Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Happy News...

Our little girl had everyone in the ultrasound room laughing as she rolled, punched and kicked as the the poor technician tried very, very hard to get some measurements. Luckily during all the horsing around, she managed to show the room she is very definitely a girl!

Being able to talk to my "daughter" and not an "it" anymore is an incredible feeling. We debated, as most parents do I suppose, whether we should find out the baby's sex or not...I'm glad we agreed to go ahead and find out. I feel closer to the baby, and much more excited about the birth now that we know. I know that this isn't everyone's experience, and I'm not advocating for one way over the other...this worked for us in our particular situation, and we are oh so grateful.

A lot of anxiety and worry has rolled off my shoulders, baby and I are healthy, and I'm getting more and more excited for labor and delivery. God is good - ALL the time.

Friday, October 31, 2008

Fall Colors

My sister, Holly, put together a lovely little bouquet of autumn 'flora' from out in the yard. I love the bold scarlets and golds - nature's last 'huzzah' before its long winter sleep...

Doing My Part

I did my duty this week, and went to the local Courthouse to vote...

I decided to go early, because there's something else exciting happening on November 4th - our 20 week ultrasound!

I have to admit, I'm much more excited about seeing my baby on election day than I am about who the next President of the United States is going to be, but it does give me just the tiniest bit of an emotional, patriotic thrill to cast my ballot in an election - even though I am thoroughly disgusted with how this election has played out, with its smearing tactics and biased media.

In the past couple of weeks, it has been hard to recognize this country as the same one I was raised to love and give allegiance to - it's a scary world that is possibly going to get a whole lot scarier... I just hope whoever God allows into the Oval Office in January will allow Americans to retain the freedoms and liberties that make us unique in the world.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Pumpkins

Sometimes - oftentimes - it's the simple things that inspire my eye behind the lens... And I love no subjects more than my family - especially when they're having fun.

It was a lovely, brisk fall evening - the light was perfect, the pumpkins brilliant, and everyone getting a kick out of getting to play with knives...

Sharpening the knives...



Quite a mess...

Drawing the face...


Lighting the candles...


Masterpieces.

October - On the Road...

October seems to have been spent in the passenger seat of our old Honda Civic Wagovan... And in beds that aren't our own. We've done a lot of driving - a lot of traveling...it's been exciting, exhausting and lovely, all at the same time. It's good to be back home, for a while...

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Celebrating the Miracle That Is Her Reproductive System...

I recently helped throw my friend, Natalie, a baby shower for her third little miracle... It was a lovely, colorful morning...

Here's my kitchen, as I prepared all kinds of brunch foods...including cupcakes...

The finished products! Decorating cupcakes is so much fun...

We decorated with pansies, mums and colorful boy/girl themed collages, as Natalie doesn't know whether baby number 3 will be a daughter or son!

A lot of the gifts were wrapped in bright, autumn colors...

Baby showers are delightful and exhausting, especially when you're helping pull all the pieces together! They're always well worth the effort, though, and it was great to be a part of gathering Natlie's friends and family around her to help celebrate the miracle of new life.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Autumn in Ohio

It's been quite a while since I've posted here...life has been crazy, time has been short, and internet has been largely unavailable! However, I've found a quiet moment to go to my favorite coffee shop and spend an hour or so catching up. Here's what we did this past weekend...

We always enjoy our visits to Matt's Aunt Mary and Uncle Larry's farm, up in southeastern Ohio... It's a beautiful, quiet area...

Mary has a lovely, colorful garden this autumn...



This was the first time I had met Mary and Larry's horses - they were being abused by flies, but were very sweet and affectionate. They even loved Django, and wanted to kiss him! Django wasn't too cool with that at first, but he warmed up to the horses after a while...


[Do I have to kiss this horse? Gosh!]

Friday, September 12, 2008

Ta Ta For Now...

Today is my last day with internet! I'll have to frequent the local coffee shop and grocery market to check my mail from now on.

I will not be able to devote as much time to blogging now. In some ways this is good - while I love blogging, there are a multitude of other things that I can work on - especially with a baby coming soon.

However, I will try to still post at least once a week.

xoxo

Empty

In my life, memories have been categorized by houses. Each of the 12 houses and locations I have lived in during the past 22 years is like a chapter of my story.

Tomorrow the 13th chapter of my life begins, as we start over in a new house and area. We've planned this move for months, but it never really sinks in that a life chapter is 'over' until the house is empty.

That's when you start thinking about what you're leaving behind.

Not that you ever mean to or want to leave things behind when you move...though, when I was little and we were leaving a house to move to a new one, I used to like to hide a note or a letter somewhere sneaky, basically stating "Jacqueline lived here."

I don't do that anymore - I try to remember to bring everything with me when I leave a house. However, I do get a little sentimental, thinking about leaving memories behind.

Memories live in your heart and your head - I know they can't be left behind, technically. However, when I look through an empty house where so many memories have been lived, I can't help but worry a little that things will be forgotten when I'm not there.


Maybe it's just the kind of person I am. That fridge is naked and clean today - but a couple of weeks ago it was covered by "memories." Pictures drawn and scribbled by nieces and nephews, magnet photos of friends and family, clippings I wanted to remember from the local newspaper...I've always had this need to remember important people, places and things in my life. It's hard to let go.

I can take all my refridgerator decor with me to the new house - but what about the other memories that were not memorialized in writing, photo or drawing?

All houses hold good memories and bad memories - this house has been no different...and I want to remember it all.

I want to remember the laughter, the music, the quiet peacefulness of being in the country, the close proximity to our families, the joy of first time pregnancy...all those wonderful things.

But I also want to remember the bad - the anguish of miscarriage, the frustration of doubt, the fear and anxieties of beginning a new pregnancy, the anger through fighting sickness, and dabbles in depression when I can barely hold up under the weight of the world and forget that Christ is there to take that burden for me. Those weren't pleasant times, but those were the most important times here - those were times of deep growth.

So I get a little depressed when leaving an old house - it's saddening leaving behind the rooms where your life has played out, for good and bad...

It's also hard not knowing what to expect when you begin again in a new house... What memories will be created there? Will it feel like home?


This lamp was a wedding present, and it has hung in both the kitchens we've lived in together has husband and wife. As I was packing up the kitchen last week, I began to take down the lamp...

"What are you doing?" Matt asked.

"There's no point in hanging this up in the new house - we may not be there longer than 3 months." I said.

He took it out of my hands and put it back on its chain. "We've hung this lamp in every house we've lived in so far, and we'll hang it in the new one," he said.

I like it when my husband gets all assertive and bossy, and I was comforted by his words.

Chapters ending do not have to be sad, and new chapters beginning do not have to be scary. Wherever we go, there will be new memories, and as long as we're together we will be "home."

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

It's Time For Some Campaignin'!

Make sure you watch til the end - my husband Matt makes a guest appearance in the video! ;-)

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Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Meghan McCain's Blog

*Life update: Busy-ness! We are preparing to move (hopefully this weekend) so the house is disorganized, and I've been busy with cleaning, packing and chasing our two rascally dogs. Sorry for the lack of more personal posts - as soon as things calm down, I'm excited about organizing photos and getting back into some serious blogging.*

I was excited to find a blog written by John McCain's daughter, Meghan. I don't know much about her, other than she's the daughter of a high-profile politician, and that she loves to write. She just had a children's book published entitled "My Dad, John McCain."

Her blog has some neat tidbits about life behind the scenes of the McCain/Palin campaign. There are also a lot of neat pictures, so if you get a moment, check it out!

Tonight is the 3rd, (or is it the 2nd?) night of the RNC. I got to watch a couple of minutes of last night's events - mainly Laura Bush and President Bush's addresses. Tonight, however, I am committed to sticking around to see Palin's primetime speech. After all the malicious smearing attempts from the media this week, I'm very excited to hear what she has to say tonight, and to learn what kind of reaction she'll get from viewers across the nation.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Maybe I'll Vote After All...


"Who is she?" ... "Why was she chosen?"

I don't think any of us know the answers to those questions 100% yet...however, when I learned a few facts about Palin, McCain's choice for VP, I felt the first stirring of hope and excitement that I had experienced since the beginning of this presidential race.


Most important to me is the fact that Palin is staunchly pro-life...not just in words, but in practice. She's the 44 year old mother of 5 children. Her youngest was born just this past April, and has Down's Syndrome.

If any other conservative Christians out there felt like I did about McCain's moderate stand on the pro-life/pro-choice issue, (discouraged? Apathetic about whether he wins in November or not?) then you are probably just as excited as I am that a truly pro-life candidate is on the presidential ticket.

Besides being impressed with Palin, my opinion of John McCain has risen a little bit, just for taking the risk to choose her. I mean, it was a terribly risky move, but it may just be the move that wins the election for him this fall...

Palin has little experience in the public eye, compared to most seasoned Washington politicians. She was the mayor of a tiny Alaskan town before being elected governor - an office she has held for less than 2 years! However, Obama has very little experience in politics as well, (and he's running for Presdient,) so any hits against her for not having enough experience shouldn't be taken very seriously by anyone in my opinion. She also brings the "freshness" of having little experience, youth (she's the youngest person on the presidential ticket,) and new ideas - the very things Democrats have argued work for Obama in his inexperienced political career.

As a woman, Palin also may work to draw Hillary supporters away from the Obama campaign. Palin is the 2nd woman in U.S. history to be on a presidential ticket - and the very first Republican woman to do so.

Coming from Alaska, Palin knows a lot about the oil industry. I think her experience may interest those who are concerned about the fuel "crisis" that our country is going through. Though she has little to no experience in foreign policy, she is definitely a strong domestic policy candidate.

From the beginning of the primary races earlier this year, I felt very disheartened by the whole campaign. Obama, Clinton, McCain - not one stood out to me as someone I could get excited about, or feel good about voting for. I had almost made up my mind not to vote this year, I felt that apathetic about the choices.

Palin is just a VP nominee, but she is someone I can get excited about. A pro-life mom, who hasn't had the chance to be corrupted by D.C. politics yet, and who takes strong stands on the issues that are important to my family and I. Suddenly I feel ready to go out and vote for McCain!

We're excited to get to know more about Palin next week, as the RNC takes place in Minnesota.