Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Turkey Trot and New 'Do

Bennett asked me and Stephen to come to school this morning to watch him run his first ever, one-mile, turkey trot.  We've never really seen Bennett run, besides on a soccer field, and we thought the prizes for this race sounded hilarious: first place wins a turkey, second wins a Cornish game hen, and third place wins a whole chicken.  Sadly, the P.E. teachers forgot to show up.  Ha!  There are all the fourth and fifth grade classes lined up with their teachers, ready to go, and the people who organized it are missing.  They'd even sent home flyers to the families.  I hoped the teachers would let the kids run anyway, but no such luck.  They all went back to their classes.  So no one-mile race for Mr. B.

But... this little girl decided she could have her own turkey trot.


She ran the whole way home.
 

Other than this quick "Stop for a second, Millie" shot


Notice something different about her?
 
She finally had her first haircut.

Yes, we realize she's almost 4 and 1/2 years old.
(heads hung in shame a little)
 
Mommy was out of town a few weekends ago,
and while the boys and Daddy were at the barber shop,
Millie joined in on the action.






 
I confess I freaked out a little when on the phone that day (while still on trip)
Millie told me her hair was as short as mine.
I thought we had said no more than two inches,
but apparently hair that's never been cut needs more than two inches taken off.
My panic subsided after Stephen texted me a photo.
Definitely shorter than expected,
but still cute and girlie.
 

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Tender Mercies

During family scriptures a few weeks ago, we came across this Book of Mormon verse:

"But behold, I, Nephi, will show unto you that the tender mercies of the Lord are over all those whom he hath chosen, because of their faith, to make them mighty even unto the power of deliverance."      1 Nephi 1:20



In preceding verses, Nephi had explained his father's revelations regarding Jerusalem and how Lehi had tried to warn the inhabitants of said city.  They mocked Lehi and his prophecies, became angry, cast him out, and eventually "sought his life, that they might take it away."  Then comes the above verse about tender mercies.  If you know the story, you know what comes next.  The Lord commands Lehi to take his family and depart into the wilderness.  Some tender mercy that is, right, having to leave all your friends and belongings and head to the desert?  And yet, eventually that decision to depart Jerusalem yielded fruitful blessings: the plates/scriptures, wives and families for Lehi's children, learning to trust the Lord in all things (from finding food with broken bows to building ships to escaping your own brothers' captivity), and eventual arrival in the promised land.  Tender mercies indeed.



I've been trying to pay attention to the tender mercies in my own life lately, even the slightly-disguised, not-so-desirable ones like being asked to leave Jerusalem, and I have come to realize some things.  First, it's no joke when it says "because of their faith."  Without our trusting and believing Him, how can He deliver us?  My most faithless moments over the past few weeks have been by far my worst, the ones where I feel like the world is against me and I will never escape my past mistakes and/or current weaknesses.  In contrast, the moments where I have chosen to hope and believe, chosen to obey despite my "natural man" feelings have brought peace, answers, and of course deliverance from that self-pitying misery.

Another thing I've learned is that the adversary would have us believe we can't change.  He wants us to feel rooted in our insecurities for as long as they'll keep us down, for as long as they'll cripple us from thinking outside ourselves, for as long as they'll cause us to forget the transforming power of the Atonement.  And boy, is he ever good at his job.  Talk about convincing, talk about manipulating, talk about smooth.  He knows right where to dig in with my emotional Achilles' heels and how to get me believing there is no chance for improvement.

Third, deliverance always comes.  Sometimes we have to be patient.  Sometimes we have to pay closer attention.  Sometimes we have to grow a little before we can be delivered.  That doesn't make it any less than someone else's immediate deliverance.

I felt especially delivered yesterday after struggling early in the morning with some feelings that have persisted for several months now, feelings very akin to the faithless ones I described above.  Engulfed would be an apt word to describe the way those emotions seemed to pull me right under.  We had planned to go to the temple, which was of course the last place I wanted to be while feeling that way.  I sulked and stewed the entire drive up to Oakland, but then came an unforeseen deliverance while doing initiatories.  To my complete amazement, the biggest worries and fears I'd been dwelling on were dispelled as either false or unimportant and not worth my energy.  The answers to those silent prayers of my heart could not have been more pointed, and my gratitude for a loving Heavenly Father and His awareness of my needs could not have been stronger.  Tears streamed as those loving temple workers patted my back and gave me tissues and loved/served me despite not knowing me.  It was the tenderest of tender mercies, one I hope I never forget, and one that brought mighty power to my own testimony.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

November 9

Yesterday brought Eli's last game of the season
and a comp tournament for Bennett in Morgan Hill.
 
Is it crazy that I'm sorta sad
to see soccer Saturdays come to an end?
 
Eli turning on the heat

Stop, turn, kick

Post-game snacks

Medal time

Posin' it up

With Coach German (pronounced "hair-mon")

Leo, Eli's buddy from kindergarten

Can I tell you how excited this child has been to get a trophy?

The Yellow Eagles!

Fan club
(Daddy is busy coaching B's first tourney game of the day)

Mr. B getting his hustle on
in his second game of the day

Weaving his way through traffic

Challenging yet another opponent

Boom!

A quick breather

Doing what he does best:

Defending that goal.

Although he did get to play offense second-half

and even scored the only goal of the game.

Goal kick

and again

and again.  This kid kicks a lot of goal kicks.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Full Day, Full Week

 
Grandma Paula showed up Monday night for a surprise visit,
and we didn't waste any time getting to some fun.
 
Off to Los Gatos we went Tuesday morning,
my mom's favorite place in the Bay area,
for a drive down Tait Avenue in all its Halloween glory,
a walk through charming downtown,
and an all essential pit stop at Icing on the Cake.
 
We rushed back home to watch Eli's class sing in a school assembly,
relaxed after school with some Halloween books,
made Cabbage Patch Soup,
and then CARVED PUMPKINS.
 
 
Lunching at Andale

Hi, Grandma

Carvin' it up

Millie attempting to gut a tiny pumpkin

Bennett and his "common core" as he declared this pumpkin top

Liz getting all fancy with her drill

Eli, the designer, directing his unpaid carver

Ta da!  The smallest jack-o'-lantern in the world

A closer look
 
 
The next day brought costumes at dance class
(we've switched from community to studio for tap/ballet and LOVED the change),
baking Halloween sugar cookies,
and Cub Scouts pack meeting where Bennett earned his Wolf badge.
 
 







Millie--and I--heart Miss Amanda and M's dancemates





 
Benito and his amazing Wolf Den leaders.  We will miss them!


Thursday = Halloween,
so we hit up music class (church) in the morning,
the boys' school parades in the afternoon,
and trick-or-treating in our friends' fun neighborhood that evening.
 


I love this shot my mom got of all the moms and kids under the parachute

Millie loves playing Primary president and Primary chorister