Sonlight Curriculum
Showing posts with label Staying Motivated in the Home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Staying Motivated in the Home. Show all posts

Monday, March 8, 2010

Are You Invisible?

I've talked with several Mother's recently about the "busy season" of Motherhood. There's so much to do! Sometimes we get so busy that we may fall prey to numerous temptations. Feeling sorry for ourselves, forgetting to take time for ourselves, forgetting our motivation for doing all the things we do as wives and Mothers.

I recently encountered a person who thought the sacrificing I am doing for my family and our traditional ways may be a problem. She expressed concern that I could fall into "losing myself" by not taking time for myself by shopping alone, pampering myself and getting away as much as she does as a single mother. Right now those are luxuries that I think are wonderful but are not always practical on a regular basis. I have priorities and they outrank some of the luxuries I enjoyed before having a family or at least their frequency. Don't get me wrong, I think there is a time and place for every woman to be pampered. Let's just remember our priorities and why we do what we do. We may feel invisible at times, but it will all be worth it as it blesses our family and glorifies our God.

For those of you who can relate, you may benefit from the this short video as much as I did.Thank you to my friend who shared it with me after the encounter I mentioned.

Keep up the good work you are doing in the lives of those in your family!

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Back with Book and Blog Suggestions

I'm back.

As most Mom's know, we have limited private time in a day and I took a break from blogging in order to focus on some projects at home and catch up on some reading. I hope to pick back up as I find the time. I have missed this outlet.

I've made some updates which include a Mom Moment store where you can find some of the books I have found particularly helpful or encouraging in the roles of a christian wife and mother. Please feel free to share your own good finds. I love a good book!

I also like finding blogs that cover similar topics and interests of my own. I found a delightful one this past year at passionatehomemaking.com. Lindsey is a Mom who inspires as she tackles so many topics of interest. I'm sure I'll be referencing her blog often here at Mom Moment. Please visit her site as her blog is one of the best I've found. What's your favorite blog?

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Lists For Lorrie

1. FIVE things under $5 that I couldn't live without

-Silk Chocolate Soy Milk
-Oxi Clean stain remover
-Email-so glad it's free!
-Disposable diapers (I'm with you Lorrie!)
-Iced Sweet Tea (love the nurses/housekeeper I work with who make it every shift!)

2. FIVE favorite movies

-The Note Book
-The Sixth Sense
-13 Going on 30
-Pure Country
-It's a Wonderful Life
(Chic Flicks & Love stories rate high and occasional comedies)

3. FIVE baby names I love

- the ones parents keep as a surprise until the baby's born
- ones with siginificance and meaning to the parents rather
- family names
- namesakes
- Abigail & Jackson...go figure

4. FIVE songs I could listen to over and over

-Blessed be Your Name -Chris Tomlin
-anything by Mac Powell & Third Day (I'm better by groups...love music and find
this too difficult)
-how you live (Point of Grace) Sticking with Lorrie on this one. Love it.
-When You Say Nothing At All and nearly everything else by Allison Krause & Union
Station
-Any 80's Song that Andy gets into singing in the car
-Every song that bring to mind a good memory


5. FIVE people who have influenced my life in a positve way

-My Family growing up
-Jr. High/High School Youth Director
-My College Roommate
-My Husband & Children
-My Best Girlfriends


6. FIVE things that are always in my purse

(I rarely carry one...why when you already have to carry the diaper bag?)
-receipts
-lipstick/chapstick/gloss (at least one)
-cell phone
-diapers/wipes/extra outifits
-wallet (with many pictures of my family)

7. FIVE moments that have changed my life (in no particular order)

-moments I spent with my Mom learning about Jesus as a child
-moments I spent serving others...vbs's, mission trips, teaching sunday
school/youth groups, soup kitchens, etc.
-the day I passed my Nursing Boards and got my RN license
-the day I married Andy
-the day I gave birth to Abigail and then the day I had Jackson
-the moment I accepted Christ as my Savior and the moments he's reminded me of his
love before and after

8. FIVE obsessions I have right now

-becoming a better homemaker
-taking pictures of the people I love...primarily my kiddos
-finding time for myself...really need a haircut and have been obsessing over the
idea of a pedicure
-taking a weekly trip w/ my little ones to Chic-Fil-A
-stopping complaining and instead working on the relationship at the source of the
complaint
-watching new episodes of The Office & Lost

9. FIVE places I would like to go
-shopping for a new dress
-on vacation with my family
-to Switzerland
-a spa to get that haircut and pedicure
-out west to see my friend Amy

10.FIVE appliances or kitchen tools I cannot live without
-dishwasher
-garbage disposal
-toaster oven
-microwaveable kid friendly dishes (oh yeah, and the microwave itself)
-fridge (what would we do without them)with you again Lorrie

11.FIVE people whose top 5's I would like to see
-Andy's
-Abigail's
-Mom's
-Molly's
-yours!

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Monastic Motherhood

Have you ever felt like you've lost yourself in motherhood? Maybe you looked at the clock one day and saw it was noon when you realized you had changed dirty diapers, bathed children, made breakfast and lunch, cleaned up the messes from breakfast and lunch and dressed the children. But when you looked in the mirror you noticed you hadn't yet brushed your hair or teeth and your own stomach was growling? I've been there too and that's why I found the following so encouraging. It gives new perspective to the Christian Mom. Thanks to my friend Bonnie for sharing it with me.

Be blessed!


Carlo Carretto, one of the leading spiritual writers of the past half
century, lived for more than a dozen years as a hermit in the Sahara
Desert, alone with the Blessed Sacrament for company, milking a goat
for his food, and translating the Bible into the local Bedouin
language. He prayed for long hours by himself.

Returning to Italy one day to visit his mother, he came to a
startling realization. His mother, who for more than 30 years of her
life had been so busy raising a family that she scarcely ever had a
private minute for herself, was more contemplative than he was.

Carretto, though was careful to draw the right lesson from this. What
this taught was not that there was anything wrong with what he had
been doing living as a hermit. The lesson was rather that there was
something wonderfully right about what his mother was doing all these
years as she lived the interrupted life amid the noise and incessant
demands of small children. He had been in a monastery, but so had
she.

What is a monastery? A monastery is not so much a place set apart for
monks and nuns as it is a place set apart (period). It is also a
place to learn the value of powerlessness and a place to learn that
time is not ours, but God's.

Our home and our duties can, just like a monastery teach us those
things. For example, the mother who stays home with small children
experiences a very real withdrawal from the world. Her existence is
definitely monastic. Her tasks and preoccupations remove her from the
centers of power and social importance. And she feels it.

Moreover, the demands of young children also provide her with what
St. Bernard, one of the great architects of monasticism, called
the "monastic bell". All monasteries have a bell. Bernard, in
writing his rules for monasticism told his monks that whenever the
monastic bell rang they were to drop whatever they were doing and go
immediately to the particular activity (prayer, meals, work, study,
sleep) to which the bell was summoning them. He was adamant that they
respond immediately, stating that if they were writing a letter they
were to stop in mid-sentence when the bell rang. The idea in his mind
was that when the bell called, it called you to the next task and you
were to respond immediately, not because you want to, but because
it's time, it'sd God's time. For him, the monastic bell was intended
as a discipline to stretch the heart by always taking you beyond your
own agenda to God's agenda.

Hence, a mother rearing children, perhaps in a more privileged way
even than a professional contemplative is forced, almost against her
will, to constantly stretch her heart. For years, while rearing
children, her time is never her own, her own needs have to be kept in
second place and every time she turns around a hand is reaching out
and demanding something. She hears the monastic bell many times
during the day and she has to drop things in mid-sentence and
respond, not because she wants to, but because it's time for that
activity and time isn't her time, but God's time.

The rest of us experience the monastic bell each morning when our
alarm clock rings and we get out of bed and ready ourselves for the
day, not because we want to, but because it's time. Response to duty
can be monastic prayer, a needy hand can be a monastic bell, and
working without status and power can constitute a withdrawal into a
monastery where God can meet us. The domestic can be the monastic.

By Fr. Ron Rolheiser, OMI, Seattle, WA

The Catholic Northwest
Progress, Jan. 18, 2001.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Missing sock on Isle J

I was running frantically through Target the other day trying to find a missing sock. My 7 month old little boy hates wearing socks, but it's cold outside and he needs them. Not to mention it was literally freezing outside and the socks are new and quite adorable I might add.

The whole family was with me, including Grandma, when we checked out at Target and I realized only one sock was accounted for. I saw the look in my poor families eyes. They all knew what was about to take place and quickly began their pleas and protests but not before I began running. I shouted something over my shoulder like, "I'm not leaving without that sock and you better not leave me either!"

And I was off. Like a trained athlete at the starting line I ran full speed ahead. Like a race car driver I was weaving in and out of isles. Past A, B and C and a sharp turn toward J, K and L. Yeah, if you haven't tried to buy anything off a Target gift registry, you may not know what I'm talking about here. Target's isles are alphabetical, just like the dirt roads of the small town I grew up in. It may sound like a good idea, but it's not. The alphabet is a straight line with out intersections!

Anyway, just when I had back tracked half our steps and was going in for the kill and working up a sweat from the mission, I ran into an old friend I had not seen in years. How could I not comment on her completely new hair cut, mention the birth of my most recent child or briefly explain why I was sprinting? With a quick, apologetic exchange I gave her my new number and promised to blog more. I think she's the only other person that has read my blog besides me and I didn't even tell her about it.

As I ran away from her I shouted something over my shoulder like, "I've got to find that sock!" Just then the face of an angel appeared. Okay, maybe not a literal angel, but in the least, a good Samaritan. He was dressed in flannel and smiled kindly as he said, "Is it yellow and blue?" "I saw it on isle J." He must have noticed my exasperated expression because he began guiding me through the maze of alphabetical isles to isle J where to my amazement laid the little striped sock that in that moment closely resembled the gold metal at the finish line. I thanked him graciously and ran to claim my prize of admiration and shock from my whole family who were patiently waiting for me at the front doors of the store.

I felt like giving an acceptance speech and thanking them for believing in me and supporting me even when they didn't. But then I realized, I had only picked up a sock we dropped at Target. Now it was time to go to Sam's Club. And I thought the Target cross country course was long?

Thank you God for rewarding me in the small ways. Sometimes it's the little things that make the biggest difference in a Mom's world. Today it was a sock at Target.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Want to Write...

Baby crying. Gotta pick the baby. He comes first. Sure miss writing. Be back soon...I hope! :) God bless.

I love being a Mommy. Thank you God. Please help me to soak in every moment...even when I'm tempted to be impatient or long for something less important than the gifts of Jackson and Abigail that you have given to me to hold. I am blessed and thankful.

Monday, January 7, 2008

Keeping that resolution?

Happy New Year 2008!

It's that time for making and keeping resolutions. I love a New Year. It's like the first day of school that every one gets to take part in for the rest of our lives. A fresh start, a clean slate and a new beginning. All at the flip of a calendar.

I always loved that line in You've Got Mail when they compare a fall day in New York to that of the smell of newly sharpened pencils. Everyone loves to be inspired even in the small things. And such is what a New Year does for me.

My resolution list started out as many. Then I read about how your chances at success really increase if you focus in on just one. So, for me it is going to be bible verse memorization. To increase the success rate even more you are to be specific, so my resolution still needs some work as I haven't picked the passage yet. I will post it when I do though.

I hope to journal more in the new year too. I used to have more time for that. I miss it.

May the Lord bless us as we strive to seek and to serve Him more in 2008. God bless you and your New Year's Resolutions!

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Christmas Message from Corinthians

I CORINTHIANS 13 - A CHRISTMAS VERSION

If I decorate my house perfectly with plaid bows, strands of twinkling lights and shiny balls, but do not show love to my family, I'm just another decorator. If I slave away in the kitchen, baking dozens of Christmas cookies, preparing gourmet meals and arranging a beautifully adorned table at mealtime, but do not show love to my family, I'm just another cook.
If I work at the soup kitchen, carol in the nursing home and give all that I have to charity, but do not show love to my family, it profits me nothing. If I trim the spruce with shimmering angels and crocheted snowflakes, attend a myriad of holiday parties and sing in the choir's cantata but do not focus on Christ, I have missed the point.

Love stops the cooking to hug the child. Love sets aside the decorating to kiss the husband. Love is kind, though harried and tired. Love doesn't envy another's home that has coordinated Christmas china and table linens. Love doesn't yell at the kids to get out of the way, but is thankful they are there to be in the way. Love doesn't give only to those who are able to give in return but rejoices in giving to those who can't.

Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails. Video games will break, pearl necklaces will be lost, golf clubs will rust, but giving the gift of love will endure.

Merry Christmas and lots of love to you and yours!

Author Unknown

Monday, September 10, 2007

Stability or Faith?

You want to know one of my weaknesses? I like to watch The View. It's one of my indulgences in the day. I make Abigail's lunch while she watches Sesame Street and she eats lunch when I watch The View (or some of it anyway).

My husband will occasionally harass me about the members on the panel or the topics discussed and I will be the first to admit I can't justify a lot of it. However, it's nice to feel like I am a part of some adult conversation during the day and you can't hide from how pathetic our world is sometimes.

Anyway, that's not my point. My point is that today I heard a good quote. I'm an optimist for the most part and I like to pick out the bits of good. And my take home point today was a quote from their new panel member, Sherri. My paraphrased version is, "If life were all about stability than we wouldn't need faith."

Isn't it true that we can often be easily tempted to feel self-sufficient when are day is going smoothly; almost as if we have things under control? But all it takes is just one thing to go wrong and we are quickly reminded of how imperfect we are and our ever present need of a perfect Savior.

I hope today that you, like me, will be less tempted to get frustrated at the instability in your life and instead will be reminded to have faith in a loving God who knows and loves you.

(As a side note, I typed this with one hand while holding my 2 1/2 month old with the other...talk about instability!)

"But without faith it is impossible to please him, for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him."
(Hebrews 11:6)

Monday, July 16, 2007

Weary?

It's late. I'm exhausted. Being a Mom of a 2 year old and newborn is draining. I love my two so much, but they require a lot of me. My days are full of diapers, feedings, late nights/early mornings and discipline, but they are also full of hugs, kisses and cuddles. May this verse encourage you during your periods of weariness as it does in mine. God is good all the time.

"Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up." -- Galations 6:9 (NIV)

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

80 Days and Counting

Baby Jackson as I call him is moving all around today. This isn't anything new really as he is nearly always active. I wonder if this will be a reflection of what he will be like once he arrives. My due date seems to be quickly approaching as I look at my calendar. Today I sat down and actually counted the days and I found encouragement from seeing that there are 80 days left before my due date. There is still time to be productive! Now, if I will just make the most of that time.

I took my own advice from yesterday and reviewed the flylady's website. My little girl has been a handful today and when I put her down for her nap I wasn't ready to jump into cleaning. I needed a break and figured her website was the most productive break I could take. I appreciate her enthusiasm for making a home a refuge and retreat. My desire for this is great, but my enthusiasm for the tasks required is small. Thankfully, her enthusiasm can be contagious. Her daily reminders are what I need some days.

Spiritually, I have found my daily devotionals and an occasional stop by the girltalk web site to hit the spot. Personal time in the word and in prayer along with what feels like a little online fellowship does my heart well and helps me keep things in perspective.

I'm a young wife and Mom and realize I still have lots to learn. I thank God for all the little blessings along the way. What blesses you in the midst of your daily routine? Please do share.

Have a wonderfully blessed day.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Staying Motivated in the Home

As my due date gets closer for the birth of my second child, a son, I find peace in preparation. Yesterday we were able to order some items for the baby's room and the more prepared we become the more the reality sets in that our little boy will be here soon.

Now if I can just put this preparation into practice in the every day details! I have a kitchen to clean and a house that needs put in order and most particularly, a darling toddler who enjoys providing me with every distraction she can that prevents me from accomplishing all that I have in mind. I wouldn't trade this life for the world though and I often remind myself of this.

God, please give me strength for the day. My true peace is from you and in the blessings you pour down. Keep me focused on the tasks at hand and prevent me from falling into the trap of idleness or laziness. May I be a loving Mother and wife and may that be reflected in the way I live each day.

Let's set goals today for this week and see where we are by Friday. Mine will begin with cleaning out the baby's room which is currently a slowly clearing office. Have a great and productive day! If you need some more advice in the cleaning and organizing department check out my link to flylady.com if you haven't already.