Tuesday, March 29, 2011

14/52


"Talking it all out seems to have done away with [it’s dreadfulness], somehow. It’s very strange - and I thought it so real and bitter. It’s like opening the door of a dark room to show some hideous creature you’ve believed to be there - and when the light streams in your monster turns out to have been just a shadow, vanishing when the light comes."

~L. M. Montgomery~
Anne's House Of Dreams

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

13/52



I'm afraid I've become rather obsessed with this window and the sunlight pouring in now that spring is so near.  (Though I always seem to relish this window, regardless of the season, don't I?)  I was able to open it for the first time this year and the fresh air is always so refreshing. 

I've been growing sprouts this year, too... yes, I dare to try again!  Not having a sunny spot and having all my previous attempts whither due to too much shade, I've decided to try rhubarb, though I've yet to decide where to plant it, and watermelon, which will probably end up a failure but I can't resist! Spring has crept into my being!  We have a marshy area to the West of our house... I'm going to laboriously wheel some dark soil from our forested area out back, sift through it hoping to get rid of all the small plants and seeds that lay dormant in it, and mound it up so the watermelon plants will have plenty of water yet not be drowned, and hopefully get some direct sun.  As I said, it'll probably be a failure but what's a girl to do with no where to grow and an itch in her soul to try?  ;) 

I think I started the sprouts a month too early.... haha!  I just couldn't wait any longer!!

Monday, March 21, 2011

Thoughtfully, Mindfully

People don't do things mindfully anymore.  They're too busy, it seems, with accomplishing as many things as they can at once and don't take time to sit and just do one thing and not do anything else.  Like drinking a cup of tea as mentioned in the quoted post below.  We were meant to take our time and enjoy little moments like these.  I hope you'll take time to be more intentional, mindful, and enjoy your day more.


Ritual isn’t about doing a routine mindlessly. It’s a way of building something good into your life, so that you don’t forget what’s important. Done mindfully, a ritual can remind you to be conscious. Done mindlessly, a ritual is meaningless.
1. Sit in the morning. When you wake up, in the quiet of the morning, perhaps as your coffee is brewing, get a small cushion and sit on the floor. I will often use this opportunity to stretch, as I am very inflexible. I feel every muscle in my body, and it is like I am slowly awakening to the day. I’ll also just sit, and focus on my breathing going in and out. I’m an absolute beginner when it comes to meditation, but this always starts my day right.
2. Brush your teeth. I assume we all brush our teeth, but often we do it while thinking of other things. Try fully concentrating on the action of brushing, on each stroke of each tooth, going from one side of the mouth to the other. You end up doing a better job, and it helps you realize how much we do on autopilot.
3. Eat mindfully. Turn off the TV, put away the computer and mobile devices, even put away the book or newspaper. If you eat with any of these things (most people do), eating without them will seem boring. And yet, unless you do this, you are not truly appreciating your food. I like eating my oats mindfully, paying attention to each bite. It makes the food taste better, and I eat slowly and with gratefulness.
4. Wash your bowl. When you’re done eating, wash your dish immediately. Do it while paying full attention to your washing, to the water and suds.
5. Drink tea. There’s something ancient about the tea ceremony — and when you drink tea as a mindfulness ritual, you’re connecting with millions of others who have done so over the centuries. Make your own tea ceremony — prepare the tea carefully and mindfully, pour it slowly, sip it with thoughtfulness. See if you can set aside one time each day to do this, and it will transform your day.
6. Walk slowly. I like to take breaks from work, and go outside for a little walk. Walk slowly, each step a practice in awareness. Pay attention to your breathing, to everything around you, to the sounds and light and texture of objects.
7. Read in silence. Find a quiet time (mornings or evenings are great for me), and a quiet spot, and read a good novel. Have no television or computers on nearby, and just immerse yourself in the world of the novel. It might seem contradictory to let your mind move from the present into the time of the novel, but it’s a great practice in focus. Also, I love a good novel more than almost anything else.
8. Look at someone gratefully. Each day, find someone you care about. Instead of just seeing what you always see, really look at the person. Try not to do it creepily. See this person for the miracle that she is, and be grateful for her existence. If you’re feeling generous, tell that person how thankful you are for her.
9. Work with focus. Start your workday by choosing one task that will make a big difference in your work, and clearing everything else away. Just do that one task, and don’t switch to other tasks. Single-tasking is a great way to find focus. Increase your Monk Mind.
These rituals aren’t the only time you should be mindful, but they’re great reminders. Today, try a few of them to fully live and fully appreciate this wonderful day.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Tis The Set of The Sail

One ship sails east and another sails west
With the self-same winds that blow.
'Tis the set of the sail and not the gale
Which determines the way they go.

As the winds of the sea are the ways of fate
As we voyage along through life,
'Tis the set of the soul that determines the goal,
And not the calm or the strife.

~ Ella Wheeler Wilcox ~

Saturday, March 12, 2011

2 Corinthians 6:3-10

Our Charge:
Giving no offence in any thing, that the ministry be not blamed: 
but in all things approving ourselves as the ministers of God, in much patience,

When?
 in afflictions, in necessities, in distresses, in stripes, in imprisonments, 
in tumults, in labours, in watchings, in fastings;

How?
by pureness, by knowledge, by longsuffering, by kindness, 
by the Holy Ghost, by love unfeigned, by the word of truth, by the power of God, 
by the armour of righteousness on the right hand and on the left,

What will I have to suffer?
by honour and dishonour, by evil report and good report: 
as deceivers, and yet true; as unknown, and yet well known; 
as dying, and, behold, we live; as chastened, and not killed; as sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing; 
as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing all things.


Friday, March 11, 2011

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Jesus is all the world to me

Jesus is all the world to me:
My life, my joy, my all.
He is my strength from day to day;
Without Him I would fall.
When I am sad, to Him I go;
No other one can cheer me so.
When I am sad, He makes me glad;
He’s my Friend.

Jesus is all the world to me,
My Friend in trials sore.
I go to Him for blessings, and
He gives them o’er and o’er.
He sends the sunshine and the rain;
He sends the harvest’s golden grain:
Sunshine and rain, harvest of grain—
He’s my Friend.

Jesus is all the world to me,
And true to Him I’ll be.
Oh, how could I this Friend deny
When He’s so true to me?
Following Him I know I’m right;
He watches o’er me day and night.
Following Him by day and night,
He’s my Friend.

Jesus is all the world to me,
I want no better friend.
I trust Him now; I’ll trust Him when
Life’s fleeting days shall end.
Beautiful life with such a Friend;
Beautiful life that has no end!
Eternal life, eternal joy,
He’s my Friend.



PS. Why is it that all these beautiful hymns are sung by... well... people who don't always sing on key. People who need more training. Of all the songs in the world, such meaningful hymns should be done justice and sung with the most skilled of voices instead of by the weird misfits. They should be as pleasant to the ear as they are to the soul. How we fail.
PPS. I don't say this to dis the above group, it's just my overall, general opinion.  Some gospel singers and musicians sing hymns gorgeously.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

11/52


I was given these hyacinths for being single. haha.  Regardless, I've enjoyed them being an addition to my room.  Made it smell sweet and look like spring, even with snow on the other side of the window.

Found a new song.  It's beautiful and matches my heart today. 

 

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Molly Gibson

Molly Gibson.  Heroine of Wives and Daughters, written by Elizabeth Gaskell.

The heroines I find the most edifying of these period novels all have the common factor of maintaining high characters while dealing with difficult situations.  Somehow associating with and being respectful toward those around them whose conduct falls short, yet continuing to behaving themselves in the most gentle-lady of ways, keeping their reputation of uprightness despite the compromising situations they find themselves in.  

In the case of Molly Gibson, it was a step sister’s compromising conduct that caused Molly woe.  In standing for what was right and stepping out to aid her step sister in mending her reputation, Molly herself was put in compromising situations, subjected to horrible gossip, and suffered her reputation to be tarnished.

How was she able to bear it?  What got her through?  She refused to defend herself out of refusing to betray her sister’s confidences.  Interesting that she put her own reputation on the line to protect the reputation her sister who didn't seem to value her won reputation.  Molly exhibited great amounts of uprightness and steadfastness of character.  And she did it merely on the behalf of holding to good morals and good breeding of being a gentlewoman, not out of a faith or devotion to God (though I find faith and good breeding to be intimately connected and rarely can you possess one without knowing the other).  Was it because she had a completely selfless heart that she was not tempted to defend herself?  Was it an unusual strength of will and determination being focused on refusing to lower herself to defending, which, in so doing would betray the very reputation she sought to protect?  Is this sort of uprightness attainable by any who would aspire to it? Where did she get such an understanding of these morals which seem so lost on today’s society?


Wednesday, March 2, 2011

A Deeper Look at The Golden Rule

Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets.
Matthew 7:12

Doing to others what they would do to you takes two wise acts of imagination, one massive act of self renunciation, one beautiful act of joyful generosity.
1 - Get inside their experience and have some creative empathy.
2 - Stay you and try to imagine what you, as God has taught you in the Bible, would be needed here.
3 - That’s impossible without a massive act of self renunciation.
4 - Do it as a joyful act of generosity.

... If you stop at the 1st step without moving on to the 2nd step, you aren’t loving them yet.  Because if you just say I’m gonna get inside and be them, well, the problem is, they may not know what they need.  They may be so in agony they don’t even know what they really want.  So you can’t just get inside them and just do what they want.  You have to get inside they and still be you.  The Bible saturated, humble, God shaped you, with a creative act of empathy getting in their life, and their skin, and their feelings, being both them and you and out of that, discerning what is wanted and needed here at the deepest level, and that’s what you do.
- John Piper

Serving and ministering to others isn’t merely letting them tell you what they want.  It’s not merely seeing a need and filling it.  It’s seeing the need and discerning more fully what should be done about it.  It requires that you stand apart and decide between yourself and God what He wants you to do in the situation, not what others are telling you should be done, not what looks like should be done, nor even what others are pressuring you to do.  All that matters is that you do as God leads and commands you.  That's what's important and that's what's key.