Moments From The Week

I think I will let my playlist stand as reference for how this week has gone!

For those who have been asking my mother in law’s open heart surgery went extermely well, so well that she may be discharged as early as today.

What I am listening to this week:

Who cares if it’s a song from the Twilight soundtrack and most likely everyone and their mother is familiar with it except for me who just heard it for the first time this week and now has it on repeat. Christina Perri’s Thousand Years:

Then there is this one- Liz Longley’s When You’ve Got Trouble

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UM4tDPSPtp0

And finally there is Matt Maher’s  Lord I Need You Now:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-KM_zpwfr4

What I am reading this week:

I love fall and what it brings – mega sized fashion magazines laying out the fall must have’s! I have spent the last week pouring over the following two style guides:

http://www.instyle.com/instyle/

http://www.peoplestylewatch.com/people/stylewatch/

What moved me this week:

I continue to be moved by this commencement address. The words have hung with me the last two weeks and I promise not to forget them.

http://6thfloor.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/31/george-saunderss-advice-to-graduates/?src=me&ref=general&_r=1

Beaches

Remember that movie about the two women played by Barbara Hershey and Bette Midler who meet one summer as kids on the Jersey shore and who through all of life’s ups and downs remain friends? Sometimes I think that Beaches viewed by a young, impressionable 11-year-old me helped to solidify my love of the beach. A summer spent at the shore where you meet your best friend for life under the boardwalk, it doesn’t get any better than that!

Now I travel with my girls twice a year to take in the sun and the salt that sustained me as a kid. It’s not the Delaware shore of my childhood or the Carolina coast of my college and young adult years. It’s the southern shores of Georgia. The islands with their unkept beaches; their rocks, warm waters and shrimp boats. It’s the place where a boardwalk never existed and where you can walk for a mile on the sandy shoreline without ever seeing another soul.

 
But it’s not just the barren sandy path that has me come back when the calendar turns the mark on the sixth month. It’s the people, those generous of spirit. The potential for lifelong friends that is fostered by the history and culture of the Georgia coast brings us back.

 
The “hello ma’am” always draws me in. “Where are you from?” “What brings you to Georgia?”. They always reach out first.

I know that most everyone I meet down here I will end up carrying with me on my journey home. People such as Captain Tim.

capain tim

http://www.fishthegeorgiacoast.com/about-the-captain.html

 
Tim’s not a native (in these parts one defines a native as someone whose family has lived on these islands for at least four generations). But he too was lured by the culture (and fishing of course) of this place and now calls it home with his wife and stepchildren.

He and my husband have been fishing together for the last few summers. But this trip they decided to take Sidney. And this happened:

sidfish

Look at that proud little lady. Captain Tim spent over 4 hours on the boat with her that day along with my husband and his parents. They fished for bait then fished for shark and Sidney had an absolute blast (well until hour 4 when the 90 degree plus day finally got to her). Captain Tim was beyond patient and had just the right mix of education and fun to keep the morning interesting for her. He didn’t coddle my nine-year old but empowered her with his fishing knowledge and his love of this place.

He also helped my husband do this:

brock fish

Those who know my husband know a smile on his face such as the one pictured above ( you know the kind of smile that is shown on not just your mouth but overtakes your whole face) has only been captured on camera maybe three times since we were married in 1999 (those smiles would be at the births of our girls). According to my mother in law, my husband also spent those four hours learning from the Captain. They talked fishing of course- the tides, the marsh lands and the changes in the geography of this place. And they caught fish (a lot of fish)! Brock came home sunburned and invigorated.

I don’t think I can fully articulate how someone such as Captain Tim goes above and beyond what you ask him to, not because he feels obligated but because the love of this place lives in these people. It becomes tangible when you engage with them. It is a part of their spirit and after a few moments with the Captain Tim’s of Georgia’s Golden Isles their spirit overtakes you as well.

And that my friends is why it’s so hard to leave this place. You long to carry their spirit back with you. In my world of deadlines, highways and highrises, the further you move away from your trip the harder it is to conjure up their spirit.

So we will travel back on the sixth month and we will refuel. Captain Tim will take my family fishing again and those smiles will live for a few more weeks on their faces. No we didn’t meet this lifelong friend under the boardwalk but the salty floors of a fishing boat are just as good.

Beach Days

jekyllbeac

How can one leave that?

or this?

 

ellieandmatty

Struggling today with the after vacation fog.

So many stories from this week but the words won’t come this Monday morning.

Maybe tonight I can summon the sound of the ocean in my ears and the sight of the star speckled Georgia sky.

Then the words will come.

Moments from the Week- Georgia here we come

I don’t think my family could be any more excited to see this week come to an end. The ending of this week marks the start of our summer trip to the Golden Isles of Georgia (we visit St. Simons Island every December and Jekyll Island every August).

I would like to say that I was up at 4:45 this morning because I was too excited for our trip but in reality “the boy” had his own ideas. He woke me up to show me the disaster area he made of our downstairs . I am assuming he decided to tear up a wicker basket and relieve himself on my new hallway rug because he saw the suitcases and was traumatized. But honestly, he is an 8 month old puppy and no one knows why he does what he does.

So in my sleep deprived but heightened state of awareness this morning (2 cups of coffee in already) I decided to do my last blog post from the safe confines of my Ohio home. In a few hours we will be off on our adventure but we did manage to squeeze in some fun this week.

audreydinnersidgreenbean

Yes those are green beans. Yes we grew them in our backyard. And yes there are only three of them but we nurtured those little guys until we could eat them.

ellie cooking

My Ellie girl loves to bake. Brownies were her choice on Wednesday night.

Here are more things that spoke to me this week. Enjoy your weekend.

What I am listening to:

Josh Abbott Band She Will Be Free

Bart Crow If I Go I’m Goin

What I am reading:

http://www.amazon.com/dp/1469266512

Moments from the Week

life rearrangedcoffee

That picture above pretty much sums up the week. Loads of tall iced coffees (one Splenda) and a lot of propel water (to counteract the caffeine and keep me hydrated).

The week started out with a trip with the two big girls and my mom to see The Lion King in Cleveland.

lion king

And then there was some one on one time with Sid at her riding lessons. She jumped quite a bit this week.  To say I was nervous would be an understatement but I guess this is what parenting an almost 9 year old is all about. Allowing her freedom to do what she loves and being scared sh*tless as she does it. I love this picture of her in the car on the ride home from lessons. Yep, loving the feeling of her head out the window on a winding country road. Freedom.

sidcar

This is what parenting a 2 1/2 year old is like. First big girl haircut (goodbye curls). Bribing her with lollipops to sit in the chair while the stylists cuts her hair with lightening speed (anyone with a child that age knows how hard it is to keep them still for long).

elliehaircut

A week full of precious moments.

Here are a few other things that have spoken to me this week:

What I am reading:

Finished this one during my air travels. I love the weight of a book in my hands.

http://www.amazon.com/Kayak-Morning-Reflections-Grief-Small/dp/0062084038

Speaking of freedom and children this blog post spoke to me:

http://www.aholyexperience.com/2013/07/why-your-kids-dont-need-a-supermama/

What I am listening to this week:

Eric Bibb’s The Cape seems especially fitting this week.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIECz7Y01-U

Trips

Trips

I have always thought that these trips for work serve two primary purposes:
1. to remind me of why I work
2. to remind me of why I parent

I hate to leave my family. I hate to be physically apart from them.
But I leave and I spend a day doing what I do in some different city and
I am reminded of how good it feels to be good at something.

Then I come home. And those girls and that man with their smiling faces and 
open arms make me overjoyed at the opportunity to parent and partner again.

Lately I have realized that there is the third reason to travel as I do 
for my job-
the chance to connect with people.

I once heard an interview with Chris Christie (I'll be honest it was one 
of those Oprah life class interviews, please don't think less of me). 
In the interview Oprah asked the New Jersey governor why he did what he did. 
He didn't give the typical political answer of "I have a servants heart.
I do it for the country". No he said something akin to
"I thrive off of meeting people. It's like a high.
I get a jolt connecting with people".

That's how I feel about these work trips. It's a jolt of energy. 
You spend the days I do on these trips walking the halls and 
attending meetings and you feel alive. You feel connected to others. 

So I leave my beautiful little family and in exchange I get to meet people. 
For one millisecond I get to participate in their lives and 
exchange stories.

What a wonderful gift I have been given.

Gifts

DSC01237The family and I have been pretty busy these last 4 days and I can’t wait to share all the details.

But for now it’s more cherry pie and maybe a margarita or two before this birthday girl heads to bed.

Moments from the week: A week in pictures

This is how I started my week. 6:45am on monday morning as I pull out of my driveway and head to work. I had to stop the car to snap a picture.

rainbow

Cannot wait until we head to Jekyll Island in August. Brock bought this mug on one of our first trips down to the Golden Isles. He has his coffee in it every morning. Think he needs a new one?

mug

We’ve had some pretty major storms over the last week. In the early morning hours of Wednesday two little visitors crawled into our bed after a particularly vicious storm went through. This is how things looked in our room at 6:30am (note the very wet and scared dog that also decided to jump into our bed).

thunderstorm

Who knew someone could be so excited to install new mats in a truck? And yes those mats were a present for his 36th birthday. Wow are we old or what?

truck

Ellie is very helpful when I try to procrastinate. I didn’t feel like running so instead of helping a mama out by taking a few pictures with her she announced “Mama I don’t have time for pictures”.

elliemom

The storms finally stopped and we were able to get out last night to do some flower picking and roast marshmallows over the fire pit.

fieldofgold

Audrey had her final day of gymnastics camp today so of course we had to take her out to lunch to celebrate.

gymnasticssidcc

Looking forward to this week. Brock is taking Sid out on the boat for some late night catfishing.

Tomorrow we have a wedding for one of Brock’s coworkers which translates into loads and loads of time minus children for the two of us.

Sunday will be spent “fish shopping”. We promised Ellie she could get a fish when she was potty trained and wouldn’t you know the little girl made up her mind this week that she no longer wanted to wear diapers. Just like that and after 8 years we are now a diaper free house. That girl deserves a fish!

One final thing. Check out the following. Nail on head. I don’t know why I feel the need to justify why I watch this show but here’s a few reasons.

http://consideringfrugal.blogspot.com/2013/07/duck-dynasty-what-robertsons-know-about.html

Coffee Date

I cram in moments to write.

Stuck between a doctors appointment and a conference call I have time to fill, so I run to a coffee shop to sip my black coffee and let the words that have been sitting with me spill on to the paper.

******************

I’ve been visiting coffee shops long since before it was cool.

My first trip I can recall was at 18 to the Starbucks in a strip mall across from the movie theaters in Monroeville, Pennsylvania with my dad. Probably circa 1995.

His drink of choice was a tall coffee black, mine was a Carmel Macchiato.

We sat in the tall chairs at a long black table.

He asked me about college, my hopes and dreams. He always quizzed me.

What about major’s Heather? Have you landed on one? Any boyfriend’s? Have you thought about summer internships?”

Some teenagers would bristle at the rapid fire questions ( it was hard to keep up with my dad’s train of thought-he was on to the next question before you had time to digest the first), but I loved the attention. In that moment, with coffee in hand, my father completely focused on me, I felt so grown up.

Just 12 years later I would be sitting at another coffee shop on the south side of the city. Another Carmel Macchiato in hand (a younger me really had a thing for sugary coffee drinks) while my dad and I talked with my daughter Sidney. Sid was transfixed at the site of a man walking his parrot. “How is preschool Sid? Do you want to go see the horses at the park? How about Round Hill farm? Would you like to go there later?”.

He peppered her with age appropriate questions while she remained focused on the site of the brightly colored bird now sitting on the railing waiting for his owner to return with his cup of coffee.

I, a three-year old Sidney and a 9 month old Audrey where visiting my parents. I had stolen away from work for 2 days and left Brock back in Columbus to tend to his work and dogs. The visit was prompted by a phone call in which my dad told me he would need open heart surgery in October but not to worry it was all under control. The best doctor, the best hospital would all be treating him.

So we sat, admiring the parrot and trading questions. Mine focused on his surgery. Being completely uneducated when it came to healthcare matters and honestly sheltered from pain brought on by a loved ones health crisis, my questions did not have the proper weight behind them. I did not recognize the enormity of the situation. Over the next hour, he continued to shift talk away from him and back to myself and my daughters.

That would be our last coffee date but his presence would loom large at my coffee breaks over the next month.

There was the coffee from the cafeteria the day of his surgery when the doctors delivered the news that it was successful and without it they had determined he would have died from a heart attack in the very near future.

Ah the joy in that cup of coffee as we savored the moment where this giant of a surgeon told us he had in essence given us our dad back.

Then there was the drive through coffee in the car from Columbus to Pittsburgh less than 7 days later when a frantic call from my mother told us my dad had taken a turn and was now in a medically induced coma in the ICU. Brock and I talking over our cups of expensive brew, trading thoughts on next steps.

There was the coffee with my dad’s old colleague and friend who came to pray with us the day they cracked open my dad’s chest for a second time.

Heads bowed, styrofoam cups of waiting room coffee in hands. Fingers burning from the heat, tongue searing from the taste. In that moment feeling alive and connected not numb and alone as I had moments before.

More cups of waiting room coffee then I could count over the next week as the infection brought on by the hospital and the giant of a surgeon raged through my dad’s body.

His smile, his laugh, sitting with me at all of those coffee trips.

Rapid fire questions from me to my husband, my brothers, my mom as the moments of waiting turned into days.

And then silence in the early morning hours of October 23 as he slipped from our grasp.

It took me 5 years after his passing before I could have another Carmel Macchiato.  On my birthday last year I  made it a goal to have one.

My dad had always forgotten the date of my birth. His father was born on the 19th of July and his sisters on the 17th of that same month. Over the years as he filled out forms for me (athletic waivers, permission slips, bank accounts), he would always pause and ask me “Remind me, were you born on the 17th or 19th?”. Momentary anger on my part before I would respond “No dad remember my birthday is the 18th of July.”

As the clock marked the hour I entered the world 35 years prior I sat alone in my car drinking the full fat concoction.

The foam on my lips,

The Carmel on my tongue,

The tears on my cheeks I long thought had dried up.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbTp83HtnTs

dadmomaudrey

Moments from the week

On Sunday morning I looked out my back windows and saw this:

DSC01123DSC01125

What is it about the sight of a hot air balloon on a still, summer morning? It just sets your week off with the right tone. And that it did.

Laying in bed on Wednesday night, long after the kids had gone to bed, I looked over at Brock and told him “today was a good day”.  Nothing spectacular, nothing earth shattering just a good old fashioned day of hard work, laughter and tired kiddos.

Today was another one of those good days. As the girls sleep, the boy lays curled up on my feet while I type. He looks like this now.

DSC00939DSC00898

His colors are starting to fade from the dark brown he was born with to the wheat color he will live his life as. It makes me a touch sad to have such a visual reminder of how quickly time can move. But I am glad now that we took this chance on that crazy dog. He makes the end of the day so perfect.

So on to the summary from the week. The following have spoken to me to over the last seven days- all in their own way and for their own reasons.

What I am listening to this week:

People wonder why I love bluegrass and country. This is it. Loving the cover of Born this Way!

http://www.cmt.com/videos/unplugged/little-big-town/831991/born-this-way-unplugged.jhtml

What I am reading this week:

Yes I really did just finish this book! AND Brock and I are taking the girls to see Jase speak in Columbus at the end of July. I don’t care if you judge me.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Duck-Commander-Family-Dynasty/dp/147670354X

What moved me this week:

I heard this story on my way into work this morning. It stopped me in my tracks.

http://www.npr.org/2013/06/27/195967886/six-words-black-babies-cost-less-to-adopt?utm_source=npr&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=20130627