"For I know the plans I have for you," declares the Lord, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." Jeremiah 29:11
Showing posts with label Hurricane Katrina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hurricane Katrina. Show all posts

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Decade

A decade. 10 years. 

What can happen in 10 years?  What has happened in 10 years?

2 moves: 1 apartment and our first house. 3 children. 3 jobs at 3 different schools. 175ish students I've taught. The loss of our first dog. The adoption of 4 others. 4 cars.  2 campers. A trip to Disney World.  There's so much more too, a decade's worth of adventures.  The last ten years have been busy, but amazing.  We have had our ups and downs and we have been thoroughly blessed.

Today marks the ten year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.  Every year on this day New Orleans is on my heart and mind, but especially so today.  I mean, ten years is a long time.  A long time.  In some ways it seems like a lifetime ago, something that is so far in the past that it's hard to even imagine it happened.  Yet there are times when I can close my eyes and instantly we are back there.  I can see every detail of our apartment, our school, the city, the Mardi Gras parades we attended.  As with any memory, there are parts that will always remain in the forefront of my mind, while others have faded so much they are almost gone.  

It was truly an amazing time in our life.  Amy and I were fresh out of college and newly married.  We were in a new city far (6 hours) from home.  Not just any city either, New Orleans, it was like we'd moved to a whole other country.  But that's what makes New Orleans special.  It is like no other place on earth.  We made friends with our coworkers, some of whom we are still in touch with.  Granted it's via Facebook, but we do still communicate.  The Kindergarten teacher Paula played an important role in our lives.  She became the mother figure for us since we were both out of the nest for the first time and far from  home.  Likewise we filled a void for her as her children were moving away to college.  It was such a fun faculty.  Weekly faculty meetings at a nearby restaurant.  Parties.  Late nights and weekends at school.  23 Mardi Gras parades.  Yes, lasting friendships were built.  Ones we still look back fondly on.

People always ask what we think things would be like if we'd gone back.  That's impossible to say though.  The experiences we had while in New Orleans have helped to shape the people we are.  The teachers we are.  Living there, going through Hurricane Katrina, deciding not to return, and everything since have led to this point.  I love my life right now and I could not imagine it any other way.  My wife, my kids, my job, my family, my friends.  None would be the same had we decided to return.  Therefore I don't think about what if.  

Now, that's in no way meant to diminish how hard it was to decide not to return.  It was, in fact, one of the hardest decisions we've ever had to make.  We loved it there.  Our apartment, our job, our friends, our life, the city.  Amy and I discussed it so much, over and over.  It actually ended up being quite an easy decision to make given the fact that He had decided to bless us with Braeden.  Finding out Amy was pregnant really left us no choice.  We had jobs but had no care for him.  Moving back to those uncertain futures was not really how we wanted to begin parenthood.  Going back to the environment with its questionable health risks was also not something we wanted to expose Amy to.  So, the hard decision really wasn't that hard after all.  Just very emotional.

Watching the devastation play out before our eyes while being so far away was very hard.  Seeing everything we'd come to know and love literally get washed away tore us apart.  Going back eventually to see the damage for ourselves was an experience we will never forget.  Those images are burned into our memories, just as vivid as all of the positive ones.

So now, here we are.  Ten years later.  The city has rebounded.  We've watched it from afar.  They've grown and changed.  They've adapted.  It is different, that's obvious.  It will never be exactly the same as it was before.  In some ways that is sad.  People moved, people died, lives changed, memories and places lost forever.  In other ways though change is good.  They're stronger.  They're proud.  Amy and I talk about returning all the time.  We've been back only once, before Braeden was even a year old.  We returned for Mardi Gras and it was wonderful.  It has just never worked out to return since.  Every year we think, "Maybe this year", but it's not.  Timing just doesn't work out.  But who knows, maybe this year is the year.  The desire is there and the kids are old enough to travel and visit and understand as we lead them around the city we once called home.  The city we love still and where part of us will always remain.  And who knows?  Maybe one day we will move back.  Retire there?  Maybe, maybe not.  We've talked about it.  We will just have to see what He has in store for us.

I could go on and on, but I don't want to ramble.  Maybe I'm too late for that already.  I'm sure you'll forgive me though.  Right?  Thanks.  So, today and every August 29 I say a special prayer for New Orleans.  For the city as a whole.  Residents past and present.  Friends.  I thank God for it all; the memories, the life we had, the relationships, the experiences, the lessons we learned.  I pray for continued strength and resilience.  For blessings to abound for this great city.  10 years.  Wow.

All is well, a decade later, in Drosche Land. 

            

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Not What I Expected

So, last week was my birthday.  I turned 30+3.  Nope, still not ready to type the number. Oh well.  

It was a good birthday.  Nice and easy.  But it made me think a lot.  I mean, here I am in my (thankfully still) early 30s.  I guess I am now fully an adult.  No denying that.  Marriage.  Career.  3 kids.  2 dogs.  House in the suburbs.  Doesn't get much more adult than that does it?

But it got me thinking about how much life has changed in just the past few years, much less the last 10.  Is this what I expected 30+3 to be like?  I don't know.  Did I ever really think about being 30+3?  Probably not.  But I can guarantee you it was nothing like this.

Now, don't get all shocked and judgmental.  This post isn't necessarily heading in the direction you may think it is.  It won't be what you're expecting (ha, pun on the post's title).

No, this isn't what I expected my life to be like.  I never thought I'd be a teacher.  But here I am in my 10th year teaching 1st Grade and not a day goes by that I am not thrilled with my job.

I knew I would be married, I mean I am pretty co-dependent so it was a given.  But I could never have expected to have a wife like Amy.  One who supports me in everything I do.  Encourages me to be everything that I am and want to be.  Does the bills.  Cooks amazing foods.  Is an awesome mother.  Nope, I didn't expect any of that.

I wanted kids.  But these 3?  They far exceed anything I could have dreamed about.  Braeden, Jackson, and Stella all daily make me smile.  My heart swells and often I can't imagine loving them any more than I do.  Sure they test my patience (also a daily occurrence) but lying down to sleep at night I thank Him for these 3 blessings that I never could have expected.

Teaching at the same school I attended, and loving every minute of it?  Nope, didn't see that one coming.

To have met and made some of the friendships I have?  Again, I'm codependent, but these people are great.

I could go on, but I think I have made my point.  

Nope, I never expected 30+3 to be this.  To be everything that it is.  To be here where I am.  To have the blessings that I have.  To be as thankful as I am.  Nope, I'm still surprised.  God has given me so much to be thankful for that I am in awe.  Daily.  Sure, getting to 30+3 has been an adventure.  The road as had many twists and turns in it and has often been bumpy.  Hurricanes.  Adoption adventures.  Job changes.  So much more.  But it has led me here and here is good.  It's exciting to continue down this road and to see what comes next.

So, maybe this post is a bit sappy and sentimental, but it was a very contemplative birthday this year.  Guess that's what happens when you turn 30+3.  Didn't see that coming either.

All is well, but that's to be expected, in Drosche Land.


Saturday, April 28, 2012

Y is for Yearbook

Pictures.  I love them.  Taking them and looking at them.  They can help you to capture a moment in time.  Remember an event, a person, a place, an emotion.  Looking back at them allows you to relive that moment.  Being a teacher, the yearbook is naturally something that comes to mind when thinking about pictures and memories.  The year goes by so quickly, for both the teacher and the students.  If it weren't for a yearbook we might forget many of the highlights of the year.

Think back to your time in school when you would receive your yearbook from the previous year.  Remembering everything that happened.  Maybe you missed friends who had moved.  Maybe you counted how many times you appeared in the yearbook.  Maybe you tried to collect as many signatures as possible.  Whatever you did with your yearbook I am sure it was special.

I've obviously always loved my yearbooks.  But more than just getting them, I've always enjoyed creating them.  I was on the yearbook staff in middle school and high school.  We didn't have one in college and that is still something I'm bummed about.  Luckily my own love of taking pictures makes up for the lack thereof.  My yearbook from my one year at St. John was lost in the flood after Katrina.  Something that still saddens me.  I was able to salvage my class picture from that year, but I would love to look back and remember.  Again, I'm lucky to have some pictures of my own.  I once again got to create the yearbook when I began working at Memorial and quickly remembered how much I loved it.  Last year I again picked up the task at Trinity.  I am actually just beginning working on this year's.  Yes, I know it's late.  Procrastination has gotten the best of me once again, but I have a little more than a month.  I'd better get crackin'!

Having worked on yearbooks since 7th Grade, I have seen many changes in techniques and technology.  From the humble beginnings of the cropping tools and orange colored pencils to the introduction of computer software.  Now it is entirely done online and I can work on it anywhere.  It's amazing how many things on that end of the yearbook have changed over the years.  But the purpose of the yearbook and the joys it brings remain the same.  As I'm sure it always will.

I still have my grade school and high school yearbooks and occasionally look at them.  Do you still have yours?  Did you look forward to "Yearbook Day"?  What was your favorite part of the yearbook?

Old yearbooks I'm about to pore over yet again!

All is well, remembering, in Drosche Land.
 

Saturday, April 14, 2012

M is for Marriage

I'm codependent.  I don't like being alone.  I don't like quiet (or being quiet for that matter).  So, I was destined to be married.  I just never knew how lucky I would be in that area.

The story of Amy and I is a long one, beginning back in 7th Grade when we first met.  We weren't exactly friends though until high school.  She set me up with her best friend who I dated for over a year.  After we broke up Amy and I became best friends.  However, one of us was clueless to the true feelings of the other!  This friendship continued through high school and into college.  It was filled with ups and downs, good and bad.  Amy went away for college and that was hard for both of us.  Then, at the end of our Freshman year it finally hit me.  Her feelings all along.  My feelings, all along.  We've been together ever since.

From the moment we began dating we knew we'd get married.  Our lives were already heavily intertwined and continued to do so.  Our finances joined.  More ups and downs followed.  Nearing the end of college it was finally time to propose.  The moment we both knew was inevitable.  Still though, it was the first, and likely the only time, I was able to surprise Amy.  Of course she said yes.

We were married, moved to a new city, got a dog, survived a major natural disaster, moved back to Houston, had 2 sons, bought a house, and bought a van.  All in 4 years.  You might say we like the drama, like the business, like the action of life.  We don't sit still well.  We're easily swayed into a new adventure.  Now we are rapidly approaching yet another big adventure.

In June we'll celebrate our 8 year anniversary, but we go way back.  Amy and I figured out that we've known each other longer than we haven't.  We've been a couple longer than we've been apart.  It's a special thing we have, whether it's 8 years or 18 (yes I did the math!).  

But no matter what life throws at me I'd not change any of it.  Nor would I choose to experience it with anyone else.  It hasn't always been easy, this adventure called marriage, but it's always been worth it.  Amy and I have grown closer and our faiths and marriage are stronger than ever.  She is truly my other half, she truly does balance me out and complete me.  And I do the same for her.  See, I told you I was destined for this.  HE always knew!

Lucky in love.

All is well, happily married, in Drosche Land.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Sunday Snapshot - Tradition

We have several Christmas traditions we enjoy here, who doesn't? One of my favorites is something that I'm sure many people do. Each year Amy and I buy an ornament for that year. Something that represents a major event or sums up that year. One of my favorite parts of decorating for Christmas each year is getting these ornaments out and remembering why they were chosen. Looking back, laughing, reminiscing. I'm pretty sappy an sentimental, as you well know, and this means the world to me. I love it so much that I do it all over again when it's time to put them away each year! So far we have 10 ornaments (wow, a decade's worth of Christmases together!), dating back to our first Christmas together in 2001. We've already decided what ornament we will get for 2011, we just need to find it. I'll post about that later, but I thought I'd share our collection today. Plus it gave me an excuse to try out my iPhone camera for close-ups! I often think about the future when we will need an entire tree just for these ornaments! Ahhh, the memories and joys of the season! I love Christmas!

All is well, picture perfect, in Drosche Land.


2001: Our first Christmas together. The usual 1st Christmas ornament! It's like a little time capsule, inside is a scroll where we wrote the details about the day like the weather, the gifts, etc.


2002: A cute ornament and my age must be getting to me because it is the only one that I cannot remember why it was chosen! Yikes! I'll have to consult Amy about this one. But I do like it because you can put a bulb from a strand of lights in the bottom and the littl tree "lights up"!


2003: We recorded a greeting into this one where we took turns saying Merry Christmas. However, it has long since stopped working. I want to see if it needs new batteries but am afraid that will wipe out any recording (if there still is one) and it will be lost forever. Amy and I still know what we said and say it each year when we hang it up though! Man we look young!


2004: Our first Christmas as a married couple! It was very special also because we had moved to New Orleans and it snowed o Christmas Day! Our colors for the wedding were red and silver and our flowers were roses and calla lilies so this was perfect!


2005: It should have been our 2nd Christmas in New Orleans but we had evacuated due to Hurricane Katrina and were back in Houston. At this point Amy was already pregnant with Braeden and we had not yet decided on staying in Houston or returning to New Orleans. When we picked out an ornament we wanted something bold and flamboyant, like New Orleans. This one reminded us of Mardi Gras, our favorite time there.


2096: Or first Christmas as parents and Braeden's first Christmas! Or theme for him was ducks and this was given to us so we thought it fit perfectly!


2007: We bought our house! This was our first Christmas in the house and we had only been living there for less than a month. We were still living out of boxes but we had a tree, even though the majority of our other decorations were still packed and/or in storage!


2008: The first year we cut down our own Christmas tree! It was my idea to cut off the bottom and shellac it. We did it the following year but have not again due to the busyness of everything. Next year we plan on resuming this tradition because we do love it so!


2009: The year we decided to take control of our finances and began following Dave Ramsey's plan! Amy and I decided to use the pieces of our cut up credit cards to fill an empty glass ornament to represent this momentous occasion. We still have a way to go but were working on it! A yearly reminder of how far we've come and how much we (thanks to Amy's awesomeness) have accomplished!




2010: The year Amy started her Sentsy business! We fell in love with it and she's continued to sell it regularly. Yes, the scent was originally that of a Christmas tree but it has since faded!



Sunday Snapshot

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Anniversary

Wedding?  No.

Birth of a child?  No.

Buying a house?  Buying a car?  First job?  No, no, and no.


Nope, none of these momentous occasions are what I'm remembering today.  However, it is something that is just as big and life-changing.  Today is the 5 year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.  For the past week the news has been rerunning and remembering the whole ordeal, replaying iconic clips and pictures from that fateful day.  Amy and I have been doing the same here for the past week.  Looking back at pictures, pre- and post-Katrina.  Remembering our first year of marriage in the great city of New Orleans.  Recalling all of the experiences we had at St. John with our friends.

It's hard to believe that 5 years has passed.  Our lives have changed so much in that time period it is at times hard to fathom.  2 kids, an apartment, our first house, a van, 4 jobs; just to name a few of the things that have happened to us since our "short" evacuation from NOLA.

Yes I said short.  It was never in our plan to stay in Houston.  We actually almost didn't evacuate for Katrina after the horrendous experience from Ivan just one year prior.  It was the pure persistence of our parents, in addition to the 2:00 am NOAA update.  "Fine", we said, "we'll go and end up staying for a few hours before heading back.  Whatever!"  Little did we know.  That would though explain why we only packed 2 days worth of clothing, no dog food, and very little else.  

Looking back of course we are thankful that we did evacuate and thus avoided what could have been.  One of the biggest things we remember, and will probably never forget, is the feeling of hopelessness as we watched our adopted city, home, and job literally disappear.   It would be a month or so before we would be able to even attempt at returning to retrieve our belongings.  By then we had found out that Amy was pregnant with Braeden and thus had made the difficult (mainly for me) decision not to return.  The lack of job stability, infrastructure of the city, and childcare were just some of the biggest fears we had about returning when/if we were ever able to.

So, with some friends and a moving truck we went back and packed up our past, present, and future to leave everything we had known, that had become so uncertain, for a safer uncertainty back in Houston.  But God was looking out for us and providing for us, as we have seen so many times since.  Our cup has overflowed many times over (the book was right!) and we have continued to be blessed with fantastic friends, family, and great ministry.  Nope, none of this was in OUR plan, but it's not truly OUR plan that matters is it?  A life lesson we learned from Katrina and are often reminded of.

I'm often still asked if I miss New Orleans or if we wished we were there.  Frankly there is no easy answer to this question.  Do I miss it?  Of course.  Do I regret not being there now?  No, we are right where we are meant to be.  For me it is still a bittersweet feeling.  I regret nothing and I would not change the life I have now, or the one I am planing, for anything.  The hardest part is the lack of closure, which we will never get.  We never truly got to say goodbye to our life in New Orleans.  It was all so abruptly taken from us.  We have the memories and pictures, both pre- and post-Katrina, that we will always turn to as we look back on a time that has forever shaped us and changed us into the people we are today.  As with any life event, it will always hold a special, and yearly a heavy, place in my heart.

All is well, thoughts and prayers for NOLA today, in Drosche Land.           

Monday, August 09, 2010

The Same, But Different

Well, this coming year will be my 7th year teaching!  Wow!  As if the rapidly approaching dirty "t word" wasn't enough to make me feel old this sudden realization has joined forces.  Yeah yeah yeah I know 30 isn't that old, with age and experience comes wisdom.  I've heard it all before.  I'm sure when I am on the freeway to 40 I will be thinking the same (perish the thought of the dreades 4-0!).  But I digress.  What, you ask, is the conundrum I speak about in the title of this post?  Funny you should ask, I was just getting off my 30 soapbox to discuss that.  

So, like I said, this will be my 7th year teaching.  Every year these 2-odd weeks before school are a whirlwind of hectic planning, organizing, shopping (WOO HOO!), rearranging, meetings, and the inevitable attempt to get back into routine (and get used to wearing pants and not shorts (don't even get me started on the transition from flip-flops!)).  This year though has seemed different.  Here we are, 6 days into the 2010-2011 school year and I am enjoying the smooth sailing that is thus far!  Yes I am busy doing all the aforementioned things, but it's different.  I know, those of you relating this to the above tangent about the t-word are going to say experience and confidence, but you're WRONG!  Well, yeah maybe that is slightly it, but not the main part I'm talking about.  Well, to keep you from pulling your hair out in anticipation I will tell you the difference: NO MOVING!  Yes, that's right, this is the first school year that I have not had to move classrooms and/or schools!  It's amazing the amount a little stability can make.  Let me break it down for you.

2004 - 1st year.  Move everything to St. John in NOLA and get used to being an actual teacher.

2005 - 2nd year.  Yeah, I didn't move but still reeling from the 1st year.  Then enter Hurricane Katrina - nuff said.

2006 - 3rd year.  First year at Memorial, basically starting over and repeat of year 1.

2007 - 4th year.  Renovations at Memorial begin and my classroom is cut in half in size forcing me to rearrange and pack up tons of stuff.

2008 - 5th year.  More renovations at Memorial.  This time an entirely new room, again.

2009 - 6th year.  Move to Trinity, again, basically starting all over, again.

2010 - 7th year.  Steady, predictable, familiar bliss.

See what I'm talking about.  Crazy huh?  So, you can see my slight confusion at not having to pack, unpack, etc for the first time ever.  Boy is it nice.  I have been able to focus on planning for the upcoming year, cleaning and rearranging my classroom, and learning our brand-spankin' new Reading/LA curriculum (Aweseome, but tons of work!).  I think it is setting this year up for nothing but success and ease, I hope.  By the way, none of you are allowed to throw these words back at my in future posts about the crazy hectic pace of life and/or the school year, got it?  I'm going to enjoy myself now!   Ahhhhhhh.

Oh, did I mention our new building at Trinity is almost done and K - 4th will be moving into it next school year?  AAAAAAHHHHHHHH!  Oh well, the no moving thing was nice while it lasted!  :)

All is well, without having to unpack boxes, in Drosche Land.    

Saturday, April 10, 2010

A Taxing Process

It should come as no surprise to anyone who knows me, that I don't do our taxes.  I haven't done my taxes since I was in college and used the 1040EZ and you could file on the phone!  But you get married, go through a once-in-a-lifetime natural disaster, have kids, buy cars, buy a house, etc. and the difficulty level of doing your taxes soar.  This is when I get out of the driver's seat and let Amy behind the wheel.  She is a number-crunching mastermind!  Aside from our taxes, she handles all of our family's finances.  I could never repay her for all of the hard work she does in this area for us.  But, truth be told, she loves it.  She is gifted at it.  This year, her ability to scour tax forms, deductions, receipts, and numbers truly paid off.  We have never received a refund from our taxes.  With my status as self-employed we most likely never will, since I have to pay in self-employment taxes.  Now, that's how I understand it.  As you can tell from the information given above, this may or may not be an accurate understanding.  But I'm willing to state that I am a good 90% sure.  Sadly, we always owe Uncle Sam lots of our hard-earned money come April 15th.  The worst was when we went through Katrina and everything was all wonky.  I don't remember the exact amount we owed (although I'm sure Amy does) but it was ridiculously huge.  Since then it has gone down slightly as we have grown and matured, learning to better manage our finances (thank you Dave Ramsey).

This year though marks a momentous occasion!  No, we did not get a refund, but it is about as close to one as we will every get.  On her second pass through our taxes before submitting, yes Amy does several trial runs before mailing off the official paperwork and you're about to see why that is a wonderful trait, she found some more deductions we could make.  This year, thanks to Amy's spectacular accounting skills, we will only owe (insert drum roll here) $3.90!  Yes folks, there is a decimal in there along with a severe lack of 0's!  Woo hoo!  Needless to say when we found this out, it was like Christmas!  So, we are happily entering 2010 with hopes of a similar victory in about 12 months!  Amy's mom came over this afternoon so Amy could work her magic on her taxes also.  While she didn't get it down to the rock-bottom price we owe, she was able to shave off a good amount from what she does owe.  So, take that H&R Block - we don't need you or your services!  HA!  Ahhh, what a great feeling to know that Uncle Sam can't even order a value meal at McDonald's with what we owe him!  Better to stick to the dollar menu!

All is well, without emptying our wallets, in Drosche Land.