Friday, December 25, 2009

27 December 2009 - Christmas

Christmas came at our house, and our family is very blessed. We are grateful to those of you who sent cards, letters, gifts or were generally thinking of us this Christmas. We missed being with our family, but were grateful to spend the day together.


All girls got a new Webkinz in their stocking. Daddy did not get anything of the sort in his stocking.
Madeline had been informing every Santa she saw this month that she wanted the Edward doll from the Twilight movies. Merchandising is a powerful tool, especially on five year olds.
Emily did the same, but her Christmas wish was an Easy Bake Oven, which Santa provided.
Jessica is a builder, and got a cool Lincoln Log set...
...and we didn't just hold down the fort, we built it.
Santa brought me an industrial strength vacuum cleaner. I am not ashamed of my feety jammies.
There were plenty of gifts to go around and we all got something we wanted.
He brought mommy a small fridge for her (almost) finished basement kitchenette.
As I said at the beginning, our family is very blessed. We hope your Christmas was as wonderful as ours, and wish you all the best in 2010.

20 December 2009 - Getting Ready for Christmas

Since my Christmas gift to Joanne was to finish the basement, I spent most of my week working on that. I also had to give and grade four finals, so this week was mostly about doing lots of work so that I can take a break for Christmas time. Not too much of a break though because tithing settlement still isn't done and there are several families in the ward who need help at Christmas time.

I got one coat of stain on the cabinets, and was able to start work on the tile floor.

Christmas time means baking, and that means Emily helping in the kitchen.
On the Saturday before Christmas each year, our ward sings Christmas carols outside the Giant Eagle grocery store and rings the bell for the Salvation Army. Madeline was happy to be the bell ringer.

This year we manned both entrances to the store, and competed with each other to see whose bucket would raise the most money. The bishop's side won ;-)

Emily is in front in this picture with her Christmas hymns notebook. It was freezing cold and snowing most of the day. We had a lot of fun, but we were glad when our two hour shift finished.

Merry Christmas to everyone. We hope you have a wonderful holiday.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

13 December 2009 - Piano Recital and Basement Work

This week we had the girls' Christmas piano recital. All three girls are in piano now. In all, there were about a half dozen kids participating in the recital, most from our ward. This is a shot of Madeline on one of her two pieces.
The girls in Christmas dresses in front of a decorated tree.

My Christmas gift to Joanne progresses. I've been disrupted by grading, finals, more grading, crisis after crisis, confession, ice storms (more below), and generally everything else, but I'm trying to have it ready for her by Christmas. The cabinets below will, at some point, be stained the same glossy cherry color as the top cupboard. At least the counter tops are done.

The girls had Christmas tea and cookies to warm up and to enjoy the season. It's been very cold here.

Here is a story for you:

This past Sunday, things didn't go well. I was getting ready for bishopric meeting at about 6:45 am and my phone rang. My executive secretary was calling to tell me he had slid on black ice into his neighbor's yard, and he was going back home to wait for it to melt -- he'd see me at 9:30 for sacrament meeting.

I finished getting ready and my second counselor called to say he'd slid into the KMart parking lot on black ice and wasn't coming to church or going back home until it melted. I went outside, slid around a little on my front walk, and decided that if I was careful, I would be able to make it to church. The ward clerk called and told me that he had fallen on the ice the day before and broke his foot. He was trying to drive to Bishopric meeting and couldn't work the clutch very well, slid on black ice into a ditch and blew a tire.

The whole world was covered in ice. I made it down the hill and out of the neighborhood OK. Then I slid around on the road toward the church, so I turned around and went a different way. I was sliding down a hill pretty badly so I decided if I was going down, I would go down on my terms. I slid my truck into a paint store parking lot and left it there. I called my first counselor, Jim, to see where he was at. He was stuck and trying to come around to where I was.

There was a 12 car pile up that closed both lanes of I-70 in Washington. A four car pile up had closed one of the main roads into the church. Another 10 car pile up was blocking most of US-19, a major highway for members of our ward who live north of the building. Cars were sliding into guard rails and each other on every road in more than a half dozen counties in western PA.

Jim made it to where I was. We watched as a few people wrecked. We sat in his van with the heater on and had bishopric meeting. Our cell phones rang constantly. The ward mission leader called and said he couldn't make it to the church for his correlation meeting. I told him to cancel it, and asked if he'd help me get the word out that we were canceling the "early" meetings. I did not say that we weren't canceling church. I did not say this because I am dumb.

The ward mission leader called the Elder's Quorum president and told him church was canceled and to start a phone tree. Then he called the High Priest group leader and told him the same thing. It went viral fast! Within 10 minutes my cell phone (and Jim's) lit up -- sometimes I was receiving three and four phone calls simultaneously. People wanted to know if church was really canceled. I told them no, and they said oh, cuz I just called nine people and told them it was.

The sacrament meeting speakers called. They would not be making it in. The relief society president called, she had slid into her neighbor's yard and then fallen on the ice, in her dress, in the middle of the street, and had to scoot on her butt to the edge of the street before she could stand up. She wasn't coming either. The young women's president called. They were blocked by the pile up on US-19. They weren't coming. (Oh yeah, she's married to the gospel doctrine teacher).

Jim and I, at about 9 am, slid his van into the parking lot at the church. I almost fell walking up to the building. I called Joanne and told her to stay home. No one was there. Jim and I threw salt. Lots of salt. About 9:25, the ward mission leader made it. About 9:35, the ward clerk made it with his wife. The teacher's quorum president called -- he wasn't going to make it with the bread for the sacrament. Four families made it by about 10 AM.

With 37 people, we decided to hold a brief sacrament meeting, do tithing settlement for everyone who was there, and then go home. Jim had some crackers (with blueberry bits) and one mom had a slice of bread for her baby, so we had sacrament. We had a pianist. I was the speaker. (I did a good job). We were all done and all went home on mostly thawed but still somewhat treacherous roads, at about noon.

I didn't see the executive secretary at church on Sunday. That was OK.

That is the end of the story.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

8 December 2009 - Holiday Supplement

Here are some additional, higher quality, photos of the past couple weeks for your enjoyment.

True to form and tradition, there is a separate table just for the kids at Thanksgiving dinner.

On the day after Thanksgiving, the families all went to Longwood Gardens for some Christmas lights and freezing cold weather. This is a shot of dancing water fountains set to Christmas music.
Our family in one of the hothouses at the amazingly large complex that comprises Longwood Gardens.
Madeline in front of a fountain peacock in the childrens' area at Longwood.
Joanne took this picture of a model train at Longwood. With the camera on its night setting (long exposure), I thought the blurring effect looked pretty cool.
We got most of the kids to stand still long enough to get this shot at the end of our tour.
Here are the kids with their Thanksgiving gingerbread house.
Emily and Madeline were in a festive mood when they finally got to start decorating the tree. Even Balto got in on the fun.
They were very diligent in working on it until it was done.
It snowed for the first time this week, and the girls couldn't wait to get out and play in it.

For the ward Christmas party, Jessica and her friend Hannah were the narrators. Emily and Madeline were angels.
Santa, or one of his helpers, came to the ward Christmas party.
Madeline was pleased to act the part of an angel while telling Santa what she hoped he'd bring her.

6 December 2009 - Getting ready for Christmas

The Monday after Thanksgiving, the girls did not have school (who says Utah is the only state crazy enough to give the opening day of the deer hunt as a school holiday?!?). Joanne and I both had to teach, because we college folk are far too sophisticated to kill deer. Madeline was beside herself with anticipation for me to come home from work and get out the Christmas tree. Joanne kept the girls busy by working on other Christmas decorations around the house.

I got the tree off the shelf in the garage (that's right, we do fake at our house, but we do not judge those of you who mercilessly slaughter innocent and helpless live trees for your own entertainment ;-)


And once I set it up, the girls (and give Joanne lots of project management credit here), kicked in and did the rest.
Three years ago, I began working on finishing our basement. For about six months, I made incredible progress, finishing the home theater/storage/exercise area, and the bathroom. Then, two and a half years ago, I was called to be bishop of the Washington Ward. And...nothing else happened.
My Christmas gift to Joanne this year is to finish the kitchenette and walkout door area of the basement, which is essentially all that's left. I don't know if I'll make it by Christmas, but I got a good start on Saturday.
Anyone wanna help? Enjoy the season!

29 November 2009 - Thanksgiving

For Thanksgiving this year, we went to Karl and Jolene's house in Delaware. We were able to go for six days, which was nice since its about a six hour drive each way -- it gave us time to enjoy, and not just travel.

On Thanksgiving morning, we had our own little Turkey Bowl in the backyard.The kids all enjoyed helping with the meal. In this picture, they're getting the dinner rolls ready.
Everybody (including me) loved holding baby Eden, who brought her mom (Danae) and dad (Jerry) down from New Jersey for the holiday.
Uncle Karl (and Trevor) even got the weekend off from work to spend time with the family. Trevor's my little buddy.

Aunt Joanne's always good for a gingerbread house with the kids. This was on Sunday afternoon before it was time to head home.
We are grateful to live near family and have the opportunity to spend time with them during the holidays.