The day I got married, one of my closest friends looked me in the eye and said "God has many wild and wonderful things ahead for you and Jeremy."

Being called mom by 7 kids is definitely wild. Each day I look for the wonder in it all...and give thanks.

Partnering with my husband in life, parenting, work and serving is definitely wonderful. He is my favorite.



Saturday, October 25, 2025

The Bread Bandit


Hiccup loves bread with a devotion that borders on obsession. Now and then I catch him on patrol—his nails clicking purposefully against the tile as he makes his rounds through the kitchen and pantry. His head cranes upward, neck stretched taut, nose twitching as he inventories the countertops and island with the focused intensity of a jewel thief casing a mansion. Those dark, intelligent eyes sweep across every surface, cataloging what prizes might wait unattended.

He's memorized the arsenal. He knows exactly what the orange and clear packaging looks like for King's Hawaiian Original Sweet Rolls—that bright, unmistakable beacon of golden, pillowy sweetness. He knows that Sister Schubert's Rolls come in a metal tin and clear package with green print, and he can identify the metallic glint from across the room. He can spot any loaf of bread in any packaging if it's left out on a countertop or even placed in the pantry but not high enough in the breadbasket. White bread. Wheat. Sourdough. It doesn't matter. If it contains carbohydrates and yeast, Hiccup has logged it in his mental database. 

Last summer he stole the last of Salty Bee's Cookie Cake while we were at church. The white box centered on the kitchen table, with the kitchen chairs placed like guards, was not enough to keep him out. 



Last night he discovered what’s inside the square cardboard box with black print….pizza.


The last time Savannah took him to the vet for his checkup, she texted me asking what food Hiccup eats, as Dr. Cate always asks what his current dog food is. I answered, "bread" because the boy is naughty. He loves bread with a kind of passion that makes him willing to risk it all.

When someone forgets to put the bread up high enough where he can't get to it—or if in a hurry we leave it out on the island, still warm from the grocery store—Hiccup capitalizes on the opportunity with the efficiency of a seasoned operative. I am sure if he knew how to dispose of the evidence he would try to hide it, maybe bury the packaging in the backyard or slide it behind the couch. But because he is a dog and he doesn't possess opposable thumbs or understand the concept of garbage disposal, we always find the evidence. We find shredded plastic bags torn into ribbons, cardboard mutilated beyond recognition, or metal tins scattered across the kennel floor like the aftermath of a minor explosion. Sometimes there are teeth marks punctured through the packaging. Other times, the bags look like they've been through a paper shredder, reduced to confetti-sized pieces that cling to the blankets with static.

We know Hiccup is not the only guilty one. He is the one to pull it nonchalantly from the countertop—standing on his hind legs, stretching every vertebra in his spine, hooking the package with one careful paw and dragging it toward the edge until gravity does the rest. But once it gets to the kennel, once the prize has been secured and the plastic ripped open to reveal the soft, fragrant treasures inside, Cocoa enjoys the winnings along with him. How do we know? She looks just as guilty when we arrive home. She may hide in the back corner of the kennel, pressed against the metal bars as if trying to phase through them, or perched on the couch with her body coiled so tight she's practically vibrating. She won't move from her curled up position, won't uncurl even slightly. Her gaze will be set on some other place in the room—the wall, the window, anywhere but our faces—with a quick side-eye glance toward us to gauge the look on our faces, to measure the magnitude of the disappointment. Her nose is always tilted downward, tucked almost between her paws, and she will continue to look away and glance back and forth until it becomes unbearable for her to sit through the guilt. Her ears flatten against her skull. Sometimes she trembles slightly, not from cold but from the sheer weight of her conscience.

Hiccup shows some guilt but not an ounce of remorse. His response is often one of making sure we still love him even though he is naughty, as if his charm and affection might somehow rewind time or erase the crime scene in the kennel.

He approaches with the knob of his tail wagging low and hesitant, head dipped but eyes bright, and seeks to give and receive affection. He leans his warm body against my legs, pressing his weight into me, pretending the shredded bread packaging is completely invisible in his kennel, as if by ignoring it he can will it out of existence. He'll lick my hand, nuzzle under my palm, his fur soft and his breath—predictably—smelling like Hawaiian rolls.



They are supposed to be on a diet. I carefully portion out their daily scoops of dog food with the precision of a pharmacist, measuring exact amounts, and monitor who eats what and at what time of the day. I keep schedules. But the whole plan crumbles into uselessness when bread gets left out. All my careful calculations dissolve the moment Hiccup spots that orange package on the counter, and I'm left standing in the kitchen, holding empty plastic shreds in my hands, wondering how a dog can look so innocent while being so thoroughly, unrepentantly guilty.