Spring Things


The first day of Spring was yesterday, and we celebrated by going outside to play in several inches of snow.  For a couple weeks I have been trying to fill out the prompts for this linkup about Spring, but literally every time I planned to work on it, it would snow and put me out of my springtime mood.  But today I'm going to just ignore the weather, spray some lilac-scented room freshener to get in the spirit, and share some spring musings! 

  • List your favorite thing about spring.  Which season do you like best?
My favorite thing about spring the last couple years has been the moment when the birds return to our house.  Sometime between March and May, the trees around our house fill with songbirds, and the noise is loud enough to actually wake me up in the morning.  You would think that would be annoying, but it's not at all - I love waking up to birdsong.  I do not love waking up to woodpeckers, however, and unfortunately they tend to return with the rest of our winged friends.  

Aside from my love for the birds, springtime is actually not particularly pleasant at high elevation - our "spring" according to nature typically doesn't occur until May, and then it happens all at once a week before summer.  In the meantime, it's just an endless cycle of mud, which freezes when it snows, then melts the next week and gets tracked all over my house.  I would love to visit a state that actually has magical (or at least pleasant) springs - which states are those?  Please comment and tell me.

My favorite season in the mountains is most certainly fall.  That's when the magic happens.

  • What puts spring in your step?  What does your favorite pair of shoes look like?  When do you wear them?
The scattered days of warm weather put a spring in my step, along with the fact that this is the first spring in the last two years that is normal!  No lockdowns (ugh, 2020), no masks (ugh, 2021).  I feel free and light as a feather!  

Unfortunately I can't tell you what my spring-y steps look like these days, because I don't currently have a favorite pair of shoes.  Even though I've updated many things in my wardrobe over the last five years, shoes is not one of those things, and it's starting to show.  My winter/spring shoes are all grungy looking or literally falling apart, but I'm limping them along.  I do have some nice summer shoes though, so I'll probably continue to not buy new winter footwear for as long as I can get away with it.  Eventually I'm going to have to shell out.

  • Around St. Patrick’s Day we see invitations to ‘kiss me, I’m Irish’ on graphic tees and images everywhere.  Are you Irish?  If not, what would your graphic tee read?  ‘Kiss me, I’m…”
I actually do have some Irish way back there somewhere, along with German (a quarter), English (probably a sizable fraction since it's coming from all sides of my family), and Polish.  I'd like to get one of those DNA tests sometime, because apparently even siblings can have a different mix of ethnicities in their DNA.  Have any of you had your DNA tested?


  • What flowers would make up your perfect spring bouquet?  What is your favorite floral fragrance?
Oh, I love the scent of lilac, and then probably honeysuckle, roses, or jasmine.  I'm not sure how all that would smell together though.  My ideal floral fragrance would certainly have to include a hint of woodiness.  I like to feel like I'm walking through the woods while smelling my odd flower bouquet.

  • Spring cleaning?  A necessary evil or overrated?  What’s your favorite cleaning tip?  Cleaning product?
I tend to do some cleaning out whenever I switch out the kids' clothes for the seasons, which is in the early summer and early fall - I'll get rid of old clothes and toys at that time.  As far as deep cleaning the rest of the house, I don't do that in the spring necessarily, but whenever I have time to do it over the course of the year!  Since we homeschool, deep cleaning happens alot in the summer when we don't have school work.  My favorite cleaning products are Mrs. Meyers, and don't say anything to me about their toxicity or whatever - I like the way they smell, and I'm going to keep using them!



  • Slinkies are coiled spring toys.  Did you ever have a Slinky?  Silly Putty?  What was your favorite toy as a child?
I did have a Slinky and Silly Putty, and a bunch of other toys!  I particularly remember Pogs in elementary school.  Does anyone know how to actually play the Pogs game?  We just collected them when I was a kid, but I know there was supposed to be some way to play with them.  I also went through a Crazy Bones collecting phase in middle school, and once again there was a "game" you were supposed to do with them, but I strongly suspect the games were just a pretense for both of those toys.

My favorite toy as a child was certainly my teddy bear though.  I still have it in my baby box.

  • When we ‘spring forward’ on March 13, what do you hope to do in that extra daylight?
Okay, against my better judgement...let's talk about what they are currently trying to do with Daylight Savings Time.  Have you heard that the Senate passed a bill to put the country permanently on Daylight Savings Time?  

I am strongly against this.  

Where I live, staying permanently on DST will mean that sunrise won't happen until 8:21 AM in the winter.  That is absurd to me.  We try to start school at 8 AM, so now you're telling me that I may have to wake my kids up and get them started on school before the sun even rises?  NO!!  Why are they doing this to us?  

I know that alot of people hate changing the clocks in the Spring and Fall with a passion (I cannot relate to this, I don't understand why it's such a big huge deal).  But in the end, there is a reason we've been doing it this way for a hundred years - to avoid 8:21 sunrises in the winter (way too late), and 4:30 sunrises in the summer (way too early).  So I personally think we should just stick with the current system, because it is more convenient.  However, if we are going to eliminate the switch in the spring and fall, at least put us back on Standard Time!  Why should we permanently go onto artificial time (which is what DST is) - why not go back to the time that more closely aligns with the natural clock, ie. the time that brings the sun closest to straight up at noon?  That would be Standard Time.  There are also apparently studies that suggest more sunlight in the morning is much better for your circadian rhythms than more sun in the evening (you have to look up the studies yourself, I need to finish this post).  

Bottom line - just say no to permanent Daylight Savings Time!  Write your senator.

What was the original question?  Oh, nothing.  I woke up with the sun, and adjusted my kids' bedtime and did nothing with the extra hour of daylight, because in reality, we had the exact same amount of daylight we would have had if we didn't switch the clocks!

  • The following colors will be trending for spring soft lilac, canary yellow, hot pink, salted caramel, scarlet, sky blue.  Will you be styling any of these?  Is there a color you will avoid?
It's so funny to me that there are colors that are on trend for different seasons - I want to know who decides these things!  I will say that I have loved all the sky blue in the stores lately.  I did purchase a soft lilac top at Target, but I'm on the fence on whether I want to keep it or not.  I'm also on board for the scarlet, I don't hate the salted caramel, and the other two I probably won't buy because they won't fit in nicely with my wardrobe (though I do love those colors in theory)!

  • What will you be reading this spring?  Do you have a favorite devotional or quiet time routine?
I am deep into rereading The Return Of The King right now.  It's been a bit of a stressful month for our family, and I needed to go back to something comforting, and the Lord Of The Rings is that for me right now.  I also plan to read Perelandra by C. S. Lewis in the next couple weeks.  As for quiet time reading, after my Bible, I am reading The Gospel Comes With A Housekey by Rosaria Butterfield, and I just started Far Above Rubies: The Life Of Bethan Lloyd-Jones by Lynette Clark.  Bethan is the wife of Martyn Lloyd-Jones, and if you don't know who that is, go fix that right now.



  • Share an inspirational thought or spring quote.  Why does this speak to you?
Speaking of Lord Of The Rings:

"Other evils there are that may come...Yet it is not our part to master all the tides of the world, but to do what is in us for the succor of those years wherein we are set, uprooting the evil in the fields that we know,  so that those who live after may have clean earth to till.  What weather they shall have is not ours to rule."

-J. R. R. Tolkien, Gandalf in The Return Of The King

I highlighted this paragraph when I was reading the book the other day, because it reminded me that I can't worry about what the future will be like for my kids.  I can shield them while they are young, till the soil of their hearts for the gospel, uproot the evil around me where I can, and trust the Lord to take care of what conditions they'll find in the future.  The future is God's.  It's not mine to rule, and worrying about it won't change anything.

It's also rather a springtime-y quote, don't you think?  And succor means "assistance or support in times of hardship and distress" in case that vocabulary word never cemented itself into your brain (I had to look it up).

How has your springtime been, friends?

Picking Up The Space Trilogy

I read Out Of The Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis over the last couple days, and I have so many things swirling in my brain I thought I better get them typed out into a post before I lose them.  I decided my thoughts on this book were going to be long enough to justify their own post, but I do hope to do a full reading update soon!  

I tried reading Lewis's space trilogy a couple years ago, and was so confused by it that I quickly lost steam.  When I decided to give it another try recently, I did a little research first and read the first few chapters of Deeper Heaven by Christiana Hale.  She explains that what Lewis was trying to do in this series is to recover some of the beauty of the medieval idea of the structure of the universe, through the way he structures the universe of the Ransom Trilogy.  C. S. Lewis was, as I was reminded in Deeper Heaven, a professor of medieval and Renaissance English after all!  So while some of the details of space in these books do not fit with the cold, hard facts of what we know space to be materially, he is trying to create a merging of the old medieval understanding of the universe with a physical journey through space and spiritual truths from Christianity.  The result is a really interesting combination of medieval cosmology/mythology and Christian principles in this fantastical version of space.  

An interesting aspect to me is how Lewis brings back the medieval idea of a "personality" assigned to the planets, but rather than in the form of false gods from mythology, in this book the personalities are angels that are given charge over the planets.  Ransom gets to meet one as he travels to Mars, along with other intelligent beings who have souls and all worship the one true God (named Meleldil in their terminology).  

In medieval cosmological structure, which Lewis is incorporating into this book, the Fall only affected the area beneath the moon, so the planet Ransom visits is "unfallen", not affected in the same way by the sin of mankind.  This is one example of how this series does NOT fit well into the reality of what we see in Scripture - Romans 8 tells us that creation itself is subjected to the corruption of our sin, and I don't see anyplace in Scripture where certain realms of the physical creation are exempt from this.  However, in the Ransom series, a certain element of "corruption" on these other planets may come in the form of the death of these other souled beings that Ransom meets - another questionable idea when compared with the Bible, because Scripture tells us that death entered the world through our sin.  

Perhaps in the world that Lewis has created here, the death of these creatures is supposed to be connected with mankind's sin, the "groaning" and "corruption" they experience on other planets - but again, the Bible doesn't indicate that there are other intelligent beings who suffer physical death because of man's sin, so this is definitely an imaginative stretch.  

Ransom also seems to think that animals lived on the earth for some extent of time prior to man, which would be another thing inconsistent with a reading of the creation in Genesis being six literal days.  However, we also see Ransom having to reorient his thinking away from his conception of "science" and toward deeper truths, and his internal dialogue about his views on creation and creatures is changing throughout the story, so I'm not sure Lewis was making any sort of statement about his own view on how God created the world here.

Aside from a few inconsistencies and stretching of biblical concepts, I thought this book was really fascinating.  What Frank Peretti's This Present Darkness did in speculating about the workings of demons, Out Of the Silent Planet does in imagining the world of angels and creating a system for how they could live in the medieval conception of the universe. 

If I hadn't started reading Deeper Heaven at the same time as the Ransom series, I would have been thoroughly confused.  But with the insights into Lewis from that book in the back of my mind, I could see what Lewis was trying to do in creating other "worlds" under the authority of angels, who are themselves under the authority of God.  

Armed with a little more background information, I can look past some of the questionable theological aspects and see the beauty of the story he's trying to create here.  I may not agree with everything that is said in the books, and I don't think everything is in line with the knowledge we are given in the Bible.  But there is some value in various spiritual principles communicated through the book - I can pick out the good stuff, and recognize the rest as fantastical elements created for this story to work (sort of as you do with a fairytale, or with other Lewis books such as Narnia).  I was particularly moved by considering man's fall into sin from the perspective of these fictional, unfallen cultures and personalities.  It turns your mind to all we lost when Adam and Eve sinned, and all we will regain when God creates a new heavens and new earth for His redeemed people someday.  I'm really curious to read the next book!


A Year Off Instagram And A Month On - What I Learned

 


My year without an Instagram was 2021. In many ways it was the best year I have had in a while, without Instagram to distract me from my real life. We made memories, without the pressure of taking photos for social media. I learned new skills, because I had extra time. I didn’t stress about everything going on in the world, because it wasn’t constantly being pushed in my face from ten different angles. Derek even mentioned that I have seemed less anxious without Instagram.

Still, toward the end of last year I felt a pull to get back on Instagram for a minute, to see if I could find a better balance if I gave it one more try. So for the month of January (and very slightly in February) I’ve been using Instagram from my desktop, with an occasional foray into the iPad version of the app when I wanted to post a video or sporadic story. I started out thinking I would only post content that I had already published on my blog. I thought Instagram might be a nice way to reflect my blog in another space, and to interact with online friends who only have Instagram. These were done of my reasons for my little Instagram experiment.

It's been an extremely interesting experience being off Instagram for a solid year, and then getting back on.  In so many ways I came back to the platform with fresh eyes.  The first thing I thought is "Why am I following all these people?" and I cut my following list way down.  I posted again for the first time in January with a great amount of suspicion and anxiety, and I think I realized a few things about Instagram that only this experience - being off for so long, and then briefly getting back on - could give me.



1. Instagram is built to keep you in the app as much as possible, mainly so they can collect data on you.  Yes that personal data is not studied individually but is aggregated into a huge data sets, but they are still manipulating you with that information, and it's still creepy (read The Tyranny Of Big Tech by Josh Hawley for more on this). I knew all that before, but I noticed again how good they are at sucking you into the app for as much time as possible.  I was surprised at how quickly the temptation to be on there way too much came back - and that without even having the app on my phone.  

Unfortunately, my good intentions to limit my use are still no match for the addictive tricks the app plays on my brain. I think over the course of my year off Instagram, I got really used to NOT feeling the urge to check Instagram for feedback on my posts.  It feels so good to NOT WANT to check Instagram, to not even have to think about it, but you don’t appreciate the absence of a bad habit until the temptation comes for you again.  I was really surprised by how quickly that urge to check came back.  

2. A lot of us end up changing our content (or even real-life choices and habits) in some way to optimize for Instagram.  It was weird to feel anxious when I hit that "post" button, wondering if my post would even get shown to anyone because of that infuriating algorithm. Then I was alarmed to find myself strategizing how to help the next post do better, or share more of what was doing well.  When did I agree to curate myself like that, to adjust the offering of my content to appease the Instagram "gods"?  When I posted something on Instagram,  especially at first, I ended up checking it every hour, just wondering if anybody commented or liked it. Then I started thinking about the next thing I should post, and it became this low hum of anxiety in the back of my mind, this pressure I put on myself to come up with something good for Instagram.  And I found myself thinking often over the past couple months, do I really want this? Is this beneficial to my life? Am I doing any actual good on this platform?  Is this platform doing any good for me?

3. Instagram content is all so…disposable. I was surprised to notice for the first time how quickly whatever I just shared became irrelevant - within 24 hours, it was done and past, gone, worthless.  In many ways, Instagram makes our thoughts themselves seem disposable. Throw your thoughts out there, only to be buried beneath a bunch of other stuff, before we move on to planning the next post.

4. When it comes down to it, Instagram is just a bunch of people trying to be noticed. I shouldn't have been surprised to find myself in the same old rat race, once again becoming a part of the online crowds shouting, "Look at me!  Give your attention to me!  Make me feel important by clicking the like button!"   I don't think everyone consciously seeks virtual affirmation on Instagram, but when it comes down to it, practically, that's what we are all kind of doing, isn't it?  Getting back on and browsing around, I was secondhand embarrassed for some users that were clearly craving that digital affirmation, and then I realized with horror that I was basically doing the same thing!  I hate feeling like the worth of my thoughts are tied up in how many people liked them, and I was embarrassed at myself when I found myself participating in all of it.  

5. It's very difficult to keep my eyes on Christ when I'm on Instagram. I noticed some things happening in my heart that I didn't like almost immediately after dipping my toes back into Instagram.  This week I finally finished a book from my longstanding TBR, 10 Arguments To Delete Your Social Media Accounts Right Now, and the last chapter happened to be comparing Big Tech to a religion.  This book was written by someone I don't agree with on political or religious matters, a liberal I have nothing in common with except this interest in the insidiousness of Big Tech, but even this man can recognize there is an odd spiritual element to social media/Big Tech.

We like to think social media is spiritually neutral, but the thing is, I'm not so sure it is.  Something that takes so much of our time and attention and information and effort is going to inevitably affect us spiritually in some way.  It's probably not the same for all of us - for all I know some people may be impacted positively by their social media use - but for a whole bunch of us, I think we recognize there are negative aspects.  It takes alot of wisdom and honesty to weigh those things rightly for yourself, to see things clearly, and to make the tough decisions where necessary.

While struggling with all this I came across this verse in Colossians:

If then you were raised with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ is, sitting at the right hand of God.  Set your mind on things above, not on things on the earth.  For you died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God.  When Christ who is our life appears, then you also will appear with Him in glory.

Colossians 3:1-4

It struck me to the heart because I know, deep down, that Instagram does not help me focus on heavenly things. It makes me focus on all the most shallow aspects of earthly things. Things such as likes, and follower counts, and how my hair looks in that video I just posted. Vain and meaningless as the wind.

If I am getting into a more worldly mindset just by using the platform, is the rare occasion where I may actually, maybe, point someone to Jesus worth my own spiritual health taking a hit?  I don't know the answer to that.  I wish that I could just resist the way Instagram puts my focus on myself, and keep my mind only on Christ, to post with a pure heart for His glory and not mine. But it’s too easy to make everything about myself, and I feel the failure acutely when I realize that's what I've done.


6. Finally, I realized I really don’t need Instagram.  With all this swirling in my mind, I haven't posted anything on Instagram for most of the month of February (or my blog either for that matter - I needed a mental break), but when I scheduled last week's blog post to be shared on Instagram, from my desktop, I felt mostly indifferent about checking how it did.  I don't view this so much as progress in my "relationship" to Instagram as evidence that I don't need Instagram.

When I'm active on Instagram, I hate the way it makes me feel.

If I can get myself to the point where I don't care about it so much (a healthier state for me), then what's the point in putting my effort there at all?

I guess I'm saying that I'm giving up Instagram again?  I may keep my account to check in with my blog friends who I have no other way to keep in touch with, but I don't know how much I'll be posting there.  I may share sporadic verses or quotes that stand out to me, or perhaps an occasional thought that I specifically feel led to share on Instagram, but I think that will be rather rare.  There aren't many things that would be better suited to Instagram than for my blog.  I will continue, as I have for the last 13 years, to share on the blog instead, and all personal updates will be here, not on Instagram.  

As a sidenote, I wish I could nudge (ie. wrestle into acquiescence) all those friends who are only on Instagram to come back into the friendly waters of the good ol' blog world.  Whatever is shared on Instagram can be shared on a blog.  Blog feed readers, like Feedly (my favorite), still make it easy to see new posts without checking each individual blog.  The blog world is still active, much less noisy and time-consuming than Instagram, with the same potential for online connection.  Come on in, friends, the water's fine. Blogging may take a little more work than Instagram, but it's slower, it's calmer, and in my opinion healthier than the firehose that Instagram has become. 

So there's my little state-of-the-social-media statement, and I'll be here on this blog, as always, my little haven on the internet.

Sharpening Shares | Vol. 1


I want to try something new on my blog, and attempt to share a few links every (or every-other?) Saturday or Sunday to things that I've found spiritually edifying during the previous week.  I'm calling it "Sharpening Shares".  Suggestions for a better name are welcome.

If I haven't mentioned it before, I experimented a bit with Instagram in January and February, and I have THOUGHTS - which will be shared later this week - but one thing I realized is that while Instagram is a convenient place to share quick articles, videos, etc., I don't actually want to share those things on there.  I'm not convinced more people see shares on Instagram than on my blog, and I'd rather spend time in this space.  Blogs are just friendlier, and I think those of you who read blogs are more likely to pause and find some value in a great article or sermon than all the people swiping right on Instagram stories anyway.

So here are a couple things that have been turning my eyes to Christ lately.  If you check them out, I hope you find them challenging and encouraging too!

"Love Not The World" - This was a great sermon by Phil Johnson about avoiding worldliness, which he pointed out is actually a sin.  I was really convicted to rethink some of my attitudes after listening to this, and this part stood out to me personally:

"But seriously, does anyone think it is a major problem across the spectrum of evangelical Christianity in America that we have too many people that are too heavenly-minded?  With our faces buried in our cell phones, and our minds glued to whatever is trending on Twitter, and our televisions programmed to tevo whatever is on HBO while we watch Entertainment Tonight? A more fitting description of the average evangelical today is that he is so earthly-minded that he is of no good to either heaven or the church.  And our constant fixation on every whim and novelty that is currently trending in the world is a dangerous and sinful pursuit.  Fad-chasing is not and never has been a road that leads to Christ."

-Phil Johnson

Give it a listen.

Resurrection Letters Vol. 1 from Andrew Peterson - This is an old album now, but I've really appreciated the depth of the lyrics this week.  I've been in an especially springy mood, despite the temperatures being in the negatives this week, and this music put me in the frame of mind for Resurrection Day!

Precepts Bible Studies - I already mentioned this in a different post, but let me take an opportunity to reiterate that I love this Bible study guide.  I'm doing the Colossians one with my church, and I don't think I've ever dug into one book of the Bible so thoroughly.  It guides you through the process step-by-step,  with no fluff, and I'm learning a ton!  I think I'll probably even buy a guide to go through on my own when we finish with this one.

Happy Sunday, friends!

Current Mood & Five Favorites

The temperatures are in the negatives outside right now (Fahrenheit, during the day), and I'm realizing just how leaky the windows are in this house.  Windows have been on our home improvement list for a couple years, but when the warm spring air arrives it's hard to remember these frigid temperatures.  I'm sitting directly in front of our wood stove, soaking in the warmth while I type.

It's been a crazy couple weeks for me, but it's hard to pinpoint why.  I had a particularly busy span a couple weeks ago, and it's taken me this long to recover.  Instead of getting better at juggling the busyness as a mom, I feel that I am getting worse the older my kids get.  

I've also had the weird experience of recognizing my personality shifting again.  When I was first married, I discovered my extroverted side, and was always full of energy after hanging out with friends or family.  Now, it seems my introverted side is taking it's turn again, because at this time period in my life, staying home sounds the nicest.  I have started to love those weeks when we don't have much going on, when we don't go anywhere and finish all the homeschool work I was hoping to do, when we have time for movies in the afternoon, or art projects, or extra chapters of our read-aloud.  Maybe five energetic kids would bring out the introverted side of anyone, or maybe I'm just spending my extrovert energy on them more now, as they get older.  Either way, family and home have a beautiful draw for me right now.

I am finally back into a reading groove again, thank goodness, and it happens to be a classics reading groove.  I am just finishing up Huckleberry Finn, which I enjoyed more than I thought I would, and I'm halfway through Mansfield Park.  I used to say it was the only Jane Austen I hadn't read, but I didn't know at the time about Lady Susan, and I don't actually remember anything about Northanger Abbey or Persuasion, so I'm not counting those anymore.  Mansfield Park is also more enjoyable than I expected - I was unfairly soured on it as a teenager by a horrible movie adaptation, but the book is really working for me.  I always say that Emma is my favorite Austen because I relate to Emma (ie. sticking your foot in your mouth, learning hard lessons about yourself), but I am also really liking Fanny Price.  I think Fanny is alot like I was as a young teenager, so my inner youth relates to her insecurities.  I eventually found my voice after graduating high school, and I expect that Fanny will find her voice before the end of the book as well.  The rest of the characters in that book are just painful, at least at the halfway mark.

The freezing start to this week aside, it has actually felt pretty springlike outside lately, and I've started to catch a bit of spring fever. This is probably not a good thing since spring where I live rarely arrives until April, and even then we are at risk of snowstorms until well into May.  Nevertheless, I am going through all my spring morning time plans, worksheets, etc., requesting Easter books from the library, and generally getting ready to dive right into pretending it's not winter.  I even ordered a devotional for myself to read in the weeks leading up to Resurrection Day (this one).  The urge to start looking at next year's homeschool curricula is calling, but I am trying to resist at least until all the websites start having spring sales.

I'll end this post with a few recommendations from the last few weeks, just for fun!  

1. The Third Thursday Book Club.  This is a classics book club over at the Daily Wire, led by Ben Shapiro.  You have to be a member to watch the book club discussions, but you can sign up for the emails for free and get Ben's notes on the classic of the month.  This book club is the reason I picked up The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn, and probably also at least part of the reason I'm finishing it so quickly.  Whatever you think about him, Shapiro is a very smart guy, and I really enjoyed his essay on Huckleberry Finn!  He made some great points.  I was also gratified to see that he mentioned many of the sections of the book that I had been mentally highlighting - I don't have much confidence in my literary analysis skills, so it was nice to see I'm not totally off track.  I'm looking forward to seeing what they pick for March!

2. Humility And Doxology.  Have I mentioned this website before?  It's basically my favorite homeschool blog.  I have a theory that different types of homeschool blogs are going to appeal to different personality types, and something about this one just works for my personality.  I love all her booklists and poetry suggestions, and her writing style.  I immediately click on her emails when they fly into my inbox.

3. Sweatpants.  I'm not usually a sweatpants type of girl, but in this cold weather and current emotional season, sweatpants are bringing comfort in more ways than one.  I like these ones from Target lately.

4. Mrs. Meyers Mint Cleaner.  Have I mentioned that I have a limited sense of smell since being sick last fall?  I haven't been able to smell any bad smells for months (not as good of a thing as you might think), and pleasant smells are very hit and miss.  Last week I even had one day where everything - everything - smelled like butter, which was a little bizarre.  Thankfully the next morning I was back to smelling half the things normally again (and still not smelling the other half at all).  It's incredibly frustrating to be able to smell something nice one day, and not be able to smell it the next.  That happened this week with the Mint cleaner, but nevertheless, on the day I could smell it, I enjoyed it very much.

5.  This song.  I put together a Spotify playlist for my kids the other day, basically a bunch of albums that I wanted to listen to with them, all in one place.  It's probably not the best playlist for shuffling, but it's nice to not have to scroll through fifty albums on the app to find the ones I saved for my kids.  Half of the albums I haven't even listened to yet, so I started the playlist in the background while we were doing school the other day.  This song came on and made me want to cry.  Maybe I'm just in a melancholy mood lately, I don't know, but I needed this reminder.  It's so easy to let the worries and responsibilities of life overwhelm me, make me forget where my only hope in life and death lies - with Christ Himself.  

"Unto the grave, what shall we sing?

“Christ, He lives; Christ, He lives!”

And what reward will heaven bring?

Everlasting life with Him.


O' sing hallelujah!

Our hope springs eternal,

O' sing hallelujah!

Now and ever we confess,

Christ, our hope in life and death."

Happy Wednesday, friends!  Hope you have had a peaceful February so far!


Do You Know God’s Will For Your Life?

 

Do you ever feel a little lost or purposeless, or wonder what God’s will is for your life?  

I have felt that way at times, especially when I get caught up in the daily tasks of my role as a wife and mom, which can at times feel monotonous. When the kids are crying over a math lesson, dinner is burning while we are busy struggling under a load of laundry, and job conflicts or people problems are burdening us emotionally, it’s easy to start thinking there is something bigger and better out there that we’re missing - especially with the call of the little squares on social media, like a siren song, altering our expectations and luring us to all the wrong things.

Well, God‘s will for your life and mine isn’t some mysterious thing that we have to figure out. It’s right here:

“For this reason we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding; that you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; strengthened with all might, according to His glorious power, for all patience and longsuffering with joy; giving thanks to the Father who has qualified us to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in the light.”
‭‭Colossians‬ ‭1:9-12‬ ‭NKJV‬‬

Did you catch it? In verse nine Paul tells the Colossians that he is praying they will be filled with knowledge of God’s will:

“For this reason we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding;”


And then he lists exactly what that is in the following verses.

“…{1}that you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, {2}being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; {3}strengthened with all might, according to His glorious power, for all patience and longsuffering with joy; {4}giving thanks to the Father…”


I don’t know about you, but I fall short of all of those things every day. But to any extent that God strengthens me to fulfill His will for my life, it is only because of what Christ has done on the cross.  God alone is holy, and He took our sins upon Himself and died in our place, offering us His righteousness when we trust in Christ, so that we can stand blameless someday before the throne of God.  

“He has delivered us from the power of darkness and conveyed us into the kingdom of the Son of His love, in whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins.”
‭‭                                                            Colossians‬ ‭1:13-14‬ ‭NKJV‬‬


So you and I, when we trust in Jesus alone for our salvation, we don’t have to sit around wondering anymore if we are missing God’s will for our lives. Wherever we are, whatever we are doing with our time, whatever obstacles or struggles come with those daily tasks, we can live fully in His will if we do these things. We can pray and ask Him to equip us to…

…walk in a manner worthy of Him, fully pleasing Him in whatever we do,

…bear fruit in every good work by the power of His Holy Spirit,

…increase in your knowledge of God,

…be strengthened by His glorious might to do your daily work, in service to Him, with endurance, patience, and joy,

…and to give thanks to the Father who delivered us from darkness to the light of Christ’s Kingdom, by Jesus own blood spilt for our redemption, the forgiveness of our sins.

That. That is God’s will. For your life and for mine.


P. S. I am aware that most of the time when we are wondering about God’s will, it is in regards to a specific decision we have to make. It can be really tricky when we are faced with a fork in the road, to know what to do. But I think passages like these give us a guide for those decisions as well. Which decision will assist us in walking in a manner worthy of Christ? Or will one hinder us in that, even in subtle ways? Does one option lend us more opportunities to bear good fruit in every good work, or is one option stunting our growth? Will one hinder us in some way from increasing in our knowledge of God 
(through lack of time, encouraging wrong focus, etc.)?  God has brought us from darkness into light, so does one of the options help us keep our eyes on the light of Christ’s kingdom, instead of the "darkness" of worldly concerns?  

Sometimes it’s not a very clear answer. This is where Paul’s prayer for spiritual wisdom makes a lot of sense. We need to pray for God’s wisdom to see these things clearly when making decisions. If there is no right/wrong decision, it’s just a matter of our preference, then I think we choose to the best of our ability, and do whatever we do to the glory of God.

What do you think?

Snippets From The Month | Vol. 2



-I woke up the other morning to an orange glow hitting my eyelids.  When I opened my eyes and looked outside, it was a gorgeous winter wonderland.  Our winter drought appears to be hopefully over, and we have gotten several snows since Christmas.  It's not hard to be grateful when you wake up to a view like this!  I think I already started a post with one of these sunlight photos this month, but it really was pretty.


-I requested a whole bunch of winter books to read the kids, to the point where the librarians were giving me a look as I picked up my holds recently. I managed to sneak in a comment about stocking up for the spring semester of school, and ever since they have been exceptionally friendly to me.  I don't know if they think I'm a paid teacher or if they suspect we homeschool, but either way, after they realized I was educating kids it's been a whole new experience.  I'm not sure how I feel about that.  I think a regular old mom who is checking out a huge stack of picture books for her kids should get the same level of respect, teacher or not, because every mom is a teacher.  If you are a mom, you are your child's first teacher, and best teacher for their entire childhood.  The things you teach them, intentionally and unintentionally, are the lessons that are most likely to stick.  That's one reason I have long wished every mom could go to a homeschool conference, even if they send their kids to school.

-We went over to my parent's house on a Sunday, and got to snowmobile for the first time this year!  Then we looked outside and saw a moose, just standing there.  It was like a painting, with the moon shining on the snow.


-I did finally finish the photo books that gave me a bloody eye, and they arrived in the mail this week.  They are gorgeous.  I am so happy with them!  I ordered from Chatbooks, and not only is the quality even better than the last time I got a book from them over a year ago, but their customer service is top notch.  One of my books accidentally got switched to softcover before checkout, and I didn't notice until it arrived in the mail.  I sent them an email, and they are sending me the book in hardcover like I intended - I just had to pay the $5 upgrade from softcover to hardcover.  I was so relieved to not have to buy a whole new book!  That was the final thing that sold me, and I will likely be using them for our photo books next year too.  Very pleased.

-On Martin Luther King Day, our family went to the stock show, which is always an event around here.  We watched ranchers showing cows, we saw the sheep and pigs, but we sadly missed the poultry show.  It ended up being a fun day overall though!

However, we did get completely thrown off with school the rest of the week, and there were tears from certain children and myself.  Ironically, I remembered that the topic for our upcoming homeschool support group meeting at church was supposed to be "how to salvage a bad day".  After the week we had I hardly feel qualified to lead that topic.   Homeschool moms, how do you salvage a bad day? If you have any good articles or videos that have encouraged you, let me know!


-A couple weeks ago we had a small birthday party for Derek's 40th birthday, and we did a "flashback to Derek's childhood" theme.  It was so much fun, and I'll probably try to write a post about the party soon.  But I have to mention it here because for the party we bought several iconic 1980's toys, including two Rubik's cubes.  I so wanted to keep the cubes perfect for the party, but they were messed up almost immediately by little fingers that couldn't resist.  However, after the party I decided to learn how to solve a Rubik's cube - and I did!

I think I am more excited about this than anyone else.  

But nevertheless, if anyone is interested, this is the video that I found very helpful.  There was only one part that I thought he explained poorly, but I think I figured out the solution. The first cube took me a couple hours to solve, mainly because I made a couple mistakes that required me to start completely over. But the second cube I solved in 15 minutes!  Now I kind of want the kids to mess it up again, so I can practice and solidify my knowledge.

That was too many paragraphs about Rubik's cubes.  As I said, it's exciting to me, but not necessarily anyone else!

-We went snowmobiling with my parents again over a weekend, this time way up in the mountains, and it was so much fun!  Snowmobiling is such a great way to get outside in the winter. I wrote a post about this last year, and I can't even remember if I published it, but this is another perk to living close to your parents as an adult.  When they do fun things, they may just take you along!  Snowmobiling is not something we would get to do at this stage in our lives if it wasn't for their generosity in sharing their hobby with us.

-I was going to go on about a book that wrecked me last week, but I think I'm going to save that for an upcoming book post/video in the next week or two.  I'll keep the title to myself and just leave you in suspense.

-This week started off weirdly, with a severe ringing that started in one of my ears, with no apparent cause.  I went to the doctor yesterday, and they gave me a referral for an audiologist, and hopefully we'll get it figured out.  The only possibility that seems feasible right now is an atypical migraine that causes your ears to ring.  I'm hoping we can figure it out, because the constant ringing is making me extra-sensitive to loud noises, and it's hard to hear voices if there is also background noise - and loud background noise is a regular thing in this house, so as you can imagine, that is making my days a little difficult at the moment!

How was your January?






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