Her oldest daughter Miranda and I are two grades apart. We go to the same youth group and I have had the honor of riding her first roller coaster with her this past summer at Knotts Berry Farm in California. (she rocks, too) So you could say, we are friends as well.
Today, the four of us spent the afternoon together. We went hiking in west Austin (the rich suburb), went out to eat at La Madeleine's, and went to tackle some fro-yo even after Miranda and I got some carrot cake. (*insert chattered teeth emoji here*) It was a good day. Afterall, we didn't get lost on the hiking trail or get sick from eating too much. :)
Did I mention it how delicious the carrot cake was? 10/10 stars, perhaps.
Although, (I really hate to say this) since grown ups are catching up to social media, they need to know how things work. Not that it's a bad thing for me, my mom has a Twitter and recently got an Instagram. It's pretty cool, until she tweets wrong and I have to teach her all over again. (Hi Mom! <3) But recently, my mom read on NPR's twitter that SnapChat is the new way to text. For me, I send out a few snaps every now and then, but I know people who cannot put it down so it makes sense.
For the cool people (mom, Dr. D) that do not understand SnapChat, this is for you. SnapChat is an app that you can take pictures (or videos) and send them to your friends for a short while. Usually and apparently, they are supposed to be ugly selfies, and people usually screenshot them and save them. Because if you don't screenshot them, they are gone forever. (Unless they are on their story, then it will remain in the posession for 24 hours.)
So, I described explaining it to them, and I had to do an example, and so...
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