Sunday, January 25, 2015

Never Say Never

December 8, 2014
It was a beautiful fall day. The kids had promised Dad they’d get ALL the leaves raked. He got home and it wasn’t done, so after dinner, despite the fact that it was already dark, they donned headlamps and went out to rake together. A thin little stray cat came up and mewed pitifully. Being the tenderhearted people they are, they just had to get her a bowl of warm milk. She lapped it up so quickly that they just had to get her another. And some food. They played with her and adored her and named her. “Starry” after the starry night on which they discovered her and her black fur with a few little white specks. I was appalled, knowing that the cat would now be hanging around begging for more. Indeed she did. She lingered right by the door step and slipped inside repeatedly when I wasn’t vigilant enough to get past with the two little ones and hauling Oli in the car seat. Elodie kept warming up milk while I wasn’t looking and sneaking food to the little stray. Oh dear.

 Dad and the kids began begging me to let them adopt her. The fact that I’m allergic was not enough to deter them; she’d be an outside cat, they assured. Please, no, I have enough little creatures to take care of—adding a pet to the mix is just too much. Five against one, they kept trying to wear me down—no fair. Oh dear.


But I had hope—we were going to Texas for nearly a week for Thanksgiving. Surely she’d get tired of mewing at our doorstep and find some new stomping grounds. Then we wouldn’t even have to discuss the issue. We came back from Texas and I think it only took her a day to notice our return and pick up where she left off. Elodie’s love and commitment to Starry only increased. Aaron felt that we were doing the poor cat a disservice by not feeding her real cat food, and decided we had to make a real decision about the poor little creature: adopt or send to the pound. We held a family counsel. I shared my very logical reasons and doubts and concerns. The “Adopt Starry” side was not swayed. I shared my deep-seated emotions: owning a pet is simply not how I was raised and I don’t want to, at all! The emotional climax led to a sobbing Elodie running upstairs shouting, “But I love Starry!” Oh dear.


After letting the emotions cool down, Aaron shared with me his concern that without a pet, our children may end up with a hole in their heart where the love of a pet should have been. Like the cold, dark hole I apparently have in my heart. He spoke of the unconditional love he felt from and for his pets as a kid. He spoke of the tenderness of taking responsibility and caring for another creature. I conceded that if Elodie and Xander could commit to fully take care of it without reminders from me and with the commitment to save up their own money for her cat food, then I would be willing to seriously consider it. And then the clincher from Aaron. He said that he thought that Xander and Elodie should talk together, make a decision, and pray about it. How could I disagree with that? Oh dear.


So Xander and Elodie agreed to discuss, decide, and pray. I was feeling pretty relieved, because once money got involved in the discussion, Xander decided that he’d rather save up for the fun stuff he wanted than spend all his money on cat food. What a relief! Their wise father reminded them not to decide too hastily, but to think about the poor cat and consider what was right, not just what they wanted. After a couple of days, Xander and Elodie reported to us that they had prayed about it and felt the right thing to do was to commit to Starry and take on the responsibility of caring for her. Well, well, well, now the Dahle’s have a cat. Oh dear.

Somehow it feels like I’m not being true to who I was raised to be. These Fillmores don’t own cats. Come on. I loved the way I was raised, anti-pet sentiment and all, and I guess I had subconsciously wished to raise my kids the same way. Strange how I feel like I’m losing a part of me. The primary president came over for a meeting and Starry tried to follow her in. She asked me if our cat was allowed to come in. I had to tell her it wasn’t my cat. It’s Xander and Elodie’s cat. I think I’m the kind of person who doesn’t worry about what other people think, yet I couldn’t let her think that I have a cat! No way! Not me!

To wax philosophical a bit, in Sunday School in Iowa, the teacher was speaking of how Jesus’ friends and neighbors in Nazareth largely rejected him because they were brought up with him. It was so very hard for them to let go of their long-held notion that he was just a normal poor kid that they grew up with. Because it was so very hard to let go of those notions they grew up with, they missed an opportunity of a lifetime. This whole cat ordeal has caused me to realize how many strong-held notions I cling to so tightly. I more than many, I presume, since I have been called the “tradition Nazi” by some who know me best. Perhaps what I’m supposed to learn from this cat ordeal is to let go, to open up to other good possibilities that I had ruled out. To never say never.

I’ll never own a cat. I’m allergic. I don’t like them.
I’ll never have a gun in my own house. That would be terrible.

I’ll never marry a hunter. You choose who you marry, so you can choose not to marry a hunter, right?

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Settled

We moved 3,500 miles across North America.

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Searched for the perfect house with land in the country.

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Bought a great 120-year-old house with lots of character and a small yard in town. (This picture shows it in 1912, when it was 20 years old.)

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Unpacked boxes. Tried to get organized. Made plans to build lots of shelves and custom built-ins to someday truly get organized.

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Sent the kids off to their first week at a new school.

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And with that, I’ve finally started to feel settled this week. Settled enough to do things that I haven’t done in months, like baking bread and making pizza from scratch. And things I may not do for months because we are about to be unsettled again by the arrival of a baby boy.

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Tuesday, December 10, 2013

16 All Over Again

September, 2013
Remember when you were a teenager, and you finally got your license? I specifically remember the feeling of independence and freedom the first time I drove to Target by myself because I just needed a couple things. I didn't have to wait until someone else needed to go or coordinate, I was free. 

This week, we bought this little beauty and I've enjoyed those same feelings of independence and freedom all over again. When I needed to go to the grocery store, I didn't have to coordinate and plan and take Aaron to work and pick him up at lunch to take him to his afternoon clinic, and then pack a bunch of cranky kids in the car right as I was trying to get dinner on to pick him up again. I was free. I just went to the store and did my shopping like it was no big deal. 

After 2 years of being a one car family, that freedom feels like bliss! I'm so happy to welcome this little addition to our family! Even if it means we'll actually have to shovel our super long driveway this winter. Absence makes the heart grow go fonder, and it sure prevents you from taking things for granted!

Monday, September 30, 2013

Max's Vocabulary at 18 Months

September, 2013

We all love listening to Max learn new words every day. Elodie has the distinction of Max learning her name first among the kids, and he still says it most often. (Like when he looks out the window and sees Xander and Elodie walking up the driveway after school, he shouts, Ehhhdeeee!!!) She feels pretty special.

Ehhhdee-Elodie
Dando-Xander
Heydo-Hazel
Mom/Mommy/Mama
Daddy
No!
Yessss
Nana-banana
Appol-apple
Tato-cracker
Ahgul-water 
Moa-more
Pees-please
Taintyou-thank you
Yuhyou-love you
Plillo-pillow
Dun-gun ( he also does a sound effect like "tchyou-thchyou" when he picks up a Nerf gun, what a Dahle boy)
Caw-car
Bah-ball
Veevee-movie
Oh no!
Uh-oh!
Whoa!
Weee!
Yay!
Dong (what you say when you're bonking something)
I do!
Me
Poopy
Bum
Shoe
Off (I want to play with the light switch)
Moo-moose
Berrr- bear
Ammo-animal
No-snow
Eye
Eeoh-ear
No-nose

Nothing sweeter than listening to a toddler learning to talk! I love how it's a little window into what matters to him.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Snow way!

September 18, 2013

There's no way I'm letting winter start already. (It's not even technically the first day of autumn yet!!) We've had such a beautiful, relatively long and warm fall so far--a full month of fall-like colors and  temperatures. A lot of the trees still have green leaves mixed in with the gold. It has been gorgeous! I am simply not ready to let it go. Yesterday it tried to snow, mixed with sleet and drizzle. Ultimately, the drizzly rain won out and nothing stuck. I considered it a definite victory for fall. Last night, it tried to snow again. It succeeded in getting a light dusting on the deck and the grass by morning. But that has melted already which I find encouraging. It is still trying, however, with flurries fluttering around but managing to disappear when they hit the ground. I am not willing to admit defeat and consider this the first REAL snow of the season. Thus far, I say it's only an attempt. So ha!

Last night it tried again, and this time succeeded in dusting the trees, too, and it hasn't melted yet, at 11am!! But water is still dripping off of the roof so I am hopeful that this won't stick around all day!

Thursday, August 15, 2013

First Day of School

The kids were so excited to get back to school yesterday. My third-grader and second-grader are so grown up now--they're allowed to get on and off the bus without a parent present. They convinced me that they were ready, but it still felt pretty weird letting them walk to the bus stop by themselves. Harder than letting them walk home from the same spot yesterday afternoon. It's a safe little rural road, nothing to worry about, right?
I'm really not the worrying, overprotective type, or so I thought, but it was hard for me to let go!

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Alaska Highway Bike Trek

I just got home from biking 106 miles on the Alaska Highway with 5 other tough Alaskan ladies from our ward! We started at Mukluk land in Tok. Then we biked 53 miles to our campsite (AKA a large open space with a short gravel road where our support driver could drop our trailer and we could set up our tent and rough it wilderness style) and tried to sleep under the midnight sun after lots of laughing and chatting like girls at a slumber party. The rains and the wind beat upon our tent, but it did not tumble down nor did we get wet, which I consider great blessings! We woke up and pretended to feel rested enough to tackle the next 53 miles back to Delta. The view was gorgeous, like a little piece of heaven!
I am so glad that these ladies let me join them despite my utter lack of training! While it certainly reinforced lessons in enduring to the end, I loved it! Such a refreshing, physically demanding change of pace from the daily emotional demands of nurturing young children.

And wow am I sore!