Wordless

Monday, March 1, 2010

The article deadline was encroaching, and I didn't have an article.

My topic was "worship." For someone who spent years engaging the word while working in music ministry with my dad, I was coming up short on ideas.

This one was supposed to be an easy write.

I began with a Sunday School definition of worship, something that involved singing, music, and praising God truthfully from the heart. I looked for an illustration from my life, adjusted my approach to the topic accordingly, and sent in a draft.

It wasn't right.

I spent a day or two sighing over my dilemma. I didn't have energy to rewrite. I was fresh out of ideas anyway. I write too much poetry, and often leave the concrete behind, which makes for too-vague writing. But I had volunteered to write the article, and I knew that it would be good for me -- and for my writing -- to see it through.
I'm at Ungrind today. Click on over for the rest of the story.

...

MOVING UPDATE: Thank you all for your prayers and sweet comments over the weekend. They are being felt.

We moved most of our stuff over to our new house on Friday and Saturday, thinking that someone would be there to install the sink and finish the wiring that was supposed to be done already. Any minute, I was sure they would show.

By Saturday evening, we decided to call someone to take a look at the water situation, and we discovered that the city had turned the water off completely.

Instead of trying to deal with two kids and two houses and meals and baths, we decided it would be best for me to take the kids to my parents' house in VA. Pete drove us up on Sunday and drove back Sunday night to see to things this week until the house is ready for us to come home and live. This way I have a little more support, and Pete will not be so torn between his priorities at work and for the move.

I may be a bit spotty on the blog this week until we get home to our regular schedule.

Crazy Christmas

Thursday, December 31, 2009


On Christmas Eve, with Bredon just a week old, we bundled into the car at 5:00 a.m. and drove to Virginia ahead of an ice storm that didn't arrive until late that night anyway. Both kids slept the entire way up, Bredon in our car, and Piper in her "Uncle" Kate's car - a blue corolla christened "Bugs Bunny, Jr." Piper loves that car.

Pete and I got some good talk time, and I got a song stuck in my head for the duration of the weekend - I couldn't have asked for a better one for the weekend that held enough drama to make a Lifetime Christmas movie.

Oy.

Christmas itself was fairly uneventful - who could have events when the weather was keeping everyone inside? We spent the day relaxing and chasing little ones - ours and my brother's two kids. Almost everyone was home for Christmas; my brother Joel (number four of our eight) was due to arrive with his fiancée the next day.

The next morning, my mom got a call from Joel, asking for prayer. He and his fiancée had gotten off a bit later from her family's house than they had intended, and something was going on. Two phone calls later, we discovered that they had decided to elope, five months before their wedding date in May.

The next two days saw a couple of drive-way stuck cars, a visit from my inlaws, a second birthday for my brother's son Chip, a run for a marriage license and wedding fixings, and lots and lots of activity and drama as we all processed and bounced off one another in my parents' house as we waited for their driveway to freeze and thaw and freeze and thaw for ingress and egress.

Pete and Piper and I left Monday, because Pete needed to be back at work on Tuesday. We got off late, and made pretty good time to Statesville, NC, where we stopped for dinner. And found a potato peeling in my husband's salad greens.

For those of you who don't know, my husband is deathly allergic to potatoes. Anaphalactic shock deathly allergic. He went out to the parking lot to vomit while I collected the kids and what was left of my nerves after the home drama before we headed to the nearest hospital.

Have you ever tried to keep a curious toddler from pushing buttons in a hospital room while trying to nurse a fussy newborn? *insert slightly maniacal laugh here* It's bad when the emergency patient is chasing the kid around with an IV in his arm, isn't it?

They drugged Pete up, and we made for home again around 9:30, with about 4 and a half hours left on the drive.

Piper woke at about 1:30 a.m., disoriented and wanting to be held. She cried the remaining thirty minutes into Charleston, and panicked when we got home until she got her pillow-and-blanket-on-the-warm-cozies with snacks and tea fix.

Christmas 2009 may go down as our craziest Christmas ever. At least until one of our kids calls home to say they're eloping. I really don't want to try to top it...

(Oh, and Joel did get married on Tuesday with most of the immediate family and our Aunt Chris present. We missed it, but even the people who were there didn't see the kiss - they heard it!)

I'll be doing a photo post as soon as I can put one together here. For now, I'm just clearing my head... Which I can do at the moment, with BOTH. KIDS. SLEEPING.

*GRIN*





(Image © Informal Moments Photography)

He is Here

Thursday, December 17, 2009


We're calling him "Bredon" (brEE-dun)

Meaning: "sword" (any guesses as to why we used this one?)

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More to come, of course. In a while. Thank you all for your prayers. They were felt.





(Image © Informal Moments Photography)

Tabulations

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Fourth day gray and
craving space
between medicine runs and
doctor visits,
sleepless nights,
and a few last important finishings

A few days strong, I'm
tired already
embarrassed by short-term
cheerful care,
I am
too tired to pretend otherwise

Three-day tree lit up
to warm
with color
gray songs on repeat
embracing gloom
blurring stark in hopeful soft

Thirty-seventh week
of forty
gathering prayers
from those looking in and
looking on,
waiting for tomorrow's photos

Daily grace measured out
to raise head from hand-rest and
clear blurry eyes
unexpected prayers
and mail-gifts
because baby is coming with Christmas

One safe Place for falling back
staring up
through questioned-gray to
sufficient strength and
answering "Who do you say I am?" with
God-certainty -

"Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living God."

Uncounted years for learning
could not supply
this answer
breathed long ago into this
doubting heart
easing now with relief at His incredible care
24-34 of 1,000 Gifts

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This post is linked at Holy Experience for One Thousand Gifts.

Shared too at Chatting at the Sky for Tuesdays Unwrapped.






(Image © Informal Moments Photography)

This is Us: Life at Our House

Friday, September 18, 2009


I am aware that there are many sides to me. I think I don't intentionally put one side away and choose to live out of the others - it just happens, dependent on my mood, the weather, the color I am wearing on a given day...

I am not always so introspective as I have found myself here recently. Introspection works for poetry; poetry seems merely to romanticize any description of the dailiness of my life, leaving out the gritty noise and mess of it all. I suppose if I were a better poet, I could figure out a way to include that in my writing or my prose, but when I sit down to write, I'm looking to share something beautiful, and finding the beauty to write reminds me that my life is not all noise and mess and tired.


My third trimester began yesterday. I think I am as pregnant as I want to be this time. I made a day of the gloom on Monday, trying to figure out whether I wanted any more children, ever, deciding that yes, I do, but please, I don't want to be pregnant again. I argue that I miss my figure, but I really haven't looked at myself in about two years to notice whether it's here or gone. I enjoyed a shallow-ish self-pity session, voices and annoyances hosted free with embarrassment to go.

(In my defense, my baby-boy pregnancy has been more difficult than my baby-girl pregnancy, and I haven't been sleeping so well in recent weeks. Anyone knows that a lack of sleep puts a different spin on just about everything.)

As you can see, Button has grown. He has a name now, and a personality that makes me wonder if he won't be even busier than his sister. I am hoping his almost-constant interaction with us means that he will want to meet us sooner, rather than later.


Piper keeps me busy during the day, making her messes, chattering away. I am "Momp" to her now, and she enjoys tea parties with the cats whose names she has finally learned to use against them as she chides them for doing what they shouldn't.

She is learning manners, too, "Peeze" and "Thank you!" and "Smee me," her version of Excuse me. Last week at my parents' house, I discovered just what a little parrot she has become, as my dad was holding her while destroying a small stump in the goat pasture that my youngest brother had just tripped over. Piper clung to "G-pah" for dear life and grunted out viciously at the offending stump, "Dumb stump!"

I am glad to be home this week, amazed that Friday is already here. I'm finding myself searching the trees for signs of color that likely won't appear for a good month yet, assuming we receive some sunny days with the cooling nights. It is hard to believe we have been here a year already, that we have survived the Southern summer, that soon the outdoors will welcome us again, instead of trying to suck the life out of us.

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RECOMMENDED: Check out this beautiful post from one of my bestish friends, Heidi, over at Fresh Brew, the Ungrind blog!

SHOUT-OUT: For a fun shot at a book giveaway about slowing down a fast-lane life, check out Amber's blog!

ALSO: My blog friend Emily has written about a new way to send aid to needy people in third-world countries.

AND on THAT note: Do you have a favorite charity/ministry to add to this Christmas list?





(Images © Informal Moments Photography)

and a little bit of Monday random

Monday, August 10, 2009

*I can't not advertise a new website that was launched today, since a lot of my favorite bloggers are a part of this 20-person team: The place is (in)courage, and they're already hosting a giveaway! I'm looking forward to seeing what happens here - check it out!

*I walked outside for a moment this morning and found I couldn't breathe out there. It's just a little disconcerting that humidity can make the air THAT thick.

*We got a new rug for our living room over the weekend. You see, our old rug has seen a bit of wear and tear in the last five years or so, what with moves and cats and kid. We'd been pricing them out and had settled for a brown one at Walmart for $78 or so (which was a savings from the $90 rug we had liked at Target). But then we found a completely different one for about $40 at Walmart, a white Berber look, and I love it. I love the $50 savings we got for waiting on that purchase too...

*I think I would be really bad at Twitter most of the time, which is why I don't have a Twitter account. Those of you who know me probably think I'm really bad at Facebook already! Sure, I think out loud during the day, but nobody seriously wants to see what I'm rambling about! I'm just not that interesting!

*I think our cat Mia weighs as much as our toddler. I'm not sure if that reflects worse on the skinny toddler or the fat cat.

*For a little while on here, I had a widget that offered pictures and links back to older posts of mine. I thought it made the blog look too cluttered, but I liked the idea. Does anyone have any opinions as to whether I should use it here or not? (You can see examples of this widget in use here and here.)

*I just kicked a sinus infection in about three days by taking a 3-tablet dose of my GNLD garlic allium complex before bed at night. Pete had this gunky thing first, and it lasted him about two weeks, with a horrid sore throat and a bad stuffy nose that went with the thick drainage behind his eyes down into his chest. I just have to say, if you want an effective antiviral/antibiotic, I have one!

*Our pediatrician has recommended both a seasonal flu shot and a swine flu vaccine for both Piper and me in order to protect the baby this year. I've never had a flu shot, and I've never been very keen on the idea of getting them. But I feel as though I should consider it this year. Does anybody have any thoughts? I'm curious about any possible side effects?

*Also, if you haven't noticed, I'm having some nesting issues here at my blog, so I hope you will pardon my dust. The seasons are switching from hot summer to hot fall and school is getting ready to start, and I always get antsy for the holidays around this time of year. We've already done everything we can afford to do to the house, so I think the blog is going to get the brunt of this nesting Mama syndrome. Also, keep your eyes open for an address change. It's time.

One Little Indian...

Wednesday, June 17, 2009


I shot this one in May, and I'm just now getting around to pulling it off my camera in front of my engagement shoot from the weekend. Piper did this herself in the mirror while my back was turned. I think maybe she had watched a little too much Peter Pan?

Georgiana Rose

Sunday, March 22, 2009


Well, my brother has done it again! Well, I guess it was a joint effort, since his wife kinda did it.

Whatever the case, this sweet little girl with the pretty name arrived on Thursday morning at 6:50 a.m., after a four-hour labor. She weighed in at a little bit over 8 lbs. I'm so bummed that I can't hold her from here - all I can do is look at the picture and ooh and ah and coo and do all those things that women do when we're completely taken with a baby...

I've been waiting on a picture and a name (she didn't have one for about 24 hours because she didn't look like a Charlotte Anne!) so I could show her off! I probably won't get to meet her until she's a few months old... *sigh*

Welcome to the world, little girl, and congratulations, Josh and Krys!

and we have a working site

Saturday, February 28, 2009


After lots of prayer and medita -

Okay, okay - let's just say I've been putting in a bit of mental formulatin' on this new look for my photography site, and I took some time to put it together today! (How's THIS for color girls?)

Just a note, as I find time, I will be creating new pages for the Photography and Design links - I want to add a slideshow and link out to some wedding galleries, as well as create a more thorough collection of design examples. BUT all of the links on this site actually work (insert *high, squeaky yippee-hooray!!!!*).

Now it's back to my wedding processing so I can show you some more pictures!

promise me cherries in february

Monday, February 16, 2009


The temperatures are back down to the fifties today, and the day started out with clouds. I didn't want to photograph my weekend tulips because it had been done before, but now I have a lovely new blog header. You see, the sun came out and lit up the neighbors' cherry blossoms, and I had to take Piper outside to see.

We put some thrifted curtains in our living room this weekend, to finish off the project we started in our bedroom this month. The house feels more... homey this way. A little more private, a little more permanent. Part of the slow release of a dream of owning our own home in the near future.

I am thinking today about how I can make my photography pay, as my Project 365 has totally snowballed. I have no conclusions, but I'm thinking about it, at any rate. Perhaps an Etsy shop? But then, I don't really want to make time to maintain yet another site. And speaking of sites, I finally have a concrete idea of what I would like to do for my photography site this year... I had started it, and then I just ran out of time to work on it.

I've been plugging away at my last couple weddings lately, working toward a March 14 deadline, looking forward to making collages to display on my photography blog, not yet finding the time to do it.

I remember my Grandma journaled like this every day, about the things she baked, what she did in her garden, who came to visit, where she went. I always think of her in the spring, when the blossoms come and things grow and promise fruit for summer, as we clean out what is left from winter.

Today I am aware of the passage of time, aware that even rising early won't give me more than I have, aware that I have too much to do, that I need to streamline what I want to do, prioritize, choose what matters most. I almost wish I didn't have so many choices; choosing takes time too.

I am vaguely frustrated with my limitations today, a bit weepy, quite tired of all of everything, grateful for the little real kisses and thoughtful toddler moments as Piper discovers upside down, mommy's teeth, and the fact that we both have tongues. And now she giggles on my lap as I make faces at her.

I am glad that God transcends the time that binds me here. Glad that His work lasts beyond today and tomorrow. Wishing I could see it more clearly.

"Let Your work appear to Your servants, and Your glory to their children. And let the beauty of the LORD our God be upon us, and establish the work of our hands for us; yes, establish the work of our hands."
(Ps. 90:16-17, NKJV)

hope that does not disappoint

Wednesday, February 11, 2009


Warning: this will be a long, rambly, getting-it-out-of-my-system post that I actually have to post so that I can try to blog normally again.

Saturday evening, we went to the sea. I had a lot of work that I needed to do on Saturday and Sunday, work that didn't get done because of a situation that arose, sending me into a steep emotional spiral that is only now beginning to settle a bit. I have been a overwhelmed, humbled, convicted, grateful, amazed at what God has shown me of Himself through what happened, at what He has shown me of myself and of who I am in Jesus.

I am rediscovering the beauty of grace, that I already stand naked before God, yet I am clothed in Jesus' righteousness. That God will never, ever force me to choose Him; in His love, He has given me the ability to deny Him, and in His love, He gently restores. It is such a lovely mystery how He renews me, transforms me, conforms me to the image of Jesus Christ.

I have realized that much of the "stripping" that has occurred for me is something that could only be taken from me, not something I could just hand over, for I don't know how deep it goes. Do you remember the rich young ruler? Jesus said for man, laying life down is impossible, but with God, all things are possible. This is why I am crucified with Christ, why my punishment has already been met at the Cross, why I may now live without fear.

"And anyone who does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it."(Mt. 10:38-39) I wonder at Jesus' words - leaving all for His sake.

This new life I have is not something I am finding and creating on my own - Jesus is my Life; the life I have is His life. The death that He died was mine. The stripping of me that I have experienced is not involuntary. It is my long Gethsemane, my days and weeks and months and years of entering into the fellowship of Jesus' sufferings, praying "not my will, but Thine," as I slowly loosen my grip on MY life and accept His.

We went to the sea on Saturday, and I felt. It seemed that I was feeling for the first time, the ache of the sunset light that flooded the beach and painted the water with rose-gold. I watched the waves come in, and it seemed as if each flooded over me, washing me, pulling me under, sweeping me away, throwing me finally up onto the shore of His love and slipping away with my fear.

I am not often as real with myself as I should be about my sin. I'm good at justifying, at making excuses, at holding onto me. I'm a fool, you know. I'm weak and foolish, and very, very human. I am Eve, taking that fruit because it looks like it would taste good. Because it would make me prettier or smarter or deeper or more passionate or more fulfilled or more spiritual. Yet God provided redemption for Eve. For me. At the Cross.

You know, as much as I have talked about being stripped, I have still been trying to make my life into something that is my own. I have focused on life, but not on The Life, Jesus Himself. I don't know how to do this, except to grab the simple, simple truth that any child can understand, that Jesus is my Savior. That because He loves me, I am safe - I don't have anything to fear from Him. His conviction is always, always so gentle, never condemning.

I would say that I am going through an identity crisis right now, but no, I am not really. Everything just feels very real right now, and He is very near, holding me, quelling my fear, healing my heart, helping me move where I stand frozen, unsure what to do or how to do it. We try to avoid all appearance of evil, but when evil appears good, it is only God's love for us in Jesus that keeps us safe from our own foolishness. He has sealed us for Himself.

I've been setting a lot of rules for myself lately, rules about photography, about being a mom, about being a wife, about doing this and that and the other thing. I have to be this way or do that thing or look like this or feel like that. I don't know what to do with this "permission" thing I have going with myself. I feel so guilty for changing my mind on things, having to reset my rules so often. Embarrassed. Why can I not just get up in the morning and go forward with my day without trying to set myself in a certain place for the day?

Why can't I just write a blog post off the top of my head, or take a picture and process it however I like, or just love hanging out with Piper and play ring-around-the-rosey in a messy house?

There is SO MUCH involved in being human, and in being a Christian. When you figure in the fact that I am a spiritual being with a desire for a very spiritual God who is warring against spiritual powers, it gets really overwhelming. I have not been so desperate for Him in a very long time. The peace I have comes from knowing that I am safe in Christ, even if I don't have it all figured out, and let me tell you, I don't.

Pete says I need a vacation. I think he's right. I want to go somewhere and cry and cry and cry because home is just not here. I'm never going to fit here again, and I don't know how to make sense out of all of it, and I don't really even feel like trying anymore. I just need everything to stop now, so I can just be. Just be me. Just be me in Him.
"Therefore do not be ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me His prisoner, but share with me in the sufferings for the gospel according to the power of God, who has saved us and called us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to His own purpose and grace which was given to us in Christ Jesus before time began, but has now been revealed by the appearing of our Savior Jesus Christ, who has abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel... For this reason I also suffer these things; nevertheless I am not ashamed, for I know whom I have believed and am persuaded that He is able to keep what I have committed to Him until that Day." (2 Tim. 2:8-10, 12)
I committed my life to Him. I've always been serious about that. I'm not consistent in my own strength, but I meant it. I'm scared of the Gospel. Scared of what it does to people, scared of what it will cost me. I know. Paul knew. He'd been responsible for the cost to others. When it all boils down, I know the God I have believed. I know that outside of His Son, there is no hope for me or anyone.

But Jesus did come that I might have Life, more abundantly. It is not all death and suffering. He rose again. What is it Paul says?
But whatever was to my profit I now consider loss for the sake of Christ. What is more, I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ—the righteousness that comes from God and is by faith. I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of sharing in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead.

Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already been made perfect, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.(Phil. 3:7-14, NKJV)
This is my own "press on" letter, I suppose. I trust Him in my life; I know He loves me incredibly. I know this because Jesus died for me. I know this because Jesus lives in me. I know that I am perfect before God when I come to Him in Jesus.

If you made it through this post, thanks for "listening" to these thoughts that have been swirling around in my brain over the last few days. Writing helps me clear my head. I think you're awesome for sticking around to the end. Or the stopping point anyway.

Christmas Photos and More...

Friday, January 16, 2009

Over at Far Better Things.



And you really do have to check. Our End-of-the-Year/Christmas Vignettes is there, and believe it or not, I finally uploaded some family albums!

18 Months - How Piper Is Growing

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

WARNING: There are lots of pictures in this post!



My project for today was to install Piper's photo album (with updates) over on my SmugMug site; I didn't realize until just now that today is her 18-month birthday. I think I should make cupcakes for dinner.

After a year and a half with this little ball of energy, spunk, and precocious, I am still not sure if I would dare to attempt life with more than one child. She keeps me so busy, emptying anything that can be emptied, getting into as much trouble as one curious toddler can in any given ten-minute span. Today, she started climbing everything, and I had to transfer all of our out-of-reach clutter collections to our bed. It is just a matter of time before she's pushing chairs up to my counters, and then...

There are days that I know I'm going to lose my mind, days when we don't get anything done, days that we share mutual temper tantrums together. And there are days that she squeaks and squeals in her happy, high-pitched chatter about everything and anything, making me wish that I'd never forgotten what all that means in baby lingo.

She has such a list of words now - I don't even realize she's saying them all the time, because I know exactly what she means by her very pointed gestures. She is gradually adding words to the gestures.

"Kitty" is still a favorite, now for the animal, though, not for everything else. She has learned "dog" and "down" and "done" (accompanied by the funniest grin ever - I still haven't managed to get that one on camera) and "Dad," which transfers into "that," which I think she learned by looking at her own pictures as we asked her "who is that?" For a while, she was calling herself "Tat" because of this, we think. She refuses to say "Mom," except at night when Pete goes in and she wants me (and then I don't hear her!), but she knows "shoes" and "this" and "toes" and "piggies." She is also fluent and enunciated in her "Yes," "yeah," and "no, no, no" (complete with head shaking).

She is growing more passionate by the day, both in affection and in affectation. I have to learn not to laugh at the temper tantrums - she is so funny throwing her bit-sized fits, I can't keep a straight face to discipline her! She does "bonks" with Daddy and "hugs" with Mama, and she loves her cuddle time.

Her pediatrician told us when she was 12 months old that the end of the nursing would be her decision; she was right. Our little pistol knows what she wants when she wants it, and it's taking a bit of imagination and a lot of understanding for me to figure a way around her. At least I have some idea how patient God is with ME. My little girl and I aren't so different.

I feel as though I will never love her enough; we have such a clash of wills sometimes, and such opposing ideas of what we want to do in any given moment. It has been a relief for me to remember over the last couple of days that when I was a little kid, I did little kid things by myself, and the last thing I wanted was a parent involved sometimes. I see Piper learning to play by herself and reading her books to herself and I am afraid I'm neglecting her by not being in her world every minute, but in reality, I will never be able to be in her world every minute.

She lives her every moment to the fullest. She is all there, all the time. She keeps me real, makes me crazy, and we have so much fun together sometimes.

People keep telling me to "just wait" for Piper to get worse when she gets older. I don't know if I can handle worse, but maybe it won't be as bad as it could be if I keep taking time to know the little person she is. Pete and I didn't create her; God did. I can only watch in wonder as He continues to grow her into the person He wants her to be.





















To see more of Piper's photos, click here to check out Pip's new web album!