InLoveBlog

The Baby Syndrome {vlogs by Caroline}

caroline preschool

I don’t know if I will ever stop calling Caroline “baby” even though she has been telling me for over a year that she isn’t a baby anymore. I always remind her that she’s “my baby.” And she is.

I am a middle child and so I know little about babyhood. In fact, I am pretty sure I came out of the womb totally grown and responsible as I had a sister one year older than me and a brother one year older than her. My next sister was born by the time I turned four and another brother shortly after her. I have always had this inner dialogue that if I wanted anything I would have to get it myself. I don’t know what it would be like to be showered with attention even though I have this super annoying inner instinct to fight for it.

Watching Caroline I am actually stunned by the reality of babyhood. She oscillates between being showered with attention, fighting for attention, and not getting any at all. It must be challenging to be the baby. She’s spoiled rotten yet kind of ignored. I can imagine that may confuse a person. I need to read up on it so I can help her be healthy in her baby syndrome. I don’t want her to grow up all confused and needy.

Today Caroline started her second year of pre-school. I love the mornings that I can go and do whatever I want alone for a few hours. Unlike other parents that talk about missing their kids while they are at school, I look forward to Caroline’s kindergarten and beyond so that I will have a little more time to pursue my own goals without kids at feet. Call me selfish. I think you can just call me honest.

I took a video of Caroline this morning asking her about preschool.

Caroline in her babyhood has taken a real liking to the video camera lately. Here are some other vlogs that she has created. I make a true to life cameo in the first soccer video with my mean adamant mom-voice “NO.” It think I have perfected it if I do say so myself.

I am sure you noticed that I have taught my daughter to chomp on her gum just like me. Just a few weeks ago while driving alone in the car along a country road with no radio reception, I rolled down the windows and chomped away, just because LG wasn’t there to tell me the habit was annoying. It is amazing how chomping helps one to have something on which to focus when bored.

Other side-note: I so loved the Latin man on the sideline at the game. He just seemed to make the soccer game that much more authentic. It was fun to be close to him for one half of the game, but the second half we moved to the other side as his incessant cheering became a little cumbersome even with his fun futbol-inspired accent.

Sunday Pin – Letting go

let go

My thirties have been an intense decade of self-improvement for me. Maybe this is the same for most people or maybe it is just me. I have amazed myself with my ability to adapt, change, learn, and grow. You can’t teach a dog new tricks, but I guess the dog can teach herself.

I have been thoroughly delighted that the older I get, the more I have returned to the things that made me happy as girl and teenager. I feel in some ways I have come full circle. I spent the first ten years of motherhood without a thought for myself and I wasn’t happy most of the time. Honestly, I was lost. Really lost. I was floundering, giving everything I had, which wasn’t much because I was an empty well. I feel like now I’m finally found. I still love the same things I did when I was younger: God, my family, running/biking, nature, art, reading and writing, gardening, teaching and sharing, and friendships. I almost had to let go of all these things to understand their role in my happiness and I had to work at knowing and loving myself to get them all back.

For the sake of my happiness I’ve also had to let go of a lot of unhealthy behaviors, attitudes, and habits and work hard continually to keep them from coming back.  I have tried to let go of comparison, self-neglect, competition, perfection, control, living without boundaries for myself and others, needing others and their love and approval to an unhealthy level, and so many more.

Yesterday, as I was looking forward to my upcoming 40th birthday and reviewing my past I felt a great sense of satisfaction. I have come far. I still have a long way to go, but I am pleased with where I am on my journey. It dawned on me that I have made great strides in all the major areas of my life, so I added them into the blog as pages shown above – Emotional Well-Being, Financial Fortitude, Physical Strength, Social Vitality, and Spiritual Power {I hope I can figure out how to automatically categorize future posts under their perspective subjects because if you hit the page links now nothing is showing yet – If you know how to do this and want to save me hours of research, please e-mail me at alice.w.gold@gmail.com – thanks}

So here is where I stand as of now.

Emotional Well-Being – I have learned that if I want to be emotionally healthy it’s all about being honest and loving myself and others in that honest place,  but if I have to choose between myself and others, I will always love ME first because if I can’t love me, I am really not loving others.

Financial Fortitude – I have learned the VERY hard way that I can’t spend more than I earn and fiscal responsibility is a requirement for one’s happiness. The shopping high I used to seek after is curbed as I’ve discovered it doesn’t give me lasting happiness.

Physical Strength – Physical health feels better than any piece of chocolate cake tastes. Running a half marathon trumps being able to fit comfortably into an airplane seat, although the latter is also a nice perk of physical strength.

Social Vitality – I don’t need people as much as I used to, but I also need them more. I need healthy honest people in my life and the kind of people that I associate with as well as the amount of time I spend with them is a tell-tale sign of where I am on the spectrum of social health. I am working at having more honest, close, and lasting relationships.

Spiritual Power – My faith holds power. It has gotten me through some of the most trying experiences. It has helped me love myself. It has helped me to forgive. It has helped me to improve a day at a time. I never want to be without it.

Happy Sunday!

* I just figured out how to do pages and totally revamped my above categories. Hope you don’t mind.

Lessons from the trail – Surprise Hopscotch

IMG_5463

Last week while I was running on the trail I came across a lovely surprise. Take a look. What would you do? I personally couldn’t let the opportunity pass by. In fact, I even took extra time to get out my phone to photograph it all for you.

I ran in from the top and so when I got to the bottom of the hopscotch where it suggested to take a break, I took it. I stopped my running momentum and planted my feet. As I turned around, to my surprise there were two cyclists and two runners close behind. They didn’t stop but all chuckled as I started to skip through the boxes like a school-girl with a treasure. I giggled at how wonderful it was to just have fun solely for the sake of having fun. I felt twenty years younger. Thirty actually.  My 40-year-old body silently thanked the chalk creator, but my heavy heart and tired mind breathed new life.

What a wonderful idea!

Down the trail I passed an older couple walking a dog and then hit my mileage so I turned around and passed them again on my way back home. I took off my headphones and told them about the hopscotch and declared, “I expect to see you guys have some fun with that.” I turned back to see when I figured they would be right on top of it, disappointingly they  just walked right over the top of it. What a bummer. I so wanted to see the 60 year old folks get the same sense of fun and pleasure I had experienced.

And then the lesson came.

You can’t force other people in to having fun. They have to choose it for themselves.

For me: I choose all the fun I can get. Life is short and I want to enjoy it as much as possible.

Sunday Pin – Afrian Proverb – Sisterhood

african proverb

I’m blogging during Sunday School to the utter disgruntlement of my hubby. Any minute he will look over to the screen of my I-pad, read this, and shake his head at me. I think God’s o.k. with it as He knows I seek Him in my life and understands my struggle to pay attention in this class. (Oh please don’t get this back to my Sunday School teacher). I almost just made a comment so I guess I am really safe because apparently I can multitask.

Heavy on my heart today is the topic of sisterhood. In our last meeting we got to hear from the beautiful young women of our congregation and to my pure delight my daughter Abigail was among them. She’s so beautiful and has grown up strong and insightful. I’m so proud of my girl. She took my breathe away today. How did this struggling mom raise such an absolutely amazing creature? God is good.

Abigail shared a little story about her girls’ camp experience. They went geo-caching and she was so frustrated when she couldn’t find a cache and was disappointed in her intellect when another girl found it before her. (I chuckled as this girl relies on her smarts and believes in them 100% – just like her dad – I wish I could have that intellectual confidence) She talked about how she had realized through the experience that Rachel (the girl who had found the cache) had served as a reminder to the importance of the Holy Ghost. Abigail realized she would never know everything, but God would be there and send her the Holy Ghost to help her when she didn’t. With the help of the Holy Ghost, she could get from where she was stuck to where she needed to go. What more could a mother ask for her daughter to know? I can’t think of anything. I was so so grateful for all the leaders who helped Abigail to have this experience.

Here you can find the touching song that Abigail and her fellow sisters in the gospel learned this week. When they sang it today I bawled like a baby because through this music, sung by women alone, my daughter had the opportunity to learn of her capacity for good. And so much good she and her sisters in the gospel will do.

The Prayers of a Soccer Mom

prayers of soccer parents

I vividly remember the days of AYSO just ten years ago. My oldest daughter, Abigail, had two long pigtails and an orange jersey. LG was the coach, which meant I got to help haul a mini-van’s worth of stuff to and from the parking lot and fields every Tuesday/Thursday/Saturday.  I also got to tow the one and three year old sisters along. It was a tough job. A really tough job. I remember wishing soccer onto my worst enemy…it was just such a heavy load. I had to keep the little sisters entertained and off the field (even though no one probably would have noticed another kid or two in the pack of 8 that were all vying in a tight circle for the ball – they probably would have got some more laughs at all the utter cuteness going on). I used to pray she wouldn’t get hurt, but she would normally bust out of the circle with the ball and head straight to the goal.  I brought the extra water for the kids who showed up without any. I was the team photographer and the team mom and the coach’s assistant.  Just reminiscing those days surfaces the tears to my eyelids and that burning feeling right behind my nose as I try to hold them back.

Besides church, the way I have created the most friendships in the past 10 years, is without a doubt, on the sidelines of a soccer field. Two states, seven teams, ten pairs of cleats, fourteen coaches, hundreds of teammates, and thousands of plays made by my beautiful daughter, yet, only one mom and one dad to support her through it all. We have cheer-leaded, coached from the sidelines (to the disgruntlement of the coaches), and loved her unconditionally through the good, bad, and downright ugly. I would say we, but if you know my husband, you will know it really is just I, have even been known to humiliate her by screaming a bit too much. I’ve worked on it. A lot. She still can recall the time when she was seven and shot that ball high and made the goal in the corner pocket. It was her most amazing shot ever. She didn’t even mind my whooping and hollering over it. She still has a fear of being goalkeeper as it is her worst position. She gets too bored. She plays better on the move. Thank goodness she never plays there any more…talk about needing a Xanax. I’ve never prayed more in my life then when those offenders broke through the defense and headed toward my Abigail.

Fast forward to this week. It was Abigail’s first chance at getting onto a high school team. She has dreamed of this moment her entire recollected life. We prayed for her success. We all prayed, the whole family. She has worn Mia Hamm’s #9 as a good luck charm since she was old enough to choose. She has probably played soccer more days of her life than she hasn’t. Nerves were high. She has conditioned all summer at 7 am. Yes, ALL summer at SEVEN a.m.!! She’s only 14 and so she doesn’t even drive. Guess who had to get her to the field? Me. I am a soccer mom. It’s my duty. Just like other moms go to work and clock in and sit at their desk and push through the piles of e-mails and paper, I got up, got her up, filled the water jug, made the high protein breakfast, and made sure her soccer bag was stocked with all the soccer necessaries: cleats (check), shin-guards (check), sunscreen (“Mom, I don’t need it, my skin is protected by all these soccer tans – her poor stark white feet), IB profin (for the sore quads that no longer fit into skinny jeans), tennis shoes and regular socks (check – they don’t just play soccer when they get older, they work out HARD). Unlike other working moms I don’t get paid with money. My pay is in my daughter’s happiness.

So I’m sure you can imagine how I was feeling after all these years at working so hard, my payday was on the line, the big mean boss was going to be the deciding factor as to whether or not I would be paid at all. It was up to the boss-coach to make my daughter happy or make her life come to a screeching halt. Why did I sign up for this gig again?

The first day of try-outs went extremely well. She and her dad had forbidden me from watching, but I still stole in a bout of sneaky spying while on my bike-ride. The bike trail passes right by the field (o.k. just a half mile north) but if I watched from the upper fence I knew I wouldn’t be noticed. I could only watch for five minutes before I had to run (o.k. I rode like hell) away from it all. It was just too much to take in: my baby girl with the pony tail (ironically enough about the same length as when she started playing 10 years ago) was cruelly forced up and back the fifty yard line by the bosses. She was doing sprints, high knees, squats, push-ups. I about puked. She was good. She was smart. She was dying! But, she was tough. She was an athlete. She had earned her right to be there. I prayed in gratitude.

Day 2 of tryouts wasn’t so good. I forced myself back to bed after dropping her off. I totally ignored my other three children all morning because I had to hide away and pass the time as quickly as possible. After the three allotted hours of tryouts, I anxiously waited in the mini-van in the parking lot for her to come and give me the news on the chosen players. She really wanted to make that JV team. For fifteen minutes, I abused myself with negativity and reprimand (you should have hired a private coach, you should have paid the money for the club team, you should have bought her the fancier shin-guards.) As the other soccer moms ran to their girls, I stayed put. I didn’t want to chance crying in front of everyone if the news was bad. I watched like a hawk, Abigail’s every step, every movement, every facial expression for any sign of anything. I wanted to steel myself for whatever was to come. She seemed in good spirits? Should I be excited?

She got in the car and told me that they wouldn’t post the results until later in the day on the internet. We started toward home. As we drove, she unloaded. She didn’t do so good. She hurt her back again. My first reaction was BAD, real BAD. “Abigail, you know you have that back problem, why didn’t you stretch better? I dropped you off twenty minutes early this morning!” The tears started rolling, “The coach asked me what was wrong. He said it was all about me in June, but today I looked bad. I told him I hurt my back yesterday.” Soccer momming is brutal, “Oh Abigail, you will never make the team. They aren’t going to want someone injured.” Abigail (my daughter that we often call the mini-borg because she has very little emotion like her dad) started convulsing. I pulled the car over, I couldn’t see through my tears. “I know exactly when I hurt it yesterday, but it was just stiff, until today. I couldn’t play mom. I couldn’t play! It hurt so bad.” I prayed for guidance and strength. “Why didn’t you say anything Abigail?” “I didn’t know it was bad until today.” She had the same injury in the Spring and it was back.

We called LG at work. I told him I would get this baby girl an MRI if I had to. We had to get to the bottom of it. She has to be healthy enough to play soccer. We got her an appointment a few hours out. We waited. We cried some more. Abigail ate the lunch I made for her between sobs. The doctor had no answers. I asked him point-blank three times to give us a diagnosis and he had NOTHING to say but that she should either 1-consider physical therapy, 2-pay the thousands to scan for a very unlikely bulged disk or 3-find another sport. I e-mailed the bosses (I mean coaches) to tell them Abigail’s situation. She was certainly good enough to play on the freshman team which would be trying out tomorrow, but the doctor told us she wasn’t to have any sports for two weeks. Could they grant her a spot based on performance prior to injury? PLEASE!! I begged. Actually, I was totally neutral. I didn’t want to scare them. I prayed for mercy. Abigail without soccer would be like a cat without a tail. (We actually used to have one of those and now it is weird to see cats with tails) Maybe we could move on without soccer. Maybe.

Abigail didn’t make the JV team. We figured her soccer days were over and got her packing to head to girl’s camp. She was happy she would be able to go…she thought she would have to miss it for soccer. As the day went on, her resolve amazed me. As we took the hour and a half drive a day late to camp I told her how proud I was of her. She had handled herself like a pro. (I left out my secret thought that the pros weren’t ever going to happen) I told her I was mostly proud that she cried and that she had feelings. It sucked to see her so sad, but it was nice that she was honest about her utter disappointment. She said, “thanks mom, maybe it’s for the better, I’ve got a lot going on this year.” I knew she was lying. I prayed in parental pride and told God he was good for getting her through the day. I especially thanked him for getting me through the day. Us through one of the hardest days of our lives.

Later that evening I got a response from the Varsity coach. He was the one who had noticed Abigail suffering through that day. He said nice things that made my decade, but most importantly he said that Abigail could have a later try-out, whenever she got healthy. My knees hit the floor through the sobs. I prayed in relief. The rug magically appeared again beneath my feet. I stopped myself from driving another three hours to tell Abigail. It’s three days later and she still doesn’t know the good news. We will drive tonight to pick her up early so she can be back to soccer bright and early tomorrow morning , even if it’s just to watch from the sidelines, she still has a shot at her dream.

I cannot wait to see her face. Thank you, thank you, thank you, God Almighty.

After re-reading this tale, I wonder if she is even going to want to keep playing with her bad back. And then the soccer mom in me smacks the regular mom and tells her to quit thinking crazy.

Sugar-free milkshake

letting go

On my journey to being happier at home, I’ve realized that one of the greatest ways that I can find lasting satisfaction is by being happy with myself. Being happy with myself requires the knowledge that I am taking care of myself and that I am progressing on my journey…no matter how slow.

So, one area where I have needed progress is with my addiction to sugar. I love sugar in any form, really, which makes it even trickier to quit. Sugar seems to come in an infinite amount of equally satisfying forms. brown sugar. granulated. powder. high fructose corn syrup. cotton candy. You get the drift. Until this past week I had no idea how much of the food we buy at the store has unnecessary added sugar. Even Cheerios have sugar.

As I was running the other day a thought came to my mind, “go without sugar.” The thought was persistent, “Just give it up. Completely.” My initial reaction as I talked back to myself, “Yeah right, I can’t do that.” I have struggled with my weight my whole life. I thought there was no way I could have the willpower. I thought sugar was a need. It has always been there for me when I need to numb myself from the pain of life.  That’s more than I can say for a lot of people in my life. The thought replied to me, “Alice, you can do this. Just do it for your birthday.” I’ve been wanting to give myself a gift of significance for my upcoming 40th birthday in November.  I figured I could do anything for just 3 months. As soon as I got home I put out my goal of no sugar on a facebook status. I seem to do well when I have accountability to my friends. I didn’t want to give myself the chance to talk myself out of it.

Anyhow, I am proud to announce that I have been off of processed sugar for 6 days and you aren’t going to believe this but I have already lost 10 pounds. It leaves me to believe that the little voice was really a BIG VOICE coming from a BIG PERSON (I call the big person God). I would have never had this thought on my own. Why would I even consider giving up sugar when I love it so much?

I love that I am living up to a favorite quote of mine, “Let go of anything that no longer serves you.”
Sugar has been a crutch. It hasn’t been serving me at all. For years I have tried to pretend that it has served me, but it hasn’t.

This morning was the biggest test of my willpower as I had to bake chocolate chip cookies for my hubby’s church kids tonight. I passed the test! I didn’t eat any sugary goodness.  I can’t even put words to how empowered I feel each time I shun sugar. It is shocking that it feels more and more amazing every time I “just say no”. I wonder if the pride I feel in myself will ever wear off.

As a reward I just treated myself to this. You should try it. It was soooo good.pb smoothie

Sugar-free Banana, Peanut Butter, Chocolate Chip Milkshake

Blend together the following:
2 frozen bananas
1 Tablespoon ground peanuts
.25 oz unsweetened baking chocolate
1.5 cups of milk
optional: 1 Tablespoon honey, 1/2 or 1 cup of cooked oats

ENJOY!

We can do hard things. Yes we can. Don’t sell yourself short.

You’re Gold.

I’ve thought many times that I should dedicate this song to my girls.
They are gold literally and figuratively.
If you don’t get it, remember our last name is Gold.
I married into a great last name, but even better than the name is the fact that I am a mother to four beautiful daughters who are truly golden. They shine so bright and make me the richest woman in the world.

you're gold

Here are Bella and Sophia mining for gold at The Mormon Batallion Center last week.

I was impressed today by this video made by a bunch of old stuffy Mormon clergy.
It touched my heart as I thought about these old dudes putting aside their stodginess to get a very important message out to the youth that they are called to lead.

You’re gold. You’re all gold.

We had a lady get up in church yesterday and talk about her newly appointed position as the suicide prevention specialist for the state of Utah. She talked about how excited she was to get out an important message to the kids in the state of Utah. Her message is the same: You’re all gold. She said she may not be able to teach them the gospel, but somehow she would find a way to get the message into the kids….they are of infinite worth.

This is a concept with which I have a personal struggle. In fact I received a message today from another lady from church. She sat through a lesson and heard a comment I had made. She took a moment today to say this to me:

Just thought I would pass along this quote to you after what you shared in Relief Society. It’s something I’m working on too! “One of the greatest weaknesses in most of us is our lack of faith in ourselves. One of our common failings is to depreciate our tremendous worth.” Elder Perry We need to try to remember that we are daughters of Deity and are so loved. Have a Great Day! P.S. My impression of you is you seem very giving and an incredible mom.

This beautiful little note was such a contrast to the barrage of texts I got last Friday from a disgruntled family member. [Noted: She had every right to be upset with me after my last post that I ignorantly shared and very promptly removed  – My hubby helped me understand that although my quest for honesty is very noble, I can’t force it upon other people or air their dirty laundry] Anyhow, I heard what she had to say but she kept dishing out advice via many texts. It was overwhelming and I couldn’t even process all she had to say. I just agreed with her and tried to keep the interaction to a minimum. She was right, I was wrong, but the circumstances reminded me of my own tendency to think I should control how other people do or do not act instead of just loving them where they are.

How much more motivating it is to hear a person tell me one good thing about myself. In fact, it’s a million times easier for me to to take advice when I know someone truly believes in my worth and wants to lift me up. I am praying specifically this week that God will help me see everyone as the gold that they are, especially within my family. I also hope that my very overwhelming experience from last week will help me remember to keep my compliments at full-tilt and my advice to minimum.

{Family member if you are reading this – which I hope you are not – I love you – I understand you – We are very much alike – I have processed and reprocessed everything you had to say and will try to be better – Please don’t flood my phone with texts again. My heavy heart can’t handle it. Today I am just working on trying to remember that you are gold, and the even harder task is convincing myself that I am gold too.}

On a Wing and a Prayer

While we were at the San Luis Rey Mission in Oceanside last week,
I accidentally captured this photo of a bird in flight.
Seconds before the shutter, the bird was sitting on the head of the Christus.

IMG_3674

We got home in the middle of last night from our family reunion/vacation. It was way more reunion than vacation. The phrase “on a wing and prayer” was forefront in my mind this morning as I reflected on our safe travels. Our car is fourteen years old and after putting in the necessary $600 in repairs and using up most of our short-term savings before we left, the check engine light still came on while we were in San Diego.  When we pulled out of our driveway last Wednesday, I had prayed for the miracle that whatever was to happen with this sad car, I would be able to handle it within our very limited budget. I told God that I would go without a car all together when we got home if it just meant that He would get us there to be with my parents as it was so important to them to have their whole family there. If a running car wasn’t in His plan for us, I asked Him to let me accept it with dignity.

When we arrived without any breakdowns my prayer was all gratitude. Then while in SanDiego when the car wouldn’t start, I prayed for more patience and an angel arrived at my moment of most frustration. We discovered that CA legislation wouldn’t allow Auto Zone to run the free computer diagnostic and that it would cost us $85 at a mechanic’s shop to do something that we are accustomed to doing free at home in Utah. We decided to chance it without figuring out what was going on. On our way home, we pulled over in the middle of nowhere in Southern Utah to look at the beautiful stars and we noticed the car smelling funny but kept going on a wing and a prayer. I was almost in shock when we pulled back into our driveway last night without ever seeing a mechanic.  I then prayed in gratitude again to the best mechanic of all who had watched over us. I fully expect that whenever I finally get unpacked and out from under the mounds of dirty laundry and go out to the car to get groceries that it won’t start at all, but it will be o.k. I know that God watched over us when it mattered most.

I don’t like living on a wing and a prayer. I like having control over everything. I prefer to live without limitations. On this latest trip, I would have preferred to have a new car or at the very least a rental car.  I would also prefer to be like the 12 other high-school friends I shared dinner with while in town: they each have one or two kids and a job. (I am not saying that they aren’t living faithful lives, as I am sure they are, it’s just that I am kind of jealous at the semblance of control they have) I would not prefer to live without two of my children but I would prefer the sense of control that comes with two incomes and a smaller family, but that is not what God wants for me.

God wants me to live on a wing and a prayer. I know this may sound irresponsible or even crazy, but God and I are in tune. I can’t deny it. I also can’t deny that the only way I made it to California was because of Him. In his great mercy, He didn’t just get me there, but He sent me an angel when I needed it, and even got me home too. I don’t deserve his grace. I honestly don’t even want to do it His way. But I am doing it His way (on a wing and a prayer) and I guess He counts that for something. Doing it His way is the best way. If I did it any other way, I wouldn’t have such a sure knowledge, like I do now, that He is there watching over me.

Read here for the origin of a wing and a prayer and enjoy the song.

Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not,
neither do they reap,nor gather into barns;
yet your heavenly Father feedeth them.
Are ye not much better than they? ~ Matthew 6:26

Kindness Begins With Me

wills

Here is the whole Wills’ gang.
In the family department, I do believe I am the richest girl alive.

that pizza

One of the coolest moments of our family reunion happened on Friday night.
My six siblings and I were each gifted a t-shirt to one our favorite family restaurants.
It may have been a silly little thing, but it will be a great memory to hold next to the many others we’ve already made at That Pizza Place.

Last night we celebrated my parents 50th wedding anniversary.
It was a beautiful evening adorned with a lot of old friends and fun memories.
Most of all it was wonderful to celebrate the lives of
two generous souls that I have the privilege of calling mom and dad.
I enjoyed reminiscing about the good people they are and reflected on the many attributes that they tried to instill in their children. Kindness was a priority for mom and dad and still is.

Shortly before the party was supposed to start I found myself stranded in the parking lot of Wal-Mart with a car that wouldn’t start. My hubby was a mile down the road waiting for the chicken we had ordered for dinner. I had just run in the store for the last minutes for the party: green onions, ice, and crayons. When I got back to the car I discovered that the kids had turned off the engine with lights on, A/C full blast, phones charging, and radio blaring….except they weren’t anymore because my battery was dead. I asked a guy to charge me, but it didn’t work. I sat in tears while waiting for a family member to reply to my SOS via text. Several of them went into action to stop what they were doing to come and help, but Abigail brought a man to my attention before any of them made it to me. He was walking up the car. He was an angel sent from heaven as he said, “I worked for Honda for years, let me see what I can do.” I guess we hadn’t hooked the cables up right the first time and he got me on the road in about 60 seconds. I cried some more. I was so relieved that I didn’t have to burden my already stressed family and I could get back to my hubby who, by the way, had told everyone via text that he was just fine as he had a bucket of chicken to keep him company.

Seemingly unrelated was an incident that had occurred day before. My two sisters made reference that this little Honda miracle was my payback for doing the right thing earlier. The three of us had stumbled across $60 in five dollar bills strewn across a loading dock. Instead of pocketing it, we took it in and got it back to it’s rightful owner who was obviously grateful.

As we were always taught as children: Kindness begins with me. I do believe in karma. I also believe that there are so many kind people left in the world.

We interrupt this vacation to embarrass my 14-year-old. {vlog}

So, my whole family is in my hometown of Carlsbad, CA
to celebrate my parents 50th wedding anniversary.
What a great reason to celebrate!
There aren’t enough examples left of enduring love anymore.
Face it, there is a lot of endurance and tolerance that goes into 50 years.

Our family text group has been lighting up my message board
with silly things like one sibling
crossing the CA agriculture border with some fruit
and the fact that if you spend more than $1 on a pair of flip-flops
they cannot be considered flip-flops at all.
My family is crazy fun.

The other day my daughter Abigail found a text conversation
between my sister Sarah and I.
We were discussing our awesome slip n slide dance routine
to The Eye of the Tiger.
Epic, I tell you.
Abigail wanted to know all about it.
I told Sarah we should re-enact it at my parent’s party
because it was surely one of the most beautiful things
any of their children has ever created.
[Forget the 32 grandchildren.]
ha. ha. ha.
Can’t stop laughing.
Good times.
Sarah said on the phone,
“The worst part is that we weren’t
even young enough to blame it on being kids.
I was in 8th grade and you were in high-school.”
The shame.
No, it’s the beauty of siblings.
There is no one else in the world with whom you can act so silly…
except maybe your spouse or kids.

This video is sure to be Abigail’s eye of the tiger someday.
And you are invited to the show.
The horror.
I may regret this someday.
(like when she doesn’t get accepted into BYU
because the admission’s committee does a google search.
Who am I kidding?
I want her to go to BYU as much as I want a root canal.)
I’m mostly just glad that Abigail has been reading my blog
and has given us a great example of vulnerability and authenticity.

Enjoy yourselves!
Because I sure will be while on the beach today.