The Right Kind of Guy

Okay, it’s time to come clean. I’m on a diet. But, not really.

Instead of being on a diet, I’m on a quest to live a healthier, more active life. I have been having some success with counting calories using an App. It also counts my steps and reminds to move. I like it. I’m independent in my journey, yet I’ve asked someone to provide me with some accountability. She is; I’m thankful.

All of this is to tell you about a Sunday evening, a few weeks ago. The App I am using divides foods into green, yellow, and red. Red foods are 1/4 of my daily allowance — so, not much. I have to plan for them and honestly, I don’t mind doing that. Thinking about what I eat is good for me. It’s certainly better than me going to the fridge, pulling the door open, and grabbing whatever I can find because I’ve got the nibbles.

Anyway, that Sunday. I had my usual breakfast and a fairly light lunch with my men at Red Robin. I purposely chose a salad for lunch so that we could splurge that night and go to the yummy ice cream store and buy a delicious treat. After we got home, I did some school work the men watched football and I waited… Actually, I wasn’t really watching the clock, but I was most definitely looking forward to being told we were getting ice cream. Finally, after 8:30, I came out of the bedroom, looked at the clock, and said I guess we wouldn’t be getting ice cream.

I had leftovers from lunch in the fridge, but had planned to have them the next day at work. Everyone else had eaten supper. I hadn’t and I was hungry.

My sweet husband was so troubled by the fact that I hadn’t eaten that he offered to make me something…. so I let him. He asked what I wanted and I suggested scrambled eggs and leftover potatoes from a day or two earlier.

A while later, he gave me my dinner.

It was delicious.

This is not an unusual story at our house. Mr. Gorgeous has always been a thoughtful and considerate guy.

In my fourth grade classroom my students keep a “Thankful Journal.” During the first week of school, they created a numbered list of 50 things for which they are thankful. Then in writing, they are assigned a number, they search their list to find out what item that number corresponds to and they write for five minutes to explain what they have listed and why they are thankful for it.

Today, one of my boys asked if we could write in the Thankful Journal. Rule of thumb, if a boy asks to write something, you say, “YES!” immediately. I did.

I keep a Thankful Journal right along with my students. Today, I wrote about Mr. Gorgeous, aka, John, my guy, my husband, partner, pastor, and friend.

As I wrote, I realized that there are so many things to be thankful for. Not just his kindness and leadership, but also the way he works to make my dreams come true. His selflessness is truly a blessing to our sons and to me. He supports us in whatever we want to do. He provides encouragement, care, and even resources.

As I’ve watched our boys become men, I see their father.

I see compassion and love, responsibility, caring, gentleness, confidence, and capability.

There were many things on my “husband wish list” before we got married. Thankfully, I found a man with the character that reflected God.

He is the right kind of guy.

He’s the kind who is strong and who knows where his strength comes from.

If I had a daughter, I would tell her to look for the right kind of guy. The guy who reflects the God who made him and the God he serves. That should be non-negotiable.

That’s the RIGHT kind of guy.

I’m the Mom…

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In our boys early years, I would sit down before school started each year and write a letter to each of their teachers. The boys delivered the letters to them during the first week of classes. It was our way of letting the teacher know that we were going to be involved parents. (Teachers probably thought we would be helicopter parents — I  don’t think we were that bad!) But more than that, it was an opportunity to introduce our children to their teachers. We knew that these handsome little boys would be faces in a crowd and we wanted to give them the best possible start to their school year.

The oldest’s letter went something like this:

“As the oldest of three boys, he is a very responsible young man who hates school, but if he trusts you, he will follow you to the moon and back. He has traveled to many states, seen many amazing things, visited numerous museums, and as a result, is curious about how and why things work. Learning is hard for him. He will ask for help — but only when he’s desperate. He’s hard on himself and thinks that things should come easier than they do. Please be patient with him.”

The middle son’s letter was different:

“This boy taught himself to read when he was four. Learning comes easily to him. He has a photographic memory, is fascinated by WWII, and can explain how submarines work. If you tell him what you plan to teach, he will come to school the next day knowing more about it than you can imagine. He will challenge you — if you misquote a fact, he will correct you and often, he will be right. He is a perfectionist and is very hard on himself. We are trying to help him find balance. Your job will be a tough one, but we believe in you and will pray for you. Keep in touch with us and we will help as we can.”

The letter for the youngest was different still:

“You will find that he is a kind, caring, and gentle young man. His goal in life is to make people around him laugh; we apologize in advance because he’s good at it. He knows how to behave, but may need a gentle reminder or two. When he gets “tickled” he will laugh until he cries — often slapping his leg in the process. He does imitations of adults, movie stars, cartoon characters, and yes, teachers. He learns fairly easily, reads voraciously, loves CALVIN AND HOBBES, and cares deeply about the people who surround him. Honestly, for him, relationships are far more important than learning or grades.”

Like all parents, we knew that our boys were very different young men. They still are. Like all parents, one of the fascinating challenges we faced was helping each of our boys to succeed in the areas where he had ability. While growing stronger in areas of strength is important, we also tried to stretch them and help them to challenge themselves — to find new areas of interest, and to determine new abilities. More than anything, however, we wanted our boys to see God as a loving Heavenly Father and to make the decision to love, follow, and serve Him. We still want that.

As the mom, I love to look back at pictures from our yesterdays: baby pictures, school pictures, holidays, vacations, and everyday snap shots. I often “paint a picture” in my mind of the growth of each of these young men, and sometimes I wonder if we did enough. Was there sufficient laughter and play balanced by times of hard work? Did we travel, learn, and create enough? Was our time together as a family valued? Did we spend enough time together learning about God and serving others?

Naturally, we weren’t perfect, but the pictures remind me that maybe, just maybe, with God’s help we did okay. We see the men they have become and we are proud of them and the choices they are making. Are we disappointed sometimes? Of course, but they are good men — men of character and strength.

These men of character moved from the “little boy stage” to young boys in classrooms, at music lessons, in libraries, at Church, in Sunday School, and in our home — wherever it might have been. Many, many people helped us as we worked to raise them. There were teachers, pastors, Sunday School teachers, Youth leaders, friends and friends’ moms and dads. Ultimately, we are the ones who are responsible for the way they were raised. We were careful to choose people who we believed would love our boys for the  people they were and the men they could become.

That’s why we wrote the letters. That’s why we prayed for their teachers, friends, friends’ parents, neighbors, and the church members who surrounded them. It’s why we prayed for the ones they would love and choose to spend their life with — and it’s why we still do.

Being the Mom is a great honor and privilege, but it is an enormous responsibility — one I wouldn’t trade for anything. This whole Mom thing is one of my favorites, no matter how old those boys get!

A Thankful Teacher

Yesterday was THE day. It was my “D” Day. Okay, maybe it was my “C” Day — my classroom day. It was the first of two workdays to prepare my room for the arrival of twenty-four children who will bring with them noise, energy, questions, answers, ideas, and creativity. Our district has us pack everything away so that the room can be cleaned. Bulletin boards were covered; desks and counters were cleared. It was a barren space.

Yesterday we began making it look like a classroom again — specifically, my classroom again.

When I say we, I mean WE. Us. My own work crew: my family.

That afternoon as I walked away from a classroom that has bulletin boards moved and redecorated, textbooks open and sorted, flyers copied, folded, stacked, and readied for kiddos and their parents, things sorted, moved, tossed, refilled, and a space that is looking welcoming again, I realized that it never would have happened so quickly had I not had the amazing energy and help of my family. And it’s been like that for nineteen years.

As a teacher, I have so much to do. Everyday in the classroom brings work, work, and more work. Days are long — and they don’t end when students exit the building. The stressors are many — legislators, administrators, parents, children, and obligations outside of the classroom.

But that’s only a VERY SMALL part of it, because more than anything, there are the things in this world of education for which I am grateful.

My family — husband and sons, parents, sisters, brother, nieces, and nephews — have all offered support and encouragement as I entered into a new profession with three children at home. I remember when Mr. Gorgeous, the boys, and I were sitting in Wendy’s in Spearfish, SD while on vacation as we told our boys that I was returning to college to complete a teaching degree. Their first response was, “Cool, can I be in your class?” What an amazing response and even today, I remain thankful.

As I worked on my BA, they tolerated requests for quiet, let me practice teaching  them, and critiqued my ideas. (Honestly, the five year old always gave interesting suggestions.) Later, I completed my MS. Again, they were quiet when I needed them to be, served as “lab rats” of a sort as I completed my reading specialization. My husband cooked, folded clothes, herded children and a dog, and helped keep house. Even today, when I get  ready to start a new school year, the boys ask when they will need to be in the room to help get it ready. John saws, builds, cuts, laminates things, picks up fast food, and reminds me to sleep. I could be a teacher without them, I suppose, but it wouldn’t be nearly as easy or half as fun. I am thankful.

When I went to work in a middle school there was a man who taught in the room next door. He became my unofficial mentor. His ideas and leadership were amazing. There were my friends with whom I taught — men and women who gave me ideas and helped me be a better teacher because they challenged me. And today, I work with a team of educators who are amazing at what they do — who help me be a better elementary teacher, who laugh with me, and who encourage me to be a better person. I am thankful.

So far this summer, we’ve made approximately 2,000 trips to our local stores, and at least 1500 visits to Amazon searching for and purchasing exactly the right things for my classroom. Okay, I’m probably exaggerating a little bit. Still to complete my classroom set of composition books, I needed two more. I am thankful for the dear person who sent a giant bag of school supplies to our school, because in the there somewhere were two compositions books and I was saved another trip to the store. It’s not only that generous person, it’s the kind, thoughtful people at our own church who filled four backpacks for our neighborhood school. There are people who bring extra tissue boxes to schools for classrooms full of kids with colds and allergies resulting in runny noses. And so many more… these people — these caring people — make being a teacher manageable; they are some of the many ones for whom I thankful.

And then there are the parents. The parents who prepare their children for school, help them with their homework, and make sure they get the sleep they need. There are the parents who purchase supplies for their child’s classroom. Things like board games, neon colored whiteboard markers, bags of pens, pencils, markers, and crayons, extra paper, and still more tissues — things that make being a teacher a little bit more fun and whole lot easier. Oh yeah, did I mention the Coffee House Gift Cards? How could I be a teacher without my Chai? Yes, I am grateful for parents who see a need and meet it; those who provide support for teachers, schools, and their child. I am thankful.

Of course, I can’t forget my students. The well-behaved and the ornery, the ones who learn easily and those who struggle for every single lesson learned. There are the ones who challenge me daily  with their behavior and their mouth, those who always need to have the last word. Then, there are the ones who bring a dandelion bouquet to their teacher on the first day of school or the jar of flowers from their yard. They are the main reason I do what I do and I am thankful that they share their days, curiosity, and energy with me. I am thankful.

Yes, being a teacher has it’s challenges, but there is SOOOOOOOOO much for which to be grateful — and I am.

I am thankful.

 

To Love and to Cherish

He was tall, had red hair and a beard. His car was fast… and cool. (I liked sports cars.) He was shy and cute, really cute.

I was interested; he wasn’t.

Oh well.

And so I waited, seven months I waited. Finally, he called. We went on our first date: dinner out and going home to play UNO with my mom afterward. Six weeks later he asked me to be his wife; I was smart enough to say yes.

Six months later, we were married in the same Church building that Grandfather helped drag into town from the canyon east of town to help plant a new church that he and my Grandmother attended; the same church building where my parents were married. The history and tie to the past that that place gave to us as we began our life together was special for me, and he understood.

Since that time, we’ve had good times and hard times. I find it difficult to say that we’ve had bad times because honestly, there have been hard days and tough times, but I can’t say that they were bad times. Difficulties, challenges and struggles have caused us to cling more tightly to each other. They have allowed us to know each other better, to see each other’s strengths and to be strong where the other wasn’t as strong. Those hard times have helped us to lean more fully on our Heavenly Father as we’ve leaned on each other.

How can you say those are bad times?

In thirty-two years we have welcomed three sons, lost a daughter, and welcomed another daughter, our daughter-in-love. We’ve traveled a great deal within the U.S., dragging our sons through museums, onto beaches, to the rim of canyons, and other tourist sights. Summers brought hikes, picnics, “drives” – including an annual color drive in the fall, and swimming in hotel pools. Our family has played football in parks, school yards, and our own backyard. Barbecuing became a favored routine. Cracker Barrel, our favorite restaurant, became a vacation destination, and Italian food is our special Christmas Eve dinner.

For more than three decades, we’ve made new memories and shared amazing moments. In fact, this week we will be married for 32 years.

THIRTY-TWO YEARS…

I could tell you how amazing he is – and he is. I could brag on him and tell you how hard he works in the church and on his secular job, because he does. Without feeling badly, I could tell you that he’s a great father and example for our sons and it would be completely true.

But more than anything, I want to tell you that he loves me and I love him.

During our years together, we’ve watched many marriages. Through observation and a “few” years of on the job training, I’ve come to some conclusions about marriage.

Marriage isn’t a 50 / 50 proposition, it’s a 100% /100% deal. You both have to be all in, 100% committed to the relationship and the success of the marriage. Without that commitment it will be a struggle, at best and chances are, the marriage will fail.

Relationships are tolerant. They require that together we survive the hard days, and we celebrate together on the good ones. It means that there are times when one will be stronger than the other, that one will be exhausted and the other will be energetic, that one will be healthy and one will not. A time will come, if it hasn’t already, when you will disagree. Eventually, one or both of you will lose a family member and you will be the one who loves them and gives them a safe place to grieve.

Illnesses will come. Kids might, too. Both of these bring new stresses that, if you are not totally committed to each other, can become barriers and create areas of conflict. And then there’s money. Anyone who thinks that money isn’t an issue in marriage is sadly mistaken. There’s either too much – or not enough, and either way, if you don’t talk about it and work together, it will be point of stress.

Respect is a key ingredient in a successful marriage. It’s important that you both respect each other. When you pledge your lives to each other, you become partners. Respecting your partner is a key to any successful partnership. You need to respect the gifts and strengths that he or she brings to the partnership. Respecting your partner’s opinion and ideas reassures them that you value them. Honest, quality communication is another way to show your respect. Listen and listen some more. Then, listen again.

Please allow me to give you some very practical advice: hold hands often, smile at each other, search each other out in a crowd, compliment your beloved, wink at that one who stole your heart, dress up for one another – even if you’re just getting pizza, date each other, leave notes for one another, and when you can afford it, travel together – even if it’s just down the street for the night. Finally, hug each other and say, “I love you,” every day.

For us, when he asked me to marry him, I asked him if he would still hold my hand when we’d been married thirty years… or fifty… or more…

So far so good…

A Brand New End…

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It started as a reason – maybe even a good one.  Then, it became an excuse. And finally, it’s become a crutch.

Four and a half years ago, everything changed. It’s as though there was a line drawn in the sand. A before and after line.

You see, four and a half years ago, we lost my brother to suicide. I’ve always said it that way. I’ve always included the cause of our loss in my statements about losing him. For some, suicide might be something to hide. It’s a hard thing to say, but I choose to own that statement – that reality.

Since his death, I’ve experienced anger, loss, grief, and guilt. Yes, I know that I am not responsible for my brother’s decisions. I know that the “if onlies” and “what ifs” are pointless. And I know that these things have become an excuse – even a crutch – that kept me from writing, from exploring the thoughts and ideas in my head. Today, I’m throwing away the crutch. Yes, I will continue to miss him, but his loss is no longer a reason to not do what I love to do.

I realize that we live in a world where mental illnesses are hidden or denied. It’s a world in which these struggles are medicated or ignored. I’m not a crusader – but I am a younger sister who lost her big brother. And as a result, there are a few things that have planted themselves firmly in my brain…

  1. Assistance for Veterans is greatly lacking.
  2. Emergency mental health assistance in the US is practically nonexistent.
  3. Suicide is prevalent in our world and hiding it, avoiding it, and ignoring it will not help.
  4. Suicide intervention and prevention are imperative.

So, yes, I will continue to advocate for these things, but more than that, I will return to sharing my heart.

My brother was incredibly creative – he could draw and build and invent. I write. And if he were here, he would ask me why I wasn’t writing. I’ve tried. There are half finished blogs in a folder on my desktop – it’s time to finish them, to create new ones and to return to my passion of sharing my heart through words.

My mother always said, “You can’t go back and begin again, but you can start from here to make a brand new end.” I don’t know where she got that statement, but it has always stuck with me.

So today, my friends, I’m going to start blogging again. I’m going to put aside the grief and guilt that I’ve felt and I’m going to write. It’s time to work on that “brand new end.”

I hope you’ll join me for this journey and understand that I am a different person than I used to be. Change can be good. I’m still trying to wrap my head around the commitment that I’m making to my myself today, so some of my first blogs may be reworked older posts – new stuff is on the way.

Maybe you are like me. Perhaps there is something that you started, but the circumstances of life have caused you to cease following your passion. Join me on this journey. We can’t start over, but we can start again from this place. I’d love to have you creating, meeting your challenges, finding your joy. Do it! Go for it! It may not be easy, but I believe with all my heart that pursuing your goal will be worth it. If I thought it would help, I’d double dog dare you. Let’s do this… together.

For those of you who’ve loved me and have encouraged me to follow this passion of writing, thank you.

Here I go again…. Creating a brand new end.

It Happened Again…

pexels-photo-289740.jpegIt happened again.

And again.

And again, and again, and again… some reports are saying it’s happened a dozen times this school year alone and 300 times since Sandy Hook.

This morning, someone took gun in hand and went to a school – a school he was familiar with — and changed the lives of every teacher, student, administrator, and staff person in that building.

Tonight… at least 17 families are smaller.

Tonight… at least 17 sets of parents will have one less child to hold.

Tonight… America grieves…

…again.

WHY?

Why did we decide that the right to bear arms is more important than the right for children to attend school – or for teachers to teach school — without fearing for their lives?

Why wasn’t Columbine in 1999 enough? Or Red Lake, MN, or Nickel Mines, PA, or Sandy Hook in Newtown, CN, or Marysville, WA? And now, Parkland, FL – will it be enough?

Why didn’t this all stop with Pearl, Mississippi in 1997?

Not to mention the shootings on college campuses –both public and private.

WHEN?

When will teachers walk into a new classroom and not have to worry about, “Where will I put my students if the unthinkable happens?”

When will mothers and fathers stop burying their babies for no other reason than that they went to school that morning?

_______________________

Tonight, I am overwhelmed by the loss of more and more and more and more children and those people who try valiantly to keep them safe. My heart is breaking for parents, grandparents, brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, class mates and friends who have lost people about whom they care deeply. I am numb because it really hasn’t been that long since something similar happened in Kentucky and New Mexico.

But it isn’t just the schools anymore, is it? It’s movie theaters, restaurants, and concerts.

Have we forgotten how to appreciate the creation of God? Have we forgotten the value of human life? Is there anything that we can do to bring an end to this madness?

It’s time to solve this.

My own world view says that the true answer to this problem is God and His touch in our world. I truly believe that. Even so, He did give us brains to use, mouths to speak, and ears to hear.

With these God-given tools, we have to value humanity as God’s handiwork again. It’s time to remind ourselves that human life is a gift and that it should be treasured at every age.  We’ve got to understand that mental health issues are a very real part of this problem. And whether we like it or not, we must acknowledge that the easy availability and abundance of guns in our society are a part of the problem.

It is TIME.

It’s time to realize that as long as we remain entrenched in our own opinions and ideas, as long as we choose to believe that our way is the only way, as long as we decide that there is no room for compromise – let alone understanding of another perspective – then we are doomed to more nights where parents mourn with empty arms.

It’s time… in fact,

it’s past time.

 

An Unexpected Victory

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I was eight.

Our family was hosting one of the best people in the whole world, my Grandmother.

I was on my knees on the blue upholstered kitchen chair, asking every kid’s favorite questions, “What are you doing?” and, “Why’d you do that?”

Grandmother was exceedingly patient as she answered every question I asked. Finally, she asked if I wanted to learn how to make the cinnamon rolls that she was making for our family. I said, “Yes!”

And learn, I did.

Honestly, I don’t remember kneading the dough, using the rolling pin, spreading the butter, or adding the cinnamon and sugar. I didn’t roll them up and I definitely didn’t cut them. I might have put them in the pan, but honestly, I don’t know.

What I do know, is that she explained everything she did – and why. She told me what could go wrong and how I could make them in the most efficient way.

Yesterday, over four years since we lost her, I made those rolls. In my head, I could hear her talking about rolling out the dough, about having patience as I did so. (She knew I would need that advice.) I let them raise and then I baked them, topped them with a light vanilla glaze and gave one to my husband.

Apparently, I’ve never made them for him before… oops.

He asked if they were hard to make – I said they weren’t, just a little time consuming. He suggested I make them again.

I will.

There were other times that she visited us. On one visit, she made me a set of dishes out of bleach bottles and then hand painted beautiful purple pansies on them. Another time she brought a doll bed that she had made.

As an adult, I was still receiving amazing gifts: homemade oatmeal raisin cookies, delicious meals whenever our family would travel through her neighborhood, a soda can rocking chair, a “sofa” door stop and precious conversations. When I met Mr. Gorgeous, I wrote her a letter telling her all about him. She kept that letter. Several years later, we stopped to visit her and she pulled it out of her Bible and gave it to me – truly a treasure.

There are many items from my Grandmother — and from other amazing people that I value.

But honestly, what I prize most highly are the moments, the memories.

That afternoon when Grandmother taught me how to make cinnamon rolls is so clear in my mind that I even remember what she was wearing.

Weird, I know.

There are other moments, other memories that I love to look back on. The Saturday when my best friend’s dad made pancakes for breakfast, and the day when she and her mom taught me to make sour cream sugar cookies – with REAL sour cream, not the store-bought kind. When my second-mom taught me to sew. How my mom taught me to make the absolute best hot chocolate ever made. The way my other Grandma would sit in church and clear her throat to get my mom and aunt to slow down the hymns they were playing. When my Great-Grandmother let us kids wade in her ditch and play with the water strider spiders. The way one of my Aunt’s house always smelled of coffee and Baby Magic Baby Lotion.

We all have these kinds of moments. A friend of ours in Iowa came to church and told about her neighbor girl. One summer, the girl was old enough to be on her own while dad worked on the farm, but she was lonely and a little bored. She showed up at our friend’s house and asked what she was doing. Evelyn invited her in and told her she was making cookies. The girl asked if she could learn how. Evelyn obliged. Once a week the little girl knocked on her door and Evelyn conducted a cooking class for her neighbor girl. They made pies, cookies, cakes, bread, and other things. What amazing memories they made together – no wonder that little girl went there once a week.

You see, our world has become so tech centered that we’ve forgotten to keep creating moments – to continue making memories.

For years, I’ve believed that the key to making home a place to which people want to return lies within the good memories that those places — and those people — hold.

It’s true about churches, too, by the way.

Instead of playing on a tablet or a phone, let’s teach kids to make jam, to build a bird house, to change a tire, to plant a garden, to paint a fence, to sew a pillow – or to make cinnamon rolls.

On Wednesday, our son asked we could have cinnamon rolls on Saturday. Mr. Gorgeous and I, while at the store, bought a roll of “cinnamon rolls” – you know the kind where you peel off the paper, hit the tube on the edge of the counter, put hunks of dough in a pan, and then bake? Yeah, those.

After we came home, I started thinking about that summer afternoon when I was eight. I wondered if I could still remember what I had learned from that precious lady and I decided to find out. My Grandmother was a great teacher – and I felt unexpectedly victorious as my family inhaled a pan of Grandma’s cinnamon rolls.

While I don’t like to make resolutions, I think this year, I will set a goal of looking back and treasuring more of those kinds of memories. But more than that, I’m going to focus on helping others – my husband, my family, my students, my church, and my friends – create amazing memories of taking adventures, learning things, laughing, and being with amazing people.

In 2018, let’s make memories with the people in our lives, shall we?

 

Counting Stars

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“When I consider the heavens…the moon and the stars which You created, What is man that you are mindful of him?” Psalm 8, adapted.

2016 has come and gone. For some, it seems to have been a year of nothing but loss, grief, and pain. For others, a year of change. Still others have celebrated great successes and joys. But most of us have lived through a normal year where both good and bad things have happened in our lives and in the world around us.

My mom was a single mom starting the summer between my fourth and fifth grade years. She taught me a lot of things by simply living her life – she walked her talk and if it is true that character is “caught” as much as it’s taught, I hope that I caught the character with which she lived her life. The things that she taught me can be boiled down to specific sayings that have not only colored my world, but have helped me to become who I am. Among those sayings, there is one that seems to apply to looking back at the old year: “Two men looked out through prison bars. One saw mud; the other saw stars.”

Come along with me as I look for the stars in the past year – and then, maybe, spend some time looking for your own stars.

The year began at home with three of my men – I am so blessed to have a husband who loves me and helps to make an amazing home. Two of our boys, Phil and Ben are with us, and while living with adult sons is sometimes a challenge, it is also something that makes our days brighter and fills them with laughter and conversation.

Nate and Maira traveled out to join us for a week. Wisconsin followed it’s traditional winter pattern and was very cold while they were here, but our hearts were warmed by their presence and our time together. We spent a couple of days with them down in Iowa with family. The memories we have of that time are precious ones.

While teaching in Durand, I enjoyed sunrises and sunsets on my journey to and from work. I experienced safety on the roads and a mechanically sound vehicle with no flat tires. During those nine months, amazing fifth graders – eighty of them – made me laugh and think. They made my days hard sometimes, but most of the time, they made each day fun and better than the day before. The cherry on the top was reading them four historical fiction novels and having them fall in love with classic literature. Of course, there was that one day (maybe it was three or four days, actually), when a secretary gave me a long john with Persian Roll frosting. (My sisters will understand the significance of this delightful event.)

In April, we celebrated the fact that we have had an amazing daughter for four years as Maira and Nate celebrated their fourth anniversary. We love them, miss them, and we are proud of them.

Leading Craft and Chat mornings for the ladies at our church… So yeah, some days they love me – some days they may not, at least not as much… Giggle.

Saying good-bye to my students in May was, as usual, difficult. It was compounded by the fact that shortly after the end of the school year, the decision was made for me to look for a job closer to home. I’m so thankful that many of those students have chosen to say in touch with me on Insta-Gram.

Two weeks spent in Colorado and New Mexico. Time with my dad and second mom, my mom, son, daughter, sister, brother-in-law, nieces and nephews, grand dog Max, Zoey, friends, Scrabble games, the mountains, the desert – time of blessing, joy, and rest. The one down side was not having Mr. Gorgeous there with me.

Being hired to work at Meadowview Elementary as a member of the fourth grade team. It’s an amazing school with an incredible, caring, and learning staff.

Taking Dilly Bars to the firemen and policemen in our town on the 4th of July as a gift from our Church.

Starting school with fourth graders who make me laugh and smile every day.

Having an amazing eye surgeon who wasted no time getting surgery scheduled and saving the vision in my right eye. So incredibly thankful.

A presidential election that – no matter how it turned out – reminds us that we live in a nation where we get to participate in our government, where certain rights are given to us, and where we can say what we want about the political process – even when we should maybe keep our mouths shut.

Thanksgiving – so much for which to be thankful. Celebrating first at school, then at Church and finally at home.

Cold, cold, cold days with wind chill in frigid ranges that remind me to be thankful for warmer days.

A Christmas celebration where I was once again reminded of the hope that we have due to the birth of a tiny baby who didn’t even own a crib, but who laid in a hay trough.

My – how many stars I have for counting.

How about you?

A Place Called Home

A Colorado Columbine –The state flower always means home to me.
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Home.

What is it? Where is it?

Is our home town the town in which we were born? Is home the place we lived as a child? Is it the place in which we’ve spent most of our life? Or, is it where we live now?

A few weeks ago, I left our home to go to my home. While visiting at one home, I traveled to another home. Then, when I left those homes, I returned to our home.

How can that be?

How can so many places have a claim on my heart, a claim that makes me call each of them home?

My life has been a bit transient – I moved around a lot. With divorced parents, I traveled back and forth between the homes of my mother and father. Later, I attended college in Idaho, Oklahoma, and Colorado. My husband and I married nearly thirty years ago. Since then, we’ve lived in six different states.

I’ve lived in farm houses, mobile homes, apartments, dorm rooms, basement rooms, town homes, country houses, city houses, and one Sears kit home. Some of the places I have lived were lovely houses filled with comfortable furniture. Some were small, cramped apartments with a kitchen barely large enough to turn around. We’ve lived in four parsonages – houses loaned to us by the church we were pastoring at the time. Even now, we are living in a church-provided house. I will be honest and tell you that I look forward to the day when John and I own a house where we can install beautiful mission-style moulding and trim around the doors and windows, a sliding barn door or two with a yard where we can install a fountain flowing into a small, man-made stream that ends in a pond next to a patio with a fire pit. Until then, we are blessed to live in whatever house God provides.

No matter where I’ve lived, it has been a home. It may not have been my favorite home, but it was my home none-the-less.

There are numerous schmaltzy sayings about home:

Home Sweet Home; There’s No Place Like Home; No matter what it looks like on the outside – on the inside it feels like home; Home is where our story begins; Home is where you hang your heart; What I love the most about my home is who I share it with; A house is made of bricks and stone – a home is made with love alone; Family makes a house a home…and the list goes on.

I think the most annoying thing about most of these sayings is that they are true.

There… I said it.

There really is no place like home.

Thirty years ago, I decided that for the rest of my life, wherever Mr. Gorgeous went I too would go. Wherever we lived, I would strive with all that was in me to create comfort and warmth, to fill it with love, and to make it into the home that we would enjoy. If it’s true that a man’s home is his castle, I wanted John’s castle to be the place where he always CHOSE to go. I wanted it to be the place where he felt welcome and cared for — and eventually I wanted to give the same gift to our children. I wanted our home to be the place where he — where they belonged.

And doesn’t that perfectly describe, “home?”

There are some former “homes” that I do not visit. Yet, there are places where I’ve never actually lived that I refer to as home and visit whenever I am able. Why is that?

I guess it goes back to one of the definitions of home – a place filled with love. Some “homes” were filled with love, but the surrounding circumstances were not. So, knowing that I cannot return to that house where I felt surrounded by care, I choose to not visit the places where I felt less cared for. On the other hand, I’ve never lived in my Mom’s apartment, but Mom is there and that means that it’s home.

Okay, I’ve talked in circles which means it’s probably time to land this thing.

So I guess to summarize, home is the place where love lives.

Home is the place where my sisters hug me, tease me, and drink coffee with me. It’s the place where my nieces and nephews sing silly songs from their childhood and make peanut butter benders. Scrabble games – with me usually being beaten – define my mom’s home. It can be lunch with good friends at a place we’ve enjoyed before. It can be sitting on the patio, working in the garage, or feeding the horses that describe home at dad’s. Home at our kids is defined by big black dogs and storytelling with much laughter. When our boys are together, home is shared memories, confessions from childhood, laughter until my stomach hurts, political debate, and hugs. Home with Mr. Gorgeous – well, he’s there – and that place could be anywhere.

Home is the place that God gives us to remind us of His love and care for us. For those of us with happy, love-filled homes, our earthly home is an appetizer – it is helping us to long for our heavenly home.

Someday, when I leave my earthly home, I will journey to the home that He is busy preparing for me. It will be the place where I will spend eternity, where I will be in the presence of Jesus, my Savior. For all of the amazing things that home is to me now, in that day, I will truly be home and I will have no desire to improve it, to build mouldings, or to travel to visit another of my homes. Because, honestly, on that day I will truly, finally be home.

LIVING WITH ALZHEIMER’S: a long good-bye

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NOTE: I would never intentionally invade my sister’s privacy. I am telling this with her permission. For her courage to allow me to share, I am extremely grateful. Thank you  — I love you, sis!

His name isn’t important, but he is. He’s a husband, father, son, uncle, brother, cousin, and brother-in-law. In fact, he’s my brother-in-law. I’ve watched as he romanced my sister, raised strong, independent daughters, became a member of our clan, lived as an outdoors man, cooked like a chef, and worked diligently at his chosen profession in the medical field. When my husband was my fiancée, my sister and her family came to spend some time getting to know my guy. I marveled at the instant connection between our two men, their similar humor, their mutual respect. They became friends – and family.

A few years ago, my brother-in-law began to forget things. Don’t we all? But for him, it was more than the norm. At one point, he lined up pictures on his dresser and every morning would go through the names of the ones in those pictures because he was determined to not forget those he loved. He knew that something was wrong and as was his character, he set out to “fix” it. The diagnosis of Early Onset Alzheimer’s ended his career a bit sooner than he had intended. And it changed life as we had known it for everyone who loves him.

This disease is a thief. To begin, it steals in small ways that are barely noticeable, it causes confusion, and frustration. As it continues to affect the mind, it steals recent memory, familiar behaviors, loved personality traits, and independence. In the later stages, it takes the ability to speak and be understood. The disease runs its course in 8 to 20 years, on average.

Years ago, I worked in nursing homes. We didn’t have a great deal of understanding of the disease at that time. To be honest, what I saw was the result of this unforgiving disease. One woman was loved and cared for, but insisted she was being held captive. She would become violent in her attempts to “escape” the prison. Another awoke every morning and dressed in a suit jacket with matching slacks, shoes, and purse. She wandered from room to room to room to conduct “business,” as she had done for years prior to becoming ill. The last, a mother; she waited daily for her daughters to visit, but didn’t recognize them when they did. All three of these ladies were amazing, gifted women. Yet, so much of their lives, their character, and their personality no longer existed.

Americans have gained an awareness of the disease due to the fact that many well-known people have suffered with the disease. The list includes musician Glenn Campbell, actor Charles Bronson, actress Rita Hayworth, author E.B. White, Denver Broncos owner, Pat Bowlin, and President Ronald Reagan. According to the Alzheimer’s Association, 500,000 Americans currently suffer with the disease. It normally strikes those over the age of 65, but early onset has been noted in adults in their 40s.

A few years ago, John and I, some of our kids, along with my sister and her husband drove from Colorado to Galveston, Texas to catch a cruise ship. We made amazing and treasured memories during those nine days. On the way home, we had stopped for the evening, my brother-in-law and I were watching a travel show on TV. The others were busy doing other things. The program showed some scenes from Europe when he looked at me and managed to break my heart with these words that are forever branded on my brain. He said, “You know, they tell I’ve been all around the world, but the hell of it is that I can’t remember any of it.”

My sister has responded to this curve ball with all of the strength and character that she has shown in every difficult situation during her life. She has arranged her life to become the caregiver her husband needs. She has worked to create thousands of memories that she and the rest of the family will treasure for years. The memories have been well documented in photo after photo. Their girls have stepped up to the plate as well. They’ve supported their mom and they continue to love their dad. One of them cooked with him once a month to refresh the memory of all the meals he had prepared. The other created a photo album showing the phases of his family – some he recalls, some he doesn’t. And yes, the rest of the family does what we are able to do. Mostly, all of us just love him.

We love his wife and daughters too. The knowledge of what is to come weighs on their minds and hearts, especially on my sister’s. My concern for them is that they will try to do too much. Because of their love for him, I fear that they will want to do everything and they may forget to take care of themselves. That has also become a job for the family and for their friends. We get to love, pray for, and take care of them.

Frankly, all of us get the blessing of caring for the caregivers – not only the caregivers of one who is experiencing a long-term illness, not only the caregivers who are in our own family, but all of the caregivers who are around us. What other caregivers should we notice? While there are many, allow me to suggest two. Stay-at-home moms who would love to have adult conversations and quiet time alone. When our oldest was born, a lady from our church called and asked if she could come over. I was exhausted and really didn’t want company, but I reluctantly said yes. She came into our apartment, hugged me, kissed my son, sat me down, brought me an iced tea to drink while I fed our son, and then she washed the dishes. When she finished, she held my son and sent me to bed. I napped for about an hour. It was desperately needed – and a tremendous blessing. Next, adult children caring for their elderly parents. The roles are reversed and that in itself creates tremendous stresses that we can help alleviate simply by listening and praying, taking in a prepared meal, running errands, and by loving them. Other caretakers are in our world and if we open our eyes, we will see them.

While each of these situations is difficult, I know personally about the struggles associated with Alzheimer’s because that’s where we are living. The heart breaking part of this particular disease is the sense of loss experienced by those who love the disease’s victim. We watch as he struggles, forgets, changes. Each of his losses is a loss for us as well. With every personality change, loss of strength, forgotten memory – his loved ones have also lost the opportunity to make that particular connection with him. It is a long, painfully slow good-bye. No matter what we think about this disease, the reality remains – we are saying good-bye – one memory, one ability, one day at a time.