Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Christmas Lights!

A couple weekends ago we decided to put up the Christmas lights on our house. It is just supposed to get colder here so we figured we, I mean Taylor :), would go ahead and put them up. We just turned them on Monday night and I just love them!


Taylor had to get up on the roof! I never realized how steep the roof was until he was up there.


There is something about coming home to lights that just makes me happy!


I can't believe it's almost December! Christmas will be here before we know it :)

Monday, November 28, 2011

Thanksgiving Weekend

Hope y'all had a great start to the week! So last Wednesday we got all packed up and headed to Arkansas for Thanksgiving. We were both so excited to get away from CU for a little bit and spend time with family. We go to AR around 8:30 Wednesday night and headed to Copeland's for dinner. Taylor has been craving that for awhile so he was very excited!

Thursday was a nice and relaxing day. We slept in, had a yummy breakfast, and then stuffed ourselves all afternoon with turkey, stuffing, sweet potato casserole, and all those delicious Thanksgiving staples! Julia baked an apple pie from scratch and it was soooo good. I just love apple pie at Thanksgiving.

Before baking...


After!


That night we started working on a 1000 piece puzzle. Before...


Finished!


Friday we woke up and got ready to watch the Arkansas game. I've never gone Black Friday shopping, but I did order some new tights from Gap. They should be here soon and I'm so excited. This was Taylor's main position throughout the game...


Julia and I ran to Dillard's and Old Navy at the beginning of the game, so we missed the first couple touchdowns Arkansas scored, and then when we got back everything kind of went downhill. Ha! I think we might have jinxed them :)


After the game, we headed to Little Rock to watch Taylor's cousin play in his last high school football game. I have not been to a high school football game in over 4 years so it was fun! Saturday Susan, Julia, and I went to Taylor's cousin Kathryn's baby shower. It was so much fun and she got a lot of really great stuff. After the shower, we just spent the rest of Saturday hanging out with family and relaxing.

Sunday we made the 8 hour drive back to CU and got in around 6 after being delayed in traffic for almost an hour. It was such a great weekend and we are so thankful to have wonderful family to spend each holiday with!
Hope you had a wonderful holiday weekend!

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving!

Happy Thanksgiving! To celebrate here is one of my favorite scenes from one of the Friends Thanksgiving episodes...




I hope you are enjoying time with family and remembering all that we have to be thankful for!

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Fall...

I was looking through our engagement photos the other day while it was around 50 degrees outside and a beautiful sunny day, and it just made me love fall! So I thought I would share some of our fun fall engagement pictures...



I love the lighting behind this one!


I think this one is funny!


I can hardly believe it was around 2 years ago when these were taken! Wow, how time flies. Hope you are enjoying fall as well :)

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Trick or Treat

I know this is really late, but oh well...

I was so excited this Halloween to actually have trick or treaters since we are in the house! Last year, in our apartment, I had a huge bowl of candy ready and we had a total of ZERO trick or treaters. It was such a bummer :( I could hardly believe it! This year I was a little more positive we would have at least a few kids stop by and yes we did!


Our official city trick or treating time was 6-8pm and by about 7pm I thought we were going to run out of candy! We had around 30 or so kids stop by the house and it was so much fun. There were kids of all ages (even a 15 year old girl who I seriously thought about not giving candy to) and all kinds of costumes! This one little girl was dressed as a ladybug and was just adorable. Taylor and I were talking that night about how our neighborhood is perfect for trick or treating since the houses are so close together, you can hit a lot of houses in a really short amount of time! Ha.

We also went over to Laine and Andrew's that night and made caramel apples and watched a Harry Potter movie to celebrate Halloween. Hope you all had a fun Halloween as well!

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Taylor's Blog

Hi there! Sorry for being MIA lately. Life and my laziness just got in the way of blogging. I am working on a few posts of what we have been up to lately, but I thought I would share a blog post Taylor did recently for our local Seminary. One of the professors at the Seminary is our small group leader and he asked Taylor to write a post for their blog about his research and how that relates to his faith. I thought Taylor did a great job with the blog so here it is...

"Have you ever exchanged your money for a different currency? You give a person your money, only to receive less in a different currency. Seems inefficient, right? To me, it seems that what you give, you ought to receive with no loss. A similar scenario happens to you every day. It happens every time you plug in your power cord for your hair dryer or electric razor. You pay for the energy supplied to the wire, but not all of that energy goes to your machine. Some of it goes to heating up the conducting wires that carry the energy, but you aren’t using that heat. It’s just energy lost. But, there is hope. One hundred years ago, Heike Kamerlingh Onnes discovered that at extremely low temperatures, some materials don’t lose energy to this heating. In fact, every bit of the energy you put in is converted into current. This new state of matter is called superconductivity. There is a catch, though. These temperatures are extremely cold. The highest temperature to date that a material becomes superconducting at normal pressure is -216 degree Fahrenheit. Yes, you read that correctly. It’s negative and crazy cold.

Let me take you through a very ideal experiment to that illustrates what happens with this type of material. Take a certain metal you know that is superconducting. In your lab, you have a fancy refrigerator that can get to these cold temperatures and a device that measures the heat that is lost. You turn on the refrigerator and you tell it to start cooling down to its lowest temperature. Meanwhile, you constantly measure this heat. The heat is continuously dropping as the temperature is dropping, but it is still not zero. All of a sudden, at a certain critical temperature, the heat discontinuously dropped from a number, say 25, to 0. It didn’t hit 24 or 13 or 9. It went from 25 to 0. Now, we say it’s a superconductor.

You can imagine the potential applications for superconductors. If we could find materials that become superconducting at normal temperatures, things would radically change. The energy crisis we currently face may cease to exist. Transformers along the road that solely boost the energy in the cables would be unnecessary. Your electricity bills would be less.
This is what I study in the Physics Department at the University of Illinois. I am trying to understand why some materials become superconducting at these “higher” temperatures. If we can understand why, then our hope is that the answer would lead us to discover or make materials that are superconducting at normal temperatures.

However, my ultimate motivation for studying this phenomenon is not so that we can get more bang for our buck. At the risk of sounding cheesy, I study this phenomenon because I believe it’s my calling at this stage of life. In fact, I realized my calling as a scientist when I was working on a paper for a religion class. For that paper, I spent many hours of research gathering evidence to support my belief that science and theology are not in contradiction regarding creation. My calling didn’t come from an audible voice or a billboard sign. No, it was from hours of intense and honest reading of God’s word.

In Matthew 22, Jesus says that one of the two greatest commandments is to “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.” In order to love God, we must know God. I believe we come to know God when He reveals Himself through His Word, the Holy Spirit, visions, dreams, fellow Christians, prayer, and even His creation. By studying God’s creation, which includes materials that become superconducting, I can learn of God’s attributes. I know you may think this is a bit of a stretch, but let me explain this a little more. The way these materials behave is governed by laws, laws that God has set in place. When I look under a microscope or study light scattered from these materials, I may not directly see God, but what I do see is God’s hand at work. He controls every electron. I believe He cares and is involved in these small events that happen on the microscopic scale. How much more, then, does He care about what happens on the macroscopic scale, the things that we experience and see?

This provides a Godly calling for my work as a scientist. The more I learn about the universe and its workings, the more I realize how majestic and awesome He has made it. Paul says in Romans 1:20 that humans cannot help but see “God’s invisible qualities” in his creation. Science, then, enables me to understand more about God and love Him with all of my heart, soul, and mind."

Have a great week!