Archive for May, 2008


Finding Your Spirit in the Kitchen Sink

It felt like my nerves were scraping against one another.

It had been one of those rare nights in which everyone had
gone to bed at a decent hour and woke up at just the right
time. But I felt jangled and all tossed up inside. My eyelids
felt like sandpaper and all I wanted to do was crawl into a
corner, draw my knees to my chest, and crack open a thick,
meaty book, not emerging again until I had turned the very
last page.

But it was Wednesday and my little girls had other plans - as they always do.

“Mommy, Callie is getting bigger.” Cassidy said.

“Yes, she is honey.”

“Mommy, I said ‘Callie is getting bigger.’”

“She sure is, honey.”

“Callie, Callie, Wallie. You are getting bigger,” she
sang to the tune of “I’m a Little Teapot.”

Normal conversation sounded like shouting, and Cassidy’s
everyday make-it-up-as-she-goes-along songs seemed way too loud.

I had exhausted everything in my arsenal. For a living, I write articles to
help parents celebrate everyday life with young children, to renew
our spirits, to revere the process of parenting.
But all those little things I write about that never fail to revitalize my
spirit had all, well, failed.

One of these techniques - and one that had always worked in the past - is to wheel
the kids through the rural Rocky Mountain valley that surrounds
my home. A summer stroll straight uphill always gets my heart
pumping, my legs burning, and my mind re-centered on joyful
mothering. But not today. My everyday panacea was cut short
by a nasty, from-out-of-nowhere hail storm.

After a mad dash over the river and through the woods
back to our little cabin, I tried another favorite method
of returning my mind to the place it should be.

I tried to sink into the presence of my girls. To be grateful
for their spirit and their presence by simply focusing on being
present with them. There’s something about my five-month old that
always does it. Callie has reached that magical age at which the
only thing she needs on this green and blue rock - beyond the
occasional dose of milk - is to look up at you and see a smile.

When she does, her arms and legs start to pinwheel and her
face sends forth beams of energy that can only be defined as
pure joy. This is no garden-variety grin. What she offers is
not so much a smile as it is an “explosion of face.” I challenge
anyone to stay in a blue funk after looking at that for 15 minutes.
It always works. But not today.

Today it is Cassidy who is eliciting such an expression from her
sister. Callie is in her swing while I find some dry clothes.
Cassidy has decided the mechanical swing isn’t doing it. She
helps to push.

“That’s pushing too hard, honey.” I try to keep the sharpness
out of my voice.

The swing bumps the wall behind. “Cassidy, she doesn’t like
that!” I say, just as her sister erupts in giggles.

My credibility is shot. So are my nerves.

“Into the car.” I say. “We’re going on an adventure.”
This may sound exciting - and it’s meant to - but it’s just
code for “We’re leaving the house.” And I hadn’t yet
decided where we’d end up.

We pull into the parking lot of Mommy’s “Special Place.”
A place they’ve never been before, though they’ve seen me enter
it enough times as they continue on to the park with their
dad. This is the place reserved for my occasional weekend
retreats into those thick, meaty books.

It is one of those rare coffee shops with a man behind the
counter who is friendly enough to know your name and tuned
in enough to know when you don’t want to chit-chat.

When we get there, he gives Cassidy a huge cup of cherry
vanilla Ben and Jerry’s, which melts before she eats it.
The spoon leaves a sticky pink trail as it travels from
the cup to the table, up to the window, and into her lap,
somehow not making it anywhere near her mouth.

I mop the drips with a Kleenex while bouncing Callie, who
is a little bored after her sticky-fingered sister finds
diversion in a four-year-old who has taken to bouncing up
and down the back stairs.

Now I know why I haven’t taken them here before. This is
my place (a place I hope I’m still welcome). So we climb
back in the car. I start to drive slowly. Maybe they’ll
nap. Nope.

I unload them into the house. What now? My husband and
relief pitcher won’t be home for hours. That’s when I
spot my sink, and I think about the Flylady.
At http://www.flylady.net, the Flylady offers
a helpful system for getting your home organized and
orderly, thus stamping out domestic CHAOS, which is
Flylady-speak for “Can’t Have Anyone Over Syndrome.”

The first chore in Flylady Land is to clean your kitchen
sink. The theory is that a shiny sink will give you a
sense of accomplishment, even amid your clutter. The
Flylady says, “When you get up the next morning, your
sink will greet you and a smile will come across your
lovely face.”

That’s a pretty tall promise, but what have I got to lose?
Out come the bleach, Comet, Windex, scouring pad, toothbrush,
and rubber gloves.

“I want to help,” Cassidy says, climbing on the counter and
grabbing for the sponge. I mutter something about this being
a Mommy Job and march her over to watch a self-made tape of
her new hero: Dora the Explorer. Callie goes down for some
“tummy time.”

Then I scrub that sink until it shines. After 15 minutes,
it’s as though the silly thing comes alive and winks at me.
And a smile does come across my face.

Maybe it was the 15-minute break afforded by Dora the Explorer.
Maybe it was the ability to put both my babies down and focus
on a project long enough to see it through to its completion.
Maybe it was this part of the world, however small, that I
could control with a scouring pad and some hot water. But
it had some kind of spillover effect to the rest of my day.

In retrospect, I’m really not sure what possessed me. My
sink wasn’t all that dirty and the last thing I wanted to
do on a day like this was clean. But, of all things, cleaning
my kitchen sink cleared the air in my little cabin that day.

I’ve said many times that finding delight in your role as a
mother is dependent on your ability to take care of yourself.
It’s about easing yourself down from the curtains you’ve been
climbing because no one can do it for you. It’s about pushing
yourself to be mindful amid tasks that so easily lend themselves
to mindlessness.

And I never thought I’d say it, but there are days when time
spent scrubbing your kitchen sink is time spent honoring yourself.

You know you’ve found such a task when you can once again feel
yourself settling into that core of joy. The place from which you
radiate grace and love and light straight from your soul into the
soul of your children, the way mothering was meant to be.

This is a reminder that practicing self-care isn’t about booking a
cruise or a day at the spa. It’s about finding the re-centering tool
that resonates with you at this very moment, and staying attentive
for the cues that point you toward the right one.

The right tool for today will be different than that of yesterday.
It’s up to you to hunt for it, and to delight in the search.

Susie Cortright is the founder of http://www.momscape.com - an online
magazine devoted to helping parents celebrate life with children. She
is also the creator of Momscape’s Scrapbooking Playground:
http://www.momscape.com/scrapbooking
Visit her sites today to subscribe to Susie’s free weekly newsletters
and to learn more about her scrapbook
club and her work-at-home scrapbook business.

Flesh And Spirit - Will The War Never End

There’s a war going on inside you between flesh and
spirit. Flesh and spirit are like two small
neighboring countries fighting against each other in
your mind; which is the world. Your thoughts are the
world’s most powerful country, they must decide who to
side with and how to destroy the enemy before they get
too powerful and take over the world, I mean your
mind.

The Works Of The Flesh

Romans 8:6 “For to be carnally minded is death; but to
be spiritually minded is life and peace”.

The word carnal has the meaning of or about the body
or flesh. For someone to live in the flesh they must
have a carnal mind with all the thoughts of the flesh.
This involves carnal appetites or cravings of the
flesh. It also involves self-ishness or motivation
based on personal needs and wants of the flesh.

Galatians 5:19-21 “Now the works of the flesh are
manifest, which are these; Adultery, fornication,
uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft,
hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife,
seditions, heresies, envyings, murders, drunkenness,
revellings, and such like: of the which I tell you
before, as I have also told you in time past, that
they which do such things shall not inherit the
kingdom of God.”

Have you ever felt like you could never be good enough
to please God, or that you’re too weak to give up any
of the sins above even though you know they’re against
God’s law? If so, then you may have experienced the
following.

You may have thought to fulfill God’s moral standards
you had to obey the law through your own human
ability. However, instead of receiving the joy of a
clean conscience, you felt enslaved to legalism and
guilt.

The Purpose Of Jesus

The law shows us that we are under the control of sin
and points us to Christ, the only one who can save us.

Romans 8:3-4 “For what the law could not do in that it
was weak through the flesh, God did by sending His own
Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, on account of
sin: He condemned sin in the flesh, that the righteous
requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us who do
not walk according to the flesh but according to the
spirit”.

The Fruits Of The Spirit

Galatians 5:22-23 “But the fruit of the Spirit is
love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness,
faith, Meekness, temperance: against such there is no
law.”

Fact is, your faith in God through Jesus Christ will
dictate whether you will crucify the flesh and walk in
the spirit or not.

Galatians 5:24 “And they that are Christ’s have
crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts”.

If you keep trying to overcome sin and addiction based
on your own human abilities then you’ll probably
stumble. This is because of your lack of dependence in
God through our lord and savior Jesus Christ.

But if you depend on God through faith in Jesus He can
and will make you whole. Jesus even said, “Watch and
pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit
indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak”. (Matthew
26:41).

And He also said, “…verily, verily, I say unto you,
whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, He will
give it you. (John 16:23).

See what I mean? All God wants is for you to depend on
Him by faith through Jesus Christ.

Therefore walking in the spirit is about improving
your faith in God through Jesus Christ. You can do
this by believing what He’s already done for you when
He died on the cross for your sins and raised Himself
from the dead after three days.

Don’t believe it because I said so, but because Jesus
Himself said, “If ye abide in me, and my words abide
in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be
done unto you”. (John 15:7).

In closing, if you’re not spending time with God and
improving your faith in Jesus Christ by listening to
and learning His Word, then you’re not walking in the
Spirit. So stay in His word and let the Holy spirit
guide your life in the way God wants you to live.

David Hopkins is a “Christian Article Writer” who
specializes in helping people remember to glorify
God in everything that they do. This way they won’t
miss any of His wonderful blessings. Learn more
at the Daily Word Of God Group Website. You may
also reproduce or give away this article –
Flesh And Spirit - Will The War Never End?
Provided this copyright and links remain present.

A Simple Contest with a Strong Message Wake Up Your Writing Spirit

The Blogfest 2005 Writing Contest has only been running for two weeks and already the results are overwhelming. And not because we’re getting far more entries than we expected. It’s because along with entries, we’re also getting heartfelt messages from writers all over the world. I’ve run a few contests before and received quite a few entries, but I’ve never been personally emailed and thanked by so many writers.

What’s the difference with this contest? I think the main reason is that the idea actually came from writers. Even though the writers at our company work in publishing, they find it a little sad that there’s so much focus on writing what can sell instead of writing what truly matters to you. They wanted a contest that would allow people to write whatever they wanted to write.

From that idea came Blogfest, a contest designed to encourage all writers to get the project of their dreams done. Unlike most contests, we decided not to offer publication and not to pay the prize for a completed work. Instead, we decided to offer the prizes based on how much the writing project means to the writer. This is one contest that isn’t about whether or not your work can sell or about what your writing will mean to someone else. It’s about what it means to you.

To enter, we asked writers to tell us about the one thing they’ve always wanted to write and to tell us what it would mean to them to write it. Now, after only two weeks, we have an inbox full of emails from people. Entries so far have included grandparents wanting to write their life story for their grandchildren, aspiring novelists, professional writers looking for the chance to write something for themselves and not for money, and a young woman wanting to capture and preserve her mother’s family recipes.

These people have entered and then sent us an extra email just to thank us for the opportunity. They’ve told us how just writing about the project has made them so excited and full of joy. They have enthusiasm and feel delight just for thinking about finally writing. And we’ve started reading the entries and the joy is there too. As a publisher, I’m used to reading submissions and contest entries. It’s often a joy but there’s rarely as much life as there is in these submissions. Reading them, I can feel that people have that spark of excitement that is only motivated by something much greater than money or even publication. It’s the joy of doing what your heart’s always wanted to do.

There is more to writing than publication and money and this competition is bringing out the real spirit of writing.

My message to all writers is to think about what matters to them. Think about that one thing you’ve always dreamed of writing. I challenge you to write down what completing that project would mean to you. If you feel that spark, I challenge you to commit to your project and get it written. Not because you can make money from it, but because it means something to you.

This contest has made me see more clearly than ever that there is far more to writing than making money. There will only be a few winners to Blogfest, and choosing them is going to be the toughest job we do all year. But I hope this idea can reach further than that. I hope all writers will listen to their hearts and complete their projects. I hope that just thinking about actually doing it will wake up that writing spirit that is in so many people.

Shelley Wake is one of the organizers of Blogfest 2005 and the manager and editor of Writing Stuff - the site that offers everything a freelance writer needs to succeed.
http://www.writingstuff.com



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