Annah had ever been to a beach. It has been along standing complaint (and joke) of Abigail's that she is 16 and she hadn't even been to a beach or seen the ocean. She's been known to tell perfect strangers that she's never been to a beach. :) If she wants to get technical she can say she *still* hasn't seen an ocean since we were on the Gulf of Mexico side of Florida! :) But later this summer she will be seeing the Pacific Ocean so she will have to wait just a little longer! 

Florida, where the sand is as white as Abigail's skin!

Annah

The view from the beach house -- gorgeous! 

Walkway to the beach 

Love this shot of the colorful stools on the pier.

Abigail found a star fish in the water! Just walking along and she saw something in the water, reached in and plucked it out! 
*No starfish were harmed while being photographed. 
She put it back in the water after the picture.



Abigail and Annah at Fort Pickens 

Annah, Abigail, Elizabeth...these girls share a sweet friendship -- love them!



View of the pier 

Beach time.....  I love this guy!

Tim and Sam

Found a mermaid on the beach!

Loved this picture of Annah...until we realized she only had one leg. 
Hahahaha! :)

One night we went crabbing...catching crabs on the beach with nets and pails and then letting them go. There was some serious screaming going on during the catch and the release and I'm not saying by who! 
*One crab *was* harmed during this outing when he lost a leg. 
I won't name who was so brutal with the net!

Tim knows how to dress for the beach -- seriously!


Soothing my sunburn...ice cream on the Boardwalk :)

Tim didn't get a bad burn but he got ice cream too.  

It was a lovely time spent with wonderful friends, warm sun and sand, refreshing breezes, and beautiful views! 

Yes, let's!

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

The Long Road Home...


Today would have been my mother's 80th birthday. 

This is how I remember my mother in my youth

Try as I might, I have not been able to write much about her passing. I was "stuck" in a place where I couldn't write about anything. Then I decided that life was moving on and if I waited till I *could* write about it then I would be letting things pass me by that I wanted to write about and could write about. So I moved on, just letting my heart settle and let life put things in perspective for me. It felt easier to let it go than I thought it would. It didn't make it go away but it eased the burden of feeling like I needed to do something that I wasn't ready to do.

Fourteen months later I am ready now.



On the morning of Wednesday, January 23rd, 2013 a call came from the nursing home where my mother resided.  I answered it, sure it was a call to let me know of a medication change or some other "non emergency". For just over three years when those calls came they always began with the voice on the other end saying, "This is not an emergency."  But January 23rd was different.  This time they said, "I am sorry to tell you that your mother passed away this morning."  I found it hard to breathe. Then I found it impossible to hold back tears.  I felt confused. 

My mother was very ill in November but since then she had, once again, come back from the brink and had been doing quite well.  Only a few days earlier I had talked to her and she sounded good.  We laughed on the phone as I told her I remembered how every summer she would walk around our big yard with a mason jar of gasoline in hand, going around to all of her flowers, picking off Japanese Beetles and dropping them in her jar. She never used any kind of pesticides on her plants, just her jar of gas. She laughed as we remembered summers at home.


Suddenly everything changed. She was gone. I asked the nurse what happened. She said that they had gotten my mother up into her chair for the day. She had been talking and joking with the nurses. Once in her chair the nurse had left the room. I don't know how long the nurse was gone from the room but when she came back my mother had passed away.  I am happy that it was peaceful, quick and that she didn't struggle. 

By early the next day we were on the road with Jacob, Abigail and Annah headed toward New York, the place I had just been a few months before to visit her. She had been *so* ill then and in leaving her that November day, I knew it could quite possibly be the last time I saw her. And it was.

We made the trip in record time of about 14 hours.It was very cold in New York. Our kids were severely under dressed for the bitter cold but they survived in spite of it. :)


Once there it was a whirlwind of activity as we met with the funeral home and went to the nursing home to pick up all of mom's things that were boxed up and waiting. I went into her room one last time. It was a very solemn time for me. I sat on her bed and looked around at the walls that had since been emptied of all the dozens of framed pictures she had on the walls that had surrounded her for going on 4 years. The walls were riddled will nails where pictures had hung just days before. I felt a bit sorry for the maintenance people that had to pull all those nails and fix all the holes. For over a year both my mother and father had shared the same room and now they were both gone. 



I stared at her wardrobe where just days before the doors were plastered with pictures of family, grandchildren, friends and newspaper clippings I had sent her of the girls when they were in the local paper for their production of Bye, Bye Birdie. And shelves once over-stuffed with trinkets of every kind now were empty. Every material thing she held dear was put into boxes by the staff of the nursing home who had loved her and treated her so kindly. 

Tim and I, with Cretta, Bill and his wife, Debbi, took all her boxes and went back to Bill and Debbi's house to do a quick sort through the things and make decisions on what was kept and what was to be donated. There were LOTS of boxes! Mom had a LOT of stuff! In the end we returned to Kentucky with 1 plastic tote (that I had brought with me) and 2 smaller cardboard boxes. That was all and it was enough.

The funeral was on Saturday, January 26th. A family friend spoke at the service and Tim did also. Tim has spoken at my father funeral and he did the same for my mother. He is such a comforting speaker. He makes hard things easier for everyone. And given how much my mother loved him, it was fitting that he speak. 



It was a very short trip, arriving on Thursday and leaving on Sunday. Sunday was also Debbi's birthday and in the commotion of everything I had forgotten and felt bad. I was trying to think of what I could give to her and then it came to me.  

My mother was a Jeff Gordon fan and she had everything Jeff Gordon. She had a blanket, matchbox cars, a light switch plate in her room at the nursing home, collector's cards, and many other things that escape my memory. The perfect gift for Debbi was among the memorabilia mom had....a Jeff Gordon shellacked wooden plaque that someone had made for Mom!! Yes, that was the perfect gift to bring a smile, a memory of mom and hopefully a laugh out loud. I left her a note and the plaque.....




We arrived back home late Sunday night and I took Monday,January 28th off of work as it was my birthday and also the day they were burying Mom. She was not laid to rest the day of the funeral but had to wait until "the next business day" because her resting place was at the Saratoga National Cemetery and the government doesn't work on weekends. Somehow that just strikes me as funny but you can't argue with the government. Cretta and our cousin, Charlie were at the cemetery for her burial.

The following months for me were filled with reflections of my mother, my memories of her, and the realities of our relationship and family. Every family has rough roads and we were certainly no exception. "Rough" doesn't begin to explain the half of it but I will say that in spite of it all, I did all I could do for both my mother and my father. I am proud of that; proud that when I could have been totally justified in turning my back, I didn't. I was accused of taking their money, of "putting them into a nursing home", of making things up...the list goes on. I did what I did because it was the right thing to do, in spite of everything. It was right to do for them what they couldn't do for themselves. It was that plain and simple. It was never easy but it was worth it.


A few months after my mother’s passing spring was upon us. One day I was sitting on my patio just thinking (I did that a lot trying to process her passing) and enjoying the warmer temperatures. As I sat there I recalled that years ago I had been so afraid that when the time came that my mother had passed away I was going to feel tremendous guilt because of what I did or didn’t do, said or didn’t say, etc. That was a real concern for me back then. I realized as I sat thinking that day that I didn’t feel that guilt I had anticipated. I didn’t feel guilt because I *truly* did do everything that I possibly could do for both my mother and my father. It led me to think on the Atonement and for probably the first time in my life “I got it” – I understood the Atonement in a way I never had before when the thought came to me “it was enough” – meaning that the Atonement had made what I did do and give “enough”. Did I do it perfectly? No, I did not. Was there things I could have done better or different? Of course. But what I knew in that moment was that I did do everything that I could and I did it the best that I could given where I came from and what has happened regarding my mother. It was enough because the Savior made up the difference between what I was able to do (given my life experiences within a broken family) and what I couldn’t do. He made up the difference! My imperfectness became enough because HE knows my life, my heart, my experiences and he made what I could give, though limited in many ways, enough.

I really needed that experience to help in dealing with the loss of my mother. I understand the Atonement in a way that I never have before and I am so grateful. Perhaps that was mom's parting gift to me ~ sense of peace that neither of us had when she was here. 

So Happy Birthday, Mom. And thank you for what you have given me and what you have taught me, even in very round about ways. I love you.