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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

turkey trot

Was it just me or did November fly?

December 1, 2021

November was a whole vibe. Until about the last week of the month, it felt like a giant blob of nothingness, then all of a sudden it was full steam ahead. I keep these records for me and our family because I like to remember all the things we’ve done, the special and ordinary moments we have each month. My day-to-day memory is terrible in the midst of stress and other difficulties. This month, while talking to a friend, I forgot that our family went to Illinois for part of our summer break. Because the pandemic has me questioning all of time. Anyway, if you get some enjoyment out of our ordinary lives, great. If not, I probably won’t stop. 🙂 Here’s our November round-up of What We Did, What We Ate, What We Watched and What We Read.

What We Did

Early in the month, I got my COVID booster shot. I went in at 3 p.m. on Friday, was in bed by 8 p.m. and slept till almost 7 a.m. the next day. I woke up,  read till 8:30 a.m., took 2 naps, and slept for another 10 hours that night. By Sunday I was back to normal. This was a huge difference from my first shot back in March, so I was pleased.

Phil took the kids to Central Market on the Saturday morning after I got my booster shot. In addition to the vegetables and fruit we needed for the week, he bought them coffee drinks and pastries. (!) The next Saturday, I asked if I could go with or if the kids wanted it to just be a dad thing. There was no strong feeling one way or the other, so we all went and had coffees and bagels or muffins. This has become a regular Saturday practice for us, at least until basketball games start.

Speaking of basketball, our son had his basketball evaluation. for the winter rec league season. He’s excited to get started.

Months ago, tickets went on sale for a local theater production called Emma, the Matchmaker. I had wanted to go the last time it was offered but wasn’t comfortable going by myself since Phil usually works on the nights it was offered. This time around, I decided to go for it because I’m trying to live my life the way I want to live it. I want to do the things I want to do while I have the chance. So, on a Friday night, I took myself on a date to this production staged in a late-18th-century plantation house. The audience followed the actors through four rooms and a hallway of the house, and it was delightful. Plus, Emma is my favorite of Jane Austen’s works because while I swoon for Mr. Darcy in Pride and Prejudice, Mr. Knightley is the Austen hero I would choose to spend a life with. I’ve missed local theater. I love creativity in all forms. I needed to do this for me. 

Phil and I woke up at 3:45 one morning to go outside and see a lunar eclipse. It was cloudy but we caught small glimpses of the phenomenon. I love eclipses and celestial phenomena of all kinds. Worth it.

ExtraGive, Lancaster’s biggest day of giving. Every year, no matter what our financial state, we give to community organizations on this ginormous day of giving. It always restores my faith in humanity.

Saturday morning walk with Phil while the kids were at a rehearsal for church. We hadn’t been in the woods together since the incident at the end of September. We took a flat, paved path in a suburban neighborhood, but it was beautiful.  And it’s nice to have to time to finish a conversation without interruptions from a highly opinionated teenager and pre-teenager.

Youth service at church. Our kids participated in this annual event. I loved seeing their creativity come through.

An Outlander Celebration, online book release party for the 9th book in the Outlander series. I’ve only been an Outlander fan for a couple of years, but what I lack in longevity, I make up for with enthusiasm.

Haircuts. Long overdue. So fresh. I feel like a different person.

Turkey trot. I ran it by myself. It was my first in-person race in more than two years, and while I didn’t break any personal records, I was just glad to get out there and do it and finish. It was encouraging.

A Longwood Christmas at Longwood Gardens. We used our membership to attend this popular event on Thanksgiving Day. Maybe that wasn’t the best choice, but it was the day that had the most tickets available when we were looking. It’s a magical spectacle. Super crowded. But I’m glad we went.

On Black Friday, we headed to the Christmas tree farm to cut down our tree for the year. This is the first time in years that we’ve gone to the farm to cut down a tree. 

We had friends over for dinner during our long break for Thanksgiving. We played a couple of board games/card games–CodeNames and Icons–after dinner. It was a fun reminder that we love to have people in our house and should do more of that.

Braces. Our daughter got braces on the last day of our Thanksgiving break. She’s the first in our family to have them, and the first few days were a rough ride. It’s going to be a long year.

And on the very last day of the month, Phil started his new job. What a long six weeks it was.

What We Ate

Soup! It’s at least a once-a-week menu item in the fall and winter. This month we made: Butternut squash soup. Egg drop soup. and Ham and bean soup. 

Squash bread. Phil made his signature bread to take as our snack offering for small group, and our friends ate it up without asking questions. 🙂

Fish pie. I keep forgetting to take pictures of our food because we eat it when it’s hot. This is like chicken pot pie or shepherd’s pie, but with fish as the meat.

This amazing breakfast sandwich from Farm2Table at Lancaster Central Market. I wasn’t feeling bagels when we went the Saturday before Thanksgiving. A good breakfast sandwich is my jam.

Klondike bars. For nostalgia and introducing the kids to treats of yesteryear.

Salted caramel pop-tarts. Um, what? These are better than I expected. Phil bought pop-tarts as breakfast treat for Thanksgiving morning.

Thanksgiving Day: Baltimore pit beef sandwiches, fingerling potatoes, green bean casserole, pumpkin bars (our go-to fall dessert). We don’t always do the traditional turkey on Thanksgiving, especially if it’s just going to be the four of us.

But, on the day after Thanksgiving, we did do a more traditional meal: smoked turkey breast, homemade stuffing, mashed purple sweet potatoes, maple-mustard glazed brussels sprouts. All delish.

For our dinner guests, we made Swedish meatballs from a recipe my aunt gave me years ago. Yum.

What We Watched

LegoMasters. We finished. Whew. What a ride. 

Saturday Night Live clips. Small doses of television guaranteed to make me laugh. I have loved sketch comedy for most of my life.

Kim’s Convenience. A few episodes here and there.

What If …? Episodes 3, 4 and 5 were hard to watch. But we finished the series and feel pretty good about how it ended.

Grantchester. 

Jungle Cruise. A bit hokey. Some good jokes. Plus THE ROCK. I had some issues with the ending, but it’s Disney, so I guess I can’t really expect anything different.

Paul Blart: Mall Cop. Our son is a member of the 6th-grade safety patrol for his bus, so we often call him a bus cop. We thought it was necessary for him to see this movie. It did not disappoint for him.

Over the Hedge. This was another one for our son’s sake because he’s like Hammy the Squirrel. We had lots of laughs.

The World According to Jeff Goldblum. Phil and I found this series on Disney Plus and it’s delightful because Jeff Goldblum is quirky, curious and childlike.

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings. Okay, this might be my all-time favorite Marvel movie. And it’s hard to go back to watching Simu Liu in Kim’s Convenience after seeing him in this

What We Read

Jesus and John Wayne, book club, continued. We got so tired of talking about the same things every week that we finally decided to just finish the book once and for all and talk about it once. I finished it. I need a spiritual palate cleanser now because I just feel icky.

Death by Water by Kerry Greenwood. More Phryne Fisher. I won’t apologize.

Evil Spy School by Stuart Gibbs. I love reading this series together with my kids, and I enjoy the story and characters, too.

Darius the Great is Not Okay by Adib Khorram. I bought this one at a book fair last year. The main character is an American-born high school boy with Persian parents. They have to make a trip to Iran to visit family. Darius wrestles with his identity as a “fractional Persian”–his mom was born in Iran, his dad is American, he was born in America–and it’s honest and compelling. 

Temptation Ridge by Robyn Carr. Yep, it’s back to Virgin River for me. I want to keep knowing about the characters but some of the writing is starting to annoy me. How long until the series returns on Netflix?

A Rogue of One’s Own by Evie Dunmore. Book 2 in the League of Extraordinary Women series.

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie. This is one of those “classics” I missed. I love YA literature because of the way its authors write POV. I underlined some things in this one that I absolutely loved. I understand there are some personal issues with the author. Still, I think this is a valuable read.

Portrait of a Scotsman by Evie Dunmore. Book 3 in the League of Extraordinary Women series. This one was my favorite. This whole series is so unique and compelling.

The Beautiful Mystery by Louise Penny. Another unforgettable Inspector Gamache novel. Usually I take some time before grabbing the next one in the series, but the way this one ended had me checking out the next one immediately from the library.

Paradise Valley by Robyn Carr. Okay, I might need a break from the Virgin River book series.

Spy Ski School by Stuart Gibbs. We started this one at the end of the month.

Filed Under: holidays, monthly roundup Tagged With: Longwood Gardens, november, soup season, turkey trot

That was then, this is now

November 26, 2018

I never thought I’d be the kind of person who wanted to go out running, much less who chose to run three miles on Thanksgiving morning before preparing a meal for guests.

But then again eight years ago, when I ran my first 5K, I couldn’t imagine how running would change my life and my marriage. Or how much I would need it to.

In sickness

I always tell people of that first time that we were running to save our lives. I know some people joke about this–If I’m running, it’s because I’m being chased–and although our threat wasn’t necessarily visible, it was true for us that we were in danger and running was one of our best options for survival. It was a desperate and unconventional attempt to save our marriage, and for nine weeks we trained together, sometimes pushing a jogging stroller with our young children squeezed inside. I won’t go into all the details of that time of our lives. You can read some of that journey here.

We ran that 5K from a place of sickness. Our bodies, our marriage, our minds were unhealthy, and this was a drastic measure for us that was only the start of a long road toward healing all of these things.

But I couldn’t have known that at the time.

In health

I was thinking of that first 5K because of our participation in a Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving morning. So much of this year’s race was different from that first time. The biggest difference is us.

But I’m getting ahead of myself.

In the last eight years, my husband and I have run a few 5Ks, either on our own or with our daughter when she’s participated in a running program for school. We haven’t run one together since that first one, and while we didn’t intend to run this one together, as in, side-by-side, we were still in it together. We showed up at the start together and ran the same race.

Us, after it was all over

There is something significant about that.

For years, our recovery from the crisis that almost broke us was separate. Individual. It was my husband taking steps toward health and me just trying to get through a day of diapers and clinging kids without crying. Or me finally getting the mental health help I needed while my husband struggled to provide for our family in difficult job positions.

In the last year, we’ve been on a track of being healthy together, and I would go as far to say that it’s probably been our healthiest year yet both as a couple and as individuals. We both took ownership and control of our mental health as well as our physical health. My husband became a regular at a gym. I committed to running regularly and did a food experiment to reset my relationship with food. We both lost some pounds that were weighing us down. We are stronger in mind and body, and choosing to run a 5K on Thanksgiving morning is in line with the kind of people we’ve become.

Even when temperatures were below freezing with an even colder wind chill.

I may have questioned my mental stability on the morning of the race as wind stung my exposed skin. Still, it felt like the right thing to do.

For better or worse

If there’s one thing I’ve learned about running since I started doing it regularly in February it’s that I can’t wait until conditions are perfect to run. I wouldn’t have gotten where I am today if I had.

I started running regularly in February and only took a three-week break in July when schedules were hard to coordinate. I’ve run when it’s pouring down rain, just after it has snowed, when it’s been unseasonably cold, and hotter than I thought I could bear. And I’ve made it through every kind of run. I’ve had to adjust my schedule some days when the weather hasn’t cooperated fully, but I make weather a rare excuse to miss a run.

Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash

There is something to be learned about marriage in this. Not all the days are sunny. Few are perfect. We keep going anyway. (This is not to say that all marriages must endure everything no matter what. I am only speaking of our personal journey.)

When we signed up for the Turkey Trot a month or so ago, we had no idea the temperatures would feel like the teens on the day of the race. When we signed up to join our lives “for better or worse till death do us part” I wasn’t really thinking about the “worse” part, and I surely couldn’t imagine what it might actually mean. (It was worse than any “worst” I could imagine for myself.)

We could have opted out of the race. No one forced us to run a race we’d already paid for. We could have opted out of our marriage, too. No one made us stay together. I have found a kind of satisfaction I didn’t know existed in sticking with something even when it’s difficult. Especially when it’s important.

I do

Whether it’s marriage or a 5K, this much I know: No one can do the work for me.

The Turkey Trot was my first on-my-own 5K ever. I was nervous and scared and excited and cold, but somewhere deep inside me, I knew I could do this. My husband and I layered clothing and joined the throng at the starting point. I kissed him, and said, “See you at the finish line,” knowing he would cross before me, The gunshot signaled our start and we jogged/walked until the crowd broke up and then my husband was gone and I was on my own in the crowd, focusing on my breathing and keeping my face protected from the wind.

Photo by aquachara on Unsplash

The first mile passed fairly quickly, as it often does for me, and I was surprised to see my time at 11:40. The second mile was a little more difficult as we descended a hill I heard people call “puke hill” and then gradually made our way back up a zigzagging path. I kept running even though some people chose to walk the hill. I wanted to walk but only because my mind is sometimes weak. I completed a 2.4-mile run on Sunday, so I was determined to keep going until I made it at least to that point. My goal was to run the whole thing, no matter how long it took.

Setting a goal, remembering my past accomplishments, seeing how far I’ve already come–these are lessons for other areas of my life, too.

The second mile was the longest, which is the same thing I said about the second mile during our first 5K. But at the marker for mile 2, I was at 23:15, the fastest I’ve run 2 miles in all of my training, so I was confident and hopeful that I could turn out a good time for this race. Meeting one milestone and then another is no reason to let up.

In the third mile, my training–or lack of it–began to show.  The 2.4 miles I ran four days before the race was the longest I’d run and while my body had gotten used to running 2 miles and pacing for that, the extra mile was trickier. Sometimes we will find ourselves in unfamiliar territory, places that we have no experience navigating. This is hard, no doubt, but not impossible. 

I started to take it easy because I wanted to finish strong, and there were a few more gentle hills before the finish. The race ended inside the stadium and the last mile was close to the stadium the whole time, which was slightly deceptive but also encouraging. (If I could give one piece of advice to anyone about anything it would be “pace yourself so you can finish strong.” Easier said than done about anything.)

A police officer yelled encouragement to all of us passing by and offered energy-boosting high fives to all who wanted one. This is my favorite part of running a 5K, all of the encouragement from strangers and friends alike. I always wonder why we don’t offer this same kind of enthusiastic encouragement to friends and family going through difficulties or tackling some new challenge. I’m striving to be more of an encourager in the small things.

Near the stadium, a volunteer manning the route called out that we were at 2.6 miles. Okay, I thought, only half a mile to go. My legs were feeling weak and my body was warm and I wanted to finish strong. I couldn’t find it in me to push harder because I wanted to finish and I wanted to run the whole thing. Forward progress, no matter how slow, is still progress.

As I rounded the corner to enter the stadium, a friend who had finished called out my name–“Go Lisa!”–and then my husband was there on the first curve of the track, calling out encouragement and clapping his hands. I ran the track as best I could, trying not to listen to the people around me who were just trying to make it through, including a girl who said she was going to puke. That propelled me forward like nothing else could because no way did I want to hear that.

And then the finish line was in front of me and I crossed it before the clock ticked over to 38 minutes. I was relieved and a little disappointed but mostly just glad to have finished. My husband found me and I clung to him while we waited in line for water and a banana. I ended up needing to sit for a minute because my vision got a little blurry, but we stuck around long enough to greet another friend and her family before heading to the car to warm up.

From this day forward

“Finishing” and “finishing strong” mean different things to different people and seldom will it be tidy or pretty. A three-mile effort is exhausting, even when you’re fit. (Isn’t it? I’m assuming here.) You don’t have to come out the other side of a challenge or trial looking or feeling the same as when you went in. It’s going to change you somehow. And it’s probably going to hurt a little. (Two days later, my muscles are still aching from the effort.)

My official time was 37:54, and it was the third mile that did me in. I went back to see what our time was during that first 5K and it was in the 35-minute range. This astounds me because I know how unhealthy I was then and how much healthier I am now, but I also know that my husband set the pace during that first 5K and this one was all me. (Another piece of advice I cling to: “Run your race.” I was in the 800s out of more than a thousand runners. A lot of people ran faster than me. Some ran slower. Or walked. Everyone went at their own pace. All I could do was run my race.)

After Thursday’s results, now I have a new goal. To keep working on that third mile and to run the next one a minute or so faster. Always improving. Striving for better. Seeing where I can grow and improve.

This is true for life and marriage as well.

We are in a place of health. But we have not arrived.

New goals. Continued improvement.

Now and forever.

Filed Under: health & fitness, Marriage Tagged With: marriage, running, turkey trot

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Photo by Rachel Lynn Photography

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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