We have a new pup. Two weeks ago we brought him home from Chicago. Two weeks is a lot of stories worth to share about our newest bear-of-a-dog. Here are a few:
Fitz's full name is Larry Fitzgerald Diesel Finan, named after Larry Fitzgerald. The Arizona Cardinals wide receiver. Now I really need to learn more about football. So that I can sound smart when I talk about my dog's namesake. But until then, Fitz fills his role by cuddling on the couch every Sunday to enjoy many a football game with Casey.
Fitz has many nicknames. One is Big Head Todd. Because of his ginormous head. We rented So I Married An Axe Murder the first weekend we had Fitz, so that we can crack jokes about Fitzy's "huge noggin," the size of a "virtual planetoid" "like Sputnik." And to top it off, we bought Fitzy a giant dog pillow so that he can "go cry himself to sleep on his huge pillow." Well, we didn't buy it for that reason only, but it does make the big head jokes funnier. But mostly, we call him Fitzy. Or The Fitz.
Fitzy is a total cuddlebug. For a two year old dog, he is extraordinarily relaxed and chill. But at times, he thinks he's a cat. He doesn't just want to cuddle. He wants to crawl on top of our heads and lay there. Usually, this ends in him falling off the couch because he works so hard to find just the right spot, and then he rolls ever so slightly until he loses his balance. And ends up on the floor. He has a bit to learn. Hopefully that doesn't include the ability to walk across the back of the couch like our cat Zima. Which Fitz has tried, after seeing Zima do it.
We made a visit to Lake Michigan our first weekend with Fitz. We found out that it was (presumably) Fitz's first encounter with large bodies of water. He was quite the sight to behold. Amidst the running and attacking the waves, we didn't identify his tendency of "water freaking" until the second time we took him swimmng, at my father-in-law's lake. That is another post entirely, but suffice it to say that when Fitz gets in the water, nothing and no one can stop him. Or rather, it took Casey's dad and his speedboat to bring Fitz back from the middle of the lake that first time. Tthankfully, it's nothing a 50 ft. rope and some training can't fix.
Yesterday, we did some of that training. Turns out, Fitz is a good jumper. That's the Chessie in him. And he likes to fetch. We look forward to many good times in the water.
It's good to have a dog in the house again. There's a warmth and energy that was missing for about six weeks. Nothing can replace Trekker, for sure, but we are certain that Fitz is a good fit for our family.
*Accolades to Adam Houston for the "Fitz fits" pun. Clever, yes; cheesy, maybe, true, nonetheless. :)
Holiness has most often been revealed to me in the exquisite pun of the first syllable, in holes--in not enough help, in brokenness, mess. High holy places, with ethereal sounds and stained glass, can massage my illusion of holiness, but in holes and lostness I can pick up the light of small ordinary progress, newly made moments flecked like pepper into the slog and the disruptions. -Anne Lamott
Sunday, October 9, 2011
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Like a Gypsy
When death, like a gypsy comes to steal what I love, I will still look to the heavens, I will still seek your face. But I fear You aren't listening because there are no words, just the stillness and the hunger for a faith that assures."
-"The Valley Song" Jars of Clay
Last October, I first heard JOC's "Valley Song" at Gary's funeral. Then, just six months later, when we lost Adelaide, these lyrics started to follow me. Now, with the recent loss of Trek, they strike yet more fiercely.
This feeling of death. Like a gypsy. How does death seem to steal so quickly? For all three losses, there was sickness and time for preparation. Yet in the end, the end came too soon.
For Adelaide especially, the irony overwhelmed me. We (I) had been preparing for her death for as long as I had known Adelaide (four years). When Casey first met Adelaide eight years ago, she was a recent widow and in her late 80's. Straight out of Ben Folds's "The Luckiest." It seemed that it could come any day, that each visit with her might be our last. When the phone rang, and it was one of Adelaide's care givers, or her neighbor Maggie, I always expected the bad news.
But time and again Adelaide proved us wrong. She was a survivor. She led a very healthy lifestyle. Aside from being housebound and needing to eat more, gain some weight. When I first met Adelaide, Casey had a habit of taking her Steak n' Shake milkshakes (dark chocolate) to try to fatten her up! Eventually, I think part of me refused to believe that she would ever die. Casey often joked that Adelaide would probably outlive him.
When something finally happens, something that you have spent years anticipating, but never experiencing, it catches you off guard. It feels wrong, too soon. Crazy to think, to say out loud.
Afterwards, the permanence of death is overwhelming. Something that cannot be reversed. Or undone. Sure, there are lots of actions and events that have consequences. It changes the future. But change is different than death. It's an alteration, or a shift, but it is not an end. Period.
The feeling perhaps more strange, is that each loss we have had has come at a greater cost to us. That is not to say that Trekker's life was more valuable than either Gary's or Adelaide's. Rather, the size of the emptiness in our day to day lives increased.
Gary and Adelaide were both very dear friends. Gary led Casey to Christ when he was 14 years old. Casey knew him for over half of Casey's life. Two and a half years ago, Gary was integral to the most important day of our lives; he married us. Adelaide was a friend to Casey when he was recovering from a broken heart. He says that there were years when she was the only friend who always had time for him, no matter when he came to visit. He would visit her for hours, sometimes falling asleep on her couch. As I grew to know and love Adelaide, I started visiting her more often during the summer months, when I was off school. I would sit on the end of her bed (when she no longer had the energy to visit in the front room) and discuss To Kill a Mockingbird and what high school and South City were like in her day. We were loved and mentored by each of them for years and years. We miss them dearly.
Trekker, though, Trek was our every day. I can't think of one routine that has not changed since Trekker's passing. Even as I sit here typing this post, I am keenly aware that Trekker is not nuzzling his nose under my elbow to vie for the attention I am giving the computer screen.
When we wake up in the morning and Casey flops to the end of the bed and leans down, Trekker is not waiting for his morning belly rub.
When I bend down to put my shoes on, I don't have to be wary of Trekker's head ready to collide with mine in his excitement at the association of shoes and a potential walk.
Every time I open the freezer, I wait for the sound of Trekker, coming to get his share of ice cubes. And when I drop food, my pup isn't there to be our living garbage disposal. (When we used to go to the houses of people who didn't own dogs, Casey would comment on the phenomenon of dropping crumbs, and the realization that no dog was waiting to lick it up).
And the thing that gets me every time, the walk up the steps to the front door. I have gotten into the habit of reminding myself continuously, starting with getting out of the car, and then with every step I climb, that Trekker is not going to be looking sideways through the front window (our One-Eyed Sea Monster) and that his tail is not going to be thumping against the coat rack that is just inside the door. Somehow, though, rational thought does not penetrate the heart that still waits to see her dog welcoming her home from another day at work. I guess the heart has a mind of her own.
Death is always unexpected and always unfair. I realize that now. Not because you don't have enough time to say goodbye or because s/he was too young. It doesn't matter. It can be a baby or an old lady. It can be from sickness, accident, or natural causes. None of it matters. Because the thing is, we weren't originally created to die. We were created to live forever. With God. Here on earth. So when my heart cries at the injustice of death, it's because my soul recognizes that death is an impostor. A gypsy.
Thank God for the One who conquered death, who will make all things right and new.
Saturday, August 27, 2011
Sunday, August 14, 2011
The Way Life Is
In my time with God this morning, I pulled out The Hungering Dark, the Buechner book of sermons that I have been reading since March (off and on). The sermon I left off at is entitled "The Two Loves," about eros and agape love. What struck me this morning was the following passage:
"But surely the Bible is not first of all a book of moral truth. I would call it instead a book of truth about the way life is. These strange old Scriptures present life as having been ordered in a certain way, with certain laws as inextricably built into it as the law of gravity is built into the physical universe. When Jesus says that whoever would save his life will lose it and whoever loses his life will save it, surely he is not making a statement about how, morally speaking, life ought to be. Rather he is making a statement about how life is. When John writes that he who does not have love remains in death, he is not pronouncing an ethical judgment but a universal insight into what it means to be human. Behind all such words is the conviction that God has created life in such a way that if man lives in defiance of God's law, then that man invites his own destruction as surely as the man who lives in defiance of the law invites it" (Buechner 86).
As an English teacher, I spend some of the greater parts of my career trying to teach students to see the theme in literature. Contrary to what many will try to argue, theme is very different from moral. Theme is not the lesson learned (or in Beuchner's words "the way life ought to be"); rather, theme is a truth revealed ("a statement about how life is").
Authors write to explore "universal insight[s] into what it means to be human." And no less in the Bible. In fact, probably more so. Because the One who knows best the laws which govern our world and result in consequences, both good and bad, makes the greatest of efforts to communicate those truths to us, whom He loves and covets for Himself, whom He has created to be in relationship with Himself.
I use the word laws in the context of a law of gravity, not in a set of rules which, when broken, are punishable by the creator of the laws towards those who break them. These laws are inherent in the way the world is set up to work. While scientific laws, like gravity, are easy to prove and verify, I wholeheartedly believe that other laws govern our world, spiritual laws. When those laws are defied, we reap the heart-breaking consequences. When I am tempted to look around for evidence of God (or specifically, for God's work and presence in my life), God reminds me again and again of how I have felt and known the universal truths found in the Bible.
We are a people built to walk the earth, same as we are a people built to love and worship our Creator. Try and do otherwise, and ultimately, we will fall every time.
"But surely the Bible is not first of all a book of moral truth. I would call it instead a book of truth about the way life is. These strange old Scriptures present life as having been ordered in a certain way, with certain laws as inextricably built into it as the law of gravity is built into the physical universe. When Jesus says that whoever would save his life will lose it and whoever loses his life will save it, surely he is not making a statement about how, morally speaking, life ought to be. Rather he is making a statement about how life is. When John writes that he who does not have love remains in death, he is not pronouncing an ethical judgment but a universal insight into what it means to be human. Behind all such words is the conviction that God has created life in such a way that if man lives in defiance of God's law, then that man invites his own destruction as surely as the man who lives in defiance of the law invites it" (Buechner 86).
As an English teacher, I spend some of the greater parts of my career trying to teach students to see the theme in literature. Contrary to what many will try to argue, theme is very different from moral. Theme is not the lesson learned (or in Beuchner's words "the way life ought to be"); rather, theme is a truth revealed ("a statement about how life is").
Authors write to explore "universal insight[s] into what it means to be human." And no less in the Bible. In fact, probably more so. Because the One who knows best the laws which govern our world and result in consequences, both good and bad, makes the greatest of efforts to communicate those truths to us, whom He loves and covets for Himself, whom He has created to be in relationship with Himself.
I use the word laws in the context of a law of gravity, not in a set of rules which, when broken, are punishable by the creator of the laws towards those who break them. These laws are inherent in the way the world is set up to work. While scientific laws, like gravity, are easy to prove and verify, I wholeheartedly believe that other laws govern our world, spiritual laws. When those laws are defied, we reap the heart-breaking consequences. When I am tempted to look around for evidence of God (or specifically, for God's work and presence in my life), God reminds me again and again of how I have felt and known the universal truths found in the Bible.
We are a people built to walk the earth, same as we are a people built to love and worship our Creator. Try and do otherwise, and ultimately, we will fall every time.
The (Last) Voyage of the Dawn Trekker
A couple of weeks ago, we were able to take Trekker on one last canoe trip. The weather was beautiful, Trek still had lots of energy, he ate some yummy steak for dinner, and he even swam some pretty great lengths of river on Day 2 (a surprising feat for the sick pup). Here are some pictures below.
Below is a compilation of some various emails I have sent and personal blogging I have done RE: Trekker.
Just wanted to give the update. Casey and I took Trek in to the vet [Thursday] night to put him to sleep.
Everything went really well, all things considered. We had lots of privacy at the vet because it was 1 am when we finally got there; the vet on call was Dr. Fee, the same vet who saw him when we originally took him in back in May. She is really compassionate and warm, and it was nice to work with someone who has known Trekker; we were able to take Trek on one last walk; and Trek got to eat an ENTIRE raw pork steak for his "last meal."
We buried Trek in Casey's mom's back yard (at 2 in the morning); it was a good way to have some closure. Casey is working on a grave marker already, so we will be able to visit and say hi once in a while.
As expected, it has been pretty rough. He was a great pal and a significant part of our daily lives.
One of my favorite parts of Friday was when Casey and I went through all of my computer photo albums and pulled pictures of Trekker. I thought it would be extremely painful to look back on all of those memories and see the happy, energetic, sometimes ornery pup that we knew and loved for four years, but instead it felt uplifting. We remembered Trek's good times, instead of being filled with the sad memories of his last hours with us. It felt uncannily similar to looking at pictures of Trekker when he was alive, and we reminisced about past canoe trips, visits to the cemetery, and various Trekker antics.
It has been good to lean on one another in this time, and we appreciate your prayers over the last few months and in the coming days/weeks. Thank you for your friendship.
The launch--Trek wanted to ride in front! |
Nap time with Casey |
It's mine! |
STEAK?!??!? |
Just wanted to give the update. Casey and I took Trek in to the vet [Thursday] night to put him to sleep.
Everything went really well, all things considered. We had lots of privacy at the vet because it was 1 am when we finally got there; the vet on call was Dr. Fee, the same vet who saw him when we originally took him in back in May. She is really compassionate and warm, and it was nice to work with someone who has known Trekker; we were able to take Trek on one last walk; and Trek got to eat an ENTIRE raw pork steak for his "last meal."
We buried Trek in Casey's mom's back yard (at 2 in the morning); it was a good way to have some closure. Casey is working on a grave marker already, so we will be able to visit and say hi once in a while.
As expected, it has been pretty rough. He was a great pal and a significant part of our daily lives.
One of my favorite parts of Friday was when Casey and I went through all of my computer photo albums and pulled pictures of Trekker. I thought it would be extremely painful to look back on all of those memories and see the happy, energetic, sometimes ornery pup that we knew and loved for four years, but instead it felt uplifting. We remembered Trek's good times, instead of being filled with the sad memories of his last hours with us. It felt uncannily similar to looking at pictures of Trekker when he was alive, and we reminisced about past canoe trips, visits to the cemetery, and various Trekker antics.
Our beloved pup, you will be missed. You are missed. |
It has been good to lean on one another in this time, and we appreciate your prayers over the last few months and in the coming days/weeks. Thank you for your friendship.
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Preach it, Mr. Conroy!
My Reading Life by Pat Conroy
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
When I got to the chapter entitled "A Love Letter to Thomas Wolfe," and read the following quote: "The rhythms of his prose style, oceanic and brimming with strange life, infected the way I wrote and thought with an immovable virus I have never been able to shake. It is a well-known fact that I will carefully select four silvery, difficult-to-digest adjectives when one lean, Anglo-Saxon adjective will suffice. [...] Most flaws I have as a man and a writer I can trace directly back to the early influence of Thomas Wolfe: (Conroy 241), Conroy's writing made sense to me.
I have never read any of Conroy's novels, nor have I read anything by Thomas Wolfe, so I had mixed feelings about his (Conroy's) writing style in the first half of the book. His flowery language alternates between feeling dead-on and feeling over the top. A lot of times, it is when he piles on sentence after sentence of the flowery langauge that I get bogged down. I like a few sparse sentences of filler to help my digest the flowers.
Content-wise, I found that My Reading Life has inspired me to go back and read those classics that somehow slipped through the cracks of my reading background. It wasn't until earlier this summer that I read a complete Jane Austen novel, and I'm still making my way through my first Dickens (via audio book). I have yet to tackle Tolstoy or Dostoyevsky, but having finished Conroy, I have renewed motivation to try. I know, I know, I should be ashamed to call myself an English teacher.
One of my favorite chapters deals with The Catcher in the Rye, in part because I teach the novel, and in part because he makes a statement about the power of literature and the danger of censorship. Conroy writes: "a great book could do whatever it wanted [...] great books invited argument and disagreement, but ignorance did not even earn a place at the table when ideas where the subject of dispute [...] if [the school board] wanted to ban [The Catcher in the Rye], then the board of education should go ahead and banish all of [the books], because books existed to force people to examine every facet of their lives and beliefs [...] There was nothing to fear in The Catcher in the Rye except the danger of its being censored by people who hadn't read it" (53-54).
Amen, Mr. Conroy. Preach it!
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
When I got to the chapter entitled "A Love Letter to Thomas Wolfe," and read the following quote: "The rhythms of his prose style, oceanic and brimming with strange life, infected the way I wrote and thought with an immovable virus I have never been able to shake. It is a well-known fact that I will carefully select four silvery, difficult-to-digest adjectives when one lean, Anglo-Saxon adjective will suffice. [...] Most flaws I have as a man and a writer I can trace directly back to the early influence of Thomas Wolfe: (Conroy 241), Conroy's writing made sense to me.
I have never read any of Conroy's novels, nor have I read anything by Thomas Wolfe, so I had mixed feelings about his (Conroy's) writing style in the first half of the book. His flowery language alternates between feeling dead-on and feeling over the top. A lot of times, it is when he piles on sentence after sentence of the flowery langauge that I get bogged down. I like a few sparse sentences of filler to help my digest the flowers.
Content-wise, I found that My Reading Life has inspired me to go back and read those classics that somehow slipped through the cracks of my reading background. It wasn't until earlier this summer that I read a complete Jane Austen novel, and I'm still making my way through my first Dickens (via audio book). I have yet to tackle Tolstoy or Dostoyevsky, but having finished Conroy, I have renewed motivation to try. I know, I know, I should be ashamed to call myself an English teacher.
One of my favorite chapters deals with The Catcher in the Rye, in part because I teach the novel, and in part because he makes a statement about the power of literature and the danger of censorship. Conroy writes: "a great book could do whatever it wanted [...] great books invited argument and disagreement, but ignorance did not even earn a place at the table when ideas where the subject of dispute [...] if [the school board] wanted to ban [The Catcher in the Rye], then the board of education should go ahead and banish all of [the books], because books existed to force people to examine every facet of their lives and beliefs [...] There was nothing to fear in The Catcher in the Rye except the danger of its being censored by people who hadn't read it" (53-54).
Amen, Mr. Conroy. Preach it!
View all my reviews
Saturday, July 9, 2011
Happily Ever Hovland
They tied the knot. It went off WITH a hitch. It's a done deal. The Hovlands are happily ever after!
And it was beautiful.
I arrived at Wedding Palooza the Wednesday before The Big Day (Wedding Palooza had already begun the previous Thursday after Bekah and Melissa both finished their respective schooling, testing, and working). It was a pleasant surprise because my Wednesday class got cancelled, so I met my mom, Melissa, and Bekah at Taste of Thai for lunch. Wednesday afternoon: Mostly errand running and house cleaning.
Thursday, the house cleaning and errand running picked up. Jess was home by then, and she came over to Bekah's with the wedding dress so it could get pressed. Which was lucky for me because I wasn't motivated to go running until she showed up in running shoes. So we ran. Until it started raining. But it gave me a chance to listen to some more Great Expectations. I downloaded a free audio recording on Librivox and I am slowly but surely making my way through the entire 500 pages, audio-style, all while I run. I calculated it the other day, and I've listened to about 7 hours (out of a total of 20). At this rate, it will only take me another 6 months to finish it.
Thursday evening is when the real celebrations began. MOH Melissa planned the most creative bachelorette party in which I have ever taken part. Over the course of 3 hours, we hit 12 different locations. Four of those locations were courses of dinner:
But that was only four. The other locations were all over Springfield.
Each person got a clue, and each clue had a letter, and the letters led us to different locations. But that' not all. They also spelled something....
Too much fun, right? And this is just the beginning of the weekend.
Friday started bright and early the next morning with a day full of decorating. The church. The reception hall. It probably would have been easy had we not had to rearrange the entire reception hall because of a misunderstanding with the caterer regarding how many people would be sitting at each table. But by the end, Bekah and I decided we could definitely make it if we ever needed to arrange tables and chairs aesthetically for a living. We had just enough time after table arranging to run back to Melissa's (let Bekah in the house since she didn't have her key) and shower for the rehearsal. We rehearsed. Without Casey, who got stranded at the church WITH a dog, but withOUT a car. We ate. Then back to the reception hall for decoration. After a 14 hour day, I collapsed into bed thinking, Wow, we haven't even had the wedding yet. And at the point that I fell asleep, Bekah and Melissa were still at the church finishing those decorations.
Eight hours of sleep did wonders for me. I woke Saturday refreshed and ready for a wedding. All the hard work paid off from Friday so pre-wedding Saturday was quite relaxing. Aside from hair appointments, we really had no schedules but for the ceremony at 2:30 pm. Somehow, though, I still managed to show up late to the church. I rushed to get into my dress, thinking we are about to start pictures, and thus added an unnecessary 2 hours to the I-can't-breathe portion of my day. See, when I got my wedding dress fitted, I thought it was going to be too tight, so I requested that it be taken out a bit, only to end up spending half of my wedding day pulling up my dress because it kept sliding down. So, learning from past mistakes, I decided I would just sacrifice breathing (who needs to do that, really?) this time so that I wouldn't have to worry about a loose-fitting dress. In fact, my dress was so well-fitted that when my mom fastened the clip at the top of the zipper before zipping my dress, I popped the fastener off with a last deep breath before the zip. Oops! Better than popping a seam, or the zipper, I guess.
The pictures before the ceremony didn't happen. At least not professional pictures. Instead, I wandered around the church, taking my own pictures (see below) and learning how to not-breathe.
Finally, the time came. There was music. There were tears (Not only did I cry profusely, I also forgot a tissue and had to stand up at the front of the church with a tear-streaked face for the entire service). There were vows. There was the kiss. There was the mandatory bubble picture.
Then, there was the reception. It was a blast. I had more fun at Bekah and Trenton's reception than I did at my own. No pressure of being the bride. Just lots of dancing. Somehow, I also managed to eat without ripping my dress. So the night was a success. As was the weekend. I'm a fan of having sisters get married. People kept congratulating my parents: Only two more to go, while I kept thinking, Only two more??? :(
I remember My Natalie Friend's wedding. It was the first wedding I had ever been a part of more than the showing up for the ceremony and reception. It's a totally different wedding experience. From the moving of tables to the making of slideshows (and groom's cakes), from the gluing of pew bows to the un-gluing of all those flowers from all those rocks (and an entire reception hall, when it was all over), it's one of those rites of passage as a sister. And a friend. To be a part of the beginning of a new life. It's breathtaking (in my dress, quite literally). It's magical.
P.S. I couldn't find a good place to put this information into my above post, so I'll just add it here. Isn't my husband one good lookin' fella? Check out the picture of us in the collage at the beginning. HOT! :)
Wedding Palooza 2011 |
And it was beautiful.
I arrived at Wedding Palooza the Wednesday before The Big Day (Wedding Palooza had already begun the previous Thursday after Bekah and Melissa both finished their respective schooling, testing, and working). It was a pleasant surprise because my Wednesday class got cancelled, so I met my mom, Melissa, and Bekah at Taste of Thai for lunch. Wednesday afternoon: Mostly errand running and house cleaning.
Thursday, the house cleaning and errand running picked up. Jess was home by then, and she came over to Bekah's with the wedding dress so it could get pressed. Which was lucky for me because I wasn't motivated to go running until she showed up in running shoes. So we ran. Until it started raining. But it gave me a chance to listen to some more Great Expectations. I downloaded a free audio recording on Librivox and I am slowly but surely making my way through the entire 500 pages, audio-style, all while I run. I calculated it the other day, and I've listened to about 7 hours (out of a total of 20). At this rate, it will only take me another 6 months to finish it.
Thursday evening is when the real celebrations began. MOH Melissa planned the most creative bachelorette party in which I have ever taken part. Over the course of 3 hours, we hit 12 different locations. Four of those locations were courses of dinner:
Aunt Sally made appetizers |
Salad at Aunt Rita's |
Main dish--Mom! |
And back to Me's for dessert--YUM! |
Each person got a clue, and each clue had a letter, and the letters led us to different locations. But that' not all. They also spelled something....
Too much fun, right? And this is just the beginning of the weekend.
Friday started bright and early the next morning with a day full of decorating. The church. The reception hall. It probably would have been easy had we not had to rearrange the entire reception hall because of a misunderstanding with the caterer regarding how many people would be sitting at each table. But by the end, Bekah and I decided we could definitely make it if we ever needed to arrange tables and chairs aesthetically for a living. We had just enough time after table arranging to run back to Melissa's (let Bekah in the house since she didn't have her key) and shower for the rehearsal. We rehearsed. Without Casey, who got stranded at the church WITH a dog, but withOUT a car. We ate. Then back to the reception hall for decoration. After a 14 hour day, I collapsed into bed thinking, Wow, we haven't even had the wedding yet. And at the point that I fell asleep, Bekah and Melissa were still at the church finishing those decorations.
Eight hours of sleep did wonders for me. I woke Saturday refreshed and ready for a wedding. All the hard work paid off from Friday so pre-wedding Saturday was quite relaxing. Aside from hair appointments, we really had no schedules but for the ceremony at 2:30 pm. Somehow, though, I still managed to show up late to the church. I rushed to get into my dress, thinking we are about to start pictures, and thus added an unnecessary 2 hours to the I-can't-breathe portion of my day. See, when I got my wedding dress fitted, I thought it was going to be too tight, so I requested that it be taken out a bit, only to end up spending half of my wedding day pulling up my dress because it kept sliding down. So, learning from past mistakes, I decided I would just sacrifice breathing (who needs to do that, really?) this time so that I wouldn't have to worry about a loose-fitting dress. In fact, my dress was so well-fitted that when my mom fastened the clip at the top of the zipper before zipping my dress, I popped the fastener off with a last deep breath before the zip. Oops! Better than popping a seam, or the zipper, I guess.
The pictures before the ceremony didn't happen. At least not professional pictures. Instead, I wandered around the church, taking my own pictures (see below) and learning how to not-breathe.
Dani and Emma practicing |
All that hard work made for a gorgeous church! |
Mandatory bubble picture |
I remember My Natalie Friend's wedding. It was the first wedding I had ever been a part of more than the showing up for the ceremony and reception. It's a totally different wedding experience. From the moving of tables to the making of slideshows (and groom's cakes), from the gluing of pew bows to the un-gluing of all those flowers from all those rocks (and an entire reception hall, when it was all over), it's one of those rites of passage as a sister. And a friend. To be a part of the beginning of a new life. It's breathtaking (in my dress, quite literally). It's magical.
Happily ever Hovland! |
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
God Grew Tired
God Grew Tired Of Us: A Memoir by John Bul Dau
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
GGTOU was an excellent book to take me out of my little box and see things from a non-American perspective. So many things I take for granted, and even have the audacity to complain about, when I should be oh so thankful that God has blessed me abundantly.
John Bul Dau has such an optimism and a strength, developed by the adversity he has faced. I admire him greatly.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
GGTOU was an excellent book to take me out of my little box and see things from a non-American perspective. So many things I take for granted, and even have the audacity to complain about, when I should be oh so thankful that God has blessed me abundantly.
John Bul Dau has such an optimism and a strength, developed by the adversity he has faced. I admire him greatly.
View all my reviews
Friday, June 17, 2011
Summer No-Break
It's summer break. Does that mean I am taking a break? No, on the contrary, my days are still filled to the brim. In a good way, I hope. God is teaching me about shifting the stance of my heart in regards to my commitments, rather than simply trying to "do less." Lowering the stress that I feel over my busy schedule does not necessarily mean becoming less involved. Sometimes it means saying no, but more generally, it means finding my identity and fulfillment in Christ, and not in what I do or how I spend my time. It's something I struggle with. A lot. No doubt, I also struggle with saying no when I have too much on my plate, but that is also something I am working on, and something I've made strides in overcoming with the help of my wonderful husband. He has taught me much about relaxation. I'm very grateful.
I don't know how much longer we are going to have him, but we are trying to make the most of it. He is getting the royal treatment for sure. Last week, I came home to him tearing apart a stuffed animal, one of several toys he and Casey picked up after a visit to the toy section at Petsmart. We also took him on a canoe trip (his favorite thing to do) and have spent two separate evenings at the lake. Not to mention his new favorite spot, planted right in the middle of the bed, between Casey and me. It usually ends up that Trek has about 80% of the bed, and Casey and I get about 10% each!
Trekker is still sick. He's been going downhill for the last 5-6 weeks. He is lethargic, is losing his appetite, and is slowly losing strength (and weight), particularly in his hind legs. We are to the point now that we are looking more at pain management than diagnosis. So far, he seems more uncomfortable than anything else, but it is still heart-breaking to watch my once overly energetic pup now struggle to stand up.
When I took him to the vet today for a reassessment, a guy sitting in the waiting room overheard me say to the nurse that Trek isn't feeling well, and as we walked past him, he said, "I hope your dog feels better soon." It just about made me start crying.
I don't know how much longer we are going to have him, but we are trying to make the most of it. He is getting the royal treatment for sure. Last week, I came home to him tearing apart a stuffed animal, one of several toys he and Casey picked up after a visit to the toy section at Petsmart. We also took him on a canoe trip (his favorite thing to do) and have spent two separate evenings at the lake. Not to mention his new favorite spot, planted right in the middle of the bed, between Casey and me. It usually ends up that Trek has about 80% of the bed, and Casey and I get about 10% each!
Oh, how I am going to miss him.
"Come on guys! It's time to go floating!" |
Water dog |
Squeaky ball |
Trek and his toys |
Making Atonement
Atonement by Ian McEwan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
A book I picked up last summer, but couldn't push past the first 20 pages. This summer, my Fondling the Details summer book club gave me the motivation to push through the beginning, and the result was well worth it.
As evidenced by the title, the novel deals with the idea of atonement. In the end, Briony is not able to find atonement for her sin. She concludes that "[Atonement] was always an impossible task, and that was precisely the point. The attempt was all" (McEwan 351). The idea that it is not always (or ever) possible to make up for the past resounds very truthfully. And sadly. In our discussion, we discussed the (lack of) religion in the book, aside from Briony compare herself as a novelist to that of God (a god who is more a creator than anything else). We also discussed that in Christianity, Jesus is the atonement for sin, that no human being CAN make atonement. I think I may have been the only one (at the book club meeting) who actually believes that, but it was an insightful discussion nonetheless.
And to end, one of my favorite passages: "The hard soles of his shoes rapped loudly on the metaled road like a giant clock,and he made himself think about time, about his great hoard, the luxury of an unspent fortune. He had never before felt so self-consciously young, nor experienced such appetite, such impatience for the story to begin" (McEwan 86). What a fantastic description of that adreneline rush of those moments where life's fullness overwhelms you and feels endless, like "an unspent fortune."
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
A book I picked up last summer, but couldn't push past the first 20 pages. This summer, my Fondling the Details summer book club gave me the motivation to push through the beginning, and the result was well worth it.
As evidenced by the title, the novel deals with the idea of atonement. In the end, Briony is not able to find atonement for her sin. She concludes that "[Atonement] was always an impossible task, and that was precisely the point. The attempt was all" (McEwan 351). The idea that it is not always (or ever) possible to make up for the past resounds very truthfully. And sadly. In our discussion, we discussed the (lack of) religion in the book, aside from Briony compare herself as a novelist to that of God (a god who is more a creator than anything else). We also discussed that in Christianity, Jesus is the atonement for sin, that no human being CAN make atonement. I think I may have been the only one (at the book club meeting) who actually believes that, but it was an insightful discussion nonetheless.
And to end, one of my favorite passages: "The hard soles of his shoes rapped loudly on the metaled road like a giant clock,and he made himself think about time, about his great hoard, the luxury of an unspent fortune. He had never before felt so self-consciously young, nor experienced such appetite, such impatience for the story to begin" (McEwan 86). What a fantastic description of that adreneline rush of those moments where life's fullness overwhelms you and feels endless, like "an unspent fortune."
View all my reviews
Friday, June 10, 2011
Another goodread...
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I'm not normally a nonfiction reader, but this book may influence me to pick up more nonfiction. I loved the story of Henrietta and of her daughter, Deborah. There were a few slow parts in the middle where the story got away from Henrietta and became about her cells. Rebecca Skloot is right, the real story lies behind the woman. Her cells have done amazing things for science, but she is captivating. I am so excited about this book that I couldn't help but talk to some friends about it as soon as I finished reading it, even though I will be talking about it in book club discussion in less than an hour. As I told my friends, I thought the ending was fitting in that it didn't pretend to solve the Lacks's family problems. Because nothing is solved. I think improvements have been made to give Henrietta Lacks (and her family) much deserved recongition and thanks. And I think questions have been answered that needed to be answered for half a century. But I also think that there are some things that will never be "better," and those are the consequences for the way things were handled from the beginning. Sad. But real. And true. Which is what makes it so good.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I'm not normally a nonfiction reader, but this book may influence me to pick up more nonfiction. I loved the story of Henrietta and of her daughter, Deborah. There were a few slow parts in the middle where the story got away from Henrietta and became about her cells. Rebecca Skloot is right, the real story lies behind the woman. Her cells have done amazing things for science, but she is captivating. I am so excited about this book that I couldn't help but talk to some friends about it as soon as I finished reading it, even though I will be talking about it in book club discussion in less than an hour. As I told my friends, I thought the ending was fitting in that it didn't pretend to solve the Lacks's family problems. Because nothing is solved. I think improvements have been made to give Henrietta Lacks (and her family) much deserved recongition and thanks. And I think questions have been answered that needed to be answered for half a century. But I also think that there are some things that will never be "better," and those are the consequences for the way things were handled from the beginning. Sad. But real. And true. Which is what makes it so good.
View all my reviews
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A very entertaining read. I liked learning about circuses, especially given the author's note, which talks about all the research that was used in writing the story. There were some parts that didn't sit quite right---although I usually like the flashback method of story-telling, I overall did not like how the beginning passage was nearly identical, but also not identical to one of the last passages in the story. As I read it, I knew I had read it in the beginning, but there were also parts that I knew I hadn't read, so then I flipped back and forth to see what was added. I get that Gruen needed to come back to that scene, I just wish it didn't involve repeating the exact same passages.
The twists at the end were clever, but I think because of the whole flashback issue, it ruined some of that for me.
Overall, I still enjoyed it.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
A very entertaining read. I liked learning about circuses, especially given the author's note, which talks about all the research that was used in writing the story. There were some parts that didn't sit quite right---although I usually like the flashback method of story-telling, I overall did not like how the beginning passage was nearly identical, but also not identical to one of the last passages in the story. As I read it, I knew I had read it in the beginning, but there were also parts that I knew I hadn't read, so then I flipped back and forth to see what was added. I get that Gruen needed to come back to that scene, I just wish it didn't involve repeating the exact same passages.
The twists at the end were clever, but I think because of the whole flashback issue, it ruined some of that for me.
Overall, I still enjoyed it.
View all my reviews
Friday, May 13, 2011
Nups and Pups
The past two-ish weeks have been wedding-tastic.
First, Linz n' Luke tied the knot. And their matching names weren't even the best part of the wedding. If I had to give a prize, it would be a tie between the "help" the groom received when it came time to kiss the bride (stepladder, please?) and the Royal Couple wedding snapshot, photo-shopped with L&L's faces. Loving the humor---it wouldn't have been a Murl/Stiger wedding without it.
I also have to say this is the first wedding ceremony I have attended where, instead of the lovey-dovey romantic heart-melting, I felt instead this strange "you-two-really-have-no-idea-how-hard-this-thing-is-gonna-be" feeling. Probably because my own husband and I spent the 80 minute drive to the ceremony engaged in a heated argument. The kind where neither of us speaks because the tension is too thick and we are both so determined that we are right that we can't bear to be the one to show weakness and admit our own sinful hearts.
And, of course, it was over an issue that we have been arguing about for YEARS! Considering that we only recently added the "s" to year in terms of the length of our marriage, that is a long time to argue over the same thing, again and again---just when I think we have worked something out and made progress, BAM! It hits again. This time from the left. And behind the knee. Taking out a leg. And I'm on the floor, defenseless, wondering, Didn't we get rid of your sometime last August?
This past weekend was more wedding-ness. My sister Bekah is getting married in 42 days, and my sisters and I threw her a bridal shower last Saturday. The shower was tons of fun; between the setting up, the cooking, the decorating, the slideshowing, the picture-taking, the gameshowing (and the special bonus round), I was pleased to find out just how well my sisters and I complement one another when it comes to planning parties. With lots and lots of help from generous aunts and family friends. Later on Saturday evening, my future brother-in-law, Trenton, asked me if the first year of marriage for Casey and I was easier or harder than we expected.
Casey and I have already had this conversation: Hands down, our first year was easy-peasy-squeasy. Even the second year was a breeze. Now, the beginning of the third---another story entirely. In just the last three months, I finally (begin to) understand what people are talking about when they speak of "difficult times" in reference to marriage. I had always envisioned it as a period of such challenge that both parties are constantly miserable and perhaps second-guessing those vows.
But that's not it at all. What never gets mentioned in all the talk of those first "challenging" years of marriage is that in between the arguing and the frustration and the moodiness and the misunderstanding (no matter how many times a day they may come) are periods as satisfying as the others are dissatisfying. That even though it's hard, it's still good. I still love Casey. And he still loves me. (And thankfully, last weekend, we worked out our differences between the ceremony and the reception. And had a GREAT evening together.)
For us, the hard-ness has come with increased stress. This week, the stress has come in the shape of our pup. We found out this week that Trekker has elevated levels of calcium in his blood. It's a pretty serious condition. We have ruled out many of the minor illnesses that could be the culprit. Now we are left with two.
The first: hyperparathyroidism. Treatable by removing the parathyroids. And with good results. Post-surgery, Trekker will once again become the happy, healthy dog that we know and love.
The second: lymphoma. Treatable, but only temporarily. Most dogs who get treatment only go into remission for months. A year at most.
We won't find out until next week the results of the lab work. People keep asking what we are going to do, but we can't even plan to do something because we won't know what questions to ask until we start to get some more definitive answers.
Until then, Trekker burrows his head into my side a little further as he sleeps on the bed next to me. Am I breaking the rules? You bet. ;)
Monday, May 2, 2011
24 Hours
I gave my students an assignment this past weekend to try to go 24 (consecutive) hours without technology; that is, without television/movies, video games, Internet, and texting. To clarify, they were allowed to make phone CALLS on their cell phones and they were allowed to use the computer, given that it was offline and not a video game.
Of approximately 85 students, only 7 were successful in their quest. Of those who were not, a few lasted 16-20 hours, while many others lasted fewer than 10 hours (during most and/or all of which they were sleeping). Granted, a few didn't even make the attempt...
They each had to write a paragraph about their experience, successful or otherwise. For those who were successful, the assignment was to write about what they did instead to fill the time that would have been spent involved in aforementioned activities. For those not, they were to write about the moment they broke. And what the last straw was. And how they felt.
It sparked a very interesting discussion in class today. Some students felt bad about not being able to last 24 hours, while others were proud of the fact. Some saw themselves as powerless to avoid what they have been bombarded with from their infancy. Others found it refreshingly peaceful to interact with reality--go outside, get fresh air, talk to people in person rather than via words on a screen.
And some insightful conclusions. Like how maybe we need to be more aware of how technology is controlling us. And how aware we need to be of the information we make public, however flippant, light-hearted, or humorous it may seem in the moment.
As a whole, students were able to come to the conclusion that the point of the assignment was not to prove technology a force of evil, but rather to see it as a tool, to become more aware of the ways in which we interact with computers as opposed to humans, and to recognize that our dependence on it has both positive AND negative impacts.
More so than most lessons, I think it really made a lot of students think. I had more voluntary participation with this discussion than any previously.
If you are interested, the homework assignment was prompted by a short story by Ray Bradbury called The Pedestrian. Oh, and to give proper accolades, I didn't come up with the assignment either. I borrowed it from my pal, JT. 5 stars! :)
Of approximately 85 students, only 7 were successful in their quest. Of those who were not, a few lasted 16-20 hours, while many others lasted fewer than 10 hours (during most and/or all of which they were sleeping). Granted, a few didn't even make the attempt...
They each had to write a paragraph about their experience, successful or otherwise. For those who were successful, the assignment was to write about what they did instead to fill the time that would have been spent involved in aforementioned activities. For those not, they were to write about the moment they broke. And what the last straw was. And how they felt.
It sparked a very interesting discussion in class today. Some students felt bad about not being able to last 24 hours, while others were proud of the fact. Some saw themselves as powerless to avoid what they have been bombarded with from their infancy. Others found it refreshingly peaceful to interact with reality--go outside, get fresh air, talk to people in person rather than via words on a screen.
And some insightful conclusions. Like how maybe we need to be more aware of how technology is controlling us. And how aware we need to be of the information we make public, however flippant, light-hearted, or humorous it may seem in the moment.
As a whole, students were able to come to the conclusion that the point of the assignment was not to prove technology a force of evil, but rather to see it as a tool, to become more aware of the ways in which we interact with computers as opposed to humans, and to recognize that our dependence on it has both positive AND negative impacts.
More so than most lessons, I think it really made a lot of students think. I had more voluntary participation with this discussion than any previously.
If you are interested, the homework assignment was prompted by a short story by Ray Bradbury called The Pedestrian. Oh, and to give proper accolades, I didn't come up with the assignment either. I borrowed it from my pal, JT. 5 stars! :)
Monday, April 25, 2011
Leaving Work at Work
With only 24 more school days remaining this year (but who is counting, right?), I find myself once again with mounds of work piled on my desk.
Tis the season of research papers. I collected the rough drafts of the papers last Thursday and started them over the weekend. In two hours, I read and commented on 10 papers. Of those 10, only two have some minor plagiarism issues. It seems no matter how hard I try to explain plagiarism, it is so difficult for students to understand the concept of paraphrasing. They want to change one word in the sentence and call it their own words.
Today I graded 10 more papers. Unfortunately, of those, three were majorly plagiarized, so much so that I will have to hand them back and have them redo.
4 hours of work, 20 papers down. Only 30 more to go (for this round). And I am hoping to get them finished by Friday when the next round comes in.
Yet, in the midst of all this grading, I can't help but think how far I have come since my first year of teaching (since last year, even). This is the first time since February that I have brought work home with me. I have been making great effort to do all my work at school, even if it means staying a couple hours after school once or twice a week. Even with the research papers, I have been taking them to a coffee shop to grade. It's not that they go more quickly, but it helps keep me on task so I don't take too many breaks in between reaching my daily quota.
And the biggest benefit of all: I am able to leave my work outside my house. It feels good to come home and be home, not to have work hanging over my head at all hours of the evening.
...Five years later, but hey, it's progress!
Tis the season of research papers. I collected the rough drafts of the papers last Thursday and started them over the weekend. In two hours, I read and commented on 10 papers. Of those 10, only two have some minor plagiarism issues. It seems no matter how hard I try to explain plagiarism, it is so difficult for students to understand the concept of paraphrasing. They want to change one word in the sentence and call it their own words.
Today I graded 10 more papers. Unfortunately, of those, three were majorly plagiarized, so much so that I will have to hand them back and have them redo.
4 hours of work, 20 papers down. Only 30 more to go (for this round). And I am hoping to get them finished by Friday when the next round comes in.
Yet, in the midst of all this grading, I can't help but think how far I have come since my first year of teaching (since last year, even). This is the first time since February that I have brought work home with me. I have been making great effort to do all my work at school, even if it means staying a couple hours after school once or twice a week. Even with the research papers, I have been taking them to a coffee shop to grade. It's not that they go more quickly, but it helps keep me on task so I don't take too many breaks in between reaching my daily quota.
And the biggest benefit of all: I am able to leave my work outside my house. It feels good to come home and be home, not to have work hanging over my head at all hours of the evening.
...Five years later, but hey, it's progress!
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Crown Candy: Late Post #1
I put these photos on my blog several weeks ago so that I would remember to blog about this, but lo and behold, weeks later, it is still a "draft" in my "Edit Posts." Tardy or not, here it is.
Crown Candy Kitchen is located in North St. Louis and is an old-fashioned ice cream shop that is quite the St. Louis tradition. If you go, be prepared to shell out some money, not a lot, but enough when all you are getting is a malt. It's pricey, but you are paying for the atmosphere. Still, this isn't a review of the restaurant. It's an account of the evening spent there.
On a whim, Casey and I had a free Friday night, so we decided to grab some shakes. We hadn't been to CCK since October 2007, about a month into our relationship, so we thought it would provide some nostalgia and be a fun outing. We called up Jess and her date, on the off chance they could meet up with us, and, voila,* everything worked out.
The pictures below encompass both our recent evening, as well as pics from our first trip to CCK over two years ago. From all appearances, not much has changed, in either the restaurant or in us! :)
Oh, and I almost forgot to mention our post-malt stroll. There is an organization called Old North St. Louis Restoration whose mission is to (duh!)-- restore old North St. Louis. They are working on the square area catty-cornered to Crown Candy, and it looks like it is going to be really cool when it is finished. We walked up and down the street and looked at several cool buildings. Many of them have yet to be sold, but there was an art gallery, a clothing shop, and maybe another. And all of the buildings look really nice. The target date (aka grand opening) is sometime in July 2011. I hope the funds don't dry up and all works well. It seems like a good strategy to use Crown Candy as a cornerstone. It would be nice to see a poor urban area come alive again.
Jess/CL--Mar. 2011 |
Casey and I--Mar. 2011 (Jess was holding the camera and the picture wouldn't take, so Casey and I are both drinking through our straws, but have too much in our mouths--hence the funny faces!) |
Jess and I--Oct. 2007 |
Casey and I--Oct. 2007 |
*Voila, I am somewhat embarrassed to say, is a word I only recently learned to spell. And so I had to use it in writing at first opportunity.
Road Trip! St. Louis
Each year, Casey and I try to do two weekend get-aways. One in the fall and one in the spring. We haven't really done any major vacations since we got married, but these weekends are really nice 'mini-breaks' from the daily pressures of work, house, and the like. This year, to change it up, we decided to road trip about 10 minutes away from our house---downtown St. Louis.
We booked a hotel room at the Drury Plaza Hotel Downtown at the Arch.
Aside from the beautiful location in downtown St. Louis, Drury comes with many perks--I would highly recommend Drury to anyone looking for a comfortable, pleasant hotel experience. The quality of service was excellent. The room was clean and updated. The food was of higher quality than the average "free" breakfast (they even have happy hour food and drinks in the evening, but we missed it b/c we arrived too late). The hotel lobby was spacious and sharp-looking. It even came with a nice still-life of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
The hotel itself was great. But more than just the hotel was the getting away from life at home. We started our stay-cation Friday afternoon, when I met Casey at Borders and we spent 2-ish hours reading and perusing books. I read halfway through a YA novel called If I Stay that I had heard about on NPR and sounded interesting. It was good enough to take us back to Borders on Saturday so I could finish it before heading to the hotel. Well, that and we both had 40% off coupons--hard to pass up such a good deal on books!
Saturday we cleaned our house before leaving. It's always nice to come home to a clean house. We took our sweet time, getting up late, cleaning, shopping at Borders, so we didn't arrive at the hotel until later in the evening. But we weren't in a rush. We did, however, decide to book a late dinner so that we could spend some time at the hotel, lounging in the pool and enjoying the luxury of cable tv (more so for Casey than me), before leaving again. We decided on a steakhouse that was conveniently located next door to the hotel.
Unfortunately, upon arriving at our scheduled reservation time, it turns out that "someone" had called to cancel our reservations 15 minutes before. Casey doesn't buy the story, and I am skeptical myself, but long story short, they had already shut down the kitchen because they had no other reservations for the evening. LAME! Instead, we ended up at City Diner for our fancy ;) dinner.
It was no steakhouse, for sure, but it was one of the only places we could think of on the fly that would serve food after 11pm. And it gave us an excuse to 1.) extend our retreat into Sunday evening with a second try for steaks and 2.) get dressed up for dinner AGAIN!
Before calling it a night, we decided to make one more stop--Lumiere Place Casino. I had never been before, so we thought that staying at the Drury, just a stone's throw from the casino, was about the most opportune time. Neither of us is a big gambler. Casey likes to talk about how "if he wins the lottery..." he will do x, y, or z; and when I remind him that he has to play the lottery to have a chance at winning, his patent response is, "Well, NOT playing really doesn't significantly decrease my chances of winning!" We spent all of 30 minutes at the casino and each lost our designated $5 of casino money in the slot machines. Easy come, easy go! The whole time, I felt like I was in the movie Oceans 11. It was pretty much exactly how I had always imagined it. Highly unimpressive. If I never step foot in another casino, my life will be no less fulfilled.
Sunday dawned bright and clear (a contrast to the cloudy, windy Saturday), so we decided it would be a perfect day for a hike. We haven't hiked together since our honeymoon in the Smoky Mountains. After a bit of research, we decided on the Rockwood Reservation, to get away from the major highways and hopefully, the crowds, and because there was nothing online that excluded pets, based on the website info. But upon pulling into the parking lot, the first big sign we saw: "NO PETS!" Go figure. I mean, what use could that information be on your website, right?
Instead, we ended up at Greenfeldt Park, which backs up to the reservation (and, we later found out, to Six Flags--as we made our way back to 44 via a more direct route, we began to hear the screams from The Screaming Eagle. I had always wondered about all the forest behind the park. Now I know!). We found an appealing trail at Greenfeldt and hiked for almost two hours--a great way to spend a warm spring afternoon. And Trek enjoyed it too, especially after spending the night by himself--poor pup! And, as an added bonus, we worked up a great appetite for our steak dinner--round two.
This time we ended up at Sam's Steakhouse in South County. Thankfully, no glitches in the reservation time, and we ended a wonderful weekend with a fantastic dinner together.
We booked a hotel room at the Drury Plaza Hotel Downtown at the Arch.
Drury Plaza Hotel Downtown at the Arch |
Lewis and Clark (and Casey) |
Saturday we cleaned our house before leaving. It's always nice to come home to a clean house. We took our sweet time, getting up late, cleaning, shopping at Borders, so we didn't arrive at the hotel until later in the evening. But we weren't in a rush. We did, however, decide to book a late dinner so that we could spend some time at the hotel, lounging in the pool and enjoying the luxury of cable tv (more so for Casey than me), before leaving again. We decided on a steakhouse that was conveniently located next door to the hotel.
Unfortunately, upon arriving at our scheduled reservation time, it turns out that "someone" had called to cancel our reservations 15 minutes before. Casey doesn't buy the story, and I am skeptical myself, but long story short, they had already shut down the kitchen because they had no other reservations for the evening. LAME! Instead, we ended up at City Diner for our fancy ;) dinner.
City Diner--All Dolled Up! |
Before calling it a night, we decided to make one more stop--Lumiere Place Casino. I had never been before, so we thought that staying at the Drury, just a stone's throw from the casino, was about the most opportune time. Neither of us is a big gambler. Casey likes to talk about how "if he wins the lottery..." he will do x, y, or z; and when I remind him that he has to play the lottery to have a chance at winning, his patent response is, "Well, NOT playing really doesn't significantly decrease my chances of winning!" We spent all of 30 minutes at the casino and each lost our designated $5 of casino money in the slot machines. Easy come, easy go! The whole time, I felt like I was in the movie Oceans 11. It was pretty much exactly how I had always imagined it. Highly unimpressive. If I never step foot in another casino, my life will be no less fulfilled.
Sunday dawned bright and clear (a contrast to the cloudy, windy Saturday), so we decided it would be a perfect day for a hike. We haven't hiked together since our honeymoon in the Smoky Mountains. After a bit of research, we decided on the Rockwood Reservation, to get away from the major highways and hopefully, the crowds, and because there was nothing online that excluded pets, based on the website info. But upon pulling into the parking lot, the first big sign we saw: "NO PETS!" Go figure. I mean, what use could that information be on your website, right?
Trekker doing the proverbial head out the car window |
Instead, we ended up at Greenfeldt Park, which backs up to the reservation (and, we later found out, to Six Flags--as we made our way back to 44 via a more direct route, we began to hear the screams from The Screaming Eagle. I had always wondered about all the forest behind the park. Now I know!). We found an appealing trail at Greenfeldt and hiked for almost two hours--a great way to spend a warm spring afternoon. And Trek enjoyed it too, especially after spending the night by himself--poor pup! And, as an added bonus, we worked up a great appetite for our steak dinner--round two.
This time we ended up at Sam's Steakhouse in South County. Thankfully, no glitches in the reservation time, and we ended a wonderful weekend with a fantastic dinner together.
Casey's 24 oz. prime rib |
All Dolled Up AGAIN!--and well worth it! |
Friday, April 8, 2011
Nice 'stache!
Ah, my husband's sense of humor.
One thing I have learned about Casey over the years--well, it probably only took about a week of knowing him--is that he is not a fan of shaving. He says he will never take a job that requires him to be clean shaven daily.
But do not mistake his dislike for razors for a dislike of facial hair. Casey loves to recount his history as a model for a professional photographer, one whose work has even been featured in Rolling Stone. It all began when he lived in Chicago and he and his comrades at Emmaus decided to best one another with the worst looking facial hair possible. From the neck beard to the mutton chops, these guys found humor in grotesque formations of facial hair. While in process of said challenge, Casey went to Home Depot to pick up some plumbing tools. While in the plumbing aisle, he was approached by a woman who asked him "Hey, do you like to have your picture taken?" The rest is history. He left the store a professional model. The artist's series of photos at the time she requested Casey's assistance as model was something along the lines of people who have boring jobs and fantasize about something more exotic. Pictured below is the plumber who wants to be David Bowie, glam rocker. Admire the 'stache! (Yes, Casey has make-up on his face).
Each winter, Casey takes the opportunity to grow lots and lots of facial hair--like I said, any excuse not to shave. This past winter, Casey grew quite the bushy beard. And of course, any time the beard has been around long enough, Casey begins dreaming of how he can contort the facial hair into some new and ridiculous way. With the advent of warmer weather, he has been itching to get rid of the beard. Apparently, so were many of the men at our house church. They got together on Sunday at church and planned "Mustache Wednesday."
And so as not to leave out those fellas who didn't have time to grow a 'stache, Tim was kind enough to have some stick-ons ready!
What a good-looking bunch of guys, eh?
One thing I have learned about Casey over the years--well, it probably only took about a week of knowing him--is that he is not a fan of shaving. He says he will never take a job that requires him to be clean shaven daily.
But do not mistake his dislike for razors for a dislike of facial hair. Casey loves to recount his history as a model for a professional photographer, one whose work has even been featured in Rolling Stone. It all began when he lived in Chicago and he and his comrades at Emmaus decided to best one another with the worst looking facial hair possible. From the neck beard to the mutton chops, these guys found humor in grotesque formations of facial hair. While in process of said challenge, Casey went to Home Depot to pick up some plumbing tools. While in the plumbing aisle, he was approached by a woman who asked him "Hey, do you like to have your picture taken?" The rest is history. He left the store a professional model. The artist's series of photos at the time she requested Casey's assistance as model was something along the lines of people who have boring jobs and fantasize about something more exotic. Pictured below is the plumber who wants to be David Bowie, glam rocker. Admire the 'stache! (Yes, Casey has make-up on his face).
Each winter, Casey takes the opportunity to grow lots and lots of facial hair--like I said, any excuse not to shave. This past winter, Casey grew quite the bushy beard. And of course, any time the beard has been around long enough, Casey begins dreaming of how he can contort the facial hair into some new and ridiculous way. With the advent of warmer weather, he has been itching to get rid of the beard. Apparently, so were many of the men at our house church. They got together on Sunday at church and planned "Mustache Wednesday."
And so as not to leave out those fellas who didn't have time to grow a 'stache, Tim was kind enough to have some stick-ons ready!
What a good-looking bunch of guys, eh?
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Saturday Night Free Verse
I feel like a giddy kid with a new toy.
I just spent the highlight of my week talking about books and drinking tea and eating pad thai with three other women, some of whom I had only met this evening, and LOVING every single minute of it.
Just how infatuated am I with book club? Glad you asked...
At our first book club meeting in February, I showed up with a list of potential names for our book club that I had been brainstorming and recording on my library book receipt during the time between when I got in bed and when I fell asleep each night. Book club was all I could think about every night before bed for at least a month straight. From those hours of book club anticipation, Saturday Night Free Verse was birthed.
I also brought along three potential reads for March so we could pick out the next book at our meeting, just in case there wasn't a book picked out yet. (There wasn't). My suggestion: The Time Traveler's Wife. (One of my favorites!).
This month was my turn, along with choosing the read, to host the meeting for Saturday Night Free Verse. I got to pick the meal and prepare the discussion questions. Fantastic! It's like getting to plan a lesson, but for a small group instead of an entire class, and for people who have not only read the book, but who enjoy talking about the book too! It's an English teacher's dream come true.
In addition to the meal of spring rolls, pad thai, sticky rice, hot tea, and bananas in coconut milk (in honor of Henry and Clare's first date at Beau Thai, for those of you who have read TTW), I pulled out the china that Adelaide gave me as a wedding shower gift. It was like playing tea party, only with real food and real china (oh, and not to mention the place mats and cloth napkins that were Christmas gifts from my sisters this year). Plus, we were all so excited to talk about the book that we started the discussion during dinner.
When I was in college, I had this vision of sitting around for the rest of my life discussing literature with high school kids.
If only school looked like book club, my dream would be realized....
I just spent the highlight of my week talking about books and drinking tea and eating pad thai with three other women, some of whom I had only met this evening, and LOVING every single minute of it.
Just how infatuated am I with book club? Glad you asked...
At our first book club meeting in February, I showed up with a list of potential names for our book club that I had been brainstorming and recording on my library book receipt during the time between when I got in bed and when I fell asleep each night. Book club was all I could think about every night before bed for at least a month straight. From those hours of book club anticipation, Saturday Night Free Verse was birthed.
I also brought along three potential reads for March so we could pick out the next book at our meeting, just in case there wasn't a book picked out yet. (There wasn't). My suggestion: The Time Traveler's Wife. (One of my favorites!).
This month was my turn, along with choosing the read, to host the meeting for Saturday Night Free Verse. I got to pick the meal and prepare the discussion questions. Fantastic! It's like getting to plan a lesson, but for a small group instead of an entire class, and for people who have not only read the book, but who enjoy talking about the book too! It's an English teacher's dream come true.
In addition to the meal of spring rolls, pad thai, sticky rice, hot tea, and bananas in coconut milk (in honor of Henry and Clare's first date at Beau Thai, for those of you who have read TTW), I pulled out the china that Adelaide gave me as a wedding shower gift. It was like playing tea party, only with real food and real china (oh, and not to mention the place mats and cloth napkins that were Christmas gifts from my sisters this year). Plus, we were all so excited to talk about the book that we started the discussion during dinner.
When I was in college, I had this vision of sitting around for the rest of my life discussing literature with high school kids.
If only school looked like book club, my dream would be realized....
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
These Days
Haven't had much desire to blog these past few months. Sometimes the work seems more effort than it's worth. I used to like to write. I still do, I think. Blogging is just such a different kind of writing. I have to continuously edit my thoughts, unlike journaling, where I can just spew and feel comforted that no one else has to see the vomit.
Then I vacillate between the optimism of "that won't happen to me" to the paranoia of "Big brother is looking over my shoulder. What picture could be painted of my words?"
Here is a brief recap:
Peace.
Everywhere I turn, I hear another story about someone who put something on the internet without using descretion, and the next you know, life is in shambles.
Then I vacillate between the optimism of "that won't happen to me" to the paranoia of "Big brother is looking over my shoulder. What picture could be painted of my words?"
Here is a brief recap:
- Basketball season is over. I put in my resignation. No more coaching for me. Which is a good thing.
- Looking forward to spring and warmer weather. Seems life always stays busy, even when I am not coaching and don't have grading due to a student teacher.
- Joined a book club recently that my friend Ami started (Saturday Night Free Verse). It's fantastic to have a new group of friends who like to read. Current read is The Time Traveler's Wife. My pick. I'm reading it for the second time and enjoying it more than the first.
- Spring break is here. Casey and I spent the wekend in Springfield visiting my family. We were going to see the Lincoln sights, but came back early due to next bullet point.
- Adelaide is dying. This is a much bigger deal than one bullet point's worth, but I don't have the energy to delve more deeply into the emotion and response that it deserves.
Peace.
Saturday, January 29, 2011
The Mattress was Laid to Rest
In my previous post, I alluded to the "special circumstances" that allowed Trekker access to the nearly-always-off-limits space in our house where we (Casey and I) sleep: our bed.
It all started last December when Casey and I decided to upgrade our mattress. Well, maybe it started when we helped our pastor move, and we offered to dispose of his old king-sized mattress, which we later decided to keep for ourselves, for when we got married (this was about 6 months before our wedding).
The mattress itself was in pretty good shape when we received it; the problem came when we had to move it into our house. As with many older city homes, our house was not built with the intent of moving large furniture to the upper floor. In fact, when the time came to move the mattress upstairs, the only possible way to get the mattress to our bedroom (apart from taking out the windows upstairs) was to fold it in half. As you can probably imagine, this feat, albeit successful, did not leave the mattress in the same condition in which we received it. But we made do--with a big lump in the middle of the bed where we had folded it. Still, it really wasn't that bad. We flipped it and rotated it around a few times until the biggest part of the lump was at the foot of the bed.
But after a year and a half of a lumpy mattress, it seemed like a worthwhile investment to purchase a non-lumpy mattress. We got a great deal on a Sleep Number mattress, and with help from our parents, got an early Christmas gift for ourselves.
So we moved the old mattress out. It only got this far...
It all started last December when Casey and I decided to upgrade our mattress. Well, maybe it started when we helped our pastor move, and we offered to dispose of his old king-sized mattress, which we later decided to keep for ourselves, for when we got married (this was about 6 months before our wedding).
The mattress itself was in pretty good shape when we received it; the problem came when we had to move it into our house. As with many older city homes, our house was not built with the intent of moving large furniture to the upper floor. In fact, when the time came to move the mattress upstairs, the only possible way to get the mattress to our bedroom (apart from taking out the windows upstairs) was to fold it in half. As you can probably imagine, this feat, albeit successful, did not leave the mattress in the same condition in which we received it. But we made do--with a big lump in the middle of the bed where we had folded it. Still, it really wasn't that bad. We flipped it and rotated it around a few times until the biggest part of the lump was at the foot of the bed.
So we moved the old mattress out. It only got this far...
...before we decided it would be fun to leave the mattress in the living room for a while and have a comfy place to watch movies over the holidays, when Casey and I had some time off of work at the same time.
We moved the mattress down to the living room at the beginning of our Stay-cation, around Dec. 27th, I think. We thought we would keep it there for a couple of days, just as a fun treat.
The problem was that it WAS fun. A little too much fun. We had a sleepover on New Year's Eve, where we slept on the mattress downstairs and watched movies all night. And, of course, Trekker was allowed to sleep on the mattress with us, as the mattress was "trash" (now that we had folded it in half twice--once to get it up the stairs, and then to get it back down the stairs--it had become pretty worthless as a sleeping accoutrement).
A couple of weeks later, the mattress was still in our living room. Aside from the tackiness of having a mattress in our living room, the mattress caused several other inconveniences:
- The mattress was so very large that, when laid flat on the living room floor, it took up all of the floor space from the edge of the couch to the entertainment center. Thus, we couldn't walk through the living room without walking across the mattress. We fixed this problem by leaning the mattress up against the couch at an angle (see picture above).
- The mattress was so comfortable that we inevitably spent periods of time as much as 12-15 hours in a day just lying around on the mattress, watching TV (mostly football), reading, napping...(see picture of me and Trek, taken after church one Sunday).
- We found that when we slept overnight with Trekker on the mattress, Trekker slept much later into the morning, and was not nearly as whiny upon waking, which allowed us to sleep longer and with fewer interruptions.
- The mattress took up so much room in the house that it proved to be a rather significant deterrent to house-cleaning. So...we didn't clean our house between Dec. 24th and the day we got rid of the mattress.
We talked about needing to get rid of the mattress just about every other day following New Year's, but our conversations usually ended with, "Oh, but it would be nice to have the mattress for..." and still the mattress stayed.
The cleaning inconvenience was really the final motivator that ended the mattress-in-the-living-room era.
After many lazy Sundays, slumber parties, and late-night movies, the mattress was laid to rest on Wednesday, Jan. 26th, 2011 (only a month post-mattress switch). Casey and I honored it with a burial ceremony that included dragging it through the snow and into the back alley, where we jumped on it one last time (and talked about how awkward it was to lie on a mattress in the middle of an alley). Now it sits behind our dumpster and patiently awaits large-item pick-up.
And we have our house back--and clean again!
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Cuddly Pets
It has long been Casey's dream to see our pets curl up together on a cold winter's day. When we first introduced Trekker and Zima a short 3 years ago, I never thought I would see the day. All I remember is Trekker drooling with anticipation as Casey held him back from chasing Zima all over the room (and doing who knows what with her if he ever would have been given opportunity). Zima was wise to treat Trekker with hostility. That was phase 1. At that point, I was uncertain that our pets would ever even be able to live together under the same roof.
Phase 2 of the relationship took place with Zima on Casey's lap and Trekker (still overly eager) sniffing at Zima. In response, Zima batted at Trekker's nose, causing Trekker to sneeze-snort, but not providing enough of a deterrent that Trekker would get out of her business. This phase continued for several months. Zima would hiss and bat at Trekker's nose. Trekker would sneeze-snort, but continue to come back for more. At this point, Trekker did not seem to want to eat Zima anymore, but regarded her with much curiosity and intrigue. Progress! On the other hand, Zima still regarded Trekker with open hostility. Wise cat!
Phase 3: By the time we got married, we were fairly certain that there was no danger of Trekker eating or otherwise seriously harming Zima. We put up a gate in the doorway of the guest bedroom to keep Trekker from getting to Zima's food and kitty litter. Zima could jump over the gate to come and go at will, but Trekker was not allowed in the guest bedroom. Zima seemed to enjoy having her own space. She often sat just on the other side of the gate and taunted Trekker. Still no cuddling, but they were becoming much more amiable. Even Zima seemed to warm up to Trekker. In fact, it almost seemed that the tables were turning. There were moments when Zima would approach Trekker from behind, as if to sniff his tail. Trekker, upon noticing Zima, would jump back, almost in fear of Zima's curiosity.
Phase 4 (current day). Our pets can finally be coaxed to nap in close proximity to one another. Usually, Trekker is curled up unaware, and Zima quietly makes her way closer and closer. It should be noted that Trekker is not normally allowed to sleep on the bed. But that is for another blog entry. They have yet to voluntarily cuddle, but Casey has plans make that a reality (He wants to turn the heat down
while we are gone on a particularly cold day in hopes that they will seek one another for warmth. I think he is crazy.).
Phase 2 of the relationship took place with Zima on Casey's lap and Trekker (still overly eager) sniffing at Zima. In response, Zima batted at Trekker's nose, causing Trekker to sneeze-snort, but not providing enough of a deterrent that Trekker would get out of her business. This phase continued for several months. Zima would hiss and bat at Trekker's nose. Trekker would sneeze-snort, but continue to come back for more. At this point, Trekker did not seem to want to eat Zima anymore, but regarded her with much curiosity and intrigue. Progress! On the other hand, Zima still regarded Trekker with open hostility. Wise cat!
Phase 3: By the time we got married, we were fairly certain that there was no danger of Trekker eating or otherwise seriously harming Zima. We put up a gate in the doorway of the guest bedroom to keep Trekker from getting to Zima's food and kitty litter. Zima could jump over the gate to come and go at will, but Trekker was not allowed in the guest bedroom. Zima seemed to enjoy having her own space. She often sat just on the other side of the gate and taunted Trekker. Still no cuddling, but they were becoming much more amiable. Even Zima seemed to warm up to Trekker. In fact, it almost seemed that the tables were turning. There were moments when Zima would approach Trekker from behind, as if to sniff his tail. Trekker, upon noticing Zima, would jump back, almost in fear of Zima's curiosity.
Phase 4 (current day). Our pets can finally be coaxed to nap in close proximity to one another. Usually, Trekker is curled up unaware, and Zima quietly makes her way closer and closer. It should be noted that Trekker is not normally allowed to sleep on the bed. But that is for another blog entry. They have yet to voluntarily cuddle, but Casey has plans make that a reality (He wants to turn the heat down
while we are gone on a particularly cold day in hopes that they will seek one another for warmth. I think he is crazy.).
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