Tag Archives: Life

All My Friends Are Getting Married

A journey through the mind of the single friend.

Please note that there is no intention of making my friends feel bad, just some things that make me chuckle.

“You’re at that age.”

“It’s that time in your life.”

If I have to hear these phrases one more time when I mention the amount of weddings I have been invited to I am going to scream.

I am not kidding.

Since I started college back in 2005 I have been present at about 32 weddings (I say about because I had to write as many as I could remember down and there’s a pretty good chance I’ve missed some). I say present because I’ve been invited to at least 41 weddings but was unable to attend some.

Now on average that doesn’t seem that bad…it’s about 3 weddings a year, however the last 3 years have accounted for more than half of those weddings.

But for the rest of this post, let’s just focus on one year…this year, 2014.

This summer alone I was invited to 10 weddings, was available to attend 3 before I left for Boston, missed 3 while I was in Boston, never planned on going to two because they were the same day as one that I ended up missing while I was in Boston, and 2 I was invited to in August, 1 I’ve already attended and 1 this weekend.

You still with me.

I don’t know if you know this, but that’s a lot. Also, let me note that none of the weddings I was invited to were in Bozeman. The closest was Butte 75 miles away, the furthest Kalispell about 300 miles. 3 were in Helena (90 miles) 1 in Polson (about 270 miles) 1 Butte, and 5 in Kalispell.

Yes that’s a lot of driving, but more over, that’s a lot of money…just spent driving, I don’t even want to calculate how much it would be total or even factor in gifts.

My fridge looked like a wonderland of save the dates and wedding invites, I had to buy more magnets just to accommodate them all. I’ve never been more excited to get a save the date magnet, so I would have something to hold up all the other save the dates.

This is my reality.

The end is in sight, a wedding this weekend and one in November (which takes the tally up to 11 for the year).

I am holding my breath for with fingers crossed that I won’t have as many weddings next summer.

Seriously I already have one wedding that I’m aware of and my whole summer has been rearranged accordingly, even school in Boston. It’s kind of a big one, my brother is getting married I don’t even want to think about the insanity that accompanies a family wedding.

So I am starting a friendship application process, new friends are always welcome, but if they are currently in a committed relationship and looking to possibly get married within the next two years, they will be put on a waiting list, and friendship will begin post wedding.

All current friends, you have been grandfathered in, so no worries. Please understand that if you get a handmade pot holder as a wedding gift, it’s because I am tapped out and have no money to purchase a gift.

But hey at least it’s handmade.

I Am Not A “Woo!” Girl

I have always wanted to jump out of a plane. 

Bungee jumping terrifies me. The ocean terrifies me. Snakes…I won’t even go there. But jumping out of a plane at 10,000 ft always sounded like fun to me. 

So in July of 2009 I did just that. I jumped out of a plane. I’m sorry, I went skydiving, for some reason skydiving sounds less suicidal than saying I jumped out of a plane. 

My aunt Mary Kay was visiting and she mentioned to my dad that she had always wanted to go skydiving, and couldn’t think of a better place to see from a birds-eye view than the Flathead Valley. I would agree, but I think New Zealand would be pretty awesome. That Saturday morning, my brothers, my dad, my aunt, and I loaded into vehicles and headed out to Lost Prairie to go skydiving. 

I remember the morning vividly, by 8:30am it was already well on its way to being a very hot day, and we had nothing but clear blue skies for miles and miles. The drive to Lost Prairie is a beautiful one filled with forests, hills, hidden valleys and fields that are tucked away only to be seen by those who look for them. My brother Mark and I bumped along in our family’s ’87 Nissan truck looking at the sky and speaking very little. Neither of us had ever done this before, whereas my dad and Chris both had, and we were nervous.  

Lost Prairie is about a 45 minute drive from our home in Kalispell and the closer we got to our destination, the more nervous and nauseous I got. I kept thinking about how I was supposed to speak at John Paul II Parish that evening to help raise funds for my upcoming year with Reach. Would I live to be there? I actively tried to not think about the fact that I could die. That would get me no where. So I worried away the time by looking at the scenery, taking in every thing I saw, I didn’t want to take anything for granted. You know, just in case I didn’t see any of it again. I stared at my brother’s face, his square-jaw and fresh shave, his hazel-green eyes and his nose. His nose that looks just like mine. We all have the same nose. Don’t worry I wasn’t driving. I know you were concerned. I also know that if my brother actually reads this he will be mortified to know that I put this out there for the world. I also know that my mom may tear up. Sorry mom. 

By the time we pulled up to the Osprey Parachute Club. My nerves were pretty frayed. We signed the waivers, watched the video and paid the man. Then we decided our jump order. Mark and I first, then Mary Kay, then dad and Chris. We put on our jumpsuits (seriously), met our trained jump partners (that’s a nice name for the person you would be harnessed to for the next hour) and we loaded into the plane. Once we got in the plane and it took off, the nerves eased up, I mean we’d already paid and were off the ground. I’ll spare you the awkward details of having to sit on a stranger’s lap for a 45min plane ride, with your older brother sitting across from you, but this little description should jump-start your imagination. As we circled higher and higher I became very calm. By the time we were opening the door of the plane and I was standing on the wheel outside, I had accepted the fact that I could die, but if this view was the last thing I saw then that was totally fine by me. 

We jumped. Correction, we back flipped out of the plane. Which to be honest is a little disorienting. Then we were in free fall for 30 seconds. About 10 seconds after we jumped my brother and his partner jumped. And I could hear him yell, “Yeah! Ahahahahaha! Woooooo!” 

I am not a woo girl. It’s not a thing I do, even jumping out of planes, I don’t yell. Not on roller coasters or anything. I’d rather take it all in with a giant smile on my face than scream my appreciation. If you want to see me yell, you should have seen me at my brothers’ soccer games. 

30 seconds of free fall and then 15 minutes of a parachute aided float back to earth. I saw the entire valley I called home spread out before me, but in a way I’d never seen it before. Seeing something from 10,000 – 30,000 feet is so vastly different than seeing some from 5,000 feet while you gently drift back to earth. It was exhilarating, breathtaking, and awe-inspiring. I would do it again in a heart beat. 

I recently finished applying to Boston College’s School of Theology and Ministry for a summer graduate studies program. When I say recently, I mean I legitimately pushed submit on the application about two days ago. The month or so it took me of staring at the same questions over and over and finally writing my personal statement was a long month of worry, nerves and nausea. What if I get in? I will be gone for 5 weeks for the next three summers. I will miss out on our justice outreach project, volunteering at camp, witnessing good friends getting married, but in the long run I will gain so much more. So why was I nervous? I am taking an unknown step, granted it’s one that I wanted to take, one that I am excited for, but it is a risk nonetheless. I am stepping out of my comfort zone, hoping that soon I will be standing on the wheel of the airplane, staring at the new endless opportunities ahead of me. The minute I hit “Submit” the nerves and worry went away. It’s out of my hands. 

I am in my 30 second free fall, who knows if the chute will open? I guess I’ll find out in 29, 28, 27…

Sympathy for the Devil

Please allow me to introduce myself. I realize in terms of blogging that I have left out the necessary introductory post, where I tell all of you about myself and why I have decided to start blogging. Now that I have a somewhat captive audience I figured I would throw it out there.

Here’s the deal, if you’ve read my previous posts (all or some) you hopefully have been getting a pretty good idea of who I am. If you’ve been reading them and are still in the dark, well then read this, then go back and re-read all the other posts and maybe it will begin to make more sense to you. 

So I started this adventure called “my life” back in 1987 with a lot of help from my parents and some support, but more pokes and prods, from my older brother Mark. Almost three years into this new life, Chris came along and RUINED EVERYTHING! I am just kidding, but that was my reaction to basically anything he did post infancy until probably mid-high school. I love my family, seriously, they are the funniest people on earth. You should see our group iMessages. They are also the most supportive and loving people ever, despite the fisticuffs we’ve been known to engage in. Don’t worry it’s been at least a year since the last fisticuff. (I really like using the word fisticuff, I now need to use it on a regular basis.)

I am a fiercely loyal friend. I will engage in fisticuffs (see I told you I liked the word fisticuffs) and bar brawls for my friends. For real. I overuse the term “best friend” because I consider A LOT of people to be my best friends. Deal with it. My friends are just another branch on the Kelly family tree. Even if we don’t talk anymore, there’s still a branch for you, it’s why I have a hard time deleting people from Facebook.  

There are a few friends that I refer to as my brothers or sisters. These people have seen me cry, and I don’t mean just silent tears streaming down my face. I mean full on ugly cry, where I have sought them out to be my rock in the turbulent times of my life. These people are right up there with my brothers and parents, though most of the time they don’t mock me as much. 

It is because of a few of these sister/brother friends that I started writing down my stories and thoughts and put them on the inter webs. They encouraged/bullied me into pursuing my incessant need to share my thoughts and stories. It was 75% encouragement and 5% bullying, and the other 20% came from my bedroom walls and car who were tired of having to listen to me ramble on.

So here it is. I am now blogging. And more so I am now publicly posting the blog on social media. Baby steps. I am a rambler, and I get off on tangents super easily. You should be a fly on the wall when I am writing these things down, one time is all it takes. Also just be happy that the finished products are under a 1000 words, because before I re-read and edit them they only make sense to me…and trust me, no one wants to read my stream of consciousness, I don’t even want to read it. 

So thanks for joining me in this new venture I hope you enjoy the ride. 

If you’re my friend you now know that I would hit someone with a pool cue for you. And now my brothers, parents, and the rest of the world knows that I would straight up punch a person out for them. I am sure my parents would be so proud. 

Apologies to my brothers, Mark and Chris, for posting things about you to the internet without your consent or permission. And to my parents, for not always accurately portraying you. The perspective of a child is vastly different from that of semi-grown up Kelly.

To my friends who’ve seen me ugly cry…yeah…um…let’s just not talk about it.

For those of you who understand the title, congrats, I accept you.

If you haven’t figured out the significance to the title of this post and how it relates, Google it, then let me know what you find out. Enjoy the rabbit hole.

Sorry Not Sorry

First, let me just start off apologizing for this title. I truly hate this phrase, it started out as just a working title, and then I legitimately couldn’t think of anything better. The only redeeming quality there is to this is that I didn’t hashtag it. Though just using the word hashtag, feels like I just cheapened the moment. My deepest apologies for being so modernly cliche.

I joined Twitter back in the dark ages of 2008…which by the way is a fairly big accomplishment considering Twitter was really just starting to take off at that time in larger metropolitan areas like NYC. Upon signing up I had to pick my Twitter name, a profile picture, and write something in the “about me” section. All of that was relatively easy, my picture is one of my all time favorites…me riding the wooden escalator in the NYC Macy’s in homage to Elf, my username, is basically a nickname from high school with my favorite number attached, and my bio was short to the point, and I thought represented my existential self perfectly. 

“Live, Laugh, Love.”

In other words, my bio, was stupid, cutesy, cliche, and safe.

When I was a kid in elementary school I had no problem liking what I liked and telling everyone in the whole world about it. Heck, I got “married” while on a family camping trip when I was four, and my groom and I skipped around holding hands telling the whole wide world that we were getting married.

Don’t worry, pretty sure it wasn’t legal, unless there is some weird loophole in Montana State Law that says marriages between 4 year old are only made legal if the wedding was witnessed by both families, was presided over by an elder sibling, and a Berenstein Bears book was used in place of a Bible…stranger things have happened.

I was labeled the “weird” girl in 4th grade (Weird by the way was the outcast label of the time…so much has changed) and I was proud of it! I liked listening to the Beatles, and watching old black and white movies with Jimmy Stewart and Cary Grant, I loved watching Star Trek Next Gen, and I lived for the Batman animated cartoon everyday after school and X-Men the animated series every Saturday morning. I also liked watching the Power Rangers…but that wasn’t cool so I blamed my watching it on my younger brother. 

It wasn’t until I was in college that I realized the proper terminology for what I was. NERD. I was and am a huge nerd. However, for some reason, one that I am still trying to figure out, I buried the nerd flag. I was still nerdy about a lot of things, but I wasn’t being truthful about myself and who I was. 

I now strive to be myself all the time, I love the things that I love, and I shouldn’t be ashamed of those things. I know some people will laugh when they find out that I am a proud Kickstarted backer of the Veronica Mars Movie,and others will just pretend they didn’t read that I have recently become addicted to the MTV show Teen Wolf because it’s freaky and amazing and certain character arcs are all the reason you need to watch a teen soap about supernatural beings living in a fictions town in California.

Are you beginning to get my point?

At the end of it all I don’t want to have any regrets, I don’t want to be ashamed of who I was created to be. Which as my new Twitter bio states:

“Pop Culture Nerd, Comic Book Lover, Baseball Fanatic, Middle Child, Youth Minister. ”

In my last post I talked about not being afraid, and this follows right in that same vein. At the end of the day I am not afraid to be me. 

I am unapologetically, 100%, authentically, genuinely, me. And I am not sorry for that. (I also think that somewhere in the space time vortex 10 year old Kelly is cheering and punching the air for me now)

Speaking of Nerdiness…

This is a thing if you like nerds, comics, movies, celebrities, pop culture, ect. that you should check out.

www.iwantmynerdhq.com

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Scar Tissue

*Warning* This story may not be for the squeamish 

When I was about 4 years old, I had this toy, I refer to it as the rolling lion toy. Basically it was one of those toys that is supposed to help infants scoot around and then when they’re toddlers they can push it because it has a handle on the back. As a four year old I mainly used it like a shopping cart, but on one particular evening I was running around our house pushing the lion like it was a race car. Our house at the time was really a giant square with hardwood floors, so it was perfect for running laps at maximum speed. At some point my four year brain decided we had had enough of running in circles and would change it up, so as we rounded the corner from the kitchen to the living room I decided that instead of taking the next turn, I would instead go straight through the doorway into my bedroom. As I sped through the doorway, and onto a new race surface (carpet) I stayed the course and careened into the far wall. Upon impact I flipped over the handle bar landing seated on the lion and snapped my head forward, biting my tongue.

I don’t know if this was the same for everyone, but when I was little, the worst pain I could experience was biting my tongue. It was an awful sharp pain, and it was really only happening because I was eating or talking too fast and my tongue just got in the way of my teeth.

I remember immediately bursting into tears and running from the room to find what comfort I could from my mother. As I rushed into the kitchen, I got my mother’s attention by tugging on her shirt and my stifled closed mouth whimpers. I clearly remember my mother looking at me while I pointed frantically at my mouth, she cracked a smile and in a kind, yet mocking tone said to me, “Oh did little Kelly bite her tongue?” I nodded vigorously and then stuck my tongue out going “aaahhhh.” In an instant my mom’s face went from a smiling joke to abject horror! She quickly rushed me to the bathroom and told me to lean over the sink, keep my mouth shut, and not swallow. As I waited for her to return, curiosity got the best of me and opened my mouth while looking in the mirror. Immediately blood poured into the sink, I couldn’t really see much, but pain was telling me that the blood was coming from my tongue. As I was continuing to examine my mouth in the mirror my mom came back in with a glass of warm saltwater and told me to sit on the toilet and put my tongue in the cup. I did as I was told  and was then immediately rushed to the car, while my mother yelled at my brother Mark to be good and help dad finish dinner.

Upon arrival at the E.R. we hurried inside, being careful not to spill my now bloody glass of salt water – which, can I just say, tasted awful – The nurse at the front desk  immediately ushered us into a room and a doctor was not far behind. –Please note this was the fastest service I have received at the the ER to date – After a lot of cotton balls and gauze the doctor finally stemmed the bleeding enough to take a look and see what the damage was. The good news, my tongue was still intact and connected, the bad news I had bit all the way through. In reality there wasn’t any bad news, in fact I didn’t even need stitches, the doctor decided that he would bind my tongue and if, in a couple of days it wasn’t healing, then he would stitch it up. –I am eternally grateful not to have had stitches and that the tongue is the fastest healing organ in the body-  I was charged with no talking, and only eating of soft foods, which in my mind translated to pancakes! This was the best news I’d heard all day…I love pancakes.

My tongue eventually healed and yielded a fairly significant scar that covered most of my tongue when I was younger, over time the scar has gotten much smaller, which makes sense considering how your tongue grows from the time one is four years old to adulthood. Though smaller, the scar remains as a reminder of one of my many childhood ER visits and for all intents and purposes an entertaining story.

When I was a summer camp counselor, we used to use scar stories as a small group discussion ice breaker, and they yielded some of the most interesting stories, not to mention the kids became comfortable with the idea of small group sharing. We just asked the kids to tell the group an interesting story about something that happened to them that gave them a scar or even a broken bone (it is a scar in a way). It may seem bizarre that we were asking kids to tell us about a time when they hurt themselves, but there’s a reason we started things off that way. We all have scars, physical and emotional, it takes time, courage and strength to accept the scar and move past it. Scars can remind us of a time when we were vulnerable, and got hurt. And yet moving past those pains and scars are what make us stronger individuals. We were made to heal, a scar is just a reminder that we did heal. The kids loved telling their harrowing stories to a captive audience who “oohed” and “aahhhed” in all the right places, what they may not have realized at the time was that these kids were taking ownership in their life experiences, their pain, and most importantly, that they came back stronger.

I think scars can be a beautiful thing and I wouldn’t trade mine for the world. I hope you all can see the beauty and strength in your own scars.

Happy Wednesday!

We Live In A Beautiful World

Here are a few pictures I quickly snapped of the sunset last Thursday, as I was on an evening drive to clear my head. It really put some perspective on my stress, and that sometimes we need to just be in awe of the world we are blessed to live in. Trying to capture the beauty of the moment through the lens of my iPhone can only do so much justice. We all need to stop spending so much time trying to Instagram a moment and just view it as it’s meant to be viewed through the eyes God gave us. Blessing on your day.

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Don’t Put Off Until Tomorrow…

“…what you could do today.” 

Have you ever heard this quote? I know I have, and yet to be perfectly honest when I originally sat down to type out this age old adage I legitimately couldn’t think of the actual quote…so I Googled it.

In fact that right there is very telling about how I choose to work. I Procrastinate. A lot.

Now comes a story that may seem as if it has no place in this entry and yet I will bring it all back around, and hopefully before you become wise to my plot twist.

I always wanted to become an escape artist. Seriously I was in awe of Houdini and all those illusionists who could seemingly never be tied down. When I was younger I went through a phase where every chance I got I would beg my older brother Mark to tie me up and then time me to see how long it would take for me to escape. He gladly obliged if only to keep me out of his hair for a little while longer. I would do this over and over until either my brother locked me out of his room, or I decided I wanted to do something else. But over time, I got really good. So good that I cocky. I started bragging to my brother’s friends that I could escape any knot in under 5 minutes (hey, that was a long time to 7 year old).

One summer’s evening my brother and his friend Travis decided to put me to the test. So they tied me up to a chair in our basement and walked away. Piece of cake. I was out and bothering them within minutes. So they upped the ante, two different ropes. Again I escaped within minutes. Then came the final test: three different ropes duct taped to the chair. This was outrageous! How was I supposed to slip my wrists free of their bonds when all the rope around them was duct taped? So I did what any 7 year old would do in this predicament. I started to complain, loudly. Calling my captors back to taunt me, however they quickly grew weary of my whining and so instead of releasing me from my bonds, they added insult to injury. My brother upon scouring the basement for rope, had come across a used diaper from my Baby Alive doll. To silence my annoying complaints they promptly taped the diaper across my mouth.

I swear this was a real toy, and I am pretty sure they still make them. Google it.

This effectively shut me up, I wasn’t about to get fake baby poop in my mouth! Travis and Mark exited upstairs where they continued to enjoy their summer evening. About ten minutes later there was a knock on the door and my brother greeted my friend Sydni and told her I was downstairs. To my embarrassment Sydni walked into the room and all she saw was me tied to a chair, with a diaper over my mouth. She gaped at me then said, “I guess you’re busy, talk to you tomorrow.” And then she walked away leaving me gagged and humiliated. What felt like hours later but perhaps was only about 5 minutes. My brother and Travis, after realizing that Sydni had abandoned me, came down stairs and let me go. I never asked to be tied up again.

Over the years I’ve come to learn something about myself. I enjoy a good rush of adrenaline. It doesn’t need to be overwhelming, I don’t put myself in dangerous situations just to feel the blood pumping in my veins, but one thing that will always give me a jolt, without fail, is the pressure of working under a clock. I like to put things off, because I have convinced myself over the years, and trial and error, that I work better under the pressure of having to get something done in a short amount of time.  Which means that most of the time I tend to put things off. However, I have grown and learned that there are some things that you just can’t put off because they take time. So I try to live a balance of longterm planning and work, and the short term. My seven year old self wanted to be an escape artist because for me that was the height of an adrenaline rush that I could get on fairly regular basis and in a somewhat safe manner. I put myself on a clock and the pressure was to make my escape in a timely fashion.

I know that there are times that I would be happier and less stressed if I didn’t put something off, and yet its a habit I cannot seem to break completely. Sometimes being ahead of schedule feels good, and other times I just find it incredibly boring. There is no moral to this story (with the exception that a diaper is the worst possible way to be gagged ever), no lesson learned, mainly because I haven’t learned it yet, and I fear that I may learn it the hard way. Yet that fear of failure gives me just enough pressure to make sure that I continue to push myself to succeed.

It’s a vicious cycle.

Now I know you may be wondering where my parents were that they were seemingly okay with me being tied, ducted taped and gagged. This particular evening they happened to be out and our babysitter (Travis’ older brother). Was in my dad’s office 15 feet away from me, with the door shut working homework he was doing for a summer course at the community college.

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See it does exist and they are still being made and there are more of them…just check out hasbro.com.

I Wanted To Do It All…An Unrealistic Expectation

So it’s been awhile. I mean a long while, since I’ve posted anything to this blog…I had such good intentions of posting weekly, and I have all these great ideas of things to write about, but like all well meaning New Year’s Resolutions, I failed…I posted regularly for about a month, and now here I am 3 months later, asking you all to tune back in. Sorry. I could give you all the excuses, I was busy, work was crazy, and just life. But really that’s all they are, excuses and the only person that they are really working on is me. Because let’s be honest, I just stopped dedicating time to sitting down and hashing something out. 

Eventually I’ll finish all those half written blogs I’ve started since October. Alright who am I kidding, no I won’t. 

When I was a kid, I wanted to do everything. No seriously, if you asked me what I was going to be when I grew up, I was going to be an actress, a singer, an astronaut, cure the common cold, and become the first female president. On top of that I wanted to do everything my friends did. I wanted to be in dance, take piano lessons, ski school, and girl scouts, and do all the things my brothers did, play soccer, basketball, baseball, and hunt. Then there were the things that I wanted to do simply because I thought they would be great like gymnastics and figure skating. Overall I wanted to not have a life, because activities would be my life. 

Thankfully my parents were very good at managing my expectations and grand ambitions. Most of the time I would bring something up and my parents would respond, “Mmmhmm, yeah, we’ll see.” After that I would hold out hope for these activities but would quickly lose interest and my parents were never bothered again. However, on the rare occasion that I remained persistent, they would either make me a deal, or say no. 

For example, piano lessons, I think my parents would have gladly signed me up the first time I pushed the issue if we’d actually owned a piano. However, we didn’t, and therefore how would I practice? But I was oh so persistent, because all my friends were taking piano, and so my parents struck a bargain, they signed me up for a six-week course on the keyboard. A family friend, lent us her keyboard and I began my training to become the next piano virtuoso. That dream lasted about a week and half. I was expected to practice, what is this madness?! On top of homework after school I was supposed to spend 45 minutes a day practicing on the keyboard and then twice a week I gave up 90 minutes of my evening to go to class. It was eating into my Batman and Star Trek watching and it was awful. Looking back, I’m not sure how that keyboarding course was really going to help me with piano, because on a piano you don’t have different programable sounds that you use to achieve the desired tone for the melody you’re playing. I mean come on, have you ever heard of a piano piece called the Galaxian March? (Seriously, I’m not making that up, that was one of the songs we played, I can recall it from memory. Do, So, Fa, Mi, Re, Mi, Do, Do, Mi, So, Do, So, Fa, Mi, Re, Mi, Do, Do, Do, Do). Needless to say, I wanted to quit, and my parents told me if I wanted to quit before the end of the course I would have to pay for it. So I stuck it out grudgingly and never wanted to play piano again.

 Then there was soccer, I had wanted to play soccer from the time I could walk, and this is one of those activities that I wanted to play, mainly because I was a daddy’s girl and this was his sport of choice. This activity also had the added benefit of social interaction with my friends, my parents were happy I was doing it, my brother played, and it was something I wanted to do so it hit all of my criteria. Every fall from the time I was 4, I was playing Fall Recreational Soccer. Honestly I wasn’t that good as a kid, in fact early in my career I use to sit in the back field and pick dandelions while the kids all played horde ball. You know when they all just run around the field in a pack following the ball. Then my dad bribed me to play, by telling me that he would give me a quarter for every time I kicked the ball. Let’s just say after that game it went from a quarter to a nickel to nothing, very quickly. Once we all got older and started playing more cohesive soccer I really did love it. And couldn’t wait for 5th grade when I could officially try-out to be on the spring traveling soccer team. Fifth grade and try-outs finally came, I was on the team and it was going to be wonderful, but let’s not kid ourselves, it was really hard. We started practicing indoors in February three days a week. Then outdoor practices four days a week in March with games starting at the end of the month. Practice wasn’t the worst thing, honestly it was the games. Every weekend we were on the road, we’d drive 300+ miles to play two games, and then do it all over again the next week for about three months straight. The hardest part wasn’t even the traveling and playing. I knew what I was committing to, because my older brother had been doing it for years and I traveled with his team, the difference was that we almost never played in the same place. Which meant I was spending all my weekends split from my family, my mom and I would go one way, and my dad and my brothers would go the other. My dad was the assistant coach for my brother’s team, which meant he never got to watch me play. For me personally, that was the biggest reason I only played one year of spring soccer. My dad had been my coach, and even though I didn’t always appreciate his commentary on my playing, he always wanted me to get better, because he knew that if I was playing better than I would have more fun. Don’t get me wrong the mother daughter bonding that happened that year was wonderful, but sometimes moms can be too supportive. 

The other reason for quitting was that I wasn’t enjoying myself, the team had a lot to do with it, we were on the brink of middle school and my 17 other teammates were not always the kindest bunch, in fact I was told fairly consistently that the only reason I was on the team was because there was only one team and all the girls that tried out had made the team. Now mind you this never happened in a public forum, but was whispered to me during meals on weekends or in the backs of minivans as we traveled with another family. Along with that I was constantly being played as a left fullback. In my11 year old mind, that is the equivalent of being put in center field during tee ball, it’s like I was being told that I wasn’t really useful on the field, they just needed a place to put me where I couldn’t do much damage. I was never to cross mid-field, unless I was, by some miracle playing a mid field or even a forward position.   

Of course these were not the reasons that I revealed to my parents when I told them that I wasn’t going to do another spring season, in fact I just told them, that I would prefer to play rec soccer in the fall and rec volleyball in the spring. They shrugged their shoulders, said okay and honestly were just happy that I had played the whole season without begging to quit halfway through. 

I will admit though, that during my last three weeks of play that season, our regular sweeper was moved to mid-field after one of our players was taken out due to a spread of Hepatitis A (it was a thing that year), and I was put in as sweeper. That was where I really learned to love playing defense. There’s more pressure, and your team and fans are depending on you to do your job. That was probably one of the best things that came out of the season, that and realizing that for the sake of my self-esteem, I was never going to play soccer competitively, I couldn’t deal with the constant gossip, and false friendships.  

For all the things that I wanted to do and be when I was kid, I can tell you that as I grew and with some help from my parents I realized that dreams and wants change and some even drop off the map (I never want to be the President, seriously politics is not a game I’m interested in playing). However, the things that you want to pursue won’t come easily and sometimes you’ll just have to stick it out, but they will be worth it. Commitment is important. I won’t promise that I’ll post on this blog every week. But I will commit myself to more time in my life to be more diligent in writing and editing my thoughts to share with those of you who are still interesting in reading about what I have to say. So thanks for sticking with me, there will be more humorous anecdotes soon. 

If Only…

Game 6 of the World Series was last night. Now I know I just posted about baseball, but this is the last one for a while.

I would say, “I promise,” but I can’t and won’t promise that, baseball is never far from my mind.

As I’m sure you know the Boston Red Sox won the Fall Classic last night in a 6-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals. This hurt. A lot. No one wants to lose; in fact it hurt less when we lost to the Giants in the NLCS last season than last night.

I am now using ‘we’ in the sense that I am apart of the team…it’s just something that fans do. Don’t judge.

I had to work last night so I didn’t get to the bar to watch the game until the middle of the 6th inning. As I got out of my car and was walking in a gentleman coming out of the bar said to me,

“You might not want to go in there if you’re a Cardinals fan.” (It was pretty obvious as I was wearing my Freese jersey).  I responded, “I know the score, but I have to watch my team, win or lose.” The gent smiled and responded in turn, “Good for you.”

I had to see it end, good or bad. You never know I might have missed a biggest comeback in World Series history and I just couldn’t take that chance.

Here’s the thing for some unknown and baffling reason, I am the most superstitious person when it comes to baseball. Seriously I’m not kidding. The rules I place on my superstitions change from season to season. For example: during the postseason this year I wore my Cardinals sweatshirt twice on game days during the NLCS against the Dodgers. We lost both times. So obviously, my brain tells me that I can no longer wear my sweatshirt on game days. And two years ago during our incredible and unbelievable postseason run (along with World Series victory) I refused to post anything baseball related on social media. Seriously, nothing, there were no “go Cards #postseason #wildcard” tweets or “David Freese is my boy, I knew we could do it at home!” Facebook status updates after that legendary Game 6. I posted a few things after we won the series, but even those were tempered. With the exception of one series of tweets to a friend of mine, and even that was all in good fun.

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There is one superstition that I adhere to no matter what and that is no trash talk. I absolutely refuse to engage in trash talking. A passionate and intelligent debate, sure. Bashing the other team simply because they are competing against my team? Not a chance. The superstition lies in the idea that if I do engage in trash talking the competition that some sort of karmic comeuppance will cause my team to suffer.

I don’t believe in Karma, in fact the rational and faithful Catholic that I am knows that none of my superstitious beliefs actually affect the outcome of a sporting event that I’m not personally participating in, but there’s always that “what if?” And for some illogical reason that “what if,” outweighs all other logic. So I choose not to trash talk.

And yes you could insert the theological argument here that sin affects us all and that it is a ripple effect and that sin isn’t strictly personal. I know, I’ve stated that case many times to young minds. However I’m on my soapbox about sports, and I’m not talking the type of superstition that would travel down the road of sin.

In the end I just find it easier to be gracious, in winning AND in losing. I find that at the end of the day, those people who try and trash talk me will be left speechless and maybe respect me more, when I reply with a “congrats” and “great game.” (Though let’s be honest last night’s game…not so great, not because they lost, but mostly because they weren’t playing up to their potential).  Being gracious and humble will take you far in life, and I’m not talking false humility or being under-handedly gracious. It’s not about taking the high road to shame others. I really am happy for the fans of the Red Sox, it’s nice to have a winning team. I know. That doesn’t mean that I like the Red Sox I don’t, I’m still bitter from 2004, but more over, I’m not a huge fan of the organization. But hey, I accept that people feel the same way about the Cardinals, it is the nature of competitive sports and their fan bases.

I understand that what I wear on a game day and what I tweet about won’t affect the outcome of the game, but I do think in life, graciousness and humility will always affect the outcome of how people treat you and how you treat people. Be good to each other.

Also, this new twitter format made it really difficult to be a Cardinals fan last night.

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9 Innings of Bliss

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It’s the end of October and Postseason Baseball is in full swing, as an avid St. Louis Cardinals Fan and a lover of baseball since I was a kid, October is like the Superbowl to me.

Growing up and watching baseball in the 90s I saw some amazing things, I saw the Braves rise and fall, the Yankees dominate, Randy Johnson and the Diamondbacks come out of nowhere, and even the year without baseball.  All that time I loved to watch the game, but would become easily bored, leaving the living room if we were watching at home, and even wandering the stadium with my cousins when we were lucky enough to be at a game.

The 90s were also a tough time to be a Redbirds fan, I don’t know if you know this, but the team isn’t really listed much in the history of that decade, with the exception of Mark McGwire in ’98 and I don’t know if you follow baseball, but that didn’t end well. However the mid to late 2000s and now the 2010s have been very good to my team.

Seriously…have you been watching baseball the last three years.

The problem with my team’s sudden surge in popularity and wins, however means I am constantly having to defend myself against a large number of people who will classify me as a bandwagon fan. This irks me. While I may not be a numbers person, and I don’t memorize batting averages, ERAs, or RISP, I do know what’s going on with my team…all the time, I follow the trades in the off season, the recruits and draftees and their ascent through the farm and triple A system. I know what’s going on, on the field and if anyone were to sit down and actually talk with me about baseball they would know that I didn’t just “hop on the bandwagon.”

However, engaging people in that conversation can be difficult. Why? Because baseball is a slow sport, there is no time clock on a baseball game; it will go on as long as it takes for a team to win. While some people find this tedious and boring to watch, I revel in it. Over the years of watching and learning about the game I have found that baseball is a finesse sport, a unique chess match that happens on the field, and one that will be different every time.

The past couple of summers I have spent a lot of time watching baseball, mostly on TV, and when I watch I become very still and calm, you never know when someone will make an amazing catch or hit a grand slam. Patience is the name of the game, even when you get nervous and the team is losing. Patience and a cool head is what keeps pitchers’ in the game, what keeps the batters cool at the plate, and what keeps the fielders from making mistakes. Even in the most stressful situations patience and calm will keep things from getting out of hand. Long gone are the days of my fidgeting and leaving the couch, and when I’m lucky enough to get to see a game in person, there’s no aimless wandering around the stadium. That’s why you show up early.

Watching baseball, has given me a better prayer life. Seriously, it has taught me to be present in the moment but to keep a calm mind and heart. It use to take me a long time to sit down and calm my mind when it came to my personal prayer, and even then within 20 minutes I was fidgeting and putting myself on the clock. (You know like just 10 more minutes and you’ll be good). The problem with this is that I was never fully putting myself in the presence of God. I would spend 10 minutes calming my thoughts, 10 minutes whining to God and asking for advice, and then another 20 minutes thinking about how much longer I needed to sit and “listen” before my prayer time would be considered adequate.

This is not how you pray.

Prayer is a conversation with God, which means that it needs to be a two way street, if prayer was meant to be one way, it would simply be called a monologue, of the internal variety. There is no time constraint on prayer no minimums or maximums, prayer is about being open, calm, and peaceful, to communicate and converse with God. 

Listening is the hard part, to do that we have to learn how to calm our thoughts, to be okay with sitting in silence and waiting to receive him.

Baseball taught me how to wait, something we struggle with in our NOW society, people find baseball boring and outdated, I think this is because we’ve forgotten what it means to be patient, how to wait, and to be okay with waiting and not having the answer come right away.

They say the best baseball happens in October, and that may be, it certainly seems more exciting. However, astonishing and beautiful plays happen in baseball all season long, you just have to be willing to wait and see.  The Fall Classic may only come around once a year, but your relationship with Christ is there everyday, if only you choose to participate.

On that note…

Go Cards!