Archive | December, 2011
hi.
13 DecIt’s not even 8pm and I’m exhausted. Like super sleepy.
And I’ve not much to say.
But I wanted to at least check in.
So hi.
I blogged here today. Do check it out and read the article. It’s a well-written, thought-provoking angle that may well alter the way I interact with certain age groups.
Work is going well. Busy, busy. But well. It’s the children’s program this coming Sunday which means I can do the no-sermon dance. But I have two next week for the eve and the day so it evens out.
I’ve had an itch to go see a movie lately. Suggestions? I know Girl with the Dragon Tattoo comes out next week. Psyched.
I’m going to try my hand at truffles this weekend, package them all cute like, and give them to my council members as a thank you at the council Christmas party this Sunday evening.
Christmas cards have began to arrive in my mailbox. I love getting the mail!
And because I’m out of things to say, I’ll let images say a bit more for me. Meet my “words of wisdom and humor” pinterest board.
a list of ten on the tenth.
10 DecPeople, places, things, and links that are making me ridiculously and incandescently happy as of late:
. the bloggess. I cannot believe how incredibly funny that woman is. She is made of awesome and I will buy her book when it comes out.
. feminist Ryan Gosling. Crazy thing is – thanks to Andy Root [my academic advisor and professor at sem] – I actually know what a few of those mean. [that might be pushing it. correction: I have at least heard the terms/people.] [added: oh man. there is a typographer ryan gosling too. this is funny.] [second add: Handmade Ryan Gosling. Literary Ryan Gosling. They don’t end!]
. a clean kitchen.
. new snow boots [in brown] so Mabel and I can frolic together. They will also be good for snowshoeing; who wants to go?
. quoting Lord of the Rings. [cue my sister rolling her eyes]
. as of noon today all I had done was watch three episodes of Dawson’s Creek and drank coffee. hello saturday perfection. [nevermind that blogging now is an attempt to procrastinate sermon prep]
. I plugged in my antenna cable after I finally found it hiding in a box in the basement. I can now watch HIMYM, Big Bang, and Modern Family. [no NBC; no Office]
. Josh Groban. I have a renewed love for the crooner. He cohosted with Kelly Ripa last week and turns out he’s hilarious. No words can describe but this and this may help. I tweeted him and told him he was adorable. No response.
. [sing] oh christmas cards, oh christmas cards.
. a bedroom that is finally starting to feel like I live here. new wall color, things hanging on the walls, a proper bedside table, and new curtains. huzzah!
28.
9 DecMy age as of yesterday.
It was a good birthday made wonderful by the happy happenstance of location of awesome friends. Southeastern Minnesota has treated me quite well by the presence of many familiar and friendly faces. You know these people well – I talk about them all the time!
I had lunch in Rochester with Karen, my pal at the synod office. I arrived at the synod office after doing a care center visit and the synod staff present sang happy birthday to me. For cute. Karen and I went out and about and had a long pleasant lunch, celebrating my birthday on the day and hers a week earlier. She gave me a plastic gnome with a mushroom parachute. More about that later.
In the evening, Mabel and I welcomed Paige, Lauren, and jD for dinner. Remember that Thai chicken pizza I meant to make last weekend but work got in the way? It was a group effort and even with four people, it took us longer than the thirty Rachael tells us it should. In the end, it was worth every matchstick cucumber and every zested piece of cheese. [Zested because I don’t own a cheese shredder. Now – twenty four hours later – I recall that my food processor can shred cheese. Don’t tell Paige and jD.] It’s a pizza with plum sauce, bean sprouts, scallions, and peanuts and incredibly delicious. A definite to-be-made-again recipe. [Got that, Lynn? Give it a try!]
Following dinner, things got out of hand. I had asked jD to bring his electric drill; I needed assistance hanging a heavy mirror in my bedroom. Done. We threw the tiny plastic gnome with mushroom parachute down the stairs [“This parachute is a napsack!”], and we watched Modern Family [our show of choice when gathered together], laughing at Phil Dunphy. We finished off the birthday evening with a lemon cake Lauren made [so good!], many Friends references, and a game of scrabble that lasted us until 1am.
By way of birthdays, I give this one two thumbs up, one high five, seven fist bumps, and one complimentary “balls to you!”
Here comes year 28; may it be a happy one!
Shocking.
6 DecI survived my first funeral at ROG. Shocking? Not overly. I expected I would survive. As nervous as I become for things like this, it went well. [I think.]
I greeted family members, introduced myself, and was chatty. Shocking? A little bit. The introvert was pushed to the side, as she needed to be. But, boy, was I tired afterwards.
I turned on the corded microphone in the pulpit before reading the gospel. Shocking? Yes. Literally.
We’re having microphone issues right now, as in my Britney Spears mic is at the shop. I’m using a corded mic [in the pulpit] and the lectern mic primarily. I walked up into the pulpit, had one hand on the metal reading lamp and put the other on the microphone to switch it on. It was like I had put my fingers in an empty light socket. [… which yes. I’ve done before.] I was zapped! It was more than a carpet static shock but not enough that I swore or had any sudden movements. After it happened, I remember thinking to myself, “Can I still stand? Can I do this?” A woozy second or two and I was fine. I read the gospel. Preached a mediocre sermon. And survived. My hand tingled for a couple hours afterwards.
I spent about 20 minutes sitting in the empty sanctuary after all of it with a third grade grandson of the deceased. Shocking? Nope. It was the right place for me to be.
I’m never sure where to sit during the coffee/cake time following a funeral. I don’t need to sit with the immediate family – they have other people to greet – but often times they are the only people I know besides the women in the kitchen. Today, I gravitated towards the kids. There was a group of four grandchildren sitting at a far back table. I joined them as that awkward pastor they don’t know. Plus, none of them were drinking coffee so their coffee pot was full and in need of a drinker.
Later, as people began saying goodbyes downstairs, I walked up to the narthex and was going to go into the sanctuary to clean up my papers/books/etc. I started walking down the aisle and heard someone talk to me from behind. It was a third grade grandson who had been in the group I sat with earlier. He was asking me a question. I answered and then kept walking. He asked another question. And another. And soon we were both plopped in pews, on either side of the aisle, facing each other and talking.
We talked about everything. How to outrun a cougar. [You can’t.] How he wants to go to Africa with a monster truck on safari. [A silly boy.] About Chicago, where he used to live. About his older brother who died four years ago from what sounds like a suicide. How he once told this guy about Jesus. [His parents are pastors in the Salvation Army, which includes a theology of “saving” people.] “I’ve never talked to a pastor like this before,” he said. [I took that as a compliment.]
Soon, his sixth grade sister joined us. “I was surprised. You did a good job up there,” she told me, pointing to the pulpit. We talked more about how they fight a lot as brother and sister [he bit her yesterday], about what will happen tomorrow at the cemetery, and the fact that the hotel they’ve been staying in does not have a pool [gasp].
Soon, their parents were ready to leave. We walked out of the sanctuary together and the sixth grader gave me a hug. Sitting in that sanctuary with those kids after the funeral of their grandma was exactly where I needed to be. Amen to that, Holy Spirit.
Instead of writing a funeral sermon I –
5 Dec. blog.
. hem a pair and a half of pants. [a pair and a half? one pair plus a hem repair on one leg of another]
. clean.
. change my iphone case and protective cover. [long time coming]
. watch Big Bang. [I really like Amy F. F.]
. finish decorating my upstairs tree.
. make a move in each of eleven games of Words with Friends.
. give Mabel attention. [I think she feels neglected because she pooped in the house again AND ran laps around the church like a mad woman. I think snow is her drug.]
. pay my monthly student loan payment. [always depressing]
. one word: pinterest.
. one word: pinterest.
I guess that’s it.
Off to the sermon.
Dancing Bananas.
4 DecIt’s just a fruit.
And it’s a little ridiculous to think that they can dance.
The Dancing Bananas are facing trials and tribulations by the bushel basket these days.
Surgeries.
Child custody.
Job uncertainty.
Fertility wonderings.
Questions about the future.
Potential moves cross country.
Aggressive cancer in a father-in-law.
Searching for answers to medical conditions.
It’s a lot. So much. The emails are nearly daily at this point with communication, support, and funny stories in the midst of it all. The seven of us currently live in five different states and it’s been nearly ten years since we graduated from high school.
I’m not completely sure what holds us together and so tightly. Maybe it’s the fact that you don’t often find bananas that dance. We’re rare and find comfort in being odd together. Or that we love each other and have been friends for over twenty years.
The bananas of the world are meant to unite, jump, dance, and go. And so we do, along with support, hug, and love. Early morning phone calls, cake pop care packages, and anything more. I love my Dancing Bananas.
another first.
4 DecMy weekend without sermon writing was true in its title – besides some touch-up work on the sermon Saturday night, I spent no time writing. It was wonderful.
However [yeah. there’s a however.] it was anything but a weekend free of work.
I had a board meeting on Friday afternoon at the nursing home in Austin. Have I told you I’m on a board of directors at a nursing home? I’m a warm body in a chair and that’s pretty much it because I still can’t read the financial sheet they hand out each month. I spend an hour driving to and from and the 1.5 hours there in a daze. It is on my day off, after all.
And then [yeah. there’s an and then.] I went to the post office to drop off a bulk mailing. From there, it was to the funeral home.
That’s right. This girl has her first funeral at ROG this week.
I met the funeral director to get the scoop [the family had met earlier that day and I was not invited into that conversation. weird?], drove home, and went to the office. [Sidenote: The funeral director? Surprisingly young. And married. I looked. But I do wonder what makes a person want to become one who arranges funerals and preserves bodies. I admire them.] I had phone calls to make, funeral church arrangements to secure, and my own bearings to find.
I met with the family on Saturday morning to plan the service. It was good to meet them before it all – I had only met the husband once [when I visited he and his wife – now deceased – in my first month here]. We chatted. We planned. Now tomorrow my task will be to prepare for it all on Tuesday.
Tuesday is December 6th which marks exactly my three month anniversary at ROG. It’s as if the universe is saying the easy part is over. It’s real now.
gnomen forecast.
4 DecFrom last night:
You know, in the movie Mean Girls, the blond one uses her – well – breasts as an indicator whether or not it’s raining while she does the weather for the school’s newscast. I have like ESPN or something. My breasts can always tell when it’s going to rain …
Exchange breasts for this gnome. Change rain for snow.
There’s a 30% chance that it’s already snowing.
fun story friday.
3 DecI meant to post this yesterday. You know – on Friday. But the day got away from me so here is a fun story friday edition on a saturday.
First story. I went to the Baptist church Christmas tea last week with a car of congregation members. The program was lovely and then we had coffee/tea/desserts in the basement. There were super polite – SUPER polite – boys [high school-ish] going table to table, serving the beverages. One boy stopped at our table, asked if anyone wanted water, and when our table declined his offer, he BOWED and began to walk away. Until he came back and said this to me: Excuse me, ma’m, might I say that is a very beautiful ring you’re wearing. *bow* [Awkward?]
Second story. I keep a bed pillow on my couch/loveseat. Mabel uses it like a human. And she drools.
Third story. Paige’s house was on the Waseca Christmas house tour. Friday night was the preview for the home owners and their families, and the committee members. Paige invited her local family [Lauren, jD, and I] to tour the homes. Some of the houses were extreme to the awesome and some were extreme to the completely odd. There were codes to communicate within our family about the atrocities we witnessed. Lauren would say, “My sister would love that!” and jD would cough if something was hideous. Lauren’s sister loved a lot of things at certain homes and I think jD came down with something. There were lanterns in the 1960s pink bathroom tub and the largest Christmas village ever. Paige has a music room in her Christmas house and so we formed a family band. I played the accordion.
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| Christmas goose. |
Fourth. Paige, jD, and I go everywhere synod-related together, right? Right. And so we’re going to send the synod a Christmas card from the three of us. There was a photo shoot. Oh yes. A photo shoot.














