An Oklahoma City Holiday

OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo This year we made our way to Oklahoma City for the Christmas Holiday. We hadn’t visited for over a year, and the last time we were there for Christmas was when Isaac and I shocked everyone with our Elopement just days before Christmas proper. We are a spontaneous and fun-loving couple, and that’s the kind of thing we do; but as we age, we try to take a more regulated and mature path to fulfillment.

OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo Oklahoma hasn’t changed dramatically since our last visit. We were able to catch up with a few people, one of whom happens to be my best friend from Alaska; the wonderful Jax Harmon. They were recently sent to Fort Sill in Oklahoma, lucky me! We spent a day at the Science Museum where our kids all happily ran wild, and we were able to trail along behind them, chatting about all the new and old things going on in our lives. It was wonderful, and despite my laryngitis, the time spent with family-friends was energizing. OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo

What a great reunion. Sister-in-law Anna was recently accepted to Medical School (OU, Boomer Sooner!), Ethan got a new kidney and is enjoying all the freedom that good health brings, all the siblings were together for the first time in forever, and Pop-pop and Cece got to enjoy Christmas morning with Margot and Woods. So much to celebrate and rejoice in. I’m glad to be a part of this family, and to have honorary family like the Harmons to share life with. Peace to all in the new year!OKC Holiday | Yea Yea Pueblo

Oklahoma City, OK

Touring a metro area that I called home for nearly a decade seemed a little surreal to me, especially with a growing baby bump and a toddler in tow. I commuted back and forth from the City to Norman, 70 miles a day at my claims adjuster job in what I can only refer to as my ‘old life’.

Oklahoma City Memorial

 

Oklahoma City, OK

Oklahoma City MemorialI worked hard. I still work hard, but I don’t have a paycheck to reflect that every two weeks. Visiting OKC reminded me of the career and young adult life I left behind a couple of years ago. I appreciated the work experience I gained, but I’m happy as an entrepreneur and housewife. On days that I’m bored and cooped up in our on-post housing in Alaska, I remind myself that it could be worse — I could be sitting in my cubicle in OKC, dealing with unhappy insureds, with only a long commute home and a cold meal to look forward to. I spent those days counting down until the weekend when I could have brunch with friends, or until the next payday. Now I’m watching Margot grow up little by little everyday while her little brother tosses and turns in my belly. It’s been so much more rewarding than the insurance workflow I was previously overwhelmed by.

It seems that even while I’ve been away, making major changes in my life over the last two years, Oklahoma has remained the same. Sure, there are a few I-35 improvements, new restaurants, and expanding suburbs, but the landscape hasn’t changed much overall. The scars from the Oklahoma City Bombing remain, although healed in part by a spectacular memorial site. The University of Oklahoma in Norman retains its Cherokee Gothic integrity, even while enduring its decadent student housing expansion. And the downtown area is still under construction — a metropolitan anomaly that is not unique to Oklahoma.

Oklahoma City Memorial

Oklahoma City Memorial Oklahoma City MemorialThe Arts Festival was more of a people-watching event for me, since Oklahomans wore their Sunday best everywhere. Where were the Chacos? Where were the zip-away hiking pants and gawky gardening hats that I’m used to seeing in the Pacific Northwest? It was a deviation from my new norm, to say the least.

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Okahoma City Zoo 095A9888 095A0059It only took 12 years since moving to, and moving away from Oklahoma to finally visit the OKC Zoo. I guess I was just waiting until I had a toddler of my own to make it more fun. Margot enjoyed waving and playing peek-a-boo with the animals in their exhibits. It was a fairly one-sided engagement for her, since the animals didn’t wave back. It was a sensory treat for her.

Oklahoma City ZooMargot got an even better look at the animals near her Great-uncle Sam’s house on the outskirts of Oklahoma City. She ‘helped’ feed the goats, horse and donkey that lived on farms close by. Outside of the zoo, she’s saw her farm animal friends from books in real life. She gleefully waved to them as well.

Traveling with a one-year-old went better than expected; she kept the screaming to a minimum onboard the aircrafts, and back on solid ground, she happily played ‘chase’ and ‘peek-a-boo’ with her Aunts and Grandparents — she even got to meet the Great-aunts who have welcomed her so warmly since her birth. I speculate she is receiving special treatment from Isaac’s maternal side of the family because Margot is the first great-grandchild. She is the changing of the guard, so to speak.

My side of the family is ever-booming in population, so much so that I have aunts and uncles younger than me, and my grandparents have grandchildren older than me. The Sanchez and Shamblin generations know no cyclical bounds in my neck of the family tree.

Oklahoma City, OK 095A0272 Oklahoma City, OK

Visiting to the lower-48 was totally necessary, really fun, and a little too short lived. Next time we’re up for traveling again, we may not be ‘up’ for traveling again! Woodrow Paul will be here, yay!, and Margot will be old enough for us to purchase her plane ticket…grumble.

Oh, looks like you caught that — Woody is what we’re naming our boy. We think it embodies his Okie roots well, while still nodding dutifully to his wooded Alaskan birthplace. We’ll meet our Creole-Mexican-Alaskan baby boy in September, when the leaves turn amber, and the air turns cold once again. Until then, we’ll stick close to Fairbanks.

Loose Ends


Things have been pretty hectic around here lately. I’ve been scrambling to make time to see each of my friends before I take off for the west coast. The hardest part of moving out of state has to be saying goodbye to the college friends I’ve made since moving to Norman, OK back in 2004. My, how things change.

Brunches with buddies have been frequent, and conversations about the dorm days have been prevalent. I’ve also done some lazy Saturday shopping with my friend Jordan (psst! check out my new picnic basket). This week I’ll also be saying goodbye to my co-workers and office life. When does this whole transition thing get easy?

Anyways, I better get back to packing. I’ve got one week left in the great state of Oklahoma. Cheers!