CLICK HERE FOR FREE BLOGGER TEMPLATES, LINK BUTTONS AND MORE! »

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Project Life

I finished up project life for 2011  on Monday and I got it on Thursday. Talk about quick service.

It looks great.

From Becky Higgins. They are both 81/2 by 11.


I did project life in 2009 on 12x12 pages and I ordered it from blogspot and I love it.
I am sad that Becky Higgins has moved over because I have had a good time with this project I am so glad that I have documented 3 years of our family life and that they are in books that we can look at  over and over again.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Go Choir


This sweet girl and I joined the choir together. I am so glad that she will go and that we can get this goal done together. 

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Jacob

On Saturday Jacob and I went to the new movie The Lorax. We had a really good time.

The Secret Journal

Emma just got done reading this great book. She enjoyed it.
I loved it when I read it.  Now she is reading Matched.

Secret Daughter

I got this description from Amazon. I thought it was a great book. And I highly reccomend it.

On the eve of the monsoons, in a remote Indian village, Kavita gives birth to a baby girl. But in a culture that favors sons, the only way for Kavita to save her newborn daughter's life is to give her away. It is a decision that will haunt her and her husband for the rest of their lives, even after the arrival of their cherished son.
Halfway around the globe, Somer, an American doctor, decides to adopt a child after making the wrenching discovery that she will never have one of her own. When she and her husband, Krishnan, see a photo of the baby with the gold-flecked eyes from a Mumbai orphanage, they are overwhelmed with emotion. Somer knows life will change with the adoption but is convinced that the love they already feel will overcome all obstacles.
Interweaving the stories of Kavita, Somer, and the child that binds both of their destinies, Secret Daughter poignantly explores the emotional terrain of motherhood, loss, identity, and love, as witnessed through the lives of two families—one Indian, one American—and the child that indelibly connects them.