Sunday, November 23, 2008
Friday, November 14, 2008
sam's new tricks
As you can see from this picture, Sam also likes to suck on his sweatshirt zipper. I guess J used to suck on the strings of his hooded sweatshirt when he was younger - maybe sweatshirt sucking is genetic?
Some awesome lip-smacking skills
Playing "peek-a-boo"
Thursday, November 13, 2008
church choir
Since we are moving, this means that last Sunday I held the final rehearsal as choir director of my church choir. In some ways, I have loved being choir director since I got to superimpose my musical preferences on the ears of the congregation. Over the past two and a half years, the choir has sung Renaissance choral music, John Rutter, traditional French Christmas carols ("Whence is the Goodly Fragrance Flowing?") and some of the lesser-known hymns. It's been really fun. Furthermore, I made sure that the choir has never sang any Mormon pop/EFY songs that contain ridiculous over-extended metaphors about candles, bridges, stormy seas, lighthouses, or seashores. Hooray for good music instead! At the same time, however, directing the choir has been rather stressful and difficult. I thought I would list some of the things I have learned during my time as choir director:
- Make sure that the person chosen as choir accompanist really knows how to play the piano.
- Practice with the choir accompanist before he/she comes to rehearsal for the first time.
- If necessary, play the piano accompaniment for the accompanist either before or during the rehearsal.
- Never expect the choir to sound like the Cambridge Singers.
- Do not let people perform with the choir who have never come to rehearsal. (We practiced a Thomas Tallis piece for three months and I made the mistake of letting someone sing with us during the final performance. I didn't know how to turn her down. Anyhow, she came in one beat too early on a verse, and it through the whole choir off for the rest of the song. When singing Renaissance choral music, one faulty musical entrance can ruin the whole song. And, well, the performance was ruined. After we toiled on the same song for three months.)
- You will never be able to convince the people who actually know how to sing to join the choir.
- You will never be able to convince the people who actually play the piano to be the choir accompanist.
- There will always be at least one person in the choir who can only sing LOUDLY. And flat.
- You can try to teach the choir about enunciation and pronunciation (in an effort to help soften the hard Utah accent), but it just won't work. Even if most of the choir does it, the effect will be ruined by the same LOUD singer. Bless her heart.
- Do not order Christmas music from Best in Music. It will never arrive.
- Only 25% of the choir will come to rehearsal on a consistent basis. Consequently, you will spend two out of three weeks reviewing the same music for people who weren't at the previous rehearsal.
- Bringing treats to choir will not increase attendance.
Sunday, November 9, 2008
katie and haylie
One of my best friends since high school came to visit this past weekend. Katie lives in Germany, but she is in the States now for a vacation. Originally, we were going to get together in December, but when Katie found out that we are moving she changed her travel plans to spend a day with us. It was a nice for me to take a break from packing! It was also really fun to meet Haylie, Katie's little baby girl that was born three weeks after Sam. Katie and I are already devising an arranged marriage between the two. Here are a couple of pics from the weekend:
Okay, so maybe it wasn't love at first sight for Sam or Haylie. They still have at least 20+ years to grow attached to each other, right? (Note the moving boxes in the background!)
Our brothers came by to visit too. This is the first time Scott met his niece.

By the end of the visit, I think that Sam and Haylie started to warm up to each other. Maybe this arranged marriage has potential. They are kinda-sorta holding hands in this picture. However, I don't think Haylie realized that Sam was putting the moves on her when this picture was taken...
Thanks for coming to visit, Friend!
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
where i voted today
Monday, November 3, 2008
surprise!
So, J just got offered his dream job as the junior designer here. Okay, his real dream job would be at the Tate Modern or the MOMA, but the SAM is a close third. So, we're moving. To Seattle. In two and a half weeks.
I know, I know, we're crazy!
We are thrilled that J gets this chance to work in the museum industry. Plus, since the museum is in Seattle, J is really excited at the chance to contribute to the community and city that he loves. He's wanted to do museum design for a while, but he got discouraged this summer after applying to several museums and never even getting called for an interview. And then, this job at the SAM just fell into his lap.
When we went up to Seattle this past August, a BYU grad offered to introduce J to the creative director of the SAM. J was excited to have this person as a contact, and went to the meeting with no expectations (J had actually called the SAM a few months prior to see if they were hiring any designers, and at the time they weren't). This director really liked J's work, and basically spent a good hour explaining to J why he should come work for the SAM. J was floored. The director said that he would be in touch with J - and we basically have been waiting, white-knuckled and with bated breath, to hear about this position for the past two months. (This explains all of my ambiguous "status updates" on Facebook about waiting, right?)
So, J was offered the job on Thursday. He starts the beginning of December, so we're going to move up to Seattle before Thanksgiving. Yikes!
The only downside to the job is that it is a major pay cut from what J is making now. So, we're going to be poor. Like, really poor. But hey, I figure that if we're going to be poor, this is the time to do it. J is going to want to try his hand in the museum industry sometime, and it's probably better to be poor with a small baby than to be poor with a kindergartener, right? And who knows? I might like being poor. I've been conjuring up a lot of romantic ideas about poverty: we can wear patched-up clothing and huddle under the blankets together to try and get warm. I even told J that I could get a job as a laundress like Charlie's mother (in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) and wash laundry in a large vat of steaming water. We're going to be living in the house that J grew up in, so I've envisioned that I'll put my vat in the living room, next to the grand piano. Yesterday I began to perfect my rendition of "Cheer up, Charlie." It'll be awesome. You'll wish that I did your laundry.
I'm a little nervous about moving across the country, but I'm happy that J's family is there. And one of my best friends from high school lives there too, which makes me reeeeeally happy. And my aunt lives in Portland, which isn't too far away...
Yippee!
I know, I know, we're crazy!
We are thrilled that J gets this chance to work in the museum industry. Plus, since the museum is in Seattle, J is really excited at the chance to contribute to the community and city that he loves. He's wanted to do museum design for a while, but he got discouraged this summer after applying to several museums and never even getting called for an interview. And then, this job at the SAM just fell into his lap.
When we went up to Seattle this past August, a BYU grad offered to introduce J to the creative director of the SAM. J was excited to have this person as a contact, and went to the meeting with no expectations (J had actually called the SAM a few months prior to see if they were hiring any designers, and at the time they weren't). This director really liked J's work, and basically spent a good hour explaining to J why he should come work for the SAM. J was floored. The director said that he would be in touch with J - and we basically have been waiting, white-knuckled and with bated breath, to hear about this position for the past two months. (This explains all of my ambiguous "status updates" on Facebook about waiting, right?)
So, J was offered the job on Thursday. He starts the beginning of December, so we're going to move up to Seattle before Thanksgiving. Yikes!
The only downside to the job is that it is a major pay cut from what J is making now. So, we're going to be poor. Like, really poor. But hey, I figure that if we're going to be poor, this is the time to do it. J is going to want to try his hand in the museum industry sometime, and it's probably better to be poor with a small baby than to be poor with a kindergartener, right? And who knows? I might like being poor. I've been conjuring up a lot of romantic ideas about poverty: we can wear patched-up clothing and huddle under the blankets together to try and get warm. I even told J that I could get a job as a laundress like Charlie's mother (in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) and wash laundry in a large vat of steaming water. We're going to be living in the house that J grew up in, so I've envisioned that I'll put my vat in the living room, next to the grand piano. Yesterday I began to perfect my rendition of "Cheer up, Charlie." It'll be awesome. You'll wish that I did your laundry.
I'm a little nervous about moving across the country, but I'm happy that J's family is there. And one of my best friends from high school lives there too, which makes me reeeeeally happy. And my aunt lives in Portland, which isn't too far away...
Yippee!
Sunday, November 2, 2008
the autumn leaves
Crunch. Crunch. Crunch.
The other week we drove up Big Cottonwood Canyon to look at all of the leaves. The whole mountain seemed like it was ablaze in a carpet of yellows, oranges, and reds. I think the Wasatch Front during the fall season is one of the most beautiful things in the world.
However, I am reminded each year of how difficult the fall season is for the perfectionist. It is impossible to rake up every single leaf off of one's lawn. Aargh! I feel like I have to stand on guard, rake in hand, to catch any leaf that make try to sneak its way to the ground.
There definitely are disadvantages to being a perfectionist.
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