This past week was conferences week (not my favorite time of the year), so I had half of Friday off. So, naturally, Josh and I headed to Springfield for a longish weekend. We didn't really have anything to do, we just wanted to hang out with family and relax. So, that's what we did! :) We went to see the new movie,
Amazing Grace (
http://www.amazinggracemovie.com/) on Friday afternoon. It was really good. It's sort of about the song, but it's more about the abolition of slavery in the British Empire. It was very good, and it was nice to go see a movie where one of the lines was "I have learned two things. One, that I am a great sinner. And two, that Christ is a great Savior." So Josh and I really enjoyed it.
Anyway, then we just hung out at his parents house and had bbq. Saturday we slept in, laid around, and finally decided to go on a tour of Springfield. Josh and his dad were supposed to go fishing, but since it was snowing, windy, and a high of 33, they decided maybe not! :) So we went and saw where everybody worked, the Springfield Cardinals ball stadium (where Jess now works as a member of "Team Louie"), and, of course Bass Pro. Where, since he couldn't go fishing, Josh decided that he would buy TWO new fishing rods instead. I'm still a little fuzzy on how that all worked, but I do know he appeased me by saying one of them was mine, and I'm holding him to it! ;) Josh going to Bass Pro with his dad is like me going to Target with my sister, Jess... they leave with nothing and we have 43 things we didn't go in there for but somehow discovered we couldn't live without! Anyway, we watched a movie and hung out Saturday evening, then Josh and I had to leave early Sunday for church. All in all, it was exactly the weekend we wanted- we just lazed around, and we got to see family! We also made our first baby purchase. Nothing big, we just found a cute, yellow blanket that said "BABY" on it at Deals and, since it was $1, we bought it. Josh's dad bought us those plastic tipped spoons, too. So we're started on collecting baby stuff! :)
As we drove around Springfield on Saturday, I was amazed at the leftover scars from the ice storm in January. I mean, we got frustrated with how long it took the ice to melt up here. Down there, the ice is gone but the damage is still very real. Many streets we drove down had piles of brush as tall as a man lining them. People still had limbs and sticks covering their yards. But what struck me most was the trees that were still standing. I've always loved the shape of most trees against the sky- the trunk goes up, then splits into more and more branches, getting smaller and spreading out until it looks like the pictures we used to draw in kindergarten. That isn't true of the trees there. I don't think I saw a tree in the entire city that hadn't lost at least part of it's top. Silhouetted against the sky, many looked more like the dead trees you see surrounding swamps in horror movies then like the trees kids draw. Lots of them still had branches hanging in their uppermost limbs. It was pretty crazy, and I guess I just expected that, once the ice melted, everything went back to normal. I will be happy to see it in spring, when new branches start to grow, and leaves begin to restore that kindergarten shape! I wish I had taken my camera with me, but instead I found this picture of a brush pile in someone's yard in the newspaper. A month and a half later, and still much clean up to do!