Friday, November 30, 2012

Day 30: 3 Gifts Astonishing



Day 30:  Three gifts astonishing


1.  It's astonishing how much love one heart can hold.




2.  It's astonishing how different a sister and brother can be.




3.  It's astonishing the lengths He went to save us, yet for us it's so simple. Oh how He loves us.
"For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish,
but have eternal life." ~ John 3:16


And that's a wrap.  One month... 30 days... of declared eucharisteo.  Praise Him.



Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Day 29: 3 Gifts Red


Day 29:  Three gifts red


1.  Red flowers in autumn.




2.  Ones I love wrapped in red.




3.  Ones I love lounging in red.




Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Day 28: 3 Gifts in Community



Day 28: Three gifts in community


1.  Fellowship

2.  Friendship

3.  Accountability






Fun Fact ~

Here's something I learned yesterday.  It's not wise to recycle your 50 lb. bag of dog food as a lint receptacle between your washer and dryer.  Come to find out, it makes a cozy den for Stuart Little and the rest of his mouse family.  For when one or more of the community of dogs you live with notices Stuart make a food-run, they will tear that bag to smithereens, revealing all the Little Family secrets within.  Your floor will be scattered with empty seed husks (they apparently steal a good deal of seed from the bird feeders) and empty acorn shells.  There was no evidence that any members of the Little Family were harmed in the home invasion; they all apparently fled successfully.
Can you just imagine how much lint an almost full 50 lb. bag of dog food can hold?  Yeah....



Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Day 27: A Gift Handmade, Held, Happy



1.  Handmade = Sweet treats homemade by the hands of two that are dear to my heart.



2.  Held = a precious new grandbabe cradled in my hands.




3.  Happy = my pretty kitty, Tahra, last night when I scratched her back for 20 minutes.


Thought I'd hit the archives for this one - they're still gifts that delight me!  Well... except for Tahra whose delight was just last night...but the picture is an oldie.




Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Monday, November 26, 2012

Day 26: 3 Gifts Preparing and A Recipe or Two



1.  Containers of work-day lunches prepared and frozen for quick retrieval; turkey and rice casserole for hubby, turkey soup for me (recipes below).





2.  Tablespoon-dollops of pumpkin, frozen and placed in a ziplock freezer-bag for when the furry kids get a tummy ache.  Did you know pumpkin relieves a dog's upset stomach?




3.  A trip to the Tree Farm means preparations for Christmas decorating has begun!


Here are those recipes...

Turkey and Rice Soup

Take your turkey carcass, neck and giblets and place them in a very large pot and cover with water (be sure all the bones are covered - it will be about a gallon).  Add a large onion, quartered; two carrots, quartered; and two celery stalks, quartered. Cover and simmer for many hours.  Cool and strain the solids out of the stock.  I typically let mine go all day. I start it the morning after Thanksgiving (intent on avoiding the shenanigans of Black Friday), and don't start the cooling process till late afternoon or evening.

You can discard the veggies, compost them, or remove the onion and feed the rest to your eager, happy-dancing dogs.  This year those drooling dogs also received the neck meat and giblets (careful of bones).  There have been times, though, I've added it back to the soup - your preference.

Take another couple of carrots (2 or 3) and dice them; another onion, diced; and another couple of celery stalks, diced. Add them to the soup along with a few shakes each of your preferred spices (thyme, rosemary, bay leaf, a bit of seasoned sea salt - this one seasoned with garlic, onion and black pepper).   Also add 2 cups of diced turkey.

Bring to a gentle boil, then let simmer for about 30 minutes. Turn off the heat and add 2 cups of cooked, brown rice.  Let it cool a bit and then divide into your storage containers.  It gave me about a dozen pint jars.  The Thanksgiving Turkey Soup is one of my favorite parts of the holiday!


Turkey and Rice Casserole

This is a lot like the soup, only subtract the broth and add a bit of cream of chicken, instead...

Saute half a diced onion, a diced celery stalk, a diced carrot (go heavier on the veggies, if you like, but this was made with Joe in mind who prefers it meat-heavy).  Add a can of Healthy Request Cream of Chicken soup (until I can post a tried and true recipe for homemade cream of... I'm trying to get away from canned soups), 2 cups turkey, 2 cups cooked, brown rice, and 1/2 to 3/4 cup of the broth from the turkey soup, if available.  If not, just add a touch of water to loosen it a bit.  Season it to taste, similar to the soup.  Stir it up good and turn it out to an 8 x 12 baking dish sprayed with non-stick spray.  Bake at 375 for 30 minutes.  It should serve about 4 if you add a yummy side-salad to it.



And there's still turkey left.  I think there may be Turkey Pot Pie on our future!




Using up every bit of that Thanksgiving turkey (and the stock veggies, too)... I'm linking to the Homestead Barn Hop!  I'm new to it... but I just love Barn Hop Mondays!






Sunday, November 25, 2012

Sunday Psalms and Day 25






Day 25:  Three gifts ugly-beautiful

1.  Christ's sacrifice at the cross.


Besides that, I don't know what else to list. 

Saturday, November 24, 2012

My Favorite Finds and Day 24



I took this the same day Kingston was hoping to find baby cows (which we still haven't done).  That's a mama and her
growing-up-fast calf in a pasture I pass on the way to their house, and the reason why I thought we wouldn't have much
trouble spotting baby cows in the fields.  This wasn't a good weekend for Billings Farm, they're doing holiday stuff.


Day 24: Three gifts humble.


1.  My bank account, but I'm thankful to have one. ;-)

2.  My vehicle, but I'm thankful to have one. :-D

3.  That I have a relationship with the Most High, and He calls me daughter.  That's bow-down-before-Him humbleness.


Favs...

Ann Voskamp"We won’t stop confessing He is good and we won’t stop thanking Him for grace and we won’t stop holding out our hands — and taking His hand. We won’t stop believing that “God is good” is not some trite quip for the good days but a radical defiant cry for the terrible days."


In the Kitchen ~
Don't Waste the Crumbs:  This just makes me want to get a food dehydrator.


For the Home ~
Fragrant Home:  Christmasy potpourri scents... 15 of them!


For the Dogs ~
Green Living:  After the last couple of days, I'm determined to become more purposeful in finding an herbal flea and tick deterrent for the dogs.  I can't risk putting those awful chemicals on them.  I'm still doing research, but this link is a start.


And let the Christmas music commence!






Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Friday, November 23, 2012

A Thanksgiving Recap and Day 23




First...

Day 23:  Three Gifts Only in Christ


1.  Joy, the kind that runs deep with no regard for circumstances.

2.  Love, in it's purest form.

3.  Hope, for the now and for the future.



It's been a crazy couple of days, which is why I'm just now putting this together with only 3 hours left of Day 23.  I'm going to go ahead and publish it with just pics at 9:08, while I go back and write commentary. 

If you've come before I republish... then come back in a little while and read all about it!


----------


Okay, so... I've been feeling yuck pretty much all week. I stayed home from work Monday, went in Tuesday, but left early, had off on Wednesday (yay!) and didn't feel too bad, so did too much, and woke up Thursday morning feeling so crummy that I thought I was going to have to send Joe to the kids' house with the turkey while I slept the day away.

Thankfully, God answered my prayer for strength and wellness in the affirmative, and by 9:30, I was in the kitchen prepping the bird.  I continued to feel better as the day wore on.  I still have sniffles and a ridiculous tickle in my throat, but I don't feel like I'd just rather lay down.

Knowing I was under the weather, Kristiina wanted to get here early to take on most of the kitchen-burden.  Wouldn't you know, it was a day Aria had one of her marathon morning naps and they didn't get here till about 1:00!  Ah, but she was a well-rested, happy baby!




While mommy and grandma were in the kitchen, she sat with daddy on the couch for a little while watching The Lorax.  She loves that movie!  She never keeps shoes and socks on, and mom... there's that beautiful cardigan you gave her for her birthday.  {grin}  Kristiina absolutely loves it.

Meanwhile, Kingston was happily (and busily) "helping" us cook.  He planted himself on a stool to man the "ice-maker" (bread-maker) while it made dough. No matter how many times we corrected him, it was an ice-maker.  When it was time to mash the potatoes, he excitedly ran to get daddy to show him what I was doing.  Now that he doesn't shy away from noisy appliances, they delight him. 

There was one point where he was trying to ask Kristiina and I something about the bread-maker or the dough, and we couldn't decipher the word he was trying to say... sinking... thinking...?  He shook his head.  Kristiina asked him to repeat it and he did, patiently and slowly to try to help us get it.  We still didn't.  He tried again, looking straight at us as if reading his lips might help.  "No, sorry Kingston, we're not sure what you telling us."  He thought for a moment and said, "Is it resting?"  I was utterly impressed that at under three, his vocabulary is large enough that he can find a synonym to convey what he was trying to say.  The bread-maker pauses and is quiet for a good period of time and he wanted to know if then was the dough resting.  (We still don't know what that word was.)  He is so smart... and so fun.  How'd he get so fun?!




Look no further!  (She needed leverage to get at that turkey!!)





Finally, it was time to sit down to eat... an hour and a half later than anticipated, but that always seems to happen, marathon nap, or not.




Turkey was Aria's first taste of meat of any kind.  Despite the expression I captured, she liked it.




Kingston's wide-eyed-turkey shirt says, "Eat Pizza!" 




After dinner, Aria (with Kingston's help) opened her birthday presents from grandma and grandpa.  (Having run out of time last week.)  This is a walker/activity toy.




Big brother actually thought it was pretty cool, too.  Look at those bare toes.  They each had one sock on and one sock off!  Silly kids.

After the kids played for a little while, we had coffee and dessert... that home-grown pumpkin pie.  I'll share the recipe later... and also how I would tweak it.  It wasn't our favorite; some of the spices were over powering, and the wetness of the fresh pumpkin (versus the gloppiness of canned pumpkin), gave it strange, custardy texture.  Anyway, like I said, I'll share the recipe and more on that in a future post.




In his pajamas, in anticipation of the ride home, Kingston helped me wash dishes.




"I'm a very good helper." he told me, numerous times. {grin} And he is.




After everyone went home and I finished up in the kitchen... the dogs came upstairs and it was this.

And it was at this time that I noticed Emma was limping on her front leg.  It alarmed me because the previous day, she suddenly started limping on her rear leg.  When lameness comes on quickly and switches legs abruptly, it's a sign of Lyme Disease.  Oh... heart sinking.  Joe and I knew we'd try to call the vet in the morning, hoping they'd be open and not enjoying a long weekend.

By the time we woke up, she was so lame and weak in the legs, they wouldn't hold her up.  She looked like a newly born foal trying to stand for the first time.  It was wrenching to watch.  She wouldn't eat or drink, either.  I called promptly and thankfully the vet's office was open... and could see us at 10:15!  Phew. 

Joe carried her to the car and I road with her in the back seat.  She was a very good girl for the doctor.  She had blood drawn and her temperature taken; she never flinched.  The doc was certain we were correct even before the blood results came back.  All of her symptoms; lameness, swollen joints, fever, loss of appetite, pointed to Lyme Disease.  The test proved that to be the case and we were given anti-inflammatory meds that she's to take once a day for a week.  She had her first right there in the office; they're yummy chewables.  Another medication she needs to take for a month!  Three a day with food or they'll make her sick. 

We were also given the assurance that she'll be like herself in 24 hours, and totally recovered by the time the meds are gone.  Big sigh of relief!  Within an hour of taking the anti-inflammatory, she was walking on her own, and even with some perkiness.  Such a welcome improvement.




Tonight, all our beloved canine-kids got to eat their annual Thanksgiving fair... the veggies (sans onions) with neck meat and giblets from the stock pot.  Such happy dogs, are they!




Ah, and later, I found where my little "good helper" put away the potholders!




Our beautiful Em-n-Em-n-Emma is doing so much better now!  That anti-inflammatory works wonders, and I suppose the other stuff is doing it's thing, as well.  We're so happy she's okay.  She actually chased after her brother this evening when they went outside.  She's a different dog from this morning and we're so thankful.




And finally... while we were busy with Emma, this gorgeous little guy was at the salon with mommy (Daddy and Aria were there, too), and they both were getting their hair cut!  Yay!  Kristiina said he woke up this morning and volunteered, "I'm ready for a haircut." They had been talking about it, prepping him.


And at the park afterward; a reward for being SUCH a good boy!  Look how big he is.

No more ponytail to keep those long, curly locks out of his face.  I haven't seen it in person, yet... just lots of pictures and a video... tomorrow we'll see for ourselves.  Can't wait!




Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Day 22: Three Gifts Grateful



Day 22:  Three Gifts Grateful



 
"Give thanks to the Lord for He is good, His love endures forever."  ~ 1 Chronicles 16:34

1.  I'm grateful for God's everlasting love.


 
"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith - and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God - " ~ Ephesians 2:8

2.  I'm grateful for God's amazing, sustaining grace and the gift of salvation.


 
"Lord, you are my God; I will exalt you and praise your name, for in perfect faithfulness you have done wonderful things, things planned long ago." ~ Isaiah 25:1

3.  I'm grateful for God's perfect faithfulness and the wonderful things He's done.




"Give thanks with a grateful heart
Give thanks to the Holy One
Give thanks because He's given Jesus Christ, His Son"
~ Don Moen



Nic, Kristiina and the kids are coming over. We're providing the turkey, gravy, mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, squash (home-grown!), homemade french bread, and pumpkin pie (home-grown, too!).  They're bringing the stuffing, homemade cranberry jelly (as opposed to the canned stuff I have in the fridge), and a green salad with toasted almonds and pomegranate that I can't wait to try.

They're going to come nice and early so we have plenty of time to enjoy each other's company and so Kristiina can help with the cooking, particularly since I've been a bit under the weather the last couple of days.  It's that time of year for sore throats and sniffles.


May you find yourself relishing the company of loved ones today, amidst hearty laughter and warm embraces.  If that's not on your agenda this day, then may you find peace and rest; time to reflect, with a grateful heart.
 
 
I hope you're feeling blessed today!




Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Day 21: Three Gifts Family



Day 21:  Three Gifts Family



1.  Laughter, Friendship, Love...



2.  ...Laughter, Friendship, Love...



3.  ...Laughter, Friendship, Love!



Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Day 20: Three Gifts of Traditions






Day 20:  Three Gifts of Traditions


1.  Holiday meals and the homemade turkey soup the day after Thanksgiving.

2.  MOPS Fridays with Kristiina and the kids.

3.  Sunday family-days - sometimes with food, sometimes not; always with love and laughter.





Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Monday, November 19, 2012

Day 19: Three Gifts Autumn



Day 19:  Three Gifts Autumn


1.  Playing outside with my most favorite little boy... leaves and harvest!




2.  An Autumn Birthday for my most favorite little girl... and this one, the first!

There will be much more of this to come... {wink}



3.  The brilliant, bronzed colors of Autumn!




Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Sunday Psalms and Day 18






Day 18:  A gift made, shared, passed on


1.  My dear daughter, blessed with wonderful talents and skills... and that she delights in blessing others with them.



2.  Birthday presents for a cherished one-year-old.


3.  The Giving Platter, given to me with a plate of cookies to bless our family when dad went on to heaven.  It was one not associated with any particular season... simply friendship.   Never meant to be kept but passed on, I filled it with treats and gave it to my beloved friend and decade-long bible-study hostess for her buffet table the last time we gathered together.




Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Saturday, November 17, 2012

My Favorite Finds and Day 17





Compassion in Peru ~

Angie Smith "Every step we take in the direction of compassion brings us closer to the the cross, and I don’t know that I’ve ever seen the Gospel more clearly illustrated in my life."


 Shaun Groves:  It's so simple, and yet so powerful - "And the impact of Compassion’s ministry extends beyond a sponsored child’s family to the community around her."


For more amazing stories about the group's experience in Peru, or to learn how you can sponsor a hopeful child, click on the picture below:

Compassion Bloggers Peru Trip 2012




Ann Voskamp:  "We are the women who make our lives about the cause of Christ, not the applause of men, live to express the Gospel, not to impress the Jones’, live not to make our absence felt, but to make Christ’s presence known."

OCM Skin Care ~
Tsh, A Simple Mom:  OCM = Oil Cleansing Method.  "Alright, it might sound a little odd to clean your face with an oil, especially if you have oily skin. But contrary to popular belief, oil does not cause oily skin or acne. That culprit is usually a combination of hormones, trapped bacteria, and dirt."
I've read lots about this and I'm doing it!  Bought the natural, reasonably-priced ingredients yesterday and gave it my first try. So far... love it!  My skin feels good.  I'll write a post about it soon (couple of weeks) with a status update.  I recommend you go see what Tsh has to say about it...

Tsh also wrote over at (in)courage yesterday - she had some good words:  "Choosing to go with the flow during the hard days when nothing goes right (this happened last week)—and choosing to go to bed early that night, because His mercies are new every morning."


A soft and gentle worship song.  Close your eyes and enjoy; soak up those words....that's how I listen, and invariably tear up at the piano solo right after:
"...look to the sky, hear the angels cry, singing 'holy is the Lord...'"



I like Brooke Frasier a lot.



Day 17:  3 gifts of laughter


1.  Kingston speech!  He always has me in stitches (or puddled... like when he told me out of the blue yesterday as we walked hand-in-hand across a parking lot, "Grandma, I really love you.") Wow. He can make my heart stop!  But this is about laughter... he evokes it every time I see him.


2.  Glances with Kristiina over those little heads we love so much.  Sometimes we try to hide our amusement; sometimes we just can't.


3.  Hanging out with hubby - he has me giggling all the time.




Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!

Friday, November 16, 2012

Day 16: Three Gifts Hard Eucharisteo



What is eucharisteo, anyway?

Here's Ann, because she speaks often of it...



Ah, it's essentially just giving thanks... in Greek.

So, hard eucharisteo must be... being thankful even when it's confounding.

Here are what would be my "I'm thankful for it but wouldn't mind if it were different..."


1.  My job.  For helping to pay the bills, I'm glad I have one.  But it's not what moves me; I'd rather be creating, homesteading and homemaking.  Those 40+ hours a week take up way too much of my time.

2.  Loving being here so much.  I love, LOVE living in a rural, country setting, in a state that utterly celebrates the ushering in of each season.  And, I wouldn't trade living 15 minutes from my grandkids and their parents for ANYTHING in all the world.  But the rest of those I love live far from me, and since I'm a family-girl, that's hard eucharisteo.  I must establish a better routine of visiting and hosting...  or maybe everyone could just move north and fall in love with it, too!  That would be ideal.

3.  Ha. Its ironic.  Right now I resent homemaking.  So, it's hard eucharisteo. I love it and hate it simultaneously because I don't have the proper time to devote to it.




Hmmm... try that one.  Hard eucharisteo is kind of hard to pin point - took some mulling over.




Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!




Thursday, November 15, 2012

Baby Animals and Day 15



That same morning that I woke up to snow caps on the pumpkins, I called Kristiina to see what she and the kids were up to.  She had said previously that she'd like to join me while I ran a few errands.  When she answered, though, I could hear a bit of tension. "What's the matter?" I asked her.  "Kingston is being crazy... he just woke Aria up from her morning nap." [being crazy is code for typical, loud, rambunctious, almost-three-year-old - something he comes by honestly; at 3, his mother knew how to use rambunctious in a sentence].  "Aww, I'm sorry. I was just calling to see if you still wanted to run around with me today."  She hesitated and I could tell she wasn't sure anymore if that was the best idea.  "Or, if you like, I can just come swoop up Kingston so you and Aria can have some time to yourselves."  Even before she uttered a word, I could sense relief, "Oh!  Would you swoop?!  That would be awesome."

And so began Kingston and grandma's day together.  Considering the boring places I had to stop, he was very well behaved.  My favorite part, though, was our chats in the car while en route.  He's a very good communicator. 

I just said to Joe the other day when we left their house that I could talk to him all day.  "You mean you could listen to him all day!"  Haha... yeah!  He's a talker.

We share ideas and plans and schemes and he responds with, "Yeah, that will be great!" or "does that sound like a good plan?" or "does that make sense?" Can you just imagine him looking at you with the innocence of a three-year-old and his chocolate brown doe-eyes asking you if his idea makes sense? I become a mushy, goo-ball every time.  It's crazy-adorable!

If he'd like to alter a plan that's been set in motion, he'll ask if "that's a big deal?"  Or if he's not sure, you'll see him pause, thoughtful- with a finger on the chin, and say, "Hmmm, yemme sink about that" [see the wheels turning... and then the light bulb goes off, and he smiles] "oh, i have an idea..."  He is so fun.

So, while we were driving, he started talking about animals and their babies and mama-milk.  I'm not sure how we got on the topic, but he told me that if I "wanted to see what he's talking about, it's on his mat"  (I was confused.)  Kristiina later told me that a week prior he had asked about the cow udders on his car mat, you know - the floor mat that has roads and villages... and a farm with a cow. He wanted to know what those udders were.  He hadn't brought it up to her since then, but he remembered it now.

After chatting awhile about baby animals and mama-milk, we both decided it would "be a good plan" to find some baby animals.  Well, you know this is not exactly the best time of year to spot baby animals grazing in the fields (which is really what we were hoping to find).  Those Spring-born calves are almost as big as their mamas now. 



Still, we drove and we looked.  Then I had an idea... Billings Farm in Woodstock; home of all those beautiful Jersey cows.  Mom and I were there once in December and they had babies of all ages... they must breed them year-round.  Off to Billings Farm we go!

Only, on the way there...


This happened. 

By the time I pulled in their parking lot, I felt like he had slept long enough for it to be a power nap and thought he probably wouldn't object to me waking him up, especially since we were about to see a whole bunch of baby cows.

So... I called his name; nothing.  Again, a little louder; nothing.  I opened my door and shut it; nothing.  Hmmm, I guess the nap wins.

I took the scenic route home (and, actually, had taken the scenic route there, too).  The route that takes me right past Slick and Willy's place.



Beautiful, isn't it?  No wonder Slick and Willy are such happy horses.

I thought maybe by the time we got there, Kingston would have slept long enough and petting the nice horses would be a good consolation.






When I went up to the fence, they were grazing.  This is Willy with Kingford. 



It took them a few minutes of my cooing and calling, but finally they decided they'd come say hello.

Kingford still wasn't sure he needed to give me the time of day.  He's quite a bit older than his adolescent pasture-mates.  He finally came and paid his respects, but he didn't stay long.




Hello handsome.



Oh, you're such a beautiful boy.




A close-up of Willy and the "hairs of his chinny chin chin."




Slick has the white on his nose and Willy is all black.



Sweet, sweet boys.

I was there for a good 20 or 30 minutes petting and cooing and rubbing the noses and necks of  those beauties while they returned what I'm sure was their version of hugs and affection.

Kingston never knew we were there.


 

We finally headed for home.  He woke up when we got there and told his mother all about our adventures.  Then he remembered the baby animals and told her with a pouty lip and near tears, "But we forgot."  Aw... he didn't realize we tried. 

I'm going to call Billings Farm and make a plan.  I think Kingston and I will have another date real soon!  I'd say this weekend, but he has two birthday parties... one for the twins (playmates), and one cake-smash for his baby sister.

With all that fun, he won't notice if we postpone it a week.




Day 15:  3 gifts golden


Chance said no repeats, but I think the cherished gold bands are worthy of another shout-out, so...

1.  My gold bands, symbols of love and a promise.



2.  The beautiful autumn backdrop of this precious photo of my two beloved girls!



3.  The sun; whether rising, setting or shining... I'm a huge fan.





Care to join me in giving thanks?  In the comments name three things you're thankful for today, and if you have a blog... maybe you'd like to link up!