19 November 2006

Well, it happened...

It finally, really happened. Last weekend, Michelle and I got married. At 2pm, Saturday, 11 November 2006, she and I finally pronounced before the world the vows we had tacitly made some time before. I'm not really sure what to write beyond that point. It was a godsend to have seen the friends and family that we did, and it truly broke our hearts to say goodbye.

For the wedding day itself, everything went very smoothly. Nothing went awry, and the whole day went off with only the one hitch. (Get it? I was reprimanded for it the first time I used that line.) Having my friends run the dance made it even more special, and as always I was astounded by the rounds of wonderful words they had to say.

Unfortunately, we haven't gotten in all the pictures that were taken that day, and even more unfortunately no where near enough pictures were taken. So here are a few that I felt that my few readers might want to see...


Here are Austin and I getting ready.

The kindly gentlemen who were willing to stand by me (Joe, Warren, Ken, and Jaime).

The Gents trying to pose with Austin. This is as far as we got.

The recently appointed Grandma Pat and Austin getting the ring bearer pillow ready.

Me with the man who made me all that I am, and to whom I owe everything.

Mom and Michelle's mom Kathy lighting the Unity Candle before the ceremony.

Michelle being walked down the aisle by her father, Mike.

Michelle and I lighting the Unity Candle during the ceremony.

The whole wedding party. Can you tell which of the girls is my sister?

The newly expanded Fryer family.

My family.

My beautiful wife and I. Every time I think I couldn't be luckier in life, she smiles again...


Our first dance, Nora Jones' "The Nearness of You".

Well, that's enough out of me. Everything wrapped up far too quickly, and though it was a very long weekend, it practically evaporated before my eyes. This week has more been a matter of falling back into a normal pattern, just with a slightly heavier left hand. Still, I wish everyone could have stayed just a little bit longer. After all, why would they want to miss out on this the morning after they left:


Toodles folks~

02 November 2006

Snow and Halloween...

Well, the whole of October has come and gone, and it's odd to believe we've lived in our new house for nearly a month. To me it feels like I've been there several months now, but to Michelle it's not quite home yet. I think it'll take some time for it to settle, and maybe because we have half our basement rented out for a while that keeps it from feeling like it's completely ours. But I do think in time, after Thanksgiving and Christmas roll through, it'll feel like our home entirely.

I have no doubts that some of you have been curious as to how I've been faring out here in the climate of the northern Midwest. All I can report is that I'm having a ball. I've been waiting to live in a world that actually shifts and changes. Early in October, we saw the first signs of snow. It was falling outside the school as we were setting up some of the aptitude testing in the computer labs. So often now, I feel like I'm home and in my usual routine, as if I'm not far from California. But these little moments crop up to remind me how far I've gone from where I grew up and that I'm something of a foreigner in this land still.

There are also wonderful moments of great fun I have here at the school. I don't know if it's healthy that so much of my fun comes at the expense of the kids, but I also don't care. The kids need to be messed with. To me, fun was when during those early snow flurries (that's what the national weather service calls them, they wouldn't even be considered drizzles if it was rain), the fire marshall randomly showed up and set off the fire alarm to drill us. So all these wonderful little ten- to twelve-year-olds were standing outside without coats on a breezy, snowy morning. Through their whines of misery, all I could do was smile with the other teachers.

And within a week of all that, it was sunny and warm again. On one afternoon, Austin and I decided it was nice enough to wander around and meet some of the neighbors. We definitely lucked out on the neighborhood, and that point was driven home on Halloween. We got Austin dressed up as Buzz Lightyear and very excited to go around the trick-or-treating. We had gotten started a little late, since Michelle doesn't get out of work until after six. By the time we reached some of the houses, they were just trying to unload their candy, so Austin by the end of our rounds could barely hold up his bag. Of course, the poor munchkin was absolutely freezing, yet wanted to keep on trucking. We kept him wrapped in a blanket until it was time to ring the doorbells. He's a real trooper (unless we put him in pants he arbitrarily decides he doesn't want to wear; now that's hell).

On a final note of feeling like we're home, it's the little things you only do at home that make you feel like you're there. The night before Halloween, we stayed up to carve our pumpkins into Jack-O-Lanterns. We actually had a nice afternoon, though with a cold breeze, to go out to a proper pumpkin patch and pick out our pumpkins and pet some of the animals who kind enough to stand in a pen for us.



Austin is so odd sometimes, because he so desperately wanted to use the spoon as a scoop, but wouldn't dare reach in with his hands and pull out the innards of the pumpkins. I guess he really takes after his mother in being a neatnik, since of course I never made any great effort to remain clean and neat when I was a child. (Mom & Dad, keep your comments to yourselves.) In the end, the big moment was to put our Jack-O-Lanterns on our front doorstep and light the candles inside them. That was the biggest reminder to me that this house is my family's home.


Toodles, everyone~