Saturday, May 31, 2008

Its Almost Over



Alec's last soccer game is this morning. Thank God. It's been torture. His team is awful. They have lost every game except for one, and that game was tied.

Don't worry, Alec doesn't read my blog.

At the beginning of the season, his coach told everyone that regardless of their wins, each boy would receive a trophy, because it was more about teamwork...etc.

It will be kinda funny handing out trophies to a team that is probably in last place.

Hip hip hooray!

Thursday, May 29, 2008

The Graduate



Krista's graduation was last night. When I told Josh and Krista that I was coming along, they were very excited. I was so proud to watch her. She graduated with cum laude, which means high honor. Watching Josh watch her was priceless. He was so proud and excited for her.

I regret not taking any pictures of her in her cap and gown though. I watched as her Mom snapped a bunch of pictures and also was busy meeting her family. I had never met Krista's two sisters and their families, as well as an aunt, one of her grandpa's and her grandma.

Congratulations Krista!

Birthday Party Highlights

Cleddus crashed my party. For those of you who are wondering, who in the world is Cleddus, he is the guy who is always crashing the scene at church. He is what you call a hillbilly. He carries a plunger with him all of the time and has goofy looking teeth. You had to be there.



Someone at my party thought he was a stripper at first! She had never even heard of Cleddus, so you can just about imagine anything when you first see him in action. He was kind enough to give me a wide variety of wonderful little gifts, including the gorgeous hat.



I'm HOW old?



Opening gifts in front of the 30+ people was a bit embarrassing. But reflecting on it now and thinking of how each person specially choose something for me makes me feel so special. They were thoughtful gifts. The cards were either halarious and/or written with lots of love.



It was a beautiful day spent with those I love so much. It will definitely be a birthday memory that I will always cherish. Turning forty isn't so bad after all.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Happy Campers

Last Friday, we packed up and took the kids camping. Not all of 'em, just Rachel and Alec. They each brought a friend. Rachel chose her friend Kelsey, Alec of course brought along Daniel. We had a great weekend. Its the first time we had been at this campground, which is just north of Otisville.

John took the kids canoeing a couple of times. I sat back at the camp site and enjoyed some quiet time after taking a few photos of them.


John had to get all the 'icky' water out of the girls' canoe.


After canoeing, the kids were brave enough to try out "the blob". They had a blast.


Alec and Daniel were hardly seen except for dinner and around the fire later in the day. Those two boys had a great time exploring and bicycling all around the campground.



We are planning on going again in July and then for Labor Day weekend.

Friday, May 23, 2008

May 23, 2008

Today is my big 40th birthday.

How do I feel?

NOT any different from yesterday!

No lie.

It's just a number.

Just happens to be twenty years older than I was when I was twenty.

Ouch.

Okay, focus. It's going to be just fine.

I'm a young Mom! Right?

I'm wiser. Right?

I have a lot to be grateful for.

Yes I do.

Do you realize that forty years is 14,600 days, plus a few extra leap year days.

I remember adding up how many minutes I had lived when I was in 6th grade and showing it to my teacher. I had all of the math written out on a sheet of paper to prove it. See, I've always been a weirdo.

Joan Collins, Drew Carey, Rosemary Clooney and Jewel share my May 23 birthdate.

In 1968:

Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In debuts on NBC.

It was a leap year.

Martin Luther King Jr was shot and killed.

Lyndon B. Johnson signs Civil RIghts Act 1968.

Robert F. Kennedy was shot and killed

The film Yellow Submarine released by the Beatles.

The soap opera One Life to Live premieres.

Aristotle Onassis and Jacqueline Kennedy marry.

Helen Keller dies.

These people were born in 1968 and are joyously turning 40 with me:

Molly Ringwald
Gary Coleman
Chad Low
Mary Lou Retton
Sarah McLachlan
Lisa Marie Presley
Edward Burns
Kenney Chesney
Lucy Lawless
Patricia Arquette
Ashley Judd
Debra Messing
Rachael Ray
Will Smith
James Caviezel
Hugh Jackman
Vanilla Ice

Also, at least five others from church:

Ronda
Shannon
Sherry
Todd T.
Todd B.

Oh Happy Day.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Tragic

If you haven't already heard ~

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hCX0xYfGnwKXZ56bJKPQoZGnyBKgD90QLK081

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Remembering Them

With Memorial Day coming upon us, I want to take some time to reflect on loved ones who have passed on into eternity:

Charles Henry Fredericks
My grandpa, who died in 1972, when I was only four years old. Sadly, I do not remember him. I only know him through photos and shared memories. I do know this, that he loved his family and was thrilled to have grandchildren. He and my grandma had 11 children and since his death there have been numerous grandchildren, great grandchildren and even great great grandchildren added to the family! He had a son named after him, my "Uncle Chuck", a grandson "Chuckie" and a great grandson "Charles" as well as another grandson "Matthew Charles".

Anna Mary Fredericks
My grandma, who died in 1990. There are so many memories of this wonderful woman. Oh how we doted on her and she loved every minute of it. Things that remind me of her: Coca Cola, Crotcheting, Game Shows, Card Games, African Violets, the Potato Soup that I now make and Muumuus (look it up if you don't know what that is). I remember how proud she was when John and I stopped by her house with our firstborn on the way home from the hospital. I remember stopping and seeing her at the hospital in my wedding gown because she was hospitalized and wasn't able to make it to my wedding. I also remember the day she died. I was going shopping with a friend and had just dropped Josh off at my sister's. As I was pulling out of her driveway, Kristie ran outside and motioned for me to come back. That is when she told me that Grandma was gone. I was in disbelief. We had just celebrated her 80th birthday that summer and I'm so glad that we were able to love on her and be with her for that wonderful celebration. My eyes well up with tears as I think of how much that I really do miss her.

Oh, and her parents actually came over from Lithuania through Ellis Island and I got to see their names etched into a large memorial there a few years ago. That was really neat.

Timothy Michael Lynch
My sister's third son, who didn't live past 20 weeks gestation. I was not present at his birth, but remember the day very well. Little did we know, God was leading us to salvation and it would be through this little one's death. Little Timothy would be five years old today. He is experiencing such joy, the extraordinary, supernatural joy that we have yet to experience ourselves. He is also holding the hand of his baby sister, Hope.

Hope Rachelle Lynch
My sister's fourth child and daughter, who also didn't live past 20 weeks gestation. I was present at her birth and it was amazing. So tiny and fragile. God was with us in that room. We could feel the comfort of His presence. It also comforted us to know that she was with the Lord as well and with her big brother Timothy Michael. Someday the both of them will share with us their journeys, from their prespective and what they experienced in the heavenly realm.

Danny Lee Fredericks
This is a tough one as well, in a different way. Uncle Danny was only thirty-three years old when he took his own life. I won't elaborate on that, but I will go on to tell you about what a fantastic guy he was. He was always the clown. The life of the party. My Mom's baby brother. Father of four: Gary Lee, Shawn Marie, Heather Anne and Matthew Charles. Sadly, now the grandpa of five grandchildren that he would never meet. Gary Lee is so much like him. The last memory I have of Uncle Danny was at my cousin's wedding in 1984. He was wearing a silly looking apron because he was helping out in the kitchen at the reception. That is how I want to remember him.

Lanie Eugene Fredericks "Uncle Gene"
Uncle Gene and I shared a birthday. I remember going to his house as a child to spend the night with my cousins: Kelly, Marty and also little Theresa. I remember when the famous softdrink "Tab" was out, he was always drinking that. Isn't that a silly memory? He has been gone several years. He was a diabetic.

Janice Brown
She was married to my cousin Steve for some time in the 80's. They later divorced and she remarried, but I can't remember her last name when she died. Anyhow, Jan and Steve used to hang out with my parents quite a bit. They had a son, Steven, and I used to babysit for them. I remember spending the night over there and her taking me to see "Mommy Dearest". She would always compliment me and Kristie when we were teenagers, "how young and pretty and skinny we were"....yeah, I wish I could hear that again. I believe the last time I seen her was at Kristie's wedding, which was back in 1996. She died when I was pregnant with Alec. It was a snowy day and her and her husband were on their way up north. There was a horrible car accident and she was killed instantly. At the time it didn't mean anything to me, but I think about it now and smile. At her funeral, the pastor talked about how Jan had very recently accepted Jesus as her Savior and how she would come to church with the Bible tucked under her arm, hungry for the Word. What a pleasant vision.

Alfred Mack Cooley
My "PaPa". Kristie and I were his only grandchildren (my Dad is an only child) and we have many, many fond memories of spending time with him. He died when I was only 9 years old. Its where my red hair comes from! Unfortunately he was a pretty big beer drinker and died of a massive heart attack, beer in hand, while shoveling his mother's walkway in December of 1977. He had a heart of gold. I remember going to Niagara Falls and Saute St Marie on trips with him and my Grandma. I remember him pulling Kristie and I around in a wagon of some sort, in his large yard on Cooley Lake Rd, behind his garden tractor. I remember going to K-Mart and buying paper on sale. No big deal, but it was so funny and such a vivid memory. It was my grandparents, Kristie and I, along with our cousin Allen. Since there was a limit on how much you could buy, he would give us each money to buy our limit in separate lines. We would then bring the paper out to the truck and go back and get more, in different lines. I don't recall how much we actually got, but it was a riot. I remember helping him in the large garden at his mother's house in Davisburg. He would send one of us girls to run in the house and get him his Pabst Blue Ribbon. He was only 47 years old when he died. Way too young.

Thelma June Cooley
My Grandma, who died when Josh was a little over a year old. Actually, it was just 2 months or so after my Grandma Fredericks died. She was a trip. She was quite the mother-in-law to my Mom. Now my Mom was only 17 years old when she married my Dad. My Mom couldn't make a bed "the correct way, according to Thelma", to save her life. She was also a beer drinker. She loved us girls though, and would "show us off" to just about everyone, everywhere when we were pre-teens. She knew so many people at different business locations (the bank, Big Boy, stores...etc). We were so embarrassed. She made awesome homemade cinnamon buns. And I mean awesome. She would take us shopping and buy us just about anything we wanted. My PaPa died so early on and we continued to spend a lot of time with Grandma after that. Unfortunately, with the combination of alcohol, probably loneliness, a little extra money for herself and frequenting bars, her life slipped away into not a whole lot at the end. She did some crazy things, but she was our Grandma and we of course loved her.

Mabel Cooley
My great Grandma, who died just about a month after my Grandma Cooley. She was a full blooded Cherokee Indian. Out of her eight children, three of them were red-heads. My PaPa was one of the three, although they were actually more strawberry blonde. I remember visiting her house during family reunions or just going for dinner with my grandparents. Either she or her son Burt who lived with her, had two dogs. I think they were dachshunds. I remember us kids would play Parcheese on the floor in the front room. She lived to see two of her children pass away, my PaPa and Uncle Burt. I hadn't seen her in years before learning of her death. Oh, and I remember her having a sister named Bertha.

Shawn Anthony Wedge
He is not family nor really a "loved one" per say. He lived down the street and I grew up with him. He died the fall after John and I were married. His death was very tragic. I don't know all of the details, but I know enough: he was playing around with a gun and took a chance that it wasn't loaded and pulled the trigger, close range, at his head. His life was snuffed out at twenty years of age in that foolish instant. To say his parents were devestated is a ridiculous understatement. His mother Nadine could never get past the traumatic emotions she most likely experienced every second of her life after that day. She would later take her own life by sitting in her vehicle in her garage, poisoned by the carbon monoxied. I remember going to Shawn's for birthday parties and even just going over to play when we were in kindergarden. I can still see Mr. & Mrs. Wedge and Shawn driving in their truck past our house all those years. When I had Josh, Nadine came to see me in the hospital. She brought me a tiny little blue bib. She was very happy for me but you could see it was also extremely difficult for her. I believe she wasn't able to attend my bridal and baby showers as well as my wedding. Several years later, while my Mom and I were visiting my grandparents' graves, Mr. Wedge was at his wife and son's graves, not very far away, bawling. It was so heartbreaking.

As we remember those who have passed on, let us also remember and cherish those who are with us now, every day that we have with them. Someday we will part.

How will you be remembered?