Sunday, March 30, 2008

Catching up on pictures


First, I don't think I'll be blogging on Saturday. Second, I am just so happy here, things are going great. Third, no coop pics, because it was too cold to go outside on Saturday so we bagged yardwork. Stay tuned for those. Here are some pics I'd like to share with you.

Sophie, getting a prize for being helpful and friendly at her school, kindly lined up by her otherwise grumpy teacher right before we moved:




Sisters in the tub!







Our last family night in Pasadena we shared with friends...here are the Hansens--miss you!!







Sophie and Addy--so cute!







The fabulous Halls



The wonderful Higginbothams




The much-missed Chamberlains



A serene Laura and her fevered daughter.
The sweetest pic of Sis. Wright ever, with cute Addy.
My sweet Doris!



Sophie and Autumn



Then we moved away. If you were at the FHE and you didn't see a picture of yourself, it is because I am a poor photographer and got you with your mouth full and didn't want you mad (Lyons, DuToits, Hunters, many others), or I was in the picture and it was just too bad to be allowed.

So, when we came here, we had an owl who lived in a small pine tree in our driveway. I named him Mr. Peepers. He was annoyed that people had moved in after having the place to himself for almost 2 years, so he's gone now. But first he left some serious owl art on David's car.

The weekend after we moved in was Easter, and we had a hunt. Here is Sophie and our friend Brodie Mitchell frolicking about in the mini-orchard. Our house is through the trees on the right.

Here is Grandma helping Lucy find some eggs.



Here's the best picture I could get of Ben, right after he got the last clue and found his basket. Believe me, he was happier than he looks, but he won't pose for pictures without serious threats, which I didn't feel I should do while we celebrated the Easter Egg thing. He could pass for 16 with that face, not eight. Will he be "over" the teenage attitude by the time we get to the teenage years, or will it be just magnified exponentially?


Noah, happy and glutting himself on candy.



Sophie, Morgan and Addy, feeding our neighbors. Morgan especially loved the horses.




So, I'm all caught up on pics. I'll try to upload them weekly now. Life is good!!






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Friday, March 28, 2008

Grocery shopping in Utah

That's all I did. All day. Costco, Whole Foods then did the leftovers at Smiths. I spent enough to cover three weeks of food, so it had better last three weeks. I miss Trader Joe, but I'm determined to get over it. I was in a bad habit of going there several times a week. This once-a-month major shopping, with a few quick visits for milk and eggs, will be a nice change.

Sorry my blog is boring. Trying to keep a journal and whatnot, but not a lot of excitement yet. Tomorrow, you'll have pictures of our before and after chicken coop demolition, though!

xoxoxo

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Only a virus

My and Lucy's cultures showed negative today--yay! It's handy to have someone able to test what's going on so easily. I'm beating the virus with tons of garlic, Vit C, and water.

I felt better enough today to go to the Discovery Center children's museum with Michele--it is by far the best children's museum I've been to, and I've been to many!

I need to print a formal retraction to appease my pa-in-law: Utah is not lame. Utah germs are lame, and the lame things about Utah are lame. I love everything about Utah that is not a germ and is not lame.

;)

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

How does one title each day of one's life? It's oppressive!

Feeling a bit better, but kind of not. Mom worked in microbiology today (she works in the lab at the hospital) and cultured herself, says we may have streptococcus pneumococcal (not strep throat, pneumonia). She came by tonight to culture me and will tell me tomorrow. I feel less coughing, but very tired, and like someone is standing on my chest. Lame germy Utah!

Michele came to visit this morning, which was nice. Friends like her who know just about how "well" I take care of my daily life look around this place and all the outside work to be done with a kind of "Good luck with that" look. All I can say is I will have help--this is becoming the extended family farm, it seems.

The kids just played all day, half in the neighbor's yard on their tramp and swingset, half in our yard. They all fell asleep hard. I think Ben is already losing weight. Hope I'll follow suit.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Utah is Germy!

I ALWAYS get sick when I come to Utah! I was here one day when I started with a sore throat. Granted, I'd gotten no sleep on the first days due to the drive and the move, but I started pounding back garlic pills and vitamin C like crazy, since I'm not like normal people and can't take echinacea 'cause it gives me heart attacks and stuff.

So, I was in bed all day. Acknowledgements go to Kim for taking my kids this morning, TV for taking my kids in the early afternoon, and Elaine for taking my kids all the way through dinner, and to my husband for taking care of everything else. No thanks to the lame Utah germs that made me cough up my lungs (and sometimes my lunch) until DH went and got the raw honey (yep, works same as cough syrup, less yucky, druggy and red).

On my list of things to do today was unpacking toys and books and reading about how to prune my fruit trees. Since I could do the latter while lying horizontally, I was able to check that one off. There's my five-minute journal entry. In four minutes.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Monday Monday

I finished the whole upstairs unpacking today--it looks great! Nevermind the downstairs, that's for the next four days. It feels so nice up there--so peaceful. We had our FHE on "peace" tonight, inspired by a quote from our Sacrament meeting speaker yesterday, "Peace cannot be imposed, but is a direct result of righteousness." Dang, we were trying hard to impose peace by martial law.

And, best of all, thanks to our nightly baby torture routine for two nights, night three (last night) was the FIRST night EVER that Lucy slept through the night. Yes, she is 21 months old. We're trying one more night to be sure, then she moves in with her sister. My sanity will be saved after all. She slept until 10:30 (granted, we didn't put her down until 10, since we're all off due to daylight savings and moving a time zone in just a few weeks). She was SO happy today--more upbeat than I've ever seen her! I think getting a full night of uninterupted sleep, even though it was against her will initially, will be helpful to her.

I didn't even go outside today, just trying to get the house in order. But I did inventory my seeds and learned that I have a TON of what I need (thanks to Ted Gooding, always giving out free seeds). I have lots of cool-crop seeds ready to go in as soon as I get the ground tilled, which hopefully will be next week.

My friend Elaine is doing chickens with us. She has ordered the chicks and will get them to 4 weeks before moving them to our pasture--around May 15th. The workload will really be gearing up about then.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

He is risen!

Happy Easter! (And happy birthday to my pa-in-law!)

Christ is indeed risen, and everything is possible because of it. With Him there is hope, peace and joy, both in this life and hereafter, which would never be possible without Him.

We had a nice Easter brunch with my mom (trying to make most of darned 1pm church).

Church was fine. I liked seeing my cousin Kim and sitting by her, she is my sister-cousin, as we both have no sisters and no other girl cousins on this side of the family, and have a very sisterly relationship--she is six years my senior. People in the ward say I look like a dark-haired Kim. I'm looking forward to having her close.

Based on three hours with this ward, I can tell you very little. Although, many things are obvious regardless. We moved from an urban area to a semi-rural area, we moved from a diverse area to a very homogenous area, we moved from an area rife with complexity and often intensity to one that is pretty straightforward and--let's just say it--a little sleepy. And we moved from a ward that is chock full of friends and loved ones to one where we know 7 people, to whom we are related and five of those are minors.

So you can pretty much guess how there's some adjustments to be made here. But we ask not what our ward can do for us, but what we can do for our ward. Church is not entertainment, or even a social club, but a place to learn to serve and see each other as brothers and sisters, to make life easier for others. A person can do that anywhere.

I knew (or maybe planned) that this would be the day I would come a little closer to shedding the denial of leaving my CA friends behind. This was the first day I allowed myself a 15-second hidden sob, but had to recover quickly to go to a fun family party that eased the sad out a bit.

And that's my five minutes for the day. And, since my Utah friends and family probably don't feel the need to read this anymore and I'm probably left in private with my CA friends--hey, I love you all--really, really.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Re-emergence

When we go rafting every two years, some or all of us eventually fall out and go under in a big rapid, and, for the rest of us in the boat, the seconds before we see that head pop up always feel like minutes.

So, to my loved ones wondering if I've gone under for good, here is my head popping up--pop!

Although the last few hours of packing on Tuesday PM bled into Wednesday AM, the Lord sent Angels (Shauna, Doris, Megan, and Jen, not to mention my angel mother) to help wrap things up so we could get out by 1 p.m. The drive was long but didn't feel so bad, I had the two little ones in the van, mom had the older ones and the DVD player in David's car. David and the moving van stopped in Las Vegas to stay with his brother (since the truck is so slow) and my mom and I went on to David's parents in Bountiful, arriving at 2:30 a.m. Thursday morning.

I was pretty fuzzy Thursday, felt mildly confused and disoriented ("What state am I in? Why?") and not a little bit cranky. My prayer that morning went like this: "Lord, this is a big move, it is overwhelming, stressful, and a huge change, my kids are out of sorts for the same reason, and I've had 4 hours sleep and feel crazy, wondering if this was a good idea in the first place. So, I'm making this day your problem, please take care of it. Thanks in advance, Valerie."

And He did. I checked in with the owner of the house we are renting, and we went around the property and talked about things. I asked if it was ok if I fenced off the old garden for chickens, since we are plowing the pasture for our new garden. She had no problem with that, but then decided to give us (free) some more land they own behind our lot that is actually designed for that purpose (although we need to demolish the old hen house), plus two other animal pens (future use TBD)--that gives us a full acre! She also gave us the use of a landlocked apple tree (also their property, in the center of the block). Every new thing I noticed about our place made it just more amazing and more of a miracle. For instance, how did I not notice the oversized tub? (Didn't look behind the door, silly.)

We were told the moving truck would get 3-6 miles to the gallon (that's 700 miles with diesel at $4.50/gal in CA), and we were jumping for joy when we learned he was getting 10 MPG. David arrived at 5 p.m., exactly on schedule. Aunts and uncles, a great aunt and uncle, grandmas and a grandpa, and cousins, and cousins once-removed, unknown but friendly new ward members, all emerged to get the truck unloaded in under an hour, sorting each box into its proper room. I then walked away and slept peacefully at David's parents.

I came back on Friday to start unpacking and just walked around, almost numb with joy. Space, grass, normalcy. Spring, in its true, everything-dead-comes-alive form, I haven't experienced in over a decade. Crocuses and violets were pushing through in the front "yard." I say "yard" because this house hasn't been lived in for almost two years, and ivy and unraked leaves have taken over. There are random shoots and sticks everywhere, but we can't start cleaning up or pulling anything out because they are just as likely to be flowers as anything else. So, we're just watching and waiting to see what comes up.

My kids are in heaven. On Friday, Ben said, "Mom, if you say today is a 'home day' again, I'll know that you really mean it's a 'park day' because we have a park in our back yard." Ben kept asking me to come help him swing high on the board-on-a-rope tree swing, and I told him to find a ladder and work it out, I had work to do. He managed to find a 20' ladder (!), set it up, and starting swinging from 10' up. He's pretty much been doing that the past three days, along with "fixing up" the play house. He's outside most of the time, Sophie a lot, although not quite a much, and when she's out, she's over petting the neighbor's foals.

Today we had an Easter Egg hunt, thrown together at the last minute. We ended up with both grandparents, two aunts, a niece and our friends the Mitchells enjoying the festivities. I feel like I'm in a dreamworld, like I'm playing house.

I'll be honest, when it comes to our temporal arrangements, it has been an awful three years, and very little good happened to us (temporally, mind you) during that time. Now I get something that I've always wanted and prayed for, but written off as impossible, and I am not sure how to take it graciously. I just keep saying "Really!?" and "Are you kidding me!?" and then repenting, "I mean-- thank you!" But at the same time I see, that if He had said yes to any of the temporal improvements I had asked for in the past several years, this would never have happened.

It feels great to be close to family and get to know them better than the previous 1-2x a year made possible. They have been so there for us, and so excited about our being here, it has really taken me off guard.

I'm setting a goal to do 5 minutes a day here in the family blog, and I'm taking MamaMelodrama down to two articles a week (for quality purposes). That way my far-away friends can be with me through all the slapstick city-folk-turned-bumpkin antics that will surely ensue.

Goodbye, urbanity!

Monday, March 17, 2008

Stop Gap Post

Hi everyone! The move is on. We'll be loading the truck Tuesday, driving away Wednesday, and moving in Thursday/Friday (Saturday, Sunday, etc. etc.)

The family is fine, the move is going fine, we are all fine.

[Translation: Aaaaaaaaaaaaa! Save me!]

Sunday, March 9, 2008

More mundane updates

The one event of the week that I had to announce outside of my lengthy treatise on my own self below, was that Lucy is learning to sleep better. I had a horrible week of no sleep because she's been sick with a cough and up many times at night. She nursed and then fussed and didn't want to nurse but didn't want to go be rocked or held so I finally just had to put her in her bed, as she was getting all mad and scratching and hitting. She was mad for a while, but I really could see nothing I could do and I was out of my mind with exhaustion.

She was getting in the habit of fussing after nursing, nothing worked to make her feel better. I just decided when I needed her to sleep I'd put her in bed. Now, it's the end of the week, although I've had to get up a lot to give her medicine and help her with a bad cough, she is going to sleep both at night and at naps with very little or no fuss--I just put her in bed. The benefit of waiting 21 months I guess is they figure out faster that it's easier just to go to sleep.

She actually went over to her bed tonight, looking longingly at it, before we realized she was tired and wanted to be put down.

So, although I have no rest to show for this wonderful blessing, I am very excited of the prospects once she is well. The only problem is she does that infant thing of waking up at 5-6 a.m. and fussing, and would probably go back to sleep in five minutes if left alone, but at that time of day, everyone would wake up if I let her fuss--none of the heavy sleeping I could count on at 3 a.m. Can't wait until we have more space in the new place!

David has been a saint, letting me sleep until 9:30 on Saturday, and getting a great nap today. He is the crabbiest, most wonderful man in the world.

Lastly, I've really been excited about the new place because I want to get serious with the home food production thing vis a vis Animal Vegetable Miracle. I don't think this is just my silly hippie self, but that I'm being led to make this change. Then I came across this article in the NY Times about the increasing price of food (and how they expect it to continue to rise quickly due to a falling dollar, demand, crop failure, raising food for gas--as in ethanol, and oil prices). The article gives you the feeling we really will start to see a time where we have to eat less for economic reasons, not just because we want to look skinny.

It's becoming more obvious that those who follow the prophet's guidance to pay of their mortgage, keep out of debt, have a savings and plant a garden will stave off the future problems as our economy pays the price of sustained unsustainable practices. The problem is our economy relies heavily on consumer spending and borrowing, and more and more consumers are out of cash and credit. Without a HUGE cash bailout to families (no $1200 will cut it), their consumers will have their hands tied. I think the corporations forget that the employees they are laying off and their consumers are the same people.

I read some really interesting scriptures about this today, but I'll save those rants for my scripture blog, which I've been woefully neglecting.

Nostalgia: My California Eulogy (or, making up for journaling sporadically for 12 years)

[This is exactly what it sounds like, is super long, and I won't be offended if you skip it.]

I first came to Los Angeles alone. I was 24, it was 1996. I had to leave David home to pack and get us ready to move because I'd been offered a great-paying job (a whopping $36K!) with a very impatient boss who insisted I start immediately. I stayed with David's cousin in La Crescenta and immediately began the local ritual of the LA commute through the San Fernando Valley, over Coldwater Canyon into to Beverly Hills. I was an office manager for the independent Laboratory run by Cedars Sinai Hospital, where my first son would be born three years later.

I was so homesick and felt I would never adjust. But it only took me the week to be comfortable navigating the traffic and knowing my way around. I visited the temple that first week by myself one night after work, and as I walked up the steps, never having been there before, I felt more homesick than ever. But as I walked in the doors, an overwhelming peace came over me and I felt a voice say, "This is your home, come back often." Anytime I felt homesick after that, I went "home" to the temple.

We'd already come down for a hasty weekend to pick an apartment in Hollywood. When we finally moved in, realized quickly that we'd been indeed hasty and far too rent-minded (only $725--we'd paid a steep $525 for our swank Capitol Hill apartment). Although it was a relatively nice building, we got a swift introduction to Hollyweird via our stoner neighbors and the gay couple next door with their super-loud (and somewhat hilarious) slap fights. I remember a night waking up to crashing sounds--some crazy person stole a car and drove it at breakneck speeds up our very narrow street lined on both sides with tightly-packed cars. The driver jumped out of the car, ran away, not to be seen again. Ah, Hollywood.

But the Hollywood ward, just as quirky and sometimes eyebrow-raising as the rest of the town, was where I got my testimony of buckling down and doing the work of the Kingdom. It was the kind of place where, as the Primary 1st Counselor, I may be the only adult there to show up, and might find myself conducting, leading music (sometimes while playing), doing sharing time, then teaching a combined class. I might have to keep the Primary President from cussing in front of the kids, and I probably would have to feed the kids granola bars because no breakfast was had at home. I'd leave feeling like I'd given a lot of blood.

It was the first time where it was very clear that if I didn't show up, an important ward auxillary just wouldn't happen. I was accustomed to riding along in the handcart of the church while all the old people pulled us along. Hollywood was where I learned to get out and push.

So, after our 9-month lease ended, we were on to Westwood. This time we we sacrificed space (only 500 feet), but paid the same and got location, location, location, where we could walk to wonderful movie theaters and restaurants, and boy, did we take advantage of all of them. I always say if I could take back the money and the calories from this time I would be rich and thin.

In the short period at Hollywood, we'd been able to walk to the Chinese theater, albeit somewhat timidly at night, but the Westside perks won out.


Although I knew the Hollywood ward needed us, we were led to start going to the UCLA Student Ward over in Westwood, and I think this is where David began to make his spiritual strides. Like our wonderful ward here in Pasadena, it was a ward heavy on the academic crowd, scientists and PhDs and post-docs, and it was an intellectually and spiritually stimulating place.


David was getting his undergrad at USC, now in Religion and Judaic Studies (although we'd come down to study film, he wasn't enjoying the program), and as soon as we came down I auditioned for and began studying opera with with Shigemi Matsumoto's studio in Northridge, paying what was essentially another tithing for the privilege. But this was the reason for my being open to coming to LA.


Meanwhile the lab where I worked was having stability issues and my boss announced he was leaving and suggested I should leave to avoid being laid off, so I took a job with our telephone system provider at the same salary. I was laid off after only 4 months, when the very small company realized they were paying me too much and didn't have anything for me to do.

I was nervous but relieved to leave that dysfuntional pit in Van Nuys, and this firing opened the way for me to interview with the Sprint PCS LA Area Sales and Marketing office, which had only 11 people when I was hired on 5/12/1997, when they had no network, but a bunch of plans, excitement, momentum and tons of money to throw around. Another proud, impatient and demanding boss here, although at least with some cult of personality, and I was hired as a generic project person--he liked me, he just didn't know what he was going to use me for.

He soon persuaded me (against all my protests that I was "past" that stage of my career) to be his Exec. Assistant. He persuaded me with money, which does indeed talk. I should have caught on quick that I would have a lot of fodder for a big, lucrative law suit in that conversation, where my religion, our faith's disinclination toward premarital sex, and later even my bra size managed to come up without any encouragement from me. He called me the "Emperor's Assistant" or his "work wife," a relationship which was never anything but platonic, although most of the office assumed otherwise. Why-oh-why am a nice girl who laughs red-faced instead of calling a lawyer?

The launch of SPCS was a crazy-intense, super-educational, career-boosting and income-generating ride, and left me well-versed in the corporate world, but clear on the ridiculous illusions of its meaningfulness that one must hold when working in it. It was here I met my dear, dear friend Doris, who has become essential to my existence.

Very shortly after taking the job at SPCS we realized that regardless of the fun of living in the "Village," the 500-sq foot thing just wasn't working for the two of us and our cat, Toe Jam. We moved into one of the fancy haunted hospital towers at Park La Brea, coming to terms with the idea that for long-term living we were going to have to deal with the $1150 rent. Our sweet almost-child Toe Jam committed suicide out our 8-story window, a very traumatic experience. We were soon joined by cats Ingrid and Bogey.

During the first two years here, I continued the annoying, expensive and roller-coasteresque ride of infertility treatments that I'd begun years before in Utah, and regular surgeries and hormone treatments were an integral part of life--thank heavens for good benefits! We'd given up many times, but after the most invasive laparotomy (that big, smiley-face belly cut) and ovarian reconstruction, we really felt "done" and started looking into adoption. That surgery was in May of 1998, and we turned down the next round of hormone treatment follow-ups, much to our specialist's disappointment.

Although the surprise career jump at SPCS really made the opera ambition more difficult, since I had much less time for practice, in the fall of 1998 I got one of the lead roles in the Santa Monica Community Opera, my second role with them, coincidentally playing a beatific nun in both: Dialogues of the Carmelites and Suor Angelica. At 26 I was playing in a shortened version (20 minutes) of a heavy-hitting Lyric Soprano role Verdi designed for 40 year olds where I had to cry, scream, sing a high-C and then commit suicide on stage. I'd say I did the best I could with what I had at the time.

But the story was significant personally: having been sent to the nunnery by my wealthy family for having an illegitimate son, my evil aunt comes to have me sign away my portion of the estate for my sister who is marrying. As I desperately and repeatedly ask about my son, she casually mentions the boy got sick and died, and coldly leaves. I am driven suicidal in an attempt to be with my son, take some poison, then suddenly realize suicide is a mortal sin and I'll never be reunited with him in heaven, but then I see a vision of Mother Mary and my son and am redeemed. As I sang and sobbed, lamenting my son and how much I wanted to hold him, I couldn't know that I'd he'd actually been conceived earlier that week.

Due to this, it was my first and last operatic lead. David started law school just a week after Ben was born. After ten weeks, I negotiated a part-time from home deal for a while until other employees' whining about my cushy life (probably due to once being being the big guys "work wife) was unfair. (Let them kiss up to a demanding guy for three years if they want perks!) So, they offered a promotion from my current role as Marketing Analyst and I went back to work full time, now as a Business Operations Manager. I just couldn't do it, I missed Ben too much, and although I liked his day care, he just seemed to have a lost look whenever I went to pick him up.

My last day at SPCS was three years to the day of my first (all us start-up type folks were getting bored with the monotony of daily operations and leaving anyway). I started doing contract graphic design for their ad pieces, and the money crunch, which we never really have escaped for too long, began. I tried odds and ends to bring in money, including my first jabs at entrepreneur efforts and a night job for a law firm downtown. We couldn't afford to continue the voice lessons, but Ben came first.

We bought a condo in Pasadena when Ben was 1, and Sophie was born about a year later--only one surgery required! Then we started the business, and I expanded it quickly although I was undercapitalized. Next I childishly insisted that we sell our condo so I could rent a house with a yard, which we did, making what we thought was a good profit, although the place reached triple that price in the coming years. At the same time, we agreed David would turn down a good job with a good firm because our business was doing well. Those three decisions, all made within a few months of each other, set the financial climate of what looks to be the rest of our lives to "Stormy Weather."

But, I didn't know that then, and I loved the two years we had in that little white house. That was where we had (and lost) Eden, where I had my only miscarriage, where Noah was born (in a birth tub in the bedroom), where we lived when my dad and grandpa died, and where the business thrived then died. That was when we came closer to our friends in the ward, like my sweet friend Michele, who lived just a block away. We entertained a lot, with lots of baby showers, a Mardi-gras party, and, of course, the ritual Thanksgivings. It was an event-filled time, where I felt I aged much more than two years.

In the aftermath of the business going down, we moved briefly to Sierra Madre for a summer, where we enjoyed the pool, the Sierra Madre July 4th festivities, Sophie's fourth birthday, Noah's first, and where he learned to sleep through the night (much to the frustration of our apartment neighbors). Then we were off to Redlands for 7 months where we enjoyed another little white house and our wonderful friends, the Mosses, who then went off and moved to Utah, and we missed Pasadena terribly. In Redlands I became pregnant with Lucy.

While in Redlands, I had a strong prompting in the temple that we would end up back in Utah. David didn't like this prompting. Barring complete necessity, he wasn't ever going back.

So, due to events just as chaotic as was the norm during these years, we moved back to Pasadena rather suddenly, to our current townhouse duplex, with rents now up to $2000 for such a place. We moved just in time for Lucy to arrive eleven weeks early and put us at the wonderfully generous and tender mercies of our old ward family. The almost two years we've been back have drawn us so much closer to the Lord and to the ward, put us more in His service, and has strengthened our friendships as well as our resolve to be of use in his Kingdom.

Our tenure in California has been a tremendous education. I hope I'm not just older, but wiser. Although it took me seven years to come to terms with staying forever, I've spent five years thinking I'd die here. I know I'll miss it terribly, but I'm in "doing" mode now. I'm sure after I'm unpacked, I'll sit on the couch in my living room and think, "Where am I?" Where are all my California friends?" And the reality will sink in.

But the thing I feel most for my time here and for the people I love here and for the Lord for bringing us here, is gratitude.

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Cutting the fat

In preparing for the move, the first step has been purging the house of what I don't want that's not trash. I was hoping that would leave less in my house, but it is not noticeably different. Especially in the kitchen, I set the threshold at anything I hadn't used in the past 6 months, and I got rid of very little, as I spend a lot of time in the kitchen and really use all those silly gadgets.

But, there is still a decent-sized pile to discard, it is now taking up a quarter of our garage, waiting for the DI truck to come on Friday. We got rid of a little bit at a yard sale yesterday but it was rainy and cloudy. I think one has better luck craigslisting the bigger items and donating the small stuff, but I'm just looking to shed the stuff. It has felt good to get rid of things.

We only have two weeks left, and my head's in a fog. I'm not letting myself feel sad about leaving my friends until the end. I just feel excited about the change and think on that end. That leaves me in a little impatient limbo, not really living in the "now."

Tomorrow I actually start packing, and taking all the items that go to other people around, doing the daily scavenger hunt behind retail stores for boxes. It's really happening!

The kids are mostly excited now, but there are inklings that feelings are mixed. When I explained to Sophie today that we wouldn't be going to choir because they are practicing for the Easter program and we won't be here for that, she was really upset. She usually gets to play with her friends in the nursery during choir. This minor change seemed to represent all that was being uprooted in her life and she sobbed over it dramatically. Poor thing. Also, Noah was explaining that he wanted to stay at his house and not move anywhere. It is definitely a very major change, but it still doesn't seem real to me.

We had a wonderful lesson in patience in Relief Society today, it was MUCH needed. Patience with people and circumstances really is the key to peace on so many levels.

That's it for now!

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Happy Birthday to Me!

I turned 36 on Friday! We had some low-key celebrations and I tried to stretch the birthday perks into sleeping in each morning all weekend and getting a big fat nap today, which worked out pretty well for me. I never thought a nap would be such a cherished gift, but I can't think of anything I want or need more.

Yesterday was great, we went to the temple, had dinner together after we put the kids down, watched LOST (we're one episode behind still), and I finally "caught on" to Guitar Hero. (I wrote more on this new development in my life here.) I finally beat Tom Morello in battle--it only took me 10 times!


Lucy had some assessments this week. She is performing well on problem solving and cognitive skills, and physically is developmentally doing well. She's language-delayed, though. As part of this, both her teacher and the assessment person tell me Lucy's strong personality makes her difficult to work with and get to do things! She clearly knows what they want, but will stare them in the face, take the materials, and throw them on the floor with smug raised eyebrows.


Lucy and her teacher, Anaika, playing with curlers


The fact she's the baby of the family, our family is large by today's standards, and that she started out sickly they said often leads to this--she's spoiled! We also apparently infantalize her, even though she's almost two, because she's so small. We don't talk to her and interact with her like a two-year-old, but simply tote her around and live life around her like she is a baby.

She gets read to simply because she's on the lap if someone else is being read to, but there is no special time where we just sit with her and a book and ask, "Where's the ball? Show me." Honestly, when I saw the teacher trying to get her to do this, I thought, "That is ridiculous, how come they are trying to get a baby to do that?" Which tells you how duped we are.

She still wakes to nurse 1-3x a night like a 4 month old, that's how duped I am. I worked with my other kids to train them to be great sleepers by age 1 at the very latest, and we've all been the happier for it. How did I get here?

I think it is remarkable that I haven't noticed that she's hard. The teachers tell me that this is a credit to me, that I'm not high-strung, I am used to not getting enough sleep, I am juggling a lot of things and people, and that my idea of "hard" has adjusted since I have other children that, we'll say, are "challenging." (Meaning that they care always challenging me!)

They say that if I were a first-time mom and Lucy was my only one, I'd be pulling my hair out over her. Which is funny, because as far as parenting goes, this is nothing in comparison.

I'm glad to have this perspective, though, and after we move (we all agreed we should wait until then) I need to teach her to sleep and welcome her more to the independence and excitement of toddlerhood, along with more age-appropriate books and materials.

It's so funny how overprepared I was with my first, and how behind the ball I am now. I think some middle ground must be the best place to be. I see people at the store stressing out over their toddlers' behavior and I just think, "Oh, honey, let it go, you have no idea what's ahead of you if THIS freaks you out."

Anyway, so there's Lucy.

Noah needs Joyschool or something. I need to figure out how to occupy him in the next month. He still has that half-sick, out-of-sorts thing that comes and goes. Sweet as ever, and into everything.

Ben is doing great on his schoolwork. We are really drilling math facts right now, and we won't go on in our curriculum until he can do 100 multiplication problems in under 6 minutes. He is now doing 50 2-digit plus 2-digit addition problems in almost 5 minutes. We use this website to drill.

Sophie is actually really excited about what she says will be her "whole new life." I know there will be apprehension with the upheaval, but she seems to be going forward with a really great attitude. She is surprisingly unattached to school, although she's going to miss 2-3 of her friends.

David has more long-distance work coming up, but, in today's economy, I'm starting to feel grateful for a job that actually grows more secure with the economic problems (foreclosures can increase his workload).

David sent me this great article that I found very motivating about the potential of frugal living. Now is definitely the time for it!

And now for a very small soapbox:

I have found myself getting more involved in the election process this week, and want to encourage all my friends and loved ones out there to not let the talking heads do all your thinking for you. Seriously, the talking heads should never be your primary source of information on anything.

Get the facts about all the people (not just your people) from the people themselves. If you want to hate somebody, do it smart by knowing what it is you don't like about them.

Here's your assigned reading for the week!

http://origin.barackobama.com/issues/
http://www.johnmccain.com/Informing/Issues/
http://www.hillaryclinton.com/issues/

And, as I said before, let hope direct your vote.

For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.
2 Tim. 1: 7

PS: Finally we're back into our Sunday routine of chore charts and blogging, so blogs for Ben, Sophie, and Suburban Harvest are updated.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Retraction (or, the Story in Full)

If you've been following this blog for a while, you may have heard me say, rather recently, that we are going to live in California forever, that it's the "right" place for us, etc. Well, apparently not.

While we were in Utah, David learned that more of his work will be out of California, and he also realized the quality of life we could have there was better that we could have here. He decided we should move there.

After he decided this, and I had time to pick myself up off the floor from the shock, I was sent off to Utah this past weekend to find a new house to rent (which is why the late post). It was kind of a whirlwind, and we saw 10 properties on Monday, picked one out, then found out that another place was available that we thought wasn't anymore. That was the only one we saw on Tuesday, and it was definitely the one for us. We move March 18th.

For about $800 less than we pay now, we have a much, much better way of life. You can see pictures here, click the pic. It's winter, so the trees are naked and make it look a little unkempt.


House




It is exactly what I've always wanted--a big garden, a small orchard and vineyard, trees to climb and swing in, big pine trees. Also, perks include a 2-story playhouse in back and a laundry chute!

One thing I love about Utah is that it is normal to have a living room AND a family room--seems so excessive and luxurious by California standards! David is not excited about the red master bedroom, so we'll have to make a few adjustments there, but the house is cute and so big compared to anything we've ever had.

We will also be two blocks from my sweet cousin Kim's house (and go to the same ward). Thanks for finding us this place, Cuz!

So, some very big changes, we're both a bit nervous, but it feels good and everything is opening up to go this direction, which is saying more than anything else we've tried to do in the last five years.

I have so many thoughts surrounding all this that I can't think clearly to formulate them coherently, so I won't. Suffice it to say that I thought we'd have to fix a lot of other things before being in a situation like this, things that would take decades, and I really feel the Lord is showing me that he knows me, cares about me and hears me. Some of the littlest details in this house seem unimportant, but only the Lord would know that they meant something to me.

To all our California friends, we love you SO much and never thought this day would come. Thanks to blogs, email, cell phones and the continual exodus many of you make to and from Utah, I hope to hold on to you tightly.

To all our Utah friends, let's start booking the dinner calendar now!

Sunday, February 10, 2008

The Story in Part

Another excitement-filled week at the Christensen home. I am still trying to get over that bad bug I brought home from Utah, and everyone has had a tad of it, mainly minor for the rest, though. The house is woefully neglected due to the fact you can't really clean house while lying horizontally, which put it out of the question, since I was so busy doing the latter. I went to Ward Breakfast yesterday under the assumption that by virtue of being sick 9 days I must surely be better, but that just led to being completely wiped the rest of the day. I went to church today, but am now ready for a long winter's nap, not making the lasagne I have planned for dinner.

Lucy is growing up so much, such an independent little pixie. She is also a bit spoiled, which is totally my fault and I'm hoping to rectify that without too much drama. Still trying to fatten her up. Some labs are coming back this week for her, hopefully with some useful information. She is conflicted about her status as a toy for other children, as she likes being played "with" in a friend sense, but not so much being played "with" in the doll sense, which is unfortunately extremely common.

Noah has been having very few accidents (hooray!) but has seemed a little under the weather with a belly thing. He is SO mischevious and takes 100% follow-through on every request, which gets old fast when you are unwilling to leave your bed for any reason.

Sophie is continuing her complaints about school, and I feel bad because I don't blame her. The work is dry and boring and she doesn't have a very friendly teacher. But I try to be encouraging and help her bring out the positive. School doesn't have to be all fun and games, but at this stage it helps if they enjoy learning and have a good relationship with their teacher. Her reading is almost fluent, though, and she enjoys it.

Ben's doing great at home with school and is moving on to 5th grade Language arts, which he's very proud of. He enjoys it. It has been a rather bland homeschooling week, though, due to my inability to do anything, and he has made sure I am constantly aware of that. We've just done the basics.

David is getting ready to do some traveling to PA and NC this week for work. It looks like his job is going to require quite a bit more travel out of CA. That has a variety of impacts on our life and is triggering a re-evaluation of some things. So, this post isn't detail-rich on that, but I'm sure more information will follow.

Oh, apparently Noah has undressed Lucy and started a bath for them both, so I guess this post is over. Go over to mamamelodrama and take my chocolate quiz if you haven't already.

Sing it with me! "to the B to the A to the R to the A to the C - K - O - B - A - M - A!"

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Let Hope Direct Your Vote

With the understanding the vast majority of this blog's readers will think I'm, at best, misled, and at worst, hell-bound, I'd still like to say that I had completely given up hope on so many things relating to American politics until I started taking a closer look at Obama. I hope today goes well for him.


Sunday, February 3, 2008

Wacation in a Winter Wonderland

Our trip to Utah was wonderful. The fact that Mom and Dad Christensen's house is big enough for us to lose our own children, that we weren't on top of each other, was a vacation in itself. In line with tradition, I got terribly sick, but this time only at the very end, so I could bring it home with me and extend the vacation two more (much less comfortable) days in bed. I love my sweet husband!

Here is a rundown of what we did and some photographic evidence that this trip actually took place:

http://web.mac.com/davidchristensen/iWeb/Site/Library.html

My Thoughts on the End of an Era

As I have read so many tributes to Gordon B. Hinckley this past week, and I've thought much about the influence he has had in my life and pondered what defining messages or moments have had the most impact on me. I loved him greatly and had a testimony of his divine calling, one confirmed to me many times over his long tenure. He spoke to us as a region in a simultaneous Stake Conference across Southern California just a few weeks ago, emphasizing loving marriage and family relationships. He looked very small and frail, yet cried out with power in his frustration at the mistreatment of women.

Then, as in so many other conferences where I heard his voice, I marveled at the ridiculous deception that makes him and his fellow associates out to be oppressive, power-hungry ringleaders of blind sheep. That would be a very well-cloaked evil indeed, masked by constant pleadings to be more loving, kinder, respectful, mindful of those around us, renewed in hope and doing good. And, with each message, comes the never-failing witness of the Spirit that this man speaks with Christ, and for Christ, the great Exemplar which the prophet so clearly emulated.

The adversary will do all in his power to sow seeds of doubt, even in the face of reason, to prevent us from hearing the prophet of the Lord, and accepting His prophet's call to simply humbly come unto Christ and be healed. Our enemy seeks to make us take offense when we are asked to set aside selfishness for service. But the prophet speaks truth: that true healing from pain, disappointment, despair or confusion doesn't come from licking my wounds in a circular path dedicated to self-discovery.

Which brings me to the area where I felt the strongest influence from Gordon B. Hinckley. The story is now well known. When young Elder Hinckley was encountering illness, rejection, prejudice and despair early in his mission, his complaints written home were answered with a short letter from his father: “Dear Gordon, I have your recent letter. I have only one suggestion: Forget yourself and go to work.”

Hinckley recalls, "Earlier that morning in our scripture class my companion and I had read these words of the Lord: 'Whosoever will save his life shall lose it; but whosoever shall lose his life for my sake and the gospel’s, the same shall save it' (Mark 8:35).

"Those words of the Master, followed by my father’s letter with his counsel to forget myself and go to work, went into my very being" (from Ensign, July 1987, 7). In describing what happened next, he said: “I got on my knees in that little bedroom … and made a pledge that I would try to give myself unto the Lord.

“The whole world changed. The fog lifted. The sun began to shine in my life. I had a new interest. I saw the beauty of this land. I saw the greatness of the people. … Everything that has happened to me since that’s been good I can trace to that decision made in that little house” (Church News, Sept. 9, 1995, 4).

President Hinckley continued by saying: “You want to be happy? Forget yourself and get lost in this great cause, and bend your efforts to helping people” (in Church News, Sept. 9, 1995, 4).

He said more recently: "The best antidote for worry is work. The best medicine for despair is service. The best cure for weariness is to help someone even more tired."

I was at a recent sacrament meeting in Utah where the speaker explained that when we lose ourselves in the service of Christ, it is easier to find our true self, as there will be more of us to find. This losing myself and forgetting myself in service to Christ is not frantically busying myself with family church duties while secretly holding out for expected payback in the form of my own needed blessings, equal returned attention, or even instant personal fulfillment from a given act of service. It is taking the gospel of Jesus Christ "down, deep into our hearts" as Henry B. Eyring emphasized in the funeral. It is seeking to feel and hold within me the love of my Savior for me through communion with the Father in constant prayer and study. I have then felt this love so naturally translate into a similar love for my fellow travelers in this often hard, sometimes joyous journey.

Each time I review this story of President Hinckley's mission, I am reminded of a phrase in my own patriarchal blessing, which after discussing some talents and blessings I would have from the Lord, follows with the charge: "You should make use of them to further the work of the Lord." The Lord understood I would be tempted to use any abilities for better standing in the world, and reminds me that by losing myself in His work I will, in the end, rejoice that I was not distracted from my true mission on this earth by seeking my own comforts. It would be like being sent on an important business trip, only to miss the purpose of my trip as I stayed in my hotel room, fluffing pillows and making sure the accommodations were comfortable enough. I want to return Home without regrets.

After WWII, when Hinckley decided to end a promising career with the railroad in Denver to return to the employ of the church, he told a friend, "This is the Lord's work, and I feel I would make my best contribution in life, by doing my humble part, to further the cause." This is a sentiment I wish to echo. I would like my tribute to Gordon B. Hinckley's life to be my own covenant with the Lord to try to forget myself and go to work, and to lose myself in Christ and in building his kingdom. Instead of finding myself, to let Him find, shape and transform me.

My self is a hard thing to forget, as it is has become accustomed to so much attention, and I know it will take practice. But I always find when I am serving Jesus Christ, that I have access to much greater ability than my own. As Elder Eyring said at the funeral, "His optimism was justified, not by confidence in his own powers to work things out, but in his great faith that God's powers were in place. "

Thank you, dear President Hinckley, for showing me what is possible when one person simply forgets himself and goes to work for Jesus Christ, and inspiring me to do the same.

"'Til we meet at Jesus' feet."

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Welcome me back from 1975!

I have a new cell phone to replace my old, broken one (thanks for the early b-day present, mom). Some of you may know that I was relegated not only to the home phone, but a corded home phone, like back when I was 9 or something, so I could choose to socialize while standing in a rather useless part of the house, or I could just bag that and actually live my life (something I blog, surf, email and phone-chat to avoid).

So, I'm back to being free, or no longer being free, not sure which.

Since most people who read my personal blog (this one), are the same people that used to call me when I had a phone, I just thought I'd let you know here.

PS: Important health warning at MamaMelodrama today.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Shameless Mid-Week Redirecting

If you're bored and bloghopping, take a look. Today's post refers you to yet another post I highly recommend:

http://mamamelodrama.blogspot.com/2008/01/post-i-didnt-have-to-write.html

I understand that this is inefficient and shameless, and take full credit for it.

Valerie