Yesterday, we saw a portion of an infomercial while we were with my in-laws for Thanksgiving. It was for something called “Booty Firm”. Personally, I go for squats, lunges, and jogging instead of some exercise machine, but whatever works for you.

It put me in mind of this sign we saw around Mbarara for a while. I think they’ve all be taken down, but I still laugh when I see my picture of it.

So here is your slightly off-color Friday Funny. (Because what woman doesn’t want bigger hips and bums this holiday season!)

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A few days ago James and I picked up turkeys at the grocery store. I put one of them in the fridge to thaw so I could cook it for our family. It sat there for a couple days. I knew it had to be thawed, but I put off getting it out and “cleaning it up” so I could cook it. Another day or two went by. Finally, I knew I’d better just buck up and do it.

I got the turkey out of the fridge, unwrapped it, rinsed it and voila! It was ready to go. Five minutes tops. All trussed up for me, with a little pin in the top to let me know it was done. Easy Peasy. Why had I put off doing it for an extra day or two? It turned out not to be that hard at all! Nearly sterile, in fact.

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“What’s the big deal?” you might ask. “Why would you be so put off by doing a turkey?”

Let me tell you a little about Thanksgivings in Africa.

First of all, this is how we get our turkey. It’s up walking around and we can actually pick which bird we want. 

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They smell funny and are kind of gross and that smell lingers. And lingers. You can still smell it, even after they are processed and you are ready to cook them.

Once you have your turkey, you have to find a way to process it. I consider myself pretty pioneer woman, but even I draw the line at prepping my own poultry. Maybe I’m squeamish. It’s just worth it to me to have someone else do it for me – I’m not sure I’d be able to eat it if I did it myself.

The next step in the process is, well, this. Since a picture is worth a thousand words, I’ll let this one speak for itself.

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(We took this picture a few years ago – the one and only time we photographed the process. After that we just remembered what it was like and didn’t record it for posterity. I wasn’t present at the taking of these photos. I was in the house trying not to think about what that smell was.)

I usually let the turkey sit in the fridge for a day. There are always feathers still stuck in the skin so I have to skin the thing. I also have to tie up the legs and get it to fit in my roaster. Have I mentioned that it smells funny? Refrigerating it helps it not smell quite so badly and I don’t gag nearly as much.

The other food is a lot more fun to cook! We usually have everything potluck style and everyone who comes shares in the preparation. Carla Bassett makes the best dressing and gravy and Cheryl Tracht’s dinner rolls and baked beans are to die for.

Everything has to be made from scratch. Want whipped topping? You have to get cream and whip it until it’s just right.

You have to plan ahead for pumpkin pie because pumpkins aren’t in season in Uganda in November. We’ve had a couple Thanksgivings without any!

You also have to plan ahead for pecan pie. We can’t get pecans in Uganda, so have to bring them with us from the states. Gotta love delicious Georgia pecans! We usual stock up when we drive through on furlough.

Green bean casserole is a challenge because you can’t get canned cream soup so you have to either make another kind of green beans or make your own cream soup (I’ve done both).

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Thanksgiving in Uganda is fun and challenging and delicious. We always have friends over, both American and Ugandan. We sit around and eat way too much food and play games and talk and laugh and have a great time. Sometimes we have to plan our gathering around other events that are taking place (because it’s not a public holiday in Uganda). When we are finished, we call our family back home or message with them just as they are beginning their celebration. 

So, Happy Thanksgiving from our house (in which we’re serving store bought pie this year) to yours! May you remember the blessings of God and have a day filled with all your favorite things!

I joke with my husband that I was a suffragette in another life. In all seriousness, though, I do not take my voting rights for granted.

I first voted in a presidential election in 1996. Because of a class I was to take, I had to vote absentee. That event set the tone for my whole voting career. Out of the 6 presidential elections I’ve voted, 4 of them have been absentee.

In 2008, our family was traveling on deputation in Alaska. We got off a ferry from Kodiak, Alaska in Homer, Alaska at 5AM. We picked up the absentee ballots that had been sent to us there and found our way to the post office. The ballots had to be signed and notarized. Who better to do so than the local postmaster who was also a notary public? We pounded on the post office door at 6 AM. The postmistress answered with her hair in rollers, wrapped in a big fuzzy robe, feet swathed in huge fluffy slippers. (She lived above the post office.)

“We don’t open for two hours!” she growled. (It was before her morning coffee. Everyone growls before they have their morning coffee.)

We explained our predicament to her. We had a twelve + hour drive ahead of us and the ballots had to be mailed that day in order to arrive in time for the election. She grudgingly let us in to the post office and notarized our ballots after we voted. Bless her for not impeding a free election and doing her duty even when it wasn’t pleasant!

Today, the temperature was a good 80 degrees warmer than it was that day in 2008. The hour was more reasonable, and we only had to go to the Election Office to vote. Apparently, so did several hundred other people at the same time. We arrived to a line that led outside the building, then wove back and forth inside the building.

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(The Election Office is under the part of the building that does not have a sign on it.)

We made our way slowly inside, to the front, and then voted.

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This election cycle has been a nightmare, as far as I’m concerned. It started too early, and had lasted too long. I’m not even going to go into the choices for candidate. This election, more than any before, has tested my resolve to exercise my right to vote.

Someone once said to me, “A choice to abstain from voting is still exercising my right.”

While I can’t disagree with this statement, I can’t help but thinking that it isn’t what our sisters from history fought so hard for. They already had to abstain from voting. They fought for this right to vote. Some were imprisoned for fighting for this right. It was a long, hard battle, in which women finally gained a voice and an opinion in our electoral process. Susan B. Anthony, recognized by most as the founder of this cause, died before she gained the right to vote in a presidential election.

So today I voted. I’ve voted every presidential election. Often, it hasn’t been because I’ve been particularly enthusiastic about the people I’m voting for. Instead, I join the ranks of those women from the past who believed that women deserved the same natural, civil, political, and judicial rights as men.

Votes for Women!

(For more information about the Women’s Suffrage Movement, check out the Wiki page about it. You’ll get the full history, including the fact that these women fought for the rights of everyone to vote, not just women.)

It’s that time of year again!

NaNoWriMo started today and goes through the end of the month. I love NaNoWriMo. I look forward to it and plan for it all year.

My first NaNoWriMo was technically in 2008. I barely wrote 20,000 words. In fact, I don’t know if I even created a novel on the website. There is no record of it. I can’t find the novel I worked on that year and don’t even remember what it was about.

2011 we had been in Uganda for almost two years and I had a 10 month old baby. I wanted to teach my kids creative writing that year and a friend told me about NaNoWriMo’s Young Writer’s Program. I went through it with my children that year and we all set out to write our novels. That year, my first “real” year of NaNoWriMo, I finished over 50,000 words by the end of the month. 

I’ve participated every year since and even a couple times during Camp NaNoWriMo in July. (Sometimes during Camp, I’ll edit a novel I worked on during NaNoWriMo.)

I splurged this year and got the 2016 NaNoWriMo shirt (and a mug, not pictured!). The Blast Off theme is so cool this year and I love the shirt! (I also love that it is warm enough to be outside in a t-shirt and shorts on November 1!)

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This month, I set off on that journey yet again. 50,000 words (or more!). 30 days. Every year I wonder “Can I do this thing? Do I have 50,000+ more words in me?” Every year so far I’ve finished. This year, as I stand at the cusp of the month looking ahead to 30 days of work and creativity I say to myself…

Let’s do this thing!

Pizza has been a Huckabee family tradition since…well, for so long I can’t remember it not being a tradition. We have only rarely missed our weekly pizza night, usually through no fault of our own.

When we were in New York City, we found a true New York style pizza place, complete with brick oven and homemade cannoli for dessert. It was walking distance from the 9/11 Memorial.

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As we ate, John* said, “This tastes just like the pizza we make.” 

“That’s because we prefer New York style pizza,” James answered.

The first time we had New York style pizza was in 2006, the last time we went to New York City. We took the subway over to Brooklyn and found a tiny little hole in the wall pizza place run by a Russian man who, once we’d finished eating, stuffed a brown paper bag with donuts from his pastry shop next door and sent them with us “for the children”. How the kids loved those donuts that had been squashed on the return trip!

We adapted our pizza recipe to be more like the pizza we’d eaten that day. We’ve done that ever since.

The key to any pizza style is the crust. St. Louis style pizza crust is cracker thin. Chicago style is pan pizza thick, in some cases known as “deep dish”. Sometimes you need a fork to eat it. New York style is in between, a perfect blend between crust and toppings.

This is the crust recipe we use. I know there are countless others out there. Personally, I like this one because of it’s simplicity and adaptability. We’ll get to that in a later post. This recipe was given to my family of origin years ago so it is not original with me.

Pizza Crust

(makes three 14 inch crusts)

  • 2 cups water (can add up to 1/3 cup more if needed)
  • 2 TBSP oil
  • 1 TBSP yeast
  • 2 tsp salt
  • 6 cups flour (or enough to make the proper consistency of dough)

Just dump all the ingredients together and mix until the dough forms a ball that is easy to work with.

You don’t want it so moist that it clings to your fingers and the rolling pin, and you don’t want it so dry that it crumbles apart. I usually add 5 cups of flour and begin mixing, gradually adding the sixth cup until the consistency is correct. It’s okay to use more than 6 cups of flour. You want it to form a smooth, pliable lump.

Divide the dough into three balls. Flour the countertop and place a ball in the center. Flour the top of the ball. Begin rolling into a circle the size of the lightly greased pan you will use. (At normal altitudes you might not need to grease your pan. In Africa, at 5,000 feet, we have to grease it or the crust will stick. Sometimes it sticks anyway.)

For St. Louis style crust divide into 4 balls and bake them for a few minutes to keep them from rising. Let them cool before adding toppings. For Chicago style, place the crust into a deep greased pan and allow to rise for a few minutes before adding the toppings.

Still to come…Homemade sauce and how to top these masterpieces.

(*John is my pizza making right hand man. He knows almost as much about making our pizza as I do, so much in fact, that he can do the entire process on his own without my help.)

A few weeks ago I posted a blog entry about 9/11. I told how we’d visited the site for the Freedom Tower back in 2006.

A few days ago, we got to return to New York City and see the now complete Tower in person. It did not disappoint!

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We took our children to the 9/11 Museum. It was crowded, yet there was a feeling of awe, horror, and respect in the place as people remembered or learned for the first time about the events of that fateful day. My children were moved by what they saw. James and I were, too.

We remembered.

We went outside and spent time around the Memorial – one of the most beautiful, well designed, and peaceful memorials I’ve ever seen. The sound of the flowing water – a symbol of eternal life – as a backdrop to the thousands of names of people who died that day.

Here and there around the memorial, people had placed fresh flowers in the names of those who died, probably a loved one or a family member who has no other place to show such respect.

They remembered.

One man caught my attention. He looked like he’d just gotten off his shift from work – disheveled and tired. He went along the memorial, touched specific names, then gently kissed them. He remembered.

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For me, the most moving part of the visit was this wall:

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The remains of people who had been found but could not be identified were entombed there. In one day, one event, these people were gone. But they were not erased. They had made their mark on the world. They had given their lives, some sacrificially, some without choice, some without hope. But they were not erased from time. They are why…

We must always remember.

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One of the things we missed the most when we first moved to Africa was the changing of the seasons from summer to fall. We didn’t miss the cooler temps. We didn’t miss the shorter days and longer nights. We didn’t miss winter’s imminent approach.

We missed the changing color of the leaves.

The explosion of color from green to fiery reds, oranges, and yellows.

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Some of that missing has gone away. We all enjoy the steady temperatures in Africa. We love the year-round warmth. We love that the days stay the same length year round because we live at the equator.

This year, we get to spend part of the fall in New England and the north east. The colors have been fantastic this year!

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We’ve been taking loads of pictures to store up a supply of color to enjoy when we are in Africa and the longing for the fall color riot takes us. We can look at the pictures in the comfort of our warmth with no dread of impending cold weather. We’ll get our “color fix” and go on.

I love the beach. Any beach. Just give me sun, sand, sea breezes, and the ocean spread before me with its rolling waves. Beaches figure in at least two of the books I’ve written so far.

Last furlough, a pastor we knew from deputation contacted us. He’d changed churches, was pastoring in Florida, and wanted James to share our ministry in his new church. However, at the time we didn’t have any openings for meetings left. He and James arranged that James would contact him for our next furlough. When furlough planning time came, James did just that and they set up a meeting time for the beginning of October.

In the meantime, my sister, her husband, and their two girls moved to Florida. October seemed like the perfect time to visit them, too. We made our plans and got everything set to head down there.

Then Hurricane Matthew developed. It didn’t even occur to us that it might be a problem until we were headed to Florida. We drove in strong wind and heavy rain for part of our trip – though it was only a tropical storm where we were.

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We arrived safely, without incident. Thankfully, that was the worst we got.

We were able to visit the beach with my sister and her family two times while we were there. Both times the weather was perfect! The kids played in the sand and waves. My landlocked children learned to body surf. We finished up our last day at the beach with ice cream.

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We had a great time with my sister and her family. They were so hospitable and opened their home to our gang. We spent hours talking, hashing over politics and computer apps, playing tennis, eating, and jogging together. It was hard to leave when the time came.

Our church meeting went well, too. We had a wonderful time reconnecting with the pastor and his family.

Maybe life really isn’t a beach, but when you have a little beach in your life (and fantastic family!), it sure makes it more fun!

You may or may not have noticed the two week hiatus from the blog and my Facebook page. Why the long break?

Because, dear reader, I was visiting my best friend!!! 😀

As I mentioned in my post about my writing history, Rachel Miller and I have been friends for a LONG time. Almost our whole lives. She spent years in Russia, then caring for aging grandparents, then finishing college and working jobs around Montana. I’ve been having and raising children, going on deputation, and living in Africa. We don’t get to see each other very often but we keep up with each other through messaging and email and FaceTime (if the internet is working). (Thank God for modern technology! In the old days we’d be thankful to hear from each other once a year. Now we can message every day if we want.)

Rachel came to visit us in Uganda in 2012. She’d been in Kenya for three weeks and God provided for her to spend a little over a week with us. We had a blast! We talked, and sewed, and talked, and went for walks, and talked, and shopped my favorite Mbarara haunts, and talked, and…well, you get the picture. The last night she was there we spent several hours constructing a box wherein a large Ankole hide drum could be transported back to the states without being damaged. It worked!

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In September of 2013 my family and I got to spend two weeks in Montana with Rachel and her family. We stayed in the prophet’s chamber at their church and went to meetings in the surrounding area. This meant that Rachel and I got to see each other almost every day. We went for coffee at this wonderful local coffee house in Billings called City Brew. We went for walks by the Yellowstone River. We sat around at the MIller’s house. We stopped at Walmart for things. And we talked…and talked…and talked… 

One morning, we left Billings very early and visited Yellowstone National Park. Rachel went with us. The weather had been warm and sunny — unseasonably so — in Billings. It was freezing cold and rainy in Yellowstone. We would get out and hike and see the sights, then get back in the van and crank the heater up as high as it would go. We also climbed stairs and paths. It felt like hundreds of stairs, maybe even thousands (hyperbole overmuch?) but at least it kept us warm.

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I even got warm enough (thanks to the heater I was carrying on my back) that I could take off my jacket.

Early in 2014, Rachel’s dad passed away unexpectedly. We have never felt the thousands of miles of separation as acutely as we did then. Phone calls are better than nothing in a situation like that. But nothing can make up for not being able to hug a grieving friend and let them cry on your shoulder, not being able to be there for them in their loss because of the distance, bearing their pain, but not being able to share it in person. 

So, when my wonderful husband suggested a visit to Rachel as my birthday present this year, well, to say I was overjoyed would be an understatement. I was beginning to fear we’d go the whole visit stateside without being able to see each other.

I arrived on Thursday and we started talking. We didn’t really stop except to eat and sleep for the next 5 days. We got coffee. We shopped. (She has just released her first novel!) We fixed food. And we talked, and talked, and talked… It was a healing balm for both of us, a treasure of time and wonderful memories.

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I’m not great at selfies, but this picture captures exactly how we both felt.

I’m so grateful to God for this time I got to spend with my friend! 

September 11, 2001

James was working second shift. As usual, he hadn’t gotten home from work until around 11:30PM on September 10. 

Our oldest sons, James and John, were 6 months old. September 11, I got up early with them to feed them, then put them down for a nap and went back to bed. It was around 7AM our time.

A little later, we woke to the sound of the phone ringing. My dad called to tell us an airplane had flown into the side of one of the twin towers. We both thought he meant a small, twin engine plane and went back to sleep.

A few minutes after that, my father-in-law, Jim, called to tell us another plane had flown into the other tower. 

This time, we understood it was serious. These were airliners full of people and fuel. 

Our TV was ancient. We kept it in the basement and used it for playing videos and DVDs. We didn’t even have it hooked up to an antenna, even though we had the antenna wires available. James hurried downstairs while he was on the phone with his dad. He hooked the TV up to the antenna and turned it on. He yelled for me to come see what was happening.

What we saw looked like a terrible nightmare. Both towers were burning. We saw people hurl themselves out of the building to the ground, lives doomed one way or the other. (We later learned they may have been forced out by the heat of the fire burning inside the buildings.) 

Moments after we turned on the TV the first tower collapsed.

We stayed glued to the television all day, along with the rest of the United States. Our emotions vacillated between horror, grief, anger, and disbelief as we watched the drama unfold. These things didn’t happen inside the US. Murder, on that scale, had seemed impossible on American soil. Yet there it was, the nightmare of those terrorist attacks, unfolding before our very eyes.

The skies were silent as all the planes were grounded, the silence eery, a constant reminder of the tragedy we’d witnessed. Little by little we learned what had happened that day. By those same, gradual discoveries, we realized our children, these innocent babies, would grow up in a world that was After and resembled nothing of the world Before.

In 2006 we took our children to Ground Zero and saw the beginnings of what would become the Freedom Tower.

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You could still see damage on the surrounding buildings, even 5 years later.

When the children were older, we told them about Before. Then we showed them documentaries, news clips, and told them stories of 9/11. They cried, just like we did on that day, 15 years ago. They shared our horror, our loss.

Today, we remember those who died. We remember those to gave their lives to try to save others. We remember the sacrifice, the bravery, the pain, the loss, the grief.

We remember, because we do not want to forget.