Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Leap Day
Keith says everyone should get today off. It's an extra day after all. I agree. It should be a bonus--do whatever you feel like day. The kids have always said it would be great to be born on leap day. I don't think so.
At this time in my life I'm not exactly thrilled with bonus days. I'd like all the days to be over. Most of them are miserable anyway.
My bonus day would be with Ian. We'd get apple fritters for breakfast; Big Macs for lunch with extra fries and lots of root beer. We spend part of the day at the movie theater. We definitely go to the comic book store and I'd let him drive. It hurts to wonder if he would've outgrown comic books by now, but I know he would still want to go to the movies. We'd go to the Harley Davidson store and pick out our dream hog. Maybe we'd catch a flight to Florida to watch the Sox spring training and then have snacks at 3 or 4 different restaurants for dinner. He'd buy souvenirs that make me shake my head, along with witty T-shirts and something with his name on it. We'd stay in a hotel with a pool and I'd even let him go back and forth between the hot tub and the pool--because in my fantasy day, we wouldn't have to worry about what that might do to his heart.
You know, at this point, one bonus day with my son every 4 years sounds pretty damn good.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
"Write What You Know"
Why does God tell us to do things that only He knows we could ever actually accomplish? It seems like kind of a trick to me--kinda like the guy who was lucky enough to be given one talent. He is so protective of the gift that he hides it to make sure he doesn't lose it and have it inadvertently stolen. At least that's how I see it. He didn't maliciously or lazily bury it. He just wanted to make sure nothing ever happened to it. I know that's probably the wrong interpretation--of course it is, I've read the story dozens of times. He was supposed to invest it. Is it just the time I've grown up in that makes me think investments are so risky? What if it was the only thing of worth he ever got and he didn't safeguard it? It's kinda like getting a family heirloom, a necklace or a fancy tablecloth or something. Would you want to set your table and eat on a lace cover that was your great-grandmother's or would you keep it stored in tissue under the bed?
This is a long drawn out introduction to why my scriptures look like they do in this photo. God has given me some really powerful insights into the scriptures; more specifically how to ask Him questions and get answers. I have written the references all in one spot--Doctrine and Covenants Section 4. I've also been given very specific counsel that I am to be a writer--that I should have that as my "career"--that what I write will be directed.
Huh! I can't do it.
How can I write about something that I think I know so very much about, but that I don't live?
Why would anyone listen or be influenced by me? I'm not anybody. Besides, what if I'm wrong? I wouldn't even want to let anyone know if I was attempting to try, because then they would know when I failed.
I feel totally and completely useless. I sleep. I eat--too much of both I'm afraid. I complete the tasks that I have to. I bawl.
This is why there haven't been many posts this month.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Guilty on all Charges
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That's Lucy to the right of his thumb. |
Our girl Lucy is going to the California State Mock Trial Competition. Venture won the county meet on Saturday. Lucy was a good witness for both the defense and the prosecution. I have to say, I was more fond of the basketball playing, resident assistant, than the partier, but she played both parts well. During the scrimmages early in the season, she was a pretrial attorney, but left that role for the more experienced senior when it came down to the final win or lose. Next year, she'll be the only one with any practice doing that and will probably lead the team.
In fact, most of the team will graduate. Of those who actually competed, there were only 3 who weren't seniors. Pretty impressive, huh?
In fact, most of the team will graduate. Of those who actually competed, there were only 3 who weren't seniors. Pretty impressive, huh?
She also got recruited last week to apply to Stanford's high school program. They mentioned financial aid etc. I guess I should believe her that her PSAT scores really were that impressive. She's a good girl. I worry anyway. I'm a mom.
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Sunday, February 19, 2012
"We Are Not Cat People"*
My family is so witty. I'm proud that we are able to entertain ourselves without the help of any electronic devices. Yesterday we went up to the foothills to spend the day. Lucy was at a retreat for mock trial and we had to pick her up at the camp at 9pm. Yes, I know that's an interesting time. I picked it. The group was staying until today at noon, but Lucy needed to be home for the Sabbath. I thought I was a pretty mom to say I would pick her up so late, especially since it was nearly 2 hours from home.
Keith, Mikey and I packed a picnic and left home to arrive in the mountains around lunchtime. There were a couple of really neat towns with an old main street that we could explore. We started at an old church with a cemetery surrounding it. Turns out it was the first Serbian Orthodox church in the United States. I've never seen fancier graves and tombstones. It was a cool discovery. From there we went to a "Used and Rare Bookstore." That took a good hour and then we browsed a kitchen store had a microwave potato chip maker we were interested in. There were 5 or 6 antique shops too. Mikey is fun to hang out with. He doesn't whine and likes to look at everything. I got him candy cigarettes at the candy shop. Keith wasn't thrilled, but I thought they were so fun when I was a kid.
Next we went to the Black Chasm. A vertical cave. They a awesome. Apparently it has features that only 5% of all caves in the world have. Lucy wouldn't want to go in a cave, so that worked out well. We had our lunch there too. We wanted to see the Indian casino in the area, just to see how big and fancy it was. That was a bust. We couldn't get close without paying to park. Oh well, it's not like we were counting on winning at the slots.
So now we come to the part of the day that I think is what I will remember the longest. At about 7 o'clock we had done everything we could do to fill the day. It was dark and most everything was closed. We had eaten a marginal dinner at a local restaurant and we were left to our own imaginations. We parked the van outside a cafe where there were street lights and sat in the car for the next hour and forty-five minutes. We started with the animal game--naming animals, as many as we could, in alphabetical order or not. At one point we named all the kinds of monkeys we could think of.
"Let's do the cat family," I said. We started with cougar and lion; puma, panther, cheetah, leopard, mountain lion, bobcat, lynx, tiger. Then we got tabby, calico, tom, Siamese, Manx?--the one without the tail. There was Cheshire and a few more. Then it got really fun. I said "____in the hat."
Here are some of the responses:
____got your tongue
____sup
____cher in the rye
curiosity killed the____
KIT____
____on a hot tin roof
____o-nine tails
____amaran
____illac
____nip
____nap
____erpillar
____alogue
____aletic converter
____'s cradle
____scan
____'s meow
____woman
____acomb
____apult
It just kept going and going. I'm sure there were more that I can't remember. We were laughing. Anytime we do something like that, I think about how people must have used games like that a hundred years ago to keep themselves amused. I think I'd probably be a good Amish person. I'm so easily entertained. Anyway, we passed the time. Lucy got to stay pretty late and we we together---4/5 of us anyway. Speaking of, I think Ian would've liked the game. He has such a clever wit.
*a phrase Keith taught Ian to say before almost anything else
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Choice and Accountability
Okay, I'm going to date myself here. I used to love the show Truth or Conseqences when I was a kid. Bob Barker was the host--long before Price is Right. I think it was even in black and white.
My favorite game was when the contestants would be sent to their home towns to find people who shared their names with someone famous. They would bring back all the people they found and introduce them on the show. I forget the specifics of other sketches, but I remember it was hysterical.
It's the title of the show that I'm thinking about today--especially the consequences part. I got a good lesson in consequences for my actions this week that made my Valentine's Day pretty expensive. In fact, I think I'm going to use my experience as a teaching tool in young women's under the value of "Choice and Accountability."
I offered to drive an older woman in our ward to the hospital to visit someone in the hospital. I needed to go and make a visit of my own, so why not go together and save her the multiple bus transfers and the time? It was a hectic day, but I found the time and picked her up. We got there and I decided to park in a lot where I knew I was not supposed to park. It's posted. We took in a smiley face balloon and a card and had a fairly good visit, despite the fact that when we got there, our friend was completely covered--over her head and tucked in all the way around--a little scary. We didn't stay very long, about 30 minutes, start to finish. When we got back to the lot, my rugged Montana with super hero symbols on it was nowhere to be found.
Towed.
There we are: me and a 75 year old with no way to get home. I called the number on the sign that I should've heeded and found that the yard was about 5 blocks away. As Shirley and I were discussing the option of her waiting on the bus bench while I walked there and back, the guy who called the tow-truck came over and offered us a ride. He got us there and you'd think the story would end there but, NOOOOO.
I'm not on the registration--only Keith. That's a great story. When Keith bought me the van, as a Mother's Day gift, we had all 3 kids with us. It was fun, to say the least. Lucy fell in an ant bed--a red, mean, biting, ant bed, and then while we were finishing the paperwork, she shut Mikey's hand in the door of one of the models on the showroom floor. Hence, I was off with my 2 year old when the signing happened.
Okay, back to this story. Since I was not the registered owner of the car, did I have proof if insurance maybe that would have my name on it? Sure. I walked back over to the car and produced it. Oh good he said, you can get it, BUT, since you aren't the registered owner, it will have to be cash. No credit cards. $275.00 CASH.
I'm in a really not good neighborhood with a senior citizen and no ATMs to be found. I had to call a friend to come get us, take me to an ATM and then bring us back. She said was would come. YAH!
Nope. Still not over. She called to say she couldn't find the street, at which point my cell phone went dead.
I got out enough that she found us and we went and got the cash.
We got back with time to spare before they closed and I had to produce the documents again with my driver's licence for him to make copies and then he just said thank you, you can go. Well everyone knows you can't get $275 from an ATM--I handed him $280. He made me ask for my change. It was quite a day to say the least.
It was a poor choice. With consequences. Consequences I thought somehow wouldn't apply to me.
Choice and Accountability.
My favorite game was when the contestants would be sent to their home towns to find people who shared their names with someone famous. They would bring back all the people they found and introduce them on the show. I forget the specifics of other sketches, but I remember it was hysterical.
It's the title of the show that I'm thinking about today--especially the consequences part. I got a good lesson in consequences for my actions this week that made my Valentine's Day pretty expensive. In fact, I think I'm going to use my experience as a teaching tool in young women's under the value of "Choice and Accountability."
I offered to drive an older woman in our ward to the hospital to visit someone in the hospital. I needed to go and make a visit of my own, so why not go together and save her the multiple bus transfers and the time? It was a hectic day, but I found the time and picked her up. We got there and I decided to park in a lot where I knew I was not supposed to park. It's posted. We took in a smiley face balloon and a card and had a fairly good visit, despite the fact that when we got there, our friend was completely covered--over her head and tucked in all the way around--a little scary. We didn't stay very long, about 30 minutes, start to finish. When we got back to the lot, my rugged Montana with super hero symbols on it was nowhere to be found.
Towed.
There we are: me and a 75 year old with no way to get home. I called the number on the sign that I should've heeded and found that the yard was about 5 blocks away. As Shirley and I were discussing the option of her waiting on the bus bench while I walked there and back, the guy who called the tow-truck came over and offered us a ride. He got us there and you'd think the story would end there but, NOOOOO.
I'm not on the registration--only Keith. That's a great story. When Keith bought me the van, as a Mother's Day gift, we had all 3 kids with us. It was fun, to say the least. Lucy fell in an ant bed--a red, mean, biting, ant bed, and then while we were finishing the paperwork, she shut Mikey's hand in the door of one of the models on the showroom floor. Hence, I was off with my 2 year old when the signing happened.
Okay, back to this story. Since I was not the registered owner of the car, did I have proof if insurance maybe that would have my name on it? Sure. I walked back over to the car and produced it. Oh good he said, you can get it, BUT, since you aren't the registered owner, it will have to be cash. No credit cards. $275.00 CASH.
I'm in a really not good neighborhood with a senior citizen and no ATMs to be found. I had to call a friend to come get us, take me to an ATM and then bring us back. She said was would come. YAH!
Nope. Still not over. She called to say she couldn't find the street, at which point my cell phone went dead.
I got out enough that she found us and we went and got the cash.
We got back with time to spare before they closed and I had to produce the documents again with my driver's licence for him to make copies and then he just said thank you, you can go. Well everyone knows you can't get $275 from an ATM--I handed him $280. He made me ask for my change. It was quite a day to say the least.
It was a poor choice. With consequences. Consequences I thought somehow wouldn't apply to me.
Choice and Accountability.
Monday, February 13, 2012
Scripture that I Own
Here's another scripture that I feel I own. I didn't acquire in the same way as some of the others. This scripture isn't one that I earned through my own study. It's not one I inherited from a family member. This one is a gift from a friend and given in a very unusual way. In fact, she doesn't know she gave it to me.
Alma 18:35
35 And a portion of that Spirit dwelleth in me, which giveth me knowledge, and also power according to my faith and desires which are in God.
Probably 3 or more years ago I heard someone say a prayer and ask for a "portion of the Spirit." I don't think I had ever heard it expressed that way before, but I loved it. That language supposes that there is plenty to go and can be divvied up. It almost makes me think of the 'recommended daily allowance' on food packaging.
I've been taught all my life that the reason the Holy Ghost doesn't have a body is so that we can feel his influence in our minds and our hearts and so that he can influence God's children all over the place. So the term portion is perfect. It's my little helping. Or giant helping--after a fast. Or the perfect complement to a beautiful song. It's just super imagery to me.
I didn't know the phrase was scriptural at the time. I just knew I liked it. I've never forgotten it. Since that time the woman has become a friend of mine. Her name is Jane Holiday. She's pretty wise. When I read this verse and a few others which also include the unique phrase, I think of her and her prayer. It's kind of great to have a personal connection to words of a prophet from many centuries ago.
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