3/31/10

Penny for Your Thoughts

In my chemistry class we did a mini-lab on surface tension. We placed a penny on the table and used a pipette to place drops of water on it until the bead that formed finally broke.

I still don't remember why it did that... had something to do with electronegativity and hydrogen bonds, but as far as specifics go, your guess is as good as mine.

At any rate, I liked the lab so much that when I got home from small groups tonight I pulled out my camera and repeated it. I got some pretty neat shots, too.

I wonder if I could get class credit for this?



3/27/10

Hungry Girl?

I got home this morning from a friend's house, opened the pantry door, and announced,

"There's nothing to eat in here!"

As soon as the words left my mouth, images of hungry kids in Guatemala popped into my head involuntarily. I mentally corrected myself, feeling sheepish,

"There's nothing to eat in here that's instant and delicious."

Bah.

I dug around our freezer and found some chicken nuggets. After popping them in the oven, I put noodles on the stove to boil and dug around the bottom shelf of our pantry for a can of green beans.

Twenty minutes later I grabbed the ketchup, flopped down on the couch, and turned on ESPN. My aforementioned friend banned me from any form of sports television because (insert whiny voice here) "it's my birthday!" I did, however, manage to check my brackets via phone; she protested that, as well, saying that I was addicted, but I semi-politely informed her that, no, the general population of America follows March Madness just as closely as I do if not closer, and that she was in the minority, and that she was also a BIRTHDAYZILLA.

At any rate, I had a lot of catching up to do. I balanced my plate of yumminess on my knees, salted the green beans and dug in. As the baseball stats were being reported, I chewed thoughtfully and tried to pinpoint the feeling that was lingering in my stomach.

I thought long and hard before it hit me.

Satisfaction.

Could it be that I enjoyed, savored, and was more grateful for my meal more than usual because I put... effort into it?



..........



Nah.

On a completely different note, our family is doing much better now; we're doing great, in fact. There are several options for Lily that we hadn't even considered before, and there have been some new doors open. God is good! Lily was back to her normal schedule on Wednesday, everyone is relaxed again.

3/24/10

Tears


"I'm on a diet of tears - tears for breakfast, tears for supper. All day long people knock at my door, pestering, 'Where is this God of yours?'"
Psalm 42:1

Life isn't always smooth sailing.

Life isn't always great, even for me.

Sometimes, life pretty much stinks.

Yesterday was one of those times.

Our family has really been praying hard for Lily to go to a specific special needs school in Austin that concentrates on speech therapy. We had explored options and decided that this was the place for her at this point. A three day test-run (so to speak) was scheduled, and yesterday - day two - the powers that be told us that while they loved Lily and had fallen in love with her, they had not accepted her into the school.

It was a serious blow.

It was a day full of tears for our family. We were truly crushed; extremely disappointed.

My youth pastor talked this past Sunday about how the Word of God is a lamp to our feet - it's not going to show us the whole path, but it will show us the next step.

I turned to Psalms right away, because I so relate to David's raw honesty. He cries out to God often, asking Him where He's gone, and why He's done certain things. I could relate to that. I felt like God had let me down when it counted!

So what's the next step?

Every time David cries out and rages, no matter how angry or sad he is, he makes sure to end by saying, "I still love you, God. You are still great." He ends by praising Him. Praise is the next step.

Well, I don't really feel like doing that right now, God.

But I did. I dragged back out the prayer notebook I had just put away, filled with questions and bitterness, and started writing again. I told God why I still loved Him, why I would still trust Him, why I was still believing Him.

And you know what?

It helped.

I just started praying through the Psalms. It was comforting. When I woke up in a funk, I grabbed my Bible and flipped to them again. It was my lifeline.

And you know what?

I'm okay.

I really am. We're all going to be okay.

Tears don't last forever, but God's promises and sovereignty do. And I am forever and a day thankful for that.

3/20/10

Updated To Do List

1. Completely finish decorating room.

2. Get license already. I only have one section left in my workbook now. Ha!

3. Go to the doctor about nasty feet. I told my mom that my toe still wasn't better. She looked at it and declared it a job for a doctor. Yuck. I am gross.

4. Get a haircut.

5. Make a necklace yourself. I adore the necklaces like J Crew carries, but as a babysitter who hopes to own a car by this fall - and who has stopped hoping that a magical jewelry fairy will visit her and bestow gifts - I decided that I should channel my creative juices and try making one myself.

6. Blah dee blah dee blah.

I just felt as though I needed to put a sixth item, even though I don't truly have anything to put there. So I wrote nonsense. And hoped you wouldn't notice.

How shneaky am I?

March Madness Indeed


Every year during March Madness my entire family forms an online bracket group, fills out their brackets, and then competes for a dinner of their choice. I felt really good about my picks this year, as all of the match-ups seemed fairly obvious.

Let me tell you, I am sick of hearing announcers exclaim,

"__________ has won for the first time in school history/since 1932/since Abe Lincoln was president!"

I'm currently tied for fourth with my aunt and cousin.

However, I'm 99% positive I've picked the correct champion and final four teams. Everyone ahead of me seems to have picked unlikely upsets to win it all.

All in all, the best part is definitely the dinner at the end of the tournament. The family heads out to the winner's restaurant of choice and spends the night talking, laughing, celebrating, and making the occasional excuse for losing the bracket challenge. It reminds me that having fun... runs in my family.

But I still want to win.

3/19/10

Pedernales Falls





Today was just pure bliss! I'm going to start at the very beginning - last night.

Reagan and I were invited to spend the night at the house of some wonderful, long-time friends: Kaylinn and Madison. I arrived just in time to snag the last piece of pizza. We set up their tent in the backyard with blankets and pillows and sleeping bags and whatever other padding we had handy, then went up to her room to catch up. Afterwards we watched Ice Princess (stop laughing) on Disney channel with her grandmother. Then we headed out to the tent under a vast canopy of stars, yawning and rubbing our tired eyes. It was cold, and the breeze nipped at my arms; I was more than happy to climb into my blanket nest and catch some Z's... but not before staying up another hour laughing.

This morning I woke up at eight to birds singing and soft, white morning light penetrating the tent walls. I just laid there and enjoyed it. Mrs. "S" brought cinnamon tea out into the tent, and I sat up against my pillows, hair tossed into a bedraggled ponytail, and snapped some pictures of everyone wrapped in blankets and beautiful light, sipping away. I think that was my favorite part of the whole day, because it was so peaceful and quiet. We would have stayed there for hours more, I think, if we hadn't known that there was warm cinnamon rolls inside.

Over breakfast, it was decided that we would go to Pedernales Falls State Park. We drove to the park crammed into the suburban like sardines. Once we arrived, water bottles were handed out, jackets were shuffled around, and shoelaces were tied before we began hiking down to the water.

Pedernales is gorgeous. Gorgeous. A wide, swift river rushes down through a vast expanse of enormous blue boulders - larger than life and smooth from years of being polished by the water - sitting on sand. We climbed and climbed and climbed, bounding up rocks and crawling through crevices. There's one section of rock that forms a straight wall - tricky to navigate but extremely rewarding once you're at the top, looking down at how far you've come. I like the challenge of finding little nooks and inlets to support my feet and grab onto to hoist myself higher than before. It's the best kind of instant gratification.

Out in the main part of the park are the biggest boulders - massive stretches of rock with river charging between. There are little pools of water hidden all around, clear and bright and deep, and there are places that jut out into the water right where it separates into two different paths; you can lay on your stomach and let the water spray you in the face and put your hands in and feel the frightening power of all of that cold, cold water. It's thrilling!

Once we'd climbed to our hearts content (and gotten stuck in a few places as well) we headed back up to the car, piled in, and drove further down to the area of park where wading and swimming is allowed.

We splashed our way straight into the middle of the icy water, shrieking and gasping, and spent an hour trying to get to the other side of the river, which was less rocky.

It never happened. The current was just too strong.

We did, however, manage to get completely soaked. It was slow going, pushing against the weight of the water, trying to maintain balance while searching blindly for a sturdy place to set our feet, then plodding forward and repeating. Sometimes we were wrong about how good our footing was and ended up slipping on the stones beneath or getting our feet stuck between them. Every now and then a really large rock would be within our reach and we would take a rest before plunging back in. We fought our way a good half mile up the river before calling it quits and following the edge of the bank back to our starting place, shivering and laughing and trying to rub off the mascara that was streaked across our faces. We dried off as best we could, grabbed our shoes, and headed home.

It was great.

And I'm zonked.

As in, completely worn out. Between the late night, the sun, and my very sore legs, I can barely see straight.

Goodnight.

3/17/10

Morgan's Wonderland


Today, the whole family headed to Morgan's Wonderland, an amusement park in San Antonio geared specifically to special needs kids.

I don't believe I've ever mentioned it, but my littlest sister, Lily, has special needs (though not very obvious). There is not, so far, a specific name for Lily's needs, however... she defies categorization. With pride. Perhaps that's why I haven't thought to mention it before. The first thing that pops into my head when asked to describe my sister Lily is definitely not that she has special needs; she's SUPER cute and knows it all too well, an evil genius (there is no room that can hold her), very loving and touchy, stubborn as heck, the ultimate Backyardigans fan, unbelievably bossy (and that's coming from ME); and has the fine motor skills of a... a... a fine motor skills superhero who can take apart anything at all including baby gates, crib tents, blinds, my cell phone (still bitter about that), spatulas, and even playground equipment.

At any rate, she has special needs. That's made places like amusement parks completely overwhelming.

But Morgan's Wonderland rocked. It was just a wonderful, blissful experience. And it was FUN.

We got Lily up this morning and told her that today was a Lily Day (as if every other day isn't). We popped her into the carseat, turned on the DVD player, and headed to Morgan's Wonderland.

The instant we walked in, I swear she relaxed. Maybe she could sense that we weren't uptight and worried, or maybe she could just tell. I don't know. Whatever the case, she smiled at the woman who placed armbands on all of us and then rushed into the park.

There was a massive, sprawling playground - the equipment was all wheelchair accessible and big enough so that two could pass each other at the same time. The slides were fast and fun but short enough that everyone could handle them. There was a massive sandbox to dig in, a train to ride, and places to eat snacks. A huge gymnasium held basketball courts, kickballs, and a stage for the drama queens in the park. Lily loved the indoor "sensory station" - so did the rest of us! Imagine a dark room with four giant screens projected onto the walls. One shows butterflies flying around, the other shows beads falling down, and the last shows little tadpoles swimming about. Okay, now imagine that when you stand in front of the screen and lift your arms, the beads fall into the shadow of your arms projected on the walls; or the butterflies land on your head; or the tadpoles swarm around you in a blur. It did all that!!! Lily was ready to go before I was - I kept finding more stuff the screens would do! It was unbelievable!

The favorite by far, though?

The water station.

I don't think I've ever mentioned this before either, but Lily loves water.

No, I mean she loves water. She climbed into the fountain at a Mamacita's restaurant one time. If she so much as spots a puddle, she sits in it. Bath time is like heaven.

So when she saw the massive water tables with all these gears and spraying hoses and bowls and canals and little kids running around with dripping wet clothes and water droplets beaded on their eyelashes, she just about had a cow.

Had a COW.

She wouldn't stop laughing. She cackled and grinned and jumped up and down and shrieked. Oh, my gosh, she was beside herself. I don't think we would've been able to pull her away except that somewhere between the musical fountain and the giant water mill, the sun and excitement and effort of climbing up so many playground steps added up and she crashed. We picked her up, still grinning and sopping wet, and headed out.

It was beyond an awesome day.

This is also the earliest she's gone to bed in a year or so, I think.

We will definitely be going back.

Oh, and here's the link to their website. If you know anyone at all who has a child with special needs, I highly recommend the park. Be sure and read the story behind it all, too!

Thank you, Morgan's Wonderland, for a beautiful day in the Rush family!

http://www.morganswonderland.com/

3/16/10

Me, Myself, and I...


I haven't ever posted photographs of myself on SSS before, because generally I'm behind the camera and not in front of it. Today I finally took the time to set up a mini self-portrait shoot.

Much easier said than done.

See, I have zero equipment aside from my SLR. No screens, no lighting, no tripods.

This means that I have to first choose a spot to take the pictures, then find a way to set up the camera so that it captures my whole self and not just my arm/stomach/neck, guess-timate where to place the focus, set up the self timer, take at least three test shots, and re-set lighting and focus settings before I can actually get on with the real photography.

While it makes things difficult, it's also something I pride myself in. It gives photography an extra dose of creativity. It also enhances the quality, believe it or not; no lighting system, no matter how great, beats natural lighting!

All that to say, I pulled on a sundress, went through aforementioned process, took 70 pictures and present to you... one!!!

3/14/10

Stuck in My Head


So, I've had Taylor Swift songs stuck in my head.

All day.

You'd think I would be out having crazy celebrations, living it up on Spring Break. But no, I kicked off my seven days of school-less freedom with a stomach bug. I've been feeling pretty yicky. I think I'm better now, though. I was assured by several friends who have befallen the same fate that it only takes twenty four hours to run its course.

I'm praying their right, because I hate being sick. It makes me feel stressed and out-of-sorts, like I'm missing everything and will be locked up forever and ever.

It didn't help that I had a really lovely outfit picked out for church this morning.

At any rate, I spent the day on facebook and listening to aforementioned Taylor Swift songs, doing a patch job on my nails (painted for the first time in two years!) and drinking crystal light, trying to finish that stupid Drivers' Ed book and watching Disney Channel.

Hey, it was the night of premieres.

Except for, you know, the Lizzie McGuire movie.

I'll update you if I wake up feeling extraordinarily healthy tomorrow morning and take on something especially adventurous.

Or not.

3/10/10

Pretty





Still making up for all of the photos that have been missing! Hope you like these... the other sister, this time! :)

3/8/10

Daddy's Girl






I downloaded camera software onto the family computer and am happy to share with you some of my latest photographs! Enjoy!

3/7/10

Passion

This past Monday was almost the best Monday ever.

I got to school ready for a full-speed, high-impact, meltdown kind of school day; I had tons of work due, tons of work to catch up on, a journalism class to lead, and geometry and chemistry tests hanging over my head. I rushed into the building and was told to go into our main meeting room and pop a squat on the floor. A friend waved me over and I sat down next to him.

"What's going on?" I asked him, totally confused.

He shrugged and said, "They said they have a surprise for the high school and eighth graders."

Next thing I knew, a bus had pulled up in front of the door, and our vice principal announced that we were taking the day off for a mini retreat at a surprise location! We all dropped off our backpacks and headed out.

I opted to skip the bus and climbed into one of the "mom-mobiles" with a group of friends, one of whom is the daughter of the respective mom. We had an... interesting journey to the secret location, to say the least. Our group took the scenic route, taking two detours, one of which included a real, live, Wizard Academy. Trust me, when people say that Austin is weird, they mean... Austin is really weird.

We reached our destination (the community center of a very nice neighborhood on the outskirts of town) late and flushed with laughter. We joined everyone else in their exploration of the grounds, then headed up to the "conference area" for our first session.

The whole group participated in a lively dialogue regarding next year's schedule, elective options, and student life events ("Frozen Yogurt Friday, anyone?"). We got to have a productive, ongoing conversation with some of the school leaders we love in a more casual setting. It was great, in my opinion; I love my school!

Mrs. Schuknecht got our attention and told us that the main topic would be passion.

I love the word passion.

Just so you know.

She said that her goal was for every student to leave our school full of passion for life, whether that means being passionate about cooking or business or writing or karaoke or football. They want us to be passionate.

Unfortunately, I had to leave early. But it got me thinking. And I promise I will write more later on this topic.

3/6/10

D-Day

It has arrived.

The most epic Saturday of my life so far.

Not really.

But still.

Today, I set out to finish drivers' ed and overhaul my closet.

All in the same day.

Wow.

And you get to come along on the crazy-exciting journey, with moment by moment updates from yours truly.

Ready?

Let the to-do list crossing off begin!

9:21 AM
Eating two sausage biscuits and preparing to start. I'm going to try and get a bunch of the DE workbook done first, then I'm moving on to the closet. I've gathered lots of books and magazine pictures of gloriously clean closets to inspire me. I think it's working.

10:42 AM
I have completed one chapter of my DE workbook and I've started on the next. I took a look at my closet, and noted that none of my inspirational closet photos picture cruddy wire hangers. I text my Mom and ask her to pay me for last night's babysitting in plastic hangers from Target.

12:35 PM
I dive into my closet head-first and attack the bulky and currently un-affective rubbermaid drawer units; I discover that I'm going to need some storage, but since buying a dresser is totally out of the question (I'm on a babysitter's salary, here), I'll have to get ... *shudders* ... creative. Good thing I've got a few of these yummy Cinnabon bars to keep my energy up.

3:36 PM
I am really tired of going through stuff by now. I would quit, but there's stuff all over my room. The good news, though, is that now I start putting stuff back in; I think I can be done in an hour if I work fast!

4:45 PM
Okay, so I'm not done. One more hour, probably. I'm at the most boring part now; the closet itself is clean but all the stuff I took out of it is all over my room waiting to be sorted and carted off. I see the light at the end of the tunnel...

6:51 PM
I'm done! Finally! All that's left to do is take clothes to good will/my favorite resale store and figure out what to do with the leftover organizing things (baskets, a shoe rack, etc). Now I get to just relax and enjoy my beautiful, spotless closet! Maybe I'll post some before/after photos... though to be honest, the middle is what nearly did me in.

3/4/10

To-do List

This is not one of the posts that have been on my mind ("Just Fine, Thanks"), but all day today I have been thinking of things I need/want to do. I decided to share my to-do list with you... now all I need is time to accomplish all these things!

1. Reorganize and clean bedroom, bathroom, and closet. I'm talking complete overhaul, here. I just have too much stuff! I clean my room and within hours it's messy again.

"If you are becoming a slave to your things, get rid of them." From the Book of Me.

2. Completely finish decorating room. When we moved into this house last spring break, I had a couple of picture frames that never got hung, and I've also been mulling over a new placement for my bed and desk. Eventually I plan on painting the walls, too, but I don't think that's going to happen anytime soon.

3. Finish drivers' ed. I'm three weeks overdue to get my license, simply because I won't take the time to sit down and go through the workbook and watch those horrible instructional videos from the early nineties.

4. Fix my feet. I have super dry skin and generally yucky feet, so I have to set aside time to really get them sandal-ready again; especially since basketball season wreaked havoc on them and I have one dead, blue toenail.

5. Get a haircut.

3/2/10

¡Guate!

This past week, I traveled with my Dad and grandma (Mimi) to Guatemala with a group out of Lynchburg, Virginia. The trip was sponsored by a wonderful organization known as World Help (if you haven't heard of them, click on the link at the bottom of the post and check out their webpage).

Day one:
We get on a plane and fly a total of three and a half hours before arriving in Guatemala City. There isn't even a time change difference. Poverty is so much closer than we think!

We met up with the VA group at the baggage claim and went to the Westin; definitely not roughing it, but apparently we needed to stay in Guatemala City for a night before heading to the mission. We had a conference during dinner that night and then went to bed.

Day Two:
In the morning, there was an earthquake tremor.

I slept through it.

Awesome, right? The most exciting part of my morning was waking up to Taylor Swift blasting into my ears (forgot to take off the iPod before falling asleep).

We packed up, got on a bus, and pulled out of the hotel at seven-ish in the morning.

Insert three hour drive here.

Dad woke me up as we pulled into the mission, Hope of Life. The mission sits on 3,000 acres of rural Guatemalan land. The directors, a man and his wife, have started an elderly home, an infant and child rescue center, and an orphanage; on top of that they feed roughly 150,000 people a day in the surrounding villages and are currently building houses for them, as well (more on that later). Needless to say, I was astonished.

The bus chugged up the looming mountainside to the mission compound, where we all got off and collected our luggage. Everyone was staying here except... the World Help directors, the group director, Mimi, Dad, and me. We the chosen few climbed into a van and were whisked away to the Visionary House, a gorgeous three story structure with trees and flowers growing all around, a stunning view, and clean, pretty rooms with air conditioning.

Everyone met back up for lunch in this beautiful giant cabana/kitchen/cafeteria for a really, really, really delicious meal, then jumped onto a new set of buses and headed out on a whirlwind tour of the poverty in Guate.

We first visited a landfill where children collect broken glass all day, everyday for 25 cents. The mission had workers out there feeding them lunch - we found out that they do this every day. Next we went to a nearby village and dedicated three water wells. It was sweltering outside - 105 degrees - and my Dad wasn't feeling well. I found him in one of the trucks later on with some of the workers. He felt awful and was running a fever. Not good. But we still had one more stop to make: we passed out bags of food and Christmas for an Orphan shoeboxes to the kids in yet another village before heading back to the mission for dinner.

Day 3:
My Dad was still sick at this point, so I headed down to breakfast without him. After yet another tasty meal, we headed out.

The bus was filled with the sounds of laughter, chatter, and clicking cameras. As we turned the corner and our destination came into view, though, the chatter turned to aghast silence. The cameras stopped clicking. The laughter was smothered by sorrow and some dissolved into tears. 4,500 people, we were told, call this place home.

Rows upon rows of dirty, lean-to shacks lined the flat, dusty area. Many of the homes consisted of sticks or pieces of wood jammed into the ground with plastic siding or leftover tarp wrapped around and thrown on top. When it rained, there was no barrier stopping the water from turning their foors of dirt into mud.

That's hard to see.

After distributing some food, though, we visited the homes of three special families. Hope of Life had built them new houses to replace their weather-beaten, makeshift shelters. We would first go into the old house (which the families now used as kitchens), try to fathom living there, then enter the new house. The new houses were smaller than my whole bedroom, but they had thick walls, concrete floors a foot off the ground, a porch, bright paint, and real beds for the kiddos.

It was so much better, I can't even describe to you the transformation. Know how much it costs? $6500.

That afternoon we were back at the mission. My Dad got up and had lunch with everyone, and then everyone took a tour of the mission. We saw the elderly home, the baby rescue center, and - my favorite - the orphanage. We then split into three groups to go serve at one of the locations until dinner.

Now, when I say orphanage, there's one thing you have to understand. These kids have it made! They are so much better off there than they would be in one of the villages. They had food, clothes, shelter, an education, music, and plenty of love! They're just normal kids. I had so much fun just hanging out with them, talking with them as best I could, watching them dance, and giving them hugs. We decorated some pretty cool bags at the craft table, too, if I do say so myself.

Day 4:
In the morning we dedicated another water well in neighboring village.

Right after lunch, we got to go serve at one of the three HL ministries. I went straight for the orphanage again.

The craft that day was bead bracelets. Bad idea, don't recommend it. There were beads all over that place by the end. Kids kept dropping them, adults kept dropping them, they were rolling all over. And they were hard to tie, man! But all that aside, we got to hang out on the playground afterwards with them. Most of them started playing soccer - they're seven years younger than me at least and better at fĂștbol than I will ever be in my life. One little bitty guy had a mini beach ball that one of the ladies in the group had given him and was tring to shoot it like a basketball. So I hoisted him up and let him dunk it. Turns out, that's fun in any language.

The mission workers turned on music and they all started singing and dancing. They wanted to teach us, but somehow us white girls never got it down quite as well. :)

We had to leave, eventually. They all gave us enormous hugs. I don't like the leaving the kids part. I don't like it in New Orleans, I don't like it in Guatemala.

That night at dinner, lots of people gave testimonies about their experience. Noel, the vice president of World Help and an all-around nice woman, gave her testimony. She said she had been thinking of me all week because she was about my age when she really felt the call to mission. It meant a lot to me that she said that. Her testimony was amazing, too, and I love that both she and her dad put the emphasis on changing individual lives.

"You can't save them all, but you can save one."

Day 5:
We got up at 5, were on the bus at 6, and pulled out of Hope of Life for Guatemala City.

Insert three hour bus ride here again.

We checked in at the airport, grabbed a burger, said our goodbyes, and went to our gate.

"I feel weird," I told my dad.

Half an hour later, I didn't feel weird anymore. I felt terrible. It was like getting hit by a truck.

"Hey," my Dad said suddenly, "That's what I felt like."

I found Mimi and got some medicine. One of the other ladies gave me a piece of ginger.

"It helps with the nausea," she told me.

I nodded politely, but planned on throwing it away. No way was I eating that. I already felt pukey.

I reached our gate as we were boarding. Standing in line for fifteen minutes was definitely not what I wanted to do. I needed to get horizontal. Now.

"What's that?" my Dad asked, pointing to the ginger. I explained and he told me I had to eat it.

"No!" I hissed.

"Yes," he commanded.

If I blow chunks all over the plane cabin, you will be so sorry, buster, I thought as I shoved the flat little piece of gross into my mouth and held my nose. Ewww.

I was shaking by the time we got on the plane, and though I never did throw up, I managed to completely freak out every other passenger before we landed.

Never have I been so glad to be home. :)

One short flight later and we were in the suburban with my Mom and two sisters and the Backyardigans singing, "Check me, I got the rad moves - the supersuper bad truly mad moves."

Home is the best.

3/1/10

Just Fine, Thank You

Hello.

It has been a while, hasn't it? A lot has happened in the time I've been gone. I have a lot to talk about. And everything I need to say is leaping out from the file folders in my brain, singing,

"Pick me! Pick me! Pick me!"

They all sound so convincing, I don't know where to begin.

So I decided I'm not going to start with any one or finish with any other. I'm going to put them all into different posts. That way they each get enough attention.

Let the posts begin!