8/24/16
Dear Baby Girl,
You're too little now, but when you get older, people will ask you all the time, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" I can't wait to hear your answers and learn about your dreams. When I was younger, people asked me the same question. I would change my mind so quickly and jump all the way from astronaut to architect, but there was always one constant as well- I would proudly answer that I wanted to be a mom.
On Christmas Eve of 2015, just a month after I married your incredible daddy, I found out that I had become what I always wanted. We took a pregnancy test and I patiently waited to see what it said. Okay, you got me. I wasn't patient. I couldn't wait the three minutes. I actually just laid on the ground in the bedroom and watched with disbelief as not one, but two lines appeared. TWO lines!!! That meant that you were growing inside of my belly, baby girl! You made me a mama! You were the best Christmas present I could have wished for!
Fast forward to today- just 2 weeks before you're supposed to come into the world. You are a miracle, baby! I hope you know just how much you are loved. Now hurry up and get here so we can meet you!
With love,
Mama
The Adventures of Syd
Tuesday, October 4, 2016
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Are We Not All Beggars?
A prayer is really a plea. It's a chance for us to ask for the help we so desperately need. It's a chance for us to beg for the forgiveness we need to be made whole again. It's a chance for us to not only be grateful for the blessings, but a chance to plead with our Heavenly Father to continue to bless us with them. It's a chance for us to beg for the strength to overcome temptation and valiantly fight this war with sin and darkness.
With that beautiful opportunity, we recognize or dependence on our Heavenly Father and on His Son. Does this not make it easier to follow them?
Think of it this way: You are on a hike. The trail is steep and perilous. The night is dark. Unseen dangers lurk all around you. Miraculously, you've been blessed with a guide that knows this exact trail. He alone knows how to bring you through the darkness and deliver you safely home.
Would you follow him?
Now think about your life. You don't know exactly what trials and tribulations this life will hold for you. You don't know how to get through them. Neither do I. But He does. We would be utterly lost in despair without the divine aid of our God. The reality is that most people don't sense the dependency. And those who do often forget. We cannot do this alone. Prayer is a chance to remember.
With that beautiful opportunity, we recognize or dependence on our Heavenly Father and on His Son. Does this not make it easier to follow them?
Think of it this way: You are on a hike. The trail is steep and perilous. The night is dark. Unseen dangers lurk all around you. Miraculously, you've been blessed with a guide that knows this exact trail. He alone knows how to bring you through the darkness and deliver you safely home.
Would you follow him?
Now think about your life. You don't know exactly what trials and tribulations this life will hold for you. You don't know how to get through them. Neither do I. But He does. We would be utterly lost in despair without the divine aid of our God. The reality is that most people don't sense the dependency. And those who do often forget. We cannot do this alone. Prayer is a chance to remember.
Mosiah 4:19 For behold, are we not all beggars? Do we not all depend upon the same Being, even God, for all the substance which we have, for both food and raiment, and for gold, and for silver, and for all the riches which we have of every kind?
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Thoughts on Hope
About a week and a half ago, I was thinking about hope. I was thinking about it because I wasn't focusing on it. I wasn't letting hope light my life. I was caught up in a thought cycle that made me forget all the blessings that I had because I was focusing on the bad. The situation wasn't anything serious, I was just very homesick. I wanted to go home, see my man, see my family, and snuggle my dog. I missed those most wonderful elements of my life. Like I said, not a life-threatening situation, but it still brought me to tears. Being 1,500 miles away from the ones you love most is hard! It's not fun when your heart always aches to be somewhere so distant from where you really are.
So after I moped for a little bit and then dried my tears, I started thinking about hope. And let me tell you what went through my mind.
People always talk about having hope and focusing on hope. It's not so easy to have, though. It's not like a social security number where you just get it once and then you have it for the rest of your life and never have to worry about it again. It's not like a driver's license that you work for once and can then just renew once every few years. Hope is something you have to work for all the time. And I do mean all the time. You have to hold on tight to it, cling to it. You can lose it the second you start to lose your grip. You have to fight for it. You have to erase all your negative thoughts, sweep them away and throw them right into the garbage can without ever really looking at them. Those negative thoughts can bring you down in an instant. It happened to me! Instead of throwing away those thoughts, I thought about the distance. I thought about the long amount of time before I would see my loved ones again. I looked at the calendar and it seemed to stretch on forever. I thought about how I felt alone. Those thoughts are black. What I should have been doing instead was focusing on the bright spots.
Life is like a moonless night. The sky is inky black and offers little illumination to see anything around you. You might be scared of the unknown surroundings. You hear noises that frighten you and you wish you could just see something, anything. You wander around in the darkness with no direction. You lose hope that you will find your way back home tonight and you resign yourself to sit in that isolating darkness and just try to survive.
Does that sound fun? Does it sound happy? If that was your life, would you wake up excited everyday ready to live it? No. Remember what I said about those bright spots? They totally exist, even in this little metaphor I've created. Consider this instead:
Life is like a moonless night. The sky is inky black, but you notice something. If you focus your eyes, you can see a pinprick of light, a distant star. You start looking for more stars and they begin to appear all over the sky. Some are twinkling, some are even different colors. You see a shooting star and you are amazed at the beauty that surrounds you. By now, your eyes are adjusted to the sky and you see beautiful lights all overhead. Instead of being scared of and resenting the darkness, you are grateful for it because it gives you the opportunity to see these awe-inspiring lights. You've spent the night praising the wondrous sight above you. Time has slipped away and a faint streak of light illuminates the horizon with the rising of the sun.
Doesn't that sound much better? I sure think so. This world, by nature, is fallen. Much of it has turned to the darkness. People everywhere are losing hope. But you don't have to, and I don't have to. We have the option of adjusting our eyes to see the light, to see our blessings, to see the beauty all around us. No matter how dark our "skies" get, there are always blessings to light our way. And then there is the greatest blessing of all: the Atonement of the Son. He knows what your suffering feels like and pleads to carry you through. He will never fail. He is more constant than the rising of our temporal sun each day.
I ask you now to adjust your eyes, adjust your heart, and adjust your life to hope. Don't forget that pain will end. Don't forget that hope and faith can get you through every single trial. There is not a single exception to that rule. If you do that, you will enjoy incomprehensible blessings.
So after I moped for a little bit and then dried my tears, I started thinking about hope. And let me tell you what went through my mind.
People always talk about having hope and focusing on hope. It's not so easy to have, though. It's not like a social security number where you just get it once and then you have it for the rest of your life and never have to worry about it again. It's not like a driver's license that you work for once and can then just renew once every few years. Hope is something you have to work for all the time. And I do mean all the time. You have to hold on tight to it, cling to it. You can lose it the second you start to lose your grip. You have to fight for it. You have to erase all your negative thoughts, sweep them away and throw them right into the garbage can without ever really looking at them. Those negative thoughts can bring you down in an instant. It happened to me! Instead of throwing away those thoughts, I thought about the distance. I thought about the long amount of time before I would see my loved ones again. I looked at the calendar and it seemed to stretch on forever. I thought about how I felt alone. Those thoughts are black. What I should have been doing instead was focusing on the bright spots.
Life is like a moonless night. The sky is inky black and offers little illumination to see anything around you. You might be scared of the unknown surroundings. You hear noises that frighten you and you wish you could just see something, anything. You wander around in the darkness with no direction. You lose hope that you will find your way back home tonight and you resign yourself to sit in that isolating darkness and just try to survive.
Does that sound fun? Does it sound happy? If that was your life, would you wake up excited everyday ready to live it? No. Remember what I said about those bright spots? They totally exist, even in this little metaphor I've created. Consider this instead:
Life is like a moonless night. The sky is inky black, but you notice something. If you focus your eyes, you can see a pinprick of light, a distant star. You start looking for more stars and they begin to appear all over the sky. Some are twinkling, some are even different colors. You see a shooting star and you are amazed at the beauty that surrounds you. By now, your eyes are adjusted to the sky and you see beautiful lights all overhead. Instead of being scared of and resenting the darkness, you are grateful for it because it gives you the opportunity to see these awe-inspiring lights. You've spent the night praising the wondrous sight above you. Time has slipped away and a faint streak of light illuminates the horizon with the rising of the sun.
Doesn't that sound much better? I sure think so. This world, by nature, is fallen. Much of it has turned to the darkness. People everywhere are losing hope. But you don't have to, and I don't have to. We have the option of adjusting our eyes to see the light, to see our blessings, to see the beauty all around us. No matter how dark our "skies" get, there are always blessings to light our way. And then there is the greatest blessing of all: the Atonement of the Son. He knows what your suffering feels like and pleads to carry you through. He will never fail. He is more constant than the rising of our temporal sun each day.
I ask you now to adjust your eyes, adjust your heart, and adjust your life to hope. Don't forget that pain will end. Don't forget that hope and faith can get you through every single trial. There is not a single exception to that rule. If you do that, you will enjoy incomprehensible blessings.
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Those Folks Who Raised Me
Today is my parents' 26th anniversary! These people are so great. They've taught me so much and given me so much and loved me so much. They've laughed with me, cried with me, and put up with me!
My mom is an almost perfect model of patience. Seriously. She never loses her temper. She never reacts with anger, always with love. I don't always have her grace and poise when reacting to problems, but I strive to be like her!
My dad is an incredible example of generosity. Every single day, he sacrifices to give of his time to others. He's always doing things for church or out serving with the missionaries. Not only is he generous with his time, but also with his money and possessions. He always helps people in need.
I just wanted to give a quick shout out to those two people who I love so much! Truly, they have made me into the person I am today and I will never cease to be grateful to them.
Love you, Mom & Dad! Happy Anniversary!
My mom is an almost perfect model of patience. Seriously. She never loses her temper. She never reacts with anger, always with love. I don't always have her grace and poise when reacting to problems, but I strive to be like her!
My dad is an incredible example of generosity. Every single day, he sacrifices to give of his time to others. He's always doing things for church or out serving with the missionaries. Not only is he generous with his time, but also with his money and possessions. He always helps people in need.
I just wanted to give a quick shout out to those two people who I love so much! Truly, they have made me into the person I am today and I will never cease to be grateful to them.
Love you, Mom & Dad! Happy Anniversary!
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Who Is She Anyways?
Hey y'all! Here's a few fun facts about me:
- I'm from Texas (see above "y'all")
- I LOVE cheese and carbs. They're the best.
- I am two short semesters away from graduating with my degree in Elementary Education (YAY.)
- I am madly in love with a Mexipino. He's even better than cheese and carbs. And that's a lot coming from me.
- I am currently very far away from said Mexipino. He's back home and I'm alllll the way up in Utah. Sigh.
- I think school supplies are completely awesome and I'm a little overprotective of them. But really. Ask anyone who has tried to borrow my sharpies.
- Oh yeah, this is me and that wonderful man I was telling you about previously.
Me & Reuben! Isn't he handsome? I sure think so! |
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