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	<title>W5- The Wilkins Five &#187; Candice&#8217;s Blog</title>
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	<link>http://dubfive.com</link>
	<description>Here&#039;s what&#039;s up with the Wilkins Family</description>
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		<title>You Make Beautiful Things, Part 2</title>
		<link>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/you-make-beautiful-things-part-2/</link>
		<comments>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/you-make-beautiful-things-part-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 16 Dec 2011 20:31:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Candice's Blog]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dubfive.com/?p=252</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When you swim in the ocean off the beaches in Cabo San Lucas you&#8217;re actually  swimming in the Sea of Cortez. Swimming in warm, teal colored water is  life changing. I realize this sounds melodramatic, and maybe it is, but  my experience *was* life changing. The waters were rough and beautiful,  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When you swim in the ocean off the beaches in Cabo San Lucas you&#8217;re actually  swimming in the Sea of Cortez. Swimming in warm, teal colored water is  life changing. I realize this sounds melodramatic, and maybe it is, but  my experience *was* life changing. The waters were rough and beautiful,  warm and frightening. They were and are everything that life is,  captured in nature. The fullness of life, which contains all things  beautiful and yet horrific in the water. And when you float and swim and  duck under the waves you feel everything that quite possibly was meant  to be felt.</p>
<p>My children loved everything about the beach. The water, the sun, the sand. Holy moments occurred when I watched them run on the wet sand, leaving their delicious little footprints behind. Footprints that would never be that exact size again. Each moment and each print to be cherished for the moment of time they were in, for only brief seconds for we quickly continued moving forward in time, never to return to that particular holy moment again.</p>
<p>All around<br />
 Hope is springing up from this old ground<br />
 Out of chaos life is being found in You</p>
<p>Three mornings out of our week we had breakfast at a delicious  restaurant called Girasoles de la Hacienda. The restaurant overlooks the  ocean, it&#8217;s a peaceful atmosphere and the food is delicious. But what  made our mornings most beautiful were the people of Girasoles: Daniel,  Norman, Francisco, Deisy, Araceli, to name a few. There was truly a  connection between our family and these amazing people.</p>
<p>The Mexican people in general were some of the most beautiful and  gracious people I have ever met in my life. They were kind and friendly,  they smiled and they were accommodating in ways that Americans never  even dream of. The Mexican people I met smile a lot and that&#8217;s  refreshing. They make eye contact with you when you pass and they say  &#8220;Hola!&#8221; and &#8220;Buenos Dias!&#8221; They are humble, genuine and encouraging.  (&#8221;It doesn&#8217;t matter that it&#8217;s only ten o&#8217;clock in the morning, David,  have some tequila, it&#8217;s your birthday!&#8221;)</p>
<p>You make beautiful things<br />
 You make beautiful things out of the dust<br />
 You make beautiful things<br />
 You make beautiful things out of us</p>
<p>In my cynicism I wondered a time or two if our treatment was purely   based on what US dollar someone may receive from this American. However, in   my limited experience with humanity, I&#8217;ve learned that there are   connections that cannot be explained, and that it was more important for   me to trust this particular instinct instead of allowing my cynicism  to  prevail.</p>
<p>In the movie &#8220;Before Sunrise&#8221; the character Celine describes God as  not someone or something inside of us, but as existing in &#8220;this little  space in between&#8221; us. She says: &#8220;If there&#8217;s any kind of  magic in this  world it must be in the attempt of understanding someone  sharing  something.&#8221; Our times with our friends at Girasoles were at the very  least magical, but much more likely Divine.<span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular;"><span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular; color: maroon; font-size: medium;"><strong> </strong></span></span></p>
<p>You make me new, You are making me new<br />
 You make me new, You are making me new<br />
 You are making me new</p>
<p>The day before we left I spent some time contemplating how fortunate  we had been to broaden our horizons and embrace a new and different  culture. It occurred to me that our experience was only one of many to  be had. Our world is so huge and yet our personal worlds are often so  small. How many more geographies, cultures, languages, and, most  importantly, people are there for us to experience on this great Earth?  Countless, I presume. I hope that this is only the beginning of that type of  journey for the W5</p>
<p>You make beautiful things<br />
 You make beautiful things out of the dust<br />
 You make beautiful things<br />
 You make beautiful things out of us</p>
<p>Like most things in my life I feel as if God ordained each moment of  my trip for me. Not only the beautiful moments, but also the busy, the  stressful, the sick, the tense, and of course as equally the intimate, the  peaceful, the silent, the rest. My husband Dave shared at  our Thanksgiving meal how grateful he is to be able to embrace the  fullness of life which includes both the beautiful and the ugly, the  happy and the sad. He likes to explain that without both sides of each and every coin our life as we know is probably  not full. I like to think our time in Mexico embodied Dave&#8217;s theory completely. And for that I am eternally grateful.</p>
<p>You make beautiful things<br />
 You make beautiful things out of us</p>
<p>PS As per the addition to my bucket list I downloaded an app for my iPhone called &#8220;Learn Spanish Quick&#8221;. Muy bueno!</p>
<p>(*) Lyrics &#8220;Beautiful Things&#8221; by Gungor. Watch their YouTube video below.</p>
<p><br class="spacer_" /></p>
<p><iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/oyPBtExE4W0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
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		<title>You Make Beautiful Things</title>
		<link>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/you-make-beautiful-things/</link>
		<comments>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/you-make-beautiful-things/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Dec 2011 17:00:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Candice's Blog]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dubfive.com/?p=222</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[My end of the year reflections tend to start when the holidays start. The weather changes us from summer into fall and with the change, and awareness of holiday and the sacred, I contemplate my past year. The new year is coming soon after all. How can I embrace the new year without pondering where [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My end of the year reflections tend to start when the holidays start. The weather changes us from summer into fall and with the change, and awareness of holiday and the sacred, I contemplate my past year. The new year is coming soon after all. How can I embrace the new year without pondering where I&#8217;ve been in 2011?</p>
<p>All this pain<br />
 I wonder if I’ll ever find my way<br />
 I wonder if my life could really change at all(*)</p>
<p>Every five years the immediate side of my family takes a big vacation, all 10 of us together. In both 2001 &amp; 2006 we vacationed in Hawaii. This year my mom made the suggestion we make a change and visit Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. It felt like the right time for change. Hawaii, incidentally, is at the same latitude on the globe as Cabo, so in terms of both warm weather and water temp we could expect pretty much the same climate. Both pretty darn close to paradise if you ask me.</p>
<p>So we scheduled our time away, packed up the kids and headed off for vacation during this past Thanksgiving week.</p>
<p>On the plane just before we landed I asked my sister what she hoped to accomplish on her trip. She shared a couple of deeply moving goals she had as she continues on her own personal journey. She asked me about my goals. Without missing a beat I answered: &#8220;Sit and stare.&#8221; Insert hilarious banter between Jerry (Seinfeld) &amp; Elaine:</p>
<address>Jerry: So ah, what did you do last night?</address>
<address>Elaine: Nothing.</address>
<address>Jerry: I know nothing, but what did you actually do?</address>
<address>Elaine: Literally nothing. I sat in a chair and stared.</address>
<address>Jerry: Wow. That really is nothing.</address>
<address>Elaine: I told ya.<br />
 </address>
<p>I spent a lot of time that week sitting and staring. Me and my thoughts. Long breaks from books, magazines, conversation and most importantly my phone and social media. To say it was glorious is an understatement.</p>
<p>All this earth<br />
 Could all that is lost ever be found<br />
 Could a garden come up from this ground at all</p>
<p>I&#8217;d visited Mexico only a handful of times prior to this trip, always youth mission trips to Ensenada or Tijuana (just a smidge south of San Diego), but nothing ever as south as the most southern point of Baja California. When you get off the plane (about a 1/2 hour from where we&#8217;d stay in Cabo, a short drive to the actual beach) you immediately see beautiful desert mountains. Just stepping off the plane I felt the welcomed rush of different scenery, culture and people and it made me instantly happy.</p>
<p>My mom is a second generation Mexican-American. Her maiden name was Vasquez and her maternal family are Lopez. Even though my mom was raised by a Spanish speaking mother she grew up in the 50s &amp; 60s when (some) Mexican-American children weren&#8217;t taught the language of their parents. They were essentially encouraged to be &#8220;white&#8221;. Not to mention, my grandmother and her sisters gossiped in Spanish, they didn&#8217;t want the little kids to know what they were saying or who they were talking about. And so my mom never learned Spanish, which to this day makes her sad. And because she didn&#8217;t learn neither did my sisters nor I. Which I wasn&#8217;t that sad about&#8230;until Cabo.</p>
<p>In Cabo we quickly discovered everyone speaks Spanish (I know that sounds obvious, doesn&#8217;t it?). What I mean is they don&#8217;t necessarily cater to the American tourists and speak only English. No, in general they speak only Spanish. And you know what? Spanish is beautiful.</p>
<p>About 4 years of high school Spanish y yo puedo hablar un poco Espanol. I was able to speak a little bit of Spanish, but not much. After our week in Cabo I added learning this beautiful language to my bucket list. My sisters and I joke: &#8220;So we can speak to our people!&#8221; But in all seriousness, after spending a week in Mexico and being immersed in the language I was changed, awakened, and challenged.</p>
<p>You make beautiful things<br />
 You make beautiful things out of the dust<br />
 You make beautiful things<br />
 You make beautiful things out of us</p>
<p>(To be continued&#8230;)</p>
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		<title>Grief</title>
		<link>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/grief/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Oct 2011 17:19:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Candice's Blog]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dubfive.com/?p=214</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Last year after the Floodgate Foundation had its first Board of Directors meeting I wrote about what a humbling experience it was to have been asked to participate in such an important, life-changing organization. I told you that I sat at our meeting table with the overwhelming sense of &#8220;now how exactly did *I* get [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Last year after the <a href="http://www.floodgatefoundation.org/">Floodgate Foundation</a> had its first Board of Directors meeting I wrote about what a humbling experience it was to have been asked to participate in such an important, life-changing organization. I told you that I sat at our meeting table with the overwhelming sense of &#8220;now how exactly did *I* get here?&#8221; The organization is not only life-changing for the individuals it&#8217;s impacting, it has been life-changing for me.</p>
<p>I recently found myself in another HDIGH? moment (That&#8217;s &#8220;How Did I Get Here?&#8221; for short, wink-wink).</p>
<p>A good friend of mine, a mentor mom and social worker, recently asked me to begin co-facilitating a grief support group with her. She&#8217;s a licensed clinical social worker and has worked in the field of grief for about a decade. She&#8217;s an expert really. So when an expert asks you to help her you don&#8217;t say &#8220;no&#8221;. Especially when you haven&#8217;t worked in the social work field for 8-1/2 years because you&#8217;ve been busying yourself as a SAHM. Just the &#8220;ask&#8221; part is an honor. She raised the question: &#8220;Do you want to pray about it?&#8221; Nope, not necessary. I&#8217;m good. Let&#8217;s do this.</p>
<p>The grief support group is specifically for parents whom have lost a child.</p>
<p>A-hem: HDIGH?</p>
<p>This particular group of parents have lost a child who is under a year old, possibly even before their pregnancy was full term. Years ago my mentor talked with me about the possibility of co-facilitating but was concerned that I was too near child-bearing age (my baby Grant is 4 now) and I would likely over-identify with the parents, which may not make me the best group leader. We waited several years and now it appears it is time.</p>
<p>But I decided within ten minutes of the group starting last week that it may not have mattered how old my kids are: Losing a child is losing a child. If you have one, you can imagine the horror no matter what their age. You put the baby down for a nap, he doesn&#8217;t wake up. SIDS. Even when my &#8220;baby&#8221; is thirteen, I&#8217;ll probably over-identify. And I&#8217;m OK with that.</p>
<p>I can&#8217;t talk about the specifics of the group, but I can tell you that I didn&#8217;t make it through the first meeting without tears visibly rolling down my cheeks. I was embarrassed, but what could I do? Their pain touched me, and I couldn&#8217;t help but let it show.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll admit I don&#8217;t know what I&#8217;m doing (I have a bachelor&#8217;s degree in social work), I&#8217;ve never led a grief support group before. But I&#8217;m totally up for the challenge and I&#8217;m so incredibly honored to be invited by my friend to journey with these parents who have suffered greatly. Typing the words &#8220;suffered greatly&#8221; doesn&#8217;t even begin to describe a sliver in the holes of their hearts. The babies they cannot hold.</p>
<p>What I do know is that I am being changed. I wrote in my journal in Starbucks the night after our first group: &#8220;Today. The day my life changes forever. Because truly everyday you&#8217;re life can change. If you let it.&#8221;</p>
<p>Sitting amongst grief-stricken parents is a privilege. A privilege I have not earned, nor do I deserve. I am not a part of their &#8220;club&#8221;. A club they adamantly declare they never wanted to be a part of. And yet I&#8217;m there. I&#8217;m going to broaden myself, learn new ways of empathizing, learn a new depth of compassion. I may not know exactly how I got to where I am but I sure as hell know I don&#8217;t want to leave. And as I thank God for his providence in my life, I pray for the parents I&#8217;ve met, who wake up today with an ache that will probably never be soothed.</p>
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		<title>Mountain gorilla mommy</title>
		<link>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/mountain-gorilla-mommy/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Aug 2011 20:28:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Candice's Blog]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dubfive.com/?p=208</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today&#8217;s the first day back to school.  The routine returns. Yes! I love routine&#8230; I&#8217;m back at home with just my baby. He&#8217;d correct me: A-hem, I mean my big boy. He&#8217;s 4 and we&#8217;re doing preschool at home this year, getting ready for Kinder next year. My oldest is a 3rd grader and my [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today&#8217;s the first day back to school.  The routine returns. Yes! I love routine&#8230; I&#8217;m back at home with just my baby. He&#8217;d correct me: A-hem, I mean my big boy. He&#8217;s 4 and we&#8217;re doing preschool at home this year, getting ready for Kinder next year. My oldest is a 3rd grader and my middle child a 1st grader.</p>
<p>The first day of school is always an emotional day for me. Leaving my big  kids is never easy and yet they&#8217;re always so excited for their new  school year, for their latest adventure. That at least makes it a little easier on me. We  say our prayers, cross our fingers, communicate a lot and then say our  goodbyes. Trusting the teachers to take good care of my babies  while they&#8217;re away from me, that&#8217;s a huge deal. Trusting God to make  something great out of these little people, even huge-er.</p>
<p>Several years ago my sister introduced me to a movie about the amazing mountain gorilla. Mountain gorilla mommies rock. They don&#8217;t even let go of their newborns for the first 3 months of life. After that, they don&#8217;t let the babies out of their sight for the next 2 years. I&#8217;ve learned a lot about a mother&#8217;s love through the mountain gorillas. Beautiful and ferocious mommies that they are.</p>
<p>This summer Grant became a member of the booster seat club and closed a chapter not just on car seats but on many things baby. I no longer have children who take naps, or require strollers. I sleep through the night. I no longer change diapers, so I don&#8217;t carry a diaper bag. I don&#8217;t even carry baby wipes! (Which I could  totally still use sometimes&#8230;)</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve definitely turned a corner in parenthood. The corner I couldn&#8217;t get a glimpse of 8-1/2 years ago. Not even 4 years ago. Turning that corner so far has been about 49% bitter and 51% sweet.</p>
<p>I love my children, I love being a stay at home mom (SAHM)  and I feel present with them no matter what stage they&#8217;re in. Having said that, as they grow further from babyhood I feel more space in my mind return for things Candice. I&#8217;m still figuring how to prioritize those things but in the mean time I don&#8217;t mind being honest that I&#8217;m grateful for the opportunity to begin a new chapter in my life.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m wondering what mountain gorilla mommies do after the first two years have passed&#8230;</p>
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		<title>Stale Goldfish</title>
		<link>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/stale-goldfish/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 03 Jul 2011 22:58:33 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Candice's Blog]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dubfive.com/?p=198</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Arm in, arm in. Click. Play find the crotch buckle. Then another click, click. And so the car seat routine goes. For eight and a half years I&#8217;ve been the model citizen using a 5-point harness to buckle my babies into their car seats. &#60;Insert pat on the back.&#62;
I&#8217;ve tried to calculate how many times [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Arm in, arm in. Click. Play find the crotch buckle. Then another click, click. And so the car seat routine goes. For eight and a half years I&#8217;ve been the model citizen using a 5-point harness to buckle my babies into their car seats. &lt;Insert pat on the back.&gt;</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve tried to calculate how many times I&#8217;ve actually buckled my kids in and out of their car seats. Times three kids! Then I was overwhelmed by the math (this is summer vacation after all) and thought I might as well just guesstimate in the thousands.</p>
<p>Later this month my baby turns 4 years old. The routine of arm-arm-click-crotch-click-click comes to an end. Grant will be four years old and forty pounds and by California law ready for a regular seat buckle and booster seat. Another major parenting milestone passes. Grant&#8217;s a big kid and could easily pass for 4 already. Poundage-wise he&#8217;s certainly big enough to switch seats now, and I&#8217;ve been tempted to do just that, but something besides the law is holding me back. This is my baby. I&#8217;m not ready.</p>
<p>Isn&#8217;t it odd though that I&#8217;m not looking forward to something that&#8217;s totally going to make my life easier?</p>
<p>Easier, but&#8230;The truth is, the experience of buckling your baby into their car seat is a pretty intimate one. It&#8217;s not only repetitive but you&#8217;re physically close to said baby time after time after time (year after year after year). Invading their little personal space, hands maneuvering their little appendages, smelling their smells (OK those sometimes are so great, I was thinking more along the lines of just-after-bath-baby smells.)</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s what I remember most about the routine. Not the hassle, but:</p>
<p>The snuggles. The kisses. The giggles. The big admiring eyes. The alligator tears (&#8221;Get me out of this thing!&#8221;). The times s/he didn&#8217;t know I was checking &#8216;em out in my rear view mirror. The sing songs, the baby conversations with themselves. The baby who fell asleep in the car, their soft purrs as I tried to gently lift them out of their seat (to keep them asleep, of course!). The cheeks, the little hands touching my cheeks. The closeness. The love. The love. The love.</p>
<p>Shortly, my new routine will become a few quick instructions&#8211;hop in, hop up, reach over and click. I&#8217;ll take out the used, filthy, stinky ol&#8217; car seat. I&#8217;ll find old Goldfish crackers, Hot Wheels, Legos, popsicle sticks and even dried up chicken nugget hot mustard (all things I&#8217;ve honestly seen). I&#8217;ll clean up and vacuum. I&#8217;ll move in the cute little booster seat and admire my &#8220;new&#8221; car.</p>
<p>And then</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll shed a little tear for the closing chapter. For the three beautiful babies God has gifted me, for the precious (and challenging) years I&#8217;ve spent loading them up, in and out, and for the privilege that it is to raise my children.</p>
<p>For now, and until midnight on July 21st, I think I&#8217;ll let those Goldfish crackers stale just a little more.</p>
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		<title>Birthday musings</title>
		<link>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/birthday-musings/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Mar 2011 16:26:45 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Candice's Blog]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dubfive.com/?p=185</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In two days I celebrate my 35th birthday. I&#8217;m not freaking out.
I tweeted a couple of weeks ago&#8230; &#8220;Feeling like changing my &#8220;word&#8221; from Journey to Path. &#8220;Path&#8221; seems to have me focused and not as distracted by the fringe. We&#8217;ll see&#8230;&#8221; For a long time I&#8217;ve used the word &#8220;journey&#8221; to describe my spiritual [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In two days I celebrate my 35th birthday. I&#8217;m not freaking out.</p>
<p>I tweeted a couple of weeks ago&#8230; &#8220;Feeling like changing my &#8220;word&#8221; from Journey to Path. &#8220;Path&#8221; seems to have me focused and not as distracted by the fringe. We&#8217;ll see&#8230;&#8221; For a long time I&#8217;ve used the word &#8220;journey&#8221; to describe my spiritual experiences over the past, I don&#8217;t know, lifetime. For sure the past 8 or 9 years. The word journey has felt right; it&#8217;s like I&#8217;ve been traveling to get to a place, right? But I got to thinking since you don&#8217;t really &#8220;arrive&#8221; until you &#8220;die&#8221; (or so they say) I wondered if &#8220;journey&#8221; would be my word forever. So I considered: what if it IS possible to arrive and for my journey to change into a path? I&#8217;m pretty sure that&#8217;s how I feel today.</p>
<p>At certain milestones in my life I&#8217;ve taken off, or picked up, baggage during my journey. The last big upheaval was when I turned 30. That was a doozy. Two things were happening. One, I was totally burnt out on church life and people (churchie &amp; non). I swore that, as I turned 30, I&#8217;d have a new motto: &#8220;I don&#8217;t give a $#!t.&#8221; I swore that even when people asked me to work in the nursery at church I&#8217;d shine &#8216;em on and not care. True story. Well, sad to say, I guess, it never quite turned out that way. I was still too insecure to give up people-pleasing that easily. I&#8217;ve spent a lot of time these past 5 years being disappointed in myself because I wasn&#8217;t able to put off the people-pleasing baggage. But what I didn&#8217;t know was that maybe it&#8217;d take almost 5 years of working it out to actually be able to practice a slightly friendlier version of my motto.</p>
<p>Last year I had the challenge (which was really an opportunity) to put some much needed boundaries in place, for myself and for our family. I decided it was time to truly redefine the aforementioned &#8220;fringe&#8221;. It was a nerve-wracking and painful year, but after all the hard work I got what I needed: a voice, some freedom and some self-respect.  So as I round my mid thirties and start toward the probably incorrectly dreaded 4-0 I believe having these boundaries in place is what allows me to take my new path.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s a few examples I&#8217;m super-excited about&#8230;</p>
<p>At the end of last year I was honored to be asked to become a part of the Flood Found Board of Directors. Floodgate Foundation has been an inexplicably humbling experience. (You can read more about <a href="http://www.floodgatefoundation.org">Flood Found here</a>, and please support our efforts if you are able.) After our first meeting as a Board I found myself looking around our meeting table, asking &#8220;Now, how exactly did *I* get here?&#8221; lol. I drove home from that first meeting overwhelmed with appreciation to God. &#8220;I&#8217;m actually living the life I want my children to strive for.&#8221; Surreal.</p>
<p>Earlier this year my good friend and forever pastor, Gary Molander, asked me to write an introduction for the chapter of his first book. He asked if I wouldn&#8217;t mind writing about a very specific time in my life, when I was 25 and when God intervened on my behalf in a mighty way. I enthusiastically agreed (and then quietly asked myself again: &#8220;Now, how exactly did *I* get here?&#8221;).</p>
<p>Writing the intro was beyond my wildest dreams. Sure, I&#8217;d wanted to write a book since I was young, but I never guessed my participation in book writing would come at this age, at this life stage. After I agreed I sat down to write a sad but redemptive little story about how God used one woman to speak openly, honestly and firmly into my life. Her name was Jamie, and God used her to completely change the direction of my life. Forever. When the book is available I&#8217;ll post the info here, it&#8217;s called <a href="http://www.garymo.com/my-book/">&#8220;Pursuing Christ. Creating Art.&#8221;</a> by Gary A. Molander and it comes out this summer.</p>
<p>Finally, after much consideration I&#8217;ve decided to launch a website this year that advocates for victims of human trafficking. I&#8217;ve felt God turning one of my greatest fears into action and I can&#8217;t wait. I&#8217;ll write more about that later also. The website should be ready about the time Gary&#8217;s book comes out.</p>
<p>Deep breath.</p>
<p>So, yes, a lot of good and amazing things have happened to me this year and through a very painful last year. Enough so that I&#8217;ve decided to change my word. I&#8217;m on a path. I&#8217;m eternally grateful to God that I&#8217;m on that path, with Dave, with my kids and with My Savior. Happy Birthday to me.</p>
<p>PS I have three more blog posts in the works, so please stay tuned. One is a two-parter about the process of leaving &amp; grieving (we left our church of 12 years last year, among other things) and one is my review of Rob Bell&#8217;s new book Love Wins.</p>
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		<title>The Garage</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Mar 2011 23:01:23 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dubfive.com/?p=176</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Between my hubby and I we walk our kids to and from school three times a day and we love it. Today after I got back from picking up my daughter from Kindergarten I found I had locked us out of our house.  I can&#8217;t remember the last time I got locked out but I&#8217;m [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Between my hubby and I we walk our kids to and from school three times a day and we love it. Today after I got back from picking up my daughter from Kindergarten I found I had locked us out of our house.  I can&#8217;t remember the last time I got locked out but I&#8217;m sure it&#8217;s happened before. Luckily (and perhaps Divinely) as I was standing outside my door dreading having to call Dave and pull him away from his work to help me get inside I heard him leaving a message on our answering machine: &#8220;Forgot something I need for work today, headed home now.&#8221; Oh, NICE.</p>
<p>So the kids and I waited outside for Dave to arrive. It&#8217;s beautiful today here in Fresno. Maybe 70 degrees, I dunno. And so it was a nice little wait&#8230;until I started concentrating on the state of my garage. Ah-hem. There&#8217;s back story here. You see, Dave broke his elbow about six weeks ago. And before that he had started a project making our sons bunk beds. So for a few weeks the garage was going to be a mess, and then it turned into a few months.</p>
<p>I go in and out of the garage daily, but I&#8217;ve gotten to the point where I&#8217;m not looking at the mess. I&#8217;m seeing it, yes, but I&#8217;m not &#8220;seeing&#8221; it. Well this afternoon I saw it, yesiree, and I almost fell over. There&#8217;s stuff everywhere, and if I had a nifty iPhone I&#8217;d post a picture right now. (Maybe I&#8217;ll use Dave&#8217;s phone and do that later.) There&#8217;s almost no place to walk, tools, wood, the bunk beds, dirt, cords, bikes, strollers, everywhere. Everywhere.</p>
<p>So while I waited I pondered. This garage is a mess and needs to be cleaned up badly, but Dave and I have been acting like it&#8217;s not that bad. We pass it every day and notice it with just a glance. We&#8217;re just putting off cleaning it up &#8220;until Dave&#8217;s arm is better&#8221; or &#8220;until the bunk beds are done&#8221;. In the meantime, we certainly wouldn&#8217;t want to focus too much on how bad it looks, how badly it needs to be cleaned up. Hmm. Wait a minute, this sure is sounding a little too familiar. Pause.</p>
<p>How many times have I approached my personal (emotional, spiritual, relational) issues this way? Going along in life, getting so used to the mess that I don&#8217;t really see it anymore. I might ignore it, I might forget it&#8217;s there, or I might promise myself to clean it up later. Either way it&#8217;s still a pretty messed up garage.</p>
<p>While I waited for Dave some more I turned away from my garage and focused on the sun, the noise of an airplane passing over, my kids, the trees swaying in the breeze. It really was a beautiful moment for me, taking time out of my day to think about my issues, inspect the life of a lady bug my daughter had observed, wait patiently for my hubby to arrive. If I hadn&#8217;t gotten locked out of the house I wouldn&#8217;t have had this moment. I&#8217;m thankful to God for that. And so today my prayer is that instead of the real garage, but more like the metaphoric garage, God would reveal to me some of the stuff inside my heart that needs to be cleaned up. Otherwise I just might trip over that messy pile of cords.</p>
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		<title>Luke gets glasses!</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 11 Dec 2010 17:06:43 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A couple of weeks ago my firstborn, 7 year old Luke, was told he needed glasses. Luckily he was totally excited, wanting to be like his parents, and so the two weeks while we waited for the glasses to be ready didn&#8217;t seem to go quickly enough for Luke. I took the news kind of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A couple of weeks ago my firstborn, 7 year old Luke, was told he needed glasses. Luckily he was totally excited, wanting to be like his parents, and so the two weeks while we waited for the glasses to be ready didn&#8217;t seem to go quickly enough for Luke. I took the news kind of hard. Weird, I know. It just seemed to me like another occasion to acknowledge my son&#8217;s growing up. I don&#8217;t like that so much.</p>
<p>Luke looks incredibly handsome, I&#8217;ve posted some pics on my twitpic page <a href="http://twitpic.com/photos/candicewilkins5">here</a>. And I love that he&#8217;s excited. There&#8217;s nothing better than a kid who&#8217;s excited about something that could be traumatizing. Luke doesn&#8217;t know he could be embarrassed or unhappy, all he knows is now he&#8217;s like his dad. And he for sure picked out glasses that look like Dave&#8217;s.</p>
<p>Wonder why my little boy getting glasses would bother me so much (which btw I haven&#8217;t let on to Luke these feelings, never would want him to think I&#8217;m anything but as excited as he is)? Over-sentimentality you ask? It&#8217;s hard to explain what happens to a mother&#8217;s heart when she experiences the growth of her child. I didn&#8217;t know this before I had kids, who could. But to see this beautiful kid, who once was a beautiful baby, getting taller by the day, losing teeth, learning fractions, and even getting glasses, well, sometimes it&#8217;s just overload on a mother&#8217;s heart.  I know it must seem like all parents say this but it really does feel like just yesterday Luke was the size of my 3 year old and we were Christmas shopping with Luke and Danielle right in the shopping cart. Those days are no more, babysitters are a must for Christmas shopping. &#8220;Hey, kiddie, look over there!&#8221; just doesn&#8217;t cut it any more! I miss those days&#8230;</p>
<p>Thinking about Luke growing up and my other two babies getting big makes me ponder where this year went as well. It was a year of severe refinement for Dave and I. Our hearts hadn&#8217;t been molded in this fashion for a very long time. After almost 14 years of marriage we still felt the pull to have completely left and cleft from our families. If you can believe it, yes, even after all of that time. But having spoken with many people about this issue, I find that it isn&#8217;t that uncommon. It seems with each passing year the need to focus on the Wilkins5 becomes more and more evident. There is such a thing as fringe, and that&#8217;s OK.</p>
<p>I took out my list of &#8220;to do&#8221;s for 2010 and I think I&#8217;m now able to cross off about 2 whole things from my list (I had at least 10 to start). *Laughing* Yeah, right! Oh my, what life with 3 children is like. I love it, but I don&#8217;t usually get a whole lot done. That&#8217;s OK, though. Watching three beautiful and healthy children grow up as slowly as possible takes precedence over any pesky &#8220;to do&#8221; list. The list never leaves, but the children eventually do.</p>
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		<title>Happy Birthday, Dave!</title>
		<link>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/happy-birthday-dave/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 27 Nov 2010 17:10:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Candice's Blog]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dubfive.com/?p=161</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Happy Birthday Dave Wilkins. My husband. He&#8217;s 35 years old today. I&#8217;m  thinking back to the first birthday we celebrated together. It was 1992.  The first gift I ever gave him was a multi-colored flannel hoodie. I  don&#8217;t think he ever wore it. Not even once. I remember buying it at  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Happy Birthday Dave Wilkins. My husband. He&#8217;s 35 years old today. I&#8217;m  thinking back to the first birthday we celebrated together. It was 1992.  The first gift I ever gave him was a multi-colored flannel hoodie. I  don&#8217;t think he ever wore it. Not even once. I remember buying it at  Miller&#8217;s Outpost. Oh yeah. Well, I said it was 1992! My days of buying  Dave clothes was short lived, even to this day he&#8217;s in charge of his own  wardrobe. And a completely cool wardrobe it is, I might add.</p>
<p> So if my calculations are correct we&#8217;re celebrating our 19th birthday  together. Crazy. I&#8217;m so thankful for the almost 2 decade journey we&#8217;ve  been on together and I thought what better way to celebrate Dave and that journey  is to brag about him here. A Facebook status just wasn&#8217;t cutting it, a  tweet wouldn&#8217;t either. So here is a short list of my 3 most favorite  things about Dave Wilkins. I hope you all enjoy reading a little bit  about this amazing man and his life.</p>
<p> Of course, Dave is all the things we know him to be: great friend,  amazing dad, talented artist, hard worker, leader, caring and loving husband. But one of my  favorite things about Dave is that he&#8217;s willing to live his life as a  flawed human being. Dave wasn&#8217;t always this way (that&#8217;s his story to  tell) but for quite a while now he&#8217;s allowed himself to evolve into an  open and honestly imperfect man who sees living in that reality one of  his greatest assets to his family, his wife, his children, his business.  We all know men who are willing to put on the &#8220;I&#8217;ve got it all  together&#8221; front, but not Dave. He&#8217;s found value in being able to live  his life as the guy who doesn&#8217;t have it all together, the guy who  questions his faith regularly, the guy who yells at his kids, the guy  who doesn&#8217;t always meet his work deadlines. He&#8217;s not OK with these things, but  actually he kind of is.</p>
<p> You might be familiar with the video Dave made several years ago  called <a href="http://www.floodgateproductions.com/v2/store/product_info.php?products_id=330">&#8220;I&#8217;m Watching You Dad&#8221;</a>. He wrote a line in the video that stands  out as kind of Dave&#8217;s mantra for his own life, and it&#8217;s really become  the mantra for the Wilkins 5. In the video, our son Luke, in voice-over  and letter  to his dad, says: Dad, you&#8217;ve showed me how to live a life &#8220;that isn&#8217;t  safe but  IS good.&#8221; Dave&#8217;s a risk taker. He&#8217;s willing to be uncomfortable. He&#8217;s  willing to show his kids that in order to have a fulfilling life  sometimes you  have to be willing to be at unrest, maybe just for a time being, but  nonetheless anxious, unhappy, unsure. This applies to so many things in  Dave&#8217;s life: his search for answers about God, his art, his  relationships, his dreams. </p>
<p> Yesterday we took the kids to see the new Disney movie &#8220;Tangled&#8221;. It was  a fantastic movie! The kids really enjoyed it and Dave and I both  cried. Oh, I love that about this man. His sensitivity for his kids, for  me, and for others abounds. I like to tease Dave about it, so when I  know he&#8217;s choking up I&#8217;ll ask him: &#8220;Do you need a Kleenex?&#8221; and then we  just laugh. When I&#8217;m sad and when the kids are sad, it&#8217;s truly nice to  have someone we know we can go to who&#8217;s going to be sad with us. Dave&#8217;s  that guy.</p>
<p> Having birthdays with the kids is a blast. Luke and I schemed up a  present plan that includes iTunes &amp; Star Wars on DVD. Luke also  picked out an hilarious card that plays the Rocky theme when you open  it, you know the musical kind of cards? Luke was in charge of all the  wrapping and signing. Dani made her own gift, she made a beautiful craft, then wrapped it herself. She was so proud and  it was so lovely. As for Grant his present showed up this morning:  Tinker Toys made into two Darth Mol (sp?) light sabers. The yooshz when it comes to our 3 year  old&#8217;s artistic expression. For lunch we&#8217;re headed to Sal&#8217;s with Doug, Al  &amp; the girls. Then cake and who knows what for the rest of the  afternoon. We&#8217;ve got a &#8220;Little House on the Prairie&#8221; DVD to watch from  Netflix. I&#8217;d better have a Kleenex box handy for the birthday man.</p>
<p> Happy Birthday, Dave. I love you. Here&#8217;s to many, many, many more.</p>
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		<title>How did the time go so fast?</title>
		<link>http://dubfive.com/candice-blog/how-did-the-time-go-so-fast/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Jun 2010 03:15:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Candice's Blog]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dubfive.com/?p=152</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[My oldest son Luke&#8217;s last day of first grade was Thursday. It was a moving end to what was a wonderful first grade year. We loved our teacher, Ms. Tashiro. She was smart, kind, inspiring, she loves God and she taught Lukey to fear HFCS and Blue Dye #4. (HCFS = high fructose corn syrup, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My oldest son Luke&#8217;s last day of first grade was Thursday. It was a moving end to what was a wonderful first grade year. We loved our teacher, Ms. Tashiro. She was smart, kind, inspiring, she loves God and she taught Lukey to fear HFCS and Blue Dye #4. (HCFS = high fructose corn syrup, and I may not have the blue dye number quite right but you get the point.) Fifteen minutes before the final bell rang on June 10th Ms. Tashiro gave 16 of the most adorable first graders a moving and emotional pep talk for life: &#8220;I&#8217;ll always be here if you need me, you can do anything you want to, you were meant for something special.&#8221; It might as well have been a graduation speech; it was phenomenal. Sure Luke might just hear this pep talk once a week or so, but my guess is that most of the kids don&#8217;t. Ms. Tashiro&#8217;s deep love for her students goes beyond academics, it shoots straight to their hearts. She has a ministry, and I&#8217;m honored that my son was a recipient of her love and guidance.</p>
<p>Processing life with a second grader and a kindergartner (come Fall) is challenging. Many things run through my mind. Mostly: How did the time go so fast? and Am I really this old? SIGH It seems like only yesterday my oldest was born, but the truth is seven and a half years have passed, he&#8217;s a big second grader and my second child, my baby girl, is 5 and ready for Kinder. Only my baby boy (&#8221;I&#8217;m not a baby, I&#8217;m Grant!&#8221;) remains at home. How did this happen? I&#8217;m quietly learning time does not stop. Time does not hold still. Time does not slow down. In fact&#8230;It speeds up.</p>
<p>This journey I&#8217;ve been on, this journey called motherhood, is shaping me like I never thought it would. Like I would have never imagined. The thing is I&#8217;m not just learning about my children, I&#8217;m not just learning about me, I&#8217;m learning about humanity. On the last day of school I ran into a mom whose son had been in Luke&#8217;s Kinder class, she was teary eyed and said to me &#8220;I can&#8217;t believe they&#8217;re growing up so fast.&#8221; I&#8217;ve judged this mom quite a bit, unfortunately (and in sin), because her son had some behavior challenges, but what I learned on that last day of school was that this mother is really no different than me. Sure we might have different parenting styles, and even different values. But when it comes down to it she&#8217;s just a mom who loves her son. The thought of her boy moving from first to second grade depresses her as it does me. And so I asked God to forgive me, and to please continue to purge me of this disgusting yuck called judgment.</p>
<p>What I hope one day to report to my children is that the journey of motherhood was not only about them, or about me, but that it was about learning to love people better. I hope I can tell them about my sin, my judgment and the ways in which God grew me through all of that. I look forward to telling them how difficult it was for me to watch them get big. But that there was no greater honor for me in this life than doing just that.</p>
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