Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Wishing You

A Happy New Year!!

Image
ImageMay the Lord bless you and keep you; may He make his face to shine on you and be gracious to you; may He lift up His countenance on you and give you peace.
Numbers 6:24-26

May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.
Romans 15:13

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Books

I apologize for being quiet for so long! The Lord has kept me busy with quite a few other things lately, so I just haven't had time to post much. I hope to catch up soon! One of the ways I've been spending my time is by reading a few books. I have always loved reading, so when I am reading, its usually several books at one time. I'll leave one by my bedstand for nighttime, one in the bathroom for when I need a break, and a few others scattered about the house for when the kids go to bed and Michael and I will snuggle on the couch and read together.

The four books I've been working through (other than Preparing for Puppy type books) are Hind's Feet on High Places by Hannah Hurnard, The Hiding Place by Corrie ten Boom, The Sword and the Switchblade by David Wilkerson, and God, Marriage, and Family: Rebuilding the Biblical Foundation by Andreas Kostenberger. I highly recommend EACH one! They've been such a blessing to read.

"Hind's Feet in High Places" is an awesome allegory. It has taken me the longest to read, because after each chapter, I really have to sit back and reflect on what it was about, and what it demonstrated about God's character, or about my character toward God. Its been a beautiful journey and I'm not even done yet!

"The Hiding Place" was so moving. I cried throughout the book, and when I finished it as well. The faith that was shown through the incredible persecution that people were under, and the way the God used the suffering of people to help others was so amazing! It made me realize how easy of a life we have it here, and pray that my faith and hope in the Lord can ever be as strong in the face of persecution.

"The Sword and the Switchblade" was another huge faith builder. It was incredible to read of the ways God moved, often at times in ways that were hard to understand when they first happened, but the ultimate fruit borne was no doubt the Lord workings. What a mighty God!

"God, Marriage, and Family" is a different type of book, as it designed to be a study, and the others where personal testimonies or examples of one. However, its a VERY extensive study that I am enjoying very much and would recommend this book to both singles and married people alike, as understanding the way marriage and family are to reflect the teachings and character of God is such an important aspect of understanding Him and serving Him better!

All of these books, except for "God, Marriage, and Family", were readily available at my local library (the Marriage book was a birthday gift from my sister :-) ) so please search yours and see if they are available for you, too! They are too good to miss! If you have any books you'd highly recommend, please let me know, as I am looking for more to devour!!

Saturday, December 20, 2008

8 is Great!

Image
On Thursday, Isaac celebrated his 8th birthday! It was a very low-key birthday this year, we only went out for dinner and to a movie and then had a small party with family, but he thought it was wonderful just the same.

Whenever I speak about Isaac, I call him my "rock". He is such a blessing to our family - a wonderful example of the oldest brother - caring, helpful and responsible. He loves each of his brothers and will just as happily snuggle with Nathan on the couch as he will play tag with Ezra in the yard, or color pictures with Joel. He does not put on airs trying to be more grown up than he is, however, he demonstrates maturity beyond his 8 years.

I remember when he was first born, while they were giving him a bath in the delivery room, I thought to myself "What have I done?! How will I ever know what to do with this teeny tiny person being placed in my care?" The weight of the responsibility was overwhelming and frightening! But the Lord knew my fears and blessed me with an even tempered baby, who grew into a toddler with a heart to obey, who is now a school-aged child who eagerly seeks out and loves learning. Most of all, Isaac is a boy who loves Him, loves His Word, and loves the family he has been placed in. I am so blessed to be Isaac's mom, and I hope to never take this privilege and ministry for granted.

When Isaac was almost 2, he had an accident on a play structure. He fell off of a ladder, knocked himself unconscious, and stopped breathing. It was the most terrifying moments of my life! The EMTs came, by which point Isaac had begun breathing again, and he regained consciousness as they arrived. We took a ride in the ambulance to the children's hospital, where we spent the day running tests and doing scans. Amazingly, he did not even have a concussion! The doctors were surprised, but I knew the Lord's hand was on him. When we got home that evening, I went outside to spend some time alone with the Lord, and sobbed. He showed me so clearly the weakness of being a mother. He showed me that it is not within my power to save Isaac - not physically, not spiritually. Isaac is truly in the Lord's hands, and that day I gave over whatever control I was trying to hold on to, and have rested in His peace ever since, trusting in His sovereign plan for Isaac's life. I am so thankful Isaac has a heavenly father who is so much greater and wiser than his earthly parents are!!

I thank the Lord for my wonderful little (but not so little!) boy!

Image

Friday, December 19, 2008

Scientific Benefits of Breastfeeding and Childbearing

Mrs. Parunak at Pursuing Titus 2 has a fascinating blog post about the health benefits of childbearing and breastfeeding. I've always heard that the more children a woman has, and the longer a woman breastfeeds are both beneficial to her health, but I've never really heard much of the "science" behind it. Being that I love learning new things, I was very interested to read about it! Here's a basic summary, but for more detail, be sure to check out "Telling the Truth About Birth Control" at Pursuing Titus 2! This will seem lengthy, but its really worth reading!
A 2002 article in New Scientist proclaimed that modern women in the UK were facing breast cancer rates as high as those of childless nuns in the nineteenth century and said,

Western women could reduce their breast cancer risk by nearly 60 per cent if they returned to pre-industrial levels of fertility and breastfeeding….For each child a woman has, her risk of the disease declines by 7.0 per cent. On top of this, for every year that she breast feeds, her risk declines by 4.3 per cent.

So how does this work? Why would a “return to pre-industrial fertility” help save women’s lives? Why is it that any decrease in childbearing, or postponement of childbearing increases your breast cancer risk? It’s because estrogen itself is a carcinogen. Every month a woman has a menstrual cycle, she is exposing herself to estrogen. That’s dangerous any time it happens, but it’s worse if she hasn’t had a full term pregnancy yet. This is why delaying childbearing “until you and your husband have gotten to know each other,” or “until you get your career established,” is actually risky business. The earlier you have your first baby, the lower your breast cancer risk. According to Daniel B. Kopans, M.D., Director of the Breast Imaging Center at Massachusetts General Hospital,

…a woman who has her first full-term pregnancy by the age of 18 has about one-third the risk of developing breast cancer as a woman who has her first full-term pregnancy after age 30.

When a girl reaches puberty, her breasts start to develop, but they don’t actually finish developing until she begins making milk for her first baby. The immature breasts of a woman who has not yet gone through pregnancy and breastfeeding are composed of type 1 and 2 lobules. (A lobule is a milk duct and several milk producing glands around it.) In fact, 70% of this woman’s breast tissue is type 1. Type 1 lobules are the most susceptible to breast cancer. 80% of breast cancers are formed in Type 1 lobules. 10% form in type 2 lobules. When women reach the last eight weeks of their first full term pregnancy, at least 70% of their breast tissue matures to type 3 lobules, and then when they begin nursing, their breasts fill with milk and become type 4 lobules. Type 3 and 4 lobules are cancer resistant. The sooner a woman’s breast tissue matures to type 3 and 4 lobules, the safer she will be from breast cancer because she will have exposed her cancer-vulnerable, immature breasts to fewer menstrual cycles, and therefore fewer onslaughts of estrogen. And the more babies she has, the more lobules will mature. (For more information, click here and read the excellent FAQ.)

But not only do many women delay and/or decrease childbearing, they do so through hormonal contraception (like the Pill), which contains steroidal estrogen. And while it is claimed that estrogen given with progesterone (as it always is in hormonal birth control) is not dangerous, there have been numerous studies linking hormonal contraception with increased breast cancer risk. A Mayo clinic meta-analysis of 23 studies found that 21implied increased risk, and combining the studies gave an estimated 44% increase in pre-menopausal breast cancer risk in women who used the Pill before their first full term pregnancy. The World Health Organization, in its own studies, found the risk to be slightly lower (24%), but still high enough to be scary, to me anyway. (Read more here. Click on “Girls on Steroids”)
The Lord never ceases to amaze me! Its incredible the way that He designed our bodies to naturally be protected just by following His blessing of "be fruitful and multiply"!

Thursday, December 18, 2008

100 Days!

According to my due date (March 28), there are only 100 days left until we meet the new Robinson! Of course, all of my babies so far have been at least a few days to two weeks early, so there might be even less than 100... and then again, there could be more! But just for fun, I wanted to commemorate the 100 day mark with a poll. The BIG question is... will this be another boy? Or will we have to do some major pink shopping soon? Please vote in the poll in the sidebar on the left and share your thoughts! :-D

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Wordfilled Wednesday

Instead of a wordLESS Wednesday, I wanted to have a WordFILLED Wednesday. Here is a verse the Lord has put on my heart lately:

Have this attitude in yourselves which was also in Christ Jesus, who, although He existed in the form of God, did not regard equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied Himself, taking the form of a bond-servant, and being made in the likeness of men. Being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.
Philippians 2:5-8

What amazes me about Christ and His life is the fact that He wasn't a "super-hero" savior. He didn't come in live this amazingly exciting and glorifying life and conquer the Romans in the sense that one would expect. Instead He - God incarnate - came to us as a plain man, lived an incredibly humble life, and then... died. And died in a way that was so UNglorifying - nothing like you'd see in action movies where the hero goes out in a blaze of gunfire and excitement. He died in a way that was considered a curse, despised, reserved for only the lowest of the low. He was mocked and abused, but worst of all, He was rejected. Certainly not what one might expect from the Savior of the World! Surely our hero would be handsome, popular, win everyone's hearts, show his power by killing a few bad guys, save the day, and ride off into the sunset, and everyone would cheer, right? How I love the paradoxes of God's ways!

As I go through my day to day life, striving to serve Him, I keep this scripture in my head, and think... am I being humble? Am I being obedient? Am I emptying myself for His service and those around me? Or am I trying to be loved by man, showing my "power", and focused on perserving my life and my image? Do I realize the awesomeness of God, or am I trying to somehow grasp an equality with Him?

Lord, I pray that you would daily help me carry my cross - to die to pride - to acknowledge You as Lord and sovereign over all things... and to obey humbly in all things, emptying myself for You. Thank you Lord, for your precious Son!

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Worship Music

I love listening to worship music! It really helps the atmosphere of my home stay focus and full of the spirit, and is so uplifting! I've noticed there are various types of worship music - a type that is straight scripture being sung, a type that is pure worship, simply expressing love and adoration to our Savior, and also a type that tell the gospel message, the story of Christ... and then there's songs that combine all of the types into one!

I especially am moved by the ones that tell the gospel message. My pride and the distractions of everyday living can often push that message out of the forefront of my mind, so songs that can reinforce it, bring it back to the place of importance that it belongs, are precious to me. Remembering His sacrifice and what it means for me keeps my love strong, my heart humble, my attitude one of gratefulness, and my desire to only obey Him.

Here is one we sang in church last weekend that I wanted to share!

Oh, to see the dawn
Of the darkest day:
Christ on the road to Calvary.
Tried by sinful men,
Torn and beaten, then
Nailed to a cross of wood.

CHORUS:
This, the pow'r of the cross:
Christ became sin for us;
Took the blame, bore the wrath—
We stand forgiven at the cross.

Oh, to see the pain
Written on Your face,
Bearing the awesome weight of sin.
Ev'ry bitter thought,
Ev'ry evil deed
Crowning Your bloodstained brow.

Now the daylight flees;
Now the ground beneath
Quakes as its Maker bows His head.
Curtain torn in two,
Dead are raised to life;
"Finished!" the vict'ry cry.

Oh, to see my name
Written in the wounds,
For through Your suffering I am free.
Death is crushed to death;
Life is mine to live,
Won through Your selfless love.

FINAL CHORUS:
This, the pow'r of the cross:
Son of God—slain for us.
What a love! What a cost!
We stand forgiven at the cross.

~Words and Music by Keith Getty & Stuart Townend
Copyright © 2005 Thankyou Music


Saturday, December 13, 2008

The Cat... er... Dog's Out of the Bag!

For anyone who reads Isaac's blog, this is old news, but I have to confess to everyone else that we have shared the news of our soon-to-be-home puppy, Ada, with the boys. We tried to keep it a secret, but it was getting increasingly harder to plan and discuss things without them catching on. Also, we decided that getting them prepared for her arrival would make things alot less stressful for her, instead of a group of surprised and overly excited boys bouncing off the walls with joy (there will be enough of that happening, anyway!). So, they are thrilled and we are happily planning together as a family, discussing responsibilities, things we need to teach her, and overall just how much we're looking forward to her homecoming. We went to visit her today, and got some new pictures! Its amazing how fast puppies grow - two weeks ago, she wasn't even standing up on her feet... now she is happily bouncing around and playing with her sisters. We can't wait to see what another two weeks will bring!

ImageImage

Couldn't Have Said it Better...

Sometimes I run across other blog posts that seem to take the words right out of my heart and say exactly what I believe about things. Jess, over at Making Home, did this with her post "Combating the "You Should Get Out of the House More" Mentality". Great stuff! I hope it encourages you the way it did me!
Let's be willing to say it like it is: as moms of young children, the best place for us to be is at home.

That's just the truth. One can find all sorts of arguments about having the right to be elsewhere, exceptions (a widowed or abused single mom) and more, but the overarching, general truth is -- and we all know it -- children are happiest and best raised when mom is home with them and engaged in their daily lives.

It's strange that it's politically incorrect to say that moms are needed. At home. To be there for their children.

No one has a problem with a boss who says things like, "Jim is the reason for this company's success." Or, "Sandy holds th
is office together." No one gripes and says it's demeaning for a worker to be needed in their job. So why is there a cultural problem with saying that moms are needed by their children? It's the truth. And, interestingly, that is what God tells young women that they need to learn: to be "working at home", loving their children.

It can be good to attend a ladies' Bible study. It can be beneficial to be a part of a co-op or playgroup. It can be wonderful to get together with a friend. But on the whole, more often than not, young moms should be at home. God has given the privilege of conceiving, birthing, and nursing children to young women, and it is only for a season.

BUT "THEY" SAY...
"They" are always saying all sorts of things, aren't they? There are an abounding number of loud voices telling us that we "need" to get out... that we can't be mentally, emotionally, intellectually, and spiritually satisfied and stimulated at home... that our self-worth depends on having individual aims that are separate and distinct from who we are and what we do in our homes. And all too often, we believe it.

Some take it so far to say that if we have a brain, we ought to be using it for society. That other people can raise our children for us (because that's mindless work), so that we can contribute to the surrounding community (as though raising hard-working, honest, God-fearing children isn't a significant contribution). But even without these feminist notions in our brains, we still hear the common refrain: "You need to get out of the house more." Even within very godly circles, young moms can easily feel that what they are doing in their daily lives at home is not really the most faithful, godly thing they could be doing.

But what kind of world is it, really, where women are encouraged to feel negatively about being home with the very people who need them most? Where women are encouraged to get away from moments that bring great joy and delight? Where women are made to feel that their minds are only fully used outside the home? Where women are made to feel guilty when they choose to use their intellect and passion to infuse the minds of the next generation with a strong moral foundation, good common sense, and a broad, wise understanding of the world around them?

It is lousy, unbiblical advice that encourages women to abandon the God-appointed place of their sanctification and usefulness to Him.
And for young moms, generally, that place is in the home.

OUR HOMES-- IN THE WORLD, BUT NOT OF IT
Our homes ought not be run according to the principles, wisdom, and priorities of the world. Even as Christians, this is an easy trap to fall into.

Sometimes it's difficult... minister's wives, for example, may be pressured or expected to take on more than they should while having young children at home. Young mothers who display any sort of spiritual depth will likely be asked to teach Sunday school classes, head up ministries, or contribute time and energy to "good" things. Young moms are often actively encouraged to join groups like MOPS, scrapbooking clubs, ladies' Bible studies, or other fine and fun activities.

It can be hard to discern what God wants us to do when other people are so vocal in telling us what we "need" to be doing. It may require that we learn to say "no". We may need to learn to graciously but unapologetically stand up for what God reveals in His word-- that God's general plan for young moms is to be doing the basics-- loving their husbands, loving their children, exercising self-control, living purely, and working at home, offering kindness to others and submission to their own husbands. It's not popular, but following God almost never is.

And sometimes you can even get lambasted for it by other Christians... that you need to be doing "more". Sometimes it is the very people who ought to be encouraging us to stay home-- the "older women" mentioned in Titus 2-- that ask or encourage us to be away from our homes. But regardless of who's doing the asking, we need to take to heart the things that God would have us learn and do as younger women, and implement these things into our lives.

DISCIPLING DAILY
When you are discipling little souls and training them to love Jesus while wiping their noses, tying their shoes, and cutting their meat into smaller
bites, you ARE "doing more". It is a HUGE thing to be daily in contact with one or more young disciples that you are loving and training up in their faith. It is a HUGE thing to be available to answer their queries, tell them a Bible story, listen to lengthy explanations about the purpose of a new toy creation, or to pray with them at night when they are scared. It is a HUGE thing to be, daily and hourly, earning the trust and respect of a little person, so that they might later all the more fully trust and respect Christ.

It is a HUGE thing to "just" spend time with your children. Christ Himself spent three entire years with 12 grown men and some of them still took a while to really get it. And let's not forget that it wasn't all miracles and parables... sometimes, Jesus & His disciples were just sitting around eating fish, or taking a nap in the hull of a ship.

We as moms are given (Lord willing, if we are blessed to watch them grow into adulthood) potentially 18-20 years of daily interaction with our children. We are privileged to pray for and with them, "study" them-- learning their personality, their strengths & weaknesses, their skills, their interests-- and, in so doing, offer wise guidance as counsel as they grow, and serve them with kind affection. Spending time together, watching, teaching, learning, and loving-- these are no small things.

Should I strive to "get out of the house more"?
Sometimes I struggle here, particularly in an overseas setting-- I want to be able to communicate with my neighbors better. I wish I had more time for Turkish study. I would enjoy being able to share deeper things and communicate more clearly, instead of at a toddler-level of communication in this language. There is a natural pull there for me.

And sometimes, well-meaning others even give me that oft-offered advice, "you should get out of the house more". I know that from the outside, mine seems like a very cloistered life.

But right now, I have four small children... four little people I get to communicate with every single day. Four souls that I can impact and disciple every single day. Three men and one woman who I can begin influencing and shaping right now. I am doing big things and changing the world by discipling those that God has put into my immediate sphere of influence. And it's a job no one else can do in the way that God has equipped me to do.

Whether or not the world salutes it, whether or not the Christians around us value it, there is high value and eternal significance to this work of motherhood.

IT'S A BIG JOB... AND I WANT TO DO IT!
Day-in, day-out motherhood is not for the faint of heart. Our culture whispers lies about it, saying it's easy, insignificant, or that anyone can do it. But the difficulty of it lies in the facts about it-- very few do it for the long-haul, and even fewer do it well.

I want to be one that crosses the finish line with exuberance. One that struggles through even the hardest of times with God's peace and joy, and thankfully walks through the good times. One who is a reliable, rock-solid source of comfort, strength, wisdom, and encouragement (all drawn from the wells of God's word) for my husband and children. One that doesn't come up with excuses of why I am the exception in God's plan for younger women. One who yields to the demands of the Potter who knows much better than I do what I was made for... I am striving to be a young mom who says, "yes, Lord. Yes. Here am I. Use me."

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Wordless Wednesday - A View of Homeschooling

ImageWhat I found yesterday after telling everyone to get ready for reading!

My Roots are Showing

I spent the majority of my teenage years growing up in a small town in New Hampshire. Life was so different there than it is here in Suburbia, Atlanta! We didn't have a WalMart, public pool, city parks, 6 lane highways... anywhere we needed to go, we could usually walk to. In the winter, my parents would cross country ski to work when the roads were too bad to drive. In the summer, when it got hot, my friends and I would drive into the woods and find a swimming hole to jump in, or go rock diving at the quarry. We'd camp out wherever we wanted, there were no designated "camping grounds" - and camping usually did not include a tent, just sleeping under the stars or in the bed of a truck! Students at highschool had gun racks in their trucks, loaded with hunting rifles... one student even brought his hunting puppy to classes with him to help socialize him! Flannel was the fashion, and not because of the grunge movement - simply because it was COLD!

Anyway, all that to say... I was molded alot by spending my years growing up in the small town/country life. I enjoy country music, so in honor of my roots, I wanted to share what I consider to be the absolute best country song ever. The louder you turn it up, the more fun it is! Enjoy :-)


ImageImageImage


(Oh, and the playlist generator has it wrong - the group is not Diamond Rio, it is The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band!)

Monday, December 08, 2008

Michael Got Tagged Too! - michael writing...

1. I play disc golf. It's a poor man's version of the real golf game. Probably more exercise though because you don't use a cart.

2. I met Ben Stein in the airport. Well, I said "Hey, you're Ben Stein", and he said "Hello" (make sure when you read Hello, you do it with a kind of monotone boredom).

3. On my lunch break at work one day, my coworkers and I were playing catch with a Frisbee. I ran shin first into a stonewall. I had to go to the emergency room for x-rays and a stitch.

4. In high school I played soccer, ran track and cross country, wrestled, and competed in dramatic interpretation.

5. My children can catch me now when we play tag.

6. My wife can't stop talking about how fit my triceps are. Not a day goes by where she doesn't say, "gosh Michael, your triceps are huge".

7. I like long car rides with my family. Especially when Erin and I act silly and talk for hours about completely random stuff, or dissect bad lyrics to cheesy country songs.

Quiet Lately

I haven't been posting much as of late, as some may have noticed! There area a few reasons for it... first, we went out of town for Thanksgiving, so my computer access was limited. Second, since coming home, we've been plugging away and getting back into routine, and life is just busy. Third, while the Lord has been moving in our lives alot, there really hasn't been the cohesiveness of thought to share what He's been teaching me and where He's been leading me... its all a bit "in progress", which makes it hard to post about.

So, I will share an update for now...

Our Thanksgiving was wonderful, and I hope others also had a blessed holiday. We traveled to West Virginia to visit my parents and had a wonderful week with them. It even snowed enough for a snowball fight one day, which the boys and Michael loved! The drive there and back went as smoothly as it could have, no mishaps, arguing, carsickness, etc. Just a pleasant 9+ hour drive! It was such a blessing to have it go so peacefully! Here's a little slide show of the fun in the snow.

Image Image Image


As I posted about in my previous Wordless Wednesday, we are indeed getting a puppy. She is a Boston Terrier, and her name is Ada. She will not be old enough to come home with us for about 3 more weeks, so I am using that time to study up on how to housebreak and train a puppy. I've housebroken one puppy in the past, and potty trained 3 children so far, so I'm feeling optimistic about the challenge ;-) Michael and I had two Boston Terriers in the past and absoutely love the breed, so we are very glad to be welcoming Ada. The boys don't know yet, so it will be a fun surprise. Keeping it a secret has been hard, since we're so excited about it ourselves! We're hoping Molly doesn't think Ada is a fun squeaky chew toy! Molly is really laid back about other dogs in the house, though, so we think the transition will be fine.

The pregnancy is going fine - totally uneventful, which is the way I (and my midwives) like it. I am 6 months along now, it seems like the time has FLOWN by! I can't believe how soon it will be time to meet our new little one.

The Lord has been doing some interesting, behind-the-scenes type of things. Its been so fun to see what He's working on in us, and where it will take us. He has been touching my heart in so many ways - areas of gratitude and gratefulness, submission, peace, and also action. Following God isn't just about believing in Him and holding a set of convictions, it is also acting on those beliefs, being used to demonstrate His love and for others. I believe that He has called me to do this within my home with my family first and foremost, but also to use my home as a ministry to extend this to others.

A scripture that has been quietly lurking in my mind for a long time now is James 1:27. Michael and I have dedicated ourselves to praying for wisdom and the Lord's guidance in regards to what He wants us to do as the future comes... please feel free to join us in that! In God's timely way, we just started a series in church on Nehemiah - and the first sermon was about looking out to the world, seeing the needs of others, and diligently seeking the Lord's will about what to do with what He reveals to us! I love the way He works in confirmation! So we will faithfully wait for further guidance, in His timing.

Friday, December 05, 2008

The Late Night Song

I woke up with pregnancy insomnia at 3 am with this song in my heart. I only pray that my attitude, actions and heart reflect my desire and purpose to surrender all to Him. Serving Him is all there is in life that holds any worth.


Thursday, December 04, 2008

7 Random Things

Marcy tagged me a few weeks ago, but because of traveling for Thanksgiving and then having computer issues (which are all better now, thankfully!), I hadn't had a chance to post my answers. So, a little late, here are 7 Random Things About Me!
1. I can't wear nailpolish on my fingers. I can wear it on my toes fine, but if I wear it on my fingers, I feel like I'm suffocating!

2. My "career goal" up until I got married was to breed and train horses, and I was pursuing an Equine Business Management degree.

3. Michael and my first apartment was above a show horse barn where I worked - we had a balcony off the bedroom that looked over the stalls!

4. My dad picked my name for me with the intention that it could not be made into any nicknames. Unfortunately, it turns out that names that don't have natural nicknames are easy prey for unnatural nicknames - just ask Michael, who loves to make them up for me ;-)

5. In my teenage years I thought it would be cool to give my firstborn son the first name of "Harley" and the middle name of "Davidson"... I think Michael, Isaac and I (and probably many others) are all thankful that I didn't follow through on that!

6. My favorite part of pregnancy is labor. I'm not some weird sadist, I just really enjoy the challenge and excitement of it, and the beauty of the way God designed life to come into the world. I'm also terrible at waiting, so when labor finally starts, I know I get to meet my new little one soon!

7. I only like Dark Chocolate. Milk Chocolate is way too sweet for my taste! Unless its mixed with something, like, say, peanuts or peanut butter!
I'm supposed to tag other people, but in the past few tags/memes I've done, I've tagged about everyone I know... so... I'll leave this open for anyone who might want to join in!

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Wordless Wednesday - Coming Soon!

ImageP.S. - We're trying to keep it a secret from the boys until she can come home with us (around New Year's), so if you happen to talk to them... shhhh...! ;-)