Caroline
Really Important Stuff My Kids Have Taught Me # 31
Change
Really Important Stuff My Kids Have Taught Me #28
Tennessee Bridge
I’m already crying and I haven’t even started writing yet. I’m a mess.
In 2003, LG and I, with our three little daughters crossed over this bridge for the first time as a family. The girls were so young: 4,2, and newborn. We had come across the country for law-school and Grandma Gold’s empty house was a perfect place for us to crash while we house hunted (an hour and a half away) in Knoxville. It was two doors down from my in-laws, which is about a mile beyond this bridge. We didn’t know it at the time, but we started a tradition. It had been a long trip, where we learned all sorts of car sanity games. We challenged Abigail to a Tennessee Bridge off. She must suck in all the air support she could and holler “Tennessee Bridge” as we drove over. She should not stop hollering until we safely reached the side closer to grammy’s house.
Crazy Momma
Hiking with Maria
I think she did a pretty good job. Given the incompetency of her models.
I am certain we would have quit before getting to the top without Maria’s help.
Or one of our kids would have fallen off a cliff.
Look she got a great shot. If only LG was looking at the camera this would have been the perfect photo to say goodbye to our life in Tennessee.
Maria said it all would be worth it
when we got to the top.
I believe she was right.
The Snow Blues
What a year.
So, here is your Christmas card.
If you are a diehard,
you can print us out and put us up on your wall
so you can prove to all incomers
that you really do have friends.
This year was the kind
that we didn’t have a professional photo.
We also didn’t want to spend for the
cost of printing and mailing.
To put it lightly,
our family has been tried tremendously.
To put it honestly,
we have walked through hell
and we are hoping that we are on our way back.
It was the kind of year that made me grateful
for a simple family snapshot.
Even if it was
as an afterthought,
and we ended up with a crappy backdrop,
and the sun was in our eyes.
You see
we were on our way to church,
together.
And together
is
huge.
It’s more than anyone can ask for.
This morning
I realized that I wanted a living record
of the end of this year,
as I looked at my daughters
and the love of my life.
We were all in the colors,
black, white, and red.
And I saw that as a great representation
of a very hard year.
We are all
still trying to do the right things.
Together.
And that pretty much sums it up.
God has held us together
in the palm of His hand.
And I am extremely
humbled
and
grateful.
And happy.
I look forward in faith.
Even if the sun has been blinding.
And what better Christmas message is there?
My daughters would not be any more beautiful
with a professional photo to prove it.
My marriage would not be as strong
without the trials and intense work.
My friends would not have reached out to us
in such love
without our pain.
Our gratitude for loving parents
would not be as deep
without the struggle.
And our testimony of a loving God
would not be as intimate.
I think we have every reason
to
rejoice.
Jesus Christ makes all things possible.
He is love and light.
He will blind you
if that is what it takes
to heal you,
to love you,
and
to know you.
And when you get through it,
you will be grateful for a sun so bright.
Even if it hurt temporarily.
Merry Christmas to you.
Especially if the sun is blinding your eyes.









































