What a weekend!

Well, this weekend Craig and Jamie got married–hurrah! Frank was a groomsman and I was a reader, so we were both at the rehearsal dinner and then, of course, the wedding.

Okay, first things first: it was a beautiful wedding! Jamie looked just like a snow princess! Craig didn’t look nervous, but according to the Father of the Bride, his hands were cold and clammy–how cute!!!

As I was watching the ceremony (and alternately checking out my husband–ow ow!), it occurred to me how things have really changed since high school. I mean, one would hope things *would* change between high school and now. But it was like stepping back and looking at my life like it was a still life painting and I was watching myself in high school and college and now. It was amazing to see how everyone changed, but still remained friends. And how some of the friendships deepened, some of the grew apart and how we all remained friends in the end. It was very cool to see.

So here we are, Craig and Jamie M are now happily married!! Way to go, guys!!!

Another one bites the dust. 😀

92% Done with 2003

So with 8% of the year remaining and a new year just a few weeks away, it seems like now is as good of a time as any to have Thanksgiving.

I know, my stamp of approval was needed to affirm a national holiday.

It just seems like a wise idea to kick off the busiest month with a holiday that gives time to pause and reflect. And energize for crazed “Green Friday” shopping. Of course, I doubt the Pilgrims were chomping down on their splendid dinner thinking, “Great, I’ll fuel up now and I’ll be able to hit all of the sales from 6am till 9pm. Can’t wait!!” Anyway, ’tis the season to rush, rush, rush!

A girl my senior year in high school once asked the class of ’98 why we were counting down the best days of our lives. Why were we so eager to hurry through this carefree time? But no one cared. Besides, her question came too late–the last day of school our senior year. Rah! Freedom!!!

But I think she was a little right. Maybe even a lot. What was the rush?

So this year, I am going to savor every minute of frantic holiday shopping. I think I’m going to make cookies. I am going to let every day drip by as slowly as I can. Because what is the rush? Where are we going so fast? As an old woman (23), I don’t have a Barbie I am anxiously waiting to open on Christmas Day. There is no post-present high on Christmas morning. And that is just fine by me.

I get to start and finish this holiday season with weddings–one of my dearest friends, Erin B, is getting married on 12/6 and my cousin Dave M is getting married on 12/27. There is a lot to celebrate this December. Our first Thanksgiving kicks it off. Our first Christmas. Our first New Year.

There is so much to be said for a fantastic husband, a wonderful family and terrific friends. I can’t wait to spend time with everyone this holiday season!

So–it’s cold. I moan a lot about that. But after I’m done whining, I’m going to heat up some soup, make a sandwich, curl up on the couch and watch time slide by…

ahhhh…

Have you seen my brass screw?

According to my grandfather, a brass screw fit into your belly button and attached your bottom to your top. This prevented you from pooping all over the place. When I was younger, Papa would ask if I lost my brass screw. “What’s a brass screw?” I would ask. “It’s in your belly button,” he explained. “Oh,” I said, picking up my shirt to peak. Just as I was inspecting my tummy for this elusive brass screw, Papa would tickle my belly button. Sure, some people would consider this cruel, but they don’t know anything about the importance of a brass screw.

This weekend Papa passed away in his sleep. Saturday morning, July 5th, Papa slept in for the first time in years. He didn’t get up to watch TV in the middle of the night or wheeze as he went to the bathroom. According to my grandmother, she only heard him mumble softly in his sleep at 3 a.m. and then nothing.

Saturday it stormed in the early morning hours, but I didn’t hear it. I heard nothing at all as I slept in my room in the basement, including my grandma pacing the floor above me, calling out, “Is anyone home? Is anyone home?”

When I was 7, my dad’s father passed away. Grandpa No-nokes is what Caitlin and I called him when we couldn’t pronounce Roanoke, the town they lived in. Anyway, he was grandpa, a person we barely knew. We cried at his funeral because he was gone and it was scary and sad to face the idea that sometimes people leave and they don’t come back. And when I was 9, my great grandma, Booma, died. Even though she lived nearby, I only knew her as benevolent Booma who gave us starburst candies and made us scrambled eggs she called “tick-ticks.” In 1999, when I was 19 years old, Grandma No-Nokes passed away. That was heartbreaking. She was the kindest, sweetest, most well-meaning person in the world. The sentiment was shared throughout the entire family and across all of Woodford County. Strong, funny, faithful–Grandma R was the epitomy of aging beautifully. And yet, looking back, we visited her only once in a while and I realize that I didn’t know her as well as I wish I had.

And all this leads me to Papa. I lived with Papa. I know there were days he was a bear. I know he made mistakes. Big ones, little ones–a vast range of them, really. I know how big of a bark he had. I was afraid to ask him about the war. Stories that began, “Back when I was at the Bank…” immediately sent me into a mental coma–dry mouth, glazed eyes–and all I could do was nod. Papa had an opinion on everything. His opinion wasn’t typically unfounded–usually he read up on important things and only partially ad-libbed on minor issues.

But here is the deal. There is good and there is bad and there isn’t any one way to any of this. If I remembered him only as a saint or a sinner, then I would be losing his essence. Papa was a big man. Not just in mass, but in spirit. He had big emotions, a big heart, a big voice. I know in the next months we are going to uncover bits and pieces of Papa. But that’s all they are. And none of these things are a final word on his character. Mistakes, victories, failures and successes will be uncovered and remembered and then they will be put away.

So in the interest of my own heart, when remembering Papa becomes foggy and distant, when I forget which bank it was he worked at and what his cologne smells like and the rumbly smell of his laughter and the shuffle of his footsteps across the front hall and the way he squinted his eyes when he was learning something new and how he always, always had a nail clippers with him and how particular he was about the kinds of foods he liked–when I start losing hold of that, then I will need one perfect, sunny Saturday afternoon memory to hang on to. And for that, I choose the brass screw.

Peace.

Mountain Ranges

I know I usually write amusing things on my blogspot, but with the abundance of serious decisions and serious world affairs, I have a lot of very serious things on my mind. Perhaps that has been my mental block in writing anything meaningfully funny here.

Frank and I are getting married. This sunk in a few nights ago. Yes, it took a little bit to really hit me… but when it did, it was like standing at the base of a gigantic mountain and looking straight up to it’s highest peaks. I was filled with joy because of how breathtaking it is. But at the same time–GULP! What a huge commitment!! This is not something to take lightly. As he reminds me (daily), we just need to take it one step at a time.

Beyond that mountain is an entire mountain range of new futures and new lives. How will this world be for our children? Your children? What kind of legacy are we leaving behind? Is this world really better than when we first entered it? How can I do my part? Is working on a media plan something that improves our culture? Our world? How does this all fit into the big picture?

Things get done by taking on manageable pieces. Do what you can do in a day and then rest. I forget this a lot.

Those are my thoughts. Cheesy as they may be.

Retreat

I just went to retreat. That was nice. Nothing terribly amusing or interesting happened at retreat. I like the girls in my small group and they are pretty funny so it was a nice evening.

I am sooo tired that I am going to go to bed in a minute. I just like putting entries in my blog. It’s like always having someone say, “Well, Emily, what did you do today?” Not that no one asks–many people ask because I am just that important (sarcasm)–I just like having some place to report to. Sort of a life reconaissance mission. What did I find out, what do I plan to do with the information.

Also, just so you are all aware (whomever you all may be), I do not plan to have perfect spelling or grammer in my blog. I think that would limit my creative freedom and self-expression. Just an FYI.