i was giving you everything i have to give.

Happy Thursday, kiddos. We’ve made it over the hump, and we’ll be rewarded by Friday tomorrow followed by a lovely weekend ahead.

This week is the second week I’ve been at my new job, and my first full week there, and I am loving it. Besides my coworkers being general delights, they like my baking (thank God) and I’ve already been gifted some lemons for the taking (seriously, our lemon gentleman dropped ’em off in the marketing area and said take as many as you want…which obviously meant I took an entire bag).

I think I am going to love this job, with its fruity perks, it’s “farmer’s hours” (I work 7:30 to 4:15) and everyone’s sunny dispositions. Did I mention there is a TJs right across the street? And that I already have a friend there from a previous job? And that my coworkers have already picked up on the fact that I love penguins? And that I love yoga? And didn’t laugh when I blew up my exercise ball to keep under my desk?

These are good people, folks. I hope you have the same lovely luck I do. Sending you sunshine from my lovely state.

 

Unusual Bloom

This year the Joshua Tree’s are blooming, something rarely done in such large numbers. Last week, Jeff and I drove to Joshua Tree National Park to see them in bloom; although the bloom may represent the plants distress at being without rain this year, a sort of last-ditch effort to procreate, it was beautiful, and a reminder of the fragile ecosystem of the desert and this planet.

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Thanks to Jeff for the majority of these beautiful photographs. Happy Earth Day, everyone. (PS – here are some more!)

everybody has their reasons/and one is always where they’re from

Happy Spring, y’all. Here in Los Angeles, plants are blooming, my sunflowers are sprouting (as is my cilantro, chives, basil, dill, and aloe) and we’re on our way to sunshiny days and long afternoons winding into cool, short nights.

Soccer has started for another season, causing me to reflect on the last 11 seasons. I’ve been coaching since 2009, coached numerous sports since I was 17, I have been refereeing soccer since I was 15, and playing soccer since I was four. When people ask me why I started coaching soccer out here, I usually come up with a reason, but the real reason is that it’s all I’ve ever known. It’s who I am. It’s where I came from. Soccer runs deep in my veins, and life without soccer just doesn’t make sense.

This past week, the kids showed up on the field to learn the rules, play the game, and have some fun. Rule number one as a coach for me has always been “no hands.” Rule number two? Listen. Three is hustle, and four is “you’d better know the other kids names. Otherwise, how can you ask them to pass to you?”

These kids keep me young. Every season they ask me my age, question my choices for positions, and beg me to watch over and over again as they learn to punt, or throw the ball in, or simply learn to pass. They make friends (and somehow, always enemies) on the field, and someone always scores a sweet goal that ends in high-fives and consoling the goalie of the other team.

This week, we learned the word “abbreviated.” And “hustle” and what to do when the whistle bowls. We ran five laps. We played five minute quarters, and everyone wanted to play offense or goalie. There were tears, there were laughs, and everyone is excited to meet Coach B next week. I learned a few new names, and learned how to explain midfield in a way a five year old understands.

Every season I learn something new, learn how to teach things differently, and look forward to different smiling faces each week when I ask, “How was school this week?” and remind them, “I’ll see you next weekend. Good game, guys.”

Here’s to a 12th season, kids.

solvang: sunny fields

These girls are my favorite. They were with me through thick and thin when we traveled abroad, through countries where we didn’t speak the language, when we had two dollars to our name, when we couldn’t find a bathroom…they are my  kindred spirits, always up for an adventure. And of course, Corelyn and I have been adventuring in the kitchen for years, and in 2011 traveled across country…so it was only natural we enjoy a day trip with the crew to relieve the old days…this time, with a few extra bucks.

Last weekend we adventured in Solvang, where we enjoyed bookstores, coffee, jumping photos, and a whole lot of laughter. So, so much laughing. And delicious food, of course. These girls keep me happy through highs and lows, and are always in for a hilarious photo or two.

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I am so glad I have such lovely friends to travel around with…more photographs here! Thanks ladies, for being such lovely friends!

Ten years gone by

One more thing on the oh-so-prevalent news stories of the day, friends.

Ten years ago, when I was in high school, I wrote an article for my town’s paper on homosexuality and the right to marry and asking my community why accepting gay people as one of our own was a problem. This was one of the emails I received:

Dear Jennie,

I read your column in the Chelsea Standard. I know that it is an opinion page , however I would like to ask you if you have done any research into the topic of homosexuality?

To be a responsible journalist you need to write from a view point after researching both sides of an issue. From your writing, it is clear that you are misinformed as to the reality of homosexuality and the effects on the person, marriage, children and
eventually society.

I would encourage you to research this from another angle. Focus on the Family at family.org can provide you with some very interesting data from those who were homosexual and have come out of the lifestyle. The facts and testimonies they will provide you will enlighten you both medically and psychologically. This is a moral issue for many, however if you have ever given blood you will see that the questions asked by the Red Cross highlights the unhealthy and dangerous lifestyle that it is. That is from a medical standpoint, something the activists would like to hide.

Also, you seem to be very critical of conservative people. Are you aware that in the forming of our country, those with conservative (Christian) viewpoint created the law that we now uphold? Our country was founded on these principles. Because of that we are one of the most civilized country in the world. In fact, those without religious convictions could not be involved in most governmental decisions. You are taking a very short sighted view of principles and a value system that has made America what it is. Even if you do not uphold Christian principles, you have to ask yourself where you/others get your morals, or sense of right and wrong? What makes right/right or wrong/wrong?
Yes, there are absolutes in our world. There is cause and effect for immoral behavior.

Have you researched the long term affects of children adopted by homosexuals? Girls growing up with lesbian mothers or boys with no father? Children need both male and female to grow as healthy as possible. That is not what someone dreamed up- that is what is physically necessary to produce children.

These issues not only have moral implications but societal as well. Is it their “right” to have a child in these abnormal circumstances? Is it right that a family with a married man and woman should be denied a child because of homosexual rights to adopt a child? Which family would you have wanted to grow up in?

Are you aware that in California, all children from kindergarten up have to be taught that homosexuality is “normal” and “desirable”? That was the work of homosexual activists. Even though the medical profession admits that homosexual practices are unhealthy and even deadly, they are still touting it as “normal” to children.

Please research this topic from a different perspective being open to something you may not have learned as of yet. Consult Focus on the Family @ family.org for books and articles to read. The Family Research Council in Washington D.C will also provide you with enlightening information. The “Love Won Out” conferences and Exodus International have been very successful in reaching /healing these hurting people without enabling an unhealthy and destructive lifestyle.

I’m posting this because 10 years ago, I didn’t necessarily have an outlet to share this. 10 years ago, I realized that the God that everyone claimed to worship on Sunday was not the same God I thought existed, if there even was a god. 10 years ago, this letter came from a fellow church goer, someone else’s father, to me, claiming that I hadn’t done my job as a journalist.

I’m posting this because I see all over facebook and twitter and the like everyone supporting the cause of the right to marry who you want, but I want to make sure your acting. That you’re not just sitting on facebook liking red equal signs, and telling people who you know agree with you that they’re right.

I’m posting this because 10 years ago, this email made my skin crawl and made me question the small town I was living in. And 10 years later, this makes my skin crawl and makes me question (some) of the people in that small town. And small towns all over this nation. And the big cities, too, because California is where Prop 8 started, after all.

So if this email makes your skin crawl like it did mine, then I ask this of you: We all need to dig a littler deeper, talk a little louder, and tell someone we don’t know, someone who doesn’t agree with us, why this is important. That is where we make a difference. This is how we move forward. This is how we change.