Finding peace

After two years or waiting, praying, hoping, wishing, frustration, and anger we’ve found peace in an unexpected way — even after we had essentially given up.

We’re excited to share this photo with you, taken earlier today…

Do you see what we see?!

TWINS!

We’re expecting the Blundy Babies to make their appearance before Nov 10th.

Laurie’s got a great post up on her blog as well.

And for fun updates, you can follow @blundybabies on Twitter or send a text with “follow blundybabies” to 40404.

An indispensable leader

Imagine if we all sought to be leaders like this:

How different would our institutions be? How different would our communities of faith be? How different would our communities be? How different would our families be?

(video from Seth Godin)

A bedtime story

Snow!

One morning Nate and Marc went outside to play after their breakfast.

Nate decided to go for a ride on his new bicycle.

He rode the bike down the driveway, then down the sidewalk and around the block. He was riding so fast that before he knew it, his training wheels fell off.
Continue reading A bedtime story

Clara Oleta Knotts (Jan. 28, 1919 – Feb. 16, 2010)

Clara Oleta (Glasco) Knotts, 91, went home to see her Lord and Savior face to face, Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2010 in Dallas.

Oleta was born Jan. 28, 1919, in Pickton, Texas, to Clara and Jesse T. Glasco. She grew up and attended school in Pickton before moving to Dallas during World War II with her sister LaVerne. In Dallas she worked for Proctor and Gamble and then later joined her sister LaVerne at Southwestern Bell Telephone Company. She met her husband, Deryl, in the spring of 1949 and the two were married Jan. 6, 1950 at The First United Methodist Church in Dallas. She always said the happiest moments of her life were those spent with her husband.

After their marriage, Deryl and Oleta moved to southeast Dallas where they both became active members of Pleasant Mound United Methodist Church for over four decades. Oleta was a firm believer in the hope and love of Jesus as her redeemer. She spent her life sharing those lessons with others, including teaching adult Sunday school classes for more than 40 years. When Oleta and Deryl later moved to east Dallas they quickly became active members of Eastridge Park Christian Church in Mesquite.

Oleta was preceded in death by her parents; her husband Deryl P. Knotts; her brother Noble Glasco; her sisters LaVerne Cheney and Myra Ragan; and her granddaughter Amy Elizabeth Blundell. She is survived by her two daughters, Margery and husband Fred Blundell of Mesquite and Beverly and husband Del Oyler of Sulphur Springs; five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Visitation will be held Friday from 6-8 p.m. at Grove Hill Funeral Home in Dallas. Services will be held Saturday at 10 a.m. at Eastridge Park Christian Church in Mesquite with internment at Grove Hill Cemetery in Dallas. Pastor Dan Carroll will officiate. Memorials may be made to the Good Samaritan Fund at Eastridge Park Christian Church.

Listen to an interview with my grandmother in 2007.

Thank you all for your thoughts and prayers this week. She will be greatly missed but I’m comforted that she’s now at peace with Granddad, Amy and other family members.