Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Hiking With Friends

Hiking with two of my best friends on Monday.
We hiked to the first river on Mt. Olympus -- 
always a good accomplishment at the beginning of hiking season.
I made it comfortably and was happy to see that I wasn't in as miserable shape as 
I worried I was.

Also lots of good conversation with friends helps make the hills easier.


A gorgeous waterfall that is not usually there! 
Lots of runoff after our big snow season!
Also the first river was flooding its banks.
I've never seen it so wide.


Loved this extra fancy daffodil I saw as I walked around the neighborhood
delivering baby shower invitations for one of my Mia Maid advisors!


Monday, April 29, 2019

Invisible Mother

This went viral quite some time ago, but I'd never seen it before. It showed up on my Facebook feed last weekend. A beautiful reminder that a Mother's work matters.

By Nicole Johnson
One day I was walking my son Jake to school. I was holding his hand and we were about to cross the street when the crossing guard said to him, “Who is that with you, young fella?”
“Nobody,” he shrugged.
Nobody? The crossing guard and I laughed. My son is only five, but as we crossed the street I thought, “Oh my goodness, I’m nobody?”
As Nobody, I would walk into a room and no one would notice. I would say something to my family, like “Turn the TV down, please.” And nothing would happen. No one would get up or even make a move for the remote. I would stand there for a minute, and then I would say again, a little louder, “Would someone turn the TV down?” Nothing. 
That’s when I started putting all the pieces together. I don’t think anyone can see me.
I’m invisible.
It all began to make sense! The blank stares, the lack of response, the way one of the kids will walk into the room while I’m on the phone and ask to be taken to the store. Inside I’d think, “Can't you see I'm on the phone?” 
Obviously not; no one can see if I’m on the phone, or cooking, or sweeping the floor, or even standing on my head in the corner. No one can see me, because I’m the Invisible Mom. 
Some days I am only a pair of hands, nothing more. Can you fix this? Can you tie this? Can you open this? 
Some days I’m merely a clock to ask, “What time is it?” I'm a satellite guide to answer, “What number is the Disney Channel?”
Some days I’m a crystal ball: “Where's my other sock? Where's my phone? What’s for dinner?” 
Hands, a clock, a crystal ball—but always invisible. 
One night, some girlfriends and I were having dinner, celebrating the return of a friend from England. She had just gotten back from a fabulous trip, and was telling wonderful stories. I sat there, looking around at the others all so put-together, so visible and vibrant. It was hard not to compare and feel sorry for myself. I was feeling pretty pathetic when my friend turned to me with a beautifully wrapped package and said, “I brought you this.” It was a book on the great cathedrals of Europe. I wasn’t exactly sure why she’d given it to me until I read her inscription: “With admiration for the greatness of what you are building when no one sees.” 
In the days ahead I read—no—I devoured the book. And I discovered what would become for me, four life-changing truths:
1. No one can say who built the great cathedrals—we have no record of their names.
2. These builders gave their whole lives for a work they would never see finished.
3. They made great sacrifices and expected no credit.
4. The passion of their building was fueled by their faith that the eyes of God saw everything. 
In the book, there was the legend of a rich man who came to visit the cathedral while it was being built. He saw a worker carving a tiny bird on the inside of a beam. He was puzzled and asked the man, “Why are you spending so much time carving that bird into a beam that will be covered by the roof? No one will ever see it.” And the worker replied, “Because God sees.” 
After reading that, I closed the book, feeling the missing piece fall into place. It was almost as if I heard God whispering to me, “I see you. I see the sacrifices you make every day, even when no one around you does. 
“No act of kindness you’ve done, no sequin you’ve sewn on, no cupcake you’ve baked, no last minute errand is too small for Me to notice and smile over. You are building a great cathedral, but you can’t see right now what it will become. But I see.” 
When I choose to view myself as a great builder—instead of Invisible Mom—I keep the right perspective. 
When I really think about it, I don’t want my son to tell the friend he’s bringing home from college for Thanksgiving, “My mom gets up at four in the morning and bakes homemade pies, and then she hand-bastes a turkey for three hours and presses all the linens for the table.” That would mean I’d built a monument to myself! But I don’t want that—I just want him to want to come home with a friend and share a wonderful meal as a family.  
The author of the book went so far as to say that no cathedrals could ever be built in our lifetime because there are so few people willing to sacrifice to that degree. I disagree. 
As mothers, we are building great cathedrals. We cannot be seen if we’re doing it right—which is why we may feel invisible some days. But one day, it is very possible that the world will marvel, not only at what we have built, but at the beauty that has been added to the world by the sacrifices of invisible mothers.

Sunday, April 28, 2019

Chris' Senior Talk and Nick's Recital

Christopher spoke in church today with the other graduating seniors. (Actually half of them. The other half spoke two weeks ago. We have 12 seniors in our ward!) He did a great job! I was teary and beaming the whole time!

A few years ago he gave a youth talk (maybe when he was 13 or 14). He didn't want to spend much time preparing and he didn't want my help to organize his thoughts. Today he said he remembered how he didn't prepare and how it didn't go so well and he's kind of been afraid of speaking since then.

Well today he did fantastic! He thought about the topic several weeks in advance and got some ideas. Yesterday he took time to write it out and this morning did a tiny bit of fine tuning. As a result he spoke confidently, with great poise, smiled his cute smile, and looked up at the audience just the right amount.

He got a lot of positive feedback and even one of the bishopric members texted this afternoon to say during a temple recommend interview, one of the youth referenced Chris' talk and how it helped them to realize they had a testimony. Way to be a member missionary, Chris!

This is his draft. And the talk from Elder Cook he referenced (he read a few paragraphs of it today) is here.
Nick had a piano recital today and did awesome. I hope he still continues to play 
"We Are the Champions" even thought he'll start working on new songs!
They had to tell a joke after they introduced themselves. His was:
"How did the orange drive away?"
"He peeled out."


Nick made a white cake from scratch today for dessert. It was delish.

Saturday, April 27, 2019

Spring Saturday

Dan had a race day with Chris and Marty and I had a temple morning with the Young Women.
I did initiatory while the girls did baptisms. 
(We always have more leaders than is needed to pass out towels and it can get too noisy if we all sit in on the baptisms.)

I took all family names today so felt pretty excited about that.


Nick and I collected more bikes for his Eagle project. He's up to 61 now and we still have people texting every day that they have more!!



Dan, Marty and I went to dinner tonight and then Dan and I came home to watch Infinity Wars so we can get prepared to see Infinity Endgame. Even I am caught up in the hype and I've barely seen half of the movies! (I've picked up Nick and friends twice now after they saw Endgame on both Thursday and Friday. So. Much. Chatter. And an age where they have a hard time keeping endings/spoilers to themselves! Nick came home on Friday and said, "Marty, what have you heard about Endgame?"
And Marty yelled, "Don't say anything!!" And ran out of the house. It's serious business.

Summer's coming... The shaved ice shacks are opening!


Today is my Dad's birthday. Been thinking of him a lot today.

Friday, April 26, 2019

Birthday Girl!

Happy Birthday, Courtney!

You're doing so many fantastic things -- working towards your PhD, doing math problems that take up a whole page, your work in the lab, Relief Society President, making time for friends and fun in the city and making time for friends who come to visit. You have a beautiful, broad perspective of love and I admire how you can eloquently express your love for the Gospel, for the Savior and for his children. From a young age you've been confident in your knowledge that God has a plan for you. What a gift that has served you well in working toward your goals and creating new ones! When life gets hard, you don't give up. You admit your struggles and then get to work. Or sometimes you sleep or eat mango sorbet and then get back to work. I love you. I love seeing you become you. I'm grateful to call you not only my daughter but my friend. 💕

Thought it would be fun to have a look at past birthdays!

Chicago 1997 -- The rocking pig!

New York 1998 -- I was so proud of the Ernie cake!


1999 Summit, New Jersey -- The day before we moved to California. And butterfly clips!


2000 Bel Air, California -- The piñata I made that broke on the first hit!


2001 Los Angeles, California -- The Barbie "rolling" backpack--I never quite understood what a rolling backpack was so I ended up buying you a Barbie bag on wheels which turned out to be not at all what you wanted because it wasn't a backpack but was actually a suitcase.

And your face saying, "I feel very awkward bringing a suitcase to school."


2004 Salt Lake City, Utah -- Hula Hoop champ!
(And notice Marsha's house is still there!)


2005 -- Rockreation



I flipped through my journal to see if I wrote anything on my 24th birthday. I didn't. But I do remember...

We were living in Dallas, Texas in the townhouse-style apartment we moved to because we didn't want to be living on the 3rd floor after we had a baby -- too many stairs to haul up a stroller and a baby and groceries! I was pregnant, but we hadn't told anyone yet. We wanted to wait until the 8-week mark, which was approximately September 12.

Gram and Papa came from New Mexico to visit and for my birthday they gave me placemats that matched our dishes. I was SO THRILLED! I remember thinking they were the greatest thing ever-- the sophistication of using a placemat, but in the fun style of our dishes.

Then we told them that we were having a baby! And it was their turn to be SO THRILLED! We worried a little about how they would react because we knew we were young and Dad was new in his career. But of course as they always were whenever we told them about a decision we'd made, they were 100% on board, supportive and super excited!!

Hard to believe that baby is now 24 herself and also doing things that I am SO THRILLED about!

Here's what I looked like about then:


Wednesday, April 24, 2019

A Happy 27 Years!


For our anniversary today did sealings in the Salt Lake Temple. The tulips and the weather were just as perfect as they were 27 years ago. (Although we didn't have to start near so early in the morning as we did the day we got married!)

Turns out that one of my best friends' dads was the sealer. He was very thoughtful and deliberate about the process and began by bearing his testimony of the temple and the Lord's work. It brought a sweet spirit to the process. He also teased a bit too which gave a fun sense of camaraderie that you don't get in the other ordinances. It was a great way to celebrate our marriage.

I was really moved to be holding Dan's hand across the altar again and hearing the covenants we made so many years ago -- he's been so faithful in keeping those covenants. I've done my best too. We make a pretty good team together. For sure we're not perfect, but we're both committed to our life together, to each other and to our children.

Earlier today I was thinking about some of the ways I was initially attracted to Dan. He was fun! He was easy to talk to. I felt at home with him from our first date. (So much so that we were together pretty much 24/7 after that!) His confidence was contagious! He made me dinner, paid for dates and treated me extra special. He had goals and a plan. I could tell from the beginning he would take care of me. Without realizing it consciously then, stability was important to me. He's provided that. Sure his original plan changed (from law school to business), we've moved a lot and he's changed careers, but it was always forward progression -- not just simply a whim. (Except that one time he wanted to move to San Francisco and for the first time I said, "No." And he respected that.) Our life, these changes have been an adventure for me and I've loved all the places we've lived together and the experiences its provided us. I'm a more well-rounded person because of it. Both of us are. It's been wonderful to share in this life together!

Oh, our first date... it couldn't have been any better than it was. It was perfect! I'm so glad he called me the next day in spite of me breaking the cardinal rule of kissing on the first date! Ha!


Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Welcome Home

Welcome Home!


Also we got a call from the Stake President today and the missionary department has questions about Chris' femur and if we are planning on having the rod removed. (No.)

Oh No! Chris was so bummed when he found out, 
worried that his call will be on hold for another week! I am too.
We may still get it on Tuesday, but it may be the following Tuesday.

His positive attitude went out the window for a bit. We'll see if its back tomorrow.

Monday, April 22, 2019

The National at The Beacon

We had one day to sleep in while we were in New York and we took full advantage of it!
When we finally got out the door (maybe around noon),
we walked up Central Park, then went to brunch at Kirsch.

There's always something out of the ordinary to see in Central Park!

So many beautiful blooming trees and flowers!


We came across this Community Garden filled with tulips near 90th and Amsterdam.



While at brunch (at 2:00 p.m.) it started pouring rain. So we took our time then finally took an Uber back to the hotel. And seriously, went back to sleep.

We had pizza at "My Pizza Pie" which is tiny, but more Italian style than New York style and 
muy delicioso.

Then to The National, which was the whole reason we came to New York this weekend. 
It's one of Courtney's and Dan's favorite indie bands.

I wouldn't say this was the best photo of a band performing.
But it is a photo.


I loved it! I really did! They even began with a 25 minute arty movie they contributed music and lyrics to with a long intermission after. So we got more talk time with Courtney and Michael.

And I think I liked the movie best out of anyone.

The National was playing at Beacon Theater which was fun because its only a few blocks from Courtneys apartment and we stayed at The Trump so we were close by too.

We walked up to ice cream afterward (thanks Michael!) and then an obligatory walk past 81st and Broadway to remember those good times and see the new apartment building where 
Essentials used to be. Then said our goodbyes. Too short!

But Courtney has much going on -- studying for quals (at the end of May), classes, homework, 
her lab project and her lab research. She needs prayers to sustain her. And to help her figure out what's going wrong with the scissors project. (Don't ask, just pray.)

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Central Park on Easter

Courtney's church time has been changed from 2:30 p.m. to 9:00 a.m. 
Which is great if you live there, but not great if you're visiting from Utah.

But we LOVED meeting all her friends at church!
She is surrounded by greatness!
One thing I loved about living in New York were the musical numbers in church. 
Basically professional musicians performing each week. The YSA ward is no different.

Because it was Easter they had extra musical numbers. 
A darling new convert who is a Freshman studying art and theater sang 
"If the Savior Stood Beside Me"
and two girls studying at Julliard played a violin duet of
"I Know that My Redeemer Lives."

The congregation sang "How Great Thou Art" and I wept through the entire thing.

After Sunday School (I LOVE 2 hour church!)
Courtney walked home with her friends and Dan and I changed at the hotel then we met up with Courtney for lunch and to walk through the park and talk. 


Such a beautiful Easter Sunday!






As much as we hated not spending every second with Courtney, we needed a nap before dinner.
We parted ways and met her and Michael up downtown for dinner 
at the best restaurant for "chicken under a brick."

Side Note: All the restaurants were essentially empty because Passover/Easter/Spring Break fell on the same weekend and so many people were out of town.

It feels weird that I don't have any pictures of Michael.
But on the other hand, it may have been more weird to take photos so I could post them on my blog.

Meanwhile the boys at home are surviving great. 
They had 7 different stops to pick up bikes yesterday. We called them multiple times making sure they got all the addresses and they actually went everywhere, which annoyed them, but they did it.
And for Easter I left them baskets with eggs filled with money 
(their special request since we were leaving them over Easter 
and remembering last year when Gram really set a high bar!! :-))

Saturday, April 20, 2019

New York -- Hudson Yards

It's always strange to get up at 6:00 in the morning, board a flight, and by the time you get there ready to have some fun, it's 4:30 in the afternoon!


Courtney and Carine met us outside our hotel and we headed to Hudson Yards for shopping at the new mall. Dan wasn't excited about shopping, but he was excited about seeing the largest real estate development (or some exciting statistic) so he went to walk around. And when he walked the Highline, he also went and hit a bucket of golf balls at Chelsea Piers!




The cute shoes I've been seeing advertised on Instagram didn't turn out to be flattering on mine and Courtney's feet. But we did find cute pants and a couple tops at Madewell and Uniqlo.


We got to meet Michael, Courtney's boyfriend, at dinner. I like what Courtney tells me about him -- he's good at planning fun things for dates, they are supportive of each others keeping up on friendships with other people, he replaced her light bulbs while she was out of town and helped to build her new desk, and he encourages her to keep her plan to study on Friday nights saying, "you'll feel better if you do." What I liked about him most when I was with him is that he's funny. And easy to talk to and be with.

Cute skirts that we didn't buy because of the missionary vibe.

After dinner we walked to an Italian dessert place for cheesecake. Dan and I headed back to the hotel after that because we were exhausted at 10:00 NYC time/8:00 Utah time. "The kids" met up with friends who biked down to SoHo from the Upper West Side and then they went out for more fun. Those were the days!

Friday, April 19, 2019

Spring

I did some shopping today for clothes for New York and then some packing. The boys all went racing and Nick and friends joined them and raced Go-Karts. Nick was super excited about showing off his skillz and his friends were pretty impressed. Marty had a good time racing for his first time!

Brad Jones, Dan's old mission companion and my old roommate, Randi's husband (Randi died in 2003), came up from Lehi and brought EIGHT bicycles for Nick's project!!! He and some army buddies had helped Bicycle Collective before so he was excited to donate again. WOW! We are getting so many offers of bikes! I think Nick will hit his goal of 50!

Brad stayed and chatted for a while and the weather was perfect for sitting outside and catching up with old friends.

Tomorrow we go to New York to be with Courtney!

I went on a walk this morning. Look at this gorgeous tree!


Thursday, April 18, 2019

P

I graduated from Pelvic PT today. 
I have progressed from a 2 out of 5 to a 4 out of 5 in strength.
I can hold for 6 seconds what I used to only be able to hold for 1 second.
However, my symptoms haven't changed, which means that because different things are out of alignment, even though I have good Kegel strength, unexpected pressure is causing problems.
So I'm a good candidate for surgery to fix my peeing problem.

My therapist said my doc is a great one and gave me the name of two others she recommends.
I made appointments with both so I can ask all my questions, 
get specifics and details to make my decision. 

My doc (all three are ladies and are all urogynecologists -- the best people
to perform a incontinence surgery vs. a plain urologist) says its a 15 min. procedure, 
and is easy to undue if for some reason you don't like it or have complications.

It's a 2-week recovery plus another month of no exercise or heavy lifting.
But wouldn't it be great to not have to make a big deal of 
crossing my legs every time I sneeze or cough? She said all her patients are so happy.

I also had brunch with friends, a hair cut and color and Nick's baseball game.

This cute photo is from last night's combined YM/YW activity of learning to
swing dance and line dance. 
The caller turned out to be an old friend back when Courtney and their son was young.
He was the perfect guy to break the ice and get the kids involved. When it was time
to learn to swing, he partnered the kids up in 2 min. flat so they didn't have to get shy or embarrassed hoping someone would ask them to be their partner.

Nick has blue sleeves. At first he and his partner didn't hold hands or anything.
But his lacrosse coach was there and basically just made him do it.
Notice how he and his partner are both looking as far away from each other as possible!
😂
That was how it was for most of the junior high kids! Such fun!


Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Resubmit

Well dang.
We got a notice from the bishop that Chris' mission papers got returned because 
his hair wasn't short enough in the photo. (Too tall on top and touching his ears.)

I'm the one who "loosened" his slick-backed hair because I wanted it to look
more like him! Oops!

Again, he had a good attitude. 
Our family went out to dinner for FHE (and watched Star Wars 8) last night.
Marty was telling Chris that the time you go out on your mission is every bit as 
important as the place you go. He said even weeks can make a difference
because of your MTC district etc.


When Chris found out his photo was rejected, he said some of his other friends'
photos had longer hair. So he is choosing to believe that he needed to
be assigned at a later date and that it's all God's Plan.

I love his positive attitude. I call it Faith. Trust. Patience. Obedience.

Nick's got his Eagle Project underway.
He made this flyer and had his troop help him pass it out at church.
We hung copies in a couple of local bike shops and at City Hall today.
Dan and I posted it on our Instagram accounts and he posted on NextDoor.

We've got the most responses from Instagram so far and a few from church!


Monday, April 15, 2019

Garden Fresh Vegetables

I started our garden yesterday planting seeds that can be started outside and survive frost. 
Very exciting! 
It rained and rained Sunday and today and its supposed to rain tomorrow too. 
My friend said its a good time to start because I won't have to water.
Hopefully the seeds didn't get washed away!


Last year the beets, carrots and lettuce got planted in late May and the lettuce wasn't ready
until it was almost too late in the summer. 
And the carrots didn't have enough time to grow until it was too late.

But it's fun to try some new things on my own!
I'm learning a lot.



Sunday, April 14, 2019

Young Women in Excellence

We had a lovely Young Women in Excellence tonight. 
Simple and spiritual. The girls all wrote a few paragraphs about a time they 
knew they were a Daughter of God. We displayed them on one wall.
On the other were their baby pictures. 


The graduating seniors read bios (written by the moms) of the new Beehives. 
They were so poised and gave them big hugs.

Suzi Olson is a local artist who primarily paints pictures of Christ.
She spoke about how she knows she's a Daughter of a King and 
how her art has been influenced heavily by the gift of the Spirit.


I just finished the book Saints (Volume 1). Marty had really liked reading it on his mission.
It was well written and although very thick, it was an easy read.
I loved putting the history of the church into a narrative form.
I just finished studying Preach my Gospel for my scripture study,
and I realized it was a perfect time to start reading the Doctrine and Covenants
having the history recently in my mind.

We think of the sacrifices the Pioneers made, but in reality, from the beginning the
early saints were facing persecution, doubts, apostasy and being forced to leave their homes.

Makes me grateful for this time we live in. 

Saturday, April 13, 2019

Boys

They're at it again...
Some on the Vespa, the motorcycle, skateboards and others filming.
These boys are always on the move. 


Friday, April 12, 2019

TheraCane

The TheraCane is the most amazing device in the world for massage! 
It may not look like much, but it's a life-changer! The cane makes it so you can massage difficult places in your back and not have to be a yogi to manipulate your arms to get there.
Legs, feet, neck, hands, arms, toes. Of course back. Your whole body will thank me.

We all took turns using it during Conference. 
I like to use it while I'm reading my scriptures. 
You can focus on the reading just fine and get your body work done at the same time. 
You'll read even longer. Trust me.

It's $30 on Amazon and with Prime you can have it here Monday. Do it. Now.


Thursday, April 11, 2019

Try, Try Again

Nick ran for SBO Secretary this week, but sadly he lost. Fortunately everyone else in the family has been in the same boat before, and he'd lost before, so he took it like a champ!

The good news about losing is you get treats from cute girls!



I'm sad I didn't take a photo of his posters. He made them himself and they said,
For a FRESH year, vote me, Nicholas Shaeffer.
With a picture of him holding a Febreeze bottle!
Pretty clever!


Wednesday, April 10, 2019

The Next Batch

Last night Chris had three more friends receive their mission calls... AND, Chris had his interview with the Stake President and his papers are officially submitted! We've heard they get put in the "pool" on Monday, assigned on Thursday and e-mailed on Tuesday. So we missed the pool for this week so we're expecting his call on the 23rd. So exciting!

This week: 
McKay -- Fortaleza, Brazil
Noah -- Kenya
Cole -- Tokyo South, Japan




Chris loved the Priesthood Session talk about "Band of Brothers" because he said 
it reminded him of his group of friends. I sure love these boys!

Today I was exhausted and stayed in bed most of the day.
My back is also killing, and I was sort of panicking that it could be a kidney infection.
But I coincidentally had a massage scheduled and she verified my kidney was fine.
And I looked on the internet and a lot of people experience extreme exhaustion with a UTI.
So I feel justified that I'm not just lazy. 

It's been raining for two days straight so all sports are cancelled. Yay.