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Showing posts with label thanksgiving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thanksgiving. Show all posts

Monday, November 30, 2009

Four Days


Four days to spend with family.
Four days that Mark didn't have to go to work.
Four days that I didn't have to go to work.
Four days to play with my baby.
Four days to eat ridiculous amounts of delicious food.
Four days to make lists, scan flyers, map out stores and hit sales.
Four days to spend half our Christmas budget.
Four days to get coughed and sneezed on.
Four days to catch a cold. (Annalyn, not me.)
Four days to fill up my purse with post-its, receipts, tissues and wrappers.
Four days to clean the house and mess it up again.
Four days to read one book and watch three movies.
Four days to laugh and cry and love and fight and plan and remember.
Four days to celebrate Thanksgiving.

How was your Thanksgiving weekend?

P.S. If you missed it yesterday, I was at (in)courage, talking about my list of hard questions. And in case you're not quite ready to return to the real world just yet, don't miss my favorite (fictional) Thanksgiving scenes.

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Thursday, November 26, 2009

Happy Thanksgiving!

Praise the LORD.
Give thanks to the LORD, for he is good;
his love endures forever.

(Psalm 106:1)

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Thursday, November 5, 2009

Sadly, my new modem is not on this list.


I live in the middle of the country, but my roots are Southern. Want proof? Listen to my daughter talk for any amount of time. I guarantee you'll hear her say, "Thank you" at least three times. If not a hundred.

Because that child of mine? Is thankful.

She says thank you for her milk, thank you for her waffle, thank you for her Elmo, thank you for turning on her movie, thank you for changing her diaper, thank you for helping her up the stairs - you get the picture.

And while it is possible that she's just hooked on this phrase (similar to how she has, on occasion, been hooked on the word, "poop"), I also think it does reflect our family's attitude. Mark and I aren't perfect by any means, but we do work really hard to appreciate each other. Even in the little things.

I chalk it up to those Southern roots.

Last year I posted daily in November, writing about something I'm thankful for. I'm so glad I did that, but woo-eee, it was hard. Never has November been so long! This year I'm going to stick to weekly thanksgiving posts. I'll add a MckLinky, so you can link up your Thankful Thursday posts, too.

I've got to tell you: I'm cranky. I've been on the phone with Time Warner customer service for the last 90 minutes. And despite that hour and a half I cannot get back, a new modem and an exercise in extreme patience when the fifth (FIFTH!) customer service person I was transferred to asked for my phone number AGAIN and then had me reboot the router FOR THE THIRD TIME, my internet connection is still out of whack. I kind of want to yell at someone. So being appreciative of the little things is probably a good idea. Here goes . . .
  • Absolute best part of my day on Wednesday was getting my 2010 planner. I'm not just excited to see the blank pages full of possibility - although, I am. But this year's planner came in a Trapper Keeper! Okay, not a Trapper. It does not have a velcro tab or neon colors, but it is a nice, leather portfolio with lots of pockets. It's so soft and pretty, and I want to pet it, George. And, yes, I'm an office supply nerd. That's been established, thank you very much.
  • We took Annalyn to get her pictures taken on Sunday. We hadn't gone for professional photos in almost a year, because a) it's so darned expensive and b) our last two experiences were terrible. So I was kind of dreading this, but it needed to be done. Grandparents were getting antsy. And though our photo session went straight into naptime - also known as dangerous territory! - I'm happy to report that thanks to an extremely patient photographer and a highly entertaining photographer's assistant, we bought way too many super cute pictures! Seriously - who needs 64 wallets? It's not like these were her senior pictures! Although . . .

Nice pose.

I realize those are two minor things to be thankful for today. But it's what I've got for now. I'm sure I'll think of 27 other things I'm way more thankful for as soon as I hit "publish." Maybe I'll write them down for next week.

What are you thankful for today?

Sunday, November 30, 2008

An apple a day...

My Granny was a hypochondriac. We used to joke that she’d had every affliction except prostate cancer, and for that, it was only a matter of time. Granny did have many genuine health problems, though, and she took so many pills she needed one of those pill boxes to separate them for each day.

I’ve worked for two health charities, hearing the stories of previously healthy people who suffered vicious attacks on their bodies by the diseases I worked to eradicate.

One of my closest friends from college was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis last year, a diagnosis made even scarier by the fact that she’s watched her dad and aunt struggle with the same disease for years.

A dear friend from high school died of colon cancer a few years ago. I had lost touch with him, but reportedly, he was diagnosed in the late spring and was gone before fall. Just that quickly.

And of course, last year, I became seriously ill as I entered my third trimester of pregnancy, spending eight days in the hospital and delivering my daughter seven weeks early.

For all these reasons and the dozens of stories I won’t tell here, I’m truly thankful for my health. I may be overweight, asthmatic and allergic to everything that grows. I may have a shoulder that throbs when under any stress and a leg that aches when the weather changes. But really, compared to the struggles that so many people face each day, these things are like a paper cut. Irritating and slightly painful, but nothing to lose sleep over.

I’m amazed at the strength and courage I’ve seen in people who face chronic or deadly illness. The most striking thing from my time with ALS patients was the unstoppable joy so many of them had. But I’ve also been reminded – each time I see someone facing pain or illness, each time I hear another story of cancer or disease – that I’m so very blessed to be healthy. I’m thankful for my health.

Today wraps up my month of thanksgiving. I could name so many other things, people, places and experiences that I’ve been blessed with, that I’m thankful for. What about you? What are you thankful for?

Saturday, November 29, 2008

The List.

I have a list. (Surprising, no?) A list of questions that I plan to ask God as soon as I get to heaven. It’s not a real long list, but it has some of the most important questions in my heart:

Why did my friend Carrie have to die in that car accident?
Why did Mark’s mom have to die before she was even 50?
Why did God send me to grad school? (Why didn’t I love grad school?)
Why didn’t the church plant work?
Why did I lose my job while I was pregnant?
Why are Photobaby and I okay and healthy?

These are the hard questions of life. Don’t ask me to ponder why the sky is blue or why birds sing or if zebras are white with black stripes or black with white stripes. We can figure out those things (some of us can recall our biology classes, the rest of us can look it up on Google), and they don’t impact my heart anyway. But these things that don’t make sense, that don’t fit into a box, that don’t stay resolved – these are the things I long to ask God.

Until then, though, I’m thankful that God has the answers. Even if I don’t. No, especially if I don’t. Because when it comes down to it, I don’t have to understand or even like the way things are. But I believe that God has a reason, an answer. And part of me is glad that my God is so big that no one can know His thoughts but Him.

I’m thankful to love and serve and know a God big enough for my questions…and His answers.

What are the questions in your heart?

Friday, November 28, 2008

You're my person.

When I was in seventh grade, Smitty and I did a report in science class about lightning. In eighth grade, we went on a school trip to Washington, D.C., and took our first hold-the-camera-ourselves photo. In ninth grade, I rode home with her after school and celebrated our grades and class ranks with her mom. In tenth grade, Smitty gave Mark her stamp of approval when he asked me to the Homecoming dance, reminding me that he used to live down the road from her house. In eleventh grade, we starred in our school’s production of “Arsenic and Old Lace.” (Well, Smitty starred. I was just in it.) During our senior year, we traveled to Kirksville with our parents for a campus tour, both of us leaving with revelations: her, that she did not want to go to Truman; me, that I did. We held a joint graduation party, then went our separate ways. So as freshmen, we figured out how to stay close while living three hours apart, sharing details about boyfriends and classes and piercings and changed majors over the phone and this new technology called e-mail.

I could go on, but I’m sure you get the point. Smitty and I have been friends for a long time. What’s funny (to us) is that I recently found a picture of my 6th birthday party, and she was there. We didn’t even remember it!

Smitty is absolutely my best friend, my person. And I’m so thankful for her! But she’s not my only true friend.

In college, I met T-Rex, Triple and Chelley (as well as my Family Group at the BSU and my dorm friends who became life friends), the Iowa-loving, truth-telling friends I will have for life. In grad school (short-lived though it was), I met Amber, the person I may have more in common with than any other. At my first job, I met Colleen, Heidi, Jenn and Jill, the girls who walked with me through rough times with my marriage, as well as amazing successes and devastating failures at work, all while laughing at my ability to become “drunk” over Diet Cherry Cokes. You know about Kevin from my first agency job, but it’s also there that I met Daphne, my copywriter friend who loves country music and small towns and animals and family more than anyone I know. And I can’t forget my church friends – Mandy, Amy, Katie, Jacqueline, Elizabeth – who became so much more than “church friends.” So much more.

These women – along with childhood friends and my new bloggy friends – have listened to me, prayed for me, encouraged me and loved me. And they have made me who I am today. I love my friends, and I am so thankful for them.

What friends are you thankful for today?

Thursday, November 27, 2008

It's not a holiday until someone cries.

My family has issues. I mean, we are full of the crazy. But gosh darn it, I love these people. Even if it's true that in our family, it's not a holiday until someone cries.

We love board games, especially Yahtzee. We love stupid movies, especially ones starring Chevy Chase. We love the Lord, even if our journeys are unique and ever-changing. We love to eat, and feel the consequences as a result. We love Don Chilitos, a little hole-in-the-wall Mexican restaurant in Mission, Kansas. We try to make burritos like they do, but it's not quite the same. Just like the restaurant has never been the same since they took down the fish tank. We love to travel. We love home decorating shows and musicals and the History Channel. Well, Dad doesn't love musicals, and I don't love the History Channel. But we all endure these things for the others.

We are family. And I love them. And I'm so very thankful for them.

Happy Thanksgiving, from my family to yours!

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Roll On, Eighteen Wheeler, Roll On!

As I may have mentioned a time or twelve, I have much angst about my career path. I’ve had several jobs since graduating from college, all of which started as my dream job and ended as…well, something else entirely. I’ve also talked about money and how we just never have enough of it.

But what I haven’t shared with you is how my husband is an incredibly hard worker, and how he’s been blessed with a great job.

The story is a long, winding one, but the short version is this: I pushed Mark about finishing college for several years, afraid that he would waste his potential and end up as a truck driver, like his dad. And then Mark realized that he enjoys driving and wanted to be a truck driver.

Of all things!

So, a few years ago, he embarked on a determined journey to become a truck driver. He worked long, hard hours at FedEx Ground, driving and delivering in snow, sleet and ice, working through injury and illness – all for not much pay. He then jumped through a lot of hoops to move from that job to a job at FedEx Freight (yes, it’s a separate company), spending time, money and hope on his belief that working there would be good for him and good for our family. Finally, three years after first applying to work there and just a few months before I got pregnant, he was hired part-time. The bad news was that he was working two jobs for most of my pregnancy. The good news is that he eventually moved to working full-time at Freight, earning shorter hours, a better salary and better benefits.

And even though he doesn’t get to drive as much as wants yet, and sometimes he gets an old forklift to use on the dock, and his hours keep him away from his loving wife – Mark loves his job. He’s doing what he wants to do and being rewarded for it.

I love – and am so thankful – that one of us has an angst-free career. And more importantly, I’m so very thankful that Mark is a hard worker who provides for his family.

This hasn’t changed how I feel about driving a truck and unused potential. I won’t be surprised at all if God has something else for Mark later down the road. (Ha! “Road” – no pun intended, but ha!) And I still cry buckets when I hear Alabama sing, “Roll On,” the song about a truck driver who gets stranded in a snow storm. But for now, I am thankful that God has provided this job for Mark. And I’m thankful that Mark does it.

If you weren’t doing the job you currently have, what kind of job would you like to have?

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Sleep in heavenly peace.

For 9 1/2 years, Mark and I had a bedroom full of hand-me-down furniture, including the full-size mattress we slept on. It was crowded. And not at all resembling the Pottery Barn catalog. But it was functional and free.

Then a couple months ago, I was running late for church, so I drove separately while Mark went ahead with Photobaby. On my way there, I heard a commercial on the radio for a furniture store that was closing and holding a big sale. Well, actually, a HUGE sale! (Imagine that being shouted in radio announcer voice.)

So on a whim, we drove across town to the closing store and checked out the their furniture with slashed prices. About an hour later, we were the proud owners of a new bed frame, mattress (queen size!), dresser, chest of drawers and side table. Just like that!

Well, there was a bit more to the story, including negotiation and calculation and consideration and...well, figuring out if we could really afford it.

But the end result is that I now get to sleep on a big, comfy bed. And I'd gotten so accustomed to our old, small, not comfy bed that my new bed feels like a fancy hotel bed (like the one Photobaby is rolling around on in the picture). So, now, every time I get into bed, I can't stop myself from saying, "Ahhhhh...."

Hope that's not too much information for you. But I just can't help it - I'm thankful for my new bed!

What's your favorite piece of furniture? Are you pro-Pottery Barn look, or anti-Pottery Barn look?

Monday, November 24, 2008

The quietest and most constant of friends

Books are the quietest and most constant of friends;
they are the most accessible and wisest of counselors,
and the most patient of teachers.
~
Charles W. Eliot

Have I mentioned that I love reading? Oh, just a few times? Well, then, you won't be surprised to know that I'm thankful for books. After all, if it weren't for books, I never would have learned that...
  • Magic exists, and good trumps evil. (Chronicles of Narnia)
  • When standing or eating in a field, cows all face the same direction. (The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn)
  • Fried worms are chock-full of vitamins. (How to Eat Fried Worms)
  • Old desks and closets always have secret compartments. (Nancy Drew)
  • Murder may always be wrong, but sometimes it's understandable. (A Time to Kill)
  • Pigs can't look up. (Encyclopedia Brown)

Books have played such an important part in my life, from walking uptown to the tiny town library in the summer to check out the next Trixie Belden book to avoiding chores and hearing my mom shout, "Get your nose out of that book!" to earning pizza with the Book-It program to my first job shelving books at the next town's library. And hopefully, someday soon, they'll play a big part in my career!

I'm thankful for books.

Do you prefer to check books out of the library or buy them? Do you love the smell of old books, or think that musty paper is gross? (I'm sure you could guess, but I'm a fan of musty paper.)

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Yes, I'm one of those people. I'm a scrapbooker.

Seven years ago, my cousin invited me to a Creative Memories party. She sold the scrapbooking products, and even though I was broke and had no business buying paper and stickers, I went to spend time with her. While I was there, two things happened.

I realized my cousin is a good salesperson. And I began scrapbooking.

I’ve always loved taking and collecting photos, and I had journals, albums and even a few scrapbooks from years before. But this type of scrapbooking was purposeful, creative and addictive. And I haven’t stopped doing it since.

I’m happy to say that my scrapbooking style has changed since that day I glued a few graduation pictures and a purple border on a page. Since working at Archiver’s part-time, I’ve even started getting fancy and using ribbon and (I can’t believe I’m saying this) stamps and ink on my pages. I have more paper than I could ever use, more projects than I could ever finish, and more stacks of photos than I can get organized.

But I love it. I’ve even tried to make a business out of it. (You can see a few books I made – and hoped to sell – below.) I’m glad that didn’t take off, though, because this way, scrapping is still a hobby. Still something FUN. I’m thankful for scrapbooking. It’s a way to preserve and honor memories, but also a way to connect with other women and spend time with friends.

Do any of you scrapbook?

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Thankful for choir, I am.

Last Sunday, our choir sang, “The King of Love My Shepherd Is.” It’s a beautiful song, and this was the second time we sang it. When we did it two years ago, I didn’t like the song much. It was slow and difficult. And I got out of breath every time we did it. But this time, the notes and breathing patterns came a little easier, and I was able to appreciate the simple, yet stunning, beauty of the words and harmonies.

[In case you’re wondering, our choir called this song, “The Yoda Song.” You know, because silly title, it has.]

I’ve been in several church and school choirs, including Swing Choir in high school. I confess, I got out of most the dance routines by serving as the accompanist. But play a little Beach Boys tune, and I just might find myself walking in a square and whipping out jazz hands.

But I digress. My point today is that the church choir I sing with now is my favorite one of all. It’s full of talented people, and it’s led by a gifted and God-focused director. I’m thankful for “the best 90 minutes of my week,” as Brett (our director) calls it. I’m thankful for choir.

Here’s a sample of the song we sang last weekend. Imagine it with less (lots less) flute and less Mormon Tabernacle-ness.

Are you involved in any church ministries? Have you ever sung in a choir? Am I the only person who really dislikes the flute?

Friday, November 21, 2008

"Education is a progressive discovery of our own ignorance."

Title quote by Will Durant.

I was brought up to value education, and I'm so thankful. My mom is a teacher, but even before she went back to school to get her degree, she was constantly teaching us at home. One of the things I remember her saying so often was, "Look it up." And off I'd go to the World Book encyclopedias. (These days, I'm constantly going to Google to look something up, so clearly this lesson is one that has stayed with me!)

I was able to attend decent schools at little cost to myself. I was challenged and encouraged and taught. I could name many things I regret or resent about my education or lack thereof, but when I think of the opportunities I had compared to those so many others do not, all I can say it that I'm thankful for my education.

"An education isn't how much you have committed to memory, or even how much you know. It's being able to differentiate between what you know and what you don't." ~ Anatole France

"I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think." ~ Socrates

Thursday, November 20, 2008

I'm thankful for Camp Fire.

I was a Camp Fire girl. Girl Scouts weren't really big in my town, plus my mom had been in Camp Fire and so had my cousins. So of course that's what I did. We met in our church basement and learned about Veteran's Day (sending Valentines to Vets every year), science (getting beads and patches for experiments such as squirting iodine on vegetables to see which ones were starchy), sewing (my mom made me put my beads and patches on my vest myself), and fashion.

Just kidding. There was nothing fashionable about those bright blue pants.

We also had campouts and sang songs and made foil dinners. I learned how to properly fold up a sleeping bag and that 90 percent of your body heat is lost through your head*.

I learned a lot and had a lot of fun in Camp Fire, and I'm so thankful it was a part of my life.

What about you? Were you a Camp Fire girl or a Boy Scout or anything like that?

* I realize this is possibly untrue. I don't claim to be a scientist or meteorologist or anything of the sort. I'm just reporting the facts as they were taught to me.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Gone, but not forgotten

Today’s title refers to both Veterans Day and my grandfather, a veteran. I intended to write about Veterans Day on the actual day it occurred, but I forgot. Not for long, though, so here are my thoughts.

My mom’s father was an Army man. He served in the Korean War and WWII and worked for the government even after retiring as a Lieutenant Colonel. He would have made it to the Colonel rank, but he didn’t have a college degree. He actually didn’t even graduate high school and instead earned his GED.

His name was Mervin, but I called him “Dakie.” (That’s with a short “a,” rhymes with “khaki,” for those of you who didn’t have a Dakie of your own.) Reportedly the name was created when I tried to imitate my mom, who called him “Daddy.” (She’s Southern. They do that.)

My Dakie was from Georgia, and he could wiggle his ears. He loved spending hours working in the yard, and sometimes when we went to visit him, he’d say to my dad, “Tom, I’ve got a little chore I need some help with.” That usually meant he needed help with an outdoor and/or handyman project, although rumor has it that it once involved nose hair.

My mom tells me that Dakie was just as accident-prone as Mark; unfortunately, they never met. Dakie made a funny little noise to tease our cats every time he came to our house, and he fed dinner scraps to the birds every night. And one time when I was at his house – just me, no parents, no cousins – he told me that I’m his favorite. He also thought I looked like Brooke Shields, so I say he had good taste.

Dakie, holding me as a toddler. I'm not sure, but I think he has part of an Easter egg on his head!

Together with Granny, Dakie traveled in his motor home to Good Sam Clubs, taking us grandkids to Lake Paradise for cookouts, paddle boating and swimming. When I was a real little girl, I would spend Fridays with Granny and Dakie. We would drop Granny off at the beauty parlor, then afterward we’d all go to Hardee’s and eat hamburgers with ketchup and mayonnaise. For dinner, Granny would cook him big meals with mysterious foods like collard greens.

Dakie was a fast driver and a terrible driver (a trait my brother has definitely inherited), and I remember one time he got a ticket on the way back to our house – with my brother and me in the car. And Dakie read his Bible every morning and went to church every Sunday and loved the Lord.

As a matter of fact, I remember one of our last conversations being about the trip he’d just taken with his church, to the Presbyterian Church’s general assembly. Well, that, and the dog race track they were building near his house.

But more than any of these things, the thing I remember most from my Dakie is the importance of patriotism. He had fought for our country; he even came back with some shrapnel in his shoulder. He taught me to stand at attention during the national anthem, and he taught me to respect the American flag (including how to fold one and when it should and should not be flown). And when I stood at Fort Leavenworth during his funeral in the summer of 1991, I learned how brutal the lonesome notes of “Taps” are and how jarring the sound of a 21-gun salute can be to your heart. Like so many of our country’s heroes, my Dakie may be gone, but he will never be forgotten.

I’m thankful for my dear granddad, and for all the men and women who serve and have served in our Armed Forces.

Have you or any of your family members or friends served in the military?

Monday, November 17, 2008

That's HOW many points?


I just got back from my Weight Watchers meeting. Today's timely lesson was about Thanksgiving and involved the time-honored tradition of writing down everything you think you'll eat on a paper plate. And then counting up the points. And then sharing with the whole group.

I didn't share with the group. But I'll share with you.

If I'm honest about what I would normally eat at a Thanksgiving dinner, it would add up to about 50 points for the meal.

We go to three Thanksgiving meals in a two-day span.

Just to put this in perspective, because I'm a chubby girl, I get 28 points each day and 35 flex points (per week) to use however I want on top of that. (For those of you who also do WW, please don't calculate just how much that makes me weigh. Please?) So, there's really no possible way to stay within my points allowance eating like I normally eat.

Then again, I've been paying for WW for 3 or 4 months now and have lost 5 lbs. So clearly, I'm still eating like I normally eat. Hmph.

Well, this is a bonus gratitude post. Like it or not, I need Weight Watchers. And I'm thankful for Weight Watchers. I just wish they'd magically lower the number of points in a big ol' serving of cheesy potatoes!

What's your favorite holiday dish?

Never thought I'd say this...

Some girls are good at sports. And, feminist that I am, I’m all for girls and women getting equal opportunities in the athletic arena. I believe team sports teach young people life lessons that just can’t be found anywhere else. Even, much as it pains me to admit it, in band. I believe athletics in general encourage healthy lifestyles and dedication and ambition. And I believe that showing support for “your” team is one way that schools and communities bond, and that’s a good thing.

In sum, I think sports are great.

But while some girls are good at sports, I am not one of them. Smitty was. She was a good basketball player. Not me, though. It didn’t matter how bad I wanted it or how many hours I stood in my driveway practicing free throws, I am not an athlete. I may be competitive. I may have rhythm. But I am not an athlete.

Nevertheless, I am thankful for the time I have spent in sports. From gymnastics to t-ball to dance lessons to volleyball to basketball to aerobics, I have made friends and learned lessons and received many a health benefit from athletic activities.

I also collapsed, wheezing, on the floor after doing a few too many separators. And tripped over my own two feet running down the court and stood up, mortified, only to hear my own coach holler a joke at my expense. But that’s been so many years ago. I’ve forgiven that wretched coach and focus on the good things I learned from sports. Mostly.


That's me in the back, smack dab in the middle. My dad was the coach of our t-ball team that year, so we're standing in my back yard. That's my friend, Elise, standing next to me. We met playing t-ball. Neither one of us was an athlete.

Did you play sports? Do you now? What have you learned from sports?

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Our house is a very, very, very fine house.

With two cats in the yard. Life used to be so hard.*

Well, we do have two cats. But I'm telling you, they had better not be in the yard. I tell them when they try to escape, "You live inside, not outside."

And life has been hard before. Probably will be again. But not so hard that I didn't have a house to call home. I'm thankful for a home.

Some people don't have a home. Some people have many homes. I'm thankful that for as long as I've been around (which is getting longer every day), I've had one home. Sometimes it's been a small home or a borrowed home or a broken-down, needs a handyman, why'd we buy it in the first place home. But I've always had shelter. I've always had a home. Here are a few:
This is the first house I remember. The old photo doesn't do it justice. Of course, I mainly remember the inside and happy toddler things. My parents built our house (below) when I was 4 years old, so my brother and I could attend better schools.
The house I grew up in. It's a green house. And a fairly small one. But it was often a fun house and always a loving house, on a quiet street in a small town.

The first house Mark and I bought. The one we now can't sell. The first house Photobaby ever lived in.

What's your favorite home? Have you had many over the years?

* From "Our House" by Crosby Stills Nash & Young, in case you don't know this one.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Proof.

Today, I’m thankful for cameras and pictures. As you might have guessed by my blog name, I love photos. I love taking them and having them and framing them on my wall and putting them into scrapbooks. I don’t necessarily love being in them, but for today’s post, I’m going to put up with it. Because today, thanks to the wonder of photography, I have proof of a few things I’ve told you about. Here goes:

Remember when I said my parents let their cat sleep in my crib? Check this out:

And what about that time I talked about diversions at work, and I told you about my friend dressing up as a clown. Well, here we are:

Just recently, I told you the sad story of my doll collection, the one that never got taken off its shelves. Is it weird that I took a picture of them?

Oh, oh, remember when I told you that one of these days I’d find the picture of my nerdy self holding my spelling bee trophies? I swear, my mother made me pose for this one:

And, here’s one just for fun. I was not kidding when I said I love music. I love it so much that I’m willing to show you this picture – of Photokid jamming to her Walkman:

So, there you have it, folks. Proof that at least a few of my stories were not made up. And for that, I’m thankful for pictures.

Do you like taking pictures? Are there embarrassing pics of you lying around somewhere?

Friday, November 14, 2008

I'm thankful for my church.

Church camp, New Mexico, 1992

I’m so thankful for my church. Actually, I’m thankful for several churches:

  • The church where my parents met – Mom and Dad lived in different suburbs and attended different schools. If it hadn’t been for their church, they might not have met. And then where would I be?
  • The church I grew up in – I was taught, encouraged, challenged, protected and loved at that church. The pastor, my Sunday school teachers, the choir directors, our youth group and even the little old ladies – they all played a part in my spiritual growth. I learned the books of the Bible and all its stories, I learned life lessons with illustrations involving toothpaste and construction paper hearts, I held crying babies in the nursery and taught crafts to the children at Bible school, and I sang beautiful songs that I’ll never forget (“In Remembrance” with the adult choir, “From East to West” at church camp, Michael W. Smith’s “Give it Away” with the youth choir). The church of my childhood helped make me who I am today.
  • The church I was married in – Even though I didn’t grow or learn much here (I only attended on weekends home from college), it holds a special place in my heart thanks to my wedding. And the Christmas event when my brother and I performed “O Holy Night.” And my mother-in-law’s funeral, where almost 700 people piled into the sanctuary and even the pastor cried. But I’ll be honest, I mostly remember this church as the site for my wedding.
  • The Baptist Student Union at college – The BSU encourages its members to get involved with a local church, rather than depending on this campus organization as a church family. But for the four years I was at Truman, the BSU was my church family. I attended a local church, and it was good. But it was at the BSU that I learned why I believe what I believe. It was there that I met many of my lifelong friends. It was there that I turned when I had questions or problems or devastating news or cause for celebration. It was there I learned how much I enjoy leading Bible studies, as well as praise and worship. It was my church home.
  • My current church home – Pastor Bob is one of the most dynamic and convincing speakers I’ve ever heard. Pastor Todd is the most passionate and caring pastor I’ve ever met. Brett is the most talented worship director I’ve ever had the honor of working with. And the Sunday school class (or Adult Bible Fellowship, as we call them) we walked into 5 years ago has led to the most amazing and challenging experiences of my life. I learned massive amounts about doctrine and practice, I met and bonded with an amazing group of women through weekly Bible studies, I learned a boatload of lessons by planting a church with these people, and I will be friends with some of the folks I met in our ABF forever. (Cue “Friends are Friends Forever” now…)
  • The church we planted – I learned a lot by planting a church. I did good. I made mistakes. I’m still hurt over how it all played out. But I wouldn’t change it for the world, because I know that we answered God’s call. And I can’t wait to see what His purpose was in having us experience what we did.
  • The Church – God’s Church is an amazing phenomenon. The simple fact that we believe in salvation through Jesus Christ creates an automatic bond between fellow Christians. Like the way I knew I’d found a friend when the girl sitting next to me on the first day of grad school orientation told me she liked my ring (the one with “Jesus fish” on it, you know, so people know I’m a Christian). I’m thankful for my brothers and sisters who stand with me. You know who you are.

I’m thankful for all my churches. What about you? Has your life been affected by a church?