The Ghost in Our House~ Jen

My phone turned everyone on the edge of the lake into a ghost at dusk a few months ago. Weird.
My phone turned everyone on the edge of the lake into a ghost at dusk a few months ago. Weird.

Growing up, we had a ghost in the house. I’ll put that on my mom. And if my mom was writing this, she’d tell you the same.

We’d lived in the house probably ten years before we put it all together. We sat down as a family and told each other all the weird things that had happened that we thought were just weird coincidence or the creakings and squeakings of a 40 year old house. That night, I named her Dorothy.

Dorothy was the source of the knocking on my bedroom wall, the reason that the dog sat up and begged from no one. She whispered in everyone’s ear, waking us up in the dark of night. Up to that point, none of it was scary. Just weird.

But that dinner was like her coming out party. Once we acknowledged her presence, she got busy.

One night Teresa was playing with my mom’s music box, a masquerade clown that played “Music of the Night” from Phantom. As if that in itself was not creepy enough, two hours after she left, I was watching TV by myself when I heard the box play about six slow notes in the dining room. It did that sometimes, like it hadn’t quite wound all the way down.

Thirty seconds later though, that thing started playing loud and fast like someone had wound it all the way up.

I screamed for my brother, who yelled back “I’m not coming out there!” My mom came running up the hallway and grabbed the box, which had indeed been wound all the way up.

Dorothy.

My dad hired a painter to paint the family room. After six hours they wanted out. The paint fell over, the brushes moved from where they had been left, the TV switched on and off. “You got a ghost, boss” the painter told my dad.

Dorothy.

At Christmas, the stockings my mom made when we were all babies, that hung on the mantle every year, and were packed away in the same place, were gone. My mom turned the house upside down. Nothing.

When we dragged the decorations out for the next Christmas, there they were, right on top.

Dorothy.

I lost a pair of jean shorts, my favorites. I looked for them everywhere, even in my brothers’ drawers. Then I forgot about them. One day in the middle of winter, I pulled a load of whites out of the dryer and mixed up among them—my blue jean shorts.

Dorothy.

My brother used to surf early in the morning. The kid never remembered his house key. He’d tap on my bedroom window so I could get up and let him in the back door. One Saturday morning, he  called my name and tapped, and I got up and opened the back door. Which set off the house alarm. Which brought everyone running, including my brother who’d been asleep in his bed.

Dorothy.

It got to be a thing. My mom, standing over the tv, turning it off only to have it turn right back on. “Dorothy, cut it out!” she yelled finally, and that time the tv stayed off.

One night I was doing the dishes. It was just my brother and me in the house. He came into the kitchen to get a drink, but then he bolted for the back door and locked it. “I just saw someone outside!” he said.

“Blond hair?” I asked him.

“Yes!”

“I’ve seen that. I think it’s Dorothy” I told him.

And then this night. I was doing the dishes. It was dark. The rest of the family was watching tv in the other room. I looked up from the sink, into the window, which was like a giant mirror, reflecting the room behind me. And I saw a woman with blond hair, in a long black dress, walk into the room towards me. I froze, and watched as she turned and walked out.

When I ran out into the family room to tell my parents, my brother said “I thought I saw someone walk into the dining room just a second ago”.

Dorothy.

The mystery was solved one afternoon at my grandparent’s home. I was telling Dorothy stories and my grandmother, a few Canadian Clubs into the afternoon, said “We had a ghost here too. Bessie.” She then launched into a list of Bessie stories that sounded a lot like Dorothy. My grandmother thought she haunted a painting they used to have.

“Is she gone?” my dad asked.

“Oh sure, since we got rid of the painting” my grandmother said.

“Where did it go?” he asked.

“We gave it to you years ago! The one in the living room.”

And I knew exactly the painting she was talking about. A delicate, Romantic style portrait of a young girl, her face glowing against the background, even in the dark.

The girl in the painting was not a blond. And she was not dressed the way that Dorothy was dressed the night I saw her. But since the day my dad took that painting off the wall and sent it to Goodwill, there has never been another Dorothy incident in the house.

I know. Spooooooky.

Happy Halloween!

Halloween Time! ~ Dana

Spiders on windows and pumpkins on porches… Can’t you just imagine Julie Andrews singing a Halloween remix of this song?!  Ok, maybe it’s just me, lost in my Sound of Music world, but that’s ok.

I think that one of the reasons that Jen and I are such good friends is that Halloween is one of our favorite things.  Like most Americans, my love of Halloween started when I was little, but not because I collected copious amounts of candy and spent the next week in an imbalance of sugar highs and hard crashes.  In fact, my mother used to make me throw out the previous year’s candy before I was allowed to go Trick-or-Treating again.  No, what I loved was the dressing up part of Halloween.  The first costume I have vivid memories of was a handmade costume that my mom sewed:  a beautiful blue Little House on the Prairie dress, complete with puff sleeves and matching bonnet.  It was awesome.  And that year was a particularly hot Halloween and I remember sweating like a stuck pig in that thing, but I wore it and loved it, nonetheless. (I wish that I had a picture of it to share with you.)

I also had the more traditional costumes (pirate) and some non-traditional costumes (skunk?!).  My college years were great.  One year my roommate and I dressed up as an old couple and no one knew our identities while several members of the men’s volleyball team dressed as the Spice Girls.  So much fun!!

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One year I bought an old wedding dress from a thrift store in downtown Long Beach and went to parties as the Bride of Frankenstein.

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That dress was revived several years during my teaching career as well when I would stalk the halls of the school as La Llorona (a scary legend out of Mexican folklore)… that is, until I caught my heel on the 4 ft train and went down the stairs, ass-over-tea-kettle, and ended up at the bottom a bruised and bloodied mess (which probably made the costume even scarier)!

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What I don’t like is when people make Halloween out to be a glorification of evil.  Halloween was born out of religious traditions that take time out of the year to honor and remember those who have died.   Ancient Celtic folk believed that this is the night when the veil between the spirit world and physical world was the thinnest.  They built bonfires and dressed in costume to ward off evil spirits, but also believed that their loved ones who had died would come home again.  They lit candles and set an extra place at their tables, inviting their loved ones’ spirits to break bread once again, a tradition that I began keeping many years ago as well.

This year, I will have a Princess Jasmine and a butterfly fairy to take Trick-or-Treating.  Jen is excited that one of her kids is finally old enough to don a scary costume; Gabe is dressing as a vampire.  Both of our homes are decorated with Jack O’ Lanterns and witches.  And as Jen put it, what holiday could be more Christian? We open our doors freely and willingly, welcoming complete strangers with a smile.  Then we give those strangers sweets and treats that we have spent our hard earned money on.  What a wonderful perspective on a fun time of year!

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Autumn, Disney-style ~ Dana

You all know that we love autumn, and we love Disneyland, so I had this wonderful idea to show you how awesome Disneyland looks this time of year. They have all sorts of great events going on, the biggest of which is Mickey’s Halloween Party, which we attended, of course. And I wanted to get all these lovely pictures of the girls in their costumes, of the giant ghost Mickeys that light up the party after dark, of the cast members who called Mazie, who was dressed as Princess Jasmine, “your highness” all night long. But alas, with two kids up well past their bedtimes, I came home with only a few fuzzy shots.

But I am committed to you, dear readers! And so I ventured back to the park. With the two girls. By myself. And although there were some pictures that I just didn’t get, I hope you enjoy the ones that I did.

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The entrance plaza and Main Street are decorated to the hilt with fall-colored bunting, gorgeous leaves, and lots and lots of carved pumpkins.

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Frontierland always has a country fall festival mood with a super cute little spot for pictures.

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Frontierland is also home to the Dia De Los Muertos celebration, which is new the past couple of years.  Mazie loved the face painting!

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And of course, the Haunted Mansion is decked out in all of it’s Nightmare Before Christmas splendor.  It’s hard to believe that this year is the 13th anniversary of the transformation, which stays from autumn until Christmastime.   I would have loved to get more shots of this amazing display, but the neither the kids, nor their mommy, were interested in waiting over an hour for it.  But it’s so neat, even from outside of the gates.

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And my new favorite Halloween decorations are the singing busts from the Mansion, which look just lovely adorning my new Halloween Tree!

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The girls were so good for these couple of hours, so I rewarded Mazie with a much-deserved spin on It’s A Small World.

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And home again… in matching Halloween jammies.  We are SO INTO THIS SEASON!

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We hope you are enjoying your autumn, too!

Aloha! ~ Jen

The first time I went to Hawaii, I was 17 years old and it was a volleyball trip for my high school team. We spent a week in Honolulu before school started, playing in a tournament with teams from around the islands and the nation. I was hooked.

Five years later, after my first year of teaching, I went back. This time to Maui, where I felt an immediate soul connection. Maui was magic. I made the trip about every two years after that, with some of my best girlfriends. I couldn’t get enough of Maui.

Ten years later that all made sense when I met Shea. He grew up on Maui, in an honest-to-goodness sugar shack in the middle of a plantation. Our first trip together, he showed me kama’aina Maui, places tourists rarely go. And I showed him haole Maui on the Ka’anapali side.

Hawaii is important to us. The lifestyle and culture are an intrinsic part of who Shea is, and he wants to share it with our kids, who are natural water babies and fish eaters. They revel in the feeling of warm sun on their shoulders, so they take to Hawaii like they were born to it. Which, in a way, they were.

Gabriel body boarding at Hanalei Bay
Gabriel body boarding at Hanalei Bay

We just got back from a week in Kauai with my parents, where we snorkeled, body boarded, jumped waves, zip lined and ate fresh mango, coconut and fish. The Hawaiian people are enormously generous and kind, but even more so once they find out Shea is kama’aina. For Hawaiians, this makes us ohana.

Speaking of ohana (which means “family”), look at this sign we saw while shopping one day:

This was hanging outside a local souvenir shop in Koloa
This was hanging outside a local souvenir shop in Koloa

Wow, right? I just wrote about keeping the Sabbath and here was this sign, like a…well…sign. See how it doesn’t say CLOSED? CLOSED is a brusque, unfriendly word that conveys a feeling of nothing.

OHANA DAY is a whole other feeling. It says “We’re with our families. You go be with your families. It’s all good and love. We’ll see you here tomorrow.” Most of the non-super touristy places were closed on Sunday. And the parks and beaches were packed. How’s that for some Sabbath?

We had two highlight adventures. The first was suggested by a local guide on a snorkeling trip. “Salt Pond Beach is the best place to watch the sun go down” she said. “Build a fire, cook dinner, sit back and enjoy the view.”

So we did. We gathered driftwood, which the Eagle Scout (my dad) turned into a perfect beach fire. We swam in the dusk, roasted hot dogs and watched the sun set. Amazing.

Salt Pond Park, Bonfire dinner at sunset
Salt Pond Beach, bonfire dinner at sunset

Then on our last night, we went to Po’ipu Beach to watch the sunset. There’s this cool little cove that’s a natural kiddie pool—protected by rocks, only 18 inches deep. After dinner, Gabriel was out hunting crabs in the rocks with a bunch of boys when they started screaming.

You know I thought “Shark!” before my brain processed that they weren’t running away, but towards whatever it was. Then I heard TURTLE!

And sure enough, three huge honu had risen off the rocks right where the boys were playing. Scared the bejeezus out of them, since the smallest turtle was at least 4 feet long.

Hawaiian Honu, green sea turtle.This one was at least five feet long and two feet away from me!
Hawaiian Honu, green sea turtle.This one was at least five feet long and two feet away from me!

Hawaiian honu are special. For native Hawaiians, they represent longevity, peace, humility and the spirit within us all. I feel that when I see them. They seem divine in some way, like they know God. There’s also a legend that the first honu, Kauila, could change herself into a little girl, and that she watched over small children playing on the beach.

I love the honu.  I have three tattooed on my ankle to represent my babies. It was a special gift to see them that close on our last night.

The view from our balcony
The view from our balcony
My mom and dad, still loving life and each other after 45 years!
My mom and dad, still loving life and each other after 45 years!
Waimea Canyon, smack in the middle of Kauai.
Waimea Canyon, smack in the middle of Kauai.

I really can’t say enough about Hawaii. I know that it seems a world away and very expensive, but for us, it is no different than traveling to Mexico or Portugal or Croatia to take the kids back to the motherland. And it might not be as expensive as you think. Check it out!

Aloha!

And the Winner Is….

Grace

We are excited to announce that Beth Myers is the winner of our first giveaway!  Congratulations, Beth!  We have contacted you via the email address that you provided and look forward to getting you your dress.

If you didn’t win and are still interested in one of these beautiful handmade dresses, please visit our Etsy shop at http://www.etsy.com/shop/FullOfGraces.

There are more giveaways in our near future so stay tuned.

Happy Friday everyone and have a great weekend,

Jen and Dana