Next, we met my family at a pumpkin patch. It was so great!
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Josh's Big Day
Josh loves the Young Women I teach. Since we are leaving, I had the girls over for breakfast at our house. Greg was out of town so Josh was excited to get to hang out with them.
Next, we met my family at a pumpkin patch. It was so great!
He actually sat still to get his face painted. He wanted something blue so I just had her do a blue pumpkin. It was cute and Josh was happy with it!
This was awesome! No other adults were getting in, but Renda, Brandi and I jumped in the with kids. They had a huge trailer filled with fresh-picked cotton. (Yes, we itched like crazy later. Especially after Renda hit me with a big handful that went down my shirt!)
They somewhat posed for a group pic. This is my niece Hayleigh, nephew Noah, Josh and nephew Jordan.


They had a corn maze at the entrance of the festival. The kids had a blast hiding in the corn since they were small enough to run down the rows. This was another great idea to make this the best patch to go to!
When we FINALLY found the exit to the maze, we saw a few people headed this way. So the kids really got to run free. (We didn't find out until later that we went the wrong way since we walked all the way to the patch instead of taking the hay ride but at least we didn't have to stand in line twice!)
I was so proud of Josh. As soon as we walked into the pumpkin patch his found a cute little pumpkin. It weighed practically nothing so after two seconds when he was done carrying it, I didn't mind. He looked a lots of pumpkins but he never changed his mind!

I'm just not as good as Josh. I found a cool one that matched his but weighed a ton!!!! I had found a neat green one that I was going to get but saw this one and just had to get it. My brother had to take it from me b/c my arms gave out and I couldn't even carry back to the line to get on the hayride.

We had to wait in line for quite a while so Josh found a way to entertain himself. He thought it was just like being at the beach! He was dirty, but content and didn't run away!


Thanks to Aunt Renda for such a great time! We can't wait until next year!
And to conclude this long day, Josh had an accident. Thank goodness he already had a bath after such a dirty day b/c he fell in the living room and hit his eyebrow on the corner of the coffee table. The SAME corner he hit just months ago with the back of his head. Well of course I freaked b/c his head was spewing blood. We probably should have gotten stitches, but Greg's mom just used strips to close it up and padded it well so he wouldn't hurt it any worse. Poor guy :( I'm just thankful it wasn't his eye, but I hope he doesn't have a bad scar.
Next, we met my family at a pumpkin patch. It was so great!
Boo at the Zoo 2010
Josh's "Mountain"
I'm back! We are in Dallas...Georgia that is...
Well, I have had so much to post, but too much to do to justify sitting down at the computer for so long. We are ''watching" the Alabama game so I'm taking a break to catch up on all our happenings over the last month.
We now live in Dallas, Ga. We went downtown yesterday and it only took about 45 minutes to drive there so it's not too bad. And we are about 2 1/2 hours from B'ham. (Greg says only 2 so I guess it just depends on how fast you drive.)
We got to see Greg's building, the Georgia Pacific building. He seems to like work okay. He got to bye steel-toe boots for work since when they go on audits they go to the paper mills. Neat. I never knew there were so many style options!
We've already had some visitors, so anyone that wants to, you are welcome to head on over!
We now live in Dallas, Ga. We went downtown yesterday and it only took about 45 minutes to drive there so it's not too bad. And we are about 2 1/2 hours from B'ham. (Greg says only 2 so I guess it just depends on how fast you drive.)
We got to see Greg's building, the Georgia Pacific building. He seems to like work okay. He got to bye steel-toe boots for work since when they go on audits they go to the paper mills. Neat. I never knew there were so many style options!
We've already had some visitors, so anyone that wants to, you are welcome to head on over!
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Veggies any way you can get them...


So, my picky eater continues. For the passed two weeks he has moved onto corn dogs. While once in a while they may not be too bad, but he can eat two or three for one meal!
So I have tricked him...
I have now started buying the vegetarian version. They taste the same to him and have to be a little bit healthier than regular ones....I hope!
Just like one of my new fav commericals where the mom keeps banging on pans to distract her husband from telling their kid that there are veggies in Chef Boyardee products. Yay for deception to kids! :)
Monday, October 4, 2010
Death
Death seems to be a funny thing. There are those of us who have been touched frequently with the loss of loved ones, and others who witness it from afar. As life can be sometimes, it seems to weird to focus on the striking difference my husband and I play in these roles. For those of us in the first category, we all deal with it and discuss in so many different ways. So long ago, I never knew what to say to someone grieving. Now I know differently, for death and the fear of death haved seeped into my very being.
I remember hearing once, that the Lord gives us challenges in our lives that build our tolerance and ability to deal with specific trials. This thought alone stains my pillow some nights with fears of my son ever entering this category. And though I have experienced my fair share of death, this is the only one that I know would make my heart cease to beat.
I was young when the first deaths started to occur in my life. First, my grandfather, my mom's father died, when I was but a toddler. I wonder now as I have to explain death to my three-year-old, how my parents explained it to me, since their faith and knowledge of these matters varied so much from my own. We had a long berevement after that, not having any close relative die (to my knowledge) until my other grandfather, when I was 11. I vividly remember visiting him in the hospital for a brief moment before being sent back to my aunt's house, then remembering waking to the impression to look out the front window only to see my mom embracing my dad, crying. For a girl with a construction-worker dad, that was a sight I had never seen before, therefore declaring the horrible news. At such a young age, I'm not sure what sorrow I felt, but I'm sure there was sadness for his absence in my life and my dad's grief. A few years later, my parents close friend finally succumbed to AIDS and passed with us living across the country. We had been seperated for many years and I only remember feeling empathy of sadness from my parents grief. His death was followed by another close friend of theirs, dying of yet another disease, this one hurting me more deeply than the first because I had spent so much time with him in my early years and he is still present in so many of my childhood memories.
Then came the horrible trilogy that is still with me even after all these years. Say what you may about urban legends, but death came for me...in threes. My mom's only brother, her closet sibling, died of a heart attack in 2001. Again, I remember feeling sadness at his loss, but mainly for my mother who had lost someone so close to her heart. The following year, on a seemingly ordinary day that will haunt me until the day I, in fact, die.... my mother was ripped from my life in a car accident. Up until this point in my life, I always thought how odd it was to be part of such a normal family of four. So ordinary, a mother, a father, a son and a daughter. Never again would we be ordinary. Her death, tragic in so many ways: Not seeing my brother graduate high school, then me college, us both married, having her grandchildren. Tragic each year as new things happen, how life changes, keeps going and yet, she's not here to witness any of it, to give much needed advice on so many subjects. Then the trilogy coming to an end the next year, as my mom's mother, died on a visit here for my brother's graduation. Solidifying the never ending cycle that our family is doomed to have the constant fear of death and heartache close by.
After that, my family was given a reprieve to somewhat recover, until this year. My dad's eldest brother died along with my husband's grandfather.
Life is so fragile. So easily ended here on this earth. And yet, it still seems so odd that these people can leave us so quickly and unceremoniously, shocking our system and having us scream and yell "Why?"
Even with strong beliefs and knowledge of such a wonderful Gospel. That we all will live again and be together, death is still a hard issue to deal with. While someday we may be together, for now, we are not. Without this knowledge, I cannot see how anyone could go on living.
This week I am reminded of death again, at the loss of the first soldier I have known in a war where so many have died. Oh how the reality sinks in when it's someone from your own universe to have gone. I hope and pray that his family can continue on with their lives and some sort of solace in the Gospel, that they too, thankfully, believe in.
We each deal with issues in our own way. I will advise any seeking guidance as to what to say to someone lost in grief. There is nothing you can say, but "I'm sorry." If it appears that person wishes to be left alone, please do so. I basically had to be rude to one one aunt, at my uncle's funeral. His daughter had sought solitude in a room at the funeral home and it was asked of me to go to her and comfort her. I would not, for all I could remember was my mother's and even grandmother's funeral. I was wandered, looking for seclusion only to be found and pestered with questions when all I wanted to do was be alone with my thoughts and let the grief wash over me as it should.
I have just read a wonderful blog post from a friend of mine. It may causes tears, but it's worth reading for anyone who has lost a loved one.
http://tracypulley.blogspot.com/2010/10/thoughts.html
Thank you, Tracy.
I remember hearing once, that the Lord gives us challenges in our lives that build our tolerance and ability to deal with specific trials. This thought alone stains my pillow some nights with fears of my son ever entering this category. And though I have experienced my fair share of death, this is the only one that I know would make my heart cease to beat.
I was young when the first deaths started to occur in my life. First, my grandfather, my mom's father died, when I was but a toddler. I wonder now as I have to explain death to my three-year-old, how my parents explained it to me, since their faith and knowledge of these matters varied so much from my own. We had a long berevement after that, not having any close relative die (to my knowledge) until my other grandfather, when I was 11. I vividly remember visiting him in the hospital for a brief moment before being sent back to my aunt's house, then remembering waking to the impression to look out the front window only to see my mom embracing my dad, crying. For a girl with a construction-worker dad, that was a sight I had never seen before, therefore declaring the horrible news. At such a young age, I'm not sure what sorrow I felt, but I'm sure there was sadness for his absence in my life and my dad's grief. A few years later, my parents close friend finally succumbed to AIDS and passed with us living across the country. We had been seperated for many years and I only remember feeling empathy of sadness from my parents grief. His death was followed by another close friend of theirs, dying of yet another disease, this one hurting me more deeply than the first because I had spent so much time with him in my early years and he is still present in so many of my childhood memories.
Then came the horrible trilogy that is still with me even after all these years. Say what you may about urban legends, but death came for me...in threes. My mom's only brother, her closet sibling, died of a heart attack in 2001. Again, I remember feeling sadness at his loss, but mainly for my mother who had lost someone so close to her heart. The following year, on a seemingly ordinary day that will haunt me until the day I, in fact, die.... my mother was ripped from my life in a car accident. Up until this point in my life, I always thought how odd it was to be part of such a normal family of four. So ordinary, a mother, a father, a son and a daughter. Never again would we be ordinary. Her death, tragic in so many ways: Not seeing my brother graduate high school, then me college, us both married, having her grandchildren. Tragic each year as new things happen, how life changes, keeps going and yet, she's not here to witness any of it, to give much needed advice on so many subjects. Then the trilogy coming to an end the next year, as my mom's mother, died on a visit here for my brother's graduation. Solidifying the never ending cycle that our family is doomed to have the constant fear of death and heartache close by.
After that, my family was given a reprieve to somewhat recover, until this year. My dad's eldest brother died along with my husband's grandfather.
Life is so fragile. So easily ended here on this earth. And yet, it still seems so odd that these people can leave us so quickly and unceremoniously, shocking our system and having us scream and yell "Why?"
Even with strong beliefs and knowledge of such a wonderful Gospel. That we all will live again and be together, death is still a hard issue to deal with. While someday we may be together, for now, we are not. Without this knowledge, I cannot see how anyone could go on living.
This week I am reminded of death again, at the loss of the first soldier I have known in a war where so many have died. Oh how the reality sinks in when it's someone from your own universe to have gone. I hope and pray that his family can continue on with their lives and some sort of solace in the Gospel, that they too, thankfully, believe in.
We each deal with issues in our own way. I will advise any seeking guidance as to what to say to someone lost in grief. There is nothing you can say, but "I'm sorry." If it appears that person wishes to be left alone, please do so. I basically had to be rude to one one aunt, at my uncle's funeral. His daughter had sought solitude in a room at the funeral home and it was asked of me to go to her and comfort her. I would not, for all I could remember was my mother's and even grandmother's funeral. I was wandered, looking for seclusion only to be found and pestered with questions when all I wanted to do was be alone with my thoughts and let the grief wash over me as it should.
I have just read a wonderful blog post from a friend of mine. It may causes tears, but it's worth reading for anyone who has lost a loved one.
http://tracypulley.blogspot.com/2010/10/thoughts.html
Thank you, Tracy.
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Fire Station Trip
We went to the fire station for our weekly play group. It was the same station we went to last year and they were so nice. They spent about 20 minutes talking to the moms about all the details of what they do and all the gadgets they have around. Obviously our little 2- and 3-year-olds didn't really know what they were talking about, but it was nice for us to learn a little something. Well, this year, they were very abrupt and listed a couple things to keep the kids away from and herded us down to the fire trucks. I guess it turned out to be a good thing for the kids because they barely got to play for about five minutes when they got a call and had to head out...so we went to the park nearby.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)