An Engagement

Elise & LaurenLauren was the first grandchild on the Alston side of the family.

She loved her littleElise & Lauren #2 cousin Elise and she was so happy to welcome another girl in the family…cause she already had a little brother and 2 boy cousins.  She enjoyed playing with her…showing her new things… singing and putting on plays together.  I’m sure there were times Elise might have thought she was a little “bossy”… and well…she probably was…lol.

At our Alston Family Christmas a couple of months ago…Elise came in all excited.  I was standing in the laundry room…which is a pass thru from the garage  to the living room…when they came in…Elise and her boyfriend.  She had a huge smile on her face and saddled right up to me…she put up her hand for me to see…her ring…she had gotten engaged.  I hugged them both and told them how excited I was for them.  She was worried about how to tell the grandparents…Mimi especially…without giving them a “heart attack.”  I said…”Girl…lead with your hand out front…show’em that pretty ring…just tell’em”…then we both giggled.  She finally worked up her nerve and told them…of course they were happy and excited for her…no heart attacks for anyone.   Mimi asked how and when it happened.  It is a sweet story…the guy did it up right…made it real special.   He enlisted the help of the friends…a married couple…who had introduced them at church one day…to help with the excuse to “go out to dinner”…so they would be dressed nice…when they took pictures and video.  They all went out to eat at a nice restaurant in Lufkin but then drove back to the church in Nacogdoches where they met.  He played his guitar and sang to her…then whipped out the ring he had hidden under the front pew and proposed…on the altar of the church.  Wow… so unique…thoughtful…meaningful… and special.

Elise EngagementAs they told the story and showed us all the pictures…it hit me…tears started rolling…I tried to hide them…to stand at the back of the group…so maybe they wouldn’t notice…I didn’t want to ruin their joy and excitement.  I wouldn’t get to have this moment…with Lauren…when she squeals and shows off her ring and tells us how “he proposed.”  It is…  another “loss” to deal with.

Elise had been dating him a few months when she brought him to the Alston family Christmas in 2012.  We all liked him immediately…and we knew if he could take our joking and picking on him and giving him goofy nicknames…then he would fit in our family just fine.  And as we have seen them together over the last 16 months we knew they would make a great couple.  They both love the Lord…are musically talented…great with kids… volunteers…camp counselors…help each other study in college…know how to work hard… and are positive people with great attitudes.

 

I want them to know how excited I am for them… Elise & Skeeter 

and I truly hope I didn’t steal their joy that day.

I love you guys…

Elise Alston and Stephen Matheny (Aka: Skeeter, Sam, Slinky)

and Welcome to the family, Aunt Suzie 

2013 Blog Year in Review

To kick off the new year, we’d like to share with you some data on Lauren Alston Foundation ~ LAF’s activity in 2013.   We thought you might find these stats as interesting as we did.

Crunchy numbers

A San Francisco cable car holds 60 people. This blog was viewed about 3,200 times in 2013. If it were a cable car, it would take about 53 trips to carry that many people.

In 2013, there were 17 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 41 posts. There were 26 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 14 MB. That’s about 2 pictures per month.

The busiest day of the year was September 17th with 131 views. The most popular post that day was The Answer is 2….

Attractions in 2013

These are the posts that got the most views on Lauren Alston Foundation ~ LAF in 2013.

Where did they come from?

 37 countries in all…here are a few of them…
Japan – 7
Thailand
Brazil – 1
Russia – 3
Australia – 10
UK – 30
Turkey – 28
India – 1
Sweden – 4
France – 2
Germany – 34

Most visitors came from The United States and Canada & Germany were not far behind.

We have 50 “Followers” but would love to have more.  If you haven’t done so…please sign up using your email (which will never be shared)…you will receive an email when a new post is made on the blog.

Thank you for your love and support.

Happy New Year

 

Happy New Year and may the Lord continue to bless you and yours.

May we all try to love more…

and give more…

to everyone we encounter.

We are blessed to call you friends and have your love and support on this journey.

happy-new-year-greetings5-1

Blessings Bags (RAK’s)

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A friend, Nina, shared this on her Facebook page and I had to share this wonderful Random Act of Kindness idea.  Blessing Bags to keep in the car when you pass homeless people…or someone who is in need.  Items that are helpful, needed and easy to pass out.  Something special you can do with the kids to teach them about caring for others.  Or get a Sunday School class, group of friends or community organization together and assemble and pass out the bags.  What a great way to remember the reason for the season…all year long.

BLESSING BAGS
INGREDIENTS:
Gallon size Ziplock bags
chap stick
packages of tissues
toothbrush and toothpaste
comb
soap
hotel size shampoos and lotions
trail mix
granola bars
crackers

nuts, applesauce and fruit cups

juice boxes

any single size serving items that don’t require a can opener

napkins and plastic spoons, forensic giving food items that need them
pack of gum
band aids
mouthwash
coins or a few dollars  (could be used to make a phone call, or purchase a food item)
hand wipes or a small bottle of hand sanitizer
you could also put in a warm pair of socks 

stretchy gloves and hand warmers

a pocket rain poncho

tampons (for women)
The ideas could be endless!  They can even use the bag after the contents are gone.
Assemble your choice of items in the bags and throw in a note of encouragement, a blessing, scripture verse, etc.  Seal the bags and stow in your car…next time you see a need…you are ready.

 

This will be my next RAK in memory of Lauren…I hope you join me.

Made me smile and laugh too

LAF Plates

 

I have new license plates and I love them.   My car was a little dirty and I decided it needed a bath… so I went to the car wash.   The guys working it use a brush to scrub the bugs and road film off the front and back of your car before you go through.  One guy started brush washing the front of my car and saw my plates… he stopped… he smiled… then laughed.  He called to the guy in the back… pointed to my plates… and I heard him say “Hey… I like her plates.”  They laughed and smiled… and so did I.  I hope I made their day… cause they sure made mine.

“As everyone knows, there is often a rather fine line between laughing and crying.”   E.B. White

A memory letter in the mail

Is was a pleasant surprise to find a memory letter in the mail after we returned from Florida.  It was from a Sunday School teacher of Lauren’s at First United Methodist Church.  These letters are what a parent…who has lost a child…longs to receive and are a cherished treasure.  Along with the letter was a very nice donation… to continue Lauren’s legacy of helping other.

Suzanne and Bryan Alston,

I read the article in the Charm magazine about the wonderful things you are doing in your daughter’s memory,  I was so pleased to find your contact information.  I had been wanting to let you know that I did not hear about what happened to Lauren until almost a year after the accident.  Even then, I didn’t put it together that it was Lauren.  I’m Debbie Adkins.  We attended First United Methodist Church and I had the honor of teaching Sunday School with Scott for three years.  I was blessed to be with these kids and you daughter for her 9th, 10th and 11th grade years.  Can’t believe I got to have access to these amazing kids for that long.  Your daughter though, so smart, bright, independent and sure!!  I remember that being such a great group of girls.  My daughter Ashley had attended Hudson, but we moved to Central Heights her senior year.  We drove and attended church there the next two years but I stayed with the Junior group when they became seniors.  I remember Lauren being so sure of her faith.  She had a beautiful working knowledge of the word and was always giving suggestions or guidance to others.  It was during these years that I was so blessed in return.

 I hated that I didn’t know, didn’t go the memorial service or have a way to let you know that not only did Lauren touch my life, but she was so loving and supportive, in her confident way, to so many in Sunday School.  She truly was an example of how you could be happy with yourself, rely on your faith and carry on.  No doubt those assets are you as well.  Just wanted to touch base and finally get the chance to let you know and wanted to offer some donation toward her memory.

Debbie Adkins

FUMC Senior Class of 2006.  None of them had their honor cords  or neck sashes on because they hadn't arrived yet.

 FUMC Senior Class of 2006.   Lauren is second from the left on the bottom.   None of them had their honor cords or neck sashes on because they hadn’t arrived yet.

 

Time doesn’t heal our kind of wound

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We just got back from 7 weeks in Florida… staying in our RV.  One day, about a month ago, as I was laying by the pool… a Daddy and his Daughter, about 9 or 10 years old, were splashing and playing in the water.  “Daddy, can I jump off your shoulders… Daddy, watch me swim under water… Daddy, count how long I can hold my breath…” on and on they had fun hanging out together in the water.  I couldn’t help it… as I listened to them… tears started running down my cheeks… from memories past… from knowing how much Bryan misses his Daughter and that interaction… that fun… that laughter… that Father/Daughter bond.

A few weeks later as I sat on the beach… looking at Facebook… my niece posted an article from the Lufkin Daily News.  Gary Stallard, whom I have always enjoyed reading his articles, wrote about his Daughter.  Unfortunately he is also a member of this “club” that no one wants to be a member of.  It has been two years since he lost his precious one…his Jordan.  He recalls a memory of them going to a concert one year before her death.  He thanks God for those memories… because that helps pull him through…but it has now been “Just long enough to prove to me I’ll never get over her being gone.”

 

Yes Gary… thank you God for the memories…. but it doesn’t take away the pain… your pain… or ours.

  I know Bryan suffers her loss in silence… more than he lets anyone know.

I’m sorry Gary… it doesn’t get better…maybe less raw… but…  time doesn’t heal our kind of wound.

STALLARD: I’m glad I let her slide in the mud

 By GARY STALLARD/The Lufkin News | Updated 3 days ago

I really didn’t want to go to that concert in the first place. I sure wasn’t planning on a mud slide.

 It took place on a school night in October. It was drizzling rain and cold outside; and this particular show was more for people way younger than I. In fact, I’d offered to give my daughter Jordan my ticket so she could find a friend.

Nope. This night’s commitment went way back — back to when the band broke up — and she wasn’t going to let me out of it.

Blink-182 had been one of her favorite bands for years. When the band broke up, Jordan cried. She was crushed that she’d never seen them in concert. In an effort to mend her broken, teen-aged heart, I promised if they ever toured again, we’d find a way to go.

It may or may not have been an empty promise on my part, but she wasn’t taking any chances. She broke out the sacred “pinky swear,” and I was forever bound to that.

When I heard the band had reunited and was touring — and would make a stop in Houston — I bought two tickets. Again, I planned to let Jordan invite a friend.

She invoked the pinky swear clause, and I was stuck.

I missed the three opening acts while standing in line — in the rain — buying her T-shirts. She loved every band, of course, and since this was a special occasion, I bought her one of each. When I finally joined her on the lawn inside, the cold rain had created a quagmire. I was already pre-writing her excuse for missing school from getting sick.

I spent the next two hours bouncing in the mud with her. She wouldn’t let me sit; oh, no. She needed a dance partner, and it didn’t matter that he was old. She held my hand, we bounced, and my knees promised me I’d pay the next day.

Then it came time to leave, and some other kids started a mud slide. Naturally, Jordan wanted to do it with them. I had visions of my poor truck covered with slime, but this was our night. I couldn’t possibly say no. When she finished, I could see little more than eyeballs and teeth. The child had been happily slimed, and my truck would follow.

I’m glad she did it. I still have the image of that muddy, beaming face riding home from the concert. She never stopped talking, bouncing or singing all the way back.

This week marks three years since that concert; this month will make two years since we lost my kid. Two years. Just long enough to prove to me I’ll never get over her being gone. I’m okay most of the time, but then I’ll hear a song, or smell someone wearing the same lotion she wore, or hear a giggle that sounds like hers, and it’s like getting gut punched. My knees crater, and I have to find somewhere quiet to gather myself.

It’s during these times I make a desperate grab for the image of her and that mud slide. Those memories — and thank God I have a lot of them — get me through. Memories of the late nights watching scary movies together when everyone else was asleep. The purple hair dye I let her and her sister Jaime put on my head while walking through the mall. Letting her blast her music as loud as she wanted on road trips, and trying to sing — or “screamo” — along with her. Standing outside dressing rooms while she tried on clothes just because she wanted me there — and trying to ignore the strange looks I got from passersby.

Things I’m sure normal people don’t do; but then again, Jordan wasn’t exactly normal, as anyone who knew her can attest.

Lately, when I hear parents complaining about something a child wants Mom or Dad to do, I want to beg them: Do it. Let them get muddy. Let them get loud. Let them be weird. Get loud, muddy and weird with them.

And then I pray that if they do, it won’t be for the same reasons I needed those things. I pray it will be one of those awesome “Remember when?” memories they’ll laugh about later. A daughter telling her own children how her mom or daddy once jumped up and down in the rain at a punk-rock concert and laughed while she slid down a muddy hill.

Dirt washes off. Thank God, memories don’t.

Gary Stallard’s e-mail address is garylstallard@yahoo.com.

Charm Magazine Article

Charm Mag Oct-Nov 2013 (bigger pic)The Lauren Alston Foundation is featured in this month’s October/November issue of Charm magazine, in the Get Involved section.  We are very pleased to be a part of this wonderful magazine and to be given the opportunity for more people to learn about  LAF and our out reach and goals of the Foundation.

Thank you Melissa Heard for your article.  You can pick up a copy of the Charm around town or you can read the whole magazine online.

Below is a link to the magazine and we are on Pages 28 & 29:

http://lufkindailynews.tx.newsmemory.com/special.php?pSetup=lufkindailynews_charmmagazine&date=20130926

The Answer is 2…

It still catches me off guard…  I still have to stop and pause…  to try to quickly assess…  how I will answer the question.

 It can depend on who asked it…  where we are…  how many people are around…  if I might make someone feel sad or embarrassed for asking…  if I will ever see them again…  how I feel…  if Bryan is there…   is it a man or a woman…  do they really want to know…

and so on and so on.

It is not a trick question…  I know the answer…  I have since February 27, 1990.

The answer is 2…..

Yes…  2…

Lauren and Taylor

“My baby” 1990

But it is never an easy answer for me now…  how do I say it…  where do I start…  which one do I start with…

do I tell ages…  now or then…  do I say I have one in Heaven and one on Earth…

 do I say how it happened…  and so on and so on.

1990 Dec Lauren, Taylor

Christmas 1990

The Question?

“Do you have children?”

The Answer is 2…

Lauren,  our daughter, who was 21 when she beat us to Heaven… 3 1/2 yrs ago

and

Taylor, our son, who is 23 and works in Austin, Tx.

2000 Dec 14th Lauren, Taylor

December 2000

The answer will always be 2…

2 children that I love beyond measure…

ALWAYS HAVE….  ALWAYS WILL.

2008 Easter Lauren, Taylor

Easter 2008

LAF gives to Heather Terry’s Russia Trip

heather terry                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Heather Terry is our 2013 LAF: Love, Action, Faith Scholarship Recipient.  She is a busy wife…mom of two active, precious children, one with cerebral palsy…who volunteers with organizations like her church, Carpenter’s Way, and Susan G. Komen 3-Day, a 60 mile walk for breast cancer.  In July 2013 she went with 11 others from her church on a mission trip to Russia to teach English.  She wondered what her “purpose” was and wasn’t sure how God was going to use her on that trip.  She learned sometimes it isn’t always “big”…or just one purpose… sometimes you might not ever see the seeds you plant…grow a tree that bears fruit.  Sometimes…what we might think is small…to Him it is…Big.

     To read Heather’s blog about her trip to Russia and view some of her pictures…click on the link below.

     http://liftingmyeyes.blogspot.com/2013/07/russia.html

Church on Spilled Blood in Russia