Posted on February 22, 2012
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Submitted by Susan.
Today’s story is a long one… but a GREAT read!! Its a story of perseverence, faithfulness, patience and reward! I had the privelege of photographing this couple’s wedding back in 2007 and can attest to the strength of their bond and love. Truly beautiful! Enjoy!
“A New Thing”
(based off of Isaiah 43:18-19)
“But forget all that — it is nothing compared to what I am going to do. For I am about to do something new. See, I have already begun! Do you not see it? I will make a pathway through the wilderness. I will create rivers in the dry wasteland.”
As a first generation American born Indian, I never dreamed of marrying a non-Indian. It’s not a common thing. No one in my family has ever done it. But with respect to me, the good Lord would have it differently. It’s so hard to keep this story short and succinct, because I could literally write a book detailing the wonderful miracle of joining Susan Kurikeshu to one Greg Smith.
***
Greg and I met in a college ministry group at the University of Maryland in the spring of 2003. It was the first kick-off meeting of the semester, and I had been invited to attend. (I was born and raised in a Christian home, but it never occurred to me to join a Christian group on campus until my third year of college!). After the meeting that evening, Greg, a student leader in the group, walked up to me and we hit it off instantaneously — him being the gregarious person he is, was able to navigate around my timidity and got me talking like we had been friends for years. And it truly felt like we were longtime friends. During that conversation we learned that we lived a mile from each other for 10 years of our lives, went to brother/sister Catholic high schools, and went to the same Baltimore campus for our first semester of college before transferring to the same school which we were currently in.
He walked away from our meeting that night thinking, “Wow, I could marry that girl.” I walked away from our meeting that night thinking, “Wow, he’s like the boy-next-door-friend I never had.” You see, it never occurred to me to consider a non-Indian guy –- it wasn’t part of my upbringing or culture, so being “just friends” was as far as my mind would go. Plus, I had always wanted a “boy-next-door-friend.” ?
Over the next 6 months, our friendship blossomed into something really special -– it’s so hard to explain, but the words that come to mind are: pure, childlike, adventurous, and FUN! We were like kids who loved exploring together. Our friends thought it pretty amusing. The whole time we kept our liking for each other a secret. Although it wasn’t much of a secret to our friends because our faces always lit up whenever we saw each other on group outings, or bumped into each other on campus, or had an occasional lunch together at the campus co-op — we just loved being in each other’s company. But we never talked about our feelings for one another -– I for one would never have said anything due to my family background, and for some reason I was doubtful that he would say anything either. I guess I thought it would just be a fun season in college to have such a dear friend.
It was that summer that I received an email from Greg telling me that he had feelings for me, and that he couldn’t go on hiding it from me if we were to be friends. I was shocked that the truth had finally come out, but realized that it probably had to come out eventually. The first person I told was my sister -– she started crying and asked, “Why are you doing this to us???” She knew how hard it would be on my parents if they found out.
And hard it was.
The next 4 years would be a journey that my family, myself, and Greg never thought we’d be on. My parents — immigrants from India — never imagined that their daughter would be interested in an American boy. It was out of the question! They were already looking for good Indian boys to marry their eldest daughter. When they found out about Greg they didn’t even want to discuss the idea. In all their passion, they just said, “NO!”
I never gave up. Because Greg and I were part of the same ministry and part of the same group of friends, it was hard not to see each other even if my parents didn’t want us to. Trying to explain to Greg about my family background was also hard because entering into a relationship seemed so simple to him, but it wasn’t. For me, culture and family play a heavy hand in who I am.
My parents — God fearing folk – had some time to think about the “predicament” their daughter was in. While their minds wanted to say “NO!”, they knew they couldn’t unless God said “no.” So they ended up saying they would pray about the situation. They never gave me the “yes” I wanted so badly to hear, but they never again gave me the emphatic “NO!”
It was a journey of truly dying to what I wanted most — to be married to my best friend. While the world was doing just that –- people marrying their best friends — I didn’t and couldn’t go against my parents’ wishes. In the end, I determined there was no blessing in something my parents didn’t bless. I needed their blessing with whomever I ended up marrying. Even Greg eventually realized the importance of honoring my parents in this decision.
***
After graduation, Greg left for a yearlong campus ministry internship in Illinois. During that year my parents asked that we take a fast from each other and pray for the Lord’s will. Greg and I may have spoken 2-3 times over the course of that year he was away. It was so hard to not talk to the one I had grown so close to. During that time my parents encouraged me to be open to what the Lord may bring -– they were implying another person.
The summer Greg returned, my parents asked that I take a trip to India to meet a “proposal” of sorts. For those of you who don’t know, a “proposal” is someone to consider for marriage. My parents had basically found someone of good family background, education, God-fearing, etc. that could possibly be a good fit for my family and I. So as confused as I was at the time, I went to India thinking, “Well maybe God does have someone different for me.” The person I met in India was a great guy – modern, an awesome Christian, and someone who would get along with my family wonderfully. It was also in India that I received a word from God from Isaiah 43:18-19, “But forget all that — it is nothing compared to what I am going to do. For I am about to do something new. See, I have already begun! Do you not see it? I will make a pathway through the wilderness. I will create rivers in the dry wasteland.”
I came back home from India knowing God would do something, but I wasn’t sure what and with whom. When Greg heard about the purpose for my trip to India he was heartbroken. He did not want me to just get married to any guy for the sake of my family, but there was nothing he could do but pray. I also prayed for God’s will concerning the guy in India, but the peace never came. I told my parents that I could not move forward with the proposal. Thoughts of Greg always came back to me — the way we looked at each other, the way we spoke to one another, the way we were like kids when we were together — it was this I wanted in a marriage –- a simple LOVE that makes your heart ache when you aren’t with that person.
To make a long story short, I told Greg that I couldn’t move forward with the Indian guy — that I just didn’t have peace. And as the next summer rolled around (Year 3) my parents realized that Susan was not interested in other “proposals.” They came to realize that they either had to get to know this Greg Smith, or they had to answer questions regarding their unmarried daughter. So they came forward and told me they wanted to get to know Greg. They liked him, but as hard as they tried, it was still so difficult to come to terms with their daughter marrying a non-Indian. They just couldn’t come to grips with it, even if they wanted to.
So during the summer of 2006, Greg and I met at an Irish pub in downtown Baltimore to end a sweet friendship that had begun 3 years prior. It was a bittersweet day for us because it was the first time we actually went out to a restaurant alone together –- like a date — but we knew it would be our last time. As hard as it was, we both came to the conclusion that no matter how hard we pushed, prayed, and wanted — God was closing all doors for us to move forward in our relationship. I left the restaurant that day not sure if I’d ever see him again. I wept all the way home thinking that the last 3 years had been a waste. Once I reached home, I ran straight to my bed and opened my bible. God gave me Psalms 18 (so powerful!). After reading it, I knew God was going to do a beautiful work in my life. I wasn’t sure how or when or with who, but I knew He would.
Three days later, without me knowing, my parents asked an uncle (specifically a spiritual leader) of mine to meet with Greg to get to know him better. They met, and my uncle came back and reported to my parents that they would not find another boy as great as Greg for their daughter. And for some unknown reason other than GOD, they instantly felt the peace they needed to move forward with this American boy! Don’t ask me why, when, or how, but God truly brought a peace that passeth all understanding to their hearts. No longer did they care about what family or friends thought — they knew that God was at work. (And folks, this is THREE days after Greg and I called it quits! Three days after we died to our desires! Three days after we completely let go and let God. Talk about resurrection!) ?
On the flip side, Greg was ready to move on. Don’t get me wrong, he stayed the past 3 years because he believed in it, but after three years of being tugged here and there with no real answer, he was ready to move on. He compared the feeling to an engine that ran out of oil. So while my parents were ready to move forward with a no-turning-back “YES!”, Greg was ready to tell us all he couldn’t do it.
So a few days later, Greg was ready to stop by my work to give me the unfavorable news, when all FIVE of his spiritual leaders gave him a call at different times during the day without him contacting them –- (to this day, Greg says something like that never happens!) They all felt that he shouldn’t give up on the dream, and that it wasn’t God’s will for him to give up on the dream. So instead of stopping at my work that day, he drove right by, and said to God, “Lord, I’m ready to do this again if you are in it.”
And God surely was in it, because the following year was all about Greg and me becoming best friends again –- and with my parents’ blessing! Greg proposed in the spring of 2007 after a quaint picnic and prayer walk around campus he got on one knee in front of the campus chapel. We got married in a beautiful wedding surrounded by family and friends who fully supported us in the fall of that year. And we can truly, wonderfully say we know for a fact that it was all God. I see my family and extended family and how they love Greg, and it just makes my heart so full to know that waiting patiently upon the Lord only leads to an abundant life.
When trials and things come our way, we can put our full assurance in Christ knowing that He is the one who let an imaginative American born Indian girl walk into a college ministry that one fateful night, so that she could meet an amazing man of God who waits on the Lord, and who won her over with his childlike faith. Nine years later, (5 years being friends + 4 years married), with one darling little girl and twin boys on the way, we look back and can’t believe the journey that God took us on, and that we get to be married to one another. It’s a gift. It really was “a new thing,” as God promised! It all feels like a dream now. But we know it will only get better!
Posted on February 21, 2012
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Submitted by Christine… her own love story. Enjoy!!
Posted on February 20, 2012
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Submitted by Allison… this is her mom and dad’s love story, written by her brother a couple of years ago for their 30th anniversary (wow!!) celebration! Its an awesome one!
Dear Family & Friends of Our Loving Parents,
Nearly forty years ago, a long-haired young man avoided the draft, by way of a dramatic car accident. The young man, a freshly minted graduate of UNC Chapel Hill, fell asleep at the wheel and tucked his British racing green MGB under the belly of a farming truck. As fate would have it, the young man was not meant to scour the Mekong Delta in search of an elusive man named Charlie, nor was he slated to go out in a star-crossed James Dean flashback. Instead, the coming year and decades to follow would be shaped by yet another accident with yet another unsuspecting truck driver.
Upon his recovery from 2 cracked vertebrae, he found himself in Boston with prospects about as bright as a mud puddle. Not one for discouragement, he used his Chapel Hill English degree to land a trophy career… as an assistant manager at the Ski Market. Reports are sketchy and unreliable, but supposedly he was to have his own name badge and a key to the back door.
His first day of duty arrived, and he had no wheels to speak of. Ever-trusting and courageous, he hitched a ride from a lionhearted trucker finishing a 4 day haul up the eastern seaboard. In the distance they spotted a lovely young lady walking at a steady clip down the side of the highway. The young man squinted his stone blue eyes, and could not believe what he saw. This vision of beauty was giving the international hitchhikers secret sign! Truck driver Mitch caught the glimmer in his eye, and slowed his 18 wheeler down with the air brake. As the truck rolled to a stop, the young man (North by birth and 4 years southern by the Grace of the Almighty) leaned over to open the door for the damsel on the side of the road in a characteristic move of chivalry. With 4 years of the most beautiful poetry the languages of the world had to offer at his disposal, he knew just what he would say.
As he took a deep breath to speak the most important words he would ever speak, it happened. A crash, a crunch, and a hollow thump as an old rusty white Scout International slammed into the back of the trailer. Caught off balance, the young man was thrown from the cab of the truck into a black coated pile of New England slush. As the young man struggled to his feet while simultaneously checking his rear for sludge residue, the dapper young damsel-now-un-distressed rushed off. “I’m so sorry, I’m already very late,” she called over her shoulder as she continued on her way. The young man watched her with child-like wonder as she promptly secured another ride and was gone. Clearly, she too had somewhere very important to be.
Not quite as adept in the art of thumb travel as his would-be damsel, it would be nearly 2 frozen hours before the young man finally made it to the Ski Market. As he began to relay the strange nay incredible tale of his morning travail to his less-than-understanding new boss, he looked up to stare fate square in the eye. There before him stood the lovely, if a bit hasty, woman from the side of the road. She had a name badge on, and a key around her neck. Failing to catch the irony, the young man gaped in awe at his luck. It was her first day of work as well.
Nearly a decade later he once again kneeled at the feet of that young lady when he asked her to marry him and be his bride. And all was right in the world.
** Comment below to cast your vote!**
Posted on February 6, 2012
Posted on January 20, 2012
First of all, big thanks to the Kay, Birdie, Christi, Grace, Lacey, and Paige for entering the contest. I really do love to see what my clients end up doing with their images.
That is a downfall of the digital age, I think… not knowing what you do with the files once you get them….
…. hmmm, where was I…..
Oh right. WINNER(S)!
in first place with the most unique (meaning if someone liked and commented on the photo, I only counted it once
comments/likes …. and winner of the grand gallery wrapped canvas award:
Kay’s pics are truly ART… and it was with hers and Chip’s (her husband) forethought into their session that this was possible. We grabbed this chair from their dining table as we walked out the door for the shoot… and lookee there! what a perfect way to decorate the kitchen with a personal and artistic statement! Love it, guys! Email me your mailing address and we can talk canvas image options! CONGRATS!
as much as i enjoyed seeing all of your displays, there were TWO others that really got me. i was originally only going to pick one for my “fave” of the bunch, but i just couldn’t decide between the two. so then i thought, “well, you are THE chelsea of the CHP business… you are entitled to pick more than one if you darn well please.” so i did.
1. this was by far the most creative entry. i mean come on, ya’ll…. family pics in the COOP! i love it. and because i sometimes feed these chicks (and since we are on the subject, i am also known around these parts as being an egg-whisperer…. uh huh), i am a bit partial to their chic (ha ha) environment. so, Grace, you get an 11×14 wall portrait of your choice for the Creativity Award!
2. this gallery just made me tear up. i am so lucky to meet such cool people that become such sweet friends…. and it is especially awesome when i get to be THE photog to capture such significant milestones. Lacey has their engagement session, wedding pictures, and then baby and first family photos when they went from 2 to 3 of them all up on the wall. Lacey, you too have an 11×14 wall portrait of your choice for the Make-Me-Cry Award!
and… because i am a sucker for people that participate in my contests, the rest of you, (Christi, Paige, Birdie) have a little something coming in the mail as a little “thank you” for participating.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
i know i posted this in a private note to some of my clients, but i wanted to share on here as well….
here is my favorite gallery wall (created by the oh-so-talented Grace, of the Coop fame above) in my own house. and here is a little story of the WHY behind putting up pictures and documenting family life….
“just this morning, Adelaide looked at this wall (the one in the picture) and she longingly said, “mom, when can we go back to that spot, where sydney and i are in the picture [color picture of them in low right side]? i loved going there. it was so much fun. how old are we there? when can we go back?” i smiled. and was so thankful i grabbed that shot with my point and shoot. its one of my fave pics, too, as it reminds me of a sweet time I had with my girls before #3 was in the picture.
“
THANK YOU AGAIN FOR PARTICIPATING!!! More fun to come soon……
Posted on January 12, 2012
Yes, first. Which means there will be more…. so definitely stay tuned. I am really excited about them!
First up is a contest I have been dreaming about for awhile. I absolutely love seeing my images as many of your facebook profile pictures and in other various online spaces, but I know there are some closet interior designers out there who have come up with creative ways to display the images in your homes. I don’t know about you, but in this digital age (for which there are many virtues) I find it very difficult to get my images off my computer and backup drives and onto the walls in my home or into photobooks and albums. These images aren’t meant to collect digital dust, folks! The beauty of portraiture is in the moments and milestones and momenteous occasions that are captured. I want my girls to bounce down the stairs each day looking at images that constantly remind them that they are part of a close-knit family that has fun together, that creates adventurous memories together and that love each other dearly. Photographs speak 1000′s of words, remember?! I want to look at my own walls each day and remember the moments that have flown by so fast… the moment when my 6 year old was 6 months (wasn’t that just yesterday??!). Seeing those images helps give me perspective. And lets face it, moms and dads out there… sometimes we just need to see a picture of that adorable little cherub on the walls, because at the present moment, we are seeing them as little tasmanian devils!
Perspective. Perspective.
CONTEST #1 ~ Show Me Your Walls!
WHO – current and previous CHP clients
WHAT – i want to see what you have done with any CHP images in your home or work space…. canvases, gallery walls, framed prints, nursury walls, etc.
HOW TO ENTER – take a picture of any CHP pictures in YOUR home or work space. then, email it to me (chelsea at chelseahudson.com). i will submit them to a contest album (Show Me Your Walls!) on my CHP Facebook Page (HERE). i will give you through the weekend to send me your images. you must have your submissions in by SUNDAY, January 15.
HOW LONG – starting Monday, January 16th, voters will have 4 days to vote on the images. i will announce the winners on Friday, January 20th!
PRIZE(s) – the submission with the most votes will win an 11×14 canvas (either from their own session images, or from my fine art collection). i will also be picking MY favorite display and will be sending the winner a little something special in the mail!
(gotta keep a sense of surprise and intrigue going!)
** note: if you, like me, have been dragging your feet on the whole digital files-to-walls thing, don’t worry, there will be another wall art contest later this year. maybe this month’s contest will give you the inspiration and kick-in-the-pants you need to get those images up and enjoyed by all!
Sooooooo, ready, set………. GO! Head over to the CHP Facebook Fan Page and watch for the submissions as they come in! I can’t wait to see what you are doing with your family, wedding, kids and newborn photos in your home. And, I have to admit, I need some inspiration for my own home decor! IMPORTANT: Get your friends and family to “like” the CHP Facebook page so they can comment on the entries. I will only be counting comments for eligibility.







