The Pop-In

Saturday night the fam-bam and our BFFEs popped over for a little spaghetti and chit chat. The BFFEs decided they needed to buy out WalMart’s stock of soda! They will be regifted… 🙂

From top to bottom:

1. Gavin and Holley!
2. Dad SHOWING US UP with his Indian song.
3. Making fun of me for taking pictures.
4. GOTCHA RUDY!
5. Apparently spaghetti wasn’t enough for Holley…
6. The drinks..
7. Ahh.. a fire to counteract the torrential rain we were experiencing.
8. Jason fell asleep.

Be Our Friends

I wish our living room looked like this.

SO excited. My solid black sequin jacket came in from Modcloth today. Wooohoooo! On to the post.

Ever since about sophomore year in high school I’ve been without some solid friends. I had a group of friends that I had an absolute BLAST with through the rest of my high school “career”, (is it really a career? I mean come on. I didn’t get paid. Isn’t that the definition of career?) but I never had friends I could connect with spiritually and could feel comfortable enough to even talk about that stuff with. We hung out a lot outside of school which was awesome but it was still shallow.

Since being married, Jason and I have shared the same desire: to acquire married friends with whom (ooo la la. I used whom!) we can connect. Same humor, same desires, same hobbies, etc. You know, friends. Jason met a new guy at one of his ultimate frisbee games and we had dinner at their house Saturday night. And I have to say, I had a good time. We played XBOX Kinect for like three hours. (That game’ll make you sweaty, btw.) They grilled delish chicken and veggies. I tried to recreate last night but without squash, it just wasn’t the same. Sigh.

I just wish I had a group of girlfriends I could go shopping with. Friends who had my same budget. Read: cheap. (Speaking of money, are those people on JG Wentworth really singing opera? It’s kind of impressive.) Girls who actually like Golden Girls and baking and consuming chocolate of extreme, massive, humongous, proportions.

(At least my sisters are spending this weekend with me! I can’t wait to cook for them and watch movies. Woohoo! I’m really excited.)

So, if you’d like to apply to be our brand spankin’ new best friends, fill out the form below. 🙂

Names:
Age:
Location:
Job:
Hobbies:
Favorite Foods:
Favorite Shows:
Pets:

PS. What’s with this new Easter movie? It looks like a lot of junk to me. A bunny that poops jelly beans? Really? Do something original and something that’s ACTUALLY FUNNY. THERE’S an idea! That pretty much goes for any movie that’s absolutely silly. ie: What Happens in Vegas… uhhhh…. and any other movie that is dumb. Uh. Bye.

Bowling Made Me Sore

My parents head up the college group at our church and Sunday night we went bowling. Ahhh, there’s nothing like sweaty overused shoes, loud obnoxious rap music, and not being able to hear your own voice that really makes you connect with your friends. Or scrolling through your sisters pictures the next day and realizing how bad you need a haircut and to start working out again. Partly because of the pictures and partly because I’m sore today. From bowling. I’m old.

Our friend, Austin, turned out to be a serious pro. I thought at one point the leaguers next to us would recruit him. While he was bowling 130-170 we were bowling 40s and 50s. We aren’t friends anymore.


My pop pop!
Leaguers had their own rolling duffel bags. Are those really necessary?

I love this app, Instagram. There are so many filters and you can follow people who have the app, too!

The CD from this came in today! Woo!

Saturday the hubs and I went to Laneville’s semi-final basketball game in Tyler. Jason works there as their tech director. It was really a lot of fun. They lost, but played a good game. I had forgotten what it was like to go to a good high school game.

This is my name tag from my audition at University of Texas at Tyler on Friday. Would’ve taken a picture of myself but I was ready to get into my PJs as soon as I got home at 6.

 

So, how was your weekend?

Friends

When I was younger I NEVER thought of myself as pretty or popular or as having anything to offer anyone else. I was “friends” with the “popular” kids and “friends” with everyone else. I never was-and never will be-the girl who all the guys fawn over or all the girls want to go shopping with. I’m the girl who watches Flight of the Conchords and The Golden Girls and whose idea of a good time is cleaning house and cooking dinner and being in a quiet house on my laptop. But, when we moved a couple of neighborhoods over my 3rd grade year I met my best friend. We were virtually inseparable. Like sisters, if you will. Later, we became best friends with two other wonderful girls and our two-some became a four-some. We were close all the way through our freshman year in high school. I loved those girls. Though I had two sisters, I replaced my sisters with those girls. But, as some relationships do, those friendships faded out. Fortunately, God showed me some new friends. These friends had the same humor, liked the same foods, and got my jokes. They developed more of who I am today. But the relationships themselves were shallow. Don’t get me wrong, I had some good times with those people and I consider them friends of mine, but there was no spiritual support for me. No deeper connection other than our similar humors and that we liked some of the same things. But yet again, those too, faded out.

I don’t regret any of those friendships because God used the friendship famines to bring my sister and me closer together. I realized that the friend I had been searching for had been my flesh and blood all along. A couple of years later, Jason came, and every day since then I am more baffled by just how well he knows me and just how much we are alike. Sometimes we can’t stand it but mostly, we just smile a knowing smile and squeeze each other tightly.

I haven’t felt that longing for friendship in a long time, but when Jason and I were at dinner the other night, there were 3 young couples out on a date together laughing and talking about life together and I couldn’t help that painful longing for another couple to appear across the table from us. I love my time alone with Jason but we’re both pretty much loners when it comes to friends. We have friends, but not friends.

I’ve started a book called “Before I Fall” (not a Christian book by any means. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.) about four girlfriends going through their senior year of high school. I’m barely into the book and can’t help but wonder what my high school years would look like had I closer friends like that going through the things I went through. Would I be a different person? How would my life have developed? No doubt God didn’t screw up by not giving me close friends in high school. He had a plan to draw me nearer my family and to stumble upon Jason at a bible study.

I can’t describe that feeling I felt in the restaurant that night. I wanted so badly to have another couple who was just like us. People who were embarrassingly goofy and awkward and who didn’t have enough sense to quit acting like idiots long enough to look at the menu. We joke with each other and our families about how we don’t have any friends but deep down I know it’s true for me. When I think about our wedding showers parts of me think about all the fun we’ll have but the other part of me thinks, “who’s going to come?” That probably sounds superficial and shallow but it’s what I think. I honestly wish I had more friends than I do, but maybe God is preparing me for something. Maybe being out in Cowtown, TX will be quieter than I think it’s going to be.

I guess there’s no real point to this post except that I miss something I’ve never really had. Do you have a best friend who supports you spiritually, emotionally, or comically?

Best,
Melody