(It felt necessary to insert the word "adult" in there [even if it does sound scandalous]. Obviously I couldn't have had a child's tonsillectomy at age 47. But then, that is exactly what I wanted you to understand.)
I actually felt the cocoon of prayers and priesthood power all about me going into this procedure. And I had none of the possible complications that can attend the recovery phase (extreme nausea, bleeding, etc.). I think I probably had one of the smoothest experiences one could expect.
And it was still miserable.
(I say was. Hmph. I have at last turned the corner [as they say]. That is true. But I strongly suspect it will be another week yet before I feel normal. So I can't quite speak of this as a was experience.)
Still, life goes on as it needs must. (In fact, multiple times during the last week I've been to the grocery store or to a school function and I've thought, "I look so perfectly normal. I really should be wearing my head all bandaged up or something to let people know that I am not perfectly normal and should be receiving all sorts of exclamations of 'you poor dear' and 'you brave soul'".)
In any case I've made up my mind: no more getting my tonsils out ever again unless I am only five years old. (It shouldn't be too hard a rule to stick to. Unless I get reincarnated and forget. Heaven forbid.)
But back to life going on--with or without tonsils:
Our fogs are back!!! (Well not really back back. This was the first one I've seen since our last fog season. But oh I love how it makes everything feel a mysterious and otherworldly. And neither of those are even the right words. What does it make everything feel? The way it just sort of quietly washes away--like it was never there at all. It makes me feel like I'm glimpsing something secret and magical.)
Penny went to Homecoming.
Here we have Jesse trying to convince Hans that no, a 2nd grader named Kristina (whose strength Hans is shockingly impressed by) could not in fact beat Jesse at arm wrestling (as Hans had insisted she could):
Despite his own sound thrashing from Jesse, Hans remained unconvinced. And it ended with Abe promising he would come beat Kristina up if Jesse needed him to. (Though perhaps this mustache he came home wearing the other day might be enough to intimidate any seven-year-old would-be attackers.)
Anders turned 13!
Our 6th time introducing a child of ours to their teenage years. I reminded him, the night before his birthday, that he had in fact promised me many times in the past that, when he became a teenager, he would not engage in any of the less-than-ideal teenage behaviors he may have at times witnessed from his siblings.
"I was crossing my fingers when I said that," he informed me.
In essence: he has promised nothing, and we are most likely doomed.
(Giving him a skateboard probably only cinches that certainty more tightly.)
Yes, I made his Over the Garden Wall (the strangest little series imaginable) cake. (It's Enoch. The leader of Pottsfield.) Considering I have neither the aptitude for nor the interest in cake decorating (not even the patience to put any frosting into a frosting bag), it turned out remarkably! Ha!
Two signs I especially liked. The first was from Jesse. (If you know who Dean Higgins is, I am well pleased with you. We adore Dean Higgins.) The second was one Goldie sent. I just like her charming little drawings.
An Activity Days temple activity for Summer and Mette (front row on the left).
(Giving him a skateboard probably only cinches that certainty more tightly.)
Yes, I made his Over the Garden Wall (the strangest little series imaginable) cake. (It's Enoch. The leader of Pottsfield.) Considering I have neither the aptitude for nor the interest in cake decorating (not even the patience to put any frosting into a frosting bag), it turned out remarkably! Ha!
Two signs I especially liked. The first was from Jesse. (If you know who Dean Higgins is, I am well pleased with you. We adore Dean Higgins.) The second was one Goldie sent. I just like her charming little drawings.
Here Anders (who had school off for parent-teacher conferences) and I are at Starling's kindergarten "Alphabet Fashion Show" where each kid walked the runway sporting something that went with their assigned letter. (When Starling got the letter J, I tried all sorts of J things--we could have her wear jammies or be covered in jellybeans, etc. But she just kept getting weepy and saying, "I don't know what I'm supposed to be"! We finally realized she felt all at sea just having J things on her and felt certain she had to be something.
We found her this jaguar outfit (which we were careful not to call a cheetah or a leopard) and she was happy as could be. (And has worn it ever since.)
Mette in Magna-Tiles boots.
The End.
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