Wednesday, January 4, 2012

15 Concerts in a Year:]

It's no secret that music is a huge part of my life. My Grand mother has a beautiful voice which was inherited by my mother who is the reason i can even carry a tune. I love music. I don't write it but i hear it, i sing it, i feel it. I don't know what I'd do without music. So it's no wonder that this summer me and my best friend McKell made a goal we thought was going to be unreachable. We were going to attend at least 15 concerts in a years time. And guess what?? I got to seventeen:]


1.Linkin Park
Energy Solutions Arena
2. Skrillex
Saltiar


3. Benny Benassi
Saltiar


4. Dierks Bentley
Miller Motor Sports Raceway


It rained the whole entire time. But he's so sexy it was so worth it.
Not to mention how close we were:] 

5. Bruno Mars
UCCU Center


We waited after the concert to stalk bruno. After having old men & cops tell us he has
 already left we still waited. Limo came and left and we followed it all the way to draper.
Phil Lawrence (the one who says "oh my gosh that was great" in brunos lazy song)
rolled down the window waved and yelled "we love you guys" out the window.
We were hysterically screaming and he rolled up the window while laughing.
So we moved to the other side and who's profile through the window do we see?
Bruno:] he so kindly rolled down his window and maddi almost passed out driving. :]

6. Motley Crue & Posion
USANA Ampitheatre
Poison
Tommy Lee's 360 degree drum solo.
It was freaking AWESOME!!

7. Brad Paisley
Stadium of Fire



 8. Ryan Shupe & the Rubberbands
Ryan Shupe so freaking nice.
Best personal assistants ever.
 9. Kenny Chesney
USANA Ampitheatre
Sexy Billy Currington:]



 10. Tim McGraw 
Luke Bryan and his tight pants. yummm.


 
he walked ten feet in front of us. I almost died.:]

the band perry







11. Mark Wills
Thompson Square
Mark Wills so fun!!!

 12. Billy Dean
Payson Hospital Kick off to Onion Days Concert
We were so excited to get to meet Billy Dean:] We sold his merchandise
for him at the show, got to meet & have dinner with him after.
Seriously one the most laid back, genuinely nice person. We also
may have secretively grabbed his butt too:]

13. Rascal Flatts
USANA Ampitheatre
 14. The Uproar Festival
Seether
 
Bullet for my Valentine


Escape the Fate


Three Days Grace

Avenge sevenfold



15. Nero
Saltair

16. Jason Aldean

17. Hollywood Undead
In the Venue



These are memories i will never forget. I may have spent a lot of money to be able to do this bucket list check off but when you listen to the radio or watch the CMT music awards and can say you've seen almost everyone performing in concert it's pretty awesome. Concerts are one thing i will not stop doing until i die. They are my absolute favorite thing to do. I've got plenty more on my list for this year already:]

Monday, January 2, 2012

two thousand & twelve

The expectation of the new year finds itself in every one's mind when they are counting down the seconds till they get a "fresh start" at a new year. Everyone is thinking about their resolutions that they will most likely stick to for maybe a month. My usual resolutions are something like exercise more, watch what I eat, be around family more, & get out of my comfort zone.... something like that. As I watched the ball drop in time square I thought to myself do I even have a resolution this year....do I even need one? All that seems to do is give me false hope that I won't be a failure this year and actually follow through on my resolution. As i pondered about whether to have a resolution or not it entered into my mind. What's my new years resolution you ask???


To simply be me.


No more worrying about other people. I'm looking out for myself. I'm refusing to waste anymore time on people who don't do their part to be in my life. I'm going to love more on my terms. I'm going to laugh, I'm going to cry. Whatever I do I'm going to do it my way. I'm going to let go. I'm going to learn to breathe. (especially when things don't go my way)I am going to live my life the way I want to and not let the influence of others push me in a direction I don't want to go. I'm going to focus on the friendships that actually matter. I'm going to take more time to do things for myself. My potty mouth should probably be fixed a little too. I'm going to try to not care about what other people think of me. I'm going to dress how i want. Not trying to act different around certain people to appear cooler, prettier, smarter, etc... I also want to focus on inner beauty for myself and for others. Not judge a book by it's cover. Be more quick to forgive.I am really going to focus on being myself. 2012 you may be better than 2011 or you may not. But I will do my part to stay positive while you throw curve balls & wonderful surprises/opportunities my way.








Here's to making twenty twelve all yours & hopefully finally successfully accomplishing your new years resolutions!!:)

Sunday, December 25, 2011

When Christmas Hurts

Every Christmas I get caught up in the hustle and bustle we call the holidays. Searching high and low for the perfect Christmas gift for everyone on our Christmas list. Hope, love, & joy fill the air. I'm happy. Christmas eve is great & Christmas morning is better but then WHAM. It hits me like a ton of bricks. The four year anniversary of my best friends death, my hero, my grandpa:) 2:00 a.m. Marks the fourth year that he's been gone. I honestly still can't believe it real. I thought I'd wake up from this dream a long time ago. It's safe to say this was the hardest thing I have ever dealt with in my life. But I know that I can't escape it. It's hard to accept God's will when it's not your will. But just because he's gone from my life doesn't mean I'll stop living my life. I'll have my days especially tonight when it's all I can do not to be consumed in memory of him. I miss him so much & all I really want is for him to know how much I love him.Four years ago when he passed away I was writing a friend on his mission, elder tanner bowman. I can't tell you the reason why but he was one of the only people I opened up to about the death of my grandpa. He'll never truly know how much that worn out, four page ensign story has meant to me for the last for years. I read it every Christmas almost ten times. It brings tears to my eyes but it also gives me a strength that I otherwise would not have. Being reminded of the promise of the lord that God will always be with us makes this bitter-sweet Christmas night a little easier to handle. Here is the Christmas story elder bowman sent me:) it has meant the world to me.

When Christmas Hurts
It is Christmas again. The woodsy fragrance of evergreens fills the air. The sound of Christmas carols wafts through malls, grocery stores, and tree lots. Ordinary houses become luminous, glowing in the dark with tiny twinkling lights. We feel anticipation, hope, and joy as we perform acts of service and reflect on the life of our dear savior.
But Christmas can also evoke profound feelings of loss when memories of loved ones no longer present are somehow amplified by the season.
Many years ago as a young girl, I learned how to find joy at Christmas even after losing the most important people of my childhood--my parents. The lesson came during a bleak emotional winter of my life. It was delivered by a young and earnest seminary teacher who taught me about a young prophet’s struggle with suffering and in the process gave me the Savior’s answer to one of life’s most difficult questions. Why do good people suffer?
I was only 17. Life was full of promise. I had a strong group of friends in the ward I had attended all my life. I was one of the lucky ones who loved high school—I had already found my niche. I was a writer. I wrote for the school newspaper. I filled spiral notebooks with my views on the Vietnam War, the latest music and movies, and how I felt about my hair. I was part of a witty and wonderful debate group who challenged my intellect and kept me laughing. Scholarships, college, further training in an art I loved were attainable goals—so close I knew they would be reached.
And then tragedy struck.
My dearest friend, my father—a short, heavy man with a big round face, a broad smile, a kind word for everyone, and always a stylish hat—was killed suddenly in an unusual car accident. Norris William Smith had been teaching driver’s education on a country road in the farming area outside our city, Idaho Falls, Idaho. It was the student’s first time driving. She was only 14. She pulled out in front of an oncoming farm truck, her view eclipsed by a dip in the road. The truck broadsided the car with the worst impact on the passenger side. By the time the ambulance reached the hospital, my father—a vibrant, healthy, happy man—was dead. The loss was particularly profound for me because just eight years earlier my mother had died after a long and painful struggle with cancer.
Life as I had known it ended. For months after Daddy died I dragged myself zombielike through each day as if I were running through water. Accomplishing the most mundane task felt monumental. The joy and zest I had felt for life flatlined. My grades slid. My school attendance became erratic. Even the health I had enjoyed became fragile. I no longer cared about my writing, about debate, about life itself.
And then Christmas came. Christmas—it had been my favorite time of the year, and that of my parents also. My mother had clung to life to get through one more Christmas. The house had always been beautiful with the smell of a fresh evergreen we had cut ourselves in the foothills near our home. Mom had piled plates with divinity, the white, gooey, dissolve-in-our-mouth candy of Christmas. And the house had been festive with Mom’s homemade evergreen centerpieces—an artful touch of pine, candles, a few glass balls, and a spray of canned “snow.”
Even the year after my mother died, my father had carried on with amazing enthusiasm, considering the loss he had suffered. The tree went up. Excitedly, he and I raced together through the lightened, snow-filled streets of our little town buying Christmas presents. On Christmas morning at 3:00 a.m. when I woke up, he was so excited he leaped out of bed with a string of bells, ringing them madly and shouting, “Ho, ho, ho, Merrrrrrrry Christmas!” And there under the tree was a gift I had been longing for: a little set of wicker furniture just the right size for my dolls.
Now it was Christmas again, and the sound of the bells, the smell of evergreen, the sight and feel of the snow filed me with such a searing pain I did not know how or if I could survive. I felt utterly alone in the world. The Christmas spirit was gone for me, buried with those two dear people so profoundly absent from my life. One day, overcome by despair, I escaped the raucous noise of my high school during lunch hour and trudged across the street to the seminary building. No classes were in session, and the building was dark and quiet, offering me exactly what I wanted: solitude. I sat at my desk in the dark room and wept openly. I didn’t want to be alive. Why couldn’t I have gone with my parents? How was I ever going to get through Christmas—or life—without them?
What I didn’t know is that my seminary teacher, David Beagley, stood quietly at the back of the room watching. He was young and enthusiastic. Like my father, he had a broad smile and was able to make us laugh with his corny jokes. After a few minutes he quietly approached my desk. Sitting down next to me, he asked in barley a whisper what the matter was, though I’m sure he already knew. He had led my entire seminary class to my father’s funeral. But his question gave me the chance I needed to pour my heart out to someone, to share my sorrow.
After I sobbed it out, he said he would like to tell me a story. They story went like this.
It was the winter of 1839. The prophet Joseph Smith had been illegally imprisoned once again, this time in Liberty Jail, a dark dungeon of sorts in Clay County, Missouri. The Prophet had been in jail since November. The basement room where he and other Church leaders were being held was so small he could not stand upright. He had suffered from cold, filthy conditions, smoke inhalation, loneliness, and unwholesome food. The depth of his suffering came when he learned about the terrible condition of the Church members who were being driven from the state.
In utter despair he had gone to the lord with one of the most poignant pleas in all of scripture:
“O God, where art thou? And where is the pavilion that covereth thy hiding place? “How long shall they hand be stayed, and thine eye, yea thy pure eye, behold from the eternal heavens the wrongs of thy people and of thy servants, and thine ear be penetrated with their cries? “Yea, O Lord how long shall they suffer these wrongs and unlawful oppressions, before thine heart shall be softened toward them, and thy bowels be moved with compassion toward them?” (D&C 121:1-3)
God heard Joseph’s cry, and that prison was transformed into a holy place when a beautiful, gentle, compassionate response came to the Prophet: “My son, peace be unto thy soul; thine adversity and thine afflictions shall be but a small moment; And then, if thou endure it well, God shall exalt thee on high” (D&C 121:7-8)
Then came the answer to one of mankind’s most difficult questions; Why does God allow people to suffer? “All these things shall giveth thee experience, and shall be for thy good. The Son of Man hath descended below them all. Art thou greater than he? (D&C 122:7-8) And finally, “God shall be with you forever and ever” (verse 9) Brother Beagley closed the scriptures. The room was utterly silent. My crying had stopped. The empty space in my heart was filled to overflowing with the sweet, warm feeling of the Comforter, and I felt comforted. I felt stilled. A lifting had occurred. My burden was being borne by Another.
From the Prophet’s horrible experience I learned we are never alone during our suffering. I saw that the Lord is aware of us and is close by. Most important, I learned that there is a purpose to our pain, though sometimes it may ne veiled for a time. I learned that even though our trials will not be taken away, Heavenly Father will visit us with his spirit to comfort us and help us endure our suffering until our wounds are healed.
When I walked out of the seminary building that December day, the facts remained the same. I was without my dear parents. But my heart had somehow changed. For the first time since my father’s funeral I was aware of a strength I had never felt before. I knew there were reasons for my loss that I couldn’t yet understand. But I knew I could go on.
My Christmas, perhaps my very life, was saved in that seminary room 30 years ago. As I write, I am looking at a picture of a beautiful family that has grown around me—my precious husband, Brian; our six daughters; their husbands; our grandchildren. I am not longer alone, and death is not my companion. I am surrounded by life.
I still love Christmas. Every year my husband and I and our six daughters cut our own tree. The bells my father rang so many years ago are not silent—my husband has taken over the tradition of ringing them and shouting “Merry Christmas!” Each year I place a tiny wicker furniture set out under the tree. Now it is surrounded by a living room full of wicker—my furniture of choice. And like my mother, I have learned to make divinity.
And I have come to know that each Christmas there will likely be an afternoon, and evening, or a quiet morning when, unexpectedly and without notice, grief will hit again. All these years later I still miss their laughter, their voices, their presence. But I no longer fight it. When it comes I have a good cry, I look at their pictures, and I get out my Doctrine and Covenants and read Joseph’s humble, sorrowful prayer and the Lord’s compassionate, triumphant answer. And once again I find the strength to go on with joy.





Tuesday, November 8, 2011

blast from the past

I was at work when i stumbled along these jems:] Old pictures of our family that were used in brennans wedding video. Its so crazy to see how much we have grown up. I hope you enjoy & poke fun at the horrible outfits we are in!!

hahah the swearter+mullet+the bear=golden picture.


One of my favorite pictures of me & brennan.
I have always looked up to him
(and not just because he's taller than me)

AWFUL OUTFITS how could you mom.

Brennan loved to get all his toys out of his toy box
and then sit in it. Ausin has this in his room right now.

My love for Dr. Pepper started at a young age.


Sea world!!!


This is my FAVORITE picture of brennan when he was little.
Just look at that freaking mullet haha.


ahhh little spencer. Look at his colorful outfit.

I can't tell you how many times i wore that witch costume
 year after year. I loved it haha

Brennan's baptism. That handsome man in the red tie,
thats my grandpa shepherd. He sure was handsome.
Look at my bow & my mothers long hair

Spencer used to wear this kiss mask year round.
We have video's of his dancing in the front room
playing guitar on a wooden stick with this mask on.