I'm doing Thanksgiving Kansas City style this year, celebrating with my bestie Sarah. I drove down instead of flying, spending roughly 8 hours in the car. I left super early in order to avoid incoming nasty weather, and the first half of my trip was utterly uneventful. Weather was fine, roads were dry, and I literally lost count of all the windmills and cell phone towers in Northern Iowa.
Then, as if on some heavenly timer, the skies opened and it started raining the minute I arrived in Ames. Normally not a big deal, but the temperature hovered at 32 degrees, and the risk of the rain starting to freeze was very real. So I slowed down, put my hands at 10-and-2 on the wheel, and took my time. I sure didn't want to end up in the ditch.
After about 20 miles, I rolled in to the northern edge of Des Moines. The roads were wet but not overly slippery, but I still took it slow. I saw some commotion at the bottom of a hill - mile marker 95 - and wondered what was going on. There were several cars pulled over to both sides of the road with their hazard lights blinking, people standing around in the median. I slowed to crawling behind the gawkers and saw why: a big, battered silver pickup truck lay on its side in the center median. Several people stood around the truck, some holding kids, their hair being violently whipped by the 30mph freezing wind. One gentleman in an Iowa State jacket hustled around the median, picking up the bags and items of clothing which had been strewn every which way. A woman's head popped up through the driver's side window - she was standing inside the cab - and she looked very shaken. The people around her started helping her out of the truck. Emergency vehicles had not yet arrived; I'm guessing I came along maybe two minutes after the rollover accident happened. Apparently the roads were in worse shape than I thought they were.
The scene brought tears to my eyes. This family's Thanksgiving holiday was ruined, their possessions lying in the rain in a highway median. Their vehicle was totaled. It appeared that everyone was OK, but having been in accidents myself, I suspected they would all make precautionary trips to the hospital to get checked out. They would not get to their final destination to celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday with family or friends, and that made me sad.
My tears weren't only those of sadness. I was absolutely amazed by the quick response and compassion of strangers. There were no fewer than a half dozen vehicles pulled over, and there was a literal crowd surrounding the ruined truck. I'm sure that strangers held the kids and calmed them while the parents made sure everyone was out. I imagine that the guy in the median was a stranger helping to collect the family's stuff. It would be so easy to just keep driving after witnessing an accident - but the overwhelming majority of folks stop and do what they can to help. That scene really underscored my belief that people are inherently good - and on this Thanksgiving, I needed that reinforcement.
I am thankful for the kindness and compassion of strangers. I am thankful for my bestie Sarah and her hospitality this weekend. I am so thankful for my family, who have been utterly instrumental in helping me through this trying year. I am thankful for my friends - I don't see them nearly often enough, but they continue to love me for me, and I love them just as much. I am blessed to be the mother of two beautiful and amazing children, who remind me that life really is exciting and new every single day. Happy Thanksgiving to you all - thank you for enriching my life.
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Giving Many Thanks.
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 8:29 AM 0 comments
Friday, November 19, 2010
Who Needs MySpace?
I decided to do away with my MySpace account today. I did manage to save the one awesome thing I had there - a video of Price the first time he walked across a room. This made me tear up, and it seems like such a long time ago. Won't be long before Kendall's doing the same thing. *sigh* They grow so fast...
Price Walking
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 2:55 PM 0 comments
Friday, August 27, 2010
Soul Food.
I never thought I'd be a gardener. But over the last three years, I've found a certain peace in maintaining a garden, and a ton of pride in sharing the literal fruits of my labor with my loved ones. It's interesting; I find myself planting far more produce than I could ever eat myself. Granted, at the time I planted I thought I'd have a family to feed. But it feels so much better to share.
This spring I decided to break out of my little 5 ft by 5 ft patch and build a bigger garden. I did a lot of online research and meticulously planned. Shawn and his buddies built me 5 enormous raised beds, giving me 250 square feet of garden to play with.
And on May 16, with my mother's green thumb assisting, I planted my garden with, from left:
Green beans and sugar snap peas
Red potatoes and sweet potatoes
Watermelon and cantaloupe
Spinach, leaf lettuce, and carrots
Pumpkins and cucumbers
Outside of the garden, I planted tomatoes and bell peppers in Topsy Turvy trees, and planted strawberries in my old garden patch.
As the summer wore on, I watched with tremendous pride as the seeds germinated and grew. I lovingly weeded out as necessary so the remaining plants could grow unhindered. I would take periodic breaks from my work and go outside to weed or water the Topsy Turvies. I watched bees buzz between the flowers on my pumpkins, cukes, cantaloupe, and watermelon to pollinate them and turn them into fruit. I ate beans and peas directly off the vine. I stood staring at the potato plants, wondering how the underground tubers were growing. I could not wait to start harvesting and tasting the results.
Here we are now, nearly to the end of summer. The tomatoes, peas, spinach, lettuce, carrots, and red potatoes have run their course...and were delicious!
I wasn't sure if the chipmunks would let me have any strawberries, but I guess I prevailed:
I have so many cucumbers, and I don't know what on earth I'm going to do with them.
Yesterday I picked two cantaloupe and five pumpkins, and more of both are on the way. By the way, the melons are better than anything you can get in the grocery store. Period.
The green beans just keep on producing...and they are so good, when you cook them they taste like butter.
I wasn't sure that I would get any watermelon, but take a look at this. Can't wait to find out how this puppy tastes.
Listen to me, I'm like a proud mother.
This garden has given me so much more than food. This garden has provided distraction and peace during a very difficult time in my life. It has given me common ground and things to share with my neighbors, my family, and my friends.. It is a source of tremendous pride -- being able to nurture a seed into a beautiful and edible food is challenging, fun, and very satisfying. My mom says I comefrom a long line of farmers, and affectionately calls me Farmer Jen. I'm beginning to think the moniker's pretty close to the reality!
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 2:59 PM 0 comments
Monday, August 16, 2010
Faith vs. Superstition
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 12:42 PM 0 comments
Labels: New Reaiity, things to do on a Saturday morning, virtual socialite
Sunday, August 15, 2010
I'll Try (Almost) Anything Once.

Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 9:30 PM 0 comments
Labels: New Reaiity, virtual socialite
Friday, July 30, 2010
This Is My New Reality.
I'm sitting here in a camp chair on my empty deck, smoking a cigarette (yep, I fell right off the bandwagon) and drinking V8 V-Fusion straight out of the bottle. It's a nice overcast evening, my beloved kiddos are in bed sawing logs, and I'm reflecting on my life as it is today.
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 8:45 PM 0 comments
Labels: New Reaiity, virtual socialite
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Culture Shock.
Hi! I know, it's been awhile. Turns out that having a baby puts a serious crimp in blogging time. :) But - here I am now! And I've been composing this post in my head for days.
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 4:10 PM 0 comments
Labels: things to do on a Saturday morning, virtual socialite
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Ten Years Ago Tomorrow.
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 5:53 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
On Finding Balance
I honestly think that finding your true balance is the most difficult thing to do in life. There are so many things to juggle, and so few hours in a day. Things like work, home, family, friends, and so many other obligations. I've discovered that it is very easy for me to lose myself as I work to meet the needs and demands of those around me. I also think this is an age-old problem for women in general. Never really thought this would happen to me, but tonight I realized that it most certainly has.
- After coming within a cat's whisker of being fired from a job I loved by a crazy, vindictive boss I hated, I spent seven months unemployed and looking for a job. I think I cried every single day during that time.
- Becoming a wife was a HUGE adjustment for me. I'd been single and living on my own for so long, it took me a long time to get used to and fully accept sharing my life and my home with someone else. I sometimes still struggle with it. But not like I used to.
- About a year after we married, and while I was pregnant with our son, we bought our first house together. A huge milestone, to be sure, but one that carries plenty of stress.
- Our son was born six months later. My most joyous and scariest personal moment. I had no idea how much having a baby would change my relationship with my husband...and really, my whole life. All needs except his became irrelevant the second I heard him cry for the first time.
- The second job change took me out of a long daily commute and office environment, and put me in a telecommuting environment, where I get to work from home every day. Overall a hell of a gig, but I rarely leave my house anymore.
- In the last year, my husband's business has utterly exploded. It's wonderful to see him succeed, but his work takes him away from us a lot. And he deals with more than his fair share of stress.
- And now, our daughter is due to join us any day. I'll be so glad to be done being pregnant, and just cannot wait to meet this little lady. But I'm also a teeny bit apprehensive, knowing that our lives are going to change again as we learn how to parent two children.
- Regular date night with my husband
- Reach out to and get together with my friends more often (I really miss you guys)
- Join the local MOPS group to meet more mothers of young children near me
- Re-register for ECFE classes with Price and baby
- Find a volunteer opportunity in my community
- Go to my brother-in-law's shows when his band performs
- Re-join the YMCA and sign up for a volleyball league
- Reduce my dependence on e-mail and Facebook, and pick up the damn phone more often
- Pay better attention to how I dress. Wearing PJ pants and T-shirts all day every day just isn't good for me.
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 8:32 PM 0 comments
Labels: mother, virtual socialite
Friday, January 22, 2010
On Mommyhood
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 2:22 PM 0 comments
Labels: mother, things to do on a Saturday morning, virtual socialite
Thursday, January 7, 2010
What Do I Want To Be When I Grow Up?
Ah, you gotta love January. The holidays have passed, the new year (new decade, in this case) has begun, and this is the prime time for folks to stop and take a good look inside themselves; to ask, "Am I happy with my life and where I'm going?"
Posted by Jennifer DeVries at 1:03 PM 0 comments
Labels: mother, things to do on a Saturday morning, virtual socialite