Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Recent Pictures

 G is really for the beach!

 Sweet Baby G doesn't look like a baby anymore!

Obviously I didn't fix her hair.

 ME smiling after getting her fair painted at Rooftop Rhythms.

ME and Calvin pointing out the bounce houses.
 
 The girls enjoying some ice cream.

 Yes, the dogs had to have some to!
 Ben got a hold of Cocky!
 Poor Cocky!
G making some music right after she woke up Sunday morning.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

What's next....

With the recent events in Boston, our group has been talking about the next race. I had my head set on doing the Savannah Marathon again, so I could get my revenge back, but that was before. With Savannah not being until November, if I do qualify again for Boston, I wouldn’t be able to go to Boston until 2015.

Well my fellow male runners put their thinking caps on and found us a race. We aren’t going to be able to do the Blue Ridge Relay this year, but they found a marathon called Lehigh Valley Health Network Via Marathon. I was a little wary about doing one far away, for money and childcare reasons, but I don’t think I can pass this one up. Its ranked 4th in the percentage of people that qualifier for the Boston Marathon. Not to mention there is a net elevation drop.  

Course the next step is to ask Ben and then my boss. But if all goes to plan, bring on Boston 2014!!!



Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Boston

Photo: Columbia Ninjas ready to go after watching the invitational mile races!

This picture now has a new meaning. Several of the guys and girls that run with our group headed up to Boston for the Boston Marathon. Thankfully our group is awesomely fast so they were way out of harm’s way. As an avid runner and former participant of the Boston Marathon, I am heartbroken. To take someone's hard earned joy and accomplishment is utterly absurd. I look back at the time Ben and I went there and how the whole city is filled with excitement. Everywhere you turn there is a runner wearing “the Boston Marathon” jacket. Everyone is so excited and antsy to run the marathon. It’s not even about what time you get when you get there, it’s the experience. And on Monday that wonderful experience was taken from my training partners, friends, and other avid runners that I don’t even know. Runners are resistant and whoever did this was mistakenly wrong if they think this is going to stop runners from ever doing this race again. I didn’t want to go back to Boston mainly because I have already been and would like to do another larger race, but that attitude has certainly changed.
Erin, in the picture above sent out this article. It says it all.
The spirit of the runner cannot be broken.

It is a spirit of strength. Of faith. Of community. Of resilience. Of justice. Of freedom. It knows no barriers of language or ethnicity or gender. It knows not nationality or politics or age. It is not limited to those who run, but extends to their husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, children and friends. It reaches to complete strangers calling out words of encouragement and volunteers holding precious cups of water. It is a spirit of unity and support. It is a spirit that speaks not with words, but with actions.

There are those who will try to break it, who will try to paralyze it with fear, who will try to inject it with trembling, violate it with terror, and intimidate it with threats. There are those who hate it. Who resent it. Who will try to crush it. They will hatch murderous plans and seek its destruction.

But the spirit of the runner cannot be broken, because the spirit of the runner is the human spirit.
The attacks at the Boston Marathon violated more than a race. The time and place were chosen to be as offensive as possible, to be a visible and flagrant affront to that which binds humanity as one. They were directed not just at the runners themselves, but at those we love—those who ride with us the daily ups and downs of training, who listen while we rattle off mile splits, who rejoice in our PRs, who commiserate when we fall short, who remind us to get off our feet the day before the race, who map out intricate race-day navigation plans to catch us at mile four. And ten. And sixteen. And twenty. Those who hold signs and ring cowbells. Those who cheer us on. Those who make it possible for us to reach the start line. Those who do so quietly, without asking for praise or acknowledgment.Those who wait for us at the finish.  

The attacks were calculated to ridicule freedom by victimizing the strong and murdering the innocent. They were intended to fell a community. They were designed to make a mockery of the human spirit. 
But far from achieving their aim, the attacks in Boston merely revealed terror’s own cowardice and futility. Even as it sought notoriety and fame, hate exposed its own impotence. In its presumption, fear paid the price of trampling sacred ground.

Because even as the last reverberations from the explosion rumbled through the streets, those who were able rushed to the aid of the fallen. Even as the smoke rose from the wreckage, those who were strong carried the injured to safety. Even as the attacks were planned to create an environment of fear, division, and helplessness, it drove those very things away. Even as it sought to divide, it solidified our oneness, for in that moment there was neither runner nor spectator, neither friend nor stranger, neither elite nor volunteer. In that moment, we were one.

Far from crippling the human spirit, the attacks in Boston galvanized its strength.
We grieve the suffering of those injured and the loss of those who died. We feel the sorrow and pain of those affected. But we will not be broken and we will not surrender, for we are the caretakers of their memory. We are the ambassadors of their strength.
Fear will not keep us from running. Terror will not stop us from racing. No, with every defiant mile, we will proclaim the triumph of the human spirit. We will proclaim it in the early morning before the sun rises and late in the evening when the sun has set. We will proclaim it in the rain, in the cold, in the snow, in the heat, in the wind, and in the fiercest storms. We will proclaim it in the grandest stages of sport, and we will proclaim it when no one is looking. We will proclaim it in the company of others. We will proclaim it in the loneliest of miles. We will proclaim it through pain. We will proclaim it through joy. We will proclaim it even in the midst of tragedy.
For those who conspire to destroy will fail, their plans will come to ruin, their names will fade away and be remembered no more. But we will not lose heart. We will not surrender.

For the spirit of the Boston Marathon is the human spirit, and it will never, ever be broken.
To Boston, with love.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

It's a good thing they are cute!!

This past weekend, the girls finally wore me out. I swear the more and more I do with them the wilder they are. You would think keeping them busy all day would finally hit them in the late afternoon, ohhh no, not my wonderful adorable child…which is what I had to keep telling myself all weekend.

Saturday morning, the Junior League puts on an event called Touch a Truck. I had always heard about it when I was in the junior league, but I had never been before. The whole family headed out to see all the truck, tractors, military trucks, ambulances, fire trucks, etc. Anything and everything truck related was there. They also had bounce houses and face painting, which always sparks the girl’s interest.








Notice there aren’t any pictures of Grayson, well she had a death grip on me after seeing Cocky. After me telling her 100 times that Cocky went home, I gave up and just held her.

After Touch a Truck we ran home to grab some lunch and put on the girl’s princess outfits. My mom awhile back got us tickets to go see Disney on Ice: Dare to Dream event. Course since my mom broke her foot, Ben got to go (hehe). The girls had so much fun watching all the princesses and all the cool stuff that Disney does. Ben and I actually had a good time to.




Saturday night the girls were still running around like crazy. I think the cotton candy got to them. Ben started feeling sick, so I cooked dinner and got everyone ready for bed. Ben ended up having some sort of stomach bug or something.

Sunday morning they got up bright and early just like they normally do, ready to go again. Ben was still sick and stayed in the bed. I wanted to keep the girls out of the house just in case he did have the stomach bug. We took Buttercup for a 2 hour walk, YES, a 2 hour walk…only because they both I have to spot and pick up every single rock flower, leaf, etc. Thankfully Buttercup is very patient!!! We fixed a lunch and headed to Sesqui with Calvin and Theresa for a picnic and to park at the park. We ate our picnic, feed the ducks, and just played for a few hours. After the park we went to go yogurt and then to a play at the mall. The mall has a little children’s theater in it. The acting was horrible and Grayson sat on my lap, on the floor, the whole time. I didn’t realize how much it was going to hurt until I tried to stand back up. The girls thought it was funny, so that’s all I cared about. Since we were already out I decided to go to the grocery store for the weekly shopping. We were gone from 10:00 am until 5:15ish pm. I was pooped. We went to my parent’s house for dinner and lucky Ben started feeling better so he was able to come with us. WE finally got back home around 8:00 and the three of them went straight to bed. Butter and I finally had some time to just sit and do nothing, and that’s what we did!

Friday, April 5, 2013

Easter

 Friday night we went to my parents to celebrate Easter. The girls tried to make homemade pizza, while we ate hamburgers and hot dogs. My parents gave the girls there Easter baskets, which were full of candy and stuffed animal Cocky's (which I have been looking for forever). Of course we had to go over the fact that Cocky and Uga have to be friends!




 Saturday morning we went to the girls daycare for an Easter Egg Hunt and other Easter activities.




 Saturday afternoon we went to North Augusta and the Riddles gave the girls there Easter baskets. That night we put light up things inside the Easter eggs and had put them out in the yard for the girls to find. It was so neat to see the whole yard covered with lighted eggs.




Sunday morning, the Easter bunny came, for the third time!




 Sunday morning we managed to get the girls dresses and us dressed and ready for 10:00 church!
 Saturday afternoon we planted jelly beans in the ground and over night the Easter bunny turned them into lollipops.

 After church we went back to Mari's house to spend time with the family and eat Easter lunch. The girls had so much fun playing with Sarah and Joel.















As usual we ate way too much and have WAY too much Easter candy, but who's complaining!