Poor (Pt 1)



“Poor people are those who only work to try to keep an expensive lifestyle, and always want more and more.”

I read this article and those words have been bouncing around my brain. 

Bouncing around in my little world where my husband toils to make ends meet and there is always more month than money. Bouncing around where I struggle with embracing the tiny budget that allows for one Christmas gift per child under that tree… where I have to be thankful for the parents that will keep my children from disappointment… where my resourcefulness grows thin for free creative gifts… where my apartment grows smaller as my children grow larger and faster… where my daughter has it in her head that she needs a Dreamlights for Christmas and reminds me daily—

Reminds me daily that we don’t have enough. 

And this idea—“Poor people are those who… always want more and more”—bounces until it collides with this: “Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these things will be added to you” (Matt 6:33).

I think of the rich young ruler who walked away from Jesus heartbroken because he couldn’t give up his stuff.

I think of Zacchaeus who upon discovering that God wanted him, loved him, was preparing a place for him in the Kingdom of Heaven, gave up everything he had to follow Christ.

I think of how I may not have much when I live in this American world of rich young rulers—of commercials and consumerism and credit cards. And yet how much do I have when there are people in Haiti, Uganda, and Togo whose monthly income is less than the price of my one Christmas gift for my daughter—and I struggle with not giving her more??

And I think maybe I am actually poor, because I seek and long for things... for more Christmas presents under the tree, for a larger house, for newer and trendier clothes.

I am poor because I think I lack.

But if I sought His Kingdom, I would not lack. For in Jesus is the well from which one drinks and never thirsts again. If I seek satisfaction in this world, I find a well in which toys are outgrown, clothes wear thin, and trends always change.

And I think, perhaps I could be rich… if I sought God. Because He promises whatever you seek, you will find.

I want to want God.

This culture screams at me, especially during the holidays, when mothers cry for lack and fight for more. When Black Friday promises deals and if you just wake up early enough, run fast enough, search hard enough, you could win the prize of more. 

God is quiet. He does not scream. He has no ad campaigns or sales. 

Yet He calls, whispers: seek Me first.

Seek Me first.

Drink Living Water.

Eat the Bread of Life.

Pick up your cross and follow me.

And it is a mystery. Foolishness, really. Upside down. The last are first, and first are last. The richest are the poorest, and the poorest are the richest. Those with the least can actually have the most. And the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing but it’s the power of salvation to those who believe. 
And I wonder: this holiday season will I seek Him first? Will I lead my children to Him… to the place where I am on my knees, where I am full and content and satisfied in something no sale or bonus can provide me? 

Will I live poor or rich?



I should have the second part for you Monday. And in the meantime, can I just wish you the fullest and most joyful Thanksgiving?! 

Seriously and totally, happy day full of much thanks-giving to YOU!


By Grace,

Amanda

What I'm Into... November Edition

In this issue:

The Thanksgiving Tree
The Laptop Bag
Homemade Parfaits
The Easiest-Ever Salsa Chicken
Operation Christmas Child

The Thanksgiving Tree


Ann Voskamp put up this project for November on her blog. I thought it was beautiful, it looked easy to do, and it looked like a wonderful way to bring the act of thanksgiving into our home.


I grabbed the kids and took them on a nature hike to find sticks on the ground (and what kid doesn't want to be given the mission of finding good sticks?!).


 We put the sticks in the only large vase I had and cut out the leaves from the print out. Addy helped.

Can you tell we are just learning how to use scissors? :)

I used ribbon and glue dots to stick the leaves on.

Every night when we gather around the table, Addy picks a leaf, Michael reads it, and then one of us offers up something we are thankful for. We record it on the back of that leaf.

Precious, right?! I am so glad we did this.


Want to do it too? Go here!



The Laptop Bag



I really wanted a bag just the right size for my little netbook. So I made one. Before you go thinking I am this amazing crafter or asking me to make you one, know this: it is full of mistakes. I am learning through this whole blogging process that I am not actually all that into crafting. I suppose sometimes I just need a tangible way to deal with stress and making some kind of something just helps. This was right before I went to the Allume conference... I was nervous... So I sewed a bag. There's just something therapeutic about sewing in straight lines. Does anyone else relate?? 
Cheesin' it in front of some city art while in Harrisburg. I think the bag suits me :)
That said, somethings about it turn out pretty awesome if I do say so myself. :) I used scrap fabric: fleece leftover from this project from last year and a retro-print cotton. I used two pieces of thick ribbon that I sewed together to make it double strong. So, besides needing to buy the ginorous button that I simply had to have, the bag was FREE.

Want to know how I made it cushioned and sturdy enough for a laptop?

I hacked into an extra one of these plastic boxes... I just cut the plastic pieces to size and added a piece of craft felt to either side. 
I'd show you the inside, but let's just say it's already full of my mess stuff. I also use it as a purse. It is lined in the retro-print and fits my laptop, a composition notebook and my wallet--things this writer-girl needs to have on her person at almost all times. :)



Homemade Parfaits


(Warning this paragraph contains just a minor bit of "mom-talk") So I wanted to wean my son and finally get him sleeping through the night. He was not doing either very easily. At 15 months old, I was having trouble getting him to drop lower than 4 feedings, and he was still waking up 2 times a night. The doctor suggested trying yogurt instead of milk. Yogurt is heartier than cow's milk but still contains all the wholesome dairy nutrition a growing boy needs. I tried giving him yogurt for breakfast and yogurt before bedtime. I won't say it worked like a charm... it still took a whole lot of foot-down determination to get him to wean and sleep through the night... but it definitely helped.

I have this great annoyance with store bought yogurt. Fruit and yogurt is great, but why,why, why do they need to add extra sugar on top of the fruit?? Fruit has natural sweetness!

So, I buy a tub of plain yogurt (32 oz), add a tsp. of vanilla and a tbsp. of maple syrup to the whole tub and stir. I now have hardly sweet, vanilla yogurt. A perfect backdrop for fruit and granola!

I add some frozen strawberries slightly thawed, cut them into the yogurt with a spoon, and sprinkle a tbsp of granola on top.

Delicious. And the Jed-man LOVES it.


The Easiest-Ever Salsa Chicken.


I found this here. Easiest. Yummiest. Dinner. Ever.

Place 4-6 Chicken Breasts (Boneless and Thawed) and 1 Jar of Salsa into your Crockpot... and let the magic happen. 6-8 hours later, pull super tender chicken apart with a fork, use for tacos, burritos, taco salad... the leftovers in your saturday morning egg scramble, in quesdillas for the kids lunch the next day... whatever, however.

Easy.

By the way, I use extra mild picante sauce and my kids like it. It's not too spicy for their young taste buds. (I spoon the "good" salsa on top of my taco because I like some spicy).

This is PERFECT if you have a large amount of people coming over. Two words: TACO BAR. :)



Operation Christmas Child


What's the best way to teach your child how blessed she is and how much we have to be thankful for??

By giving to someone else in need.

Operation Christmas ChildWe packed our first OCC shoebox this year. I let Addy pick the gender and age for the box recipient. So naturally, the box was packed for a 4 year old girl (who hopefully loves pink and princesses).

By signing up online (just click the picture), we were able to pay for the box's shipping and get a special label so we can find out what country our box ends up in.  I am looking forward to teaching her about that country during our preschool time.


Addy was super excited to drop this box off. This mom heart is feels all warmed-up knowing I am teaching my daughter how to be a giver and how to love. Now I just gotta deal with the whole "Christmas is tomarlow, Mom?" "No, Baby. That present is going really far so we had to drop it off now. Christmas is still a ways off." I have a feeling this is going to be a frequently recurring conversation for the next, oh, 40 days. :)


What are you up to? Any cool Thanksgivingish projects to share? Or super duper easy crock pot recipes? Leave 'em the comments.


By Grace,

Amanda

On Chewing Gum & Trust



I offered him a piece of gum.

It’s my intentional way of starting a conversation on a plane. I sorta stink at small talk.

I told him, “I am a firm believer in gum during take-off and landing.” He chuckled. I added, “And seriously, if you want or need more, just ask. I’d be happy to share.”

He smiled, acknowledging my offer.

We begin to share little bits of our life. He's retired with a long list of really cool hobbies like photography and brewing his own beer. I tell him how I write and have two kids and a husband I can’t wait to get home to. We talk about my husband and where his job may take him. We talk about faith and Christianity, of the problem of “putting people in boxes” and failing to really love them. He told me of his friend’s journey to find a denomination where he felt free to worship.

After a few minutes of small talk that was actually really big talk (I told you I stink at small talk), we rested. I wrote; he read. I journaled; he napped.

Two hours into the flight, we hit some turbulence and the plane ascended (or descended I am not really sure) without warning. My ears felt the change in altitude.

I looked to the seat next to me where my new friend is pulling out a familiar wrapper and taking out half a piece of gum and placing it in his mouth.

I sit stunned. He kept back half of a piece of gum from the gum I freely gave him… from which I had plenty and would have gladly given him more.

He didn’t want to ask for more. He didn’t take me at my word that I would give him more. He wanted to be in control.

{Which, by the way, I do realize I was two notches up from a perfect stranger, and, who knows, I could have been sleeping when he needed gum again. That part is really not the point.}

I wanted to tell him, you could have had more gum if you had but asked. 

2, 3, 4 pieces and you settled for two mediocre gum-chewing experiences because either you didn’t take me at my word or you didn’t want to ask?

And I wondered… do I ever do that with God?

Do I ever stop short of giving my all because I don’t want to run out—of money, of time, of strength? Do I lack because I just simply do not want to take the time to commune with God and ask for what I have need of? Do I attempt to be in control of my life rather than trusting God and His promises? Do I choose to ration the little bit I have rather than living expecting God to make good on His promises?

Do I stop short of fully living for God because I don’t really trust Him?

The verse that’s been on my heart:
And if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall thy light rise in obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noon day: And the Lord shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not” (Isaiah 58:10-11).

Pour out and you will be filled.

I think of the Israelites in the wilderness and the mystery of the manna. Sweet little wafers on the ground each morning—God’s provision. Don’t go out and collect it in the morning and go hungry. Hold back too much in case God doesn’t provide it the next day and it spoils (Worms! Gross!). Don’t set back extra on Friday for the Sabbath Rest and go hungry that day. 

Trust. But not just trust. Obedience too. And I think perhaps trust and obedience go hand in hand.

Trust God with each and every gift.
Seek His Daily provision.
Draw out from myself to those in need.
Obey God’s leading.
God WILL daily provide.
What God gives, He means to be used.
And do set aside for intentional rest.

Hmmm… I am thinking on this. I want to see God continue to move through this woman like He did in Pennsylvania. I know He shook me up and I can’t go back to being the same. And I know I want to hold back even now because of fear. I see all kinds of shortcomings in myself… failing to seek His daily provision by spending time in prayer and His Word daily, failing to obey His voice, failing to pour out because I am afraid I won’t have anything left, failing to take intentional rest. I want to trust and obey.

Care to think on this with me?? I would love you to chime in with your thoughts. :)


By Grace,

Amanda
 

Because Sometimes I'm Just a Big Sissy-La-La Girl





I thought I was starting to get the rhythm of this whole walking with God, day by day. Listening for His voice.

It is not easy.

Thing is, I grow weary so fast. I am one big sissy-la-la girl when it comes to trials. And change? Yeah, I kind of hate it… especially when I have no control over it. I think it is safe to admit that right now I am in the midst of a little freak-out. Trials and Change.

I think of the Hebrews—Jesus-loving Jews. Hated by Romans. Hated by Jews. Persecuted on all sides. The book of Hebrews talks about how they were persecuted, endured great trials, and did it with rejoicing.  They went through imprisonments, living day to day for provision, mockery… but their rejoicing only lasted so long. When more trials came their way, they began to waver and complain. Hebrews 10:36 points out what they were lacking:

“For you have need of endurance.”

This is the verse that is currently staring at me—gently tapping me on the shoulder. This verse is the two hands firmly cupping my cheeks during my little freak-out looking me square in the eye and telling me to focus. Perhaps, this is terrible to admit, but I kind of want to tell my Bible to shut up. I don’t want endurance. I don’t want to suffer. Rejoice in trials?! Pass!

“For you have need of endurance.”

Do I? Do I really need it, God?

{insert deep sigh}

“For you have need of endurance, SO THAT when you have done the will of God, you may receive what was promised… BUT we are not of those who shrink back to destruction, but of those who have faith to the preserving of the soul” (Hebrews 10:36,39).

We—followers of Christ, lovers of God—We are of those who left their country for one yet unknown because God said so, who stared lions in the face because we would rather please God than a king, who built a huge boat for something strange and yet to be seen (rain), who chose to be counted with suffering people rather than enjoy the pleasures of Pharaoh’s court, who circled a city for seven days and believed walking by faith and praising God could give them the victory.

We are not of those who shrink back.

And yet, don’t we?! Shrink back?

I see the hint of a trial and I want to grab my big comforter and a hide under it. I imagine the worst. I get angry. I stop rejoicing. I stop walking by faith because there is no way I am taking another step without know where I am going. I want to solve the problem. I want to know the outcome. I lose sleep. I lose energy. I fail to trust.

I want all the pieces to the puzzle so that I can put it all together. It’s as though deep down I am thinking, Thanks God for the mess you made of my life—I got it from here, thanks. 

 Oh, Amanda!

You have need of endurance!

And doesn’t slow and steady win the race?

So, I am slowing. Doing what doesn’t come natural… I am leaning in close to God. Instead of praying up a storm things like: Do this! Do that! And now, God! I am **trying** to be still. To know that He is God--Faithful--Sovereign. I am listening. Opening my hands to the things I am clinging to, that maybe He wants me to trust Him with.

I am learning that I do not need to know it all now. God provides what I need for each day. And the next day? Well, He’ll provide for that then.

I am walking one step at a time in the direction God is leading me, even if I don’t know the outcome, and even if I don’t particularly like the uncertainty of where I am currently at. I am remembering that a soldier doesn’t change their direction until the Sergeant changes their marches orders.

It’s time to stop the emotional and reactionary freak out when I smell a trial or a change coming. It’s time to lean in close to Jesus. It’s time to learn endurance.


And, perhaps, endurance is found not so much by pressing harder when it gets tough... but by pressing into the gentle arms of One Very Tough Dude--the Savior who endured and endured and endured for us.

How do you handle trials and change? Do you need endurance? Maybe we can pray for one another?


By Grace,
Amanda

10 Takeaways from Allume and 1 Big Highlight

So, I wanted to reflect on Allume, the writing/blogging conference I got to attend in Harrisburg, PA.

Can I start by saying Harrisburg is a beautiful city?!


Hills and trees and old churches and brownstones and white farmhouses… beautiful! Fall and all its glory were in full effect when we arrived. I got to see the East Coast dressed for Fall! (Yay!) My travel buddy, Allume roomie, new friend and definitely a kindred spirit went exploring with me on foot before the conference started.



I was pretty excited to be in the capitol city right next to the capitol building. (We got some crazy looks when we asked if it was the capitol building. Um... what else would it be?? Yeah. Okay. I guess it's a little obvious.)



10 Takeaways from Allume:

  1. Real life friends don’t learn anything new from my blog.” <--that was from Annie Downs session. I need to treasure my real life family and friends more even if it means waiting a week to post something.
  2. I not just a little introverted... I am super introverted. At a conference that was all about networking and meeting new friends, I discovered that I am not actually shy and can be quite loud. But I also discovered that I wear out quickly and require large quantities of re-charge time (by myself—just me, God, my Bible, and my journal). By the last day of the conference, I sat by myself and let other people sit next to me and start conversations. I just didn’t have any small talk left in me. Perhaps it makes me lame, but I seriously met some of the neatest people that way. (Big shout out to those willing to sit by the quiet loner and start conversations with her!)
  3. "Where you feel like you don’t fit, where you are the most uncomfortable… that’s your writing voice. “ <-- Denise Eide’s workshop. (Pssst… if you have children learning to read or struggle with reading or if you’ve ever wanted to understand things like why we have a silent “e”, check out her book Logic of English.) There are some places where I have been hurt, where I so haven’t wanted to write… but I can sense God calling me there. This blog might just get a little more controversial… but I think that’s a good thing. How do we bridge gaps, if there is no one willing to stand in the uncomfortable places??
  4. I am a jelly fish! <--from Phil Vischer’s talk (the creator of Veggie Tales). He shared his testimony and how jelly fish can float around, swim up or down but the only way they go anywhere is when they get in the current. Stop trying to go places, Amanda, and just simply get in God's current and let Him take you where He will.
  5. "Your Impact: The size of the heart of God for your audience.” <--Kat Lee. God loves YOU so Big! And He is the One that makes the impact. If I can just touch but a piece of the passion God has for who God wants me writing to, God can impact the world!
  6. Writing benefits my family. <--from TriciaGoyer’s talk. She listed off so many positive ways me being a writer can benefit my family. She talked about structuring our days better so that writing can be a positive thing for my family. I was struggling with mom-guilt over the way writing kept creeping into my life (or more like the social media side of blogging). Tricia gave some great tips on how to structure one’s day and made me realize being a writer is a gift that can bless my family.
  7. My Small is Big Enough <--Darren Rowse and this theme carried through many other speakers like Trina Holden. I don't need to be big for God to use me. Just love Him. Love His. And be listening and obedient to His voice. 
  8. Why would God give you a map, when He has given you Himself?” <-- Ann Voskamp “God didn’t give Abraham a map, he gave him a RELATIONSHIP.” “A calling listens to the One Who calls.” “God’s calling isn’t that you would do more FOR him, but that you would do more WITH Him.” “Lean in close to God’s Word and listen”<-- SOOO many great takeaways from AnnVoskamp’s talk. If you have 55 minutes, this is a great way to spend them! (All the other key-notes are here too).
  9. The gift of community. I got to meet some AMAZING women at this conference. And what made each woman amazing wasn’t the size of their readership, their niche, their denomination, their age, their number or age of children, their relationship status, their experience… it was the love of Jesus and a heart of compassion. This conference had everyone from whole-food-loving Catholics, green charismatics, faith-writing fundamentalists and mommy-encouraging Methodists… and the differences between us all just didn't matter. It only added to the beauty of a diverse community of women. I loved it!!
  10. The heart-felt talks I got to have with these women: Jacqui, Melanie, Becky, Jesenia, Nellie, Karen, Anna, Sarah, Karis. (and I know I missed a few). Dear kindred spirits. Instant new best friends. And seriously if you get tired of reading my stuff or want to add more to your reading list… their blogs! What a treasure these women are!



One SUPER big highlight:



Yep. I got to hug Ann Voskamp. Author of the book, 1000 Gifts—the book that totally changed the way I view my relationship with God and how I worship Him. Of course, as you may also notice from my red face, I fell apart when I met her (lots of tears people!). I got to tell her my very cool story I told you about yesterday, told her how wrecked I felt, and she so encouraged me.

Melanie, Nellie, Jacqui and Me in the Smilebooth. LOVE these dear sisters!!


I definitely have more un-packing to do (like mental and spiritual content from the conference... I did get all my clothes cleaned and put away... for the most part! Ha!) I am so SO thankful God opened the door for me to go. A seriously BIG thank you to Granma and Gramps for sponsoring my trip, my mom and sister who helped with my munchkins, my husband's support and belief in me, Jacqui for being willing to travel with this non-flyer and terrible decipherer of PA signs, the beautiful Allume team that worked to lavish on us and make the conference incredible, and all the prayers and support I got from all of you!

T H A N K  Y O U ! ! !

By Grace,
Amanda

PS-yesterday my comment moderator bugged on me yet again (on the Wrecked. post). I had responded to all of the comments, but I have no idea if you got my responses. Do know I am working on fixing this (and it may take a while because I am technologically clueless), I did not delete your comment on purpose, and I cherished each one of your sweet words! I am sorry and a big thank you for your grace. I suppose it's good to be kept humble and in need of grace. ha! xo


Wrecked. {Alternately Titled: How a White Suburban Housewife Leads an African Man to Christ}



Downtown Harrisburg, PA. I was visiting this city for the Allume conference... the conference that God decided to use this girl in an unexpected way and forever change her.


God asked me to go to a pub. I had first seen it the night my friend and I pulled into town for the writing and blogging conference we were going to attend. The pub was in a brick building complete with an Irish name and a few bearded hipsters sitting out front. Two nights later, I felt this strong prompting to go. The thing is, I have never once stepped foot into a bar. I argued with God. I tried waiting for this strange knowing to just go away. God I don’t know what to do. I’ve never been in a bar. Do I just sit down? Are there servers? Do I order at the bar? What if it’s crowded? What if I get hit on? God? Really?! The pub?! I am at a Christian blogging conference and there’s fundamentalists here and what if they see me? God didn’t answer my stream of questions and excuses. I just knew I had to go.

So I did. I walked towards the unknown, and as I approached the pub the feeling lifted and I knew I had gone as far as God needed me to go. So I turned around and walked towards a promising bench to put pen to paper. As I walked, I smiled. By chance, one young man smiled back so I said “Hi.”

As I sat on the bench, I penned these words:
God, I don’t want to be where it’s safe. Okay, maybe I do, but really, I sense the weight of the way You love people—the way life is so messy—and the mystery of the way You make it beautiful. I don’t want to crave the affection or admiration or recognition of other Christians. I have the Hope of the world, they have the hope of the world, and You see ME! (Wow!) You see me in a room full of people I think are incredible. You see me and I can bear Your Glory, the Hope of the world, in this beat-up, messed-up vessel and You can mysteriously let me shine… I don’t need them all to know my name to change the world with the gospel (and I couldn’t change the world anyways—that’s an only-God thing).

Perhaps, five or ten minutes went by when someone sat down on the bench I was occupying.
It was the young man to whom I had said hi, whose path I would have never crossed had I not walked towards a pub and turned around.  Immediately, I worried he thought I was hitting on him with my “hi.”

“Oh,” I said wide-eyed and big, “I need you to know, I am married. I didn’t say hi for any reason other than to be nice.”

He repeated back, “You are married?”

And I heard it. A familiar accent with soft R’s and heavy D’s. “Where are you from? I know that accent.”

“The Ivory Coast.” (Which he had to repeat for me 3 times before I could understand.) His skin was dark-chocolate, his nose was wide and his eyes were dark, but his gaze was soft and full of youth. I relayed my little bit of connection to the Ivory Coast.

And then I knew. I sensed the stirring of the Spirit. I needed to put Jesus in this conversation.

“Um…” I paused to work up my nerve. “Do you know Jesus?”

He looked a little puzzled. “No.”

“Would you like to know about Him?” I braced myself for the impending rejection.

“Yes. I think I would.”

I was shocked. How did that work? I took the longest thirty seconds to collect my thoughts.

I told him of my battle with depression and anxiety attacks, of cutting on myself and how God rushed in and set me free. I told him of Jesus’ death and resurrection. I told him of how we can try so hard in this life to make something happen, and somehow when we stop striving so hard for our own way—when we open our life to God and allow Him to be in control—somehow we have a joy and a peace that cannot swayed by circumstance. I told him of sin and the shame we carry when we do what we know to be wrong. I told him of God’s forgiveness.

I was jumbled. I spoke like a California Valley Girl. My words were full of like, totally, um, seriously, and ya know. I reached a point when I knew it was time. I asked, “Would you like to know Jesus?”

And the seven words that forever changed both our lives: “I think so. What do I do?”

I told him what to do. About the little step of faith. How the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but it’s the power of salvation for those who believe (1 Cor. 1:18). How when you put even a little faith in God, He meets you right where you are and proves Himself to you.

We prayed a simple repeat-after-me kind of prayer on a city bench. Hundreds must have passed by seeking to fill their emptiness with alcohol and women…while one man allowed Christ to invade his life.

I gave him my Bible, put him in the book of John and told him how precious my Bible was to me. I told him that I really wanted him to have it, but he wasn’t allowed to take it if he was just going to throw it on a shelf and never look at it. I thought of all my precious notes scribbled in the margins—God’s words to me. How the Bread of Life had nourished me and spoke to me and how I was breaking off this precious gift—Word of Life—and it could now nourish him. The Word is life and sustenance whether you are a white woman or West African man. I gave him my card and told him to email me when he found a church.

I left and went to the prayer room at the conference. I sat down and wept—like boo-hoo cried, like snot running down my face, like can’t keep the sobs quiet kind of weeping.

How did that work? It shouldn’t have worked.

In what world does a white surburban housewife who looks a bit like a librarian when her hair is pulled back tight get to lead a black man from the Ivory Coast who is in the States to finish his Master’s degree to Christ??

Not this one! And I guess that’s it, I didn’t do any leading. I don’t know how God was able to use me. But He did.

I penned this simple prayer before I left for the conference:
“Surrendering my expectations for my blog, for my writing, for the conference, surrendering my lofty ambitions and my parenting ideals so that God can raise to life His Glory in Me. In MUCH or LESS let Christ be glorified in me!”

I am wrecked. My plans, my writing, my life, my expectations all wrecked. I am not an evangelist. I am an introvert. An introvert who just happened to be obedient to a very strange prompting to walk to a pub. My words were awkward and simple. Yet somehow the mystery of Christ’s Glory happened.

“For God, who said, ‘Light shall shine out of darkness,’ is the One who has shone in our hearts to give the Light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ. But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, so that the surpassing greatness of the power will be of God and not ourselves” (2 Corinthians 4:6-7).

God puts his light in earthen pots—of clay, dirt, earth. Earthen ware. Completely incapable of having light shine through it. And yet, God’s ways are mysterious, and He delights in doing that which makes no human sense. God doesn’t shine brightest where we are talented and gifted and fabulous—God shines brightest where we are the most human—the most broken. God shines the brightest where we can’t take any of the credit.

My life was once full of ambition, full of ways I could use my talents. I just want to be dirt now. I just want to shine God’s glory. I—broken—just want to reach a lost and broken world.

“God uses the foolish things of this world to confound the wise” (1 Cor 1:27). And like Paul, what I once counted gain, I now count as loss (Phil 3:7)…I want to be a fool.

I went to a conference wanting people to know my name, to find my place in the writing world, but I found He knows my name and I get to wear HIS name…

…and really, it’s HIS name that makes the difference in the world.



***Dear readers, maybe I could ask you to pray for me? That God would direct my paths. That I would have the courage to do whatever He would ask. That I would not be swayed by emotion but rather the leading of the Spirit. And pray for this man (whose name I prefer to keep private) that God would meet him in his step of faith. That he would find Christian community. That God would somehow speak to him through that English NASB Bible. That he would daily choose to live his life for Jesus and His Glory. 



By Grace,
Amanda


Sharing this here:



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Mike Hacking Amanda's Blog


Hi everyone! This is Amanda’s Husband, Mike. I am hacking Amanda's blog along with some other husbands whose wives are attending the Allume Social. You can check it out here.

When I was getting prepared to marry Amanda almost 7 years ago, I knew she was a Godly woman who is intelligent and passionate about outreach to the broken especially on the mission field. What I didn’t know was that Amanda is also full of hidden talents and creativity. It would be a shame to have all that bottled up at home.

Thanks to the world of Blogging, Amanda has found an outlet to not only be an encouragement to other women, but share her creativity and put her passion for writing into practice.

As Amanda’s husband I do my best to be supportive and understanding. It’s obvious to me that being a stay-at-home mom is challenging and even taxing on her at times. Just like other women, Amanda can use some encouragement too. The Blogging community has provided her with a plethora of fellow women who encourage her on a daily basis. 

I pray that the women at this year’s Allume Conference have a blessed time… And don’t worry about the kiddos, we men will figure it out. Even if it means giving them “a box of donuts between 5 and 6 o’clock” (thanks for the idea Jesse.)!

We're rooting for you, Amanda. Also the Niners. But you more.

PS- I’ll be honest, I don’t know the first thing about how to Blog or furthermore, hack a blog. Therefore, after typing on my nifty Word Processor I will pass it on to Amanda to do the “hacking”.

Cadence Caller



Photo Credit



I remember when he came home from his first day of intense physical training. The door opening to the smell of Central Valley fog, the diaper-butted crawler making her way for Dad, the tromp of spit-polished man-boots, and the deep sigh of exhaustion mixed with pride. I worked hard. I am sore. I am man.

Man reached down, picked up the pink-cheeked baby, and kissed the wife who was eager to hear about the first day. He began to recount all he had accomplished: the 5 mile run, the 50 push-ups, plus the 50 more when a fellow trainee was found with smudged boots. He told me about the other work-outs—the flutter kicks, the up-and-hold-em’s, the holding-the-wall’s… All kinds of ways to either break a man down or make him stronger.

I remember him telling me about the older Sergeant in charge of the training, how he’d call out things like “When my grandma was 92; she did PT better than you,” “Left, Left, Left, Right, Left!”—and with each rhythmic line the Sergeant called out, the trainees would echo back—cadences.

I remember his words about cadences, “Somehow hearing that voice and being required to repeat it back with 60 other people in unison, it just takes your mind off the pain in your body. It pushes me forward. I try my hardest. Some of them are kind of funny too. I enjoy it.”

Cadences.

Whether the battle is physical, emotional or spiritual, sometimes you just need someone to call out words of encouragement. Mere words spoken from a heart of camaraderie have the power to pull you out of ruts, take your mind off the pain, push you forward and bring out your try-hard spirit.

That’s the power we women can have. We can grab our metaphorical pom poms and cheer for our friends and even perfect strangers—or we can sit on the sidelines or even join the opposing team.

We can offer those been-there-before and you-are-a-good-mom words to the momma whose son is having the Temper Tantrum of the Year in the grocery store (instead of quietly speculating how she could have handled it better). We can cheer for our friend as her dreams become realized (instead of being secretly jealous). We can grab our closest friend by the hand and begin to pray after she pours out her soul in tears because she’s about to lose her house and her car (instead of stopping at the thought that we don’t have the money to help her).

We can help people press forward—be Cadence Callers.

Do you want to be a Cadence Caller?? Me too! Here’s 5 Ways to be one:

1. Prayer Warrior- Be the kind of person that when you say, “I’m praying for you,” you actually are. The best way you can help someone battle whatever opposition they are facing is on your knees (or pacing your living room… or sitting quietly on your balcony.)

2. Safe Place- Be the kind of person that people know they can talk to because you don’t blab secrets. You are not a gossip. And you definitely don’t attack someone’s emotions.

3. Encourager- Be the kind of person that is FOR people. You want to see them succeed. You say things like: “Press forward! You can do this!” Maybe even throw in a “Rah-rah-shish-boom-bah!”

4. Truth speaker- Be the kind of person that can speak out the promises of God found in His Word. Be unafraid to call out the truth your friend might be blind to because fear is skewing her vision… Things like how she’s not ugly or how many blessings she has in her life or how you have messes in your house too or how things like colic and unemployment don’t last forever.

5. Listener- Be the kind of person that allows her friends to pour out their heart before you offer any wisdom or encouragement. Sometimes someone just needs to empty their heartache so God can fill them back up with Hope. God can use even a quiet mouth when paired with a listening ear as encouragement.


Really, that’s it. If you can do those 5 things, you can be a Cadence Caller, a pom-pom holder, an encourager, and a really good friend.

And hey, we are all works-in-progress, so if you know you are falling short in one of those areas, maybe consider working on it. You can do it! (<---did you see how I did that? Yeah! That’s right. Cadence Caller Outer right here. :))

This is the point of this blog. It’s why I named it what I did. It’s why I love being a part of this thing called the blogosphere… because I see it—the way we can impact one another in the best way. I’m not fabulous, or conquering… but I want to be, and maybe you do too, and maybe we can encourage one another.

So, because I really like rhymes and might just be a complete dork…

...a Conquering Cadence for you:

When troubles are getting near,
I will not give into fear!

When my kids spill all their juice,
I won’t let my tongue get loose.

When I feel angry and full of doubt,
My friends remind me what God’s about

When my friend seems really down
I’ll sing silly songs to change her frown

When the mirror is mean to me,
My friend tells me I look like a Queen

Sound off. (one two) Sound off (three four)

Ooorah!


Alright. I’m pumped. You? Go conquer your day! You can do it!


Your fellow Cadence Caller,
Amanda


Want to join in the fun?? Maybe you would like to leave a cadence in the comments? Or maybe just some non-rhyming encouragement (because really the rhyming was just for fun and so not the point)?? (Pssst… I would love to hear YOUR encouragement here too!)
Or maybe, if you are feeling brave enough, you can share how you need encouragement in your life right now?? xo


Sharing this in these wonderful places:

Spiders on Their Webs Snack

My husband currently does pest control. While studying for his different licenses, he would read our daughter his training materials (yeah, I know. There's a chance we may win the Nerdiest Parents of the Year award, but she really did like them... even beg to have them read to her). She in particular loves spiders. So, last year, for a preschool meet up that I hosted, the kids learned about the letter S and the number 8 and ate these delicious little treats. I thought now was a good time to share them with you.

Spiders on Their Webs Snack


Ingredients:
Jumbo Marshmallows
White Chocolate Chips
Semi Sweet Chocolate Chips
Pretzel Sticks

Will also need: 
Skewers
Wax paper
2 Microwavable bowls

1. Melt Semi Sweet Chocolate
2. Place Marshmallow on skewer, dip in chocolate.
3. Put 8 pretzel sticks into chocolate-marshmallow spider body so they look like legs and place on wax paper while chocolate sets.
4. Melt White Chocolate.
5. Lay pretzel sticks on wax paper in the shape of giant astericks and drizzle white chocolate over sticks so they look like webs.
6. For fast enjoyment place snack in freezer for 3 minutes so chocolate will set faster.
7. Enjoy!

This was the messiest part of this snack... adding the pretzel sticks to the mallow.
This part was a little tricky... the chocolate wanted to fall much thicker than the thin web I had envisioned... But it still turned out looking like a web.
You know their good when your ham of a daughter is too into her snack to want to pose for the camera.
These were so good! Is it okay if I confess to grabbing a left-over marshmallow, a handful of chocolate chips and some pretzel sticks and eating them together just about every time I walked through the kitchen for the weeks following this snack?? Yep. I so did.

Mallow, chocolate chips, pretzels... I think we are onto something good here. Makes me think of sweet and salty s'mores... oh yeah!

I'd love to know:
What treats do you make around Halloween for your family?


Happy Snacking :)

xo
Amanda 

Linking up at these wonderful places:

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12 Signs You Might Be the Mom of a Toddler


I know. 

You don't actually need a list to tell you if you are the parent of a toddler. But it might be fun to see you aren't the only one (if you have a toddler), see what you are in for (should you want to have toddlers one day), or remember what life was once like (when you had toddlers).

Here's a very real glimpse into the Conquering house.


You might be the mom of a toddler if:
  1. Your vacuum canister has more cheerios and goldfish in it than actual dirt.
  2. Your house is only clean at naptime and bedtime (and if you are really honest, only one or two naptimes or bedtimes a week).
  3. Your dining chairs are often turned over on their sides either to keep your child from dancing on the dining room table or to use as a make shift baby-gate.
  4. Your diet now primarily consists of goldfish, cheerios, chicken nuggets, apple sauce, bananas and cheese… and anything else you can manage to get your child to eat that's green and/or helps with the daily BM.
  5. You count how many times your child has a BM.
  6. Me talking about BM’s doesn’t faze you.
  7. Your shoulders constantly have either mushy crumbs on them, snot, or drool… or all three.
  8. You count going to the bathroom by yourself as a source of joy.
  9. You understand what “duh,” “guh,” and “bah” mean. You also understand that they can have different meanings depending on where you are and how it’s spoken.
  10. The first places you look when your remote controller goes missing are the trash can, the dishwasher, the toy bin, the drawers in your kitchen, and maybe even the toilet on a particularly rough day.
  11. The only way you arrive on time anywhere is if you start attempting to leave one whole hour before you actually need to leave to get there on time.
  12. You've brushed cheerios off of someone's rump today (including your own).

And here's two very toddler pictures of my cheerio-butt-fashion, goldfish-eating, mess-making, climbing-and-making-his-momma's-heart-stop and the source of all kinds of joy in our house--Jed.
















This conquering housewife has been feeling a little defeated lately. I needed to laugh and appreciate some really simple things in life.

Want to add to the laughs and/or the realness? I would love it if you'd share: How can you tell you or someone you know has a toddler?

xo
Amanda

On Sailing and Obedience



I picture this sailboat. 

Red
with big white sails. Out on the open ocean.
I imagine the wind in my hair, the regret
at not putting my now-wind-frazzled hair in a ponytail,
the taste of sea and salt in my mouth,
gulls flying.

I think of how I may want
to get somewhere.
I know very little about sailing, but I do
know that you use the wind
to get you places.

Photo Credit


I think of God.
And how sometimes I can do something that I know God has put on my heart to do
and somehow I have the energy
and the strength
that propels me forward.
Wind in sails.

Obedience.

I think of how sometimes I get focused on the future
and where I want to be
and  how it feels like I am not getting anywhere,
and I pull out my oars.
I try
to make things happen on my own.
I deplete my strength,
I get exhausted,
and I seem to not really go anywhere—
especially for all my efforts.

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Striving.

I think on how timing
and direction
are important with sailing.
So it is with God’s plans.

The word striving comes from the word strife—
and it’s true.
Striving is to be at strife with God’s Will—
or just His timing—
or just His direction.
Like rowing against the wind.

I think of the way that I can toil
and work
and spin
my metaphorical wheels, and seem to get nowhere
besides tired.

I think of the way
I sometimes sense this stirring
in my heart,
like an open book
with pages fluttering forward
by the invisible fingers of the wind
open at the command
of a breezy day.
God is moving
and I line myself up
with His Will
and I move forward,
easily,
almost effortlessly.

Photo Credit

“The wind blows where it wishes and you hear the sound of it, but do not know where it comes from and where it is going; so is everyone who is born of the Spirit.” John 3:8


Friends, I have seen God move here in this writing and on this blog. I have seen Him propel me forward. But I have also seen myself try way too hard, exhaust myself to no avail, and come painfully close to burn-out. I am thinking on this right now. On striving and obedience. More than I want to get somewhere; I want to obey.


What do you think? Do you see this in your life… the rowing and the wind?? The striving and the obedience?? Love to hear your thoughts!


By Grace,
Amanda

Happy to link this up here:


10 Things My Allume Roomie Needs to Know

Just for fun and just to celebrate the conference I get to attend at the end of the month, I decided to join up with other Allume attendees at Brooke McGlothlin's blog and write the 10 things I want my Allume conference roomie to know about me.

This is my first time going to any kind of blogging/writing/social media conference and my first time going to any kind of conference that I had to fly to get to. I am nervous and excited! I can't believe I get to go!

My Roomie is Jacqui from Faith and Simplicity. I have met her once inRL and I am pretty sure she's like my sister from another mister. She's such a sweetheart and seems to process things freakishly similar to me.
{Update 10/9/12: I have TWO more roommates, whom I do not know at all, but I can tell, I definitely want to meet them! Anna and Sarah, I have a feeling we are going to have fun.}

Just as a warning: You may find out way more about me than you ever wanted to know.

  1. I get really silly when I am tired and it's late... like crazy-stupid silly, like laugh-at-all-my-own-jokes silly, like none-of-my-jokes-are funny-at-any-other-time silly, like make-up-dance-moves-to-Backstreet-Boy's-songs silly. Yeah. You've been warned.
  2. While I may come to life at night, this princess turns into a pumpkin in the morning (or perhaps more accurately a bear). Probably best to avoid talking to me until I've had my coffee.
  3. I really like chocolate. Any kind (white, dark, milk, semi-sweet, bittersweet... Symphony bars with almonds and toffee...)
  4. I drink foo-foo coffee (iced half-sweet vanilla latte or iced carmel macchiato, half the pumps of vanilla and easy on the caramel, just saying). I just can't get into black coffee.
  5. I am an introvert. Just because I am quiet, doesn't mean I don't want to be around you. I may just not know what to say at that moment. I may just be enjoying the quiet. Also, I have to have quiet time by myself to recharge daily. If you can't find me, there's a good chance I am taking a walk in the fresh air, hiding in the room, or sitting somewhere quiet to read my Bible and meditate.
  6. I am really approachable and love to problem solve. If I am hogging the bathroom mirror, said something wrong (as I am prone to when I am tired, see point 1), or you would like some quiet time too because say you are an introvert like me, just say so :)
  7. Some of my favorite music: Matisyahu, Mumford and Sons, songs like "Boot-Scootin Boogie" by Brooks and Dunn, "Rapper's Delight," just about anything from the 90's, and anything I can sing and/or dance to. Oh and Hillsong United. Favorite. Worship. Band. Ever. (Oh and I pretty much can't help but sing and dance along anytime there is music. If I don't sing and dance, my head starts bobbing in rhythm and my eyebrows go up and down with the notes of the melody. Just let me sing and dance. Or keep the music off. Or better yet, Join me!)
  8. In college I used to participate in rap-offs with a group of friends. Wanna go? Ha!!... But seriously... want to? ;)
  9. I am pretty sure I don't snore or have strange odors... unless I am pregnant (I know, tmi... but seriously! And no, I am not pregnant... you can breathe a sigh of relief, roomie). Once when I was younger, while asleep at a sleepover, I sat up in bed, looked at everyone, and yelled at the top of my lungs, "Kmart! No!" I slammed my fist into my pillow, and went back to sleep. I have no recollection of this and am pretty sure this all happened while sleeping. Keep me away from Kmart? Ha!
  10. This is my first time leaving my son (1) over night, the longest I have been away from my daughter (4), my first time flying since I was in 8th grade, and the longest I have left my husband since being married (7 years). I may vascilliate between "Yay! girl time!" and "I just SO miss my kids and husband!"
And just to help you out...This face:

Don't be alarmed by this face. It's just me trying to get my flat, straight hair to be more voluminous. My hair is often straight and flat. This face will happen often. Ha!



I would love to know (Allume attendees and my readers alike), do we have anything in common??

xo
Amanda

Psssst... Want to find me on twitter??: @conqhousewife

    {In which YOU Share} On Death and Loss and Miscarriage and How God Can Still Be There



    I had another reader respond with a desire to share her story of waiting. 

    It's a story of incredible loss and pass and devastation. But there's hope, and such grace. (Do read to the end. But just a fair warning, you may want to read with a tissue.)  


    Patricia's Waiting Room

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    I felt drawn to his grave.  I felt a measure of comfort knowing there was a physical place where he was still with me, though dead.  He was only 5 months old when he died.  It wasn’t a quick unexpected death like SIDS. It felt more like a long ordeal.  He was born with congenial heart disease.  What that means is his heart didn’t form properly. After lots of procedures, operations, hospitals, and doctors, at 5 months old, my sweet, precious baby boy died. 

     I stood over the grave and cried. I recited, “The LORD is my shepherd, I shall not want…”  I told myself to be strong.  I kept thinking of the phrase you see on funeral flowers, “Rest in peace.”  The thought struck me, how could my little one “Rest in peace,” if I was wailing and carrying on. I stood and told my son, “Go on, and be with Jesus, momma’s going to be ok.  Don’t you worry about me. I’m going to be fine.  I love you.” With new found resolve, I left and tried to move on. 

    Most everyone was supportive.  They tried to comfort, pass on wisdom, insight. The problem wasn’t with them, it was with me. I felt dead inside, dark, and empty.  I knew rationally that I loved my husband, but, to be honest, I didn’t feel it. As time went on, people got on with their lives. I felt left behind. They seemed happy, and I felt stuck in grief. They didn’t know what to say to me, nor I to them.  Grief can be so isolating.  I felt like a mom, but had no child to mother.  

    My husband was after me to go back to work.  We fought.  I wasn’t happy.  We were still both grieving.  We fought some more.  

    Then the day came, a spark of hope, my period was late.  I took a test and, yes, I was pregnant. The joy didn’t last longer than a month. Cramps signaled the end.  

    Again the day came, a spark of hope, again my period was late, again I took a test and again I was pregnant.  Again, cramps signaled the end. 

    I cried a lot.  I already felt somehow responsible for my son’s condition and death.  Then with the miscarriages I felt like, boy, there must be something terribly wrong with me, a failure.  God must hate me, and I must have somehow gotten on His “bad things are going to happen to her” list.  I was convinced God had such a list, based on my experience.  Though to be clear, I didn’t know God any more than occasionally attending Sunday school growing up, and I certainly hadn’t read the Bible.
    My doctor advised me to put off, wait awhile before trying again to get pregnant. He advised me, given my history, to see a genetic specialist if and when I got pregnant again.  I finally gave in and went back to work.  I wasn’t happy; it just kept me busy.   

    The day came; a spark of hope, my period was late.  I took a test, and, yes, I was pregnant.  I made an appointment with the genetic specialist.  By the time I saw him I was 3 months, further along than the last two times. He asked me a long list of questions, ordered my son’s records to be sent to him and I made another appointment to see him.  At my next appointment he told me what my chances were on the possibility of something being wrong with this child. He advised me of the tests I could undergo to find out if there was something wrong.  He described amniocenteses, where he would draw out some amino fluid from the sac, send it out to be tested, and I would get the results back when I was 5 months along. He then asked me point blank what I would do with this knowledge.  If it came back that something was wrong, would I be able to end this pregnancy?  I felt confronted, challenged, betrayed. I had naively thought I went to this doctor for the well being of my unborn child, and he was opting abortion as a solution for a problem.  I went home upset.  My husband and I discussed the matter.  My husband, the ever rational, thought if the tests came back with something wrong, then we should end the pregnancy.  He cited financial expense, but I knew it was the emotional expense of another ordeal.  I didn’t know what I’d do.  Though I loved my son, I didn’t want to go through it again. And then the thought of a late term abortion, no, I couldn’t do that either. I cried, prayed, and cried some more.  I prayed, “Oh God, I can’t do this, you make the choice. Please, make the choice for me.“ The cramps started the next day and lasted long into the early morning.  The miscarriage wasn’t like the others. This one was like labor, and when the fetus passed, it looked like a very small, tiny infant.  I placed it in a plastic cup to be taken to the genetic specialist for examination.  I felt defeated, desolate, and hopeless.  

    I went back to work.  I tried to move on, but my heart was breaking.  My husband slept peaceful, but I couldn’t.  I sat up on the couch crying, pleading, praying, “God, what’s wrong with me?  I’m so sorry, please, can’t I have a child, even if there’s something wrong it. God, I’ll take ‘em , love ’em, please.”  There came a silent peace over me.

    When my period was again missed, this time I didn’t rush out to get a test.  I was two full months before I made an appointment to be seen by a doctor and only then because of the severe morning sickness.  I had made up my mind; I wouldn’t be seeing any genetic specialist.  I would take and love the gift I was given, as is. Even though I wanted this child very much, the gloom of the past years was with me.  I kept anticipating a miscarriage. There was this ever present dread. Seriously, I was in full term labor still feeling like “I can’t do this,” when the doctor said, “Push, now.”  I heard her cry for the first time. The doctors made their examination and proclaimed her healthy, but it wasn’t until I held her and made my own examination—healthy, pink, and beautiful—that hope began to rise in my heart. 

    Wouldn’t it be nice and I wish I could say that everything was fine after my daughter was born.  She was, I wasn’t. Physically I was fine; emotionally, spiritually, I was a wreck. I still carried some beliefs about me, and about God. I needed to learn to trust again. I needed to believe that God loved me, that He was for me and not against me, that bad things were not my destiny. What I needed most was to really know God, not my idea of God, but Him personally.  In October of that same year, when my daughter was 5 months old, I knelt down beside my bed and asked the Lord into my heart. I can’t say with all honesty that when I got off my knees there was a miraculous change, but it was the start of the process of healing.  

    My husband and I are still married, and we have been blessed with three more healthy children (that’s 8 total between heaven and earth).  I look back on this time and while some may call their waiting rooms a place of promise, while I was in it, it was a place of great pain. It is only in hindsight that I see the promise—the hope.  I have no regrets, no accusations, no blame, just a great sense of a beautiful, costly gift been given. Though it changed me forever, if given the choice I would change nothing. Where my heart was once filled with darkness and death, there is the preciousness of how fragile  life can be, and yet there is love, an overflowing, over whelming , over taking love. One day I will see my son again, and he can introduce me to his siblings, the ones I’ve never met.  

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 

    {The name was changed to preserve anonymity. This story was shared with permission.}

    Between yesterday and today, I am feeling a little wrecked. God is changing my heart and my way of seeing. Grace is infinitely possible. I don't understand it. I am feeling that broken-but-somehow-full thing I talked about when I asked for your stories, I guess I just didn't fully anticipate what that would feel like.  I would love to hear from you in the comments. I bet Patricia would as well. :)

    As a reminder, This is someone's personal story. Please be sensitive in your comments. I want this to be a safe place and an encouraging place. Also know that when you put yourself out there by telling your story, you want to know that you are okay, that your story was heard. Perhaps at least leave my friend a simple "thank you for sharing" type response if the story touches you? If you or someone you know is facing this kind of devastating grief, we'd love to pray. Just leave a comment or send me an email.

    Should you want to share your story, it's not too late, send it here: conqueringhousewife{at}the-cadence{dot}com or click here to email me right now. Read this post to hear my heart behind sharing your stories.

    If you want to read about what God does when we are waiting, click the "Waiting Room" Graphic in the sidebar or click Sept 2012 in the archives on the sidebar (pretty much all of September was dedicated to waiting). 


    By Grace,

    Amanda



    Sharing this here:
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    In the Waiting Room {In which YOU share and you can link up}

    Something about my son's expression in this picture seemed to speak of waiting... or tolerating rather. :) Photo by my talented friend, KatieFewellPhotography.


    I asked for your stories of Waiting. 

    And I got some responses. So today I have the humble honor of sharing someone's story with you. By the way, I won't be sharing my reactions or thoughts on these stories. I want people's stories to speak for themselves.

    I feel like I should mention, I just really felt like God put this on my heart to do. There may only be one or two link ups, and only a few waiting stories. I'm okay with that. It's HARD to share your story. And, waiting, yeah, that's really hard too!! And sometimes, we aren't quite ready to share, and that's okay. I truly believe God does something powerful in us when we bring our hurts and disappointments into the Light. So often, without even realizing it, we buy into lies when we keep things to ourselves, like we are the only one going through something like this, or that God loves us less because it feels like He is withholding, or that you will be stuck waiting forever and things will never change. God also does something powerful in other peoples' hearts when we share our story--compassion, faith, hope all rise up in us. It's good all the way around. (So yeah, if you want to share your story, it's not too late. And yes, you can be completely anonymous if you prefer. It doesn't have to be well-written. It doesn't have to be long. It doesn't have to have a happy ending. It can be messy {but do try to not throw anyone under the bus by, say, mentioning them by name} It can be something that happened years ago. Maybe God would ask you--survivor, conqueror of a past waiting room--to encourage someone here in theirs? There is Grace, Hope, Love... all found in the Light.)

    Should you want to share your story, send it here: conqueringhousewife{at}the-cadence{dot}com or click here to email me right now.

    Now, before I share my friend's story, I have some rules--or more like something to be mindful of. These are someone's personal stories. It's hard being in that place of waiting. Please be sensitive in your comments. I want this to be a safe place and an encouraging place. Also know that when you put yourself out there by telling your story, you want to know that you are okay, that your story was heard. Perhaps leave my friend a simple "thank you for sharing" type response if the story touches you?

    {Names and some details have been changed to preserve anonymity. This is shared with permission}


    Stacy's Waiting Room:
    ---------------------------------------------------------------


    I'd like to share my story. It's a long one. Please bear with me. Usually when someone asks me to tell them about myself I start with the normal: " Hi, I'm Stacy. I'm married to John for 10 years now. We have 2 girls 9 and 7. We home school, etc.” It doesn't usually come up right away because I don't think of it as descriptive, but I have Cerebral Palsy and I'm wheelchair bound. My childhood was challenging and didn't come to Christ until I was 16. Old enough to have made have been "forgiven much" and "love much". Against all logic and reason, I went to a private Christian University. (I could've gone to a state university for free.) I graduated early with degrees in Counseling and Biblical Studies (with a minor in cross-cultural and urban missions). During my college years and afterward (until I had children), I, along with the man I married, were very active in church and missions work. I was a hospital chaplain and my fiancé/husband and I were youth pastors. Due to my disability and other factors I was told I could not have children. Miraculously and graciously, God gave us our hearts’ desire. 3 months after I got married, I discovered I was already 2 months pregnant with my first daughter. I had to quit my job and everything I was doing at that time so that I'd be able to carry her to term. After my baby was born, it took a long time for me to recover... Only to discover, I was pregnant again. The doctors were stunned. I was scared. My husband was thrilled. Taking care of a small baby while you're in a wheelchair is not impossible, but it is very challenging. Being pregnant made it more so. Our second blessing was born premature, but healthy. Thank God! Unfortunately, pregnancy and time has taken its toll on my body. (During pregnancy I developed severe asthma and breathing problems.) I'm no longer physically able to do even half of what I could do before I had children. I have the best husband EVER!

    I love my daughters! Not a day goes by that I don't tell them, "I love you. You are a gift and a blessing in every way. I'm so thankful that I get to be your Mama and that you are my daughter. God has a call and a plan for your lives." I would do it all again in a heartbeat and so would my husband. Ever since I became pregnant, I feel like I've lived in the Waiting Room. Right after college I had been asked to teach at a Bible college overseas. (The day before my flight to was to depart I was told my Restricted Area Permit had been revoked. I had a 10 year visa. I never went.) I trust God, for the most part. I know He knows what He is doing. I know He's given me the heart I have missions. Our family prays everyday with Operation World for various countries and regions. For now I wait. I've learned that waiting can be active. Like a waiter who waits on someone in a restaurant. Or it can be passive. Either way, I'll keep waiting. My chances of ever doing anything "significant" by the world's and even the church's standard are slim to none. That's okay. Even if I never make it out of the waiting room, He is worth waiting for.
    --------------------------------------------------------------------

     The Link Up:

    Link your own stories of waiting here--how you are waiting now, how you have waited in the past, wisdom on waiting you might share, or something specific that starts something like "What I want someone to know who is (insert something that could make you feel like you are waiting like infertility, cancer, leaving a career to be a stay at home mom, taking care of a loved one...)" A past post is fine, but please only waiting topics. {I will remove any innappropriate links.}

    1. I only ask that you link back to this site on your post (so we recognize the community). The graphic or a link back to this site is fine.
    2. Please leave some encouraging words for 1 other person. I like the warm-fuzzies people give me when they comment and encourage me or just let me know they prayed for me. Let's be that kind of community!! :)
    3. And you know, Link to the specific post, not your website.

    That's it!

    Thank you :)

    xo
    Amanda

     

    Five Minute Friday: Grasp



    Today I am participating in my first ever Five MinuteFriday. I have been wanting to do it for a while, and decided today was just as good as any to dive in. Five Minute Friday is an exercise to write on a prompt for 5 minutes straight. Just write. No editing. No polishing. Just writing. I link up what I write up with an awesome community (At Liso-Jo Baker’s place) and visit at least the person in line before me. Want to be a part of a cool community? Want to hone your writing craft? JOIN! :)


    Today’s prompt: Grasp.

    Go

    Grasp. Holding hands open and then closed around something—tight. I think of holding my toddler’s hand before we cross the street. I grasp it. Hold it tight. He might try to pull away, all boy and ready to explore. But I am mom, the safety enforcer, and I grasp something so dear and important.

    I think of an idea or a concept. I open my mind to try to understand it, and then close around it once I understand it. I grasp it. And if it’s good, I hold it tight. It might try to get away from me, so I ask questions, ponder it, grasp it, run it around in my hands like I did when I got that container of gak as a child. I explore its properties, wonder about it, it tries to leave my fingers, so I involve my other hand in the exploration. 

    I think of the way God’s grasp is with me. The way I get all wormy squirmy in the palm of his hands.  I get restless and try to handle—grasp at—my own life and plans and future. But God’s grasp is often loose and gentle and allows me to leave,  sometimes it’s firm and secure and warns me of danger (like I do with my children) it really is where I want to be though my human-gak-like self wants to escape through the fingers of where I am safest—restless. Comfort: God is always grasping for me and my affections. He wants me and to hold me in His grasp. 

    He always reaches for me.

    STOP

    Okay. That was HARD and actually more like 10 minutes. But I love what got squeezed out of my brain through my fingertips on the keys. God is always grasping for me and my affections. So grateful for that. 

    Wishing you all a wonderful weekend. 

    xo
    Amanda

    TWR: A Conclusion

    In sixth grade, a group of boys huddle around a table uttering low whispers and scoffing snickers. They were making a list of all the girls in the class, from biggest boobs to smallest boobs. And I was a girl with a training bra and nothing to train.


    Flat. As. A. Board.

    I wanted to melt into my blue plastic chair. Please God don’t let them put me last on that list.
    A few agonizing minutes later, the boys began to disperse. The list was complete. My 6th-grade-fate had been decided. My worth had been determined. I walked over to take a peek at the list. I started at the top and scanned down. Please not the last name. Please not the last name.

    And I wasn’t there. I didn’t make the list. My worst nightmare had been being last, deemed the girl with the smallest boobs. A far worse reality took shape. I didn’t even make the list. I wasn’t worth mentioning. I was completely unnoticed.

    I bought into the age old lie—the same one Eve bought into when the serpent told her that God had withheld knowledge from her, that the fruit would make her like God—you are not enough.

    I spent my teenage years listening to that lie. You are not enough. You are not smart enough, pretty enough… you will never amount to anything. You will never accomplish anything. I listened to that lie and with it came a striving heart. I tried so hard to be something special, important, beautiful, wanted—someone no one would overlook. Someone who would make the top of any list some boys would make. I shoved the things about myself that I thought held me back into a dark corner and pretended to be someone else. And while God has dealt with much of this in my adult years, all this striving, trying to be something, is why I find waiting so hard. If I am waiting… if I wear no ministry title, if I am not a big name in the blogging world, if I have nothing published with my name on it… if all I am is a 10-year-old-sedan driving mom of 2 who can barely keep her house clean,then maybe it’s true… maybe I’m not enough.
    I want to be noticed. I want accomplishments. I don’t want to bury my dreams in soil and wait. No one will see me here. I will never be enough. I will never be worth anything.

    We believe that “Faith without works is dead,” but I think there is a dangerous lie the enemy would like to sell us by twisting that truth in our minds. I hear it constantly (I say it and pray it constantly), “I just want to be used by God.” And sure, this can be a noble plight, but somewhere in this is the lie that we are not enough and in order to be enough we must DO something. Striving. We say it’s for God’s glory, but the fact of the matter is that we fight the age old battle on the fields of our heart: to bring God glory or to bring our own self glory.

    Our glory is achieved by DOING—striving.

    God’s glory is achieved by bowing low—allowing Him to DO all the DOING.

    In waiting, God breaks down the lie that you aren’t enough because He loves you just as you are and you don’t have to do anything to earn that love. In waiting, God also breaks down the lie that you are enough because apart from Him you can’t do anything. It’s just striving. You need Him. And you need His timing. In waiting, you kneel down, bow low and succumb your lumpy-clay-self to the potter’s hands that mold and shape you.

    God keeps whispering to me, “Find your place in me, Amanda.” Friends, that is the single most important thing you can do with your life: discover just how much God loves you—He loves you like I tell my kids at bedtime—“to the moon and back, with all [His] heart, no matter what”—NO. MATTER. WHAT. Whether you do great things, small things, a bunch-of-mistake things, or nothing at all—you hold Your Father’s gaze. He sees you. He loves you. You are enough. You don’t have to DO anything to earn it. You have it. Slow your strive. Rest in this.

    Find your place in Him.

    The other day, I came across a song on waiting. MUMFORD! (Anyone else love Mumford and Sons??) It spoke to me.

    So take my flesh
    And fix my eyes
    That tethered mind free from the lies

    But I'll kneel down
    Wait for now
    I'll kneel down
    Know my ground

    Raise my hands
    Paint my spirit gold
    And bow my head
    Keep my heart slow
    I will wait. I will wait for you.

    I picked up my son, grabbed the hand of my daughter and we spun around the living room doing some kind of riverdance, two-stepping hoedown. Somehow in that, I saw it: I am here in this moment. I am mom. I am wife. I am beautiful and complete and lacking nothing. My heart is full. I can shake off the humanity that makes me strive, that can’t be content. I am doing exactly what was purposed for me to do and holding it full in my hands. He placed me amongst the sticky arms of an Addy and a Jed (and I only get to be there for so long.) My place isn’t found in titles, or here on the web. It’s in Him. It’s in Him!!! Somehow in dancing around my living room, my spirit was kneeling, surrendering, knowing it’s ground—waiting for now. And yet, fully living.

    In order to live, you first must die.

    I have heard this before: when you feel like no doors are open for you, praise Him in the hallway.

    Praise in spite is surrender. And surrender is fully living.

    Yes.

    I really can wait.

    I really can bury my dreams.

    I am falling in love with my God. He is Good. And He is worth waiting for.
    (Thank you dear friend, you know who you are, for that last beautiful sentiment :))

    As this series winds down, I would love to hear YOUR conclusion. What has God taught you in this waiting room??

    I can't thank you enough for being here with me. I really appreciate you, friends!!

    Amanda

    P.S. Did you see the post where I asked for your stories??? Consider sharing yours with us (anonymous is perfectly acceptable--you can even email me from an email account that's something like hotgirl85 or whatever so it will be anonymous to me too. Ha! Oh, and I will also have a link up for my bloggy friends that want to share their story with their readers too). See here for the heart behind it and the guidelines.
    See you back here on Tuesday for the waiting room link up and maybe even some stories of YOURS! So glad to shut up and let YOU talk for a change. Ha!!

    For your listening pleasure: Mumford and Sons, "I Will Wait." Grab your loved ones by the hands and crazy dance?? :)


    In case you missed the other parts of the series and want to get caught up, here are the links:
    And as a reminder, I love comments (I love hearing from you!). I love getting emails too: conqueringhousewife{at}the-cadence{dot}com. 
    Like what you read here? Consider subscribing to this blog's feed or subscribing by email to have my posts put nicely into your email box? Or join all the conquering housewives on facebook? linked up here: http://www.cornerstoneconfessions.com/2012/10/titus-2-tuesday-linky-party-21.html

    linked up here: cornerstone confessions 
     

    How to Live That Broken, But Full Life {In Which You Might Want to Share Your Story?}


    I've been dragging my feet. Complaining.

    Waiting is hard. And it seems in my life there have been a whole lot of things to wait on.

    And then, I cried out and asked God to teach me how to fully live when I am waiting, because I 'm not. Life doesn't stop and party with you when you throw a pity party. It keeps moving forward.

    And God began revealing Truth to me in His Word, and this waiting series was born.

    But God didn't stop there.

    In the midst of this series, I got a quiet email in my inbox from one of you. It told your own personal story of waiting. And while I cannot share the contents of that email, for it is not my story to share, it left me undone. It shook me right out of my pity party, and in the best way. And since that email, some of you have mentioned the things you are waiting on. Each time, it has left my heart feeling broken for you. I suppose we can choose to live with broken-open hearts or impenetrable, calloused-from-life hearts.

    See, I am learning: God plants purpose—dreams—inside of a human, fleshy shell. Full of pride, selfishness, impatience. And the only way to extract the usable kernel of wheat is to crush the whole grain. In that crushing, the chaff separates from the wheat kernel, then the Lord of the Harvest takes that crushed grain and raises it back to life, free from its chaff exterior, ready to be used. 

    Fresh Wheat Photo Credit
     
    I can get stuck feeling sorry for myself, I can get stuck in my lack of trust—worried if God will ever bring about His promises. I can live so clench-fisted demanding from God. I can pull the covers over my head, refuse to be crushed, cling to my chaff—for really we only see in part and know in part this side of heaven but I refuse to trust that God sees in full and He knows what He is doing.

    You see, only one person can attend a pity party. The second someone else shares their story, something magical happens--ministry. I care. You care. I am crushed and clinging to my chaff, and the second you expose your brokenness, I realize I can let go and expose myself too. And when we let go—separate, die to self—God raises back to life.

    I want to live a raised-up, full life!

    We all have a story. If I can say everyone waits, and God uses waiting to refine, then you all have a story of waiting to tell.

    And I wonder? Would you share yours? Would you allow your story to minister?

    Could that magical, we-might-be-broken-and-imperfect-and-still-working-out-our-wait-yet-so-full-of-grace ministry happen here?


    Here's my thought:

    Will you share your story in 200 words or less and slip it into my email box? You may choose to be anonymous or you may choose to share your name. (I will not share anything other than what you have given me permission to share.) I will put a post up, maybe a few depending on how many stories I get, sharing your stories—like 5 or so at a time.

    If you are a blogger and want your own readers to hear your story too, I will provide a link up for you to use. Have your post ready next Tuesday, the link up will go live at 8am, PST (provided I encounter no technological glitches). (If you are linking up, that 200 word rule doesn't apply to you—and how many bloggers could keep it anyways?! Ha!)

    • I want your imperfect stories of how you are waiting. It’s okay if you find your wait hard! It’s okay if your wait isn’t “super traumatic," and it's okay if it is too. It’s okay if your story is messy! Just tell YOUR story.

    • I want your redeemed stories of a time you waited and saw God show up. Encourage us that are in the midst of our waits!

    • I would even love an encouraging letter to the conquering housewives that starts something like “I want those of you who are waiting on (insert something specific like illness, infertility, wanting to be married, divorce, loss…) to know………..” and share your wisdom and heart with us.

    If you have a story that simply cannot fit into 200 words or less, that's okay! Send it anyways! Just know, if for some odd reason I have a huge influx of 1000 word emails it may take me awhile to get to them all and I may not be able to put yours up.
    Disclaimer: If for some reason there is a huge influx of letters, I may not be able to put them all up (I am a small blogger, I don’t think this will be a problem… but just in case) Also, I reserve the right to filter what gets placed on this blog. If I feel something is inappropriate, I may choose to not place it up here. Same thing for the link party, if a post is linked that is innaproppriate, I will remove it. I also reserve the right to do any minor editing that may be necessary (like spelling or grammar) before sharing it. (Most likely you will not need to worry about this! :)) 
    Also know, when I do share your stories, should a comment appear that is judgmental, mean, or inappropriate I will remove it as soon as I am able (and you are welcome to report it as well). I care more about your hearts and this being a safe-to-be-vulnerable place than I do about "good discussion." Once again, I have never had that issue, but just in case :)



    I am so excited for the way God could use this, the way God can use YOU. When we put all that stuff that has been weighing us down into the Light and ask God to use it as it is, something amazing happens. I am so full of expectancy for what God might do!!

    We shall be conquering housewives indeed! 

    xo
    Amanda 

    Email me: conqueringhousewife{at}the-cadence{dot}com


    Okay so quick recap of this post:
    1. Ministry happens when we share our stories with each other.
    2. Write me an email telling me your waiting story? Or write a blog post and link it up here?
    3. Email me your story by Tuesday, October 2, 2012. Link party will go live at 8am, PST on Tuesday, October 2.
    4. Come back here to read stories of waiting. I am planning on sharing through Friday, October 5, but may go longer if necessary. 
    Oh, and on a totally unrelated sidenote, I have gotten a little better at Twitter. Follow me? @conqhousewife I'll follow ya back :)

    TWR: When a Dream Sits Half-Completed



    I sorta have a thing for the story of Zerubbabel in the Bible. For one, it’s an amazing story of God’s redeeming power. For two, that name—Zerubbabel—what were his parents thinking?? In case you are unfamiliar with the man—Zerubbabel, and his story—let me give you a run-down (By the way, if you should want to read it for yourself it’s found in the books of Ezra, Zechariah, and Haggai). Zerubbabel was a direct descendant in the line of King David—this is important; it made him governor. He, along with Ezra and a large group of Jews, returned to Jerusalem to rebuild the Temple. Everything started off fine. They had favor. They had supplies. They had high spirits. They poured the foundation, raised the walls… they get to about the halfway point, when all of a sudden opposition arises. The temple rebuilding is ordered to be stopped. So it did. And it sat, uncompleted for 14 years. 

    I imagine the way that uncompleted project must have tormented Zerubbabel. The way it must have felt like failure. This dream—this life’s call—to see the temple of the Lord rebuild, and there it sat half done.

    But then, after 14 years, God spoke through the prophet Zechariah and said, “’It’s not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit,’ says the Lord God of Hosts. ‘What are you, O great mountain? Before Zerubbabel you will become a plain; and he will bring forth the top stone with shouts of “Grace, grace to it!”… The hands of Zerubbabel have laid the foundation of this house, and his hands will finish it. Then you will know that the Lord of hosts has sent me to you’” (Zech. 4:6-9). Not too long after this prophecy, a new decree was issued, and the work immediately resumed. A few years later and the half-completed temple was brought to a full completion. It took 20 years from the first brick to the last one, but God finished what he started in Zerubbabel.

    Photo by Microsoft. Words added.

    I think sometimes we need one thousand reminders that God is Faithful, that He finishes what He starts, that even though you may have laid some dreams aside—so you could go to college, start a family, help your husband, take care of a sick relative—God will finish what He started in you. The Bible says, “For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance” (Romans 11:29). God didn’t decide to call you—put this dream in your heart and have you start working towards it—only to decide after some kid of life happened, just kidding, your done now, let’s take back those gifts. Nope! But the Bible is abundantly clear that pauses, waits, unforeseen detours are all a part of the process. And those pauses, waits, and unforeseen detours are no thing to God. The second God said that temple would be rebuilt by His power, guess what? Decree was no thing. God did it. Whether you are in a different season of your life or you are facing a roadblock, it is no thing to God.

    God is abundantly able to finish that work, that hope, that dream in you. And you can strive, try your hardest to make it happen yourself, or go down feeling defeated, but the thing is, “It’s not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit.” When it’s time, God will make the way. In fact, God is making the way now. God will finish what He started in you. Bottom line: You need to trust Him.  

    You CAN trust Him.

    I thought I would leave you with 2 more verses I have found comfort in as I wait:

    Numbers 23:19 “God is not a man, that He should lie,
    Nor a son of man, that He should repent;
    Has He said, and will He not do it?
    Or has He spoken, and will He not make it good?”

     Photo by my super talented friend, KatieFewellPhotography. Used with Permission.

    Habakkuk 2:3 “For the vision is yet for the appointed time;
    It hastens toward the goal and it will not fail.
    Though it tarries, wait for it;
    For it will certainly come, it will not delay."

    (I love that last verse! You?)

    Tomorrow, I will be posting an announcement for something that has been on my heart. 

    Thursday I will have the last post I have written for The Waiting Room ready for you. It's gonna be good. :)

    From the bottom of my heart, thank you for sitting with me in The Waiting Room. Waiting is always easier in the company of friends. :)
    xo
    Amanda




    In case you missed the other parts of the series and want to get caught up, here are the links:
    And as a reminder, I love comments (I love hearing from you!). I love getting emails too: conqueringhousewife{at}the-cadence{dot}com. 
    Like what you read here? Consider subscribing to this blog's feed or subscribing by email to have my posts put nicely into your email box? Or join all the conquering housewives on facebook?



    TWR: How Waiting Can Be Strength



    I can’t even tell you how many times when I think of waiting, I think of the verse, “They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength. They will mount up with wings like an eagles, they will run and not get tired, they will walk and not become weary" (Isaiah 40:31) In fact, because I grew up in a fairly old-fashioned (i.e. we had hymnals) Pentecostal church, I always hear this verse in song (Hymn number 145, I think?). I find waiting tiring, so this verse has baffled me. How is there strength in waiting?

    I am a wrestler. Not in the sense that I put on one of those strange suits that draw far too much attention to one’s crotch (seriously though! Lol) and grapple on a mat with someone else. I wrestle God. I may sense His voice telling me to wait, but I want to try my hardest to makes things happen now. I sorta stink at waiting. 

    I get restless. I don’t know how to sit still. I want living, physical, actual proof that God is working out His plans. I want to know not only what today looks like, but each day to the end of my life.

    I think of when I wanted to be married, but it wasn’t time yet. Everywhere I went, every young man I came across, God would hear my squirrel-mind going something like this: “Him, God? He’s cute. What about him, God. He’s not as cute, but he’s seems really smart. No, wait, look at that one, God. Yes, I will take that one.” My hyper-active, boy-crazy mind had to drive God crazy. I depleted my strength running through future possibilities, because bottom line, I didn’t trust God enough that He would bring His promises to pass. I thought that I needed to work them out for Him. God doesn’t need our help with His promises.

    Proverbs says “Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but a dream fulfilled is a tree of life” (13:12, NLT). Deferred means put-off, delayed, or postponed. And it’s true, right? Our heart feels sick when our hope, our dream, gets put-off or laid aside. When we accomplish a dream, our soul fills with the hot air that lifts us right off the ground… kind of feels like soaring… like an eagle.

    So, how is it that God can say, “They that wait…strength…eagles…run…??” What am I missing about waiting?!

    A couple months back my daughter got a balloon while at church. She was so excited. A pink balloon! I offered to tie the string around her wrist so she wouldn’t lose the balloon when we went outside. I tried explaining how it could fly away, and how as much as she wanted to hold it, it would still be attached to her if I tied the balloon to her wrist. She wouldn’t let me. She didn’t want to let go of the balloon. Sure enough, about five seconds after we got outside, one pink balloon went sailing for the clouds.

    The word wait used in this verse is the Hebrew word qavah. This little word is actually used to describe strength. It refers to the idea of tying a rope around something and holding tightly to it. When God asks us to wait, he isn’t asking us to give up our dream. He’s asking us to let go of it, to free up our hands for what He has purposed for us to do right now. But there’s still that rope of promise, that God will be faithful to accomplish what He said He would. So, like I tried to do with my daughter’s balloon, tie that rope of God's promise around your dream. Fasten it to your wrist. And wait.

    Image by © Royalty-Free/Corbis, my words added :)

    I think when we are asked to wait it feels a little like rejection. You aren’t good enough. You’ll never amount to anything. We want to throw the dream away entirely. Waiting isn’t rejection and it isn’t ceasing to hope. “Hope [put off] makes the heart sick.” You need to keep your hope ON. Perhaps you can’t physically work towards your dream right now, but God is surely working on you and that dream so that when it’s time to hold it your hands, you will have become the person that is able to walk in that dream. Waiting is for becoming. Keep that dream close. Tie it around your wrist and TRUST God’s faithfulness.

    Trust.

    Waiting is Trusting.

    When you place your trust in God, when you stop striving to make the dream happen, or take off the rejection you’ve been wearing… I think you do get that renewed strength. At least I want to try this out. What if I chose to recognize that now just simply isn’t time for the dream in my heart? What if I chose to recognize that my hands need to be busy with the two little one’s that call me Momma? What if I chose to live here and now, instead of 10 years from now? What if I didn’t have to know what tomorrow looked like, I was just happy with today and hoping in tomorrow?

    What if I trusted God? Really trusted Him?

    Would I “mount up with wings like an eagle and soar…” even while I am waiting?

    I want to find out. :)
    You?


    Thanks for sitting with me in The Waiting Room. Waiting is always easier in the company of friends. :)
    xo

    Amanda

    In case you missed the other parts of the series and want to get caught up, here are the links:
    And as a reminder, I love comments (I love hearing from you!). I love getting emails too: conqueringhousewife{at}the-cadence{dot}com. 
    Like what you read here? Consider subscribing to this blog's feed or subscribing by email to have my posts put nicely into your email box? Or join all the conquering housewives on facebook?

    Sharing this here: Denise in Bloom
     

    Photobucket

    Dear 16-year-old Me,



    Dear 16-year-old Amanda, 

    16-year-old Amanda Fashion at it's finest. Check out the laces on those shoes. LOL

    You ARE beautiful. Stop looking for someone else to tell you this. More important than someone saying it, is you believing it. Remember that guy that called you “rat girl.” He actually asks you out this year. Let go of his words. Don’t spend so much energy worried about that pointy nose of yours or what some guy says about you. 

    Wear your glasses. Stop despising that late-blooming, glasses-too-big-for-her-face, socially-awkward girl from junior high. She is you. And though you try so hard to leave her behind, it really is okay that you are a bit shy, an introvert, a dork, and that you wear glasses. God manages to use all that stuff about you for His Glory. And one day, you actually like you better with glasses (and, yes, apart from the convenience of being able to see. And, yes, you like you in glasses when your coolness is at its peak in college... not just in your dorky-mom days, thank you very much).

    14-year-old Me, Oh that girl and her glasses :)
    You are boy crazy. Okay—no need for me to tell you this, you already know. But seriously, chill out on this. I know who you are going to marry, and he’s amazing—UH-MAY-ZING. And you won’t see it coming, and you will remain clueless until the perfect time. God surprises you. Stop trying to peek under the wrapping paper at the present He wants to give you—constantly asking if the latest cute boy in your life is “the one.” Trust me, you WILL be surprised. And trust me, you will LOVE the surprise. Truly, you don’t need to waste all your brain power right now on the male gender. Most of those boys you are fretting over are not worth it.


    You have some hard days ahead. You are going to make some whopper of mistakes. You are going to feel like a failure, like life isn’t worth living, like everyone has abandoned you… even God. Cry out. And trust me, when you do, God will be right there. God will fight for you. He will even work a miracle for you. Lean into His Grace. All those stupid decisions you are about to make (the ones that are so ugly you don’t want anyone to know about), His Grace will cover them. His Love will never fail you. His Grace abounds so greatly to you--He doesn't need or want you to beat yourself up over your mistakes. Give them to Him. He uses them for His Glory.

    You work so hard at being seen, noticed. You think you have to flirt and know just what to say and do for the guys to want you. Trust me, they see you. You don't have do anything for them to notice you. And really, when you do meet that hunk-of-a-man who sweeps you off your feet, you won't care how many boys you dated or how many thought you pretty. You will like yourself best when you see yourself in that one special man's eyes.

    Stop trying to jam your round-peg-self into the square hole. You ARE different. And that’s okay. It’s going to take you a while to figure this out, but God’s got a plan for your life and it’s not going to look like anyone else’s. That’s okay. In fact, it’s good.



    Don’t be afraid to act on the Holy Spirit’s promptings. To date, He has not failed you yet.

    Don’t be so timid about your faith. A few of those people who you are so worried about what they think of you, they make some really bad decisions that cost them everything. It might be worth the risk of embarrassment to speak up. (Pay particular attention to Kevin.)

    Do work on caring less what other people think of you. Truth be told, it’s not so much that people have poor opinions of you… they just don’t really think of you at all. (i.e. you are not the center of everyone’s universe).

    Be nice to your mom and work on rolling your eyes less. Believe it or not, you do not know everything, she knows way more than you think, and she actually becomes your dearest friend.

    Do know that your dad loves you. He may stink at words, but he kicks butt at working hard to provide. Receive that as an expression of his love.

    Be nice to your sister. Let her into your life a little more. Sure she’s a bit obnoxious when you have friends over and sure she eavesdrops on your conversations and then teases you about what she finds out, but she just wants to be a part of your life. Trust me, you will wish you hadn’t been so cruel one day, and you won’t care if she “deserved” it or not.

    Spend more time with your grandparents. They really don’t live forever.

    Oh, and just a couple things you might like to know: Mark McGrath actually becomes an entertainment reporter (Yep. Really. Perhaps his pictures don’t deserve so much wall-space?), and people stop telling you how much you look like Leelee Sobieski (either because you stop looking like her or she becomes obscure, I'm not sure which). 

    This one is important: you are going to spend the day at your best friend Stephanie’s house. The two of you are going to be goofing off. She is going to moon you, and you are going to be tempted to one-up her by flashing her. Do not do this. I repeat, do not do this. Her dad comes home from work and walks in at that exact moment. Not only will you be horrifyingly embarrassed, it’ll pretty much end your friendship. Yeah. I know, right? Never. Going. To. Do. That. Again. Oh, and while I’m on the subject of embarrassing moments, avoid bikini’s with ties. They never serve you well. Perhaps, just avoid bikinis all together. Guys have great imaginations, they don’t need to see all that skin to find you attractive.


    Your best days are still to come, Amanda. Hang in there.

    You are loved, cherished, and beautiful,

    29-year-old Amanda


    I did this post as apart of a prompt from the blog Chatting at the Sky. I am a bit late, but it just seemed like fun and like something I would like my daughter to read one day. Emily P. Freeman just released a book for teen girls called Graceful. I have not read it to give it my official endorsement, but if you have a teenage girl or will soon have a teenage girl, I think you should give it a look. :)


    http://www.chattingatthesky.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/600_4.jpg
    Link to the Dear Me Link Up should you want to do your own or read more