August 22, 2010

Funny Maggie comments

Maggie: Grandpa Ron, if you see a red light, you should stop.
Grandpa Ron: And what about a green light?
Maggie: Go.
Grandpa Ron: What if there's no light?
Pause.
Maggie: Out of batteries.

Today, out of the blue: Grammy has a tutu on her swimming suit just like me.

Maggie said to me after we returned to our airplane seats: That was a one player bathroom.


August 21, 2010

home again

I have a stain on my shirt. It is from Ethiopian food I shared with my family in Las Vegas. It is proof I was there today, and we were together. And it makes me sad and happy at the same time to see that little stain. I think I'll wear it to bed, so I can see it tomorrow. And until laundry day, I'll have something more tangible than memories that we were together.

August 10, 2010

Excellent masks

The kids love to play doctor. Axel decided today that he needed a mask and gloves for surgery. This has not been done previously. It was so funny, i had to photograph it.
Then when it was mag's turn, of course she wanted a mask and gloves too.
If you know the family Paul grew up in, you know they have it embeded in their genes to put underwear and mops on their heads. I don't know why. But my kids got it.

A conversation which took place on Sunday:
(I must preface this conversation with the information that Axel LOVES Imagine Dragons, almost as much as Paul does. Axel loves doing anything at all with his Dad. Axel is also super righteous. Probably the most righteous person in our family.)
Paul is watching his brother's band on you-tube performing at a show.
Axel: Hey, Dad, this is not Sunday music.
Dad: It's ok, this is my brother. It's ok to do things with your family on Sunday. Come watch it with me.
Axel was listening to church stories on lds.org.
Axel: No, it's a better choice to do this.
Dad: I think Axel has a little bit of his mother's self-righteousness.
I was beaming with pride in the corner. It's been a long standing discussion between Paul and I what is appropriate Sabbath Day music. Point for me.

August 9, 2010

For Marissa

What I mean is the picture is for you. The pie is for you if you come over tonight. If you come tomorrow it'll be gone. And I'm not jerking your chain, if you show at on my door, I'll give you a slice. FHE is at 7:00.
For the rest of you, strawberry rhubarb pie is my favorite in the world, and I made one today, pictured here with a few of our garden beauties.

delicious

So we have a little garden going, mostly we're eating tomatoes, but hopefully in a few months pumpkins too.

This is the dear little pumpkin a few days after I transplanted it into the ground. The first sprouted leaves were so beautiful. I was in love.


Now it's overtaking the little bed I made in the front yard. I still love it.

We have cherry tomatoes which are fine, and abundant, but the really delicious ones are the heirloom tomatoes. We eat them still warm from the sun, sprinkled with kosher salt. They are so juicy, many clothes have gotten stained.

I made this salad to bring to a party last night. The basil is fresh picked too. My first gardening summer is going well. No, the avocados were not grown in our back yard. I'm not that awesome.
This last one is blurry, but so funny. My kids are just like their Dad, they love to sleep, and since I've been married to him, I've learned the goodness of sleeping too. They often fall asleep during sacrament meeting.

August 8, 2010

Relief Society Lesson

Warning, this post is not a family or project update. It's not that entertaining, it's about circumcision. It's my religious thoughts. Read at your own risk.

I taught Relief Society today. For those of you not familiar with LDS lingo, the Relief Society is the organization of women in the church. This organization is primarily responsible for aiding members in increasing their faith and personal righteousness, strengthening families and serving the Lord and His children (pretty broad purpose, and I like it). We meet for an hour every week, customarily on Sunday after the main service. About 30 minutes of that hour is spent on a lesson, which is assigned by church headquarters. Every RS throughout the world teaches the exact same lesson on exactly the same day. So if you're travelling, and you go to a different congregation, you'll never miss a lesson. It's pretty fantastic.
One of my jobs in the organization is to teach the lesson once a month. This week's lesson was on covenants, and more specifically the Abrahamic covenant. I found the subject material fascinating. Honestly, I find all the lessons fascinating and spiritually filling. I never have enough time to teach all the great stuff I find. Even this week after judiciously crossing out the parts of my lesson that were less important (or perhaps slightly redundant) to leave time for the really important stuff, I still didn't have enough time. So I am left with this bottled up feeling of wanting to teach something I loved, but having no venue for the teaching. So, my readers, I have chosen this blog as my outlet. I hope you find it as interesting as I did.

In my lesson we got through the part of 'what specific promises did God make to Abraham and Abraham to God?' (I found this to be very helpful in organizing my understanding of the Abrahamic covenant) and 'as children of Abraham, how does this covenant translate to our situation?' Much of the covenant is found in Genesis 17.

So the part of the lesson I didn't get to is about circumcision, of which I've never really understood the importance.

Genesis 17:10,11, "This is my acovenant, which ye shall keep, between me and you and thy seed after thee; Every man child among you shall be bcircumcised. And ye shall acircumcise the flesh of your foreskin; and it shall be a btoken of the ccovenant betwixt me and you."

So it seems that circumcision was a sign of the covenant. The reminder of the promises you've made to God and He to you.

Verse 13 "He that is born in thy house, and he that is bought with thy money, must needs be circumcised: and my covenant shall be in your flesh for an aeverlasting covenant." The line that I loved was "my covenant shall be in your flesh". So the covenant was written on their bodies, where they couldn't forget it. But couldn't they have tattooed themselves? Why cut reproductive organs? This probably seemed drastic to Abraham's camp, who were all circumcised that same day with Abraham. From the LDS Old Testament Institute Manual I found an answer which satisfied me. I quote it here:

“The Abrahamic covenant makes frequent reference to one’s seed. The organ of the body that produces seed and brings about physical birth is the organ on which the token of the covenant was made."

It especially makes sense in thinking about the Law of Moses, which was so much about the physical representations of the spiritual laws. The covenant was written in their flesh, on the part of their bodies which pertained to a hefty portion of the covenant.

But under the new law that Christ established during His mortal ministry (He fulfilled the Law of Moses) circumcision was no longer required. However, they continue to reference it a lot in the New Testament, saying that now God requires a circumcision of the heart, and that this was the point all along. So what is circumcision of the heart? More from the Old Testament manual:

"The organ of spiritual rebirth, is the heart. In many places the Lord speaks of true circumcision as being the circumcision of the heart. The heart that is “circumcised” is one that loves God and is obedient to the Spirit. The “uncircumcised in heart” are wicked, proud, and rebellious.

So there is a correlation between circumcision under the old law, and loving God and obedience to the Spirit under the new law.

The Lord said in Genesis 17: 14 "And the uncircumcised man child whose flesh of his foreskin is not circumcised, that soul shall be acut off from his people; he hath broken my covenant."

So following our deductive reasoning, I think it's safe to say that being disobedient and not loving God means we are breaking our covenants, breaking the Abrahamic covenant, and forfeiting the blessings that covenant affords: salvation and exaltation being the most important.

Jeremiah prophesies of change of the token. Jeremiah 31: 31,33

"Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will make a anew bcovenant with the house of cIsrael, and with the house of Judah: But this shall be the acovenant that I will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the Lord, I will put my blaw in their inward parts, and write it in their chearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people."

So the questions I would've discussed with my class, and I've been asking myself, and now I ask you, are these:

Is the law written in your inward parts? The token of the old law was imprinted on the people; is the new token as imprinted in the people? in you?

How does being the Lord's covenant people influence your actions, how you present yourself?

My answers are for myself to ponder on.

If you're still reading you deserve a cookie.

August 6, 2010

Latest projects

So, Axel is getting ready for kindergarten, and one of the things he needs to bring is a blanket with his name on it. Well I wanted to make him something special to snuggle with at school that would maybe feel like a mama's hug. So I told him to look through my fabric and pick out anything he wanted and I'd make him a blanket out of it. Well, he picked out some plain, boring fabric that I really didn't like. So I got out some cool boyish design fabric. He hated all of it. He's very decisive. So I said, pick something else. I hated the other fabric he picked too. So I said, "Let's go to the fabric store and you can pick out whatever you want and we'll make it." At the fabric store, I told him he could pick any fabric he wanted in a certain area. It was the quilting section, and I like almost everything in there. He headed for the blue and white plaid. "Could I have this?" Mayday! Mayday! How could he pick the one ugly fabric? But then I said, let's look at some more. I said, what about this robot fabric? No. How about this frog fabric? No. How about this skull fabric? (I was reaching.) No. How about this red and white stripe? Yes. Hallelujah! Look this fabric has others that coordinate with it. We decided on 6 fabrics that he really liked, and I didn't think were hideous. We decided on a quilt pattern, I made it. He stayed by the machine a lot, very excited and loving the progress, giving me lots of encouragement.
He loves it, and I got to use my new quilting foot for the first time!

And I made some dresses for the girls. I know, they're a little big, but they'll fit next year too... and maybe the year after that. The greatest part of the dresses is that the top orange fabric is actually an old yucky Tshirt of Paul's that had paint splatters on it, and there were just enough clean spots for me to make the bodices out of it. I love upcycling!