Wednesday, September 11, 2013

The List

We met the summer of 1996.  I knew the very second I saw him that we were going to spend the rest of our lives together.  After realizing what risk his job entailed I wondered how long the "rest of his life" would be.

In the beginning the thoughts of what could happen were always there.  They were what drove me to my knees each morning and again each night....my frequent and fervent plea to my Father in Heaven, "Please, keep him safe."  He would walk out the door in the early hours of the morning and as the door would close behind him my heart would skip a beat. "Please, keep him safe".  For the next twenty-four or forty-eight or ninety-six hours I would try to convince myself that "it won't happen to him". It was back then that "the list" was born.

It won't happen to him because...
He is young.
He has a wife.
We are newlyweds.
Bad stuff doesn't happen in this department.
He is careful.
He is well trained.

I followed his days on the radio we had at home.  I was always grateful when I would hear the dispatcher say "respond Code 1" following the tones.  Tones followed by "respond Code 3" always made me anxious. The morning he would return home meant four glorious days during which the thoughts could move to the back of my mind.  Those four days or ninety-six hours or five thousand seven hundred and sixty seconds would go by so fast. "Please, keep him safe".


Eventually days turned into weeks and weeks into months and those thoughts, while still there, began to spend more time hidden in the back of my mind.  Five months after we were married we discovered we were expecting our first child. I added that to the list.

It won't happen to him because...
He is young.
He has a wife.
We are newlyweds.
Bad stuff doesn't happen in this department.
He is careful.
He is well trained.
I am pregnant.

When our first child was born it was as if we were right back in the beginning.  All of the thoughts and fears resurfaced.  "Please, keep him safe."


It won't happen to him because...
He is young.
He has a wife.
We are newlyweds.
Bad stuff doesn't happen in this department.
He is careful.
He is well trained.
I am pregnant.
We have a baby.

It didn't take long for the days to turn into weeks and the weeks into months. And the thoughts again worked their way to the back of my mind. The cycle repeated when we welcomed our second child.  "Please, keep him safe".


It won't happen to him because...
He is young.
He has a wife.
We are newlyweds.
Bad stuff doesn't happen in this department.
He is careful.
He is well trained.
I am pregnant.
We have a baby.
We have two/three/four kids.
   
Then along came that day.  The one that hit me like a ton of bricks and shook me to my very core.  September 11, 2001.  As the reality of what had happened unfolded, I wept.  Over the next few days the media reported about the firefighters (and police officers and civilians) that had lost their lives.  They would briefly say something about each of them...

"He was young."
"He was a newlywed."
"He was well trained."
"He was always so cautious."
"He leaves behind a pregnant wife."
"He leaves behind one/two/three/four/five children."

The list, in an instant, became completely invalid. Not one of those things granted us immunity to tragedy.  Deep down I never believed they did. 

It won't happen to him because...
He is young.
He has a wife.
We are newlyweds.
Bad stuff doesn't happen in this department.
He is careful.
He is well trained.
I am pregnant.
We have a baby.
We have two/three/four kids.


The days following September 11, 2001 were difficult for our family.  We were confronted with fears that we had spent years ignoring, burying, down playing, and joking away.   For weeks, the media replayed the footage over and over and over and over.  They spoke of the men that were just doing what they were trained to do..."running up the stairs while everyone else was running down".  I wept and wept and wept for those brave heroes and for those they left behind.  Previously, I mentioned "that day" and my heart ached terribly for those that had dealt with that reality. 

On the 12th Anniversary of 9/11, I am grateful for those men who looked fear in the face and ran up those stairs.  I am grateful for the men and women who serve along side my husband and give 110% to those that call out to them for help in their darkest hour.

"Please, keep them safe".

list  noun, 1) names of different things written down one after another, verb, 2) to order things by writing them down in sequence




Monday, July 1, 2013

Sunday's Serenity...



 FIREFIGHTER'S PRAYER

When I'm called to duty God wherever flames may rage
grant me the strength to save a life whatever be its age
Help me to embrace a little child before it is too late
or save an older person from the horror of that fate
Enable me to be alert to hear the weakest shout
and quickly and efficiently put the fire out
I want to fill my calling Lord and give the best in me
to guard my every neighbor and protect his property
And if according to your will I am to lose my life
God bless with your protecting hand my children and my wife
--Anonymous

prayer  noun, words spoken aloud or silently to God

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

In honor of...

Jason had the opportunity to attend FDIC this year.  While there, he participated in the 9-11 Memorial Stair Climb.  He climbed in honor of Battalion Chief Orio J. Palmer.


Gone but not forgotten.


memorial  adjective, serving to help people remember  noun, anything meant to help people remember a person or event, as a a monument or holiday

Friday, August 24, 2012

Break A Leg

Jason was out on the deck, grilling hamburgers.  He watched as Josh tied a jump rope to the deck rail and then to his waist. It was when Josh began to climb up onto the railing that Jason intervened...

Jason:  Josh, what are you doing?
Josh:  I am going to jump off the deck.
Jason:  No. You aren't.
Josh:  Why, will I die?
Jason:  Probably not, but you could break your arm or leg.
Josh:  I can live with that.

jump  noun, 1) a spring or leap, verb, 2) to lift the feet off the ground into the air, to leap 3) to rise suddenly

Monday, September 26, 2011

Back to the drawing board...


Jason called me this morning and I was so excited to tell him what I had done.

Me: Guess what I did this morning.
Jason:  I don't know, what?
Me:  It's the one thing that I really really really hate to do.
Jason:  Dishes.
Me:  Nope. (okay, the 2nd thing)
Jason:   Laundry
Me:  Nope. (okay, the 3rd thing)
Jason:  Cleaned the bathroom. 
Me:  Nope. (okay, the 4th thing)
Jason:  Emptied a mouse trap.
Me:  Nope (okay, the 5th thing)
Jason:  Oh, I know!!!  You cooked!
Me:  Nope. (okay, the 6th thing)
Jason:  I give up.
Me:  Apparently so did I.

exercise  noun, 1) an activity used to train the body, verb, 2) to train the body by using one's muscles

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Sunday's Serenity


To Do Is To Be  --Socrates

To Be Is To Do  --Plato

Do Be Do Be Do  --Sinatra


to  adverb, 1) in a direction toward preposition, 2) in the direction of  3) as far as  4) on or against 
5) until  6) used to show why  7) used with the infinitive of a verb  8) for the purpose of, in order to  9) belonging to

Monday, September 19, 2011

Monday Memories...

Shortly after returning home with our new baby girl, we discovered that Josh was on the way.  Two babies, ten months apart...I was exhausted to say the least.  One morning, after sending my two older boys off to school, I put Josh down for a nap.  Unfortunately, Hannah had zero interest in napping that morning.  I convinced myself that it would be fine if I closed my eyes for 15 minutes.  I made sure that Hannah had toys to keep her busy and then climbed into bed, laid my head on the pillow, and closed my eyes.  It couldn't have been two minutes before I felt drip...drip...drip....on my cheek.  I opened my eyes and saw Hannah standing next to my bed, grinning from ear to ear, as she waved her magic wand (aka the toilet brush) over me.  

wand  noun, a baton, a rod, a fairy's magic stick

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Sunday's Serenity


listen  verb, to pay attention to what someone is saying, to heed

Monday, September 12, 2011

Monday Memories... "Old Yeller"

 
Somewhere along the way I became a yeller.  I am not proud of it.  My kids remind me constantly "Mom, we can hear you.  You don't have to yell".
Shortly after we moved into our home we began to put in our yard.  I remember the day that we were leveling the back yard to get it ready for sod.  Jason was in the bobcat, moving dirt from the front yard to the backyard.  Our two oldest boys were running around the front yard, getting in the way helping, and I was in the house with the babies.  I stepped out onto the deck and I could hear what sounded like a man yelling at what I assumed were his kids.  It sounded like it was coming from the cul-de-sac behind us.  I could barely hear him over the noise of the bobcat and so I walked farther onto the deck and listened again...  Yep, there was definitely yelling going on and I was pretty sure it was coming from the corner house across the street behind us.  I was elated...a fellow yeller!!  I listened some more and could barely make out what he was saying...but it definitely was some serious yelling.  I ran to the front yard and excitedly signaled for Jason to stop the bobcat so he could hear me.

Jason:  What?
Me:  **excitedly**  There is a guy in the cul-de-sac behind us yelling at his kids. 
Jason: Really, what is he saying?
Me:  I repeated a few of the choice phrases I was able to understand.
Jason:  That was ME, yelling at your son, he threw a dirt clod at my head and ran off laughing.

echo  noun, 1) a series of reflected sound waves that repeat as they bounce back from an object, repeating the sound  verb, 2) to reverberate, to reflect a sound back

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Reflect. Revere. Remember.


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Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends --John 15:13

Ten years ago Ethan was 19 months old.  I am shocked at some of the things he can remember from such an early age.  September 11, 2001 is not one of them and part of me is grateful for that.  That day is never far from my thoughts and it still brings me to tears.  Ethan watched a program on one of the kids channels about 9/11.  Afterwards he asked me, "why did they do that?".  I began to answer and along with my words came tears.  Hannah then asked, "why is mom crying?".  Ethan responded with an answer and understanding that ages him beyond his years..."Because she loves Dad".

love  noun, 1) a very strong warm feeling or deep concern for someone, commitment 2) darling, sweetheart, verb, 3) to feel passion, or a strong affection for someone or something