I’ve been trying to write every week, every other if I can’t muster weekly so two Mondays ago was my deadline…but…
On that particular Monday I got home at 2:30 am and into bed at 3:30 so…needless to say, it didn’t go as planned.
What was I doing until all hours of the night on a Sunday turned Monday morning? Turns out, this lady can still party.
And by party I mean pull a double red-eye and still be at least somewhat on point for the week ahead.

You see, we sent ourselves to The Vortex and now I find myself forever changed.
The weekend was a celebration of love and partnership and honesty. It brought together a family and solidified their bond but it also did something I didn’t expect: it brought together my family.

Staring down the upcoming two red eye flights, I was optimistic in the sense that I told myself “This may suck, but you can do it”.
Positivity embodied.
By “this” I meant the risky flight times (hello, 10 pm takeoff!), not the weekend itself but I was a little wary for how the “this” might trickle into the rest of the weekend. How would a (likely) mostly sleepless night set us up for a whirlwind weekend? We would see.

The travel gods smiled upon us that weekend. Ollie slept most of the flight which was – thank all the gods – a direct flight. The Chief and I somehow both found humor in the seemingly endless search for our rental car at 4 am as well as the epic journey required to find a bathroom down the mile long hallways of the Phoenix airport rental area. We took turns being overwhelmed by the city things we still aren’t used to like parking and many-laned freeways and supported the other in their moments of panic. It was a give and take, unlike some of our past travels.

Ollie did amazingly (that truth deserves its own line).

The weekend was spent surrounded by friends from all across the states, friends we don’t often get to see. There was delicious food, wonderful music, heartfelt healing moments, beauty and dramatic landscapes everywhere, and
so
much
laughter.

It was such a dang treat.
But the sweetest part was the afterglow.
After the dust of another red eye (where Ollie took off his seatbelt once the sign had said he was allowed to and simply plopped himself down on the floor and fell asleep) and arriving at 2:30, getting hyped up by being welcomed home by a northern lights show and finally falling back to sleep around 3:30 settled, the weekend sunk in.
Weddings always give me the feels but this one was something else. I left feeling so incredibly grateful. For my partner. For our son. For our friends. For life.

Being around our friends and their younger and older children reminded me of how tender the baby years were and how fast approaching the kid years are.

Even a year ago, our Ollie looked so much more like a babe and now, he’s on his way to big kid status. It took me out of the haze that can be the constant boundary setting of being the parent of a 3-year old and into the fun of it.

Look at how he views the world! How he named the trampoline park the “jumpoline park”, how he always asks his girl friends if they would like to hold hands (and respects when they say “no”).

How tender he is when a friend gets hurt. How much he loves to dance.

This soul before me is magic, if I can simply be here to witness it and join it and remember…I’m magic too.
So are you.
I am so grateful for the reset the Vortex (named as such because two red eyes does feel like a vortex and Sedona, where we were, is known for her vortex effect) provided. For the perspective. For the examples I saw watching my beautiful friends as marvelous and inspiring parents. For the beauty I saw. For the moments shared. And for the reset in perspective.

Thank you.
With love,
From Alaska

