Tuesday, July 31, 2012

The view from behind different steering wheels . . .

“In all affairs it's a healthy thing now and then to hang a question mark on the things you have long taken for granted.” 
 Bertrand Russell


This is me driving a friend's Jaguar . . .


(Yep, my friend Tom just walked over to the cabin where I was recently staying and begged for me to trade my hot minivan for his okay 2001 Jag. *)


* Statements preceding this mark may not be the total truth.  




This is me earlier the same day, in a rain storm, enduring the elements, driving rugged terrain, searching for my son to save him from the wicked forces of nature.

The photos make me think.  They urge me to consider ways the same places look different when we look at them with opening eyes.  I remember about how much various perspectives can change the same place, similar situations, realities we are faced with again and again.

It's like that for you, too, I expect.  Sometimes we see things from under a plastic bag, bracing ourselves from a storm and sometimes we have the open, free perspective of a cool drive in a classic car.  
The terrain changes when our view does.  

Often I need to be reminded of that.  Sometimes I need a nudge that reminds me there are lots of different ways to look at everything . . . what a friend believes, how a child reacts, a problem that seems insurmountable.  

How about you?

“What we see depends mainly on what we look for.”
― John Lubbock


Monday, July 30, 2012

New Twist on the Monday Morning Mystery Photo - Vol. 4


This could be it, folks!  Someone could win today (or, maybe things will go on and you all can have another chance at this most exciting contest of your entire lives) - we'll see. 


Wait - I said that last week!  I've actually stumped you, friends!  I cannot believe it!  Come on, you can do it!
You know the drill - we've twisted up the old contest - over these few weeks, we're doing a bit of a "where in the world" kind of thing.  I put up the photo.  You check it out.  You guess where it was taken.  You send me your guesses (by fb message or email - graham.deana@gmail.com).  The first person to guess three photos is the winner!

Don't worry, if you're just starting today.  I'll repost the three previous photos.  


Remember, you may not recognize the spot, but someone you know might.  Show the photo to others and get some help on identifying it's location. 

The winner will achieve the world wide acclaim that comes with something this enormous, plus the first person to correctly guess the location of three photos will receive
your choice of an 8x10 gallery wrap or an 11x14 print!

If you've had a shoot with me before, you can choose from among the photos in your gallery - if you haven't yet had a shoot, you may save the prize until you do! 

Check out the photo below.  Guess where it was taken.  As soon as you recognize it, send me your guess by fb message or email (graham.deana@gmail.com).  I'll keep up with your correct answers! 


Here is the Week 4 photo:



Week 3 photo - here's a hint (since I fooled everyone!) . . . this was taken at an institution of higher learning that is in the SEC



Week 2 photo



Week 1 photo

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Peeling back another layer . . .

It's time for us to go a level deeper.  You must continue to know the truth about me.  I must divulge, one layer at a time, another piece of the puzzle, yet more of the total picture.  You deserve to know.

I have a shortcoming that I've never discussed, publicly or privately.  I've never shared it with my husband, I attend no group meetings to help me process this and I go through every day, pretending this is not a reality.  But, alas, it is.

Back in the day, this wasn't a problem.  I functioned at a hundred percent.  Life went along swimmingly.  Things were good.

It only shows up when I'm in public.  In my home, or in the homes of friends, I am perfectly able to function normally.  When I have to go out, though, it is my own private nightmare.  I pretend - oh, I pretend, but I'm not okay.  I go along like the rest of you, seemingly blending in with the rest of the world, and I go through the motions.

With each and every trip to a public restroom, I exit out into the world as if I have just accomplished what the rest of you have.  It's all an act, though.  I am not well.

I'm fine choosing my stall, preparing the toilet seat to keep me protected from evil germs.  I understand the flushing systems.  All of that is okay.  I enjoy the new, foamy, soap dispensers and I relish in the warm water.  I know to count slowly to twenty or to silently sing Happy Birthday to ensure that I have washed the proper length of time.  (I used to sing it aloud, but my children did not handle that with grace.)

It's at the completion of the washing routine that the problem rears its ugly head.  I watch the rest of you dash over to the touchless paper towel dispenser, wave a hand lightly at its front and then receive your prize - the paper towel.  It just comes right out for you all.  I see it every time.  I wait for you to finish.  I wait for you to leave.  I'm ashamed.  I am.



When you all are gone, and all is quiet, I'm left alone with this giant apex I shall never reach.  There I am, in the public restroom all alone.  I go confidently each time, telling myself I CAN DO THIS!  I stand there as you do, and I wave my hand across the space in front of the tiny red light.  I do it just like the rest of you - I do.

The paper towel NEVER slides quickly out, like it does for the rest of you.  It never does.  I'm defeated every time.  I grovel.  I wave.  Sometimes I look into the little red dot.  Sometimes I talk to it.  I walk away and come back quickly.  I walk away and return slowly.  I dance from side to side.  I use my hand to zoom in on the little red devil and I move it in and out.  I start over and do again what you do.  And then I repeat, again and again.

Some of you have entered the area again.  I step away.  You do your business, wash your hands and quickly, and without effort, wave lightly at your friend - and you receive your paper towel.  I wait patiently.  I start the entire routine over.  I aspire to keep my confidence; to tell myself I'm capable.  I try again.

My hands are dry now.  They've dried over time.  It's time to leave.  I'm defeated, but I will hold my head high and exit this room of doom.  You'll never know what I've been through.  I'll not show it on my face.

But, you know now.  The next time you see me, giving my all to this machine of defeat, I ask but one thing.  I've heard your suggestions; I've attempted to ape your successful moves.  I'm past all of that.  I'm too far gone.  Just give me a smile or throw an arm over my shoulder in support.  Flash your hand limply to your friend,  and take your paper towel and go.  I'll be out soon.  My hands will be dry.  I'll be all right.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

My Irish Lassie . . .





The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page.” – St. Augustine

My Irish lassie has been on my mind since the moment she flew off twelve days ago.  She's on the trip of her twelve year old lifetime, making memories she'll hold close forever; but she is a long, long way from her Mama!  My Molly Murphy is the incredibly lucky granddaughter of two people who appreciate travel as much as I do.  She is one fortunate little one.  The good thing about it, though, is that she knows that - how cool.  



“For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.” – Robert Louis Stevenson

She has emailed and skyped and texted of her adventures and we have reveled in it all.  Seeing her happy face with the verdant rolling hills of Ireland as her background is amazing, and thinking about her rejoicing at the wedding of our dear friend, Karl, is even more amazing.  This mother is a thankful one.  



“The journey not the arrival matters.” – T. S. Eliot

I'm imagining I'll be even more thankful when she is stateside, in my view, and we are laughing through the stories over Mexican food somewhere in the Atlanta area!  (That's always been a tradition in my family - if you go away somewhere far away, the part of the family who picks you up takes you for Mexican food.  Nice tradition, huh?)



“Once you have traveled, the voyage never ends, but is played out over and over again in the quiestest chambers. The mind can never break off from the journey.” – Pat Conroy

I cannot wait to hear the stories, to watch her eyes light up as she describes what she has seen.  I look forward to knowing what she now knows, to seeing the ways that her life has just gotten larger and to hearing how she describes what she now has filed away.  Travel grows a person, adds new chapters and gives a soul a new understanding of what living on this big, blue ball means - how I look forward to meeting the new parts of Molly and throwing my arms around that sweet neck I know so well!

“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one's lifetime.”  - Mark Twain, The Innocents Abroad/Roughing It








Monday, July 23, 2012

New Twist on the Monday Morning Photo - Vol. 3

This could be it, folks!  Someone could win today (or, maybe things will go on and you all can have another chance at this most exciting contest of your entire lives) - we'll see.

You know the drill - we've twisted up the old contest - over these few weeks, we're doing a bit of a "where in the world" kind of thing.  I put up the photo.  You check it out.  You guess where it was taken.  You send me your guesses (by fb message or email - graham.deana@gmail.com).  The first person to guess three photos is the winner!

Don't worry, if you're just starting today.  I'll repost the two previous photos.  And, listen up friends, I'm making it harder today!  (:


Remember, you may not recognize the spot, but someone you know might.  Show the photo to others and get some help on identifying it's location. 

The winner will achieve the world wide acclaim that comes with something this enormous, plus the first person to correctly guess the location of three photos will receive
your choice of an 8x10 gallery wrap or an 11x14 print!

If you've had a shoot with me before, you can choose from among the photos in your gallery - if you haven't yet had a shoot, you may save the prize until you do! 

Check out the photo below.  Guess where it was taken.  As soon as you recognize it, send me your guess by fb message or email (graham.deana@gmail.com).  I'll keep up with your correct answers! 


Good luck to the finest blog followers in the land!


Week 3 Photo

 Week 2 Photo


Week 1 Photo


Guess away, my friends!  I'm ready for your answers!

Thursday, July 19, 2012

A window into my soul . . .

The above photo is not trick photography, nor has it been adjusted with Photoshop.  Once, in 2006, our 'locker closet' actually looked like this.   To protect your eyes, a photo of its present condition is not being added to this blog post.



Dear Abbey,

A few questions . . .


  1. If I clean out my car better than I ever have (including tire shine, Armor All, glass cleaning, leather conditioning, vacuuming, floor mats run through cleaner twice, four tons of trash removed and even vacuuming out the trunk - which threw the trunk into a state of shock), does that help my house get cleaned?
  2. If I wash my dog, using shampoo/rinse cycle twice, in the sunshine and dry her completely, does that help my house get cleaned?
  3. If I start a new load of wash and set the dryer to dry again the clothes that are already in there, does that help my house get cleaned?
  4. If I spend time on my laptop's desktop, re-arranging, re-configuring, trashing unused icons, etc., does that get my house clean?
  5. If I make a long, detailed list of what needs to be done and then lose the list and re-make it, does that get my house clean?
  6. What about if I look at the 'organizational' boards on Pinterest?
Sincerely,

Deep in thought and clutter


Dear Deep in thought and clutter,

  1. No.
  2. No.
  3. No.
  4. No.
  5. No.
  6. No.
Best of luck.  Abbey

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Laughing and Loving on the Lake . . .


What a blast this shoot was!  

If you bring together five siblings and all of their loved ones, add a lake and a long weekend; you've got the combination of a most special occasion!  

The love was palpable, the laughs were everywhere and the Lake Oconee was the perfect background for this awesome extended family.  

Enjoy the smiles of all ages and the moments they shared. . .

  W



Monday, July 16, 2012

New Twist on the Monday Morning Mystery Photo - Vol. 2

Happy new week, my friends!  I'm glad so many of you got involved in the mystery photo contest last week!  For the next few weeks, the mystery photo contest will be a bit different.  You may start at any time - play away!

We'll run this contest over the next few Mondays - you can start anytime, as I'll repost the past week's photos on each new Monday.  The object will be to guess the location of three photos - should be fun! 

Remember, you may not recognize the spot, but someone you know might.  Show the photo to others and get some help on identifying it's location. 


The winner will achieve the world wide acclaim that comes with something this enormous, plus the first person to correctly guess the location of three photos will receive
your choice of an 8x10 gallery wrap or an 11x14 print!

If you've had a shoot with me before, you can choose from among the photos in your gallery - if you haven't yet had a shoot, you may save the prize until you do! 

Check out the photo below.  Guess where it was taken.  As soon as you recognize it, send me your guess by fb message or email (graham.deana@gmail.com).  I'll keep up with your correct answers! 



Last week's photo is added below, too.  If you're starting today, just send me your guesses for both photos.  Good luck, and have fun!




Week Two photo:


















































                                                                                             
























Week 1 photo:





Friday, July 13, 2012

List 27 . . . Who to ask - what's the meaning of life?

What is the meaning of life?  Now, that's a question!  I was thinking the other day about one of my favorite authors, Robert Fulghum, and I was reminded of one of his stories in particular.  It appears in his book, It was on Fire When I Lay Down On It.  In the story, Fulghum shares how he loves to ask folks the question . . . What's the meaning of life?  Please, please, take the time to click on this link to read the story yourself - you'll be glad you did.

Fulghum points out that most folks are quick to laugh off the question and then move along - as if no one actually wants to consider it.  But, finally, he finds someone who is willing to answer, and that answer is definitely worth the read.  It has me thinking . . . who could I ask about the meaning of life?  Whose thoughts would I most want to hear?  Hmmmmmm . . .

How about that for a list this week?  How about we name the folks we wish we could ask, "What's the meaning of life?"  This is a hard one, I know.  (For those of you who have been working on the dinner party list from a few months ago, maybe this is a good part two.)  Let's say this . . . Name ten people, living today, who you would like to hear from.  Hey, maybe some of us can actually ask!

I can't wait to hear yours!

Here are ten of the folks I'd like to ask:(As always, in no particular order - and I'm sure I'll want to add to the list after I hear your ideas!)

1.  Frances, the 104 year old friend of my grandmother, who is almost totally blind, cannot hear much, is confined to a wheel chair and laughs and smiles every time I've ever seen her.

                       





                  2.  The Dalai Lama

                                     









3.  My friend Amy's father, Scott, who grew up in an orphanage and visits there frequently to help continue what helped him.

4.  Anyone in the para-olympics.







5.  Will Ferrell












6.  An astronaut.

7.  Anyone who has visited all seven continents.

8.  Anyone who has celebrated their 75th wedding anniversary.






                                                         9.  My Dad.








10. Terry Gross, host of NPR's Fresh Air since 1975. 
 I cannot imagine anyone she hasn't interviewed!

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

The first day of a trip that began in 1985 . . .

Later today, I'll put my oldest daughter on a plane to Ireland.  She's not a very old daughter, either!  She's twelve and she (and the rest of us) struck gold on grandparents.  My folks and my daughter, Molly Murphy Graham, will board a big ole Delta plane and cross the ocean.  (It's amazing how much bigger that ocean gets when your child is about to cross it.)

Molly leaves on her trip today, though she has little knowledge that it actually started almost thirty years ago.  Let me explain . . .

My Dad and step-mother are cool.  I've said this before.  I'll say it again.  It's probably rare for children to say this of their parents, but they are cooler than me.  They've always been that way, and it's an unbelievable coo for all of us.  They do neat stuff.  They know interesting people.  They go to cool places.  You get the picture.

Back in the eighties,  they did one of those cool things they do.  I didn't think much about it, as they were always busy doing cool things.  I had no idea their little endeavor would change my life.   They went for a visit in Ireland, which is a must if you are a 'Murphy'.  They don't do things like other people, though, so they went with the FRIENDSHIP FORCE, a non-profit organization which helps folks from different parts of the world learn about other cultures through extended visits.

As luck would have it, the woman who was to be their host would have to bow out of the program because of an illness in the family.  Pop and Baba (my folks) were then placed with a young family in Dundalk.  John and Mary, and their two tiny sons, had agreed to host a Friendship Force trip, as John's mother and aunt had recently returned from their own Boston adventure with the program.  (John also has a parent who does weird and cool things like Pop and Baba - she's part of the story, too.  Just wait.)

So . . . Pop and Baba spent an amazing, lovely, fun-filled time in DUNDALK, County Louth, Ireland. At the time, they knew it to be a wonderful trip with precious new friends.  They couldn't have known then what it all meant.

What it meant was that the Murphys of Atlanta, Georgia, and all of their family and friends would forever be linked with the Quinlivans of Dundalk, Ireland.  It meant that the two families became one, our worlds got smaller.

I know there was time in my life when the Quinlivans weren't in my family, but it's hard to imagine.  I met them first a year or so after Pop and Baba's trip, when the Quinlivans (with their new baby son) came into Dublin to meet me at a hotel where I was staying on a blitz trip of the British Isles.  After that day, we were forever joined.

The Murphys of Atlanta 'friendship forcing' with the Quinlivans of Ireland was the catalyst in one of the most meaningful connections I have ever known.  It's hard to explain.  We are lucky, to be sure.

The bonding of these two families has meant multiple trips from the state of Georgia to a far away country about the size of the state of Georgia.  It has meant multiple trips to Ireland, getting to know our 'cousins' there and hours and hours and hours of laughs.  It has meant card games and dice games that couldn't be explained to outsiders, picnics of only sweets in the Irish country side and sledding in Piedmont park together on pieces of linoleum.  It has meant praying about the family in the other country and holding each other's hearts in ours when one or the other of us has been struck with sadness.

It has meant trip after trip after trip after trip to American electronic stores for the Qs to purchase the next best gadget and it has meant the moments when dear Maura, John's mother, taught me to make Irish bread late one Irish afternoon in John and Mary's kitchen.  It has meant that dear Briege, Mary's sister, is also my sister, and it has meant that I can talk her into some crazy fifteen mile walk from Dingle, in the west of Ireland, to somewhere where the bus stopped running to bring us back when we were finished.

It has meant that there was a big wedding party in Atlanta when Maura met up with and fell in love with her high school sweet heart, Seamus and they married.  It has meant that we have all traveled together, spent a week on the South Carolina coast together, cried together, talked quietly on the porch together, danced at weddings together, visited extended family together, seen the sights together, sang together, ridden subways together, boarded trains together, and been stuffed together into cars that could only be compared to the Volkswagen stuffing fad of years ago.

We are family.  It's as simple as that.  We don't talk much, we are separated by a great big ocean, but we couldn't be closer.

When I visited with the Quinlivans for the first time after an accident in England that killed my mother, John and Mary and all of the rest, were the family I needed.  I wasn't sure I would drive again in that part of the world, but John handled that for me.  On a family drive into Dublin from their home - with little discussion and a whole lot of love and trust - John pulled over, got out and rounded the car to get me out and ask me to drive.  I did.  It was okay.  See what I mean?  Family.

The Quinlivans and Company were here for my wedding, and they brought the 'gifts' to the altar for the Eucharist.  And now . . . my daughter will be with them to see their oldest son, Karl, get married.  I knew Karl and Marc and Colin when they were tiny babies and she will see them as adults.  She will be there to party with the family, meet the newest members and celebrate the love between us all.

She is in for the adventure of a lifetime.  I am thankful beyond measure.  As I write this post, I am remembering something from a couple of weeks ago.  After hearing about this trip, an acquaintance looked at me and asked, "How could you let her go so far away?"

WHAT?  WHAT?  How could I NOT let her?  How could I keep her from knowing a connection that few folks on this swirling blue and green planet will ever know?  How could I keep her from the other part of her family?

I will have a lump in my throat when she boards that plane.  I will be nervous as I watch the tiny plane on the flight-tracker radar on my computer screen.  I will miss her.  It will be a long sixteen days.
But I love her too much to allow her to miss what she is flying into - her other family.  A girl with grandparents that grant these kinds of wishes is a lucky girl.  A girl who learns about a love that spans an ocean is a lucky one.  She won't ever be the same after this trip, and I could not be happier.

Trips change us.  A weekend get-away or a stroll down a new street or a dream vacation in another land - they all live in us forever.  My Molly Murphy is about to have the first installment of a lesson I hope she'll be learning as long as she lives.  She is close to feeling things she has never felt, seeing things she has never seen and doing it all with people who couldn't love her more.

God bless parents who are cool and do out of the ordinary things and family from far away and laughter between people who adore one another.

And God bless the FORCE of FRIENDSHIP!

Safe travels, Molly, Pop and Baba.


Monday, July 9, 2012

A New Twist on the Monday Morning Mystery Photo

Happy new week, friends!  It's time to switch things up a bit on our Monday mornings together!  Let's begin something new.

We'll run this contest over the next few Mondays - you can start anytime, as I'll repost the past week's photos on each new Monday.  The object will be to guess the location of three photos - should be fun!


Remember, you may not recognize the spot, but someone you know might.  Show the photo to others and get some help on identifying it's location.

The winner will achieve the world wide acclaim that comes with something this enormous, plus the first person to correctly guess the location of three photos will receive
your choice of an 8x10 gallery wrap or an 11x14 print!


If you've had a shoot with me before, you can choose from among the photos in your gallery - if you haven't yet had a shoot, you may save the prize until you do!

Check out the photo below.  Guess where it was taken.  As soon as you recognize it, send me your guess by fb message or email (graham.deana@gmail.com).  I'll keep up with your correct answers!


You've got to play folks!  Where in the world is this photo taken?  Show your smartness and have some fun!

Friday, July 6, 2012

List 26 - the REAL reasons . . .

that my children leave empty boxes in the pantry, refrigerator and freezer.

This is the list you've been waiting for, folks.  Here I will explain why my children leave the empty boxes when they finish the last bowlful of cereal, the lone cookie or the final popsicle.  I will inform you about why you should institute this policy in your home - let you know how it will help you.

After today you won't be left wondering why children are so smart about this and you'll hope that your family can pick up the practice, as well.



My kids do not, I repeat - DO NOT - throw away empty boxes.  Never - ever.  Some might casually look at this and assume laziness as the culprit, but you'd be wrong.  It has nothing to do with laziness, nothing at all.

When one of my children finishes the last morsel in a box of some deliciousness, they aren't too lazy to walk the three feet to toss it in the trash can.  They aren't lazy at all.  They are willfully acknowledging some greater truths - truths that some just don't understand.

I used to get mad when I opened the freezer and was hit in the head by the empty popsicle box on its trajectory of death.  I would fear opening the pantry door, afraid that a convoy of empty cereal boxes would attack me, one from each shelf.  I didn't appreciate moving the three containers of no lunch meat at all to get to the block of cheese.

It's different now.  I understand.  They aren't lazy; they are part of something greater and they are only trying to help.

I hope this post can serve as an aide for you and yours on how to run a more efficient kitchen.

Good luck.

These are the REAL reasons my children leave 30 to 40 boxes, containers and bags a month in the crevices of our kitchen:


  1. If the box of those luscious (almost tasteless) fudge bars is hanging open and empty when I gaze into the freezer, I can quickly shut the door.  This allows for less cold air escape, which greatly diminishes our electricity bill, which in turn assists in our fight against global warming.
  2. The empty cereal boxes left in the pantry, tops open, plastic bag open and empty, serves as the perfect grocery list.  A quick photo with the cell phone and that part of the shopping list is complete.  Check.
  3. Fuller refrigerators run more efficiently.  Leaving empty lunch meat bags, cheese packaging and almost finished water bottles takes up more cubic space, therefore enabling our fridge to run more smoothly than yours.
  4. We all know that some times there are no popular snacks available in the home.  This can lead to children wishing for other, better, more talented parents.  If the remnants from the 'good' stuff are left around the storage areas, children are more apt to remember the wonderful things you have bought them in the past - thus giving hope for the future, as well.
  5. Number 4 can also work in reverse.  At times, parents are known to buy items not at the top of the childrens' wish lists.  If the empty wrappers and boxes are left in their spots, the shopping parent may mistakenly peruse the area, assuming that no more of such snack is needed on this trip.
  6. Things come up in life.  One never knows when an assignment might come for a school project, a boy scout badge or a Pinterest try.  Having empty containers, in all shapes and sizes, within reach is a must.  
Friends, these are but a few of the many reasons my children carry on this helpful tradition.  They are not lazy;  they are just living out their concern for others.  

My hope is that you, too, may begin such meaningful practices in your own lives.  Start this mindful  efficiency in the kitchen - your home's nucleus - and watch as the positive effects spring forth all over your home.  


You can do it.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

It's possible . . .


Last night I found out that it's possible to pull off a secret, surprise wedding.  It's fun, too.




It's possible for the bride and the groom to make the decision to forgo the original plan and opt for the real wedding of their dreams.

It's possible for them to go on a long-awaited trip to Mexico and leave the plans to family and friends . . . to know that it will all work out.

And it's possible for the two marrying to be in touch just before the service.

It might all just be magical . . .







It's possible that the mother of the bride might be sitting at a sewing machine just minutes before the ceremony and that the calm bride might be fixing her hair.



And they just might serve popcorn at the wedding!



It's possible that folks might think so much of this awesome couple that good friends open their house for the event.

And friends will be happily sitting on bales of hay as they await the wedding.

And the bride might just look like this when she catches the first glimpse of her husband to be.







And it's possible that the thankful groom might lean down to hug the father of the bride, as he brings in his daughter.








It's possible that the sun might just begin setting, glowing in the reflections in the windows, as the new day dawns on this special couple.









The bride might round the corner and throw up her hand in celebration.






And it's possible that this bride and groom might be present enough in the moment that they enjoy every minute of it.











It's possible that the love in the air might bring the bride's grandparents to the dance floor all alone and we might just all watch what long lasting love looks like.





It's possible that a bride and a groom might understand that the day is about the marriage to come and not the wedding itself.  It's possible, I know, because I was there.  

I wish Ashley and Peter the happiest of times together.  

You two are an amazing couple!


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