kara

A Labor Day Weekend Party

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Labor Day weekend we went to a party at Mandy and Bill’s house, to meet Amy’s fiance, Eric, and check out all the amazing things Mandy and Bill have done to their home, including refinishing their basement. This was after the first OSU football game, hence Andy’s smile.

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Evan and Chris

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Dara and Mike

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Eric and Amy, engaged!

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Mark, Connor and Christine

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Sigh.

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Greg and Jenna

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Isabella and Sophie

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The OU Girls

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Mandy and Banjo

Thanks for opening your house for us, Mandy and Bill! It was a great evening.

“Take rest; a field that has rested gives a bountiful crop.” —Ovid

A Ride in a Pontoon Boat

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A couple weekends ago we went to Tennessee. The whole way there Mom and Dad kept going on and on and on about how I was going to get to ride in a boat. When we first got on the boat, I didn’t see what the big deal was.

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But then Zoey seemed to be enjoying herself, so I thought, Hey! This might be fun!

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Not fun. Not at all fun. Apparently when you’re little and you ride on a boat you have to wear a horrible, hot, hideous life jacket. I hated it.

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Turns out it fit much better when I stood up. And it did match my outfit.

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I eventually calmed down (Jenna’s lap helped) and admired the lake.

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Maybe it was the gentle rocking, maybe it was the fact that I was up from 1am to 5am the night before (Mom and Dad loved that) or maybe it was Jenna’s calming touch (she was able to get me to sleep on our ski trip, too) but I eventually fell asleep.

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Mom and Dad really loved this (and I’m not being sarcastic this time).

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“A lake is the landscape’s most beautiful and expressive feature. It is earth’s eye; looking into which the beholder measures the depth of his own nature.” —Henry David Thoreau

Happy Birthday, Angel!

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August 26 we celebrated Angel’s birthday at her house by eating a fantastically delicious meal her brother, Stephen, cooked.

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Chef Stephen, Emily and Zoey

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We left when the eye-rubbing began. Notice in the first picture there’s a huge piece of cake missing. Angel’s family insisted we take some home. It was only after they cut that I realized she hadn’t even blown out her candles yet. That’s kindness.

“All the world is birthday cake, so take a piece, but not too much.” —George Harrison

On Posing, Pushing and Ponytails

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We were a little early to our lunch/bridge walk play date with Tari, Whitney and Lauren, so Mom and I walked around Newport on the Levee. I had so much fun running away from the spot Mom wanted me to pose in front of so she could get a picture.

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To make up for this I insisted on pushing the stroller so Mom wouldn’t have to.

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And check out Lauren’s ponytail! Mom says I have a lot of hair growing to do before I can have a ponytail. I’m working on it.

“Let the world know you as you are, not as you think you should be, because sooner or later, if you are posing, you will forget the pose, and then where are you?” —Fanny Brice

Sophie, the Artist

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Check out the easel Mom bought me!

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It takes great skill and practice to scribble.

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After my chalk masterpiece, Mom got out the markers and paint! (And a splat mat to go underneath the easel.)

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By the end of the afternoon my onesie and knees and feet and hands were red and yellow and brown and blue. That, Mom says, is the sign of a good afternoon.

“Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up.” —Pablo Picasso

Welcome, George Domingo Sanchez!

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A couple weeks ago Sophie and I got to meet the handsome George Domingo Sanchez, born August 14, 2009 at 11:43 am. He’s the son of Ben and Erin (a friend I’ve known since the first grade) Sanchez. Erin seemed so happy and put-together for a first-time mom. Sophie, however, seemed a little jealous and insisted on sitting on my lap while I held George. Congratulations, Erin and Ben, and welcome, baby George!

“A babe in the house is a well-spring of pleasure, a messenger of peace and love, a resting place for innocence on earth, a link between angels and men.” —Martin Fraquhar Tupper

Sea Glass

After our second miscarriage in April 2007 I thought I would go crazy with the everyday because the everyday seemed in every way wrong. I knew what was ahead of me—days of coming home from work and sitting on the couch, sometimes crying, sometimes numb. In desperate need of an escape and not wanting to repeat those long evenings Andy and I booked a trip to San Jose del Cabo on a Wednesday and left the following Saturday. It was, perhaps, the most spontaneous thing we’ve ever done. For four nights and five days we drank rum and Diet Coke, watched pelicans skim the ocean and played Scrabble, the Spanish version.

On the last morning I got up early to search for a couple more pieces of sea glass before leaving our beachfront resort. An old woman, dressed all in white except for the shawl draped across her shoulders, approached me with bathing suit cover-ups for sale. She spoke little English. “No,” I said. “Gracias.” Then she pulled out child-sized cover-ups. “For your baby,” she said. “No,” I said again. But she was insistent. Over and over again, despite me shaking my head and wondering what “I don’t have a baby” is in Spanish, the old woman repeated those three words: “For your baby, for your baby, for your baby.”

A few minutes later Andy, who had been showering, came up behind me and wrapped his arms around my waist, only to discover I was crying. The woman was gone.

Maybe it was coincidence. Maybe the woman sensed the pregnancy that, physically, was no longer there. Maybe, in a way I can’t begin to understand, our meeting was the world’s way of telling me someday I’ll have a baby to buy a beautiful beach cover-up for while vacationing in Mexico. Maybe she just assumed I had a baby, because I was a woman of child-bearing age, and maybe she pressed the issue simply so she would have money for lunch. I don’t know. I’ll never know.

But I kept that sea glass.

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My mother-in-law, who makes beautiful handmade jewelry, wrapped some of the pieces for me. I now have two necklaces and two pairs of earrings. I wear them often. And I think about that old woman dressed in white on the beach. I think about those long evenings on the couch. I think about the pelicans and the cacti and the water, too rough to swim. And I think these things while taking a walk with my daughter on a cool September evening, fingering the wire-wrapped glass resting against my skin. I think about life, about moments, and how sometimes, it takes a little tumbling to turn something ordinary, and perhaps even ugly, beautiful and smooth.

“By the time I’m done collecting for the day, I know I’ve amassed a basket full of time if only it could tell its story.” —Leasa Garvin

Picking Blackberries

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Mom says August and September are special months because that’s when Great Uncle Roger’s blackberries ripen. And this year, I got to pick my own! Apparently I’m a very good picker because I only picked the ripe ones (although I did tend to favor the big ones). And I only ate one. Honest.

Blackberry Eating

I love to go out in late September
among the fat, overripe, icy, black blackberries
to eat blackberries for breakfast,
the stalks very prickly, a penalty
they earn for knowing the black art
of blackberry-making; and as I stand among them
lifting the stalks to my mouth, the ripest berries
fall almost unbidden to my tongue,
as words sometimes do, certain peculiar words
like strengths or squinched,
many-lettered, one-syllabled lumps,
which I squeeze, squinch open, and splurge well
in the silent, startled, icy, black language
of blackberry—eating in late September.

by Galway Kinnell

Visiting Great Grandma Gebhart

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After our visit to see Great Grandma Mangan, we visited Great Grandma Gebhart. I also got to see Great Uncle Roger and Aunt Ellen (she prefers to leave the “Great” part off). I chewed a straw while I watched them make blackberry jam. Mom was worried about me being in the kitchen, but Great Grandma wrote her and said it would be a good opportunity for me to learn how to make jam. She said my Great Grandpa used to say, “You can’t learn any younger!”

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After picking blackberries (more on that later) I played the piano. It was just my size!

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I got lots of lap time after that.

“Sunday clears away the rust of the whole week.” —Joseph Addison