Thursday, December 22, 2016

December 2016 Christmas Letter

Dear Family and Friends,

Herding Morgans is a full-time job…It is kind of like herding cats – just with less scratching and more whining…although sometimes there is scratching! 

Let me start with myself – the herder.  I do much of my herding in a Toyota Prius.  Bob (ever the minimalist) decided we should trade in our van to be economical and get 2 hybrid cars.  My Prius may get 50 mpg, but I usually have children stuffed in the trunk and stacked on top of each other in the seats.  So far, my record is 9 children in the Prius!  So….10 people (and usually a dog) in a 5-passenger car…just an average Morgan herding day.  I am also still herding the crabby-old-lady cat, the crippled-retarded cat, and Charlie the dog who feigns obedience until he sneaks out of the house and terrorizes the neighbors by barking at them relentlessly (while pretending not to know us as we yell and chase him).  I baked cookies for one of our neighbors a few months back and took it to their door.  When they answered, they look bewildered as I tried to explain that I lived several houses down the street and brought them a treat.  Their English is limited and they were trying hard to comprehend who I was…when I said, “We have the naughty dog that barks at your disabled mother when she walks past our house with her walker.”  Sudden recognition came upon them as their eyes widened and they began making barking motions with their hands and laughing at me.  I took solace in the fact that at least I wasn’t known for my naughty children…whom I keep on a short leash – something I apparently need to employ with Charlie.  I am working at the Live Oak Nazarene church as of August this year.  I love working with all the friends I know from working there before, plus it is only 10 blocks from our house! Charlie often accompanies me to church and has been dubbed, “Charlie the Church Dog.”  He loves to go to church and eat all the crumbs the children leave behind when they have snacks.  Who needs a vacuum, get a Charlie.

Bob…we can always count on Bob to hold to his Nazi-Granola-Tree-Hugging ways!  He still believes Monday holidays are set aside for re-arranging the garage, that you can never have enough fiber in your diet, and pets are from Satan.  Bob has found great joy in his Toyota Prius.  He especially likes to brag about maintaining a higher mpg average than I do.  At first, I thought he was just kidding, but one day I had to drive his car and he thoroughly warned me not to mess up his gas mileage.  The rebel that I am, I took that to mean that I MUST mess up his gas mileage!!!!  I GUNNED that car all the way to Yuba City and back and when I was done…I had shaved off 8 miles per gallon on his average.  It’s the little pleasures that make life worth living.  Bob was not happy…he probably drove 25 mph all the way to Sacramento to make up for it!  Bob has retired from the State Department of Education and is now the director of Special Education at Visions Charter school in Sac.  We figure there will be no true retirement for us, we need to be employed into our 90s when our youngest should be graduating college!

Sam (19 years old) is taking college classes locally and looking forward to starting college in Sacramento at William Jessup University in the fall.  Sam is an after-school aide at a local Elementary school during the school year and a lifeguard in the summer.  Sam’s crabby-old-retarded-lady cat died a year ago and last January he chose another cat to be his companion.  We have decided that Sam is NOT a good judge of cats and will never again be allowed to choose another animal as a pet.  His new cat is also deficient in the brain.  She doesn’t know how to meow…she trills.  She is paranoid, bi-polar, and to top it off…she was hit by a car.  She walks with a limp and doesn’t have control of her tail…it kind of moves in spasms.  We give her morphine when she gains too much weight because it hurts her hip.  She lays on the floor, drugged out, swatting at imaginary flies with her tail jerking around.  I’m a little concerned when Sam begins looking for a wife…I’m thinking arranged marriage is a better option for him.  On the other hand, I am a little jealous of the cat…MY doctor WON’T prescribe me morphine for weight gain (which over the holidays is problematic) – but the jokin’ cat gains an ounce and she gets to live in La La Land!

Cooper just turned 16.  She has been taking driving lessons at school. She turned 16 in October and has yet to take the driving test to get her license.  Let me rephrase that…I, as a responsible parent, believe the nation to be at risk if Cooper Morgan were to receive a driving license.  It AIN’T GONNA HAPPEN (spoken like a true Nebraskan).    This summer we were on vacation for a month and I thought letting Cooper have some drive time across Nevada would be a splendid idea.  Really…no cliffs to drive off, very little traffic, it should have been the perfect scenario for a student driver.  The first day we gave the wheel over to her, Bob felt the need to pray for our safety before we began.  This totally freaked Alex out…Dad never prays out loud when anyone else drives!!  When Bob finished the prayer, the first words out of Alex’s mouth were, “We are all going to DIE!”  Cooper took off and about 10 seconds later a ground squirrel ran across the road.  She inadvertently pushed the accelerator to the floor (not the brake) and swerved across the road while SCREAMING at the top of her lungs!  On any other day, there would not have been a car on that road until the afternoon mail was being delivered…but NO…there just happened to be an unsuspecting driver coming toward us!  His eyes were as big as saucers as he was contemplating an exit into the desert sand, when Cooper swerved back to her side of the road.  At that point, Alex reiterated, We ARE going to DIE!  I think he said that phrase every 5 minutes for the hour that we let her drive.  We approached a small town and I asked Cooper to pull over.  She had clinched her fingers around the steering wheel so hard, her hands were locked onto the wheel!  I got into the driver’s seat and both she and I downed Ibuprophen and gave a sigh of relief (as did Alex).  I didn’t let her drive again until we were returning home 3 weeks later, which turned out to be just as hair-raising and gave me night mares for weeks to come.  I only let her practice when I can sneak some of the cat’s medication to help my nerves.

Alex (10 years old) can’t get enough sports!  He loves to play and watch sports.  He is so active!  I love to watch Alex play sports and during the baseball season I even got to announce at a couple of his games.  I am one of those parents screaming from the sidelines, cheering all the players on and embarrassing my children.  For Bob, this is almost an unbearable cross.  Bob loves sports as much as he loves pets.  It is excruciating to watch Bob try to watch Alex play!  He has the look of constipation on his face.  Alex hasn’t figured out that his dad doesn’t like sports yet.  He smiles from the field and waves at Bob.  Bob has a dazed look on his face…he is probably trying to calculate how to put more fiber in his homemade granola instead of keeping up with the game.  Alex definitely is a “daddy’s boy,” but Bob wishes he was into diagraming sentences rather than sports…THEN, he would be the fanatical parent cheering if that were the case.  Alex’s clothes are always dirty and torn from playing around outside.  That kid goes through a pair of sneakers every 2 months…the expensive kind!  I bought him a cheap pair once…they lasted a week…seriously!  Alex’s shoes will literally have holes in the bottom from all the running that he does.  This summer I bought a net for him to practice pitching into and set it up by our back fence.  The first day, he threw the ball so hard it hit the fence and broke 4 planks out!  We moved it to the street and he broke 2 more planks out of the neighbor’s fence that were 20 feet behind the net!  My front window took a ball and has a lovely crack in it.  Now that I think about it, I have always wondered how my car’s windshield got broken?!  I also think there are a few dents in the hood and top of my car that haven’t been explained either…hmmm.  

Nathaniel just turned 8 and wanted cheesecake for his birthday cake!  What child wants that?  Nathaniel plays sports only because Alex does.  He doesn’t want to be left out.  He actually is good at sports, but doesn’t have the drive and passion that Alex does.  He would rather play games on his tablet!  Alex wakes up and goes outside to shoot baskets, while Nathaniel wakes up and wants to snuggle on the couch with his Wii control.  Nathaniel thinks of Sam as his 2nd dad.  Nathaniel loves Sam and they BOTH love Legos…the two of them will play for hours.  I can’t tell you how sick I am of finding Legos everywhere!  And the pieces get smaller and smaller with each kit!  Walking barefoot across the floor has nearly crippled me…why does that stupid cat get all the good drugs!!!??? Stepping on Legos can seriously be used as a military torture treatment to gain information from enemies!  Water boarding would seem like a dunk in the pool comparatively.  Nathaniel has another passion besides Legos…Whining.  Nathaniel has learned to whine from the best of them…Cooper and he has taken it to a new level. If there was a competition, I’m sure Nathaniel would get a prize!  He has mastered the art of whining so proficiently that even an ordinary sentence can be made to sound like a Winning Whine from Nathaniel.  I thought if I imitated him, he would hear what he sounds like and perhaps stop…NO…he just whined because I imitated him and it hurt his feelings!  Nathaniel tends to have his feeling hurt quite often.  His feelings are hurt if you look at him, if you touch him, if you speak, if you breathe, if you blink…  Everything hurts his feelings…and then he whines.  Nathaniel can be very funny and loving…those are the times we cherish.  This summer my niece’s husband introduced us to the phrases, “Whiners get Shiners” and “Snitches get Stiches”.  I started to say them to Nathaniel whenever he whined or was a tattle tale.  He just whined more.  I think I need to find a local chapter of Whiners Anonymous for him.  We had been hoping he would grow out of it, but I believe he is officially addicted.

I hope you have a Christmas filled with Hope, Joy, Peace, and Love.

Merry Christmas!

Marcy Morgan

   As well as:  Bob, Sam, Cooper, Alexander, Nathaniel, Charlie, Tasha and Bell.















The pictures of the family were taken last summer in Wyoming at the Morgan family reunion.
*Charlie’s pic is obviously when he is begging for pizza (his favorite food) – he has those “puppy eyes” down to a science!
*Tasha likes to lie in the baskets…don’t try to make her get out…she will bite!
*Bell’s usual look of angry-annoyance…I think she looks a lot like Toothless from the movie, “How to Train Your Dragon”…it’s the ears, eyes, and shape of head.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

LIFE HACKS

Facebook is full of videos and stories of how to do things faster, better, or with less effort.  I've watched or read about people who perfectly cut up a watermelon in 5.3 seconds, organize their cosmetics with toilet paper rolls, and combine the chores of bathing your cat and cleaning the toilet to obtain a sparkling stool and pretty kitty!  But to be honest, moms have been coming up with "Life Hacks" since the beginning of...well...MOMS!!

* Your kid has a dirty face - spit on a kleenex and wipe it off.
* Your kid has bed head - spit on your fingers and plaster it down.
* Your kid has salted caramel chocolate truffle on his cheek - LICK IT OFF!
  (Moms learn their best hacks from observing mama cats)
* Skinned knees at the park - uh...have the dog lick it?!
* You have to leave for a baseball game and forgot to throw the uniforms in the dryer - hang it out the car window and drive to the game. (a.k.a. Drive-n-Dry)
* Forgot to buy bread - the kids get PBJ on taco shells.
* No one will eat the brown bananas - Banana Bread!
* Kids played in the mud - Back Yard Hose Shower!
* Your kids are being obnoxious in a store - turn around and say sternly & loudly (so anyone observing will hear), "I don't know who you children are, but if you don't stop following me I going to TELL the manager!"
*Company coming on short notice - shove all laundry in dryer, all dishes in oven, everything else in closets spray Lysol around the house and order pizza.
*Most everything else will require duct tape or WD-40.

This is what I know, 24 hours in a day are never enough - so it is necessary to take a few short cuts in life.  The trick is deciding what to cut short.  I've learned never to cut short my family and dear friends.  Never cut short bedtime stories and hugs.  Never cut short the amount of times you tell someone you love them.  And never, never, never cut short on dessert (or... the sweet things in life that make you smile and give you joy.)  So next time you see me flying down the back roads with a shirt flying from the window, just know I'm taking the short cut to the really important things!





Saturday, April 23, 2016

Being Transparent

I love windows.  I love what I can see through a window...sun, trees, rain, the stars and moon, my boys destroying my plants with their Light Sabers, the inside of homes when people don't close their shades, the salesman outside my door that I hide from...I can see good things and "I wish I hadn't seen THAT" things.  I love to observe and take in all that I see through the windows.  For the most part, other people cannot see into MY windows.  They can't see if there is a mess in my house.  They can't see our special needs cat limping around.  They can't see my children climb the walls like apes or slide down the banister instead of using the stairs.  They can't see the cobwebs I've grown accustomed to.  If it is a nice day and the house is in pretty good shape...I might open the windows, but I still keep the shades slanted a little.  YES, I am talking literally AND metaphorically!

I just hate when friends recommend things for you to listen to, read, or watch that have to do with personal growth and self-improvement.  It usually means I am going to have to come face to face with some kind of personal deficit, be convicted, and then begrudgingly try to do something about it.  CRAPENZIE!  Well, I have a friend that does this on a regular basis. I keep thinking I need to break up with her to spare myself the misery of self-improvement conviction, but...dog gone if she isn't super cute and funny.  I stay for the laughs and endure the self-improvement recommendations.  In actuality, she doesn't know she does this...she just shares things she has learned and been convicted of herself...unfortunately, it always seems to be the same kind of thing I am trying to suppress so I can keep flourishing in my spiritual gift of denial.

And...the latest conviction is Transparency (I personally like to lean towards opaqueness.)  I have a fear of "Over Sharing."  I am a much better listener than I am a talker.  I will admit, as a listener, I have heard a lot of "over sharing" over the years.  I have asked people casually how they were doing and an hour later I felt like I could charge them for a therapy session. I cringe at the thought of someone listening to me while in their mind they are making a mental shopping list..."Oh yeah, that reminds me that I need to get toilet paper!"  So recently, I was listening to my friend's latest "self-improvement video" suggestion, when SMACK!  Conviction "Dope Slapped" me on the back of the head!  I hate when that happens.  

So, this is me ripping off the opaque bandage.  Being a pastor, or middle class citizen, or having a sense of  humor, or driving a fuel efficient vehicle does not spare me from the troubles of this world...well the last one might spare me from high fuel costs a little...but other than that I am susceptible to the same problems and maladies that everyone else is exposed to.  I have a son with PTSD from the 5 years of childhood cancer he fought, I have a teenage daughter (enough said), I have 2 young, rambunctious boys that have special needs and have the super power of destruction.  My family has had financial problems, communication problems, physical problems, mental problems, spiritual problems, and every other kind of problem you can think of.  I have dust bunnies and cobwebs, stacks of laundry and dishes to do, a long list of household maintenance and spring cleaning.  I can yell at my children and give my husband the silent treatment.  Sometimes, I want to kick the dog AND the cats.  I am overweight, sometimes depressed, sometimes lonely, and sometimes defiant (okay, most times defiant.) I live with pain everyday...emotional and physical.  I have age spots, gray hair, and have paid for my doctor to travel around the world in co-pays alone.

It isn't easy opening the blinds to my windows for others to see.  But, my desire to have close and complete relationships with others is greater than the shame or discomfort of letting others view the real me.  The people who have made me open my curtains bring me comfort, challenge me, cheer me on, support me, and love me without condition.  Our lives are made for relationships...both good and bad.  We learn, grow, and are blessed when we let people into our lives. 

Windows get dirty, windows break, and when there is a storm - it is much harder to see clearly.  Relationships are messy, don't always last, and take work.  Some windows we should never look in and sometimes we need to be careful about who looks into our windows.  I do know this...it is through transparency that relationships are built and maintained.  I hate cleaning windows...but I really love looking through the clear glass.  

Oh great...I just realized I need to wash my windows on my house
.  Why is it that clean windows are like magnets for the dirty hands of little boys and the wet noses of dogs?