Showing posts with label I believe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label I believe. Show all posts

Friday, July 11, 2025

Girl's Club ~ Simple but Intentional Time Mentoring my Daughters

Girl's Club started years ago. It is based on the book called of course, Girl's Club by Clarkson. I read it back in 2019 and then in the summer of 2020 I read it aloud to my girls

Five years later I've pulled it back off the shelf. I've always believed in discipleship parenting 
and so many other places within this blog... 

And I find myself in another transition. Sure seeing my girls go from elementary years to middle school years was a transition. And back then it felt big. And maybe one day I will look back at this tranistion in my life thinking it is small. But right now it feels big. Abigail will be headed off to college and Anna to graduate school. While Anna will be commuting she will be involved in an intensive course of study for three years. Another transition. 

I want to use lots of time this summer to prepare their hearts for the world and places they are about to enter. Of course I know that I'm not doing ALL of the work for this in one summer; it's been their whole lives preparing them for this. I just really want to be intentional with my time this summer and with them. 

So I started reading this book aloud again: Girls Club : Cultivating Friendships in a Lonely World
Still the same copy; we are on our third read now. There are bent over pages marking favorite passages, notes in the margin, and so much underlined. On Wednesday I reread the intro aloud to my girls and this is what we loved: 

"One of my overriding goals, though, was to mentor them in their faith. I wanted to pass on a vision for life that would help them cultivate clarity for their place in God's Kingdom work through the living out of their own personal stories." ~ Sally Clarkson 

"At its most basic, Girl's Club was simply my mother's way of ensuring little pockets of time with just my sister and me. Whether it was an afternoon tea shop, an evening watching one of our favorite movies, or a trip, my mom make time to bond, laugh, discuss, and dream together." ~ Joy Clarkson 

"After all these years of cultivation, being friends is an old habit. But the richness of this time is rooted in decades of chosen closeness, of willed, planned connection." ~ Sarah Clarkson 

What I love about those parts from the introduction is the reminder that it just doesn't 'happen". To actually "pass on a vision for life" that would help Anna and Abigail see how their own personal life story would connect with the kingdom work of God, I would have to work on our relationship. 

It takes "little pockets of time" to love on them, laugh with them, and talk talk talk with them. This time must be intentional. And it helps if it is yummy, fun, and beautiful. 

So this summer every single Wednesday afternoon/evening will be our Girls' Club. I will continue to read aloud our favorite parts from this book but we will also do something together. 

Our first was this past Wednesday. I pulled out the book, We had some homemade cookies, and afterword I painted their toenails. (Anna doesn't like polish and chose stick on nails) It was time together and it felt good. 





I'm already dreaming of next Wednesday and some topics we can discuss, some things we might eat, and the fun we might have. Simple but intentional 

Monday, February 3, 2025

A Book I Recently Read That I Loved

I just finished my January book (back here I sort of explain my reading life). 

And this book was good wonderful. It is no surprise that it is by my favorite author, Sally Clarkson. You can check out her blog here.  She has a weekly podcast (with no commercials) and she blogs too. I also belong to her membership. If you're looking for a place to be inspired to be all you can as a mother in any stage of life, check out her membership

When I was a young mother home with my babies, toddlers, and elementary school aged girls, I longed to find a place, a group of women that 'mothered like me'. It was a challenge, I tell you! I read everything I could get my hands on but none of it lined up with the home I was trying to create, the mothering I wanted, the day to day mentoring I was doing. So basically I just gave up looking. I gave up looking for inspiration in books - it was all to regimented for me. Although I was an organized person and was looking for a 'formula', there was no formula out there that worked in my life. Consider what the path I was on... my motherhood journey felt so different than anyone I knew. Anyone. 

I had two little girls. 

One adopted, suffered from early post traumatic stress disorder. She had (and still has) sensory processing issues, deals with attachment still... crowds made her anxious, even extended family visits heightened her nervous system. It was a struggle but I new that I had to 'go back' and nurture her for the emotional age she was, not her age. So when she was three, she needed all of things a baby needed. When she was eight, she needed what a four year old needed. 

There were times I felt alone in this, and I longed to find pages in a book that spoke to my heart, and validated the 'sit down on the floor with her', read to her, bathe her, rock her to sleep forever, tuck her in at 16 and even 21. But I never found them until I came across Sally Clarkson.

One daughter was born with a rare digestive disease. She was diagnosed at 22 months old and suffers still. She has since been diagnosed with OCD, anxiety, and ADHD. Our little family was so different it was isolating but beautiful at the same time. 

With one daughter we couldn't eat out. The other 'normal' social situations here terrifying for her. So we became the strongest little family of four. Our faith grew and our spiritual muscles grew as day after day Scott and I did what sometimes felt the impossible. 

So when I found Sally Clarkson's books I read every single one. Finally, an author that validated the way I wanted to and had been mothering. Even if some of the chapters would have applied more when my girls were little, they are still little to me and I have the forever, for the very last day of my life and I plan on mothering them, discipling them, nurturing them, guiding them, and pointing them to the Lord year after year. 

This book I just finished has wonderful ideas so here goes... I'll share a few: 

Your Mom Walk with God by Sally Clarkson

"The older I get, the more I have realized that only God sees all the details of my life. Only God has access to the heart and soul of my children. Only God knows and understands the stresses I bear uniquely from my own path of life." 

Today I feel grateful that God has access to my daughters hearts, to their souls through the Holy Spirit. It also reminds me that I my my weakness as a mother He still is there putting all of the pieces together in a unique way, just for my Anna, just for my Abigail. 

"The success of a woman's walk through her years of motherhood is largely dependent on her walk with God. If she learns to love Him and trust Him and listen to His voice through prayer and Scripture, then she will walk on a path of life that leads to success in God's eyes." 

All of those early mornings with my journal, prayer, my Bible, pouring our my heart to God, that is what is important. 

"I need to remember that I am to lead my children in what it means to become a person who celebrates the joy of life. I am to model what it looks like to enjoy God and His creation. ... That is why it is vital that we realize we are a model of God to our children, and that we must take care that we also present His light, beauty, humor, love, and joy to them." 

Making warm cookies, finding just the right present for a birthday, planning their little years parties, all of that was a picture of God. My showering them was a picture to them of how God showers us with blessings. Oh and that part about joy... that has always been a tough one for me. I'm a go, go, go, mama. At home I like things 'just so' and I have in the past struggled to remember to just be joyful. 

"Everyday of my life as a Mom is filled with chores, duties, problems, issues, and responsibilities. If I allow my soul to become overwhelmed by these things, my spirit become dry and depressed, and I pass on my sour and disparaging attitudes... my "broken spirit" becomes a virus of darkness infecting everyone else in my house. The only "good medicine" is to choose to have a "joyful heart". No matter what my day holds, I can choose to be joyful."

Looking back now, there are so many times that I was so serious. And when I think about when they were eight and four, even twelve and eight, what was that dailyness, that daily life that I was taking so seriously. Reading this has certainly been a wakeup call to be more joyful. 

And she goes on to say, "I realized that one of the roles God wants me to play in my children's lives is to be a conductor of joy, happiness, and celebration... When I choose to notice, every day, the beauty my children display, instead of the duty they bring my way, I am worshipping God." 

"A mother who gives her children a heart to celebrate God's life and beauty gives a gift of life. She is helping her children draw joy from their lives and memories that will bring them strength and pleasure all their days." 

I could and should read that every day. Joy joy joy. I need to find it, muster it up, and cultivate in my home - the messy home days, the too full calendar days, the fusses days, the attitude days, all of the days. 

"So what does it look like to walk in God's light? I personally think that walking in the light requires me to take time to be in God's presence in quietness every day so I can refuel from the one source of true light...If I am living beyond my means, feeling stretched, dry, and dark, then I need to simplify my life so that I can find time for reflection to be sure that I am walking in His light - holding on to His perspective, being refreshed in His energy, resting in His wisdom, and enjoying the relationships that He designed to be a blessing to me." 

I think that is sometimes easier said than done. It sure is hard to proritize sleep when there are college applications, papers to correct, emails from work, a house that needs love, and a big holiday approaching - especially when it feels like so much of 'holding on to all of that' is on my mind. But yes, surely, when I do take time each day to read a devotional, to write in my journal, to pray, (making time to dwell in the light and beauty of the Lord) everything really does seem to fall into place. I become happier, more joyful, and can be a blessing to my husband and my children. 

"In the absence of biblical convictions, people will go the way of culture." 

Such a reminder to me as a Mom but also something I quote to my daughters often. We must develop our own foundational principles of biblical wisdom to guide us through life. There are so many "experts" these day. Scrolling through Instagram even will have "wisdom". I've even thought, 'oh, that's good advice'. But really, is it? Who are these people that we think are wise? Our only one true source of wisdom needs to come from the Scripture and the Holy Spirit. (and those we trust to interpret the Bible like our priests) And it is true that opening my Bible there always seems to be the answer to my problem. 

"I have found that almost every season of motherhood has brought with it an overwhelming amount of worries, duties, fears, and responsibilities that seemed far beyond my capacity to deal with them... but it is a waster of time to spend energy and hours worrying, fretting, and troubling ourselves about things that we can't make go away. God has already been through hundreds of generation of mothers' problem with their families before yours, and He has planned to be a constant companion through each and every mother's life, and that means yours, too." 

Oh goodness yes! That reminder that there were generations of mothers that reached out to God; it gives me the hope that my story will end with grace too. That verse about casting all our anxiety on God because he cares for you (1 Peer 5:7) reminds me that I am meant to go to God moment by moment. It is meant to be a way of life, a constant rhythm of returning to His presence and His help. I have to choose deliberately to place everything into His hands, and then I have to decide to actually let it all stay there and life joyfully. 

"The world tells us that if we are having a hard time, we must immediately get relief... your personal happiness is the highest priority. However, when we forfeit the ways of God in our lives for the path that offers the easiest way out of pain or stress, we lose the opportunity to grow in maturity, strength, insight, wisdom, compassion, and love, the only things that can ever make anyone really happy. 

Interesting, right? It reminds me that there was so much as a mother that I could not 'take away'. I couldn't wish away Anna's adoption trauma or Abigail's disease. But both of my girls gained insight, wisdom, compassion, and love. God used those struggles to build them into Godly young women. 

There is really so much in this book. I have corners bent over. I have written on every page, underlined, circled. There are pages stained with some tears. But I have to end somewhere even though I could quote and write about it forever. I'll leave you with one area to think about that has touched my heart in a profound way. 

"If I could encourage mothers to follow one principle of wisdom in their relationship with their children, it would be that of cultivating fervent, intimate love with each of their children. When children feel loved and cherished by the parents who brought them into the world, they have enduring stability and a security that provides them with the groundwork for understanding the God of the universe who so loves us. Love is the most important foundation for learning to believe in God... As our children are honored with our time, words, caresses, and nurture, life is deposited in their souls. They learn love not only as a personal value, but even more as a tangible experience." 

Monday, September 9, 2024

Weekending


I was thinking about why over the years I've done these posts called "Weekending". There are so many of them, and a few reasons really: 

1. I think that when I know I'll be posting about the weekend, it forces me to look at the weekend and take pictures of regular moments that I wouldn't normally. 

2. It romanticizes the weekend. I might take a picture of Abigail doing homework outside on the screened-in porch with an oversized sweatshirt and cozy socks on but really when I look back at the picture either as I'm posting it or years later I think thoughts like, "oh that's beautiful" "that was our life" "look how cozy the day really was"

3. Sometimes (well lots of times during the school year) the weekend might 'FEEL' hectic, full, and too short. But then I look at my pictures and I think, "no, it's exactly what we needed -- rest, cozy, happy" I get to 'see' the beauty even if it 'felt' like the to do list was too long for just two days. 

And a side note: Sometimes when I choose to share certain photos I leave out other memories. And I just want to be the one to say that our weekends are not free from difficulties. Currently we have health issues that we are working through, there are worries for our daughters, things we just can't seem to get done in our home... on and on. I suppose that's another reason why I love these post. They remind me that in the midst of challenge we can still take the time to sip a cup of tea after Mass, notice how adorable Abigail looked all cozy doing homework on the porch, and just how beautiful apple pumpkin soup looked simmering on my stove on a rainy Saturday night. 

So on to this weekend. I didn't remember to take my camera out until Sunday but still I want to remember a few things. 

Baking and Simmering 

I try to get as prepped as I can for the week ahead. I make a lot and freeze a ton! These are my oatmeal, no sugar applesauce, no sugar muffins. I have one each day with my huge salad at school. So the next 12 days of school are ready to go! 


This banana bread is not sugar free {although I'd like to experiment with the recipe just a bit} {and I only use whole wheat}. I make this for Abigail - a small slice to go with her thermos or with her eggs in the morning.




Abigail requested this soup again. It goes great with sourdough bread and packs up beautifully in a thermos for her school lunch. 


Working

She's off to a great start this senior year. Basically, if she's not in viola she's doing homework. 


Playing

Viola tour group and Opus orchestra started on Saturday morning. She came home beaming that she's first chair! 

Fall~ing

We were feeling a bit stressed on Saturday morning (read above - we are not free from challenges) and there were even a few tears but we decided that we wanted to do "something fall" even if it was only 10 minutes away and only for a bit. ANYTHING to get a little bit of fall in us each weekend. Scott suggested an adorable farm stand. We could pick up some fruit and fresh veggies for the week and I could walk on creaky old wood floors and look at baked goods and apple pies all lined up on shelves. It was just what we needed. 











Shopping

I had to return some library books that I had in my classroom and I popped into a local, tiny, lovely thrift store and found these treasures. I love this basket for the top of my china cabinet in the dining room. And oh this vase (I need some white hydrangeas)! I've always keep my eye out for a brass vase. 



Not pictured: 

🍎missing Anna but talking to her a bunch

🍎going to 8am Mass which felt more peaceful and lovely

🍎popping into my classroom (all of us) so I could hang some things - I am so excited about a bunch of things in my room this year (I'll take pictures as soon as I can) 

🍎 

Other weekend posts you might like: 

A weekend  in 2021

A weekend in 2020

A weekend in 2017

A weekend in 2016

A weekend in 2015

Wednesday, August 7, 2024

Summer Teatime Discipleship #4

 I wrote about the first one back here  

I wrote about the second back here 

I wrote about the third one back here 



Teatime Four: Strength and Steadfastness 

What is strength? What is steadfastness? 

As defined strength is the capacity of an object or substance to withstand great force or pressure.

Steadfastness is the quality of being resolutely or dutifully firm and unwavering. 

Isaiah 40: 30-31

Even young people tire and drop out,

young folk in their prime stumble and fall.

But those that wait upon God get fresh strength. 

They spread their wings and soar like eagles,

they run and don't get tired, 

they walk and don't lag behind. 

Life is so often weighted down by chaos,

taken over by uncertainty,

and wrought with challenges. 

When we press on, when we're willing to embrace the unknown and follow with steadfastness the road God presents, we will be given the greatest gift: experiencing the beauty and grandeur of God. 



The Biblical story of Ester: 

Ester was a young Jewish woman. Their her intelligence and beauty she found favor with the king of Persia and became queen, all while keeping her Jewish identity a secret. But after learning of a pot to kill her people Ester courageously resolved to save them. 

Ester 4:15-17

Then Ester said in reply to Mordecai, 'Go, gather all the Jews to be found in Susa, and hold a fast on my behalf, and neither eat nor drink for three days, night or day. I and my maids will also fast as you do. After that I will go to the kind, though it is against the law; and if I perish, I perish.' Mordecai then went away and did everything as Ester had ordered him. 

Ester was in a position and didn't need to take a stand and speak up. She could have stayed silent and safe, yet she risked it all and changed the fate of God's people. 

This Bible story of Ester as a hero of strength and faith shows us how she used her charm and loyality - her influence and cleverness - to convince the king to allow her people to defend themselves. 

Ester 7:1-4 

So the king and Hamn went in to feast with Queen Ester. On the second day, as they were drinking wine, the king again said to Ester, 'What is your petition, Queen Ester? It shall be granted you. And what is your request? Even to the half of my kingdom, it shall be fulfilled.' Then Queen Ester answered, 'If I have won your favour, O king, and if it pleases the king, let my life be given me - that is my petition - and the lives of my people - that is my request.' 

Ester's strength in the face of injustice, violence and even possible death saved her people. 

Ester 8:16-17

For the Jews it was a time of happiness and joy, gladness and honor. In every province and in every city to which the edict of the king came, there was joy and gladness among the Jews with feasting and celebration. 

She shed light on Haman's dark plan of destruction and in turn the king had him killed rather than allowing the Jewish people to suffer. Ester went forward knowing she could fail; she could parish just for asking. 

Being steadfast in our daily life comes down to being faithful even when we could fail; even when our friends or strangers might judge us. 

To experience the gifts of God's goodness, beauty, faithfulness, and generosity, we must remain strong and steadfast in the face of whatever storm, stress, and suffering comes our way. 

Scripture is filled with encouragement and inspiration to satyr strong and steadfast despite the hardship, pain, and adversity we encounter in life. 



Here are some verses about strength to return to in time of difficulty or doubt: 

John 16:33

Exodus 15:2

Joshua 1:9

Isaiah 41:31

Isaiah 40:31

1 Corinthians 15:58 

Today I served homemade blueberry jam filled scones paired with a Harney and Sons berry tea. We had a lunchtime teatime feast. 










Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Theology of Home

"Home, by its nature, is meant to be a foreshadowing of heaven. It is to be both satisfying in the earthly life while also offering a glimpse of things to come when we see the fulfillment of Christ's promise of heaven." ~ Gress, Mering 

My home is now decades in the making. Scott and I, over our twenty eight years, have crafted the place that it is now. I know that it won't always stay this way. We will forever be figuring out new seasons that will need new intentions and shifts as we reach the heart of our family and create a home that is a place to belong. We will always be planning, envisioning, building, and creating what our daughters need. 

My favorite places to be inspired are these. And I know that I need to be in them often, not once in a while. For those that I love draw from what I have filled into my own cup, my own soul. 

1. The Bible - yes, reading the Bible might seem daunting. Here are a few things that direct my time in the Word: 

  • Read one Psalm a day - circle, write down any truth it teaches you about God. Underline every promise God gives
  • Hebrews - write down what pleases God, the attributes of Jesus, His will for us to hold fast
  • Proverbs - keep a list of what this book teaches you about folly vs. wisdom
  • Read one chapter of John or Matthew a day - write down any lesson you learned
  • Read through Philippians - notes all the ways Paul tells us to follow Jesus

2. Devotions - these are my favorites: 

3. These books: The Theology of Home (there are four in the series) 

4. Sally Clarkson: You can find her on instagram and she has a weekly podcast. I belong to her membership for so much content that has taught me oh so much. 

I've always loved the cover of this first book. The mantle has a lot on it but I'm sure all rich in meaning within their catholic faith. After thinking it over I decided to collect some pieces that have meaning to our family and create something like it. 


Here is how it turned out: 


All of the things I chose are very meaningful to us. For example: 

This is Anna church on her college campus. It is a sacred place for our family as it was Anna's first church away from home; the first one that belonged to just her. 

We've also been there so many times for beautiful occasions that have wonderful memories for our entire family. 


I found these at a beautiful bookstore. There are drawings/art work of Anna and Abigail's saints, chosen at their Confirmation. I actually found Saint Kateri in the store and then commissioned the artist to create one for Saint Cecilia. They are very special to me. 


When I started this project I contacted our parish, the oldest catholic church in Connecticut. She found me this drawing of our church that was the original church drawing before the fire. 


A photo of my daughters in front of our church a few years ago on Easter Sunday. 


I added an oil painting of roses to symbolize our devotion of the Blessed Mother Mary. 





I do so love the way it turned out. It is a visual reminder of all that important in our lives. When I walk in the room I feel grounded and blessed. For our home to have that feeling is priceless to me. 

"Our homes are becoming sanctuaries - a place where we feel safe, protected, cared for... Making our homes a kind of sanctuary means more than simply having nourishing comfort food on the table. There must be nourishment for the soul. Without this, the soul will be left hungry and searching for the One who truly satisfies every desire of our hearts." Cress, Mering 



Saturday, August 3, 2024

Summer Teatime Discipleship #3

I wrote about the first one back here  

I wrote about the second back here 

Teatime Three: Faith and Faithfulness 

When we exercise our faith and choose to be faithful at every age, it pleases Him for us to believe in His reality and presence. 

What is faithfulness? 

As defined faithfulness is: being loyal, accurate, reliable, conscientious. 

The story of Ruth and Naomi: Naomi's two sons passed away. She told her two daughter in law to go back to their own mother's homes and find new husbands. Ruth chose to stay by Naomi's side. 

Ruth 1:16-18

So Ruth began working in a filed to pick up left over grains. The field belonged to a man named Boaz, who recognized Ruth's faithfulness (loyalty, devotion) to Naomi even in a time of great despair. 

Ruth 2:11-12

Ruth married Boaz and had a son - who was part of Jesus' ancestral line. 

Her unknown fears and doubts didn't prevent her from stepping forward in faith. She continued acts of faithfulness big and small that led her to be blessed by the Lord. 

During our lives we'll experience many moments, challenges, choices, and transitions that provide opportunities for us to demonstrate our faithfulness to God. Those are also the times we witness God's faithfulness to us. 

When we walk forward in faith and honor Him there will be situations when our expectations don't line up with what is happening. We might have days or seasons when we've been faithful to God's call in our lives but we doubt He is leading / guiding us. 

This is when our faithfulness is even more important. The fruit of following where He leads is living the story He has planned for us. 

We feasted on homemade bread toasted into cinnamon sugar perfection and a fruit salad that was so so good! What a treat! 

We immersed ourselves in God's Word and conversation about faith and faithfulness. 

Here are some verses we focused on: 

Hebrews 11:1

Proverbs 3:5-6

Hebrews 10:23










Another post you might like: Mentoring, Mothering, Discipling 


Tuesday, July 30, 2024

I'll See You In the Mass

A few years ago I read a book Theology of Home, Finding Eternal in the Everyday.  

I was struck by this paragraph: 

Meet You in the Mass

When I left for college, and at the end of every subsequent visit home thereafter, my dad would always say goodbye and that he'd see me in the Mass. Sometime later, while far from home, his meaning was impressed upon me during the moment of consecration. The Mass opens a window into the eternal by allowing us to participate in the making present of our Lord and his one eternal sacrifice. I was at a Mass in Beverly, Massachusetts, but also in the upper room, and in all future Masses, and in a Mass in my hometown. In the overlapping of eternity and time we are united to people far from us, across both time and space. I was shifting homes but remaining in place. 

I loved that sentiment - but really more than a sentiment it is truth to me as a catholic. So I started saying to Anna each time she was away at college and I talked to her, "I'll see you at the Mass." I said that to her whenever we hugged goodbye. It gave me such a sense of deep peace and connection to her that I never really thought about before. 

Last weekend Scott and I went away for our anniversary (more to come on an upcoming post). The night before we left, I hugged my girls and said, "I'll see you at the Mass." 

This popped up on my text on Saturday late afternoon. I love it oh so much. 



My girls drove to Mass and then out for dinner. Best friends. And all of us connected at the Mass. 

At that exact time Scott and I were at this lovely church. 



"He has given us the Church as our true home, the place where we can find him on earth. This home offers us, both on earth and in the future, some of the Father's abundant gifts of healing, comfort, belonging, self-awareness, worship, and nourishment. ~Gress, Mering




Saturday, July 20, 2024

Dinnertime Devotionals ~ Nurturing Faith Through Feasting ~ Investing in the Heart of My Girls

Anna is twenty one.

Abigail is seventeen.

I am so excited about my girls and their future. We have so much to look forward to as a family, and I know that God will guide them along the way. 

Proverbs 3:5-6

Trust in the Lord with all you heart,

and do not rely on your own insight. 

In all you ways acknowledge him,

and he will make straight your paths. 

I am confident in their faith - they trust in the Lord. 

But... I take seriously my motherhood - still. 

This year I felt in my heart that there were some things that I wanted to make certain sure that I went over with them, taught them. Lessons from God's word, our catholic faith, and our own family values. 

So I spent the past school year scribbling into a notebook all that I still wanted to teach them. And I found that there was just so much! 

I knew we'd have our special teatime discipleships (here and here) but those were not as often. So I thought the best way to reach their hearts were those times we were together... dinnertime! I realized that there would be 72 dinners we would be having together this summer. 72 opportunities to nurture their hearts and teach their souls. 

Side note: Scott and I committed to eating dinner at home all summer long and not at all eating out with the one acceptation of our trip to Quebec, Canada and our upcoming short trip to Vermont. Why: 

1. Scott and amazing dinner cook - amazing! I do breakfast, lunches, snacks, treats, and cook dinner along side of him. So much better than anything we can order. 

2. For health - portions are much too large when we are in a restaurant and also when we cook dinner at home we have full control of the ingredients. 

3. It makes our vacations so much more fun - something special to look forward to. 

4. So much less expensive = more money for other things we love. 

I have read this book also which has been such an inspiration to me: The Lifegiving Table: Nurturing Faith Through Feasting, One Meal at a Time

Each night of this summer I have a discussion prepared, a Bible verse, a message, a truth. And while we eat dinner every night we discuss. We ARE nurturing faith through feasting, one meal at a time. It has been such a blessing to me, their mama, to know that even now, even at 21 and 17 I am reaching their hearts, teaching, inspiring, discipling. 

This one quote from this book has been my anchor this summer: 

And when they realize they are one of those top priorities and you are CHOOSING to POUR INTO THEM with time, prayer, teaching, and connection, they get a glimpse of God's love and care for them. 

Also this: 

Your desire for a deeper friendship with your daughter will be evident in your commitment to spend time with her when the focus isn't on homework or household chore or negotiating technology time. 

What you share now in these intentional times stays with your daughter as she matures, makes tough decisions, moves away, has other mentors, creates her own circle of friends, and becomes a life-giver for others. 

These are five intentional commitments I believe in: 

1. I will welcome my daughters to come to me anytime. I will say yes to their desire to talk even when inconvenient. I'll avoid frustration by laying aside expectations to control life and commit to showing them the love of Jesus. 

2. I will create a safe place where they can say anything, ask any question, and know I will keep their confidences, hold their trust, and understand their failures. I will be someone they count on. 

3. I will prepare ahead for each discipleship time. 

4. I will be a conductor of life-giving moments of beauty, fasting, and living companionship. With music and treats and a pretty atmosphere, I will create a place of fun, pleasure, rest, and celebration in our home. 

5.  I will daily pray for them so that when they leave home they will have the foundations of biblical truth and virtue holding them and supporting them. 





Sunday, July 14, 2024

Sunday Ponderings

I love the at-home regular days of summer the best. 

They are simple - they allow my mind to wander.

They are restful and somehow productive.

They are peaceful and oh so satisfying as I pray, plan, work, read, think, putter, decorate, and enjoy my home and my precious family.

I could do these days forever. 



Often during the school year I long for an interval of quiet conversation, removed from the demands of being a fourth grade teacher and all that goes with a full school year for my family. 

I ponder much during the summer how to do well this "marathon" of life as a wife, mama, teacher. I know I need to bring some of this summer retreat with me. 

Continuing little, even just bits of routines that fill me into too full days: 

💕morning prayer

💕workouts

💕a quiet weekend morning for devotionals and reading

💕even fitting in 'fun' like decorating for the seasons or thrift/antique shopping brings me a way to press through until I realize it is summer once again 

Psalm 36:7

How precious is your steadfast love, O God! All people may take refuge in the shadow of your wings. 

(9) For with you is the fountain of life; in your light we see light.