Category Archives: holiday

Christmas 2019

Christmas break has been just the right amount of slow with small spurts of busyness. It’s been full of sweet surprises and moments and laughter. I am so thankful that God has blessed me with this family of mine!

Thanksgiving 2019

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Ms. Debbie’s daughters (Becky and Amy), Bethany’s family and my family attempted to get a quick photo shoot in for a surprise Christmas gift for Debbie and Al of all 10 grandkids. We had to pull it off quickly on Thanksgiving day because some of the family members were in from out of town, the weather was chilly and there were 2 four-month-old babies involved.

I’m glad we took the time and money to do this and look forward to ten years from now when we can re-create it (possibly with some great-grandkids!).

Then once we yelled at our kids to smile and stop squinting and “act like you like each other” for a few minutes, we headed to Aunt Diane’s and Uncle Walt’s for Thanksgiving dinner and time with family.

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I didn’t take any food pictures or family pictures that day, but I should have! Aunt Lele and Uncle Mark and Cousin Megan, Jordan and little, sweet Rylan were in from out of town. We don’t get to spend nearly enough time with them since they moved to Nashville several years ago.

I am so thankful to Aunt Diane and Uncle Walt for always opening up their home. The Grubb family traditions are my favorite parts of the holidays.

 

Halloween 2016

 

Christmas 2014

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We had a great Christmas this year!  Santa went a little overboard and blew the budget but that’s just the way it goes sometimes.  The time we spent with family was really the highlight.  We were able to have a traditional Grubb Christmas Eve with Chris’s family and extended family and then on Christmas day my parents, my “little” brother and his girlfriend spent the day with us.  That afternoon even more family stopped by and we ate and ate and ate, which is always nice.  It was a full, busy, happy time.

Thanksgiving 2014

We continued a long tradition of having Thanksgiving dinner at Aunt Diane and Uncle Walt’s house.  Many family members were there but there were some important ones missing. My dad decided not to come and Aunt Faye was in the hospital.  It was lovely to see the family members I don’t see often enough. I even got to talk writing with cousin Michael, who knows much more than I do, even though he’s ten years younger than me.

Early in the day I had just finished my first novel, I crossed the NaNoWriMo finish line at 50,057 words. I am thankful I finished so I could enjoy the rest of the weekend with my family.  I still can’t believe I actually managed to write it.  I am not ready to let anyone read it, or to even talk about it.  We’ll see if that changes once I start editing in January.

Keeping with the NaNoWriMo spirit of doing things that you’ve never done before I decided to go upstairs at Uncle Walt and Aunt Diane’s house.  I know it sounds insane but since Chris and I started dating in January 2001, I’ve been to their house at least twice a year and had never gone upstairs.  I realized about 4 years into it that I never had and then I thought it would be fun to see how long I could go without going up.  Aunt Diane and I decided this was the year so I did it.  It’s nice up there. Spacious.

I’m also reading Harry Potter for the first time and I might, MIGHT go to Starbucks for the very first time, too. Maybe.

my veteran

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When Chris returned from his last deployment, a friend of ours came to photograph the reunion at the airport. It had been six months since the kids had seen him, Jonah didn’t really remember him since he was a little over a year when he left.  These pictures of Parker are the ones that really stood out to me.  While Theodore, Katie and Foster had run to Chris and bear hugged him, Parker clung behind me and Chris had to convince him to come and give him a hug.  He was 3 and a half years old, so 6 months without Chris had seemed like a lifetime.

My husband recently celebrated his 15th year in the Air National Guard.  He’s deployed out of country several times and had many weeks and countless weekends away from us and from his extended family.  He’s missed birthdays and holidays and graduations.  But I don’t think it’s the big things that are the hardest on the men and women who have to be separated from their homes and families, from their jobs and churches, from their own world, I think it’s the little things.

Daddies (and mommies) are supposed to be there when their children go to bed, when they get sick or when they win a board game, when they finally get that book read or that puzzle built. They are supposed to be there for skinned knees and hurt feelings, for when little guys are brave enough to ride without training wheels and can write their name without help.

Daddies aren’t supposed to have to convince their little boys that it’s safe to come and give them a hug.

So to all the veterans out there who have missed the little things for days, months or even years.  Thank you so much for ALL that you sacrifice.

 

 

spring 2014

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Christmas 2013

Cousins!
My sweet girl before the Christmas program at church.

On our way to worship the Sunday morning before Christmas.
Yes, my 2 year old still has his pacifier.





Treats from Papaw and Mrs. Debbie.

One happy boy!

“I can’t believe it!!”

Santa is so neat and orderly…

Let the chaos begin…

Blessed little boys and girl! 🙂
 
Katie realizing Grandad and Grammy had snuck in on Christmas Eve night!

“Thanks Uncle Anthony!”

“Could someone please open this?!? It’s so HEAVY!”

Ready for battle…well after I put on some pants…

Davy…Davy Crockett…King of the wild frontier…

Happy with her new gardening set!
 
“Look Mommy! I’m a real knight!”

Sharing a snack with Uncle Anthony.

“Ready to ride!”

“Ouch.”

“I’m taking my bike and going home!”
 

“Having Daddy home for Christmas? Two thumbs up!”
 

Thanksgiving 2013

 
We celebrated Thanksgiving at Uncle Walt and Aunt Diane’s cabin this year.  It’s so beautiful up there and the day turned out lovely.  Filled with many things to be thankful for: beloved family and friends, delicious food, sunshine and snow, card games and conversation, a wrap-around porch to play tag!
 
 

the woman in the picture

This will be the first Mother’s Day I have spent without my children since having my first child 9 years ago. I won’t be with my mom today either.

My Grandfather Drew has passed away and I have traveled to California to be present with my dad and my Aunt Eileen.

In our culture, it seems that whenever loved ones die, we find ourselves pouring over old photographs.  This time has been no different.

As I’ve studied the past through small aging images, trying to piece together what life was like for my Grandfather who was born in 1923, I seem to always begin with the woman (or women) in the picture.

It might be different for men, but we women seem to divide ourselves into 2 categories. Those who have (or had) children, and those who have not. This is really a shame.

What I am finally growing to understand, through maturity I suppose, is that the defining aspect of a mother is not the moment she birthed a child.  A woman becomes a mother, when she gives birth, gives life to the part of her that nurtures.

I remember that moment vividly in my life. In my 5th grade class, in my rundown school, there was a hole in the floor around a pipe. As we were sitting in class one day, we start to hear this small, quiet mewing coming from under the floor.

Of course, we were curious. When we were freed from our little wooden desks and allowed to move about the class, several of us rushed to the spot we had been eyeing for what felt like hours (it could have been minutes). As we sat hunched over, peering into the dark hole trying to see if there was really a cat stuck under us.  I sat there saying “here, kitty kitty, here kitty kitty” but we weren’t able to see or hear anything.

It seem to be several days of this, and I grew increasingly anxious that this poor little cat was going to die under our classroom.

One day when only a couple of the girls were peering over the hole (the boys had moved on to bigger and better distractions) we had the idea to try and lure the kitty closer to us with food. I can see us now, on our knees, getting dusty and dirty, using  a few fingers to grasp (slightly as to not crush the puff but with enough pressure we wouldn’t lose our grip on it) an orange cheese puff down between the hole in the tile and the pipe. We dangled and called, dangled and called then all of a sudden this furry paw shoots up and bats at the cheese puff, successfully knocking into the dark, underworld the kitty was stuck in.

From that point on, I determined that I would keep that cat. She needed to be rescued, protected, loved and fed. I was the woman for the job.

After a short time, several instances of defying authority and consequences from my teacher, principal and bus driver. I was riding home with my new cat in  a cardboard box.

That feeling, that need to nurture is what makes a woman a mother.

Some women do have children, but others, many, many others spend their lives nurturing other children, in the mission field or as an aunt. As a nanny or a neighbor. As a teacher or a friend.

Women nurture their animals, their cats and dogs, their horses.

We nurture our own parents as they age and become like little children.

I may not be with my mother today or with my children, but I feel blessed that I get to spend time with another woman in my life who has been a wonderful example of how to nurture others.