{this moment} – A Friday ritual. A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember. If you’re inspired to do the same, visit Soulemama to leave a link to your ‘moment’ in the comments for all to find and see.
Learning to Count: Meaningful Gift Giving
Gift giving isn’t bad. On the contrary, gift giving is a beautiful opportunity to try to express our love in a tangible way. But we’ve been trained by our culture and the media to believe that gift giving is about stuff. And that stuff brings happiness. It doesn’t. And as soon as we pile up the gifts under the tree and train our children to begin to think that way, we plant the seed for deep rooted dissatisfaction in their lives. Gift giving should be just as much about showing love as learning the language of appreciation. And when there’s too much piled up, it’s hard to appreciate anything with sincerity. Less is more. I promise.
Pop on over to Corpus Christi Moms Blog to gather some alternative ideas to piling up toys under the Christmas tree this year.
Over the River and Through the Woods
The traditional Thanksgiving song Over the River and Through the Woods brings pictures to mind of children bundled up in sweaters, yellow and red leaves on the trees, a fireplace with a blazing fire in Grandmother’s house.
South Texas clearly didn’t get the fall memo: the memo that dictates a shift in temperature, a change in seasonal appearance. It’s still gorgeous outside here. Sunny and warm with cool evenings. The leaves on all of my trees are still a perky green as if spring is in the air.
But while we lack traditional autumn weather, we make up for it with perfect camping weather. We can still head over the river and through the woods, although we’ll just do it camping style. It’s time to pack up the tent and sleeping bags, the ingredients for s’mores, some firewood and oh yes, don’t forget those sweet little children of yours.
Pop on over to Corpus Christi Mom’s Blog to finish reading and find out some fun spots for fall camping…
Dear Dr. Surgeon
We haven’t met. Chances are slim that we ever will. Yet you hold my future in your hands…literally. See that woman on the operating table? The one you refer to as your patient? Well, she’s my mom. She’s my dad’s wife. My uncle’s sister. My cousin’s aunt. My children’s granny. She’s not a number in a system or just a body on an operating table. She’s a born person, unique in every way. She’s precious to each of us. She’s our encouragement when we feel down, our shoulder to cry on, our sympathetic ear. For two of us, she’s the reason we’re here. For others, she’s the reason we laugh and pray and find peace in our days. So we just ask you to take extra special care of her. Treat her as if she were your mom, your wife, your sister, your daughter.
She’s been battling health issues for many years. Surgery after surgery after surgery. Surgeon mistakes, bad luck, health issues pushed off for too long, complications brought on by surgical procedures. Patiently smiling through every single trial. She’s beat the odds each time. After all her body has been through, it’s clear that she’s here solely by the grace of God. His hand remains steady over her. He comforts her when she needs it. He hastens to soothe her soul.
But today her body is in your hands. So today as you prepare your surgical instruments, we ask that you also prepare your heart. As you review your notes before you see her, please also review your place in the grand scheme of things. Your hands are meant to do His will. You are an instrument of His, so allow Him to work through you. Humbly ask Him to guide you. Trust that He will.
We continue our prayer vigil for Mom as she heads back to surgery. We pray for health and healing and peace. For His will to be done and for each of us to accept whatever His will may be. For strength, for trust, for hope.
But today we also pray a special prayer for you. A prayer for your submission to His will. A prayer that you allow His hand to guide yours. A prayer that you see Mom as the unique person that He created her to be. That you remember that she’s more than just a body…she’s a mom, a wife, a sister, an aunt, a granny. We pray that you tend to her as you would tend to one of your own flock. And we trust that He will endow you with the wisdom you need to heal her with the power of your hands. And trust in the promise that He will reward you for your humility and trust. God’s got this one, so please, allow His will to be done.
Thank you.
{this moment}
{this moment} – A Friday ritual. A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember. If you’re inspired to do the same, visit Soulemama to leave a link to your ‘moment’ in the comments for all to find and see.
For My Mom…
There are thoughts in the heart that words cannot adequately express. Thoughts that we hold dear but never try to put on paper for fear of doing injustice to the depth of our love. Yet, the fear that we may never get a chance to express our feelings sometimes overrides the fear of injustice. And with that fear in mind, I attempt to express the effect on my life of the woman who brought me into this world.
I don’t remember the first time I met my mother. Of course I don’t. None of us do, however our lives were forever intertwined at that first moment of my being. I don’t remember the first time I heard her voice in the womb or felt her hand press on my little limbs as I stretched out inside of her. I don’t remember the first time our eyes met or the first time she held me. I don’t even remember the first few years. The years that I learned to crawl and walk and talk and climb. The years I learned that when I was hurt or sad or angry, she was the one that would always be there to comfort me. The years I learned that she would be the one that would cheer me on through all the trials of growing up and her faith in me would lift me up on my darkest days. I don’t remember the seed of our relationship, but its fruit is the core of my being.
I grew up as a happy little girl in a happy home. I found myself doing what most little girls do. I watched my mother and soaked up what a mom was supposed to be and do through her actions and words. I did not yet speak the same language as her, the language of woman, wife, mother. I spoke as only a child can. She listened but spoke as a woman, a wife, a mother. Yet somehow she understood me. It takes a rare kind of person to understand so many languages. She crossed our language barrier through late morning snuggles, kisses for bumps, and a heart full of compassion. She loved me despite my childish ways, she loved me with uncompromising empathy.
As I grew, she led by example. I learned to be patient with the impossible, trust in goodness and hope for mercy. I learned alongside her how to bake cookies, wash dishes and sort laundry. She showed me love despite my hormonal attitude. She showed me forgiveness despite my sulky teenage angst. She showed me bravery in the face of her health trials. She showed me courage when she trusted in His will. Yet we still spoke different languages.
Eventually I left behind the teenage angst, the sulky frown, the overly philosophical outlook on life and I discovered what my mother knew all along. Our relationship was beautiful. It just needed nurturing. And so we nurtured it together. By that point I had finally begun to speak one of the languages my mother spoke: the language of woman. I understood better who she was and why she did the things she did. She had understood me all along. I spent my college years falling in love with a best friend I didn’t even realize I had. We spent late nights doing puzzles, eating chocolate, giggling over funny accents we used to talk to each other. We spent our days dashing off to the library, sharing our mutual affection for books or hours in the bookstore debating over which book we would read together next. We stayed up late watching old reruns. Sometimes we were just there together, me studying or scrapbooking, she reading or doing a crossword puzzle. We spoke the language of contentment together.
Then I met Daxson and fell in love. Shortly after meeting Daxson, Dad got transferred up to Newport, RI. I chose to stay with Daxson. And so my mother moved that fall and I’m pretty sure she took a huge chunk of me with her. I missed her. Sure I had moved away for summers before but this was the first time she had ever left me and I missed her dearly. I missed having her there at the end of the day. I missed simple chats to say nothing at all. I missed having my friend nearby. We learned the language of long-distance love.
She helped me plan my wedding from afar. She spent her spare time sewing a beautiful white dress for me. She stood beside me as I prepared to give my heart away permanently and she told me how beautiful I was. And suddenly we spoke another language together…the language of being a wife.
Years passed by and I was blessed with the birth of my first child. Mom came down to stay with me as I got acquainted with life with a baby. It may be hard to imagine, but I was so filled with pride that I truly thought that surely no other woman before me had ever felt so vulnerable, so in awe of a little being she had created. For days I imagined myself as if I were the first person to have ever given birth because surely if this is what every woman felt, the world would seem a little more magical to each of us. But the world around me kept moving forward despite my newfound fascination of little fingers and toes.
And then suddenly it hit me. This is exactly what my mom felt when she gave birth to me. And suddenly, I could speak all the languages of my mother: woman, wife, mother. And suddenly, I felt a tug on the invisible bond we shared and I knew that I suddenly understood more than I had ever bargained for.
The years that I turned away from her…I felt regret. The years I was angry with her…I felt remorse. The years I shut her out…I felt shame. The years I thought she didn’t understand…she did. The years I hurt her with my words and my actions when I spoke only the language of child…I could not change.
I can only say how very sorry I am that I could not speak her languages sooner. I suppose there is not much to be done for that. It is the nature of children to speak as children. But now I come before her truly repentant, with a heart full of love and gratitude. Gratitude that she never gave up on me. She never gave up on us. She nurtured our relationship from that first moment and she never lost faith in it. She stood by me, strong and sturdy, despite the strength I often used to push her away. She never wavered. She loved me despite my shortcomings, despite my natural tendencies to act as a child. She loved me with unending patience and I’d like to believe that it was that faith and trust that opened the door to the world of languages for me. Without her, perhaps I would still be speaking as a child. Even now at 36. Even now as both a wife and a mother.
Now I have children of my own. They speak child. I speak woman, wife, mother. They talk back. They declare their hatred of me when things don’t go their way. They brush me aside for their friends. They take out their frustrations and disappointments on the one person they know will love them despite it all. I remind myself, it is the language of children. I speak the language of empathy, just like my mom did and I remember that it is my job to nurture these relationships. I hug them. I cuddle them. I sing to them. I read to them. I play with them. I learn alongside them. I teach them. I forgive them. I guide them. I love them with every fiber of my being. And I rest, content with the knowledge that this is how the door is opened to a lifelong relationship. Faith. Courage. Trust.
I am my mother.
I have learned my languages well. I have had a guide to help me speak so fluently. Woman, wife, mother. My soul is intertwined forever with hers. I speak her as I speak empathy. I hear her voice echo in mine when I practice patience. I see her reflection when I look into my children’s eyes and offer them sympathy, forgiveness, mercy. I lie in bed at night, staring up at the ceiling and pray with my entire being that if she ever leaves me here, I will still feel her love run through my veins, her lessons will still echo in my heart, her soul will still be intertwined with mine.
I have faith that it will be just as I pray.
A Week of Deliberate Moments
We traveled by train to Missouri in October. My parents joined us which made the trip so much more magical in the hearts of my children. It was a beautiful trip in many ways. I apologize for the delayed post but I had much to process and I wanted to be sure my words did justice to the amazing week we had.
The sun rises and nature awakens us with birds chirping and leaves rustling. We wake earlier than usual, much to our delight. The kids wipe the sleep out of their eyes and have stumbled out the back door, onto the patio and into the wide open field before I even have a moment to whisper, “Good morning.” This isn’t the life we lead back home. But this is the life I dream about. 
Our afternoons are spent with new friends down at the creek, dipping nets into the cold spring water, chasing after crawdads, catching them only to release them shortly after. Little ones spend their time throwing rocks and watching the water splash into the air. Delighted giggles fill the air. The temperatures hover in the low 80s but no one complains of heat as they are all too busy splashing, exploring, playing.

Our evenings allow us the luxury to star gaze; to see the sky as He intended with thousands of stars glittering and twinkling before our eyes. There are no street lights, no city lights to interfere with our view. The boys help Dax build a fire where we all gather round. In the dark of night, my kids all look like wild Indians as they dance around the fire waving sticks in the air, dancing with hearts full of joy. 
For an entire week we live as if this is our life. We make it the whole week without toys or electronic devices or TV. Their world has suddenly become ruled by sticks and rocks, bugs and critters, flowers and trees. For an entire week, I don’t worry if my kids let out Indian war whoops or holler at one another through the cool night air…there are no neighbors to disturb, no rules of civility to follow. My kids can be kids. 
The view from the kitchen window is one of a dirt paved path, curving ever so slightly as it rounds the bend. Further along that path there is a fork in the road. The left leads us through the woods and on to the creek. The right leads toward town. A peek out from the front porch and there are woods to my right with a path beckoning us to follow. A cup of hot tea on the back patio and I can imagine spring here, birds filling the trees, stopping in for a quick bite at one of the many feeders. 
There is peace here. Peace that isn’t found in the city. Peace that isn’t found in the suburbs. Peace that isn’t even found when you’re camping at a state park. You have to stretch a little to find this kind of peace.

This is not a vacation in the traditional sense. It’s not jam packed with sight-seeing trips or fancy dinners in fancy restaurants. It’s not maid service and mints on the pillow (although fortunately for us, we chose a beautiful property with attention to every little detail). It’s not a house on the beach or skiing in the mountains. But it’s peaceful. And it’s beautiful. And it’s more refreshing than a vacation jam packed with sight-seeing trips and fancy dinners in fancy restaurants could ever hope to be.

However, regardless of what we planned this to be, which initially was just a trip out of Texas, it has become more than just a trip for us. Somewhere along the way, it became a moment to appreciate what we didn’t even realize we were missing back home where we are buried beneath to-dos and rules of civility in the midst of suburban life. It’s the longing for a different way of life. It’s a chance to allow our kids the freedom to roam freely. The chance to explore and relax and just be.

I am so overwhelmingly thankful for this moment. Or rather this week of moments all built one on top of the other. This moment to be with my husband, my children and my parents. This moment to fill our memory buckets full of goodness, beauty and truth. This moment to appreciate the natural world. This moment to slow down and remember that a life rushed through is no life at all. This moment to stop and savor the riches of my own little world, this little family I hold near and dear. This moment to live deliberately.

Daybook
I am remembering…how much the kids and I giggled over the ridiculousness of this story. Some things are just entertaining.
I am thankful for…a beautiful camping trip in Goliad (despite Andrew sitting in a fire ant bed and me falling off an unmoving bike) full of lovely memories: an afternoon with Mom and Kathy, Scare on the Square, carving pumpkins, riding bikes and William’s lucky find. So glad Leslie and Jessica joined us for the adventure.

I am watching…the election results roll in (yep, this is really a “nightbook” not a “daybook”)
I am listening to...Little Paris Bookshop on my iPod and Secrets of a Charmed Life on Audible.
I am wondering…why this kid won’t keep a hairband on! She looks so cute when she lets me put it on (until she pulls it off two seconds later).
I am laughing…because how could I not when greeted by these two superheroes? 
I am reflecting…on this conversation with Andrew when we were out riding bikes on Sunday. We rode our bikes to the cemetery and stopped by Baby Land there, praying for the little souls and the mamas and papas who lost their little ones. A few minutes later, this conversation occurred:
A: Mommy, how did those moms and dads lose… (couldn’t hear everything as he was riding behind me)
M: What?
A: I said, how did those ….lose their babies?
M: What?
A (as he rides up beside me): I said, how did those moms and dads lose their babies? (and in the same breath, with a hint of astonishment) And how do these pedals work? (as he pedals off to join his brothers, never even waiting for me to answer either question…I love the way their little brains work!)
In the schoolroom…new week. New routine. New schedule. Renewed love of learning.
In the kitchen…fancy breakfast. Cereal with these delicious strawberries. If you’re considering stocking up on food storage or you just want to add some dried food to your cabinet, I seriously recommend Thrive Life. The food is delicious (we’re huge fans of the coconut bites…yum!).
I am wearing…shorts and a t-shirt…because it’s a very warm South Texas fall.
I am excited…because I’m learning Latin. Yep, that excites me. Weird, I know.
Someday I am going to miss…little feet sticking out from beneath the curtains.
I am reading…West with the Night (LOVE this!), Twain’s End (not far enough to judge), and Raising Godly Tomatoes (not really my thing…raising Godly children, yes, her methods, not so much).
One of my favorite things…this crowd.
A peek into my day…waited over an hour today to have an MRI done of my shoulder that I should have had done 5 years ago when it all started. 
Please visit The Simple Woman’s Daybook for more daybook entries.
Worn out and stretched
I have this sweater that hangs in the back of my closet. To be honest it’s not very flattering these days. But before it was worn and stretched and washed and dried incorrectly only to be washed and stretched again, it was a delightful sweater.
I bought the sweater back during my junior year of college. I had been invited to spend a weekend with a friend in Boston. Dad and I went shopping a few weeks before my trip. I saw the sweater and fell instantly in love. Never having been one for style, I tended to gravitate toward comfort. And this sweater just breathed comfort. But unlike most of my fashion choices, this sweater was beautiful. It was charcoal gray with flecks of color splashed about. It zipped up and had a hood. I grabbed it from the rack and Dad agreed that it had a Boston look to it. Very New Englandy.
The sweater traveled to Boston with me that fall. And then to New York in the winter. Philly the following winter. Alaska in the spring. Raleigh the following Christmas. The more I wore it, the more it stretched. The more it stretched, ironically, the more I loved it. It had character and despite its misshapen identity, it still breathed comfort. It lost a little of its beauty on the outside, but to me it remained beautiful. A treasure that withstood the passing of time.
I pulled it out this morning, this first morning that has had a taste of fall. The temperature is comfortable but the breeze is giving me shivers. I just needed a little added layer to take the chill off. Wrapping the worn and loved sweater around me and zipping it up, I relished its comfort, its history, its trek through life with me.
This sweater and me? We actually share more than just travel and cold days. You see, my body isn’t so perfect anymore either. Back before it was worn and stretched and tired, it was a delightful body. Time and babies have taken their toll. Bits of it have stretched beyond repair and bits of it sag thanks to the law of gravity. But this body? The one Daxson reaches for in the middle of the night? The one my babies snuggle up to when they’re scared? I’d like to think it’s still comfortable. It’s beautiful in a way it hasn’t always been. It has nurtured life within its womb and stretched and given way to miracles. Tiny little miracles. Four of them here on Earth. Two more securely tucked away in Heaven. It has nursed my babies into healthy toddlers. It has lifted those children and rocked them and held them close on the nights when their dreams weren’t so sweet. It has spoken of love and pleasure to a devoted husband. It has been pushed to its limits with my obsession of diets and working out. It carries on despite its lack of good sleep, a rest from stress and access to a perfect diet. It is faithful despite my nonacceptance, my constant criticism.
This morning, I snuggle a little deeper into my sweater and I look down at the stomach that is no longer flat. Instead of criticizing, I praise the stretch marks, the sagging skin, the abs that will never boast of themselves in a bikini and I accept it all for what it is. A vessel for love. And my sweater? I praise it, too. For teaching me the beauty of a body well used.
Making Scents of a South Texas fall…
If there is one thing I could obsessively collect (aside from books) it would be scents. I’d bottle up all those amazing scents that have the power to transport me across time and place and I’d sniff them as needed.
You know the scents I’m talking about, right? The ones that make you think of summer afternoons baking apple pie in Grandma’s kitchen. Or the scent of lemony chlorine that reminds you of your elementary school hallway. One sniff and you’re suddenly 8 years old again with knobby knees and Lisa Frank stickers decorating your binder.
It’s amazing how the brain works. Smells enter the nose and pass along the cranial nerve through the olfactory bulb where the brain then processes the smell. The olfactory bulb is part of the limbic system, which is closely associated with memory and feelings.
Pop on over to Corpus Christi Moms Blog to continue reading and to get a great recipe for homemade autumn play dough.







