What's new?
The Young Living Purification Oil giveaway has ended, but you can always order Young Living essential oils from me online, anytime!. Meanwhile, read how I finally found a less sugary alternative to PediaSure for my preschooler.

Monday, December 31, 2007

Christmas pics

Today we are cleaning out the closet and storage that has been in the guestroom and I am uploading photos and videos of Christmas! I finally have a Flickr Pro account, which means I can upload more photos and create more photo sets. Here are some main shots, click on them to see the whole set or to see other photos:
* NOTE: You will have to be listed as one of my Friends or Family on Flickr in order to see these photos. My screenname is ynnejdorfdarb. Log in to www.Flickr.com using your Yahoo or Flickr account, find me, and add me as a friend so that I can then add you as Friend or Family.

First, I have a whole set of photos of Natali (my niece) and her Christmas:
Next, there are a few of Christmas Day - click on this photo to see pictures of gifts and after-lunch gun-shooting. Yes, this is East Texas :-)
And finally, a video of Natali opening gifts! My camera does not have sound, so I put a song over it. She is the cutest!!

video

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Anniversary picture

I forgot to post this - a picture of us that the waiter took when we had dinner on our 2 year anniversary. Since we were in Nacogdoches, we ate at Casa Thomas, the restaurant where I worked as a waiter for a year. It still looked pretty much the same! I still really like the queso :-)

Thursday, December 27, 2007

2 year anniversary

Here are the pictures of where we spent our 2 year anniversary. We spent one evening at the Stag Leap (Deer Haven cabin), which is in the middle of nowhere outside Nacogdoches, TX. It's in East Texas so it was close enough for us to go right on over to Kilgore to spend Christmas Eve and Christmas with my family.

Here is the outside of the cabin:

shot from the front porch:

back yard area:

with a hot tub!


Here is Christian in the living area:


And the inside, the little dining area:

I took all of these photos with my amazing iPhone! :-)

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

We finally have enough miles!!!

In addition to celebrating our 2 year wedding anniversary, we also celebrate 2 years of saving airline miles so that we finally have enough miles for 2 free round-trip tickets to Japan!!

This has been quite a feat. I have had to buy groceries exclusively from one particular store for 2 years (because it gives us 250 airline miles for every accumulated $200 in purchases), and we have funneled all our purchases through our airline miles credit card, including one car and 2 new couches. We would participate in pretty much any promotion that would give us airline miles. But it worked! We have enough miles for both our tickets! We've also found a great tour we'd like to do. We are picking out dates right now and we might have the flight reserved by the end of this week. Exciting!

Will have pictures of the holidays posted, maybe later today.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Annual Christmas reunion

Whenever I get to go to Kilgore for Christmas I join in on the annual Christmas evening gathering of the people I went to high school with. Millie and I send out an evite and some people show up, one person never does. Whataburger the only place in Kilgore that's open Christmas Day. It was always the only place open past 10 PM in Kilgore when we were growing up so its sentimental, you might say. For the last several years we tried sit-down restaurants in the metropolis of Longview but that is hard for people to come and go. So, back to Whataburger. Good times.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

AGAIN???

"What a sad day that the president would say that rather than insuring [millions of] children, 'I don't want to raise the cigarette tax,' " - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

What's New?

  • We have all but 2 of our Christmas gifts purchased. In the process, we have concluded that next year we will be moving to the system of "Jenny buys all the gifts". Mutual approval/collaboration on every single gift is impractical.
  • I have put up some small Christmas decorations. No tree, just some garland and lights.
  • Working on addressing all the Christmas cards.
  • Have not figured out how to get cooking and grocery shopping in on top of all this yet.
  • At least the laundry is relatively caught up.
  • Kind of sad that I can't use Rhapsody at work. Wondering if we can afford for me to actually purchase all the music I used to be able to stream for the low monthly fee. Definitely not.
  • It is something like 60 degrees in my office. There is never any heat in this office.
  • It has been 60 degrees outside here while the surrounding states are having ice storms.
  • We know a lot of hurting people right now. I hope that I can be in constant prayer for them.

Friday, December 07, 2007

To decorate or not?

I can't decide if it is worth it to decorate our house for Christmas this year or not. Last weekend we were just so busy that we did not get a chance to get a tree. This weekend we have a window of 2-3 hours on Saturday that we are not committed to doing anything else, so we could try to get the tree then. Even assuming we are able to find time to procure the tree, and even more miraculously, to decorate it, I don't know if there is a point. I mean, we will be out of town every weekend until after Christmas is over. We won't be around to enjoy the decorations, really. So is it even worth it to put them up and take them down? I am not sure that it is. We haven't bought Christmas presents yet. I am taking control of this Christmas present thing next year, because I am tired of having to wait until the week before and then spending all my lunch hours trying to get to the mall and back, or to specialty shops, or paying extra for superfast shipping. But we also have not created or ordered our Christmas cards and that is a problem too. Good times.

Monday, December 03, 2007

Living in Dallas

I was having a conversation last week with some friends, all of whom agreed that they would not be in Dallas if they had not felt God specifically leading them here. When you take into consideration "the way Dallas is", this is not surprising. Who would want to live here? It's a hard city to live in, from a mental aspect. Most of us are here because of work or marriage or ministry.

Dallas is one of the most materialistic cities in America. One of the most conspicuously consumptive, the least environmentally friendly,and the most isolated - people live gated, and try to avoid talking to one another on anything but a very shallow level. Looks are everything. I learned this the first time I attempted to go to the grocery store in sweats. That is not considered acceptable in Dallas, and you better have some makeup on as well. I have friends who teach in schools where children get plastic surgery before they are 18, and this is not considered shocking or unusual.

Sunday at church Todd spoke about how Dallas, as a city, has no reason for being as affluent as it is - no major port, never had any major trains coming in, no natural resources that would cause business to be so financially successful here. Just a lot of people who are hell-bent on making a ton of money and they want to make sure everyone knows it. What's addictive here is the lifestyle - when everyone around you has that mindset, it can be hard to see reality sometimes. It's hard to get past the way things look, it is so integrated into everyday life. You can imagine how hard it is for most churches to survive, when no one feels comfortable telling anyone else what's really going on, because it might shatter the facade, take away their credibility, their career, their reputation as someone who "has it all together". In Dallas, individuality is not honored, affluence and power are.

We are so blessed to have Watermark in this city. For a lot of people I know, including Christian and I, it's the only reason we can stand to live here. As a group of people, this community is an oasis of authenticity in a city where everything is fake. We get together in different sizes of groups throughout the week and talk about our "stuff". I have seen businessmen who make millions stand up in Celebrate Recovery and introduce themselves as someone who struggles with pornography. I have seen well-known mothers and leaders in the community talk about their eating disorders and how they struggle to honor their husbands in their marriage. In the people of Watermark, it's the opposite of Dallas - the ones who lead are those who are willing to be the most vulnerable, to admit their problems and talk about how God is changing them.

I have seen this approach of opposites be proved very true in Celebrate Recovery - every time I can tell my small group of girls honestly about the ways I am struggling that week, confess the areas I need God to work on me, I can see that this authenticity inspires them far more than if I were preaching or explaining some kind of recovery theory from the perspective of someone who has it all figured out. That would be a lie anyway - no one is ever finished recovering, it's an ongoing process. God uses people and His Word, and I am really thankful that we are in this community where those 2 things are so important. Even if we are in Dallas...