Color by numbers…

November in statistics would look like this, for me:

Chai lattes drank: 7

Mainstream Movies watched: 14

Hallmark Holiday (Christmas, Thanksgiving) movies watched: 7

Photos taken with my iPhone: 198

Photos taken with my Canon: 0 {Wah Wah}

Creative, artsy projects done: 0

Percentage of Christmas shopping completed: 90%

Items baked: 3 {oh! progress!}

Books read: 2

Times accidentally set off home security system: 1

Super stressful work projects: 2

Surgical procedures: 1

Doctors visits: 12 {must work on this.}

By the numbers, there are some definite disappointments. Must rectify a few of these immediately. Aim to read at least 3 books in december, take photos with my Canon, see my doctor significantly less, have ZERO surgical procedures, bake more, do something creative more… Three cheers for creativity! Hip Hip Hurrah!

Overall, November was kind of a tough month and I’m breathing a bit easier with it over. Things just feel, oh I don’t know, lighter perhaps… I’m really thankful it wasn’t rough because of anything worse though, we’ve had dear friends really going through some incredibly difficult things these past few weeks. It hasn’t escaped me for a second how un-complain worthy my life is. I’m in control of these numbers, I decide them. Here’s to better numbers and some peace.

actual self-awareness…

Yesterday was one of those rare days where there was but one choice, to slow down…

Gen was home sick, from school. After a grueling session at physical therapy (which I’m taking for an old knee injury that has reared it’s ugly head after I strained my IT band something fierce) I was deep within the thralls of a migraine. It was blustery and rainy out, misery was all around.

As my meds began to take effect, I remained still and decided to curl up and finish a book I’d begun reading last week. (Catching Fire. Yes, I’m likely the last person in the country to read it, I know. It was deliberate. The first one depressed my beyond belief.)  Gen also decided to curl up, steaming tea in hand (her affliction was less head related and far more of the throat/nose variety) and plant herself in front of Jane Austen movies. When she grew weary of old English dialect and empire wastes, the remote guided her to the Hallmark channel for Christmas movies.

And just like that, our rain turned to snow.

It was eerily magical really…

The two of us love made for tv Christmas movies. We dvr them and will gorge on them incessantly until the 26th, when we’ll begrudgingly admit we’ve had our fill. I keep hearing complaints that they shouldn’t be on yet, but to those of you hating on this reality- there are lots of available (non-festive) channels… As far as those of us CM lovers go, November first is fair game. Hate elsewhere please, until after Thanksgiving anyway… Then come on over and indulge with us! We have popcorn and cocoa, with homemade marshmallows too!

Anyway, I’ve veered off point, by my obsession with low-budget holiday cheese.

The snow was beautiful. Really beautiful, in fact, because we were warm inside. We had an endless supply of mugs filled with steaming tea. We had a pot of homemade minestrone soup and fresh biscuits. We had blankets and heat. It was poetic and beautiful and though we commented on how lovely it was several, several times, not one time did I feel grateful for one of those things. Not once was I thankful that I wasn’t out in the snow. (I will clarify, I did utter many, many prayers of thanks that my headache had broken) Not once did I feel overcome with the reality that on that Veteran’s day, as twitter and Facebook status’ across the country boasted of snow- did I think about the thousands of homeless veterans without soup, mugs of steaming tea or Christmas movies.

Yesterday afforded me no choice to slow down. Even so, I still had choices. I still choice to think about me. I still chose not to be grateful for the small miracles and blessings and beauties. All in all, it was a lovely afternoon/evening and as my head hit the pillow I did thank God for it, but next time I’m forced to take things slower, I need to try a little bit harder to really be more aware…

forty things…

IMG_00261- A wonderful date with my husband to reconnect and celebrate us.

2- A beautiful movie (while on said date) which made me really think about being present and aware. I feel like I need reminding of that pretty regularly.

3- The hard moments which hurt so badly that your heart feels as though it’s shattering into a million lonely and broken pieces, but just may lead to something good and life affirming.

4- falling asleep quickly.

5- puppy snuggles.

6- friendship. The good, old fashioned kind of friends that muck around in the trenches of life’s yuckiest moments with you.

7- quality, cheesy, over played and over slow danced to love songs…

8- good, unexpected conversation with fellow out-of-state transplants.

9- cloudless, crisp, blue skies when you were expecting dreary grey ones.

10- good hair days.

11- great make up days, when it all just works out.

12- clean laundry, that smells awesome, and feels even more awesome because it’s warm and wonderful and the world is cold.

13- snuggly sweaters.

14- cups of warm chai lattes.

15- kitchens of friends who have cups of chai waiting.

16- options. Even when they aren’t what you thought they’d be, back when you were young and dreamed of adulthood, they are options and they are yours.

17- doing what you love. Even if it pays crap.

18- quoting a really great movie, and having another person know exactly what you meant and quoting a line from the same film back, without missing a beat.

19- quoting a really crappy movie that you love despite it’s huge suck quality, and the people around you thinking you’re an idiot and looking away awkwardly.

20- freshly painted toe nails.

21- knowing one of your best friends had one of the best nights of her life. Even if it was awful missing it, its really an amazing thing to know she had it- and for her to have shared a piece of it with you.

22- knowing one of your best friends is going through a horrible season in her life. You don’t love that she’s in that season, but you love that she’s let you in a little and you’re able to be there for her.

23- When your kids talk to you and let you in. That might possibly be the best thing ever.

24- a really great lip balm.

25- slow dancing in the kitchen to a cheesy, badly sung (by you), non-romantic song (alright, it was The Fox song) just to make a memory with your husband. And it was AWESOME.

26- Being a movie trailer junkie in an era where every movie trailer made is at your finger tips.

27- family photos. photos of family.

28- having your dad reach out to me the other day. It was very sweet and really touched me. {sidenote: I love my dad, I’m so grateful for him. I wouldn’t trade him for the world. I feel like I haven’t seen him in forever, and I hope to rectify that soon.}

29- getting the chance to see a friend in a community theater musical, with the family. it was a lovely Sunday afternoon.

30- Reconnecting with old friends from years ago, unexpectedly, at a new friends house.

31- Being a part of a community charity event that touched the lives of a lot of people and blessed us in the process.

32- My hands in my husband’s warm hands.

33- Reading a really great book after the last book you read  being pretty awful.

34- Nasal spray. It’s so faithful. During cold season, during allergy season.

35- working heaters.

36- that the snow hasn’t come yet, even though all of the nay-sayers were convinced it would be feet deep by now.

37- good quality lotion for dry, cold weather skin.

38- solving mysteries and burning questions, even when the answers might be a little sad.

39- crappy, disgusting brownies. It means less sugar you end up eating.

40- looking at the bright side, even when things seem pretty dim…

tea & sweaters…

IMG_3907It’s been easy for me to see how others might not be making the effort to be grateful for the gifts of moments they have in their lives… Easy for me to criticize their bitter resentments and self-pity, all the while my gratitude journal lay collecting dust in the location last I scribbled in it. Around our house, we’re taking a hefty lesson in being grateful, reclaiming our spirit of joy and gratitude and noticing life around us…

– the chocolate milk mustache on that face that hides the trace of a child, for just a little while longer.

– the hospital bill that came, both because of what insurance covered and because for the first time in a very long time I can simply pay what’s owed.

– Big, fat rain drops that surprise me, upon my windshield, intermittent among the smaller ones.

– Small town streets lined with larger than life, flaming red leaves and paved with crisp golden hued walk ways.

– Neon pink and orange sunrise explosions, vibrant and symbolizing life-like only God can.

– stolen afternoons, peaceful outside sounds, to read and simply inhale through my soul.

– dental work… it’s true, *sigh* I’m grateful.

– that feeling of “enough”; Knowing I have enough.

– vicariously living through my husband and being able to “love on” loved ones who are far away.

– missing my daughter so much and then her beautiful face shows up in one hundred gorgeous photos.

– that it’s only a handful of hours between her budding family and us.

– so many amazing people died this weekend and that made Monday morning a truly sad place, but then I realized what an amazing impact each of those people have had on just their small portion of the world I’ve seen. Wow. How extraordinarily beautiful!

– that death isn’t an end.

– pots of tea as the days grow cooler.

– umbrellas hiding away in the car just when you need them.

– random texts or calls, from a friend, just because they were thinking of you.

– Slumber parties with my puppies.

– needing a sweater.

– inside celebrity jokes, or inside jokes of any kind really. It’s good to be gotten.

A dash of un-kindness…

Last week I envisioned all of the lovely things I’d show you on my blog this week. The new autumn soup recipes, the projects I started, the photos from our lovely trip down to the market and highlights from a beautiful weekend filled with sunshine, friends and all around goodness. Here I sit, on Monday morning, holding none of that in my pocket.

Well, we did make it to the Eastern Market, and I managed to think it was pretty cool despite the fact that I felt like poo and would rather have been home in bed. That was pretty much the most adventurous thing that I took on though. Projects were abandoned, (minus one, but I’ll tell you guys about that later) plans with friends were cancelled.

All was not lost though…

When people engage me in conversation about our living near Detroit, they love to bait me on how horrible people must be here. Sure, everyone has heard something evil on the news about Detroit. If you’ve ever been here you’ll know, it’s a pretty contained issue. It’s a hard concept to grasp if you’re used to the sort of issues stemming from problems similar to California/PHX, or even the Treasure Valley. Those are more wide-spread issues. So, when I talk about us really living in a beautiful and safe area- (MUCH Safer than where we lived in Idaho, by HUGE degrees) they don’t get it. I’ve had a couple of people argue and argue about it. It’s pretty funny in that “wow, you’re really making yourself sound ignorant” way.

Anyway, that was all to preface.

In Idaho, it was really rare to run across someone who was truly and sacrificially kind. That’s not to say there aren’t those people, but it’s rare. Friends and I have been verbally accosted in the movie theater for absolutely no reason. My kids have been completely chewed out and verbally assaulted, just because. Road rage is a growing epidemic. We’ve been robbed, had cars broken into, been randomly threatened by angry strangers. Not all of the time, mind you, there’s just a cloud that seemed to settle over the world. People are increasingly entitled and angry. I’m sure it’s like that a lot of places, which is what makes this even more remarkable.

I try really hard to be kind to others. I try to think about how I never know what another persons day has been like, or where they are coming from. Sometimes I fail at this, but most of the time I do ok. Since we’ve been here, I’m consistently shocked by the random kindness in others. It comes so unexpectedly. I talked a few weeks ago about leaving my Kate Spade wallet on a bench at a movie theater. Well, Gen and I had been sitting there for a while and we had already witnessed the kindness of people several times leading up to that. In fact, we were in awe and discussion of that very thing, when I walked away from my beloved wallet and exited the theater once my husband joined us. (we’d seen separate movies and ours got out before his) when he nobly ran in to get it (keep in mind this was a BUSY theater) not only did people try to help him, but the woman who found it wanted to walk it to the manager so that the safety of the wallet was in tact in case HE wasn’t who he said he was. She was disabled, and it was a long walk, but she did that out of kindness because it was right thing to do.

Moments after this, we witnessed a car catch on fire and watched people abandon their vehicles to try to help.

It’s kind of sad when kindness leaves us speechless…

Fast forward to Saturday. We made the trek into Detroit for what is the most amazing city market I’ve ever been to. It was incredible. My husband, who can be a bit uptight at times, was starting to get agitated about parking as there were likely thousands of cars parked and the parking was set up a bit odd, and it was all different than we’d expected. Nothing major, really. Then, we literally stumble upon the main market entrance and in what would be the CLOSEST spot possible to park, is a sweet elderly man walking to his car. He asks us if we would like his space, to which we thank him and say yes. Honestly, it would have been easier for him to wait for us to pass, but he wasn’t thinking about what was easier for him.

Throughout the market we encountered kindness after kindness. We were in a kind of euphoria.

When we went to leave, we did the same gesture to two women in need of a space, and they were so relieved. It felt awesome. Despite dealing with a cold, I was feeling fantastic. We were laughing and talking, the three of us, and just really caught up in an awesome moment as we turned into a bakery parking lot. The plan was to grab a cup of tea for the hour-long ride home and perhaps some bread for dinner with friends the next day. As we’re getting read to pull right into a space there is a car that seems to be backing out of a space across the row. Chw paused for a minute to see what they were doing, but the just sat there, so he parked.

He looks over and says to Gen and I “don’t get out of your doors yet, that car is backing into the space next to us.”

So we smile at them, and we wait.

Next thing we know, the couple is screaming at us. SCREAMING. And gesturing. I roll down my window and they proceed to go OFF. They hurl a racial slur, and rant about how they were going to back into the space we parked in, but we took it. (*note, they were not backing into it when we parked there.) We profusely apologized to them. This made them MORE angry.

They got out and went into the bakery. (from their parking space that was no closer to the door, mind you, but whatever.)

We sat there for a few minutes and couldn’t help but realize that their unkindness had deflated every ounce of joy or lightness. Finally Chw spoke up and said something about feeling like crap and how he didn’t know she’d wanted to space. He felt awful.

“Look”, I reassured him, “Regardless, we both apologized. If we were in the wrong, we took the responsibility. They chose to stay angry and get bitter about it. We don’t know where they are coming from but it’s obviously not a good place. We can’t let them steal our joy.”

And I meant it. But they still kind of did. We didn’t get out of our car and go in, what was the point? As we pulled out we noticed the man, who was in his late 40’s and not exactly kind looking, had been sitting outside the bakery facing our direction and still fuming. He did not look at all happy that he saw us leaving. I got a sick feeling in my gut about that all together, but chose not to dwell on it because we’d never know what his intentions where.

I learned a lot that day. A lot about how kindness can impact someone else, but even more how my angry reaction about something as trivial as a parking space (or anything) can affect someone else. I just kept thinking “are you kidding? You have an even better space, why are you so violently upset?” but I’m sure I’ve been there, and at those times I never stopped to see the situation clearly either…

Clearly- kindness matters…