Drew, Amy, Scott and Stephanie - I want you to know how proud I am of each of you. I love you and I think of you often. I'm proud of the people you've become and I'm proud of the lives you've chosen! I am frequently amazed at your accomplishments and delighted by your talents. Each of you face challenges that are unique to you and each of you rise to meet those challenges in ways that are incredible! What joy and indescribable happiness you bring to my life.
Tanya, Vaughn, and Mark - I'm so grateful that each of you have come into our lives to enrich and bless us. Most of all, I'm grateful for the care, love and completeness that you have added to my children's lives. You are amazing people whom I delight to get to know. I love each one of you and appreciate you for your unique and amazing qualities. Thank you for blessing my life and for loving my children as you do. I consider each of you my child. We are all sealed together for eternity and you are as much my children as the ones to whom I gave birth.
Tyler, Henry, Zoe and Nate - You are the whipped cream on my desert, the ribbon on the package, the best part of life. Watching you grow and learn, seeing you blossom under the care of your parents, and getting to know the wonderful people that you are is one of the greatest blessings of my life. I also love watching your parents rise to meet the challenges that you pose. What wonderful parents you have!
So this sounds a little sappy, but of all the important things in my life, of all of the things that cause me stress and make me worry, each of you are things that make life worth living. I really do love all you. I pray for you, I think about you, I am amazed by you, and I feel blessed that you are part of my life. Thank you and have a great day!
Monday, April 25, 2011
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Running Update
So, as I follow this "Couch Potato to 5 K" program, I've run into a few distractions. (Choir tour being one of them.) The first 2 weeks I ran 3 times a week as I'm supposed to. I was really proud of myself. Two perfect weeks! Then the week of choir tour came along and I only ran once, the next week I was really, really tired so I only ran once. However, this week, I'm on track to get all 3 runs in. All of this means that I'm still on week 2 of the program, but I think it is getting easier.
I haven't mastered this by any means, but at least I'm still going! Yeah for me!
I haven't mastered this by any means, but at least I'm still going! Yeah for me!
Friday, April 15, 2011
The fast lane!

I love my job, I really do. It's just that I sometimes miss having "me" time. That doesn't mean I get anything great accomplished, I just need some time to myself. It's how I regenerate.
Choir tour was a great success. We had a lot of fun, sang, performed, and played. I came home absolutely exhausted though and my ankles looked like an elephant's. Maybe those compression socks Amy told me about would have helped save them. I took Monday as a sick day and slept and slept. I've never slept for 24 hours before! I needed it.
Tuesday was our Region Festival where I think we did an amazing job, but the judges didn't agree. Oh well!
Wednesday, was easier, I ran errands, had my harp lesson. I don't think I told you all that I bought a lap harp! I love it! It is so fun to play, so intimate to hold the instrument close to you feel the vibrations! Maybe, I'll bring it to Washington with me this summer.
Yesterday, Thursday, we had an assembly and NHS inductions to perform at and held the first part of Acappella auditions. The second part of Acappella auditions are today, Friday, and then students will show up, pretty much for the rest of the school year. You have no idea how much I worry that I won't have enough students for Madrigals or Acappella or my ladies group. Stress, aargh!
Saturday, I might actually be able to relax a little, but I really shouldn't because I have NO clean clothes and I really should go to the temple, and do dishes and vacuum and, and, and.......
Next week looks much calmer. We are finally going to have our spring break and I have great plans to do some "me" things.
In the good news, I did go running yesterday, even though it was very cold. I only did 5 of my 6 intervals because during the 5th my right calf started to hurt, so I decided to baby it a little and stop early. I came home and put some "Icy - Hot" stuff on it and I think that was a good choice. I'll go run again tomorrow. I only got to run once last week because of tour and it will only be twice this week, but at least I'm still going, right?
I love you all! I think of you all the time. Really, I do! I'm so proud of the wonderful people you are! I can't believe that my children are so amazing! WOW!
Monday, April 4, 2011
Flying Squirrels

Last night it was wonderful to get together with family and visit about General Conference. Since both Doug and Devn were there I asked them about the "Flying Squirrel Incident" and got a few more details that I hadn't remembered.

So Doug and his friend, Rex, had gone into the woods and had shot at a nest that turned out to belong to a mother squirrel and her babies. The mother was shot and the boys feeling guilty took the babies home. The squirrels stayed at Rex's house most of the time, where they were allowed to roam around the house. Mostly they climbed onto high perches and then would "fly" down and land on people's heads. Rex's family was going out of town for Christmas and so Doug was given the responsibility to take care of the baby squirrels.
In the meantime, Linda brought her fiance, Stan, to visit the family for Christmas. He knew about the flying squirrels, everyone knew they were around. Mother would not let them wander around the house, she insisted that they were kept contained. However, one night they got out and into the boys room, where Stan was sleeping. One of them climbed up on something high and swooped down in the dark only to land on Stan's face. The room went from quiet sleeping noises to screams and bed tearing apart. I don't imagine he was very happy about this, nor were my parents. Poor guy and he still married my sister. It become a family legend though. For years someone would say "Remember the flying squirrels?" and everyone would laugh.

Devn says there is a second part to this story. He was sleeping in the kitchen in a sleeping bag, since Stan had his bed. They put the squirrels in there in some kind of plastic container with boards and even a brick on the top. Someone decided that the squirrels wouldn't be able to breathe so after they were secured the boards and bricks were moved just a bit so that they could breathe. (I wonder if it was mother, it seems like the kind of well intentioned thing she would do.) Devn also woke up to the flying squirrels, only in this case they didn't swoop on his face or anything, they crawled into his sleeping bag and bit him. He must not have made much noise.
One other part that I remember is that Linda and I were sharing a bedroom. She had gone on a date with Stan and the boys short-sheeted her bed and put ice at the bottom. I was probably only 5 and I knew what they had done. I remember waiting and waiting for her to come home because it was going to be so funny. When she finally came home, I was silent as could be, pretending to sleep so she wouldn't suspect anything. She got ready for bed and got into the bed, only to find the sheets shortened, but she didn't live with my brothers all this time for nothing. She simply let go of the top sheet and kicked it down. (Remember to short sheet a bed you take the top sheet and tuck the bottom half of it into the top of the bed, then you make the bed so the top half of the sheet is folded up and looks just like normal.

Good times!
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Random memories of life in Georgia

We moved from Farmington, Utah to Warner Robins, Georgia when I was 5 years old. My dad was a logistics planner for the Air Force. I didn't know what that was for the longest time, but he would look at a project and figure out what needed to be done to accomplish it and who should do it. (I could use him to help plan my choir program!)
When we first moved to Georgia we rented a house. It was really ugly and had these brownish purple walls. Linda didn't come with us at first, she was finishing a semester at Weber, but I remember when she did come we shared a bedroom and a bed. I remember her telling me that she was engaged to get married and showing me her ring in bed one night.
After a while, probably 4 to 6 weeks, we moved into our house. It wasn't very big, especially compared to the lovely one my dad had built for us in Farmington. I don't think my mother ever like that house, so I'm not sure why they bought it. It had a huge yard, it probably sat on 3/4s of an acre. The house was probably not much bigger than Amy's house now. We had 3 bedrooms, 2 baths (one was off the master bedroom and it was bigger than the one Amy has, but not by a lot) a living room and a kitchen dining room. There were 4 children living there on and off, although Linda and Kurtis only lived there a little bit.
Some random memories of the house include:
Doug, Devn and Kurtis playing jokes on each other. Stuff like things falling off partially opened doors, and short sheeted beds (you take the bottom part of the top sheet and tuck it into the top of the bed then you make the bed like normal and when you go to get in, you can't because your legs don't have any place to go.) ice at the bottom of the bed, locked bedroom doors with booby traps, pajama legs sewn shut and more. I think my dad was also involved in a lot of this. Kurtis was the master though. No one could pull a prank on him, he always, dismantled them without getting caught. When Kurtis got engaged they tried to pull lost of pranks on him, but it didn't work.
We had the most wonderful "Winnie the Pooh" records that I would listen to at bedtime every night. They were read by the man who plays Samantha's Dad in the series "Bewitched." This was long before Disney corrupted the stories.
Devn used to tell the most wonderful bedtime stories. He would make them up and they were awesome!
I remember the 3 boys wrapping a package for Daddy for Christmas, it was a pair of cuff links and they put them in a box that was as tall as Kurtis and probably a foot square. They stuffed it with news paper and daddy had to dig through the whole box to find the cuff links. I thought this was hilarious!
I remember learning early on that if I wanted to be in on the jokes I had to keep quiet. It was a great privilege to be told what was going on.
I remember my first piano lessons, playing with the boy across the street, learning to shuffle cards, walking barefoot all summer, even on the pine cones. The family behind us was Catholic and they had little girl who showed me all kinds of things about being Catholic. We had a ditch in the by the street and I remember we were going to dig under the street to the other side of the road. (I think we only ever made it about 8 inches in the Georgia clay) I remember catching almost dead flies and operating on them to help them get better (weird, huh?) I remember learning to roller skate on the street (it had quite a steep hill at the top, then leveled out around my house. I remember walking through back yards and running around playing, climbing trees. I remember getting baptized and practicing in my parents bedroom with my dad. Although I had to wait several weeks to get baptized because my dad was in the stake presidency and we had to wait for a weekend when he was home. In those days, ward conferences were 2 days with 2 general meetings on Saturday and 2 on Sunday. It was a good place to be a kid and a good time. It wasn't nearly as dangerous for kids to wander around as it is now.
I remember that one day I left with my friends and we went to a park that was quite a distance away and I didn't tell anyone where I was going. When I was finally tracked down part of my punishment was to ride home in the car with Doug driving. He was learning to drive and I was terrified of riding in the car with him. Daddy spanked me and I was grounded for the rest of the day. Mother used to spank me sometimes, but it wasn't a big deal. But when daddy spanked it hurt!
I remember that we had a tree in the back yard where they had tied a rope so my brothers could climb up it. One day I climbed to the top of that rope when no one was around. I don't think anyone ever knew that I did that. It was probably a good 20 feet up. When I got to the top it scared me and I climbed down and never did it again.
We had a barbeque in the back corner of our yard and Doug and Devn used to melt lead back there and make balls about the size of marbles. Then they would build towers with the "American Bricks" that we had (precursors to Legos) but they had slanty roof pieces that they would put inside the towers to make a track for the lead balls to roll down. They played with those bricks all the time as well as with Army men.
I remember going to elementary school and I remember when one little black girl came to our school when I was in first grade. She was older than I was, but I remember seeing her in the playground and no one would talk to her because she was black (schools were segregated at that time.) I was too scared to talk to her. She didn't stay at our school very long.
I also remember that our principal had a paddle with holes in it like a peg board. I was scared to death he would use it on me. I would never have broken a rule though, but I knew some kids who did get "paddled."
I remember that the high school kids came and performed "The Fantastics" and that Devn was in it. They did it in the cafeteria. He was also in "The Music Man" in High School, I think he was one of the traveling salesmen and he also might have been part of the quartet in the town.
I remember a lot of scouting activities, my dad was the scout master and I always wanted to go with them. It never seemed fair to me that the boys got to do scouting and the girls didn't. I was a girl scout for a couple of years, but the program was never as good.
I remember my brothers making the most amazing Halloween costumes from stuff around the house. Headless men like Icabod Crane and scary monsters. They were very creative! I also remember them doing "Smother's Brothers" routines for ward parties. We listened to the "Smother's Brothers" records a lot. We also listened to "The Messiah" a lot.
I remember Kurtis playing the first movement of "Moonlight Sonata" a lot and VERY loud.
I remember that when we first moved there we had a maid, because that's what all the officers wives had at the Air Force base and my dad worked for a general so of course we had to have one too. She was a black woman named "Annie" and I thought she was really cool. She would come once or twice a week to do ironing and laundry, I don't know what else. I remember a couple of time she smoked in the house and I kind of liked it. My mother was furious though and pretty soon she stopped coming. I don't think my mother ever liked having a maid anyway, she liked taking care of the house herself. Annie had a very strong southern accent and she and mother had difficulty communicating at times.
I know mother and daddy went to a couple of things at the officers club on base and that mother hated that kind of thing, but they felt they had to. I know there was a cocktail party or two and I remember watching mother dress for those. Years later when I had to go to some of those I understood better why mother hated them so much.
Wow, lots of random memories. It's okay if you got bored. I was going to tell the story of the flying squirrels, but it seemed that I needed to set the stage first. It's coming.....
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