Showing posts with label Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Love. Show all posts

Monday, October 17, 2011

Happy Birthday!

Happy Birthday to my husband! 
I love him because...


He is so handsome! 


And he's a great kisser. 


And a really good dancer, though he'd never admit to it! 


I can trust him with my life. 


He's my hiking buddy!


He's a beer-brewing lumberjack. 


He's sometimes a pirate. 


He's a Joker and always makes me laugh. 


He still looks good even in a mullet!



Sometimes he thinks he is Canadian. 


He's a born and raised hockey nut. I mean Minnesotan. 


He's a great singer... but only on Halloween in costume after a pitcher of beer. 


He makes the best fires. 

And I love him because...


He is my best friend!!!! 

I LOVE YOU ROSS! HAPPY BIRTHDAY!





Wednesday, July 6, 2011

In Loving Memory

Three years ago today I lost my mom. 


This is a picture of us in Estes Park, Colorado, my freshman year of college. We made a pit stop there while driving to Rocky Mountain National Park to see the changing trees. My Mom loved traveling and the outdoors and took us out to national parks frequently. That part of growing up really stuck with me and is a huge part of who I am.


Yellowstone with Mom, Grandma, me and brother Alex. 


The Oregon Coast. 


Mom, sister Marissa, and Brad in San Francisco. 


Brad (My stepfather) & Mom. He created a Memorial Website for her. 


One of our most favorite things to do together was to play Scrabble. We would play for hours - well into the night - for days on end. Every year on this day I play Scrabble still with Ross and friends. It's a fun way to remember my mom. 

This is the last picture we took together; it was at the wedding of one of her work friends who happened to be carpooling home with her  the day they died. 


Mom and Chris died when a truck hit their car on Parker Road in Colorado on July 6, 2008. This sign was placed by the Colorado Department of Transportation Memorial Sign Program. Please drive safely and wear your seatbelt. 


I don't get to visit her grave site often since it is in Colorado, and though I wish I could take some flowers I know she's not really there. She's in a better place. I would be better off throwing flowers into the sky. 


My mom also loved with all her heart no matter who or what you were. I still can't believe that nearly 500 people - family, friends, co-workers, my middle school band teacher - showed up to her service to pay respects; it was standing room only. A true testament to how the love of one person can impact many. 

I miss you Mommy. I love you. 

Love always, 
JK 

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Picnic in the Park

Isn't is BEAUTIFUL!?!?!


Yes. This is my morning commute on my bike - isn't it lovely?


 I LOVE that Bellingham has many "rustic sidewalks" that you can enjoy on your way from home to school, work or play. There is also talk about expanding and improving them. 


Today was a combination of all three - school, work and play


All three happened here at Avellino - wonderful local little coffee house.


 Everything they make is top notch. 


Like the [homemade] caramel americano I enjoyed so much I nearly drank it all before a picture! 


And their quiche which had so many wonderful ingredients I can't remember them all!


Play included catching up with my friend Sarah (the one who taught me how to make Beer Bread!) over iced coffee. We caught up on life and dreams and talked about one of my favorite topics - food! She told me about a book she just finished reading called Eat Right for Your Type - your blood type! Interesting stuff! 

Then she had to be a good student and head to cognitive psychology, so I went to work entering in 400-some test scores from the Environmental class I am a TA for. Then I used some time to finish up a school project I have been working on for the Environmental Education program at Lutherwood before meeting Ross for more play at Cornwall Park for a picnic! 

 Ross proposed to me while we were both on summer staff at Lutherwood in 2009... if you want to know how, just go dig out your childhood board game Mouse Trap. 'Nuff said. 

_____________________________________________


Sun +


Husband & Wife +


A park +


A picnic blanket from Nicaragua +


a turkey sandwich +


an orange + 


 = A PICNIC!


I HATE PEELING ORANGES. Thankfully my mother-in-law gave me an orange peeler! 


One side is for slicing the peel - 


The other flat side is for digging under it and peeling it off! Like magic. 
Now I eat oranges more often - silly, but I will not eat an orange if I have to peel it with my fingers, I just can't stand it. One of my quirks? Perhaps. 


After lunch we chatted, Ross read his book which always sparks fascinating conversation, I practiced Yoga in the grass, and we even napped a little in the sun.  Then it was time for Ross to head to work, so we biked our separate ways.  


I came home and decided it was time to transplant a few seedlings...


And to plant a few other things... I am trying "compact" cucumbers, mini-rainbow carrots, radishes, some lettuce and herbs. I have no idea what I'm doing - but I hope something grows!!! 


Then it was time to make dinner, watch a few episodes of The Office (I'm a latecomer to the show - I just started watching last month from the beginning!), wish Ross good luck in his hockey game... and off to bed! I was exhausted! 

Are you planting a garden of some sort this summer? 

Last year I had a mini herb garden on our balcony that I made the mistake of calling my "pot garden." Lesson learned, it is a container garden. Geez. 

Friday, February 18, 2011

Fridays on Food and Faith

The Best Meal I Ever Had
I read a story the other day by M. F. K. Fisher in Food and Faith where she shared the best meal she had ever had. It left me wondering and searching and reflecting; what was the best meal I had ever had? 


What immediately came to mind was not necessarily the meal itself, but the occasion for the meal and the people I shared the meal with. For instance, I thought of my grandparent's spaghetti, which is always something I ask them to make when I am back in Colorado - a feast of spaghetti with my grandma's homemade sauce, meatballs (and my grandma even makes meatless meatballs for me), garlic bread, and salad - usually with tomatoes and cucumbers right from my grandpa's garden. This meal is usually for a large number of family members to gather together for a meal to celebrate our time in Colorado.

Another meal that came to me was my mother's homemade macaroni and cheese, always with extra large shells, which was my favorite meal growing up. It might still be. My mom would always make it for me whenever I was home visiting from college. Creamy, cheesy sauce and noodles with extra cheese perfectly browned right on top. After that it would usually result in hours upon hours of scrabble late into the night. How I miss that.

But if I were to tell the story of the best meal I had ever had, it would probably be one in which I couldn't speak to half of the people at the table with me. It would probably be the one in which I don't even know exactly what it was I ate. It would probably be the meal I ate the night before Easter 2008 at Casa Concordia in San Salvador, El Salvador.


Casa Concordia offers a safe place to stay for foreign travelers to El Salvador and is part of the Lutheran Church of El Salvador. I stayed there for Easter weekend with my fellow Alternative Spring Break-ers after a week working on a Habitat for Humanity Blitz Build - which means many groups of volunteers came from all over - the US, Canada, Korea and Spain were represented that week. I found myself there with California Lutheran University's Community Service Center. 


We arrived at Casa Concordia after a fun day of zip-lining through the rain forest canopy.


 We had time to settle and rest, we played games with the kids ( it also serves as an orphanage for a few children) and even got to spend time in the kitchen learning how to make tortillas. 

Stine and Evelyn

Franklin writing a letter to me 

Me, Franklin and Raymundo

As our hostesses were setting the table we noticed that there were far too few place setting for the number of people staying or living at Casa Concordia. We asked why there were only 6 plates when there were 17 of us - and they said that we needn't be bothered by the children.  It just seemed so strange, to be visiting and serving the people of El Salvador, yet not able to eat with them. We insisted that we all share a meal together. After much convincing and a tough time translating, we eventually found ourselves and our hosts, all 17, eating together at the same table. 


We ate fried vegetables, rice, plantains, and those wonderful homemade tortillas - but more importantly, we ate together. We chatted and made hand signals and savored the tastes, sounds, smells and emotions that were passed around. I vividly remember seeing the children with such excitement on their faces to be sharing a meal with visitors with whom they are normally segregated from. I remember smiles and sharing and satisfaction. I remember joy.  


Here is the family with whom I celebrated the resurrection of our Lord that year.


This meal was with people I only knew for a short time, and this was before I really learned how to speak Spanish, yet I remember it fondly. I especially cherish the time in which we all came together for a simple, traditional meal, everyone included and all invited, and celebrating. Celebrating the completion of a week of hard work building houses. Celebrating Easter. Celebrating community.

Of the best meals I've ever had, the ones that I remember most vividly were not because of the food itself but because of the occasion, the people and the celebration. Celebrating time home with family, celebrating birthdays or graduations, celebrating togetherness, community and Christ's love. 

This was the best meal I ever had - yet I have no doubt that there is a best yet to come. 



Other meals in El Salvador: 

 Plantanos 




 Making Pupusas

 Rice, beef and tortillas 


I would love to hear stories about the best meal you've ever had.