Yesterday, Samantha and Greg (no blog – but here is their family business site) and their two children arrived for a weekend visit.  Sam was in our youth group in the Portland area … we’d lost track of her over the years but thanks to Facebook she found us! 🙂

I had plans to cook  a nice dinner but they arrived a bit early and I was more tired than I expected.  So we ordered a couple of pizzas and just enjoyed their company!  It was a great time!  The kids entertained themselves in the game room and we enjoyed the Delta Breezes out in our backyard.

Then we took them to my mom’s house to stay the night.  She is up in Millville on baby watch – we are 8 overdue to meet Master Watson – but who’s counting.

Today is our 22 year anniversary and with everything going on we didn’t have big plans.  Sam, Greg and the kids joined us for a big breakfast.  I told Eric the bacon was his gift! lol

They had to then travel to San Francisco area for a funeral and we continued to work on the house.  After a quick trip to Home Depot – where we picked up shelving and a remant rug – we declared the project done!  Yes, there is some fine tuning required, but really that’s all little things.

So we broke out the bubbly – Champagne for us, sparkling cider for the kids – and toasted the completion and our marriage!  It was nice.

And, now we are finishing the day with one of our favorite date nights – Chinese delivery and a James Bond DVD! 🙂

Feeling blessed!

Before

Before

But really, this was after the first demo.  There was a very small room in the garage that we took out.  See the small cupboard on the back wall (with glass doors)?  It’s the only thing that remained.

From doorway looking down into Rumpus Room

From doorway looking down into Rumpus Room

Eric's 'Garb' wardrobe and kids game area

Eric's 'Garb' wardrobe and kids game area

00320041All images will be bigger if you click on them.  We still need to get a rug of some type….a card table….and a few more storage items.  But the biggest part of the job is done and we will be celebrating that fact this weekend!  Samantha and her family will arrive tonight to help us!  😀

I found this on Ruth‘s Facebook page!  Seems perfect for my blog as I’m DEFINITELY feeling older today!

Tired of all of those surveys made up by high school kids? Have you ever kissed someone? Missed someone? Told someone you loved them? Drank alcohol? Here you have 39 questions for the people who are a little older…

1. What bill do you hate paying the most?
Credit Card

2. Where was the last place you had a romantic dinner?
romantic?  Well, our anniversary is Saturday, so maybe then.  How about a dinner without kids?  That would be Cattlemans awhile back….can’t remember date exactly.  Good food, better company!

3. What do you really want to be doing right now?
Knitting

4. How many colleges did you attend?
Two. Both JCs – American River and Columbia Gorge Community College

5. Why did you choose the shirt that you have on right now?
Haven’t been able to do laundry for a few days due to room work – painting tomorrow – yippee!

6. What are your thoughts on gas prices?
bet they go up before this weekend!

7. First thought when the alarm went off this morning?
Already?

8. Last thought before going to sleep last night?
I have no idea

9. Do you miss being a child?
No

10. What errand/chore do you despise?
mopping floors

11. Get up early or sleep in?
early so I can work before kids wake up

12. Have you found real love yet?
yes

13. Favorite lunch meat?
leftover Chicken breasts or steak

14. What do you get every time you go into Target?
I’m usually there for clothes for kids lately

15. Beach or lake?
Beach

16. Do you think marriage is an outdated ritual?
No

17. Sopranos or Desperate Housewives?
neither

18. What famous person would you like to have dinner with?
Yarn Harlot would be fun!

19. Have you ever crashed your vehicle?
No

20. Ever had to use a fire extinguisher for its intended purpose?
No

21. Ring tone?
Bach something or other

22. Strangest place you have ever brushed your teeth?
kitchen

23. Somewhere in California you’ve never been and would like to go?
San Diego – I think I went as a kid, maybe

24. Do you go to church?
Yes

25. At this point in your life would you rather start a new career or a new relationship?
new relationship if it’s just a casual one (no change please!!)

26. How old are you?
Old enough to not answer

?. lost one

28. Are you where you want to be in life?
Yes

29. Growing up, what were your favorite cartoons?
Bugs Bunny, Scooby Doo

30. What about you do you think has changed the most?
This gray hair is hard to ignore

31. Looking back at high school, were they the best years of your life?
No, how could they be?  I was barely a person!  I like life now a WHOLE lot better!

32. Are there times you still feel like a kid?
when I play with my kids

33. Did you ever own a troll doll?
No

34. Did you have a pager?
No

35. Where was the hang out spot when you were a teenager?
Friend’s houses

36. Were you the type of kid you would want your children to hang out with?
Yes

37. Who do you think impacted your life the most?
My parents, my husband, my kids

38. Was there a teacher or authority figure that stood out for you?
My youth pastor’s wife

39. Do you tell stories that start with “when I was your age”?
Of course – It’s my right! lol

Found at Popsicles on the Porch– no idea who original author is:


“If I’m poetic and profound all day but don’t love my kids, I’m just like an annoying never-ending educational film.

If I teach my kids to memorize the whole Bible, giving my kids a deep understanding of God’s mysteries and making academics a breeze for them; if I have trained them to clean the whole house when I snap my fingers, to be quiet, still and compliant, but don’t love my kids, I’m worse than a dead-beat parent refusing to pay child support.

If I don’t buy myself jewelry, new clothes or anything nice ever again, but spend every penny on my children, if I’m a real “martyr mom” staying up all night working on their birthday parties, Halloween costumes, and decorating their rooms, but don’t love them personally and deeply, they might as well be orphans.

So no matter what I say, what I believe, and what I do, I’m worse than useless without love.

Loving my kids means never giving up (on them, on their father, on the family, on their future.)

Love is patient with a “screamer,” kind to a “brat.”

Love cares more for her childrens joyful fulfillment than for her own “self-actualization”.

Love doesn’t expect her kids to be something they’re not, doesn’t wish they were more like somebody else’s kids. Doesn’t brag about their achievements and live for that vicarious glory.

Love doesn’t tyrannize her children, or rudely wish they’d go away.

Love doesn’t condescend to her kids or force her own paradigms and agendas on them. Isn’t always “me first.” But loves them with reckless abandon (sometimes saying goodbye forever to careers, traveling the world, old interests and dreams, and, of course, that “bikini body!”)

Love doesn’t fly off the handle or scream at her children. Doesn’t yank them around or cringe in embarrassment when they just act like kids. Doesn’t tally up the disobedience from the whole week and get progressively furious. Especially doesn’t get angry with one child because another has been misbehaving.

Love doesn’t revel when her kids grovel, doesn’t gloat when they finally feel terrible for their offenses.

Love delights when her children grow in truth, beaming when they first glimpse God’s holy light.

Love protects these precious people, guarding their bodies, hearts, and minds.

Love puts up with anything (a sick baby, a handicap, another “accident” on the new carpet.)Always trusts God with her children (even when he seems to have such a different plan for them.)Constantly looks for the best in her kids (even if it’s not what was expected.)Never looks back (at life before kids!)But keeps going (mothering) to the end.

Love never dies.

Love is eternal.

Love thinks about her children, praying for them, each day of her entire life.

We have three things to do for our children: Trust God to be glorious in their lives, be a pillar of hope by expecting his best for them, and love them wildly.”