10.28.2012

Picture Day

We have frames over the buffet in our dining room holding 5x7s of all the kids. Lucy's frame has been up since before she was born but has sat empty for the last 2 months. I know she's little and she'll change every month but I've been anxiously waiting for a picture of her. Since I don't have a fancy camera I asked my awesome friend Mandy to snap our latest family pictures with her fancy camera. I didn't know she was an expert at photo shop until I saw these! We found a great little trail on the way to one of our favorite parks on post where the leaves were just perfect and we did pretty well for a 25 minute shoot before bed!

Here are the latest single shots.
Lucy - 2 months
Mallie - 2
Hannah - 3.5
Ashton - almost 5

This one isn't edited but I love it. David really is super Dad. In fact in the car on the way home from church today he actually said having 4 wasn't all that big of a transition. I agree probably because Lucy is the easiest baby ever.
The boys. Hopefully someday we add another one to this picture.
The girls.
Gorgeous colors!! 
I saw this pose on my friend's facebook page and loved it.
Needless to say we are a happy family of 6!!

10.21.2012

Oh the Irony

David has been out of town for the last 5 days at an ADA conference that the army sent him to. I've been handling the kids quite well on my own even if I am praying every single night for more patience. But last night when David called I told him I think I belong at Walmart. Yesterday I put all the girls down for naps and let Ashton skip quiet time to play outside with his friends. When the girls woke up I hurried and fed Lucy and put the other two girls in the car in an effort to get the shopping done before dinner. As we were loading up I called Ashton home and he hopped right in the car. Did I mention that since I had already locked the door to the house and hadn't found out the last time Ashton went to the bathroom I contemplated telling him to pee in the backyard before I buckled him just to save time? You'll be happy to know I refrained. Upon buckling all of them in their car seats I realized they were a hot mess. Hannah had knots in her hair that looked like she had gotten in a fight. Mallie had some sort of oreos from earlier in the day stuck in the sides of her mouth. And Ashton had dirt rubbed all over his face and hands. I did my best with a wet wipe and set off for Walmart. . Why was I going to Walmart to grocery shop and not the commissary? Because I lost my wallet... again. And I can't get a new military ID till David comes back to sign for me so the commissary was off limits. Different story for a different day.
 
At Walmart I strapped Lucy to my chest and the other 3 all complied to ride in the cart. That's a luxury that I don't usually experience. As I pushed them through the aisles Ashton and Mallie were both leaning up against the same side of the cart and my right arm was going dead as I was trying to balance out the weight and keep Lucy's binky in her mouth. They weren't bad  at all in the store but they still looked homeless and I looked like a walking ad for birth control. Sometimes when I take them all shopping I tell myself that we should wait a few years before deciding to add to the chaos lest we make it on to the people of Walmart website.
 
But then yesterday my friend Mandy gave me the USB with the amazing family pictures she took of us this week. They changed my mind completely. We're never perfectly groomed like this on a regular basis but this snapshot in time reminds me that I'm doing just fine. I consider it a success regularly that I have them all fed, dressed and mostly happy each day.
 

I love them all to pieces. We are not the perfect family not by a long shot but it's fun to pretend like it in pictures once a year!

10.11.2012

Pumpkin Patch

Last year we discovered Happy Hollows Pumpkin patch in it's first year. We were impressed back then you can read about it here. This year it was even cooler! We've made it our new Columbus Day tradition.
 They had a duck racing station and the kids pumped their own water.
 The same old ghetto slide that we loved from the hay fort.
 We took our hay ride down to pick out a pumpkin.
David and the girls.
Ashton's favorite color is green so we couldn't say no to this pumpkin.
This may sound bizarre but looking at this picture with a baby strapped to my chest I feel whole again. It was a perfect fall day. Last year we were in shorts and t shirts. This year it was just cold enough for jackets and there were no bugs - hurray!

10.07.2012

Called To Serve

In honor of the most recent changes to the age requirements for the youth to start their missions I thought it appropriate to finally blog about my mission. My senior year of high school one of my friends took the missionary discussions at our house. She had already been coming to church for years and was taking the discussions as the last formality to get baptized when she turned 18. I had always grown up in a missionary minded home and often said, "Someday I'd love to go on a mission..." but after those discussions I felt strongly that I absolutely positively was going to go on a mission.
 
Fast forward 1 year. My parents came to visit at SUU and took me out to dinner. I was telling them some of my plans to do a semester at Nauvoo the following year when my Dad stopped me and asked me how I felt about missionary work. I told them that I loved it and was still planning on going but that was still a few years away. And then my life was changed forever. My Dad shared with me that he had been called as a mission president and that I had received special permission to leave on a mission at 19 if my Dad and I felt like I was spiritually ready. No words can describe the excitement of that night and the 5 months that followed as I prepared for my mission to Buenos Aires, Argentina. 2 weeks after my 19th birthday I entered the MTC.
This is one of my all time favorite pictures. I had been in the MTC for 6 weeks when my parents came through for the mission presidents' seminar. Here we are standing right outside my classroom.
Here are the hermanas from my MTC district. Some of my best friends were made in the MTC. Here I learned how to get used to a companion, that I didn't know nearly as much as I thought I did and that the Lord was constantly aware of me. It was a long 9 weeks but I loved it.

I got to the field and received my trainer a native Argentine. The first day in the grocery store I spent an entire 7 minutes trying to explain a blow dryer in a round about way since I couldn't remember the word. I just kept saying "Wet hair then dry hair. What is it?" It was quite a scene but completely demonstrated to me what I was in for the following few months.
 It was the fourth day on the dirty streets in a city called San Fernando after several appointments had fallen through when my trainer sat down and told me she was done trying to figure out what to do next. At least that's what I understood of it. So I sat down next to her while I tried to think of something to say. Just then a bus drove by... I remember this moment so clearly I thought, "I wonder if I throw my arm or leg under that bus if I can get just hurt enough to go home legitimately." In the Ashton home a well known phrase of "Keep on Walking" (as in keep on walking past our house) was used anytime anyone thought about bailing on a mission early because they couldn't hack it. The moment passed I said something barely understandable, pulled my companion to her feet and we went to work.

I spent the first half of my mission with only Argentine companions. My Spanish improved rapidly and I was so grateful for the advice my sister gave me before I left. She told me to enjoy the time I spent with a companion from a different country and think of it as a mini study abroad to be completely immersed in the culture. That advice served me so well as I would go weeks at a time without speaking any English.

I am posting this next picture with serious reservations. When I worked at the MTC and showed the Elders pictures from my mission they always joked that I should have used those pictures as a before and after weight loss commercial. I gained 45lbs in the first 7 months. Impressive, right?
This picture is of Hermana Galvan and I. She was my last Argentine companion and to this day I count as one of my very best friends. We were together three transfers and we ate ourselves silly as you can clearly see. We worked non stop and had so much fun together. Someday when we save enough money to go to Argentina one of my first orders of business is to reunite with her. If anyone knows anyone currently serving in the Bahia Blanca mission please tell me!
 
So I know you're dying to know how I put on so much weight so fast right? I flipped open my mission album to my birthday right after Hermana Galvan was transferred to a new area and this is what I found.
Yep, 3 cakes in one day. And I'll admit I ate more than one slice of every single cake. I was definitely well fed by the members (okay and by my own hands). To this day I have never broken my highest mission weight even 9 months pregnant. Thank goodness. I do have a theory on missionary weight. The Lord blesses you to lose it quickly after all your service... I tell every sister missionary heading out that turning up your nose at a second plate offered to you by a loving member because you're worried about an extra pound (or 45) is not apart of The Plan.
 
12 months into mission I heard news that we were picking up the southern most tip of Argentina (and the world). Because the direct flights only came from Buenos Aires it was more economical to attach that area with our mission. I was blessed to be part of the first companionship of hermanas that flew south. Picture the rocky mountains with the base at the ocean. It was beautiful and freezing.

 
It was there I realized I spoke less fluently while having American companions. I saw a new chapel be built in our area. I saw one of my favorite families get baptize and learned a lot about the Lord's hand in the work and agency of those we were teaching.
When I tell my children and grandchildren I had to walk 10 miles up a snowy mountain everyday they'll have to believe me because I have pictures to prove it.
These are my mission shoes my last transfer. This is so cheesy but this picture means everything to me. Those Doc Martens on the left are the shoes I wore almost every single day. They barely held up enough for me to fly home. A true marker of what I had given 18 months of my life doing.
I'm pretty sure this was taken my last day in the field. If you look at my skirt you can tell how hard the wind was blowing.
Here I am at the airport saying goodbye to my mission president and his wife. You'll notice my face was almost back to it's normal size (see, it's okay to eat the extra serving!) In my exit interview all I had wanted was to feel the Spirit confirm that I had done a good job. I knew I had had bad days and could have probably done so much more so I worried if it was enough when I had finished. I prayed so hard before going in that I somehow would get that confirmation. When my mission president looked at me and said something along the line of the Lord had accepted my sacrifice and was pleased with my mission I felt it in my whole body that every single minute had been absolutely worth it.

Missions are hard. Appointments bail. Golden investigators ignore you. Your feet ache. Baptisms fall through. But for every hard moment there were at least twenty happier ones. I saw people's lives change as they learned about their Savior and got baptized. I saw families draw closer together. I could feel the Lord's hand in every aspect of the work. I became a better person.

I get a little Elder Hollandish when I talk about my mission. If you haven't read his talk about missionary work and the Atonement click here. It means everything to me. David and I love to talk about them and share what we've learned. They prepared us for every aspect in our lives. College, marriage, being parents and serving in the church. Only good things come from missions. Needless to say I am thrilled that 19 year old girls can go out. I knew when the Saturday morning session ended and one of my 12 year old beehives texted me and told me she "was so excited about the change" that this is going to change the entire youth program. I'm excited for the change it will bring into the lives of the young women and the young men and the growth of the church. To sum it all up. My mission was amazing and I will be grateful for the rest of eternity for it. The only thing that will top it? A mission with David.