3 Christmas Stories

By | December 30, 2009

I swear I don’t make this stuff up.

Asheville

December 18th: Asheville, North Carolina. The promoter says to get on the plane because the show will go on come rain or snow; in their case it’s snow. About 10 inches. Now, granted I’m from Texas and don’t know too much about you cold weather creatures, as I have never shoveled snow and find it unthinkable that you’d even leave the house if flurries are in the forecast; however I know enough to listen to the weather man when he says, “Historic amounts of snowfall,” and “winter storm warning.”

To me, that means: Don’t travel, idiot.

But assured that the show was still on, we left our southern haven and flew straight into the eye of the storm. As we drove from Charlotte to Asheville I counted the wrecks. I counted the people stuck in patches of ice. I counted the skid marks that went over little hills and disappeared. And I watched unfortunate cars spin around and around and around.

And I thought, “What person in their right mind would get out in this kind of weather? What band would drive me to such idiotic measures?”

The only acceptable answer, of course, was The Beatles.

Short of that, I wouldn’t even look out the window in this kind of weather. And in my gut, I knew no one in his or her right mind would face a blizzard for us.

We turned off the highway and onto what looked like a deserted road covered in deep layers of snow. There were hand written signs on storefronts that said, “Closed because of Weather.” And the only signs of life were college kids with face muzzles and little eyeballs poking out that were pounding each other with snowballs. It was eerily deserted. Beautiful. But eerily deserted.

Sure enough, we get to the venue and over the course of the next hour, as sound techs and other venue employees call to say they can’t make the drive; the show is cancelled.

We get in the van. We go to the hotel. My gosh it was beautiful. Roaring fire. Antique pieces of art and paintings. The kind of upholstered chairs that sit about 3 feet higher than your back and are covered in a velvet that costs more than my car, and a front desk staff who wore crisp ties and would not give a room quote out loud, rather, it was scribbled down on a piece of paper. You know it’s an expensive room if they can’t even speak it.

The promoter said the hotel was behind the McDonald’s next to the Biltmore. So that is where I lead us when we came to the split in the road by Mickey D’s.

Apparently, I picked the wrong split. And as we watched the rich old white people sip their martinis by the fireplace it dawned on us… we are in the wrong hotel.

The next thing I know we are slinking out, like gypsies, and asking the valet if we can have our dirty minivan with the Florida licenses plates back. Oh- and could you help us find the other hotel. Good-bye tranquil music in the wine bar. Good-bye little butler man. Good-bye roaring fire and really expensive bed linens. Good-bye electricity.

This story ends by us trying to eat at McDonald’s only to find that it is closed because of weather. And look people, if McDonald’s is closed, you’re in trouble.

We made it to the other hotel only to find it sitting in pitch-black. No electricity. We called other hotels in town. They had no electricity. We sat in the minivan (no- Annie was not with us, thank God) and watched the gas go down and wondered, “now what?” The guys decided it would be best to drive down the mountain during the blizzard in the dark… yeah… that is what every intelligent group sporting a minivan with limited mountain driving, snow driving skills would decide to do in a blizzard. I wanted to call their mothers. Moms can call you ‘idiot’ and ‘stupid’ and get away with it. But I just had to reinforce my seat belt and wait to die with the majority vote.

By the end of the night we had been stuck and stranded; dodged at least ten jack knifed eighteen wheelers; drove through two cities with no power and two more cities with no room in the inn; and eventually I had to take my pants off on the side of the road, squat down into a puddle of snow, and go to the bathroom with no paper to use at the end.

Turns out, when it is like 11 degrees, you don’t need paper. It dries pretty fast. Freeze dry.


Albuquerque

We spent Christmas week at my parent’s house in Albuquerque. Short version? We ate at a place called The Range Café. They are known for their famous cinnamon rolls. But they came out on a plate of butter that added volume to my hips simply by sitting too close. Before I could eat it, the bread sopped up the butter and I had a spongy yellow thing on my plate.

No thank you.

I’m not the calorie-counting type girl. I want my fat and have a fierce addiction to all things baked or smothered with guacamole and queso. But a plate of butter just looks bad. So I loaded up on their tortillas, which were to die for, and ate my lard in a more respectable manner.

Rewind. As the five of us (mom, dad, Annie, Ryan, yours truly) found our table and began to look at the menus an older couple who had been eyeballing us came by and said, “Oh how sweet. You’re using menus! You must be new in town.”

As if Albuquerque were a small town where everyone still knows everyone and they can all sniff out the outsiders. They proceeded to ask where we were from, what we were doing in town, and asked if we would like menu suggestions.

I wanted to hire this lady to bring me around town. Introduce me to Joe the postman and Gill the guy at the coffee shop and help me find the place with the hottest green chili enchiladas.

It got me thinking… I should be a hometown tour guide. You can hire me for the day and I will help you find the best bar-b-que, Tex-Mex, and show you where to stand if you want to peek in on Cowboys practice. This could be lucrative.

The week, well the short version, funneled through a haze of grandchild starved grandparents and lots of food. Oh- and one of my favorite things- a knock and run cookie dropping at the front door. I thought it was so sweet that someone from my parent’s new home would secretly drop cookies off for them, but when I opened the card; I found they were for me! From ‘secret’ fans! Secret fans? That’s the coolest thing ever! Secret fans who bring out cookies and chocolates and candies and then run so you don’t even have to make small talk and be polite but you can just go back into your blankets and Christmas tree and eat your worries and joys away???

I decided right then and there… I like these people. I can do Albuquerque.


Christmas Eve Day

We say good-bye to mom and dad, who prefer to only function in the role as grandma and grandpa these days, and hop onto the flight back to Dallas. The flight leaves an hour and a half behind schedule. So in the meant time, I volunteer to hold an American flag with the group of patriots who have formed a flag tunnel for the returning service men to walk through. Ryan says I am a dork. I hold my flag straight up and down like they tell me to with a serious face and say “welcome home” and cry with all the families who are getting someone back for Christmas.

It’s almost time to board. I buy a caramel apple from my favorite little Santa Fe candy store, Senor Murphy’s. We get on the plane ready to come home. The flight lasts two hours longer than it was supposed to. We circled over Dallas until I felt dizzy.

And now for the very abridged version: we land. It is snowing. The wind is blowing 30 mph and it is freezing. We hear the “winter storm warning” on the radio station, but we know that Ryan’s parents are waiting for us an hour away all by themselves on Christmas eve. We go home, take turns running in the house to switch out clothes and grab presents, we let Annie sleep, we start the drive from Dallas to Ft. Worth.

Remember Asheville? Ok, multiply it. But only because Texans really suck at driving in snow and ice. We get to the final major interchange before the highways merge and well…

Let’s stop right there.

Considering our bad luck this year: stolen van, trailer, and all of our band gear, head on collision with a tree that totaled the van, cancelled shows, shingles, blown out backs, sprained ankle on stage that leaves me on crutches for weeks, gout, three snow storms in a week… well… you know the ending.

Highway is closed. Access roads are war zones. And the one side road that all of us idiots decide to try and conquer is a country farm road that literally looks like it’s been hit with a hail storm of cars. Cars stranded everywhere. Annie is crying. We have been traveling for over ten hours now. And we are slipping all over the place. There is no way to get to the in-laws but there is no way to go home either. We’re stuck.

We’re going to spend Annie’s first Christmas in a motel.

And I asked myself the question I have asked all year… what kind of mother am I? My kid’s first Christmas morning is gonna be in a motel?

But then we saw a young guy waving his hands and running towards us. He’s out of breath and visibly nervous.

“Thanks for stopping I’ve been waiving down people and nobody will stop. Can you please take my girlfriend and our two-week-old daughter with you? They are in the car, we’re stuck, almost out of gas so we have the heater off and they’re freezing.”

So baby April and baby Anniston snuggled in the backseat together and I tried to feed both of them. Both crying, tired little babies.

We tried to get the mom and her baby home, less than a mile up the street, and simply couldn’t do it. We turned around and met back with the young guy and told him to hop in and we could all go to the motel together. He said, “Thanks but we only have five dollars. Thanks for trying to help. We’ll just stick it out.”

Stick it out till what? Till when? No way. Out of the question. He jumped in and sat in the front seat on his girlfriends lap. They reeked of cigarette smoke. The car was dark and packed and tense (we were still trying to get unstuck from the u-turn) and I thought…

Well this is nice and messy.

The mom said, “We’ve never met people like you. You don’t even know us.”

My response, “Anybody would do this for you. We don’t really have the money either, but we know a lot of people who do. And we trust that God will provide it for both of us. Plus that little baby girl of yours needs a lovely bed for her first Christmas Eve!”

The dad helped us unload the babies and luggage and I loaded them down with cookies that were meant for the family (but it was the only gift I had, and you have to give a gift J). Before we checked out of the hotel, someone who had been following my mother-in-law’s facebook telling about our travel journey had called and paid for both rooms. Thank you. You know who you are.

And that’s where we spent Christmas morning in all its messy glory.

It is messy. It was messy. It’s going to be messy. But it’s exactly where we are ALL called to be. We are not saints because we do what God has asked us, required of us, and impassioned us to do… we are just people who are trying to live the way Jesus did. In the mess.

And sometimes that means you are stuck in a snowstorm or two.

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25 Comments

Jerry on December 30, 2009 at 8:49 pm.

Wow, Jenny. I'm a blurker, but I had to respond to this one. I was the DJ on the air at 106.9 The Light in Asheville, encouraging people to go to your show. (That was before the NC State Patrol) told people to stay put. I sure wish I had known your predicament. At the least we could have put you up at the radio station, we're we can generate our own power. No butler, but free snacks and soda pop. :) For the record, if you are ever in western North Carolina again, you have friends that will more than willingly put you up somewhere with power and hot meals. You can reach me at the station 828-285-8477. I can't believe you drove back down the mountain.

That said, you may never come back to NC again. They say that was a 30-year-storm, so AR should be good to visit Asheville from now until 2039.

Blessings and Happy New Year!

Jerry

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Caroline on December 30, 2009 at 11:11 pm.

Yeah, the snow was crazy! I live in the mountainous (is that a word?) part of NC (a little over 1 or 2 hours from Asheville) and we got hit pretty hard. 8 inches fell at our house, and it was the most snow we had seen in years! I'm just really glad you were all safe, because I know there were SO many accidents around where I live, not to mention the mountains where you all were driving. I hope you and your family had a very wonderful Christmas, and I wish you all a super New Year!!! :)

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Scot on December 31, 2009 at 1:07 am.

You have some great adventures and stories on your tours. Thank you for sharing them. However, now I am very hungry for some good cinnamon roll…

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vanityofvanities on December 31, 2009 at 1:30 am.

I know EXACTLY the McDonald's you're talking about! It's pretty fancy. My husband and I went to the Biltmore once when he was on a rotation in Tennessee.

I'm glad you are all safe, and I'm glad Jesus put you in the snowstorm so that you could show some love to people who needed it. God bless you!

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the bowlin family on December 31, 2009 at 2:18 am.

oh my goodness, what a story, what an experience!! your life never has a dull moment, even though i know you hope for a few. :) glad you are all okay and now you have a memorable christmas to tell annie about one day soon!! love y'all!!

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Kahla on December 31, 2009 at 2:42 am.

May not have been what you planned, but it sounds as if it worked out pretty well.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

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Rebecca on December 31, 2009 at 4:21 am.

wow – never a dull moment for you, jenny! ;) i'm so happy that some good came out of such a scary and "messy" turn of events on christmas eve. i love seeing the body of Christ come together in the coolest ways.

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Keith Chilton on December 31, 2009 at 4:36 am.

Glad you're safe. :) Thanks for sharing all these stories. You're still standing after all of it. That's how I look at it. Life is adventurous that's for sure. :) God bless you in 2010!

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Color [Me] Happy on December 31, 2009 at 4:38 am.

I all it's messy best. I totally love that! God sure does have a plan for us. They say to make God laugh, follow your own plan. But to make God cry, follow his. God bless you and your lil family!

smiles…
Mandy

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Lisa on December 31, 2009 at 4:54 am.

You're right. You couldn't make that stuff up. Brings to mind the saying, "what doesn't kill you, makes you stronger." You could beat up Popeye with all you've been through!
Praying with you that this next year is a little easier.

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Josh Wax on December 31, 2009 at 2:18 pm.

You and Ryan are beautiful people and an amazing inspiration.

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michelle on December 31, 2009 at 4:56 pm.

I'm in tears, what a wonderful way to spend Christmas. Bless you and your husband and little Annie!

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maynelaw on December 31, 2009 at 6:02 pm.

Paul said "I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us." Rom 8:18

So many glimmers of the glory of God shine through what you do. Thanks for living it out and sharing this way.

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Kayla on December 31, 2009 at 11:55 pm.

Jenny, your generosity in the nitty gritty reminded me to have a GIVING heart this year… you've given me a New Year's Resolution. You sacrificed time, energy, and more for "the least of these" and it reminds me so much of the Christmas story… there was no room at the inn, so they made room in the stables. You made room in the car… God will bless more people than you can count… you have touched my heart and I thank you for doing what He has asked of you.

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SavedByGrace on January 1, 2010 at 12:20 am.

Lol, I like how Ryan called you a dork ;)
Hope your new years is just as interesting (but in a good way!!!) as your Christmas!
Keep doing what you're doing!!! <3

p.s. I cant believe MCDONALDS was closed!! that must have been bad xD

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whatmegmakes.com on January 1, 2010 at 5:17 am.

Wow, three stories that left me with just "wow."

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Anonymous on January 2, 2010 at 8:19 pm.

Hi Jenny! I confess that I am a blurker (and have been for almost a year now! :o ) and I honestly don't have any good excuses for why I haven't commented before because I love reading your blog. Your writing is honest, heartfelt, or downright funny and your faith in God is apparent. I am a teenage girl and hearing about your trust in God at all times and the ways that He is working in your life really inspire me. In this post I love that your response (to the woman in the final story) mentioned that you trusted God to provide for both of you and then later in the entry we see that He did provide through someone paying for your hotel rooms. Even when I don't know how something could possibly workout, it makes me joyful to know that I can trust God to take care of it in His own way and time.

Your blog and your music always give me something to think about and help me grow in my relationship with God, so thank you for sharing your words with the rest of us :) Happy New Year!
-Michaela

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athankfulstranger on January 2, 2010 at 9:14 pm.

Hi Jenny! Your stories and lyrics are such an inspiration to me!NEVER stop sharing them. I'm a somewhat new believer and my parents didn't exactly 100% support my decision. Therefore I clung to my youth minister's wife for support and advice about my new journey. (She is completely awesome, introduced me to your music, and you remind me of her a lot.) A couple of months ago something completely tragic happened and her and her husband had to move away, and I haven't been able to talk to her. So what did I do? I prayed…A LOT and read the Bible…A LOT. And in this crazy way God told me to check out the AR website where I got addicted to your blogs. Anyways Jenny, the point of this story is not for me to complain. Instead, I hope it encourage you to, well basically, keep encouraging. God is using you in SO many ways to help more than the people you meet on the side of the road. So thanks Jenny :) and keep on blogging.

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Saving_Grace on January 3, 2010 at 2:27 am.

hey girl…if only i knew i would've made you guys come to my house!!! i'm only like…geeze 45 minutes or so away from asheville?? you're always welcome here!!!

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Amber on January 3, 2010 at 2:31 am.

This is such an amazing Christmas story. You truly understood the reason for the season. You helped out a young couple and their sweet child when you were having a rough time already! The last story really moved me and I appreciate you writing it for all us to read.

It is such an amazing tale, and I hope you tell your future audiences about what happend.

Keep being awesome and I hope you have an amazing 2010!!

Amber

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andrea on January 3, 2010 at 7:46 pm.

Well said!!

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Casi on January 4, 2010 at 9:22 pm.

Thank you for sharing your stories. I love hearing stories of practical ways to answer the question "What does God expect of us?"
Glad you are safe!

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Tiffany Dawn on January 5, 2010 at 3:12 pm.

I love how God provided for all of you guys at the Motel. I pray that the couple is forever changed by God's love through you and your faith in Him and His provision!

Thanks for sharing Jenny!!

Tiffany Hines

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~Cara Lynn~ on January 5, 2010 at 4:30 pm.

You my friend are a blessing….god had a plan for you, and that couple….thanks for sharing your story for all of us to read :-) Cara in Idaho

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