running for fun

This house is a house of runners. My husband and I met on our college cross country and track team. On most weekends we can be found at a cross country or track meet of the team I help to coach, or at a local road race.... either racing or watching. If I am not helping with the High School team, then I am usually at the gym where I do private running lessons. I don't race as much as Drew does (and being pregnant I run even less), but I enjoy watching him race as much as I like running myself. With that being said, my niece is usually with us. She is a runner herself (long before she joined us for the year), but she is a very recreational runner. She is 6, there is no reason she should be anything BUT recreational. She has been running 5k's since she was 4 years old, she has never been forced. Trust me, if she doesn't want to run, she won't. She will walk and there is no changing her mind, and Drew and I are fine with that, so is her mom. Her favorite part about running in 5k's is when she "passes the old ladies and when people cheer for her at the end". She usually chooses the 5k's based on the T-shirt, she will see uncle Drew get his goody bag then decide that the T-shirt is super cute, and want to enter so she can get the shirt too. So, her running so far has been based on fashion.



During dinner this week, makenzie turns to me and says...
Mak- "Aunt Mandy, you know how I have been running 5k's for fun?"
Me- "yes"
Mak- "Well, I think I need a training plan for my next one... Do you think uncle Drew will make me a training plan?" and without a breath continues on with "Also, I know I am sponsored (she means wearing) by Asics... but I think I want to be sponsored by Brooks, those are uncle Drews shoes right? I think that will help me train better if I get Brooks? When uncle Drew gets home from work can you let him know that I need a training plan and some Brooks?"
Me- Well, I was speechless. I mean totally speechless.

So, this weekend we looked up some 5k's and she is currently deciding on which one she wants to do. Uncle Drew ordered her the exact same shoe (but in her size and color) that he wears... and her and Uncle Drew will begin working on her training plan as soon as she decides which race she wants to do.

This house of runners is so excited to have added another runner to the world!

a bit of my brother

I hope you enjoy this as much as we do in our house. Maybe one day this voice will be played through the radio, until then... enjoy.

the bravest little soldier

There is a six year old girl that sleeps in a pink room, in a pink bed and on a pink pillow. She wears pink clothes, puts ribbons and bows in her hair and wears a smile as big as the sun. She plays with Barbie’s, colors with chalk and rides her pink scooter. She says witty things and sings pretty songs. She loves her momma and all of her family. She loves to visit her Grammy, and spend the afternoon with pop-pop watching football, of course, always cheering for the other team. She loves her nicknames and begs to be called them. She loves her school, her teacher, her bus stop and her bus driver. She says the same prayer each night at the dinner table, "Thank you for this wonderful house, thank you for this wonderful family and thank you for this wonderful food." She loves her wonderful life.

The little girl knows this life is not her own. The wonderful life she is surrounded by, although may seem picture perfect, she knows does not belong to her. It is her transition whiles she waits for her momma to return. Before she falls asleep each night she asks her aunt and uncle to pray with her, not for her, but for her momma. She asks for protection so her mom can be safe and do her work quickly to get home sooner. Her momma is not there, to her, her momma is in another country helping other little girls have the life she has. The little girl lives in that wonderful house with her wonderful family, while her momma is away. At night she grabs the tattered, torn and tear stained picture of her momma and lays it on her pink pillow, she knows is not her own. She kisses that picture, and tells her mom she is the bravest momma and Soldier she knows. She asks her aunt to cross off the day on her "Hello Kitty" calendar; she knows it means one less day until she can hug her momma and not just the picture. She gets a hug and a kiss from her aunt and her uncle, she tells them she loves them but misses her momma. She calls the little dog, to sleep in the room that does not belong to her. The little girl knows that tomorrow is another day to spend in the life that is not her own.

Each night after that little girl falls asleep; her aunt climbs the stairs and takes the picture of the little girls’ momma, clutched between the little girls’ fingers, and places it back on the pink pillow. Her aunt tucks that little girl tighter into the pink bed and wipes the dried and salty tears off the little girls cheeks. Her aunt gives the dog one last scratch behind its ears and prays that the little dog will provide some comfort, through the night, for that little girl.

Her momma wears a uniform and is the bravest Soldier that little girl knows. The little girl doesn’t know that at six, she is the bravest little soldier her family, especially her momma, knows. That little girl who wears a smile as big as the sun, who lives in a life that isn't her own, and waits patiently for her brave mommas return. That little girl, my niece, is the bravest little soldier.