Grandma and Grandpa Visit from Spain!!!
Just last week my parents came for a little visit from Spain. We had such a great time, and only had two complaints: the visit was too short and now our oldest can't stop begging to play crazy eights, thanks grandma!!!
For the most part my parents started out pretty normal when they got here and by the end of the time spent with my crazy boys they were a wacky force to be reckoned with. Just check out the following shots, they are documented proof.
During the time they were here we played fútbol, went to a museum, picked blueberries, went shopping, played the before-mentioned card game over and over, watched some good flicks and mostly just enjoyed being together even when we weren't doing anything.
They also brought my boys some Spain champions jerseys!! More posts and pictures to follow-for now enjoy the weirdness that was unleashed.
Do you think there was something in that hot chocolate???
We Love Camping!!!
There are so many reasons our lives are better told in pictures. Not only are they worth thousand words, they are prettier and less rambly too.
All you have to know is that we went camping with some friends and loved every second of it.
Oliver's quote of the trip: "I want more crawdads, they are so good- they taste just like caterpillars!"...Uhhh, I should watch this child better when he is outside, right? Eeek.
Our last camping trip was great too! Oh, and we had some super yummy food.
Do any of you know un-crowded, way cool, camping places in Oregon? Or do you have a favourite camping memory?
I’m Done Eating Bubbles (A Post About Love)
photo by richard.heeks
God knows my love language, He knows I need to actually feel the pressure of himself all throughout me. The settling of his weight so light and thick- a feeling that I can only feel and not describe. I am not really a person of words, although they do speak to me, I am a person of feeling. My love language is touch.
I married a man who's love language is not touch, his native love language is words of affirmation. Although we both try to be literate, or even conversationally fluent in each other's love languages we just don't get how. I long to be filled up by him knowing to hold my hand when we are walking, or put his arm around me- but when he tries it is awkward and feels fake or stilted, and I push away, because the awkward touch just leaves me wanting for the way it could feel, but doesn't. I do the same. He is very sweet about it, but it hurts him just as bad. He longs for words- words of affirmation. When he does something (anything) he wants immediate praise, I feel that I am giving him lip service when I say: "great job!", "Thank you for..." and other cliche phrases that are written on kindergarten stickers to be doled out by smiling teachers. I feel foolish and incompetent and every-single-time I feel inadequate to give him what it is that fills him up most, and I am.
I have never heard of a couple that is able to satisfy the other just perfectly. Is that surprising? I hope not. As much as we can lean into each other and learn to better speak to each other- still there is one, and only One who always gets it right. God. Every time I feel sad about The Husband's deficiency (or my need) it is because I am not feeling it enough from God. If I would let myself be met by Him who can do it so perfectly that would also free up The Husband to do the best he can and it would just be the blessing on top of blessing to bring me to overflowing. When I depend first on man, and then fill up the remainder with God it will always feel like eating bubbles. But when the soul is satisfied by the stout satisfaction that is Christ, The Husband's well meaning love isn't empty bubbles anymore it s a sweeter blessing than my words could express.
Just as I say this and read it back to myself I still wish it could be different. I wish I could be whole without God. My sin nature really fights dependency to an extreme level, even dependency on someone who won't let me down. In my human state I would rather feel some holes than trust anyone. Running to God does not come naturally to me, I would rather lean on myself while pretending to lean on The Husband and be annoyed when he falls short while patting myself on the back with feelings of false humility thinking of how really I am a martyr (ha!. I would rather not have to invest the time in God that it takes for Him to burp out the air bubbles of imperfection that others have left inside me. I then realize just how selfish it is for me to be this way. And how if I keep it up The Husband is doomed to never be good enough and always fail.
Bring it on God!!
I hear it coming. Pat, pat, pat...."BuRRRRRRP!"
The Husband: Leave Some Skin on the Pavement
Our six year-old son Jackson received a fantastic birthday present this year: his very first skateboard. And of course his parents, being the incredibly responsible individuals they are, outfitted him with an impressive array of protective gear to go along with said skateboard. The poor boy, when he wants to ride the skateboard, has to go through a 15-minute ritual in which he dawns a space-age helmet and more pads than an NHL goalie. When he's finished, he looks like he's ready to go on American Gladiators.
Jackson has to wear all of this body armor because his skateboard is, in fact, specifically designed to maim him when tries to ride it. The skateboard fulfills its purpose each time it flings Jackson wildly into the air and sends him crashing to the concrete on our back patio.
Think about it: a skateboard is a flat, narrow piece of wood bolted to four small wheels, highly greased so that when force is applied it shoots incredibly fast in whatever direction happens to be convenient. As an illustration for this argument, let's say you're having a friend over for dinner and you want to break his leg when he arrives. I challenge you to find a more efficient way of accomplishing this than simply placing a skateboard right inside the front door and turning the lights out.
Yes indeed, skateboards are dangerous things. Which is why I was so pleased to give one to my son in the hope that he will acquire some truly memorable battle scars this summer. Few things are more important to building a young boy's self confidence than gnarly scabs he can show off to his friends. We didn't just give Jackson a skateboard, we gave him bragging rights.
In these days of rubber-padded playgrounds, class-action lawsuits and safety warnings voluminous enough to fill the Library of Congress, every healthy child should be afforded the opportunity to pick up some good old-fashioned scrapes, bruises, cuts, sprains and minor bodily disfigurements. It's good for them.
My own childhood would have been considerably less satisfying if I had not tried to crack my head open a few times (okay, more than a few times). The street in front of the house I grew up in is probably still marked with a healthy smattering of my flesh and blood. I remember one birthday on which I too opened brightly colored wrapping paper to reveal a four-wheeled death trap and, with a dozen of my friends watching, lugged it to the top of a nearby hill. I placed my foot on the board, took a deep breath, and prepared for my descent into glory. I was planning to swoosh down the hill making long, graceful S-curves, knees bent perfectly, arms casually at my side like a pro. I would then be greeted by the congratulatory shouts of my friends and hearty slaps on the back.
Unfortunately, when I arrived at the bottom of the hill I was no longer on the skateboard. In fact, by the time my limp, battered body tumbled to a stop, the skateboard was on top of me. Behind me, stretching for 20 feet or so on the pavement, was a streak of skin taken from the entire left side of
my body. I stood up, dusted myself off, and basked in a different kind of glory: the glory of a man who has just given himself a flesh wound while doing something stupid.
And that's only one example. A few feet away from the scene of my first downhill skateboarding attempt is a curb that permanently bears the indentation of my front teeth. I can still remember that moment, suspended in time, as I went flying over the handle bars of my bicycle with the words "I AM GOING TO DIE" flashing in my brain like a bright yellow neon sign. When I came to, I was slightly disappointed not to find myself standing at the pearly gates with Peter looking down at me and saying in a deep, booming voice, "Well son, you're dead. But that was such an awesome crash, we're going to send you back down again. Props to you."
I'm thinking I might take Jackson to my old street sometime and show him the faded evidence of my past attempts to place myself permanently on a liquid diet. It would probably make him feel a little better about his own gruesome wrecks on our back patio. And it would also emphasize an important lesson that I want both my kids to learn (a lesson I'm struggling to remember in adulthood): life is much more fun, interesting and fulfilling when you're willing to leave some skin on the pavement.
The Husband: She Excels Them All
In a previous post about how my wife and I first met, I mentioned that before she was dreadlock girl, Bethany was punk girl - spikey hair and face piercings included - and a few of you commented that you'd like to see photos of my lovely bride when she was in her punk phase.
Well, I am pleased to share a wonderful development. We have a good friend named Phil Cacka who is a professional photographer and owner of Hawthorn Photography in Portland. Bethany and I went to college with Phil and his wife Michelle "back in the day" when both Bethany and Michelle were classic punk queens.
The four of us once took a trip to Seattle with our college church group, and Phil snapped some absolutely fantastic pictures of Bethany walking around downtown, wearing a ratty old fur coat. Several days ago I emailed Phil to see if there was any chance he still had these pictures, which are now ten years old. And miracle of miracles, he did.
These pictures still make me weak in the knees, just like they did a decade ago. There's just something about them that makes me want to go out in the street, do a little soft shoe and croon in a deep voice at the moon (which for obvious reasons I will not actually do).
I think my favorite thing about them is that they capture something important about Bethany's personality: she's just a little bit insane. You have to look closely at her face, but you can tell - there's a bolt loose in her brain somewhere. To quote Stephen the Mad Irishman from Braveheart, she "isn't quite right in the head." And that is a very happy thing. I'm so glad I didn't marry a normal person.
I'm not sure why, but for some reason these pictures bring to my mind one of my favorite passages of scripture: Proverbs 31. Now, a college professor once warned me never to end a piece of writing by quoting someone else, admonishing me that to do so is to "surrender the key rhetorical space" or something like that. But in celebration of finding these pictures (thank you Phil!) and as a late tribute to Mother's Day, I think ceding the key rhetorical space to King Lemuel is entirely appropriate:
but you excel them all."
To Obey is Better Than Sacrifice

Jackson (5 years) told me that he wanted to write out the Commandments. We couldn't quite fit ten on his stones.
We have been going through seasons of change, of difficulty, of quiet and silence as far as direction goes. Recently we have heard God's leading. A while back we felt God called us to be missionaries to Spain and with all our hearts were thrilled to go. When we visited Spain we just didn't have a peace about it at all, it was an unmistakable 'NO'. This was confusing, nothing short of devastating but I clung to the verse that 'To obey is better than sacrifice' (1 Sam. 15:22) or in my case it would be to obey is better than blessing- because I just couldn't wait to go. As much as I know the truth in that, and in serving where He has called us it was hard. So then by assumption we just decided to stay at the church to which we moved, so that we could go and work with my parents in Spain, because maybe God was calling us there instead. I do not doubt for one second that God's plan and will was even there in that. I actually know that to be true now.
At that time we decided to pray, we have been praying since we got back from Spain in September praying for peace and confirmation about what His will for us was. The uncertain thing about prayer isn't that God hears or answers- but that he does so in ways we don't expect. I prayed that God would give me the ability to not be in the way as He lead. I mentioned before that we have felt in a holding pattern- in a silent place of waiting on God. That season just ended, we are in a new season. God has recently told us to head back to Calvary Chapel and as much as we are excited to go back home- I hate looking fickle. I am the type that once I make a decision I want to stick to it even if it isn't the right one. But that would be disobedient- and sin. So with mixed feelings of joy and shame we decide to go.
But God wants to deal with even that feeling of shame in me, to take that guilt away and give me what He intended to give me all along. After it was confirmed that we would go back, I started trying to pray and thank God," Oh God it is so good that you brought us to this other church to reach out, to stir things up and if only to meet one person who needed us- we are so thankful" I was once again humbled as God spoke to me about how that was part of what happened because of our obedience, but not why he brought us there. This is what He spoke to me:
When you realize your place through humility, through being broken and brought down low- only then will I be glorified. Because only then will you understand completely that any step above eternal condemnation is a gift and not yours to hold to tightly, or yours to boast of, find pride in, come to expect, or feel you have earned.
That is why there is beauty in the broken and why pain brings joy. Because only then do you not lean on yourself- you have no choice but to lean on Me. No longer will it matter if others think you are obeying or hearing, no longer will it matter because you are steadfast in Me. You have surrendered.
God spoke that to me a couple nights ago. I wrote it down and the first feelings were shock, relief, joy and then embarrassment. God was working on me trusting Him, which I already thought I did. But now I realize that for me it is harder to trust Him when He wants me to do things that make me look bad, make me look indecisive or confused, or when He tells me to stay and not to go. I can be so critical, so quick to judge others- why would I assume God would share His plan for them with me? He didn't even share His plan for me with me!!
At womens Bible study (that I have still been attending at Calvary Chapel Corvallis) our leader Cindy has been challenged that it shouldn't be 'more of God and less of me', but 'all of God and none of me'. I agree, because no matter how many bad things I didn't do, no matter how much I could have sinned growing up and didn't- nobody owes me anything. Actually I am the one who owes, I owe a debt that I can't pay. I am entitled to nothing- but through God's grace I am justified.
This righteousness from God comes through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe. there is no difference, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus. Romans 3: 22-24
What has God been working in your lately? I'd love to hear!
Today I Became A Real Farm Girl
I have always known my right of passage would be solitary and severe. What I didn't know is that it would come today. The question is, what constitutes a true able-bodied- farm girl and not just a trend follower-backyard farming-enthusiast ? Anyone can have the farm animals, have the land, and give the time it takes to tend and nurture the whole package. That is most certainly not what makes a farm girl.
The make of a farm girl is one who can follow animals and their land through all seasons, not just the pleasant ones. Today a chicken died. The death in itself is not what I am speaking of though, it is that I was able to pick up the body and dispose of it that today made me into a farm girl. I no longer have to have a man to do my bidding, I don't have to wait for him to come home and deal with the deceased bird. Death is-as we all know- a part of life, all life ends in death and I knew from the start that when I was able to touch a dead body that I would have reached that coveted status of farm girl.
We can all follow backyardigans, those trend-loving folk in whose growing circles chickens are trendy right now, growing your own food, subsistence living, and all such stuff. Having animals, feeding them and keeping them alive does not a farm girl make. One of those is made by doing the one thing you can't stand even thinking about, looking at, or touching- not like a girl, but like a farm girl. For me that meant grabbing that chicken by the feet and dealing with the feathery bod, might I say- like a real man would? Yes. I would. No icky tummy, no eyes closed and jumping backwards, no fretting, screeching or crying but just dealing in quick and precise movements. This might not be your right of passage at all, maybe for you what you dread the most of it all would be watching a live birth, or dealing with chicken poo, those all are just not my hardest thing to have to deal with, they don't even faze me really. Death of an animal for me is the worst, and not just death- but even looking at the dead body. Today I forced myself to pounce through that door and earn my right to be there with the rest of 'em. It is now that I am able to take and deal with the full responsibility of my animals. Today I became a real farm girl.
PS. I will let you know when I have become a 'Farm Woman'-as that would entail shooting the chicken and plucking and skinning and stewing it. Let me just say I haven't gotten there yet, not yet.
What would be your most dreaded duty if you have or were to have farm animals??








































