Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Tovi is 6!

Our first-born, our imaginative Tovi is 6 years old now.  Amazing.

He starts kindergarten tomorrow.  He wants to wear his new Iron Man shirt.  He has a super hero backpack.  He's ready.

And you know what?  I am too.  If we'd tried to do this a year ago, which we almost did, neither of us would have been ready.  What a difference a year makes.  Sure, I'll miss his silly face.  His little brother will miss him too.  But like Tovi said, "Mom, I'll just be gone some of the time.  Then I come back."

Here are some of my favorite moments from our Tov-ster over the last year.  I apologize for the layout nightmare.  Blogger does not like it when I copy and paste from Facebook.


Tovi: "God created us, so let us play in the tunnel!"
Logical argument, right?

First day of school ever! Tovi, Pre-k and Oren, daycare
























Tovi has a new habit. When he leaves a room, he tells us where he's going and cautions us, "You stay out of trouble, OK?" Does he maybe know us too well? 


I grew up LOVING the Redwall books. Thanks to the cartoon series on Netflix, Tovi is now a devoted fan too 








Tovi sang himself to sleep tonight: "Transformers! Robots in disguise..."


The first thing Tovi did when we got home tonight was find a dolphin stuffed animal in the play room. He explained, "Madison at school wanted a dolphin. Can I take this to school tomorrow and give it to her? That would make her happy." I love his thoughtful heart (and admire his skills with the ladies)!

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Spider-Man did occupational therapy exercises while I fixed supper tonight. Glad he thinks it's fun!




These are the best I could get because superheroes bounce in fast-motion.(7 photos)
For a few weeks now, Batman has had a cold. Every time Tovi puts that mask on, be begins to (fake) sneeze uncontrollably.


I started bedtime with Tovi and Oren. I finished bedtime with the Red Ranger and Green Lantern.

And Tovi totally said his prayers as the Red Ranger. He prayed for the other rangers 




I'm working on Tovi's L articulation with him, so when he says a word wrong, I repeat it back to him the way he said it to prompt him to correct it. In response, Tovi now just changes the word. For example:
Tovi: They were wooking for him.
Me: Wooking?
Tovi: Yeah, they were searching. And there was a fwying monster!
Me: A fwying monster?
Tovi:...A monster with wings.








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I asked Optimus if he was ready to brush his teeth. He looked at me with all the "duh" a plastic mask can muster and said, "I don't have a mouth."

Later he prayed, in character, "God, please help me fight the Decepticons..."

I want to never forget moments like these.







Tovi's monologue tonight went something like this:
"Superman is strong. He can fly. He wears a red cape that wraps around him. He's from the planet Krypton. But Krypton isn't a real planet in our universe. God made the universe. Why is Jesus God?"

Fairly standard stuff.








Tonight's bedtime conversation with Tovi revealed his disappointment at losing a superhero race today at school. He said, "I didn't cry loud. I just cried quiet and water stuck to my face."








Next time you see Tovi, ask him what happens when you dump a squirt gun on a TV.






Tovi: "I don't like orange. It's too colorful for me."






Tovi: "I'm trying to read my mind."





March 18 near Garrett, IN via mobile



Tonight the boys and I discussed that not all heroes have big muscles, but all heroes have big hearts.

I have good boys. I am so blessed to be their mom








Tovi: I know how you hunt Easter eggs. You crouch down real low, sneak up on them, jump real high, and catch them!





March 28 near Garrett, IN via mobile



Tovi: So cows pee milk out of them?





March 30 near Auburn, IN via mobile



Tovi: Animals don't drive cars.
Me: Oh? I was going to have Grayson Kitty drive tonight.
Tovi: He can't. It's too cold.





March 31 near Garrett, IN via mobile



Tonight Tovi begged Nathan to read him the Gospel story, from the triumphal entry through Jesus returning to heaven. Then he retold it to me in great, accurate detail. Those are among the most beautiful words I've ever heard spoken. Hosanna, and glory to the King of kings!





March 31 via iOS












April 6 near Garrett, IN via mobile








Tovi pretends the controls of our electric blanket is a bomb. I tried to teach him the word "defuse" this morning. He liked the word, and announced, "Oren, I confused the bomb!"




A chilly, rainy day calls for MEGA TENT!!

If you didn't read that in a monster truck rally voice, you did it wrong.
 — with The Boys and Kevin.


May 6 near Garrett, IN via mobile

Tovi: "Wow, those people are OLD."
This is what happens when we go to PT at the hospital.

Later he saw two teenage girls and said, "Wow, look, cute girls!" Woah there, Tiger.



It's heeee-eeeere...





June 26 via mobile

Me: How long do you think we have until it rains? I guess 20 minutes.
Tovi: I guess 21 minutes.
Me: What?! Did you just Price is Right me?
Tovi: Heh heh. Yeah.



July 6 near Ladoga via mobile

Tovi: *cough-sputter-choke*
Nathan: Did it go down the wrong pipe?
Tovi: Yeah, something went wrong when it went down my asparagus.
Me: (trying not to giggle) You mean your esophagus?
Tovi:...Yeah. That


July 17 near Ladoga via mobile

Tovi: Man, this water's really wet.


July 16 near Ladoga
This is how Tovi's watching Merlin with us on Daddy's lunch break.

Photo: This is how Tovi's watching Merlin with us on Daddy's lunch break.
   We FINALLY had a rain-free vacation day, so we played at the pool until the boys were thoroughly exhausted 

Photo: We FINALLY had a rain-free vacation day, so we played at the pool until the boys were thoroughly exhausted :)
July 23 near Ladoga
       
      Making use of one of the tubs from the move

Photo: Making use of one of the tubs from the move
July 23 near Ladoga
          Tovi delights in the attack 

Photo: Tovi delights in the attack






















So there's our Tovi in a year.  I pray his teachers grow to adore him as much as I do.  He's a special boy with a big imagination and a compassionate heart.  I love him.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

There is a Plan...

I have faith.  Sure I do.  I honestly believe God will work things out.  I just prefer he detail for me exactly how he plans to get me from Point A to Point B.  Funny thing, though: he never does.

I little over a year and a half ago, Nathan stepped out in faith and accepted the associate ministry position at Pleasant View Church of Christ, following God's call toward preaching ministry.  You can read more about that here.  That position has been a proving ground of sorts, an opportunity for Nathan to learn and grow as a minister and hopefully lead some others in growth as well.  He has been blessed to have some fantastic mentors really pour into him, teach him, lead him, admonish him, and encourage him.  He has had opportunities to preach and teach.  He has developed a website and a prayer ministry and started leading the worship team.  He has been privileged to work with some spectacular youth, some of the most talented, goofiest, most sincere kids on this planet.  And he has been humbled to serve alongside the mommies and daddies who raised such kids.  My children have been taught by some of the most creative ladies I've encountered.  My boys cheer when it's time to go to church.  They love it, and that's thanks to the love of these volunteers and staff.  I have been challenged and encouraged by generations of ladies who have taken the time to share their lives with me and allowed me to share my life with them.  We have been blessed.

But we've also been surprised.

When Nate left the Garrett church to work at Pleasant View, we really thought we were in it for the long-haul.  The church had a plan that when the senior minister retired, Nathan would move into that role.  But there was always a clause, an asterisk that said they could decide to keep him in the associate role if they felt that was best.  Al will be retiring soon, and the leadership decided it would be best for Nathan to stay in the associate role.  Their reasons are sensible and God-led.  The church, in order to move forward the way she needs to, will need more of an administrative-style minister.  Nathan is not that kind of minister.  He is relational.  He could stay in the associate role and continue working with youth, families, and worship.  But there's that call on his heart, that call that started years ago.  God called Nate to be a senior minister.  Point A, Point B.

There is a plan.  God knew how all this would work out from the beginning, long before Nate accepted the position at Pleasant View, long before the leadership announced he would not be the senior minister, even long before Nate knew he WANTED to be a senior minister.  While at Pleasant View, there have been some pieces that just haven't quite fit.  Our house didn't sell.  We thought it would.  We wondered if God was wanting us to be patient, or if he was wanting us to step out in faith and move anyway.  We waited.  We wondered why, if we were following God, he seemed to be holding us back.  Sometimes it felt a step...off.  We believed God called Nate to Pleasant View for a reason, but we also believed he had been called to senior ministry.  There was a plan.  We just didn't know what that plan was.

When the leadership at Pleasant View decided not to move Nate into the senior ministry role, he prayerfully started sending out his resume.  One church that was looking for a senior minister at the time was a small church in a small town in west-central Indiana.  Nate sent his resume on, not expecting much.  These things take time.

Practically right away, he received a call.  Then an interview.  Then another call.

The job was his if he was willing to accept it.

Pending a congregational vote in a week, Nathan will be the new senior minister at Ladoga Christian Church in Ladoga, IN, starting the first week of June.

God had a plan.  He did not tell me how he was getting me from Point A to Point B, or even what Point B would be.  But he knew.  Not once in all that time of uncertainty did we want for anything.  We had a house with more than enough space.  Cars to drive and gas to fuel them.  A babysitter who loved our kids and did housework so I didn't have to.  Friends who loved us and allow us to love them.  Income to cover our expenses.  Our needs have been met.  God has provided manna and required only that we gather for today and trust him to provide for tomorrow.  And he has.

This morning, our Sunday school class was studying the story of Joshua.  He saw the Promised Land and believed with real faith that they could take it, that God would lead them to conquer the giants so they could claim the land as God had promised.  But the people were afraid of those giants.  So they waited.  For 4 decades.

40 years.

God provided for them as they waited.  They had food.  Their shoes didn't wear out.  God was with them, day and night.  But 4 decades.

Joshua got to enter the Promised Land.  God delivered him to Point B.  The distance between was long, but God provided for Joshua and his people every step of the way.  If Joshua could wait 40 years, there's no excuse for my impatience.  God has no obligation to tell me how he'll get me from Point A to Point B.  He will.  That's enough.  And I truly believe his version of Point B is far better than any I could imagine for myself.

Nathan and I have run the numbers dozens of times, several different ways, and it looks like I'll get to be a stay at home mom after our move.  LCC has a parsonage, and with that and Nate's salary package, it looks like we won't need a full-time income from me.  I have never been a stay at home mom.  I'm sure you can imagine how I feel about this opportunity.  I love my job and believe I'm good at it.  But I have hated that I can only give my family what's left over.  My health is a real challenge, so often by the time I'm home from work, I'm far from my best self.  My family has paid the price for my career, even though I've worked because I've HAD to.  Even with our fairly modest lifestyle, we've never been able to make it on one income alone.  We have always trusted that if God orchestrated our finances in such a way that I needed to work, that he had a purpose in that.  I've seen my teaching career as my ministry.  But by the same token, when God orchestrated our finances in such a way that I no longer needed to work, we immediately saw that God was giving me the blessing of time.  Of energy.  Of health.  Of family.  This is God's will.

My friend Mitzi once explained seasons to me.  I was a new mom and really struggling with the change in my role in Nate's ministry, that I wasn't serving as a youth sponsor or dorm mom anymore.  Mitzi explained that I was in a new season, a season of motherhood, and that like all seasons, it wouldn't last forever.  She said her season of motherhood had been a tough adjustment too, but now as a mother of grown children, her season had changed and she was serving busily again, and missing those days of young motherhood.  She said this was my season and to embrace it, because the season would change soon enough.  Wise words.

Now we're entering a brand new season.  Nathan's entering senior ministry for the first time.  I'm going to be a stay at home mom for the first time and will be stepping out of my career, at least for now.  We are leaving the community we've lived in for the bulk of our  married lives.  We learned to be adults here.  Our children were born here.  Our dearest friends are here.  But God is with us, day and night.  He's providing enough for today and will again tomorrow.  We are somewhere between Point A and Point B right now, and that's OK.  God has a plan.  He had one all along.  I'm blessed and humbled to be a part of that plan.  And I'm so excited to see what's next.