Friday, October 31, 2008

hallllllooWEEN!




Michelle & Kyle


Steve doing what he does best!

Mike & Sam

Stephanie & Trent

Steve & Lexi


My little Pirate! (Jack)

So This year we had another party... in our small apt. It was still fun! We had a donut eating conest, played some serades, a little bit of catch phrase and what if? It was super fun. We piged out and enjoyed one anothers company. Thanks so much for comin over guys! It will be better next year, Next year i'll make some more food! ha

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Our New Project!



The living room.

sprayin the walls

starting to rip paper off...

dont worry its just the 2nd layer off wall paper...Geeze!



This is our new thing we go over and do every night starting tonight... We've started ripping the wall paper off... and were only doing one room at a time... ha. This is the living room we've started taking before and during pictures. Don't worry we hope to have some "final" ones soon! We will see how fast it goes.. with both of us working till like 5 we can only work nights. So far so good... it took us about 3 hours to get down half of the wall paper. Mind you there was built up old wall paper under that. So that took even longer! But its been fun. I think its both me and ryans interest to fix things and make them look a little better. I'm excited. Were moving in on the 1st of november. Woo!

Thursday, October 23, 2008

gO jAzz!

Jazz Game! $500 a ticket? No big deal...


2nd row baby

the coach for the blazers... sat right by him











whitney's fav. player



talk about your ultimate date! Our friends Kyle and Michelle were so nice and invited us to hang with them on the 2nd row of the Open Season Jazz Game. Lucky Us? We got treated to an all you can eat buffet that was really good! As well as half time nachos and popcorn! Thanks so much guys for letting us trail along with ya! It was tons of fun!!!

fishin'...

Strawberry










So what are you doing at 5 in the morning? Sleeping... Nope Fishin, Ry's buddy Kyle invited him to go fishin up strawberry. Boy did they have a blast! A little cHillY but it was fun!!

Monday, October 20, 2008

BREAD!!!

Sweet Love i learned how to make bread and it works! Lucky me! My sister in law Amberlie invited me over to learn how to make bread! She taught both me and Alicia. It was awesome. Cause i'm such a hands on person and she taught me good! My bread actually turned out! Thanks so much Amberlie!


Sunday, October 19, 2008

PRESIDENT BOYD. K PACKER

Normally i dont post this kinda of stuff and talks such as this. But i think everyone needs to read this. It is so important to what is going on in the world today. This was just last week Pres. Packer was saying all of this.


President Boyd K. Packer, President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
Speaking at the Forest Bend Ward, Salt Lake City UT Sunday, October 12, 2008
Page 2 of 5
“Even though I regularly have the opportunity to attend Fast and Testimony meeting, I don’t
usually stand to speak. But today, I feel moved upon by the Spirit to share a message…
Last weekend’s General Conference was different than any before. We felt that down at Church
Headquarters and have been talking about it all week. We live in troubled times. There is great
financial crisis and we’ve seen something that hasn’t happened in the last 60 years: the world’s
financial markets are collapsing. I was six years old when the Great Depression began: the 10th
of 11 children. My father was a mechanic and times were difficult for all of us. Many families
were suddenly out of work all at once. There were large public projects to try and provide
employment – like the great ditch or canal I remember being dug here in our city. It was at least
six feet deep and dug by hand, with pick and ax. Nowadays, we’d use a piece of machinery to
do it. But in those days, people worked with what we had. They were desperate times for
many. There were things as a child that I didn’t understand and was afraid of. I didn’t like to go
into the basement of our home. I thought the Boogeyman lived there. But as I grew older and
we got some lights down there, I realized that the great dark space underneath the stairs was a
large pile of old shoes. As a pair of shoes we were wearing would wear out or break down, we
didn’t throw them out. We would use a shoe from that old pile as spare parts to repair our shoes
or make new ones. It was just the way you did things in those times.
There’s a scripture that says “Yet learn we obedience by the same things we suffer.” It seems
sometimes that we don’t learn until we need to turn and rely upon the Lord. In the Book of
Mormon, well, if you looked in my copy, in the Book of Helaman about chapter 12 or 13, you’d
see that I’ve written-in a swirling chain of circles across the top of the page. It might look like
old cursive, but that’s not what it’s meant to be. It’s meant to remind me of the cycles of the
people. In times when they were blessed with great prosperity and wealth, they forgot the Lord.
Then when they fell to bad habits which led some to wickedness and placed many in peril, the
righteous would turn/return to the Lord in their humbler circumstances. It’s a cycle of prosperity
and wickedness we see repeated over and over again in the scriptures and now again in our day.
I remember once I went deer hunting with Brother Tuttle and some others. We were up in the
mountains, riding on horseback. He went up one side of the canyon, and I went up the other.
As I was riding, I bent over and just nearly kissed the saddle horn as we passed a low cedar tree
that was right by the path. Well as we passed the cedar tree, there was no more path on the other
side of it and the way before us was just a dropping hillside covered with loose shaley rock. I
kicked my feet clear of the stirrups, just in case the horse reacted badly, and it was a good thing I
did. She reared up and I was thrown back. I hit my head on some rocks and got a cut right
above my eyebrow that was bleeding heavily. I’d been holding my rifle in my hand and as my
hand flew back and hit heavily against a rock, it broke as well. So I was laying there hurt and
shaken. My companions on the other side of the canyon had seen what happened and I heard
Brother Tuttle call out “Are you hurt?” I replied “Yes, I’m bleeding!” He called out again “Are
you hurt?” I called again “Yes, I’m bleeding!”, but the wind was blowing the wrong way and
they couldn’t hear me. The fourth time this happened, I yelled in response “No!” And they
called back “Okay!” and continued to ride on up the mountain. That’s lesson one!
President Boyd K. Packer, President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
Speaking at the Forest Bend Ward, Salt Lake City UT Sunday, October 12, 2008
Page 3 of 5
I finally got myself up, caught my horse down the mountain where she had gotten caught in
some branches, and managed to get into town where I was bandaged up and my hand was tended
to.
Shortly after that, I was traveling on business and was at the airport. A fellow traveler, an older
man not of our faith, saw my bandaged hand and asked if I was all right. I replied rather offhandedly.
And he responded that it was something I would remember all the rest of my days.
He then told me that he had once worked at digging a canal – now that caught my attention
because I remembered the canal I have mentioned. He said that he was out of work at the time
[the Great Depression] and couldn’t find employment. He saw the canal being dug and knew
that if he asked the foreman for a job, he would be turned away. He saw a spare pick laying
there, so he picked it up and started working. A short while later, the foreman walked by and,
not recognizing him, asked him what he was doing. He explained to me that he told the foreman
he was out of work and stated “I need to work. You don’t have to pay me, but I need to work.”
Well, as you might expect, they worked things out and he was paid for his labors. We then
proceeded to talk, this older fellow and I, and I have remembered his counsel. Now I am the old
man giving counsel to you.
In the Great Depression, people were frightened and growing more so. They began to be very
resourceful. They had to be. Looking forward, we’re all going to learn that lesson, one way or
another.
The Church is in excellent condition. You don’t need to worry about that. But as individuals we
will face difficulty. Some will come to the Bishop seeking financial aid and counsel. And as
judges in Israel, the Bishop will respond. The time for financial largess in our ward activities is
over.” [President Packer then turned directly to our Bishop and counseled him that last year’s
youth trip to Nauvoo, which was, President Packer said, a great opportunity for testimonybuilding
and missionary work, will not happen again. Times of/for that sort of expense in the
Church are past.]
President Packer then shared experiences of providing aid and service after the great Tsunami
devastated Indonesia. He recalled... “I was speaking on the phone with a government minister
who said “I’m standing in Banda Aceh and you cannot imagine what I am seeing. A city of a
million people has been swept away and there is nothing.” A week later, I was standing in area
of Banda Aceh and the need was immense.
“What do you need?” I asked. “Body bags” was the reply. So we found 20,000 body bags in
China and had them on a plane the next day.
A call came, “we need 30 [thousand] more.” We found them and they were sent.
The next call “do you have any motorcycles? We need to get back into the mountain villages
with aid and medical supplies, but the roads are gone. Trucks can’t get through and elephants
are too slow. If we had motorcycles, we could get through.”
“Are they to be found in Asia” I asked. “Yes,” he said. So we found the motorcycles and had
them on their way the next day.
The Church is sound and is able to provide these types of aid as a back-up where there is need.
We [as members and in our individual wards] are the back-up position of the Church. Learn to
President Boyd K. Packer, President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
Speaking at the Forest Bend Ward, Salt Lake City UT Sunday, October 12, 2008
Page 4 of 5
apply the old Pioneer adage – “Eat [use] it up. Wear it out. Make do, or do without.” We’re
going to have to learn to do without. Again, “Eat it up. Wear it out. Make do, or do without.”
Even if we have the resources, we need to do more to be thrifty. Others will rely on us. The
Church will rely on us. It is our responsibility and duty to be caring for ourselves, our family,
and those around us. Be watching for need. Set something by that we can be of help to others
when the time comes. Trust in the counsel of our wise elders/older people.
There are nearly 60,000 missionaries serving throughout the world today. The cost to support a
missionary is right about $400 a month today. That’s $4,800 a year. Consider if we have the
resources that there may be others who don’t and who have a need. When Brother Tuttle was a
young man, he had a strong desire to serve a mission. But he didn’t have the money to pay for it,
and his family didn’t have the money for it. So Brother Tuttle thought of who was the richest
man in his town and, after saying a prayer, he approached him. A loan was made, a mission
served, and the loan repaid. Those who need our help may not always ask us.
It’s about time the Lord taught us a lesson. A great catastrophe is coming. Now I probably
shouldn’t say that because then it will happen. But it is going to happen. That’s what it will take
to turn our hearts to the Lord. And we will learn from it.
Our prayers will be different, less selfish. The scripture says “If ye are prepared, ye need not
fear.” Renew your prayers. You can [also] think a prayer. Carry a prayer in your heart
throughout the day. Learn to pray for that which is of worth. Another scripture says “…do not
spend money for that which is of no worth, nor your labor for that which cannot satisfy.” (2
Nephi 9:51) That can be applied both spiritually [to prayer] and physically. Use what we have.
If something is broken, fix it. Our young people are going to see different times than what they
are used to. To you teenagers, your life will be different. Things are changing. You will have to
do without some of the things you are used to expecting. Don’t be afraid. Change your life to do
without the extravagances and luxuries that you’ve expected.
Learn to pray. There’s a difference between ‘saying prayers’ and praying. A wonderful time is
coming – it’s not going to be easy, and it’s not going to be short. But don’t be afraid.
Brother Tuttle was one of the Seventy when there were just seven of them. Now there are eight
quorums of the Seventy called to go throughout all the world. It’s an apostolic calling to teach
the gospel to every nation, people and tongue. They’ll know what to do and will lead and
counsel where they are called.
Take care of what we’ve got. Begin to save. The rainy day is coming – in fact, the snowy day is
already here [in reference to today’s first winter snow]. Reset our expectations. Give up
selfishness. Wickedness is all around us. In today’s world, it’s not safe for children to be
outside alone. We need to be ever watchful. We need to protect ourselves from the wickedness,
avarice, and greed in the world.
Read the scriptures and the revelations. The guidance and counsel are there. Read with new
eyes, and the scriptures, the Book of Mormon, will take on new meaning.
President Boyd K. Packer, President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
Speaking at the Forest Bend Ward, Salt Lake City UT Sunday, October 12, 2008
Page 5 of 5
As President Bush and world leaders gather in the coming week and the weeks ahead, there will
be no easy answers or solutions. Hard times are ahead and it’s difficult for them to see what to
do. It’s important to listen to the Sprit. We are led by prophets and apostles. We can see ahead.
We can be and are prepared.
I pronounce upon you an Apostolic blessing. Comfort our children. Little children can be afraid
of things we might not think of. Comfort them and strengthen our families. Turn off the
television and focus on family. Pay your tithing. The promise is there – pay your tithing and
you’ll be watched over. You’ll be alright. None of us is exempt from trials. If hard times come
upon you and your income dwindles, remember that tithing is equitable for everyone: 10%. If
you have nothing, then it’s 10% of practically nothing. Pay your tithing, do what you’re
supposed to do. You’ll be comforted.
Sure trials will come. Because of them, faith will increase. Happiness will increase. Security
will increase. You’ll be glad to be alive at this time. It’s a good time to be living. To be raising
children. I leave this testimony, counsel, and blessing with you in the holy name of Jesus Christ.
Amen.”

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

my new family... Cottles!

coTtLes!























Here's just a few pictures my bro took the day of the wedding. When i very first met the cottles it was such an overload with names! Amberlie, Alicia, Ashlyn, Alexis and Alyssa. CRaZY! But its all easy now. Got to love them. I'm also an Aunt now. Weird. Never thought i would for a while. Well... now i'm a Cottle! Love ya guys!