Girl Running Tall




Monday, September 9, 2013

The Toast

My sister, Leigh Ann, married her love, Marty, on May 4th.  It was a gorgeous day in every way - weather was perfect, the bride was gorgeous, the ceremony was intimate and sweet, and in the end, a good time was had by all.  There was delicious food, fantastic bubbly (I love the bubbly), singing, dancing, laughter, family, friends...everything was simply perfect....except my toast.  



I wasn't ready.  I mean, I was ready in the sense that I knew what I was going to say.  I knew well in advance I was giving a toast and I had run the thing over in my mind repeatedly.  I had the bullet points loaded in my brain for when the time was right.  But guess what?  The timing got screwed up.  You see, I thought I giving a toast just after the cake cutting.  So I had it all planned out.  Dinner would be over.  Folks would be mingling about and then gather for the cake cutting and then I'd do it...when folks were just standing around.  I'd timed it out so that I'd have a drink before dinner, a drink during dinner and one in my hand by the time that we got to the cake cutting so that nerves wouldn't be so much of an issue.  But instead, during dinner I was suddenly told it was time.  What?  What?!  What?!?!  I hadn't had my pre-dinner drink.  I didn't even have my during-dinner drink!  So, I managed to get the waiter to find a glass of champs for me and told the toast-pusher that she just had to wait until I'd finished at least one glass to push me anymore.  [As a side note and for the lady readers, it's worth pointing out that the waiter had a more-than-striking resemblance to Gilles Marini...to the point that almost every lady at the wedding reception called him Gilles and giggled all night.  A girl could do much worse than having a Gilles Marini look-alike pouring your champs for an entire evening.  But I digress...]   So, I got the one glass of bubbly in me, stood up for the toast, realized that everyone was seated, quiet and focused on me, panicked and forgot everything.  I bungled the whole damn thing.  Quite frankly, as I was speaking, I lost track of what I was saying because my brain was screaming, "Just stop talking!  You're botching this!" but my mouth wouldn't stop and I don't really know what I said.   At one point, I even heard the bride - THE BRIDE - helping me fill in the blanks.  If I could have turned up the bottle of champagne - or the bottle of tequila that my mother and my husband had stashed in the other room, for that matter** - I would have.  This toast has bothered me since.  I think about it every week.

As the title of this blog indicates and as all of you surely know by now, I'm a runner.  Saturday mornings I get up early, go meet a group of friends and we set out for our weekly long run.  I typically end up running by myself as we all run different paces, etc.  Saturday morning runs are mentally cleansing for me.  Depending on the length of the run, various things happen.  I reflect on the past week.  I think about what's coming up in the next week(s).  I zone out and let my legs take over and give my brain a rest.  I occasionally have conversations with God, my Granddaddy and more recently, my brother-in-law, Michael.  One thing has been consistent with my Saturday morning runs since May 4th - my many thoughts and regrets over that toast.  So I'm going to set it straight.  



My toast - or at least the version I can get on paper.  You'll have to imagine the shaking hands and quivering voice on your own:

For almost five years, I was an only child and an only grandchild.  I thought I had it made.  And then, a month before my 5th birthday, Leigh Ann came along and I thought my perfect world had been shattered as I had to share everything including the time and attention that once had been all mine.  I couldn't have been more wrong.  As it turns out, that tiny, cone-headed baby had a lifetime of gifts to give me.  Through her - my very first sibling - I have been able to experience all the gifts of having and being a sister - except the clothes sharing part because Leigh Ann stayed tiny.  We played together.  We fought over toys.  I'm sure at some point one of us complained that the other was "looking at me!" or "touching me!"  She called me Sissy.  To this day, I don't know why that stopped but it was probably for the best.  Five years after Leigh was born Pye came along and, together, Leigh and I adapted.  Since then, we've continued to play together and argued with each other and shopped together and cry together and laugh together and spend holidays together, and...and...and...  Little Leo, as she's known in our family, visited me in college and was right beside me to welcome Nolan into this world.  All of these things - the playing, the fighting, the college visits, being by my side - were among countless amazing gifts.  

Even on her wedding day - the day that is suppose to be all about her and her love, Leo continued to give gifts.  As she said her vows, she brought Marty and Hayden, Marty's son, into our family.  I take the liberty of speaking for all of us when I say we couldn't be happier.  On her day, Leo gave Pye, Mitch, Mark and me a brother-in-law and a nephew.  She gave Ansley K and Nolan an uncle and a cousin.  She gave my parents their third and final "M". (I gave them Mark.  Pye gave them Mitch.)  We all got the pleasure and the gift of witnessing the three of them become a family of their own.  In return, our wish for Leigh, Marty and Hayden is the gift of a long life together filed with love, laughter, fortune and good health.  

Rick, Mom, Joel, Leigh, Michelle, Marty, Mary Pye, Mitch, Julia, Nolan, Mark, Hayden & Emily

Nolan and Leigh
  
Leigh and Mark


Love you most, Leo.

RunningTALL and as a proud sister,
Julia

**The history of my mother, my husband and their tequila bottle is a story for another day...

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

#Yearof40 Week 9 - A Different 40 Year Celebration

This week's post is about a different 40-year celebration - my mother's retirement after 40 years at what is now Wells Fargo. 


July 1973
The day Mom was hired at the bank
In July of 1973, when I was 6 months old, my mother was hired at First National Bank of Catawba County which became First Union, which became Wachovia, which became Wells Fargo.  For 40 years my mother gave the bank everything she had - and then some - as a way to provide for my sisters and me.  We cannot ever thank her enough for what she's given us. 

I think in modern times you'll be hard pressed to find very many people who have stayed loyal to one company for 40 years.  Her dedication to the bank was rewarded when it counted most.  Because those for whom she worked valued her work ethic, her reliability, and her work product, when Mom needed time away to be with Granddaddy before he left us, there was never a question asked or an eyebrow raised - she took the time she needed and wanted.  Same is true for when Rick fought against and beat the hell out of his cancer.   When Nolan was born, she made a quick phone call and was able to witness the birth of her first grandchild. 

The current generations, including my own, could all learn a lesson from my mother.  Get a job.  Work hard.  Be loyal.  

Forty years is a long time.  Let's think about some of the things that have happened since she started working at the bank in July of '73...

  • August 8, '74 - Nixon resigned
  • April 1, '76 - Apple Computers was founded by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak
  • May 29, '76 - Mom and Rick were married
  • May 25, '77 - First Star Wars movie was released
  • August 16, '77 - The King died
  • December 19, '77 - Little Leo was born
  • May 4, '79 - Margaret Thatcher became Britain's 1st female Prime Minister
  • July 1, '79 - Sony releases first Walkman
  • July 21, '81 - Charles and Diana's Wedding (I remember watching that with Mom...we lived in Boone at the time)
  • September 21, '81 - Sandra Day O'Connor confirmed as first female Supreme Court Justice
  • June 22, '82 - E.T. phoned home
  • April 3, '83 - NC State wins National Championship when a missed shot from Dereck Whittenburg turned into the alley-oop heard around the world...and 2 game-winning points from Lorenzo Charles
  • April 27, '83 - Mary Pye was born
  • July 13, '85 - Live Aid
  • January 28, '86 - Challenger explosion
  • November 9, '89 - Fall of the Berlin Wall
  • April 1, '91 - Duke beat Kansas for National Championship
  • March 28, '92 - The Shot.  Best basketball game in the history of NCAA. 
  • April 6, '92 - Duke beat Michigan for back-to-back National Championship
  • June 23, '93 - Lorena Bobbitt got mad and...
  • October 3, '95 - OJ Simpson found not guilty
  • December 20, '97 - Julia and Mark are married
  • December 31, '99 - We partied like it's...  Millennium! Y2K
  • October 2, '00 - Little Mister was born
  • November 7 - December 13, '00 - Hanging chads recount
  • April 2, '01 - Duke beat Arizona for National Championship
  • April 23, '01 - Apple introduces the iPod
  • September 11, '01 - The world as we know it changed forever
  • February 1, '04 - Janet Jackson had a 'wardrobe malfunction'
  • February 4, '04 - Facebook founded by Mark Zuckerburg
  • August 29, '05 - A crazy lady named Katrina...
  • July 21, '07 - First Harry Potter book released
  • September 6, '08 - Pye and Mitch are married
  • April 5, '10 - Duke beat Butler (in a hell of a game) for National Championship
  • May 2, '11 - Osama Bin Laden is killed
  • December 6, '12 - Ansley Kay was born
Mom's retirement was celebrated in grand style last Friday night in a private room at Yousef 242 in Hickory.  Yes, a private room is necessary for this crowd of family and family friends - we can get quite loud.  We had such a good time.  Food, drinks, presents and tons and tons of laughter. 
 
Trouble x 3:
Mom, Mama Michelle and Sister Susan

Joel & Michelle
Susan & Todd
Nolan and Leigh Ann

Little Leo, Mom, Julia & Mary Pye

Marty & Mark
The Three Ms: Mitch, Mark & Marty
This is what happens when they are together...
...and I'm sure we do not want to know what lies are
being told or what they're laughing at...
AK laughing it up at the party


AK being entertained by Nolan
Even the car ride home was fun...

I am happy to report that in spite of Ansley K's recent fear of strangers, she did not have stranger danger with me!  I was so afraid that she'd see me and scream bloody murder but alas, she did not.  Instead I was greeted with this precious, no-stranger-danger smile that melted me...

No Stranger Danger!
And before I left and before I all but kissed her little face off, we had play time where I melted some more...and considered putting her in my luggage...


Can you see me melting...
Big Girl time in her chair...
It was a great time shared with family and friends.  I love celebrating my family's accomplishments - even just a plain ol' birthday.  In a world where the news has nothing nice to report, I find great joy in the simple pleasures of my family - my crazy, hectic family.  But this was not a plain ol' celebration - this was 40 years in the making and I'm so happy for her.  She's going to enjoy spending her days with AK until early 2014.  After that, she has endless options for what to do with her time and I can't wait to read her next chapter.

More to come.

Running TALL,
Julia

Sunday, February 24, 2013

#Yearof40 Week 8

#Yearof40 Week 8's post is short and sweet.  I had to complete my long run today (Sunday) and I'm beat.  So this week, I give you a quick summary and a few pictures.

Monday: No exercise.

Tuesday:  Clearly "National Treadmill at the Y Day."  Every single 'mill was taken when I got to the Y at 8:15 PM!  So .9 miles on the elliptical while waiting and then a quick 2 miles on the treadmill.  Elliptical is NOT my thing.  Elliptical: 0.9 miles at 11:40 pace.  Treadmill: 2.0 miles in 22:35 at 11:17 pace.

Wednesday: No exercise

Thursday: Treadmill run.  3.5 miles at 11:23 pace.  Planned on 4 miles but Little Mister announced that he was starving and ready to go home.  

Friday: Fuel time!!!

Saturday:  Every intention of completing my long run today.  Mother Nature waged war and won the battle at 5 miles.  It was 36 degrees and all 4 of my layers were soaked through, my hair was dripping and water was running off the bill of my hat.  5 miles in 57:16 at 11:27 pace.

Sunday:  Because Mother Nature forgot to take her meds, Sunday was sunny and 60 degrees.  I had a fantastic run.  I think my best pace yet.  12.3 miles in 2:18:32 at 11:16 pace.

AK enjoying a little outside time with her Granddaddy


Those eyes!  Those lashes!!

My sweet nephew, Masen.

Happy AK

AK is cool like Mom

Little Mister and I went to see Davidson Hoops
Wildcats Basketball - 'cats beat Montana Grizzlies in OT.

Masen in the snow!!!!

Where there's one, there's three.  Masen, Dozer and Samson.  Always.
My brother, Andy, and sweet Masen.

My sis-in-law, Jenn, & Sweet Masen.

Light rain, my arse.

My brother, Richard, working in Thailand with the few & proud.

It ain't Boston but it's improvement and I'm thrilled.
 
AK and her daddy, Mitch, enjoying Blue Devil hoops.
Have a great week!!!

Running TALL,
Julia

Monday, February 18, 2013

#Yearof40! Week 7

Hope you guys had a great week.  #Yearof40 Week 7 was pretty good.  I stayed on track and feel pretty good about it.  Week was good outside of running as well. 

This week's running:

Monday - I don't normally run on Mondays but had to this week due to Dinner Club on Tuesday.  Had a nice run but my legs were tired.  Three days in a row (Saturday 10 miles, Sunday 3.4 miles and today) put me at my limit.  But I got it done and felt better for it.  Did some quick core work and push-ups but didn't have time for much more.  3 miles at an 11:33 pace.

Tuesday - No exercise - except for exercising my jaw by talking and eating at Dinner Club.

Wednesday - Again, no exercise but I did get very excited about future exercise...Savannah!!!  I registered for the Rock & Roll Savannah half marathon.  Several folks from the running group are going and I am very excited!!!

Thursday - Happy Valentine's Day!  Love & hearts!!  Also, a Happy Birthday to my brother, Raymond.  Ray Ray is now on the countdown to 30...enjoy the end of your 20's, little brother.  I had a really nice 4 mile treadmill run.  I was in NO WAY properly fueled for a run.  Normally before I leave work on run days, I eat a bagel thin with peanut butter.  No time for that today!  So on my way to the gym, I had a banana and tried a new Gatorade gel thingie and actually had a nice run.  Followed that with squats, push-ups (2 regular sets and a set with my feet on the big ball), crunches, leg lifts, dips and various shoulder activities.  4 miles at 11:37 pace - which was fine considering the fuel (or lack of) situation.

Valentine's Day - Men lined up at the flower stand
at the corner of Tryon and 3rd. 

Friday - I don't even cook on Fridays, much less run!

Saturday - Snow!  Snow!  Snow!!!  I tried very hard to find a reason not to go run.  Cold temps, snow, didn't want to, etc. But in the end, I am responsible for 1. covering the distance and 2. putting out water stops for a fantastic collection of runners.  Because folks were scattered about - Myrtle Beach Marathon, weekend away with friends, family obligations, etc. - I ended up running alone and that was okay. 11 miles at 11:31 pace. 

Who wants to run in this?!?!

Snow started falling - just
a bit - while I was running.

Sunday - It was just too cold and windy for me to hit the streets again.  So I hit up the 'mill at the Y and had a nice 3-mile recovery run.  3 miles at 11:27 pace.

This week's total: 21 miles. 

Outside of running, also a good week.  As previously mentioned, Dinner Club was Tuesday.  We had a small crowd this month but I had a GREAT time.  We laughed, we joked, we covered some more serious topics and then we laughed some more.  This month's dinner was at Hot Stone Grill in Huntersville/Cornelius.  No one in the group had been before which is why I chose it and they have this kind of gimmicky thing of serving proteins on 400+ degree volcanic stones so I thought that might be entertaining.  Ironically, none of us ordered a hot stone meal.   Three of the five of us ordered the Greek meal and it was just okay.  The company, however, was out of this world.   

My Blue Devils played UNC on Wednesday.   It doesn't matter who is ranked where for these games, heart takes teams to places they didn't know they could go and for that reason, I'm always a disaster on Duke/Carolina game days.  My Devils pulled through but it wasn't pretty.  They didn't as well against Maryland on Saturday.  Boo.  

No Anlsey K time this week but I did get this cute little Valentine picture.  Can't wait to kiss those little cheeks!  

Happy Valentine's Day from AK
If this doesn't melt your heart, you don't have one.

On Thursday, we had the pleasure of going to Little Mister's school to observe a mock trial.  It was really neat to see him in his element doing his thing.  His team won which means a tour of the Mecklenburg County Courthouse, as Nolan said, "on good terms".  

Little Mister as a witness in a mock trial

All in all, a good week.   I'm looking forward to time changing so my mid-week runs can go back to the road - although I'm no longer poo-pooing treadmill runs.  I really believe I have to credit them for better speeds and better endurance.  I am going to work on adding a bit more core work.  My friend and coach, Jackie, saw good results when he was regularly doing yoga and working on core strength and stability.

I hope you have a great week and enjoy whatever comes your way.

Running TALL,
Julia

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

#Year of 40! Week 6 Sidenote: Ansley Kay



Disclaimer:  This has nothing to do with running. 

As I head into week 7 of #Yearof40!, my weekend is sticking with me.  The weekdays weren't so great but I can't stop thinking about how Week 6 ended...with Ansley K time and a solid run with Little Mister and Trooper.   I look back at the pictures and my heart runneth over.  It goes without saying that my love for Little Mister knows no bounds.  I grew him.  He is of Mark and me.  He has my Granddaddy's name and because I get to say "Nolan" every single day, my Granddaddy is a little bit closer.  Nolan amazes me and makes me smile daily - even on days when he forgets his chores or lacks any common sense (he is, after all, a 12-year-old boy...).   Ansley Kay...how to describe it...my love for her her is shocking - in the best way ever.  I knew before she existed that I'd love her.  I knew that before she was even conceived.  Any child belonging to my baby sister was always going to be special.  But I never knew I would love her THIS much!

At dinner one night last spring, my brother-in-law, Mitch, and my sister, Pye, gave the news - a baby is coming!  My reaction probably seemed inappropriate because there wasn't really much reaction at all.  Had I started talking or really even thinking about it, I would have squealed and cried and looked like a fool - in public, no less.  So I continued stuffing my face and began the terribly long wait for that baby to join us.  And to pour salt into the waiting-game-wound, Pye and Mitch decided NOT to find out the baby's gender.  What?!  In 2012?!  We called the baby Hef (part of their last name) until the day she was born.

The day Ansley was born - a Thursday - was an emotional whirlwind.  My husband, Mark, was in Raleigh with his family preparing for his brother's funeral.  Michael died in an accident the Friday before and I felt guilty about celebrating new life with my family as he was planning to bury someone who was so special to him.  I had a true 'circle of life' feeling all day.  Mourning rolled into celebration which rolled right back to mourning.  Because Mark was out of town, leaving work early and going to Hickory wasn't possible because Little Mister didn't get out of school until 4:15 and if I left, there would be no one to get him!  Ansley decided to come very quickly which meant that Little Mister and I were in the car breaking the sound barrier to get to Hickory before Ansley was born.   But we made it. 

There are some things in life for which you can never ever prepare.  One of those things was what I heard when I got off the hospital elevator.  Before we get to that, we have to go back for a moment.  I was ten years and three months (to the day) old when Pye was born.  (For the record, Pye is not her name.  It's what we've called her since she was a little girl.)  I remember vividly the day she came home from the hospital.   I remember bathing her.  I remember feeding her.  I remember doing homework with her.  I remember her torturing my high school boyfriend with questions like, "Why'd you cut your hair like that?!" and, "What's that on the end of your nose?" referring to a teenage pimple.  I remember reading "Alexander and the Terrible Horrible No Good Very Bad Day" to her over and over and over again.  I remember coming down the mountain from college at ASU to go to her elementary school PTA program.  She may have driven me nuts, but she was and is my baby sister.


Ansley Kay, 20 minutes old
So having all of those things in mind and, if I'm being honest, admitting that sometimes I still see her as that little girl, I can tell you that there is absolutely no way on earth to prepare for stepping off of a hospital elevator and hearing your baby sister crying out in the worst pain of her life.   AK came so quickly that Pye did not get the benefit of modern medicine.  She delivered naturally.  And I stood outside of her room and listened to every moan, scream and cry wishing for it to end.  It was so hard to listen to but in an odd kind of way, absolutely beautiful.  That awful pain was bringing to us a beautiful life.  


Julia, AK and Little Mister
Twenty minutes after the cries of pain ended, we were all invited into the hospital room and we got to see our precious baby girl.  And this time, I mean Ansley.  At 20 minutes old, she had big, bright, alert eyes and was clearly starving.  Pye was a Mommy.  I held Ansley for a moment with Little Mister looking on.  I think he was amazed.  On the way home that night, he kept saying, "She's just so small."  Before I left her that night, I leaned down and sang the 'fish song' to her.  Granddaddy and I use to sing that song.  I needed for him to be there in that room with her.  Then I, of course, promised her that she was going to have the best shoe collection ever. 



Julie and Mary Pye
Mary Pye and Julie
Ansley Kay












Ansley Kay is 9 weeks old now and I've had the privilege of spending 4 Saturday nights with her.  I joke and say that I'm going to play baby nurse but there may be some truth in saying that I also go spend the night because I know that at 4:00 a.m., I won't have to share her with anyone.  At least once during the night, we have time - just the two of us and it's so precious.  It's worth noting that Ansley looks just like her mommy. When you compare baby pictures, it's just incredible.



Saturday No. 1 - December 8, 2012
Saturday No. 2 - January 5, 2013

Saturday No. 3 - January 26, 2013


Saturday No. 4 - February 9, 2013

Simply put, I had a great weekend.  I had doses of family and friends throughout.  Granted, running played a part - good runs at that but as I reflect back, I realize that the next generation of my family is off to an excellent start.  A kind-hearted, funny, smart young man and a precious baby girl.  These two children will never know a world without the love of family and the laughter and good times that come with it.   As our family evolves and with births as well as deaths, these two children - and any others that come along - will have the unconditional love and support of aunts, uncles, grandparents, cousins, etc.  In our crazy bunch that started 37 years ago when Mom married Rick, I'm a mom, a daughter, a sister, and now an aunt.  I am filled with pride and happiness.  I am 4o and I am content and as previously stated, my heart runneth over.
Little Mister and Ansley Kay
Who loves Auntie?



More to come.
Running TALL,
Julia