Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Meandering through Northern California

Standing under Foresthill Bridge
 We're trying to make up for all our time apart in one spurt of activities. We left straight from Kevin's graduation and drove to California to spend a week with Kevin's parents and our good friends Drew and Tiffany came too. The week literally flew by, we did So many fun things. Love it.
On our way to the water hole on the American River

Kevin diving off the rock. (obviously)

I get nervous about jumping off tall things...

Jumping AGAIN with Kevin

Kevin and Drew ready to look for the huge tadpole Kevin says he saw...

This little 22 rifle is the FUNNEST gun ever to shoot, I don't do kick back so this was PERFECT. I'm not a bad shot with it either...just saying.

Dad McGuire trying out the jet ski, shoes and socks and all.
 An awesome family in Kevin's parents' ward offered to let us use their jet skis for a day.  It was AMAZING, the day was perfect; there was almost no one on the lake, the water was about 80 degrees and the sun was shining.  Kevin thought it was the funnest thing to tip us though.  Ha, it actually was really refreshing.

 There is quite an intense breeze when you're flying across the lake and it sure did wonders for Kevin's hair, no?  He's thinking about changing his hairstyle.
In front of a delicious bakery in Carmel, they had awesome caramel apple cider.  Good thing too, it was chilly.

We hope to be just like them when we grow up, cute and content.
 We made our way around Carmel, Monterey and Santa Cruz for a few days with Kevin's parents,  it was so beautiful. I couldn't get over how cold it was for a California coast though.  Just crazy.  
Carmel highlights: 
-window shopping
-caramel apple cider
-the water dishes outside all the shops for dogs
-seafood!!!
Monterey highlights:
-Cannery Row
-seal sighting (by yours
Cannery Row in Monterey
 truly)
-Candy store
-JELLY FISH!
Santa Cruz highlights:
- the silver store lady who informed me I had a lucky amber shield ring on
-eating calamari on the pier with Kevin
-the colorful and fun scene at the Santa Cruz boardwalk
-Pink Godzilla Sushi T-Shirts



A candy store. I love candy stores.

Me and a jelly fish, can you see it?

Jelly Fish
 So, for whatever reason there were TONS of jelly fish off of a pier in Monterey and it was AWESOME. I think jelly fish are so sweet. Ridiculously scary to encounter but sweet. They just look so soft and puffy.  Completely delightful.

Lunch on the pier in Santa Cruz.


















 Overall we just had a great time being with each other again finally and spending some time in sunny California with family and friends, it was a great break from normal life.
Boardwalk at Santa Cruz.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Graduation and farewell to Rexburg.

Kevin's Graduation for his Undergraduate degree.

Can you tell he loves serious pictures?

Kevin and Brock, his best friend from the program. Claiming the land for Spain.
 It has been so weird for our time in Rexburg to end.  Kevin had a fantastic experience in his program.  He was able to work with so many really devoted professors who hugely impacted him and gave opportunities for tremendous growth on the part of the students. What a great experience.
With Dr. Moore, the Professor that they did the majority of their research with.

Kevin, Brock and Tyler, another really good friend from the program.
         Kevin is in great need of a break, since he's been going to school year round for two years straight. And we're both feeling like a four week summer before he starts his masters program is going to feel a bit quick. But we are SO excited that we're together again after his camping for 6 weeks. Woot.                                                                                     

Sunday, July 31, 2011

StooR FamiLy HoLiDaY MaDDnEss

On the dock at the cabin in Island Park, Idaho.

Kevin, Michelle, and cousin Scott.
Whenever we spend holidays with Kevin's side of the family, we're sure to have a fantastic and ridiculous time.  Most of the Stoor clan gets together for all major (and some minor) holidays up in a very remote community in Idaho where Kevin's mom and her siblings grew up.  This year we got to spend our 4th of July weekend with all of them.  It was a riot as usual.
 We took a lot of pictures and lit a lot of firecrackers and sparklers while we were waiting for it to get dark enough to start our actual homemade firework show.
Don't honestly remember what was so intense about this situation.


Every time we all get together there is near constant eating and munching. I LOVE it.  This weekend we tried to incorporate as many favorite traditions and foods from the major holidays we enjoy together. Swedish bread, stockings stuffed with treats/gifts, Christmas cookies and candies, and 
Staking out our seats for the firework show with Kevin's cousins.
 patriotic tie-died shirts were some of the highlights for me.  Oh, and the dutch oven potatoes (though I don't know that they belong to a particular holiday.)
Lots of glow sticks, all the cousins' kids LOVED them.

More waiting for the fireworks.

Glow stick glasses, classy, no?

Turns out it's rather difficult to frame your face with glow sticks for light without looking a bit ridiculous.


 Kevin caught some awesome shots of his oldest cousin's son, Max, playing with a bunch of glow sticks that had been strung together.  Sweet action.

Lady Liberty and Uncle Sam





















Annual 4th of July parade. 
feeling so patriotic
This is easily one of my favorite traditions.  Every 4th of July 
the whole family,except those 
who have to be in the audience,dresses 
up in patriotic garb and 
then we march back and forth
in front of the house 
throwing candy. This year was
especially intense because
we had maybe 10 actual
parade-goers (outside of the
family) and thanks to 
Aunt Wendy, we had 
patriotic music blaring. 

What a great way to spend
the holiday. What a gift to 
be able to live in a free
 land.
parade in action
The whole parade crew

Monday, June 20, 2011

Shnarning is good for the soul.

Me and my sister Annie. We made the treats, Kevin made the non-treat food.

"I'd take good food over bad food any old day of the week." (The Ghost and Mr. Chicken)

The multicolored cake of glory!
"Shnarn" is a word my Dad's family uses; it is used to describe any time with good company, conversation and food. Use it, love it.  Everyone needs a good shnarn.

So Kevin and I decided to have a house-warming party with some friends and family to celebrate our move. Course, without considering it, I scheduled it for the very same weekend as a 10 hour training with LDS Family Services for Adoption.  Needless to say, it was quite the busy weekend. But the training was So good and the party was so chill and relaxing that I was glad in the end that we'd done them both last weekend.

It's so good to be with close friends and family. Annie was really nice to drive down to help us set up, plus if it wasn't for her I wouldn't have had any of the cool treats we made.  She found versions of them on Pinterest; really cool website. And let's be serious, how cool is a layer cake with a gradation of colors? Right up my alley, I love a good gradation; in a cake, the sky, a painting or intaglio print. Try it!

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

"Ju gotta be startin with the wo-man in da mirror Dogger"

I often imagine myself handling "things" well and then "things" happen and it turns out it's a lot harder than it looked like.

 I think that's a pretty accurate description of my initial struggle with infertility. I just assumed, as we so often do, that I'd get pregnant in a few months tops and we'd have a family.  Lots of things in my life felt temporary because I thought I'd be a mom soon; my job, relationship with co-workers, etc... And then nothing. Every month, nothing.  I cried, a lot. And then one month we thought maybe...but all negatives.  So we went to the doctor, who knew, maybe we just needed a more accurate test. Accurate test, check, pregnacy, negative. Then you just find out that something's wrong with you so buckle up for loads of tests and drugs.  All of it making it nearly impossible not to think of pregnancy and babies everyday if not constantly.  I went through phases of numbness, anger and sadness. "What is so wrong with us having a baby?" I thought.  Everywhere I turned someone was pregnant or had a baby in their arms or stroller or shopping cart.  "Can we please just leave Rexburg?" I frequently asked Kevin.  I was so sad so much of the time.  It was awful.  On top of all the sadness I felt tremendous gulit; guilt for not being more faithful and hopeful, guilt for envying others, guilt for my seeming failure at "handling" it.

I really can't pinpoint the exact instant my turn-around started. Having a friend going through a similar situation helped, someone to talk to who knew what I was feeling.  Finding out that a lot of what I was feeling was natural, that I wasn't alone.  Kevin was and is my rock, sitting up with me at night when I couldn't sleep because I was crying too much, being an incredible optimist and helping me to remember what I knew of our Heavenly Father's character and love.  I learned how to pray more for ability to endure and greater perspective rather than for God to change His will and plan.  And slowly and very catiously I tried to let people in again and allow myself to love those I could have around me even if I couldn't have my own children.  I tried to stop segregating myself literally and emotionally from people who did have children in spite of my apprehension and frequent lack of desire.  (misery loves company my mom always told me)  I started praying to know what I was supposed to do with this time I didn't think I'd have.  So much easier said than done, but gradually the pain did become less constant. I started feeling genuine happiness for people with children or those expecting.  I began trying to channel the love and energy I had for our future children into other relationships; with Kevin, my family (especially nieces and nephew) and friends.  Kevin and I realized that we had So much to work on to prepare for parethood and started trying to take better advantage of the "extra" time we had to prepare.  I realized that I needed to stop putting my life on hold waiting for a baby to come.  I also realized that I needed to be working in something that I loved rather than in a "time-filler" job.  I also realized that I needed to have a better attitude about my current job since the hardest thing wasn't actually the work, it was not being a mom.  I realized that I had let my personal struggles effect the way that I interacted with everyone else.  I realized that I wasn't looking for the good as much as I should, I was often judgmental and impatient.  I started trying to "make peace" with everyone including myself.  I decided to go back to school, and for the first time since I got married I was excited about something.  Then, we found out that doctor visits and procedures were no longer covered by our insurance. 

I came home from the doctor's that day crushed and confused.  As we were talking it out, Kevin mentioned that his mom asked if we'd looked into adoption through any agencies other than LDS family services. (I had mis-read their info and thought that we wouldn't be eligible to apply until our 3rd anniversary) Several months prior Kevin and I had talked about adoption  but concluded that most agencies just weren't in a price range we could possibly afford right now.
I had always been apprehensive about adoption for the same reasons a lot of people are.  Will the child love you?  What would it be like raising a child that isn't "blood"? In a conversation with my mom I had been expressing my fears and concerns and she said, "what if someone needs you?"  I'd never thought about it that way, my perspective had been selfish, fearful and uninformed. (I mean no offense, I realize adoption isn't right for everyone.)  Well, after the doctor's visit Kevin and I checked LDS family services' website again, just to get some general info and found out that we'd actually be eligible this May. With our decision to adopt came the first feeling of complete peace without sadness in a long time. 

I don't profess to have perfected the ability to "handle" things.  There are still hard days.  And sad days.  But there is also hope, a hope of someday having children.  Hopefully soon, but I don't try to predict things anymore either. There's also happiness, geniune happiness now, even though we don't have any children yet and we still desperately want to.

What I want people going through infertility (or any trial for that matter) to know is that there Is hope, God Does love us, even when that means making us wait for the righteous and good things we want very most. Believe that God wants you to be happy and try to stop equating His love with getting what you want when you want it, maybe you've mastered that but I sure haven't.  We found our answer and direction in pursuing adoption and moving forward with our personal improvement, who knows what may come in our future. 

My brother Scott and I speak in a "valley girl" accent he picked up courtesy of a mission companion. One of his favorite lines is his own rendition of the Michael Jackson classic, "Man In the Mirror".  "Ju gotta be startin with da wo-man in the mirror Dogger", he frequently says to me. (Dogger is a nickname he has for me) Rather amusing. But in all seriousness, we can't control most of what happens to us in life but we Are happiest when we focus on the "man (or woman) in the mirror" and change and be changed for the better by our experiences. That's my life lesson #1 from infertility.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

April Showers and Lack of Flowers

So, turns out April=winter in Rexburg. woot.
But that hasn't stopped us from running around seemingly nonstop.  Seems like there is so much to do in preparation for moving in a few weeks, especially when you're moving to a different state.  I've also been helping to train a replacement for my co-worker who just had her last day this Friday and I start training my replacement in 2 weeks.  The result is an exhausted and frazzled Michelle at the end of the day.  

 One day I got home from work just in time to go visiting teaching and when I got home from our visit, Kevin had made a candlelit dinner for me.  He made pancakes, hash-browns and fried eggs.  (He hates breakfast so we never make it but it is my absolute favorite type of food so he made it just for me, and made is favorite standby for himself, pasta with red sauce.)
 On Saturday Kevin slipped out of bed while I slept in and made me breakfast in bed.  Goodnight, he is so good to me.


I've recently really gotten into sewing/quilting. (in my spare time, ha) My co-worker is expecting the middle of May and I made this blanket for her.  The star is all hand-stitched, which takes a bit of time so I found a new Disney show to watch on Netflix, "Sonny with a Chance."  Disney is absolutely my guilty (or not so guilty) pleasure.  I know it's corny but I love that it's "good clean fun", and corny is the perfect humor for me growing up in my family, such hams. 

We had a sewing machine fiasco right at the end and of course it was late at night the day before the shower.  So Kevin borrowed a machine from my friend Jamie in our ward and did all the machine stitching for me.  He's pretty good, no?




It seems like we were driving down to Utah every other weekend this month, but every event we attended was worth it.

Our good friend Drew, who served in Hungary with Kevin and I, (he was companions with Kevin and we were all in a district together in Budapest) got married in American Fork at the beginning of the month.  We are so excited for Drew and Tiffany. Drew is a great friend to both of us, and especially Kevin, (he was the best man at our wedding and grew out a mustache just for Kevin) he is an incredible and faithful person, he's a wonderful example to us.
 Kevin and Drew at the Wedding Luncheon.

All in all we had such a crazy wonderful month.  We are so so so excited for it to be May, we can finally start the adoption process officially this month and we can hardly wait.