In my favorite poem by Robert Frost, Nothing Gold Can Stay, he reminds us that like the seasons of nature, life is one season melting into another, and quickly fading away. This is my attempt to document each season in my life and my family.

Summer Memories

Filed under: General — Rachel at 11:24 pm on Saturday, August 27, 2005

I was at my mom and dad’s house the other day, and we were talking about some of the things that me and my brothers did growing up. It was fun to re-live some of my fondest childhood memories.

My brother, Aaron, was almost two years older than me. I don’t remember how old we were, but I would guess that I was around eleven or twelve. Jason was almost three years younger than me, and Malachi was five years younger. My mom and dad’s place, where I lived from age seven until I moved out at seventeen, was pretty large…about nine and a half acres, I believe…and included the house, with a large front yard, and a decent-sized backyard. The backyard stretched right to the edge of the woods. We owned several acres of woods, and our property went to the very foot of the mountain. In front of the house, was a large field. The field stretched from the edge of the front yard to the edge of another area of woods, and it was probably about two acres big. On the two remaining sides of the field were more woods, and the opposite side was the driveway.
At the far left corner, if you are looking from their front porch, sits an old barn. The barn was sort of dilapitated, but at one time had been somewhat converted into living quarters. There was a small porch on the right side of the front of the barn, and the main door was off of that porch. Once inside the door, there was an old woodstove to the left, and beyond that was a very wide doorway…about eight or ten feet wide…that went into the main part of the barn. Just past the doorway put you at the foot of a staircase. Climb the staircase, and you are on a small landing. To the left side of the landing, is another doorway. None of these doorways have actual doors, but just a doorframe. When you went through that doorway, you were in the loft. Standing in the doorway, you would see a closet (without doors) directly across from you at the end of the room, and the left side of the room was a railing. If you walked to the end of the room, there was a small walkway that went up a couple of steps, along the far side of the barn, up a couple more steps, and you are at the front of the barn again, several feet higher than the loft. You end up on a landing about six feet long, and there is another open doorway. That doorway takes you outside onto a small balcony. Now, going back outside, the doorway to the left of the porch was directly under this balcony, and it went into the bottom part of the barn. Stepping through the doorway, you would be in a very large open floor. To your right is the wide doorway, about three feet higher than the floor you are standing on, and in front of you, if you look up, you will see the loft.
Now that I hope you have somewhat of a mental picture of the layout of the barn, let me describe what was in it. Junk. That was about the extent of it. Old lumber, a rocking chair, a toilet, a mattress and box springs, old wooden pallets, and lots of other assorted things. It was believed to harbor snakes, so we always had to carefully watch our step. We were forbidden to go up on the walkway that led to the balcony, because of the danger of rotted boards, but we rarely obeyed. We absolutely loved playing in that old barn. I remember trying to clear out the room on the right for a clubhouse, and I remember sitting on the landing by the balcony, just inside the doorway and hidden from view, with one of my first boyfriends. I remember holding hands, and carving our initials in the wood. I remember closing my eyes and clamping my teeth together when he kissed me, for fear that he would try to put his tongue in my mouth. Ew! I remember hiding in there when I was mad or sad or in trouble, and didn’t want anyone to find me.
My favorite memory, though, was largely due to Aaron’s MacGyver’ishness and imagination. For some reason, I never knew it’s real purpose, there was a chain hanging from the balcony supports on the inside of the barn, and a rope secured to the chain. That rope sparked Aaron’s imagination, and he had a grand idea. He got yet another rope, tied it to the afore mentioned one, and threw it over one of the rafters. Then, he went down to the bottom of the barn, and put the box springs, with the mattress on top of it, in the middle of the floor…just in front of the bottom doorway. He tried it out first, as us other kids watched in pure awe and amazement. He climbed the stairs, slipped through the railing, and held on. He grabbed the rope, held on tight, jumped off of the loft, swung all the way across the barn and almost through the doorway, swung back the other direction, and finally dropped onto the mattress. Being the responsible big brother that he was, he tried it a few more times himself before letting the rest of us have a turn. I remember how scared I was to squeeze between the railing, and stand there with the rope in my hands, that first time. It seemed so far down. Sure there was a mattress below me, but there were jagged edges of wood and metal all around it. It felt very daring and exciting when I finally mustered up the courage to jump. I swung out and accross, and dropped with a satisfactory thump onto the mattress. Jason and Malachi had much less fear than I did, and were taking their turns as soon as I cleared the mattress. We swung for an hour or more, when the neighbor kids caught on to our fun, and joined us. There were four of those girls, and they weren’t nearly as adventurous as we were. I believe a couple of them tried our rope swing, but I think they mostly watched. We swung over and over until our parents found out what we were doing, and made us stop. Their reasons were something about safety and us breaking our necks, but all I knew was that it was suddenly raining on my parade.
It was but one of many of Aaron’s wonderful ideas. He really did have a MacGyver way about him. He was always coming up with something that proved to be a total blast…like our homemade slip-and-slide.
It was so hot that summer, and we could only dream of a pool. We rarely even got to go to the river to swim. That day, Aaron was busy outside making his newest wonder of childhood engineering, before I ever even knew he was out there. When I went outside, I saw that Aaron had laid out sheets of black plastic going down a gently sloping hill. At the bottom of the hill were the woods that were behind our house. Aaron explained the reason for the plastic to us younger kids, and told us to go get our bathing suits on and grab a bottle of dish soap. We did, and he pulled out the water hose. He of course got the first slide, and the rest of us fought to go next. It was wonderful. Beyond wonderful. It was slicker and faster and wider and wetter than a regular slip-and-slide. We would run, hit our bellies, and slide to the bottom, while one of the others held the water hose. We slid so many times, that we matted down the grass at the end of the plastic, which made us keep sliding after we were supposed to have stopped. That sent us sliding into the edge of the woods. The fact that it scratched our arms and legs when we hit this wooded end mattered not to us. We would just get up, and go again. This fun probably lasted a good hour before mom came out to see what we were doing. She was not quite as happy as we were, and yelled some insane grown up talk of water bills and money. Our fun ended quite abruptly, but I will never, ever forget the pure bliss of the cold water and the slipping and sliding on that scorching summer day.
A favorite summer past-time of ours that I can recall, oh, so fondly, took place in the woods behind our house. These were great woods. There was a really nice creek that ran off the mountain, and through the entire length of our woods. When it rained a lot, you could hear the water rushing through the creek bed all the way from the house. We got in trouble so many times for wading in the water, and getting our clothes wet. It was so tempting, though. There was one particular pool of water that got us every time. It was just the perfect little wading hole, even if it was small, and it beckoned to us so invitingly. We really should not have been blamed for splashing in. No kid could resist it. However, when it hadn’t rained for a while, the creek was little more than a small, steady stream, that petered out to still water in spots. It was then that we would build dams, haul creek rock for our many childish projects, or, as this memory recalls, turn them over in search of crawdads. I can still see it in my mind’s eyes. We would step onto other rocks, balancing precariously, and bend over, backside in the air, and pick up a rock, careful not to muddy the water. Othertimes, we would squat down on the side of the water, and reach in. If we were lucky, there would be a crawfish hiding under the rock. Then, we would ease our hand in, and grab the little creature. You had to be careful to get it directly behind it’s pincers, or the little bugger would clamp onto your fingers or hands. It wasn’t that big of a deal if it was just a little crawdad, but the bigger ones could really hurt…sometimes even draw a drop of blood.
This particular day, dad had told us to catch some crawdads, and he would take us fishing later at our papaw’s pond. We loved doing this anyway, but, with a promised fishing trip, we jumped right in with extra enthusiasm. We carried a container of some sorts to keep our captured crawdads in, and off we went. We slowly and methodically turned over rocks in our separate areas. We started at the top of the creek, and worked our way down. I believe we scoured almost the entire creek, meaning of course the portion of the creek that was inside our property boundaries. By the end of the day, we had hundreds of crawfish. We carried creek water in buckets up to the house, and poured them into a large plastic crate. We put in a few rocks, and then dumped in the crawfish. We were so proud. We called mom and dad out to look, and they were honestly amazed. One particular crawfish, was the absolute biggest one we ever caught. I don’t remember who caught it, but I’m sure it was probably Aaron. I wouldn’t have had the courage to have grabbed that monster. She was probably four and a half or five inches long, maybe more, and, upon further examination, had a whole bunch of eggs held beneath her tail. She was our crowning glory. I honestly don’t remember if we ever got to go fishing or not. It seems like we didn’t, and they started dying. It didn’t matter, though, for that day will live forever in my childhood. There was not much better, being a kid, than spending the day in the woods, turning over rocks, in search of your prey.

Feeling Better

Filed under: General — Rachel at 6:16 pm on Saturday, August 27, 2005

Finally! Hallelujah. It’s so nice to not feel sick. I still felt a little bit bad this morning, but, now, I’m feeling fine. So, yay for that!
I went grocery shopping today, and bought actual groceries. I had been just running out for this and that. Today, though, I wrote out a menu for the week to come, and bought real groceries. We have officially became a “two gallon of milk a week and maybe more” family. I can’t believe the amount of milk that Elijah alone can go through. Both the kids refuse to drink plain milk, but they gulp it down if you put a little Ovaltine in it. Elijah is constantly asking, “Choc?”. He will drink two sippy cups full…back-to-back…in five minutes, if you let him. Anyway…off on a tangent there.
So, after I got home and put the groceries away, I made vegetable soup. It was really good. After being sick, soup sounded good to me. I hadn’t really ate much of anything the past couple of days. Mostly toast. I have not felt so sick so often since I was pregnant with Elijah. I scrapped the meds, though, and am going to make my doctor prescribe me something different. I can’t handle being sick so much.
My house is a mess again. It takes no time at all for the house to deteriorate around me, especially when I lay on the couch for two days straight. So, tonight, I really need to get the mountain of laundry washed, dried, folded, and put away, and clean up the kitchen. I have had to resort to washing my dishes by hand, as my dishwasher has not been working well. The dishes are coming out nearly as dirty as they went in. I dont’ know what’s up with that, but I wish Chris would fix it. I don’t like doing dishes.
Tomorrow is church, so that is cool. Chris should hopefully get to go tomorrow morning, if he isn’t too sleepy. (He’s working tonight.) Bro. Bret asked him to preach tomorrow morning, as Bro. Bret is sick, but Chris didn’t think he could do it with so little time to prepare, and having to be at work all night. He was kind of bummed, I think. It seems he has to turn down nearly every opportunity he’s had to preach lately, because he is having to work all of the time. I really hope something happens with his work situation soon, because all of this working, while good to our bank account, is not so good for the rest of our life.
So, I just thought I would give a little update. I’m going to put some laundry in, and hopefully get enough done tonight to be able to come back and blog my story for y’all. Big Brother is being pre-empted by a football game, so I won’t be watching that. So, until next time…

Still Sick

Filed under: General — Rachel at 10:07 pm on Friday, August 26, 2005

I’m dying here. I’ll be back soon. I hope so, at least.

Sick again

Filed under: General — Rachel at 11:00 pm on Thursday, August 25, 2005

Just thought I would tell you all that I will have that story, soon, but I’m quite sick right now. So, hold on. It’s coming.

Yesterday’s Events

Filed under: General — Rachel at 11:15 am on Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Yesterday, I tried to blog, but the site wouldn’t load for me. So, anyway, here I am today.
I took the kids to my mom and dad’s house yesterday. It was a really nice day, and it was a lot cooler than it had been. So, I called my brother, Malachi, to see if he and Misty wanted to bring Keinzie to play with Kyra and Elijah. They did, and the kids had a lot of fun. I played basketball with Dad and Seth before they got there, and, I hate to say it, Dad beat me at four games of CAT in a row. Shameful! Oh, yeah. Seth has chicken pox. Finally. Now, we’ll see if Elijah gets them. I’m not too worried about whether he gets them or not, but just when he gets them. I really hope that he doesn’t get them just in time for our vacation to Myrtle Beach. Back to yesterday, we ordered pizza, and sat around talking. Something we had mentioned brought back some fun memories when I was a kid. I’m gonna tell you all that story a little later, so look for it, okay?
Right now, I’ve got to feed my monkeys…ahem…I mean, children.

Monday’s This and That

Filed under: General — Rachel at 12:43 am on Monday, August 22, 2005

The weekend is over. Whew! It’s been a busy one, which explains my lack of blogging the past couple of days. Weekends, around our house, aren’t really that big of a deal, except for church on Sunday, because Chris doesn’t work a regular “off on the weekends” schedule. Wednesday could be a day just as much fun as most people’s Saturdays, for us. However, he happened to be off Friday and Saturday. Because they have been forcing him to work massive amounts of mandatory overtime, he’s not got two days off in a row in a long while. So we were really excited about some time off for him. Friday, he spent the whole day doing schoolwork, which was all due on Saturday, and I went to Walmart. I couldn’t put off going to Walmart any longer, because we were completely out of toilet paper. Not a good thing, right Clarence? Wink, wink. So, that was Friday. Not much in the way of fun, but it was nice just to have Daddy around.
On Saturday, we thought about going to Dollywood, but it was so incredibly hot (93 degrees) we decided not to. I was determined to go out for breakfast, so we went to IHOP. It was really, really good. I had the steak omelette, and Elijah discovered that he really, really, REALLY likes pancakes with syrup. He liked the blueberry and strawberry syrups better than the regular kind. He ate more in that one sitting than I think he had ate in a week. He has been pretty much surviving on Reduced Sugar Sunny Delight and chocolate milk for the past week and a half. Both of my kids drink like camels. They get that from their dad. So, anyway, after IHOP, we decided to drive to Pigeon Forge to do something fun with the kids. On the way there, I saw the new McKay’s used bookstore from the interstate, and persuaded Chris to stop and check it out. Oh, my goodness! Let me just tell you that it was a bookworm’s paradise! It was the biggest bookstore that I’ve ever been in, as far as the amount of books that they had. I could have spent hours in there. I didn’t get to browse as in depth as I would have liked to, because of the kids, but it was still pretty great. The kids got several books, including Caps for Sale, which Barbara has recommended. Someone had cut off all of the top right-hand corners of the pages, but it was a quarter. Besides, it was kind of conincedental that I find that very book there, after seeing it so many times on Barbara’s blog. Chris found a book as well. It was something about Paul’s letters (from the Bible, of course), and he bought it as a study help for his sermons. I found three books….Les Miserables by Victor Hugo, O Pioneers by Willa Cather, and The Acts of King Arthur and His Noble Knights by John Steinbeck. I love John Steinbeck and Willa Cather. I’ve never read Victor Hugo, but am anxious to read this book, as I’ve heard high praise for it.
Let’s see….after the bookstore, we drove to Pigeon Forge, and went outlet shopping. I got Kyra a shirt and a really cute skirt and top from the Osh Kosh store, and Chris got a new belt and wallet at Wilson’s Leather. Then, I went in The Children’s Place, and got the kids all kinds of clothes for $3.99 a piece. They were having a really great sale. So, that was cool. I love a bargain. We were going to drive on up into the main part of Pigeon Forge, but the traffic was so bad that we decided to just go on home. Kyra had fallen asleep before we had got out of the parking lot of the outlet stores, anyway.
When we came home, we just hung around the house. Mom and Seth came by for a little while, and I had them bring us some McDonalds food. Chris played Madden football, and we watched Big Brother.
And then, Sunday morning, I thought that Elijah might have chicken pox, because he had all these red bumps on his belly. Mom offered to watch him for me so I could go to church, and, selfish me, I took her up on it. (He turned out to be fine, though. They weren’t chicken pox, because they had disappeared by Sunday evening.) So, Chris and I both got to go to church on a Sunday morning for the first time in a few weeks. They read our letter, and we are now official members of Fellowship Baptist Church. So, that’s cool.
Chris had to work Sunday evening, but he has got someone coming in four hours early to work the last four hours of his shift. That means he gets to come home around three o’clock this morning. (It’s Monday, but it’s only one a.m., right now.) He called me after church to tell me not to shoot him when he gets home. Let that be a warning to any would-be stalkers, by the way, anyone that trys to break in on us might get shot. I keep a 40 cal. by the bed, and I would use it in a heartbeat. So there! Are you scared? You should be, you would-be stalker! I’ve also got a baseball bat, and a Mama Bear mentality. So, don’t even think about it! Oh, yeah, and a killer cat! Oliver is one mean kitty. Just ask Elijah. So, I’m well protected, and Chris was wise to warn me he was coming home early.

Let’s see…what else? Saw my brother today, briefly. I guess I should clarify that, seeing as how I have five brothers. I saw my brother, Jason…the Marine…today. He came home over the weekend, but I didn’t really get to talk to him much. He’s doing fine, for all of you people who have been asking about him. He is still slated to go to Iraq in January. While I’m at it, Aaron (my brother who is in the Air force and stationed in Nebraska) is doing fine, too. Natasha (his wife) is doing quite well with her pregnancy, and we are all anxiously waiting to find out if their little one is a boy or a girl. I think Aaron’s rooting for a boy, and Tasha’s rooting for a girl. Either one is going to be awesome. They’re going to be really great parents. Aaron is at home right now. He was actually in Cambridge, England when the London subway bombings occurred. He was among the Airmen that you may have heard mentioned on the news, who were kept there for a couple of days. So, anyway, they’re both doing fine.

Kyra is over the chicken pox. Hallelujah! She has scabby spots, but I’m just glad she didn’t suffer too badly with them. Chris says that Elijah has ninja white blood cells which have fought off the virus for him, and that is why he never got them. I am shocked that he didn’t get them, but thankful, as well, since he hadn’t had the vaccine. The kids who got them that were vaccinated only got mild cases, but Lucas, who had not had the shot, got a terrible case of them. So, I’m going to try to go and get Elijah a shot this week, since he is old enough now.

I did get a lot of housework done on Thursday, which was wonderful, but, considering the fact that I have two little rugrats tearing through the house all the time, it should come as no suprise that most of my work is already undone. Hopefully, I can get it whipped back into shape tomorrow.

Still no sign of Baby Woof Woof. I think he’s gone for good this time.

Oscar died. I’m getting so used to our animal friends departing…in one way or another…that I didn’t have the energy or want-to to write him up an obituary. Suffice it to say, he’s been dipped out and flushed, and Frosty, Nemo, and Mud Puppy are enjoying the new spaciousness of their tank, minus two tank-mates.

Well, I think that’s all the news I have to share. I was going to read in bed for a while, but I’ve blogged for so long that I think I’m just going to go to sleep. Chris will be home in a couple of hours. Maybe we’ll have a fun day tomorrow, and I can give you something more interesting to read tomorrow. Have a great Monday, y’all!

Putting My Whole Heart Into It

Filed under: General — Rachel at 2:01 pm on Thursday, August 18, 2005

I am so behind. I’m behind in everything, but mostly involving the upkeep of the house. I have felt so “off” lately. I know that most of it is due to being sick and feeling off-kilter because of some new medication I am taking. Knowing what’s causing it, though, doesn’t help that much. If the side effects don’t lessen as I adjust, I may have to have my doctor switch me to something different. In the mean time, I need to get with the program. I am a procrastinator when it comes to things that I don’t like doing…such as housework. I give in too easily to excuses, such as not feeling well, when I need to tough it out.
In addition to not feeling well, I have also been stuck at home most of the time, so as not to spread Kyra’s chicken pox. Chris is being forced to work a lot of mandatory overtime right now, and so it’s just been me and the kids the majority of the time. That is very stressful in and of itself. I feel like I need a break, but, in all honesty, I don’t really deserve one right now. I’ve been a slacker, and I need to whip myself into shape. I need discipline.
My pastor has been preaching straight to me, lately, I believe. Not only has he been preaching on the role of the wife in the home, but he also preached a message a few services ago out of Colossians 3:23. If you are not familiar with this passage, it says:
“And whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as to the Lord, and not unto men”.
The gist of his mesage was that it didn’t matter what it was we did…whether we were employees in a workplace, students at school, children at home, or, as in my case, mothers and wives in charge of keeping the home…we should put our hearts into it, and do it as if we were doing it for the Lord. That message really challenged me, and it has been in my mind ever since. I haven’t done very well with the follow-through, though, as I’ve already mentioned.
I am going to change that, though. I am working on my mind-set. I have these ideas in my head that aren’t really there of my own choosing. They were put there by our culture and society, and I didn’t really have a lot to say about the matter. I have always heard that women can do anything that men can, from the time I was a little girl. Society told me that I would be more fulfilled if I were out in the workforce, pulling my own weight, and contributing to society in the same way that a man might. When I was a kid, I always assumed that that was what I would do. As I got older, though, I began to desire a family. When I met Chris, I totally gave up on the idea of college and a career, and I just wanted to be his wife and the mother of his kids. Once I had kids, I knew that I could never leave them in the care of another to go work a job. Even though my natural desires to nurture and care for my own family came bubbling up, the thoughts that had been ingrained into my mind for my entire life were still there, in the back of my mind, telling me that maybe there were more important, fulfilling things out there. It was like this battle in my mind, and I couldn’t put my whole heart into the running and maintaining of my home.
The Lord has been opening up my heart, though, lately, and letting me see these contradicting thoughts for what they are. Confusing. They have hindered me from being a better wife to my husband, and a better mother to my children. I’m appreciative of the messages that our pastor has preached, and also for some of the thoughts and ideas put out by other Christian women in their blogs that I have been reading recently. I am thankful, and I am determined to be better. My family deserves more of me. My faith and my God require more of me.
So, I just wanted to share that. There really was no reason behind writing that here, where other people are reading what I write, other than that is what I have been thinking about. That’s what my blog is for anyway…me talking about what’s going on in my head. So, anyway. I’m through. Have a nice day!

Veggie Tuna Mommy and Kyra Special

Filed under: General, Photos — Rachel at 11:21 am on Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Today’s culinary creation was whipped up using whole wheat pasta, tuna, corn, peas, tomato, and mayo. We christened it the “Veggie Tuna Mommy and Kyra Special”. Here’s a picture of the finished product.

Now, I’m sure some of you food snobs are turning up your noses right about now, but Kyra and I aren’t concerned with your disdain. Our lunch was healthy, made with ingredients on hand, and Kyra had a lot of fun helping me mix it up. Besides, we thought it was quite tasty.
Plus, it re-affirmed my newly aquired knowledge that kids will eat almost anything if they get to help make it. Kyra loves to help. She also loves to cook. I love to hear her say, “Thanks, Mommy. It’s yummy.”

Monday’s This and That

Filed under: General — Rachel at 12:20 am on Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Well, chicken pox has us quarantined for a while, so my day was pretty much uneventful. I didn’t even get a shower until like five o’clock. I tried to clean some, but the kids just undo everything two minutes after I do it. That stinks, but at least I vacuumed and did some laundry. Minus folding, that is. I will do that tomorrow. I don’t mind folding, but it’s a tricky process lately. I like to do it while Elijah is napping, because, otherwise, he likes to run right through the middle of my stacks of clothes, unfolding them. The problem with that is I can’t put their clothes away until he wakes up. So, usually, their clothes end up stacked in the floor longer than I intend to leave them there, and Elijah will sneak into my room and wreak havoc. I usually find him gleefully grabbing piles, and throwing them into the air. He thinks it’s great fun. So, anyway, folding the clean clothes and getting them put away is sometimes harder than it sounds.
I played guitar for a long time today. I should be much better than I am, seeing as how I’ve had my guitars for a couple years now. I still can only play a few simple songs and a handful of chords. It’s kind of depressing, but I’m hoping to take some lessons sometime soon. Even that is more complicated than it sounds, but I won’t go into that.
Two of the bright spots of my day were getting my Old Navy order in the mail, and also getting my monthly Zooba book, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time. I started reading it tonight, and, so far, it is interesting, to say the least. I finished The Mommy Manual a couple of days ago, and I’m still working on Freakanomics. I got distracted from it when I got The Mommy Manual, and I haven’t got back into it yet.
I think that I forgot to mention that Baby Woof Woof has disappeared. He followed someone home one day a few months ago, after he saw them walking our road. We got him back that time. I don’t know if he has done something similar this time, or what. I don’t think he’s coming back, as he’s been gone for over a week now. He was such a strange dog. He wouldn’t let you pet him or anything, but he wanted to jump all over the kids. When they tried to play with him, though, he would run at least four or five steps away from them. We are just not very successful dog owners. I’m quite curious as to what happened to him, but I wasn’t really emotionally invested in him. I’m sure any of you animal lovers are writing me off as an evil person right now, but I’m just being honest. Anyway, I hope he’s okay, wherever he is. Just a thought, but I wonder if Mud Puppy had anything to do with his disappearance.
Tomorrow is pretty much more of the same, seeing as how I’m homebound. At least Big Brother comes on tomorrow night. I love that show. I am hopelessly addicted.
Have a good night everyone. I think I’m going to go wake Chris up, and make him go to bed. Yeah, I know that sounds weird. He fell asleep on the couch not long after he got home from work, this evening, so I have to wake him up to come to bed. I’m burning the midnight oil, tonight, but I think it’s time for me to give it up, too. So, goodnight!

****Only 24 more days until we go to the beach!

Which Walton’s Female Am I?

Filed under: General, Photos — Rachel at 1:56 pm on Monday, August 15, 2005

You are Erin.
You are Erin. Pretty as a picture, with a taste
for romance, you are soft and feminine. But you
have a bit of a temper, and careful of that
vanity.

Which Waltons Female Are You?
brought to you by Quizilla

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