Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Rent the Runway

I tried Rent the Runway for the first time for a wedding in August of last year.  It was so much fun to get to pick and wear a designer dress I signed up for the wait list for their unlimited program.  Apparently everyone else had the same idea because it took over 3 months to get into the program.  It’s pricey but I know it is something I’ll only do through the summer or fall of this year since if all goes according to plan I’ll be trading in fabulous designer pieces for maternity clothes.  It’s been fun to try different styles and designers I’ve never worn before and the garments are truly beautiful.  I will still never be the person who buys designer clothes because they are just too expensive but you truly can feel a difference in the fabrics and can see the level of craftsmanship and design that goes into these pieces.  

Here are the items I’ve gotten through the program so far:  


Our First Christmas in Our Home

I completely missed the boat on catching up on posts during my Christmas break.  I had some time off of work and fully intended to write but got swept up in relaxing, spending time with family, events, and seeing friends.  It was a really nice break.  We did a lot of binge watching Netflix, cooking together, and soaking up the comforting feelings of hosting people in our home.  There is a certain magic you feel when the house is clean, the food you cook is delicious, and you get to share it all with your favorite people.  One of the things we really enjoyed, although it was daunting at first, was decorating our “real” home for Christmas.  I say “real” because we now have a yard, a bunch of windows, a mantle, a stairway/banister, and all the other suburban spaces we never had before.  We definitely spent a little more than we meant to but at least we know the items we got will last a long time and we truly loved how festive everything felt. 

The mantle, banister, and outdoor lights were my favorites.  Here are some photos of our home all decked out for Christmas. 








We of course kept our annual Christmas party tradition alive.  The addition of our garage space for a photo booth/games and the fire pit for s’mores added a lot of charm and entertainment to the evening.  We were so thankful so many friends were willing to make the longer drive to the suburbs and it was fun introducing them to some of our newer friends and neighbors.  The most fun for us was being able to have Kyle’s cousin and David and his wife Katie as well as our friends Rob and Evan spend the weekend with us.  Having 4 bedrooms came in handy!  After everyone else left we sat around our kitchen table to talk, play cards, and ended up finishing off the Honeybaked Ham.  I remember thinking about the whole evening and looking around the table and feeling like my heart was so full that it might overflow in that moment!










Thursday, March 3, 2016

Audible: 2015 Book Summary

I will not lie; I’m not a fan of my 30 mile commute as a result of the move.  The mornings are nice to wake up and clear my head but the afternoons are just dreadful.  There is one major benefit of my extra car time and that is my discovery of and now obsession with Audible.  I hated audio books when I was kid and just about nothing put me to sleep faster but it's a whole different game as an adult.  It feels indulgent and lovely to have someone else tell you a story.  I am a bit picky about the narrator’s voice but thankfully most of the books I’ve gotten through audible have wonderful narrators. 

2015 Audible Books:
  • All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
  • The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins
  • Modern Romance by Aziz Ansari & Eric Klinenberg
  • Yes Please by Amy Poehler
  • China Rich Girlfriend by Kevin Kwan
  • The Martian by Andy Weir
  • Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell
  • Go Set a Watchmen by Harper Lee
  • Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty
  • Bone Gap by Laura Ruby
  • Carry On by Rainbow Rowell
  • Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan 
  • My True Love Gave to Me by Stephanie Perkins

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

2015 Year In Review

I’m so far behind on blogging but I have never missed a year in review and wanted to make sure to capture what a wonderful year 2015 was for us. 
  • We saw Billy Joel in concert
  • We sold our loft, bought a house, and moved to the burbs
  • We helped host a special needs prom at the church
  • I turned the big 3 0 
  • Dory & Ashley – two of the girls from my first small group graduated college!
  • I changed roles at work and started on a crazy new adventure leading test strategy for Universe 2.0
  • I got to attend the HP Discover Conference in Las Vegas
  • We celebrated our 7th wedding anniversary
  • Kyle received the Clendenin scholarship
  • Kyle was a top 3 finalist for Teacher of the Year at LHS
  • I took way more work trips to Seattle than I planned/wanted to but had fun on some of the trips exploring parts of the city
  • Kyle presented at GCTE & NCTE (Minneapolis)


Trips:
  • 12 Mile, IN
  • High School Camp
  • St. George Island
  • Savannah, GA


Weddings:
  • Megan & Mark – 1/17/2015
  • Erin & Travis – 3/7/2015
  • Cam & Megan – 8/29/2015



Our Friends New Additions:
  • Brandy & Brad had Ryder on November 4th
  • Taylor & Christy had Raine on November 23rd
  • Brett & Jaclyn had Carsen on December 5th
  • Erin & Cameron had Kendall on December 10th
  • Kelsey & Collette had Wexler on December 12th

My Testimony

I posted a couple months ago about finally finding a small group - you can read the post here

We have been sharing our testimonies and last Monday Kyle and I both shared ours.  I have been in youth ministry for years and have shared so many pieces of my testimony but had never told it all in one sitting.  God was really at work in my heart so I began writing down the pieces of my story that He so carefully strung together.  I am grateful for so many things in my life but sitting down and really studying how my journey has unfolded so far gave me a much deeper appreciation for all the doors God has opened and closed to guide me to where I am right now.  It renews my trust and faithfulness that even when things don't make sense in the current moment so something better than I could have planned is in front of me and I must be patient and faithful in walking towards it.

It feels very exposed posting this publicly but in sharing with our small group Monday I realized I love every part of my path because it all brought me to this place in my life.  I believe there is power in honesty and it not only sets us free from our anxiety of trying to seem perfect all the time but it also helps other people let down the walls in their heart to share their truth, struggles, hopes, and prayers.  Here is my testimony I shared:

I have fond memories of going to church as a child.  It was a routine/ritual of dressing up each week and sitting together in church.  We attended Methodist churches that were more traditional with hymnals, pews, choirs, hand bells, acolytes, and pastors in robes.  I acknowledged from an early that God existed but for my child and early adolescent years I viewed faith as a distant reverent respect.  Church was the place where I wore my best clothes, used my best manners, and worked to represent the most respectable side of myself.  Even my baptism was formal confirmation classes that started when I hit the right age and was completed by taking classes and learning the content.  I remember it being a special moment when I was baptized but it didn’t feel personal to me.  These experiences grew a divide between my faith and the rest of my life.

From a young age I have always been a risk averse and conscientious person.  It was not hard for me to avoid early teenage temptations because I knew from church I shouldn’t and I was terrified of getting in trouble.  I like spending time with my parents, was the straight A student, I loved my teachers/parents friends, and I always wanted to do my best when asked to do things by people in places of authority in my life.  My parents had some strong ideas about raising me – limited junk food, no cable TV, no video games but honestly I never minded that much.  However that doesn’t mean I didn’t splurge at friends’ houses whose parents had less strict rules! 

When I became a teenager my friends started inviting me to youth group.  It was so much fun.  It was so different from the type of church service I was used to.  There were games, electric guitars, adults asking about how we felt/what was going on in our lives (rather than content knowledge questions like at school), and messages about faith that described it as a personal relationship and journey.    The timing was good because for the first time in my life I started to have some tension in my relationship with my parents.  I felt like I was such a well behaved kid but I still struggled to live up to the standards they set.  Between hormones and added stress from school/dance/friends/boys I felt like I was losing my grip on some of the aspects of my life.  At this stage in life I would describe myself as a chameleon.  I absorbed the personalities and preferences of my friends and did/said the things they did.  My fear of consequences saved me from making some big mistakes but if my friend liked making goofy videos, reading gossip mags, obsessing over boy bands so did I.  I remember having to teach myself to listen to Star 94 instead of Fox 97 because I didn’t want people to think I was lame.  If my friends were boy crazy I would pick someone in my class to talk incessantly about.  I had so little confidence in my own point of view.  I felt different from people my age and my friends just seemed so much more interesting so I emulated them.  When I started going to youth group I remember noticing that people there were so more unique and confident in themselves.  At the time I didn’t understand why but it was something I recognized almost immediately. 

The light bulb turned on while I was at Windy Gap during a retreat.   I was away from all the distractions and noise of my regular life and I could finally hear the quiet voice that had been calling me to pursue my faith.  I was in quiet time on a hill looking at the stars and the magnitude of creation and felt a sense of peace that was unlike anything I had ever felt before.  All my worries were quiet and I felt like ready to pursue my faith knowing that in doing so I would be giving up the weight of my worries I had been carrying with me.  After camp I started volunteering as student leader, singing with the worship band, inviting my friends to youth group, and found my own church for Sundays where I could learn more about my faith in a more personal way.  The girls in my small group listened and supported me in ways my other friends had never done. 

In parallel I met Kyle my sophomore year of high school.  We had a funny and rocky start of us both pursuing one another but not at the same time which resulted in us dating and breaking up and dating and breaking up.  As adults we have talked about both of us recognizing at different points in time that we knew us being together was substantial and serious and we weren’t quite ready for that kind of relationship.  I think we both regret some of the hurt feelings we caused in that early dating stage but somehow we managed to remain friends throughout the whole process.  I know God’s hand was in that because what high school girl still wants to talk to the guy who broke up with her and vice versa.  Kyle was the one who invited me to young life, who encouraged me to go to windy gap, who encouraged me to start singing with the band, and who helped me find the church we attended.  He was a spiritual leader for me before he even realized he would end up taking on that role in a much bigger way as my husband.  He didn’t approve of the choices my friends made and he regularly made me think critically about how to balance spending time with them without becoming like them.  The summer before our senior year we finally sat down and realized we were ready to give our relationship a real try.  It was a wonderful year for us but we were both anxious about going to different colleges.

In college I drifted from my faith.  I was just so busy meeting new people and doing new things.  I went to Wesley some weeks but it was more social than spiritual for me.  I rested on my laurels that I didn’t break rules and felt like that was enough, that my faith would be waiting when I was ready to pick it back up.  I had Christian on my Facebook profile but my faith sat like a trophy on my bookshelf. 

The first year and a half of separate schools was the hardest for Kyle and I but after that we hit a turning point.  We had our own lives at our own schools but we were spending more time with one another and with the other person’s friends.  What was hard at first ended up being the thing that saved us from smothering one another I think.  I’m very thankful that God’s plans are so much better than mine.  Our biggest obstacle was the accident.  At first I felt helpless because there was nothing I could do.  And then I realized that even just sitting by his side or showing grace when he lost his cool was a small way I could help.  That I could be patient while he was angry and grieving and pray that he would come through the other side of it.  And that as he worked through all of it that we would still fit together and be able to grow together as a couple.  Kyle proposed my senior year after my last game as a Georgette.  On a night when one chapter of my life was closing the next and most exciting part year was just beginning.  We had a long engagement since we were so young and wanted to make sure work didn’t change us too much.  After college we moved back home and both became active in the church again.  Around the same time our high school youth pastor started at the church and asked us to volunteer with the student ministry.  Kyle was gung ho.  I was nervous.  I didn’t feel equipped but I felt God reminded me what a huge difference the leaders in my life made and Kyle kept nudging me as well so I agreed.  Serving together has been incredible.  We have seen 8 years of students come through and some we had a small impact and others we have built lifelong relationships.  God has revealed so much to us through working with the students.  I feel like it’s changed us more than any other impact we may have had on the students.  It has taught me to rely on God when I don’t trust and have confidence in my own gifts. 

I am so thankful for my faith in so many aspects of my life.  I have realized about myself that I often experience and connect with God through serving in ministry, my marriage, and through church.  This is not a bad thing but I feel convicted to dedicate more time pursuing God directly through quiet time and prayer.  If I continue to rely on serving, relationships, or church services then if those things are ever rocky then I will feel like my relationship with God is rocky.  I have experienced this first hand with some of the challenges in the student ministry over the past year.  I know in my heart my relationship with God transcends all that but I want to make sure any disappointment I feel in ministry, the church, or in my interactions with others does not affect the way I view God.


As I reflect on my life now and what is to come the things I need support and prayer on include my excitement and anxiety about our next stage of life.  We have put so much work in our marriage with God’s help and have reached a really healthy place in our relationship and our appreciation for one another.  I can speculate but can’t fully know how becoming parents will grow, shift, and challenge us.  I pray for peace and patience as we prepare to start that journey later this year.  I have always struggled with being self-critical and comparing myself to others.  I’ve grown in this area but it is an ongoing challenge for me.  While I’m thankful for the ways it has let me relate to students I want to be freed from the thorns of comparison and self-doubt.  Especially as we prepare our hearts and minds for growing our family.  I want to be able to give myself grace as I make mistakes and learn through trials.  I want to make more room for joy in my daily life.  I also pray that I will be bolder in sharing my faith with others.  My introversion often gets in my way.  While I do well in deeper relationships I struggle in opening up completely to new people.  I pray that I can get out of the way and let God shine through more often when interacting with new people.