Poetry + Writing

Ordinary is Extraordinary

Who else struggles with perfectionism, comparison, feeling insignificant? It’s bad when I feel it for myself, but it’s downright criminal when I project that onto my kids. And I do project. All of the time. I want the best for them, therefore I want the best of them. I get totally competitive. All of the time. Oh, how unfortunate of a mother I have been. My oldest, Abigail, has born the biggest brunt of it. In fact, the other day after a low-achieving track meet, I was concerned when Abigail wouldn’t tell her slower-than-usual-finish-times to her friends. When they asked, she  just acted like she hadn’t checked her time at all. I knew she had checked it. It’s just that my perfectionism has become a part of her, and she couldn’t let herself admit the obvious…she was having a bad running day. I tried to comfort her on the way home, “Abigail, sometimes we just have off days. It’s o.k.” This morning I read this poem (Make the Ordinary Come Alive by William Martin) on the facebook page of a family member. Even though the wisdom of it stems from Taoism, which I don’t really practice, I believe it is universal. (And, I also believe I am going to study up some more on the way of the Tao – is that how you say that?) The simplicity of the wisdom blew my mind. I’ve been pondering on it all day. It struck me to the core. I couldn’t wait to share it with you. IMG_5065Do you see all those boys back there watching my girl? Yeah, she’s actually extraordinarily beautiful…even though ordinary is beautiful enough. Or they could be looking directly at me…the crazy lady with the camera cheering louder than all the rest of the crowd. ha.
 
Do you, like me, see how the words of this poem, will change “Abigail sometimes we just have off days” to “Abigail it is so beautiful that you can run!?”  How blessed we are. How blessed we are indeed with this ordinary life. So, as my kids age and prepare to fly the coop, I have a few new guideline questions for myself:

  1. Am I teaching them that the ordinary is extraordinary?
  2. Will I be not just o.k. but proud to tell my friends who raised the next president of the United States that my child is a mailman and loves it?
  3. Am I spending my time really celebrating the little things like apples?
  4. Am I giving them all the experiences that I can? (Those poor kids whose parents won’t allow them to have a pet!)
  5. Am I preaching a sermon of following your heart by following my own?
  6. Do I believe that we are not all just equally important but equally blessed to just be on the journey?

I can’t wait to embrace the ordinary with my favorite people. I hope this new philosophy will give them the space to do the same. I know it will bring me much greater happiness and satisfaction that will replace a life-long dissatisfaction because of wrong feelings of inferiority stemming from my ordinary. My ordinary is extraordinary! And so is yours. What a perfect message on a night that we are having breakfast for dinner. Bacon deserves a party.

A Pause in Parenting {A Poem}

My four beautiful  girls were all huddled around the computer desk a few days ago and were pointing, giggling, and talking as I cooked dinner. They were all so happy that I broke away from food preparation to investigate. (I’m always looking for new ways to make them happy – especially for when they spend time together) Upon inspection of the screen of my laptop, I was surprised to see them looking through my old blog. As they looked through all the old posts with stories and photos, they shared memories and debated names of former stuffed animals.

I was sucked in as easily as they had been. I knew in  my heart Abigail was just making a really good attempt at procrastinating her homework, but I let it slide. We all ooo’ed and awe’d at how cute everyone’s younger and littler selves were and shared our opinions on silly things. “Sophia, you always look better with shorter hair.” “That was so fun when we dressed as Rapunzel.” “I wish Caroline could have kept her curls.”

Bella remembered out loud, “That time Caroline threw up in my mouth was so gross.” Abigail found the photo of her first crush in 5th grade and we discussed her continued respect for  boys with brains. Sophia questioned me as to why I let her hair grow so long and scraggly. There were so many happy memories. Even the bad experiences have become happy over time.

It was a beautiful moment that I won’t forget. I felt so close with  my girls. I felt so lucky to be their mom. I was so grateful for so many wonderful memories. I was so astounded that they have grown up so quickly. I wanted time to freeze.

I was so glad that I blogged. My mom pride swelled as I realized that my little hobby had preserved so much for us to share. The girls lamented, “Mom, you used to have the best blog, and now you are so boring. You just blog about your problems.” Out of the mouths of babes. I chuckled as I reminded them that they used to often be mad at me for blogging about them and sharing all their secrets, but was privately happy that they were not just giving me permission to blog about them, but were practically begging for it.

I look forward to sharing more kid stories although I think it is more difficult to find such entertaining material as they age. It will be a fun challenge.

This morning however as I searched my heart and photo folder on my hard-drive for a more recent story or two, I just couldn’t help but feel heavy-hearted with the fact that my little girls are so grown-up.

A Pause in Parenting

They will grow so fast, they would say:
Try to enjoy every day.
I skeptically disagreed.
The dirty diapers will never stop
and neither will the million scraped knees.

I dragged along trying my best
not to totally screw up their joy.
I felt like a failure most of the time
and lamented my previous care-free me.

Ran around like a chicken I did.
Please don’t cut off my head.
Dragged them to and from every magical place
While I often wished for just a moment of peace.

It was in the car and school and church
and yard and kitchen and parks
that each little memory was made.
I didn’t believe I would ever miss it:
the toil and sweat was pain.

I stole a smile here and a smirk from them there
and a billion laughs and songs and sighs,
I often just cursed all the work it required
and didn’t stop to see the end
that would come quicker than a wink of an eye.

Now, I can’t make them stop.
They grow every day.
A millimeter at a time.
I would debate their inevitable progress still
if I hadn’t seen it with my own eyes.

I can’t stop time.
I can’t keep them for mine.
Someday they will fly this coop.
I didn’t enjoy every minute like I was told
but I tried as hard as I could.

They, however, enjoyed a lot more
then I ever had time to see
and I guess that is the way
that God always intended parenting to be.

Almost Monochromatic

It’s been snowing for
what seems like months.
Today is the second blue sky in
about four weeks.
True story.
Every other day has just been
white everywhere you look.
How my soul loves
the beauty
of a the blue sky
among the
black and white earth.

Winter white.
Everywhere
the eye can see.
The earth
seems
black
under
blanket
after blanket
of
snow.
Dead.
Yet
piercingly
beautiful.
The white
touches the white
part of my soul.
And the black
touches the black.
The complexity
of my emotions
seems to find
a balance
among the
monochromatic
landscape.
The only
colors
that surround
are
black,white, and brown.
And then the clouds lift
and
blue shines through.
Like a breath
of fresh air.
Or water
to the thirsty
Sahara traveler
who reached
her oasis.
There is blue
in my soul too.
And red,
and yellow.
The colors release
to find the sky
and remind me
of my beauty
amidst
the wintery white.

Freckles

Sophia is at 5th grade camp
for one night.
It’s crazy how
one night away
can make a mom so sentimental.
I love you my
sweet sweet Sophia.
I hope no one ever
hurts you.
Ever.
One in four
has blue eyes.
One in four
has polka-dots.
Brought on
by the sun.
One in four
so fine.
One in four
so easy-going.
One in four
so patient.
One in four
so peaceful.
Two of four
in line.
One in four
so tender.
One in four
so sweet.
One in four
so witty.
One in four
so kind.
One in four
of my girls.
One in four
so quiet.
One in four
all dad.
One in four
so mine.

But perhaps
my favorite
one in four
are those
freckles
on your nose.
So unique.
So special.

Just like
one in four.

My Love

Happy 15th anniversary to my love.
Yesterday.
He got a ukulele
and no action at all
because I just had a miscarriage
and it was the best anniversary yet
because he needs nothing from me.
Nothing at all to love me.
It’s his unconditional gift
and I am the luckiest girl in the world.

My love is bottomless.
It goes on forever.
Like through a black hole and back.
Or up to Jupiter
and all around it
and through it 
to the next solar system
and then back
and then back again.
It would take the strongest hurricane ever
to spread the true power of my love for you.
Of course the hurricane would
have to travel the whole earth.
It would take a mouse’s 
smallest tiniest squeak
to fitfully stand as the opposite my 
loudest declaration
of love.
The prettiest fullest
most colorful flower fields
are not as beautiful to me
as your smile
or your eyes
or your hands
or your laugh
and especially your tears.
The happy and the sad.
The grandest canyon
which we witnessed together
as we stood in awe
is not even as miraculous
as how I feel for you.
Even the great Pacific
that gently caresses
the shore
while the sun falls
in majesty
is not as glorious
as what we share.
And I sit
to try and
put words to
communicate
how I feel about you
and nothing comes
that can do it justice
because 
I know that
no matter how much
I love you today
and no matter how huge
that love feels
like my heart is going to explode
somehow
tomorrow
my love will be even greater.
Every day with you adds
a universe to travel,
another canyon to explore,
a garden planted,
and an ocean shore.
How can I express that?
How can I tell our future?
The slowest person
may be the last to laugh.
And that person may be me
every time
but I know I will be o.k
because you will always be at my side
and you
will always laugh first
because you are miraculous
and you will always be smarter than me
but that is one of the may infinitesimal
reasons I love you.
And I will always love you
and that love will always be growing.
It will never ever stop.
Just like our lives together.
Eternal.
Totally mind-blowing.
Completely flustering
because I am not smart enough to understand it
but I know one thing
the only thing that is important.
My love for you
needs time to never end
because it needs
that much time to grow
to reach it’s fullest potential.

My dearest Abigail

My dearest Abigail,
Last week I wrote a whole post just for you 
after you sarcastically questioned what I do all day.
It took me an hour to write.
In detail I explained how my life revolves
around task completion.
80% of those tasks,
I do just for the happiness of my husband and kids.
When I switched from my laptop to my phone
to add this cute picture of your baby sister Caroline
(because it captured what I love about being a mom)
I lost the whole post.

I think God was watching out for me
because I intended to enter that post in an essay contest.
A few days later I thought of something better.
So instead of boring you with what I do all day,
here are my deepest thoughts about motherhood.
These are the thoughts I was too afraid to pen the first time
because I didn’t think I could do the topic justice.
How privileged we are to share the sacred name of mother.
Joseph Smith once said,
 “A man filled with the love of God, is not content with blessing his family alone, but ranges through the whole world, anxious to bless the whole human race.”

I cannot explain myself without this quote. I am at a loss of words to communicate the depth of motherhood. The sanctity of it. The power and pride I feel at being among some of the most noble humans on earth. 
I have been pondering motherhood for several weeks now and writing an essay that captures my thoughts is daunting. Yet, that quote by the wise Joseph Smith explains so simply exactly what I concluded.
Motherhood isn’t limited to those who have given birth. It isn’t even limited to a certain sex or age. Motherhood is a noun, but like it’s counterpart charity, it’s also a verb. In fact, motherhood is charity. Charity at its purest. You know how the Bible teaches that God is love. Well, I am here to tell you that motherhood is love.
Another wise prophet said that 
“motherhood is the highest, holiest service assumed by mankind.”
Let me put this in math terms for you my dear Abigail
since it’s one of your best subjects.
God is love.
Motherhood is the closest we come to godhood.
a=b, c=a, therefore c=b.
I am chuckling at myself because 
I don’t even know if those equations are correct,
but you will.
I look forward to you correcting or congratulating me.
Isn’t it amazing that I am your mother,
but you are smarter than me at math?
That’s another thing about motherhood,
that I can’t go into today.
Let me just say this:
anyone can be a mother.
Anyone can give love.
Anyone.
And everyone should
because love is desperately needed by so many.
Nothing is more disturbing than a mother without love.
I would like to tell you 2 of my most beloved family stories.
One is about my grandma and one is about my mom.
These stories capture motherhood.
I hope to be just like the women I came from.
I hope that for you too.
They are the closest thing I have on this earth
to know what God is really like.
If I want to know how I can be like God,
all I have to do is think about my mom and grandma.
My first story is one the greatest stories of the life of my Grandma Dorothy.
Years ago, in the 60’s,
there was a department store clerk who was really rude to her.
Her two daughters were outraged.
This was an outing they had scrimped and save for.
They were going to buy their mom her first item of clothing
from a nice fancy store.
Grandma walked them out of that fancy smanchy place
and took them down the street.
She purchased a cheap scarf and a box with a bow
at the corner Woolworth’s.
The corner five and dime was a place 
where she shopped the most comfortably.
She took the gift back to the rude sales lady
and said,
“I thought you must be having a really hard day,
and I wanted to cheer you up.”
The woman started to cry
and told my grandma, mom, and aunt
that she had been so grumpy ever since her husband had died
and felt like nobody cared about her
and she apologized.
My grandma gave her a mother’s hug
and told her that people did care.
My mom and her sister Shirley
stared on in awe of their amazing mother
and her humility, grace, and love.
It’s women like Grandma Dorothy that
truly make this world a place worth living.
Their accomplishments aren’t even recognized by the world
like those of politicians, athletes, scientists, and authors
but they mean everything to those who need it most.
Knowing what kind of woman my Grandma Dorothy was
will help you understand the kind of woman my mom is.
In 1985 or so another family legend occurred.
My mom and dad and my six brothers and sisters and I
were leaving Chuck E. Cheese.
We walked out into the parking lot to find an ensuing gang fight.
Weapons were drawn.
My mom walked right up to the two kids in the front
and said,
“Boys, why are you fighting?
It breaks our hearts.”
She then turned to my dad and said,
“Rick, buy these boys some pizza.
They fight because they have nothing better to do.
And they need to know that people care.”
To me, there will never live greater heroes then my mom and dad.
As I watched my dad (with so many mouths to feed already
and a limited paycheck) fork out the cash to feed
20 gang members I was in awe.
Even more inspiring was the sight of my mom seating all those rivals
across from each other in the showroom.
She so easily spoke to each one,
bantered with them, and loved them into their seats.
They had put their weapons away
and were anxiously waiting for their pizzas as the big gorilla sang
“so happy together.”
I watched with a little trepidation but mostly I was beaming with pride.
Especially as I saw my oldest brother,
(your Uncle Erick)
who was a little younger than these boys
follow in the foots of his parents
and sit down with the kids to chat.
As you know Erick is now a football coach and a teacher.
He loves on big tough kids every day.
I personally think he would be very smart if he tries to live his whole life
for just one moment like that from long ago.
And I think that he is living his life for that.
He wants to be embody the finest of motherhood.
(Don’t tell his football team that.)
Is motherhood not loving the forgotten and the unlovable?
My mom is loved by so many.
Many many times as a teenager
I would come home to see someone else’s kid
sitting at our kitchen table.
My mom would be wrapping up her pep-talk
telling them just how loved they were
and how capable and blessed.
She expected the best from everyone’s kids.
She did this because if she knew one thing in this world
it was that love conquers all.
Love makes the world go round.
Love is all you need.
Grandma Dorothy didn’t think she was defining motherhood
during that simple little act of service
given in that small frame of time
in a place that no one noticed.
She was just being the person that she always was.
She was being a person who loves.
She was being a mother.
My mom didn’t love on kids because
she wanted some kind of recognition,
she did it because love was instilled in her
by her mother.
Forty something years later
because of this story
Grandma Dorothy’s grandaughter (me)
would hand over the fresh flowers she had just splurged on
to the cashier at Wal-Mart.
The elderly cashier had just confided
that she was feeling lonely this holiday season.
It would be her first without her husband.
I told her, “Please take these flowers;
I really feel like your husband wants you to have them
as a reminder that he loves you and is watching over you.”
Tears filled both of our eyes.
Motherhood was revealed in this tender exchange.
Motherhood and love.
Yes, my dearest Abigail, motherhood is a verb.
It is love.
Someday in the near future
(maybe even today)
I imagine you reaching out
to someone in need:
a kid at school who is obviously neglected, a homeless person,
a friend who is lonely, a new neighbor, or the sick, poor, elderly, downtrodden.
I imagine the smile that will cross your face.
It will be exactly like that smile you got in the car
that day when your buddy Ryan revealed he
got a rose at school from a secret admirer.
He was so happy and dumbfounded.
He had no idea it had come from you
because you had noticed that he didn’t get anything.
I will never forget your smile.
I made sure to see it in the rear-view mirror
while driving home the carpool.
You probably thought I was looking at Ryan,
but I was really looking at you.
In that moment, in you,
I saw my mom and my grandma.
I saw the face of God.
The face of love.
Yes! a=b, c=a, b=c.
Even if that isn’t correct math
my dearest Abigail,
I hope you will always remember
that motherhood is love.
And you can be a mother
at all times, in all places, and in all things.
And nothing will make you happier.

This post was written for my dearest Abigail and the nienie “motherhood is” essay contest
and anyone else who will be inspired to be a better person by my amazing mom and grandma.
Thanks be to God for giving me the inspiration and the courage to write it.


I just read that I was limited to 500 words, here’s the short version. Not as good.

My dearest Abigail,
Motherhood isn’t limited to those who have given birth. It isn’t even limited to a certain sex or age. Motherhood is a noun, but it’s also a verb. Motherhood is charity. Charity at its purest. You know how the Bible teaches that God is love. Well, I am here to tell you that motherhood is love.
Let me tell you two of my most beloved family stories to illustrate my point.
Years ago, in the 60’s,
there was a department store clerk who was really rude to my Grandma Dorothy.
Her two daughters were outraged.
Grandma walked them out of that fancy place
and took them down the street.
At the corner Woolworth’s,
she purchased a cheap scarf and a box with a bow.
She took the gift back to the rude sales lady
and said,
“I thought you must be having a really hard day,
and I wanted to cheer you up.”
The woman started to cry
and told my grandma, mom, and aunt
that she had been so grumpy ever since her husband had died
and felt like nobody cared about her
and she apologized.
My grandma gave her a mother’s hug
and told her that people did care.

Next, around 1985 another family legend occurred.
My mom and dad and my six siblings and I
were leaving Chuck E. Cheese.
We walked out into the parking lot to find an ensuing gang fight.
Weapons were drawn.
My mom walked right up to the front kid and said,
“Boys, why are you fighting?
It breaks our hearts.”
She then turned to my dad and said,
“Rick, buy these boys some pizza.
They fight because they have nothing better to do.
And they need to know that people care.”
How inspiring was the sight of my mom seating all those rivals
across from each other in the showroom.
She so easily spoke to each one,
bantered with them, and loved them into their seats.
They had put their weapons away
and were anxiously waiting for their pizzas as the big gorilla sang
“so happy together.”
I watched with a little trepidation but mostly I was beaming with pride
as the power of loving others burned into my heart.
Yes, my dearest Abigail, motherhood is a verb.
You are the best of motherhood.
You proved it the day you
got a rose at school for your buddy Ryan.
He hadn’t received any all week
and you sent him one as his secret admirer.
I will never forget your smile
as he showed us his rose on way home from school.
I made sure to look at you in the rear-view mirror
while driving home the carpool.
You probably thought I was looking at Ryan,
but I was really looking at you.
In that moment, in you,
I saw my mom and my grandma.
I saw the face of motherhood.
The face of God.

The face of love.

Your Book

I love my job at Discovery Academy.
I work with teenage boys who are finding their way in this world.
Many of them are really really lost,
and some aren’t,
but they all share one thing in common:
they are at the beginning of their journeys.

Tonight I will witness my first graduation. One of my favorite kids will be venturing out on his own. He’s graduating and I am very proud of him. I feel the full gamut of emotions, but most of all, I wanted to give him the secret to happiness. It may be the last time I ever see him or talk to him and I want him to have a long and full life. I want him to live up to his potential.

What did I come up with? A gifted journal with the following poem.
(I cringe to think about where I would be without the power of my own words on a page)

There are secrets inside of you
that only you will know.
The discovery and understanding
of your secrets
is your most important mission.

Don’t be afraid,
don’t feel alone.
You are stronger than you realize.
Don’t turn away.
Look inside yourself
as your soul is pure perfection
in its complexities and flaws.

Someday in the future
when you are paralyzed
and on the verge of self-destruction,
find yourself a quiet place
and on the pages of your book
unlock your secrets
as they will truly set you free.

If you really want to know,
I promise
your secrets will flow freely,
as you sit down and write.
The words and you
will get acquainted
And when they reconcile,
you will know
who you really are.
Your soul, when revealed at last,
will bare its breathtaking uniqueness.

Your written words will create
your book of life.
If you let it, your book of life
will become your best friend.
It will disclose
your journey to happiness:
the things that were inside you all along.

Your strengths, weaknesses,
experiences, vulnerabilities, thoughts, feelings,
hurts, hangups, loves, and opinions.
Some will be right,
some will be wrong,
but all the words when placed together
will be who you really are.

Someday
because of your book
you will understand
that the only real secret
that needed to be found
was you.
Who you really are.

The real secret to your happiness:
You should be loved
by all
but especially
by your book’s best friend.
because your book
like all the others
is the most remarkable.

The Trenchcoat

I was pretty stoked when I found this trenchcoat 
at the thriftstore a while back.
Did you know that it has a special pocket on the inside for a gun?
My hubby is the one that explained that to me.

I was just thinking how my hubby
would love for me to show up at his workplace
with just the trenchcoat.
If I packed a gun along with it,
I do believe it would make me 50% more sexy.

I got a free item with my purchase.
Of course I picked a book.

Posted by Picasa

Happy Valentine’s Day y’all.
I dare one of you to go to your husband’s workplace in just a trenchcoat.
Let me know how it turns out.

Sorry LG.
All you get is another dumb poem.

There are days.

There are days I want to strip down
and arrive at your workplace in
nothing but a trenchcoat,
but then I remember that you have co-workers.

There are days that I look at our children
and think how amazing we are
and how our posterity is the finest
and then I remember that they screw up,
but they are still the best kids ever.

There are days I can only feel love.
A love so consuming that I feel nothing else at all.
All I can think of is you with your arms around me
and then I remember how that actually feels
 to my skin
and it makes me love even deeper
which I never think is possible.

There are days I want to scream at you
because you frustrate me to no end.
Why don’t you do everything the way
I do everything?
And then I remember that you do the taxes,
and the technical support, and the math homework
and I am grateful that we are different.

There are days that I wonder where you are.
Are you in a man cave or another universe?
You retreat often inside yourself
because you are introverted and overwhelmed.
And then I remember what a great listener you are
which really helps me because I am the talker.

There are days in the distant past
(and hopefully many more in the future)
that the world consisted of just you and me
and we laid around and did nothing
but be together
and I remember those times as
the absolute best.
Ever.

There are days that are swallowed up in the busies.
And you and I run around serving our kids
our co-workers, and neighbors and friends
and we don’t have a second to think about ourselves
or each other.
And at the end of the day,
it’s all we can do to sneak in a good night kiss
and mumble an “I love you”
before the night turns into dreams
and I remember that I missed you
all day long.

There are days.
Many many days.
And hopefully many many more.
Where you and I are in love.
Through the think and the thin.
The wrong and the right.
The counseling and therapies.
And lessons learned and mistakes made.
The tired and the awake.
The kids and the jobs.
The cats and the dogs.
The sick and the health.
The sane and the crazy.
The summers and falls.
And winters and springs.
The basketball practices and dance lessons.
And doctor appointments and lunch breaks.
The afternoon delights and faraway business trips.
The jokes and the tears.
The broken down cars and the puking kids on flights.
The campfires and lightning bugs.
The mountains and hills.
The lakes and the oceans.
The hotels and pools.
The woods and the downtowns.
The pounds lost and the delicious treats.
The Christmases and birthdays,
and Easters and Flag Days.
The scripture readings and temple trips.
The vacations and lack thereof.

But really all those days
make up for the most beautiful thing ever.
Me and you.
Sharing the days.

Because through it all
we can count on one thing
and that is that
There are the days.
And they are ours.

My Man w/o a Middle Name

I love LeGrand Gold. I wish he was given a middle name so that I could say that I love LeGrand _______ Gold because that would seem so much more official.

I do love you LeGrand LG Gold. I hope you enjoy your new given middle name since that is what I mostly call you by anyway. I am so proud to be your wife.

I wrote about my man while sitting at church a while back. This blog seems like as good of a place as any to copy my words for the posterity.

Please ignore if you are single or just mad at your hubby. I don’t want to add to your pain. Just know that I have been single and mad at my hubby plenty. It’s just that right now I can’t imagine my life without the total complete insane love that I feel at this moment and so many others. I am one lucky lucky girl.

I look around the room. One dad takes a screaming toddler out while his wife sits looking relieved for a break and for her partner in parenting and I realize that you are him. 

Then I look straight across the way and I see another dad holding a newborn baby tenderly and I remember how much I love it when you hold a baby. You seem so much stronger in those tender moments. You are the protector for our little ones and the protector of me when I let you be.

I see the teenage boy excitedly taking notes and I think of you and doodling your L’s and your G’s in a boxy font so they array the way you like and I think of your special experience about the Savior of mankind and I thank God for it and how it has given you the courage to keep trying day after day. 

I look up at the Bishopric and remember the days when I was honored the privilege of seeing you lead with humility and devotion. 

I see the father with the teenage daughter and marvel that I did such an amazing job of picking a father for our very lucky daughters. You are a father that is fun, involved, kind and oh-so loving. 

Yes, LG, the 80% of you that is beautiful trumps the 20% that is still learning. 

I love you LG.