Home Education with Your Home in Mind! And an e-conference for you!

5ed9d1cfc5a73f8bf4ed579a9d79a69c "Sally, would you please, please start speaking and writing on Home Schooling, again???"

This was the most often received request at our Mom Heart conferences this year. Because I love all mamas and love just encouraging them in their roles, I have, perhaps, neglected writing articles on home schooling. But, if you have been in my home or have read some of my books, you know that I think all mamas are educators and trainers.

But, I have been working on a live e-conference for you who want some refreshment this time of year about building foundations in your home that give life, inspiration, and energy to your role as a Home Schooling Mom. We are trying this as an experiment, as we want to serve all of you the best way we can through this blog, our conferences and our ministry. So you must let me know if this is of interest to you.

I loved, loved homeschooling my children and love who they have become. I home-schooled all of them from birth till they graduated from high school and pursued their own careers and school. By God's grace, they all love us, love God and have found affirmation and favor in their careers or educational pursuits, so I suppose I can now speak with some authority about how we did it in our home.

There is a way to homeschool that cooperates with the way God designed a home to be--and it will prepare and give strength to your children. So, join me in our e-conference next Monday night, March 10, at 7:00 mountain time. It will be live and last for 1 1/2 hours to 2 hours. There will be an opportunity for a few questions but I have lots and lots to share!

JOIN US FOR THE E-CONFERENCE:

Home-Centered Learning:

Weaving a Love of Learning Into the Fabric of Your Home

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March 10th, at 7PM Mountain Time (8 Central, 9 Eastern, 6 Pacific!)

COST: $9.99

Click Here to Register!

This live e-conference will inspire you to cultivate a home of educational excellence; moral righteousness, spiritual inspiration and emotional health.

*In this 1 ½ hour seminar, you will learn how to establish your home as a place that gives life, beauty and inspiration to the hearts, minds and souls of your children.

*Giving practical foundations of love that give security, well-being, happiness and encourage social maturity

*Principles of Discipleship: reaching the hearts and minds of your children for God’s purposes

*Teaching a child how to think Biblically

*Building your Child’s mental and intellectual strength

*Providing your children with heroes, role models and stories that will captivate their imagination

*Passing on a heart for ministry by giving your children opportunities to serve.

*Nurturing independent learning and creativity by providing real life experiences.

*Establishing Traditions that inspire.

*Defining a family culture that feeds their souls.

A mother is crafted by God to bring His life into her home through the ways she organizes and creates life from morning till night, through all the seasons and bridging all of the years together. As a consequence of her life work, children will flourish and become prepared in her home to enter adulthood with confidence in education, social skills, ministry and whatever life brings their way.

Learn some basic foundations that provide the basis on which to build a strong vibrant life.

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(We have been researching the best ways to do e-conferences, (webinars), and have hired an assistant just to help us do more conferences that we hope will reach families all over the world. You participation in this conference will help us fund some new outreaches to reach more families here and around the world with our messages, books and conferences. So we thank you for joining us in this conference and for helping us to reach others.)

PLEASE, OH PLEASE, HELP US REACH YOUR FRIENDS BY ANNOUNCING IT ON FB, TWITTER, AND YOUR NETWORKS, SO THAT WE CAN DECIDE IF THIS IS A GOOD FORMAT FOR CONFERENCES IN THE FUTURE! WE ARE SO EXCITED TO BE TRYING A NEW FORMAT AGAIN--AND WE PRAY ALL WILL WORK WELL.

ATTENDANCE IS LIMITED, SO BE SURE TO SIGN UP EARLY!

How Stories Form Heroes & An Inspiring Conference!

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“Books are the quietest and most constant of friends; they are the most accessible and wisest of counselors, and the most patient of teachers.” ― Charles William Eliot

Now that I am home from the 3 conferences and our wedding, I have all sorts of thoughts floating through my mind. This year at our mom heart conferences, women loved Sarah's talk on shaping a story-formed life and wanted more! So I am happy to announce that many of you who did not get to hear the talks will be able to hear her in person. She has had many requests, and so in the past few months, she has planned a conference to inspire, encourage and help parents know how to shape their children into heroes through capturing their imagination through stories. Perhaps some of you would like to hear Sarah speak on this on a live e-conference. Let us know what you think.

 In light of this, I am thrilled that Sarah, my daughter, who wrote Read for the Heart,  will be speaking at conferences all over the United States (and overseas when she is there) about capturing your child's heart and imagination, building excellent moral foundations, and deepening their own personal messages through stories and literature. As many of you know, she is an excellent speaker, profound in her thoughts and communication, and so you will be encouraged if you get to hear her at one of these conferences. (and of course you know that I am not biased! :))

The first one is coming up near Boston--so be sure to register now, so that you will receive a copy of her new book with registration--and tell your friends about it. (Please fb, tweet and email!)

And for those of you who do not live in this area, you can write her about  your group, or go to her blog where she will be announcing future conferences. I hope many of you can come to this--or to our online conference--as I am taking your requests to heart!

You are cordially invited to...

The Storyformed Child Conference :: April 12, 2014 ::

Sterling, Massachusetts

From Sarah:

Hello friends, I am delighted to announce the very first Storyformed conference, the first event I am launching as part of my new venture at storyformed.com. For years now, I have wanted to hold a conference on the topic of story; its power, its spiritual significance, and how parents can bring and use it to deeply shape the lives of their children. This conference is the answer to that hope, a day long event in which I will deeply explore the power of great books, the need for beauty, and the vital importance of imagination in the life of a child. Speaking from my own experience as a child deeply formed by story, and my study of children's literature and imagination at Oxford, I hope to inspire you to a love for story, reveal its soul-forming power, and show you exactly how to create a story-formed home.  Through carefully crafted talks, special workshop sessions, and a conference workbook designed to help parents plan for the story-formed life, I hope to leave you with a deep understanding of the power story has to shape, equip, and kindle heroism in the hearts of children.

My dear friend Stephanie is hosting this conference at a local church, and ensuring that it will be a delightful first event. A lovely lunch will be catered (you have three choices at registration), and resources will be available at the conference. My goal is to make this a day to nourish your soul, kindle your own imagination, and immerse you in the beauty of great books.

But register soon! Register by March 8th to receive the limited, special offer of a copy of my new book as part of your registration!

Caught Up In A Story: Fostering a Storyformed Life of Great Books and Imagination With Your Children is my soon-to-be-published book exploring the power of story and helping parents know how to use that power to shape the hearts of their children. Complete with booklists and short reviews, personal stories, and ideas for bringing literature into the home, this book will companion and encourage parents ready to live the storyformed life with their children. The book will be available at the conference, but early registrants will receive a copy free with their registration.

You can go directly to The Storyformed Child conference website, or click here to register. The website offers an abundance of answers to any questions you might have about the particulars of the event.

I am delighted beyond words to have the opportunity to finally give a full conference on a topic so dear to my heart. I hope this will be the first of many, but I invite you to take part in this very special first event.

So please, spread the word and let any of your friends in the North East know about this special event! I hope very much to see you there.

Has anyone ever encouraged you too much?

 

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Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

 

"Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due, When it is in your power to do it. "

Proverbs 3:27-29

One of the reasons I enjoy getting away from home with my family is that we have so much time together to talk and discuss life and to continue deepening the friendships we already share. One evening last week, as we laid on beds in our hotel room, Joel read an article to us about the regrets that people who are dying have voiced. One that particularly has remained on my heart is, "There are so many things I wish I had said to people that I just never communicated."

Living in an isolationist and impersonal society has taken its toll on our lives. All of us long to know we are not alone, or that our mistakes have not made others disappointed in us, or that our lives matter at all. We need to know that our being faithful matters. We long to know that our labor is not in vain. We are hungry for friendship and words of love.

Yet we live in a society that lives in a an isolated bubble. Suicide rates are growing rapidly, depression medicine is at the pinnacle of business, and loneliness is epidemic.

People in the crowds of city life are often zipped up, impatient, impersonal.

Part of it is a reflection of dried up souls. Another part is simply neglect. When Jesus healed 10 blind men, only one returned to say "thank you."

Then there is insecurity. Often, people are afraid they might communicate the wrong thing to others, so they just don't say anything. Young men are afraid to be kind to young women because it may be taken the wrong way. Young girls are afraid to be friendly to young men because it may be taken as an advance. People are "too shy" to speak to someone because they might be rejected.

Yet, when daily there is constant challenge to  ideals, Biblical values, and we all live inconsistently within the confines of our selfish hearts,  we long to hear words of affirmation.

"Words of life" I call it. Generous words that water the soul, that give hope to the weary, that speak love to a dry heart. Words have power to influence, and to change. They keep a teen faithful during temptation because they call him back to his value. They keep a marriage going because it is water to weary souls. It gives hope to those in the trenches of life.

Planting words of life into the treasure chest of those we love must be a habit, intentional, focussed. A person whose heart is filled with messages of love, hope, confidence, faith in themselves, will have voices of those words when they are away from home, being tempted, living amongst other unwise people. Our messages are seeds that are planted that bear long-term fruit.

"I am so grateful for the gift of you in my life."

"Nothing you will ever do will separate you from my love."

"I am so blessed to be your friend."

"I believe in you and in your dreams."

"Your mistakes do not define you--they are just training grounds for you to grow stronger. I see your heart and love who you are in spite of your mistakes."

"You mean so much to me."

"Your faithfulness has changed my life."

"Thank you for showing me such consideration and kindness--I needed to know someone loved me today."

"You matter to me."

"I love your personality!"

"Thank you for the article you wrote/conference you held/lesson you taught/song you sang--I really appreciate the work and time you have taken to bless so many."

"I love you."

"I forgive you."

If all of us took the time to say kind words, to give encouragement and hope, to take initiative to be bold and generous with our encouragement, regardless of what someone might think or how they will respond, we shall leave a trail of the light of life-giving words that may just shape and change the way people behave, and the faith that they hold on to.

To withhold the good when it is in our capacity to give it is unwise, neglectful and unfaithful. If we live by the fear of what others may think, we are practicing being self-centered and small. If we focus our powerful words of love on others, regardless of their response, we are practicing being Christ to those who need hope and help.

I have never, ever been encouraged too much in my life because it is being drained on a constant rate.

Today, now, write down at least three people you know who may need your encouragement. Today, give words of life and water your relationships with the intention of the gift of words that bring hope, affirmation and courage.

Don't do life alone: Community starts with an invitation from you!

 

Today, our family will gather in California for the wedding celebration weekend of my wonderful Nathan and precious Rachael, his soon to be wife. But, though it is miles and miles from our hometown, we will not be alone. Our friends will travel the distance to be with us, because over the years, we have become family to each other and we do life together. We have had good seasons and challenging seasons in our friendships--but ours is more valuable for having weathered the storms and joys of life together.

I have had to start/initiate almost every group I have ever been in that became a blessing. When I am lonely, I think about how to start one more group--a mom's group, dinner group, book club, kid's group, dinner group, breakfast group--because I know I need friends in order to make it. (And I have started many a social group so my kids could have friends, too.)

Feasting seems to be the way most of my groups have begun! Two big bags of red potatoes, sliced, tossed in butter, herbs and cream cheese and placed in a pan with grated  cheese atop, seemed like enough for 30 people! Piling into the car, bringing flowers for saying thank you, and our family was once again celebrating life with friends who had become family.

Greetings, skewers of shrimp, beef and chicken, luscious chocolate and lemon deserts,  a rousing volleyball game of all ages and a moon light walk added to the fun of the evening—and the potatoes were gone in 10 minutes.

All of these made for a great summer evening party some years ago, but the treasure wasn’t in what we did or what we ate, but in the sharing of life--laughter, fun, merriment, hearts, memories, friendships and spiritual values.

Sitting in the company of friends who had cried with me at my mom’s death; prayed with me through teenage years, evacuated together during the fires, celebrated birthdays, gathered for our Christmas progressive dinner,  worked side by side at countless mom’s conferences, helped one another through surgeries, car wrecks---

Investing countless hours treasuring our friendships is what made the evening a celebration. It was the love shared and the history made through months, days and years of doing life together that made our evening so deeply meaningful to us, and especially to our children.

There have been times when some of us in the group had tension--usually over tension between or amongst our kids. But we all decided a long time ago, that we were friends forever and just like marriage--no break-ups allowed. So, we have done the hard work of loving, accepting, bearing with one another. No group is perfectly suited to you. But living isolated is much worse. Friendship, like parenting and like marriage, takes lots of care, intention and long-suffering.

Our personal family history had been a lonely one. After moving 17 times, I realized that loneliness had been a plague of my heart  and for our family for many years. We longed for a community and for equal soul mates that held our values, but trying to find kindred spirits who shared our lives and values seemed impossible. We had many friends who were scattered all over the United States, had never had the support systems of family, and so we found ourselves  alone and empty hearted many seasons of life.

So, ten years ago, I made a plan. I prayed about those in our circles who were the closest or we seemed to have the most in common with—and began to invite them over. We cast our invitations broadly and invited many people into our home, and not everyone lasted as friends. But eventually, as we stayed generous with our hospitality and faithful to our goal of finding friends and building them intentionally, we have come out with the treasure of those who have become like family, who also had a Clarkson shaped vacuum in their hearts.

But we had to initiate and make a plan and then invest our time and serve needs of their own families to build bridges of intimacy and love.

Monthly dinners became a fixture on our calendar. Birthday lunches for the moms became an anticipated celebration. Potlucks, playing games, celebrating loud and noisy new years crafted our friendships into something more than just a passing relationship into one that felt more like family.

Loneliness is epidemic and people feel invisible all over the world, wherever I travel.

And yet, for us to build those invisible threads from our hearts to the hearts of others, we must be intentional. It  requires us to reach out, to invite, to make time for sharing life and all covered with love and grace. Many friendships, though they seem unlikely, become more precious merely because of the history of years spent together.

At first, it seemed that our husbands had almost nothing in common--but just because of staying committed to getting together, now our husbands are friends and have built bridges amongst each other---and almost all of the men now do ministry with us and serve all over the US at our conferences! All because of working at being committed.

The biggest blessing of building our own inner circle is that our children have a sense of history with several other families who have become family to them.

They don’t feel alone in their lives, but supported by a circle of people who invest in them personally, but it all started with our family being willing to make a ten year goal of investing purposefully so that we would reap a harvest of love.

It all started with a phone call and an invitation, and then doing it again and again.

But today, I will be hosting a dinner for all who would come to bless my sweet ones at the rehearsal dinner. And yesterday, I brought small cakes, chocolate almonds, and scones in a cookie tin in my suitcase, along with 10 tea cups, candles and music, and had a hotel "tea time" for all the girls.

Every place is appropriate for memories shared and hearts gathered when there is a little planning and intention.

Please pray for my sweet Nathan and Rachael and their wedding, marriage and beginning of their own story to live. I thank you for investing in their lives.

Blessings of His grace to you, today

Sally

Closing each day with a blessing: The intentional routine that Opens Hearts

 

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Albert Anker

"And Jesus took the children in his arms and began touching them and He blessed them" Mark 10: 16

Sparkling lights danced and flashed on our un-curtained windows outside our 17th floor hotel room, as we had only candles lit in the darkness of late night. Joy was curled up, exhausted from finishing 6 hours of classes in two weeks, gown-bedecked, with feet dark from the sandy beach we had just walked.

Grabbing a warm, soapy cloth, I gently began to wash her small, feminine feet, with only acoustic strings filling the silence in quiet comfort.

Next, I squeezed citrus lotion in circles and began to massage her toes, bottom of feet and quietly talked to her of how happy my heart was to share in these precious moments with her.

"Mama, I have always, always loved ending my days with your blessing and love. It makes my heart peaceful," whispering to me as she snuggled and curled more deeply into the soft comforter atop our bed. This little interlude filled my mama heart a couple of weeks ago when I had a week long trip in California that literally ended with joy.

This brought to mind another such hotel visit, the first time I heard her say out-loud to others how years of intentional "good-nighting" had born lasting, loving fruit in her heart.

Speaking at the Military Regional Women's Conference in Hawaii a couple of years ago, I took Joy as my companion, as Clay and I decided long ago I would never travel alone. Someone asked Joy, then 16, to share how to reach the heart of your child or teenager, and she replied. "Every night, no matter what, I knew that my mom would come to my bed and spend time with me and talk with me and pray with me before I went to bed. It was our time, where I could pour out my fears, my secrets, my confessions and my dreams. If you want to win your teen, you need to give them time to talk to you and bed time is a great time to do that."

I was a little surprised to hear her answer, that out of all the things we did, the evening close with a blessing, came to her mind. But, early in our marriage, we heard someone speak about bed time being an important time for children. Clay and I were very intentional about creating our own routines.

When Joy was born amidst 3 older, demanding siblings, I determined that I would spend an extended time with her every night before she went to sleep. No matter what a day has held: fussing, conflict, excitement, drudgery, joy, celebration, hard work, putting the day to end well is a wise endeavor.

When we understand this idea of blessing our child each night before they go to bed, it carries with it the idea of giving our children a peaceful heart. We give love to our child's heart when we tie all loose ends together with unconditional love by blessing them every night, putting to rest all of the burdens of the day and giving them into the hands of God. Every day, we ended in words of love and grace.

No matter what has transpired through out the day, we can close it by speaking to our child's heart. "I love you no matter what. Forgive me for my impatience today, please? Or I forgive you for your disobedience today. You are very precious to me. I am blessed to have you. You may go to sleep without bearing anger, or a guilty conscience, or fear, because I love you and God loves you and He will be with you. Sleep in peace, my precious."

Bedtime can be such a burden for an exhausted mom. Understanding that everyone's adrenalin is down helped me to remember not to react to conflict at night, but to wait for the next day to face problems head on, when everyone's bodies were more capable of dealing with issues.

Please do not picture that our bedtimes were without struggle, but I think when you are intentional about making it an anchor of the day and guiding and leading your children into an expectation of the end of the day being relational, it becomes a grace to all that has transpired. But, bedtime gives our children one last impression of their whole day and it is a redeeming time of bringing and restoring and offering peace.

Clay and I had elaborate bedtime routines for our children when they were young so that they knew what was coming, and more easily submitted to the routine. As Nathan had some ocd about bedtime, we knew that if he could not remember the prayer and the kiss, he would not be able to go to sleep. So often, I would repeat a short prayer and say, "Now, I want you to remember this time, how much I love you and God loves you."

And now I well realize that children do not stay in this stage forever and one more kiss did not hurt me.

The Routine-- Bathtime, books, and the blessing

I had a very large tub in a couple of my homes. We would put the kids in with every imaginable toy in the world--whatever it took to keep them their and to give them a place to give up one last surge of energy. (Please be sure to only trust age appropriate children to be by themselves--young toddlers and babies should, of course, never be left alone!)

During this time, I would sit down and rest and read or have a cup of something, even if the dishes were still in the sink or the house was not cleaned up.  I would  just spend a few minutes restoring myself, because I wanted to be available to extend the last moments of the day blessing the kids.

Then we would take turns getting the children out, pajama'd, teeth brushed. Finally, if all was done in an orderly manner, we gathered in the living room, or a child's bedroom for a short read aloud from a child's story book. This routine of expectation helped them to understand that bedtime and sleep time was coming. Our children seemed to thrive more easily on routine.

After we read, we would send the kids to the bathroom one last time, and then each child would be tucked into bed personally, touched or stroked on a forehead and prayed for and kissed. Every night we gave an "I love you," or "I am so very blessed to have you," or some intentional words of acceptance and encouragement."

I think positive peer pressure works well here. If you train your first child to this routine, "Now it is bedtime. We have bathed, read, prayed and now you get such a privilege--you get to snuggle in your lovely bed with your soft, cuddly stuffed animals and go into dreamland."

We always talked sweetly of their beds and made them as delightful as possible. When all the children work in routines together, the younger ones tend to follow the routine without much of a fuss. We often used words like, "You are growing so strong inside. You go to bed like a big boy or girl."

During the teen years..... Often, as our children became older, the bedtime routines became longer because it meant night time talks in their rooms, sharing of hearts and secret fears, struggles, temptation. Yet, with so many older children in our lives, discussing issues all day long, I knew that Joy would need "just me" time. From the very beginning, I would rock her and sing to her many songs and cherish her at night to make up for any distractions during the day. I would lay with her on her bed and talk and pray with her and this became our own special time.

Though it did require a commitment of heart and time on my part, as often we were ready to put the day away for our "own" time, I see now that this giving and ending with love meant so much to all of our children--and especially her, because she had to compete with older siblings all day long.Though, at times I was so exhausted and drained, and I did not feel like doing the routine, one more time, I had practiced it as a life habit, and kept it going, every night, and so it became a foundation of my being close to my children--they grew to expect it. 

Even now, it is sweet to see when the older kids are home, they all come upstairs to my bedroom--now they put me to bed, because they are staying up longer than me! Joel often sits on my bed for a half hour, just sharing his thoughts. It has become special to me--that my twenty something kids still come for a blessing, still want our affirmation and still won't go to sleep without the kiss and prayer.

Routines are often difficult to establish, but when cultivated, they become a habits that give life, love and security. It is still a gift to me that I now get to share the sweet fellowship of my best friends, my children, when they are home, to tie together all the lose ends, in love and peace.

And so with all the mom's conference this season, and the wedding this weekend, many gathering on hotel beds with all the kids involved, will be my secret very best time at the conferences--all of us together, laughing, sharing, praying, loving, clothed in jammies and gowns,  and hidden from the world, just being best friends and closing the night with a blessing and peace.

Most Great Accomplishments are won at great cost: The Good and Hard!

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My first Mom Heart Conference staff! Joel, Sarah, Nathan and Joy! 

This was about the age our family started mom's conferences, 18 years ago! And this was our staff--book box carriers, registration team, those who handed out chocolate. They came cheap--and some of their friends helped, too.

I was thinking this weekend that running our conferences for countless women over the years, has been one of the biggest blessings--and yet, hardest things, we have ever done. Literally hundreds of nights in hotels with hotel food, suitcases---the dirty laundry at the end of the trip, different time zones--yet, definitely eternal work accomplished with much faith, together--and now I can see that it was the years and years of serving Him together that was one of the life-changing components for all of our children.

How interesting it was to find that Sarah was also pondering this and wrote a blog about the hard--very hard, but very good events that make life so worthwhile.

So, let me know, what does your family do--that is hard but good?

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I write this from 35,000 feet up in the free blue air. A grey quilt of clouds obscures the earth below, but sometimes the cloud down frays and the earth winks up, a brown, wry face patterned with laughter lines and the rutted gullies of old tears. I never get tired of having the window seat on an airplane. My awe at technology is usually spoiled by my suspicion that it might be ruining my imagination, but I still have a tiny girl’s wonder at the fact that we humans can fly. Airplanes feel a little like magic to me. I could sit here, nose pressed against my window, reveling in my rare, eagle’s eye view for hours.

At the moment though, I’m also just glad to be sitting. I can feel the dark circles under my eyes. For the third time in four weeks, I have gotten up far too early to lug a half dozen suitcases and crates to various airplane counters. I have packed and unpacked, washed (and, well, “unwashed”) more loads of laundry in the past months than I care to mention, changed time zones, chased rental car shuttles, and stumbled up, hair awry and eyes slightly wild to quite a few hotel desks. I have a bag of cherry tomatoes in the bottom of my bag, because I couldn’t stand to throw out good produce one more time, but they sit next to a bar of chocolate because travel season wrecks my healthy intentions. My carryon is stuffed with the speech I haven’t yet gotten by heart, the insurance papers I haven’t figured out, and the manuscript I still haven’t edited though the deadline is this weekend. In order even to write this, I must ignore the ten, urgent, unanswered emails sitting on the next tab over.

I tell you all this because in this rare moment of (literally) suspended calm, I find myself contemplating the worth of doing hard things.

Everything in my life of late seems hard. Conference season is hard. It comes as a mix of marathon, disaster, and holiday. Writing is hard. My brain at the end of a working day feels like a mental sponge squeezed dry of every word, and my heart rate spikes at thought of all the work I have yet to do. Integrity is hard. To write about beauty is one thing, to make it amidst exhaustion and laundry with nerves frayed and tongue sharp is harder. Health is hard. To eat good food, to walk long miles, to seek out natural instead of processed food takes time, and thought, and a mighty dose of discipline. (Especially amidst travel.) Even loving God is hard. Turning my mind away from the many lists of things I need to do, the countless desires, the endless distractions in order to sit with my Bible and listen, listen to his whisper in the silence is one of the most difficult habits I have ever undertaken.

Hard, every bit of it. Hard every single day of my life.

Yet undeniably, unequivocally… good.

In the past months I have watched myself complete a manuscript I never thought I could manage, and impossible deadlines were the grace that helped me to do it. I finally managed to articulate my convictions about story because I was forced to spit them out in the last-minute, white heat of speech-writing the hour before I was due on stage. The countless vegetables I’ve chopped, and lettuce I’ve washed for daily salads has paid off in a health I haven’t known for years. The friendships found and renewed in these conference weekends have kindled my heart, deepened my conviction, set me on my feet to work for yet another year. Life burgeons around me, good work flourishes, the soil of my heart is rich with new ideas and I know that the endless work of writing, of health, of love to which I have given myself with freshened vigor this year is worth every bit of what it costs me.

The truth I find is that every good thing I know requires hard work. It requires, not just a dose of effort to get it started, but the grit to hold fast and keep on when the inspiration fails. Day in and day out, a life that is in any way good requires steady labor, something I don’t always factor in when I am dreaming about the lovely things I’ll make and the heroic deeds I’ll accomplish. The good life – here in a fallen world where what was meant to be good was broken – is a hard life. We fight fallenness in every atom of existence. But every bit of the goodness we we make proclaims the someday new heaven and earth. And somehow, brings the kingdom come, even amidst the shadows.

I write this to remind myself to endure, because my idealist self often lags in the midst of all the effort. When I’m tired, as I am today with the hum of the plane around me, I wonder if its all worth it. I write this to shore up my will to endure, to strengthen the conviction that grows feeble when all I really want to do is lounge in my chair and drink five cups of tea.

But I also write this because I’ve been thinking of late about one of the hardest but best creations I have ever experienced: my family.

In conference season, I am always made keenly aware that many people watch my family. The parenting ministry that my mom and dad carry out means that we Clarksons are somewhat in the public eye. We are a family marked by our ideals, and our ministry is, in large part, to hold those ideals forth to the world and challenge others to follow them as well. But I wonder sometimes if the strength with which we state our ideals leads people to the mistaken assumption that we live an ideal life. That goodness comes easily to us, and hard to others. That somehow we were born with harmonious hearts and quiet tempers and curious intellects.

By the time we show up at conferences, feet padding the plush carpet of yet another hotel, we strive to look grown up in our Sunday clothes and polite (if not well-rested) faces. We do, of course, try to have good things to say. We strive to articulate all we believe and present a gracious face to the world. But a whirlwind of hard work and sore shoulders, heartache and heart-searching lies behind us. Imperfect attitudes, impatient words, and discouragement are the shadow side of the inspiration that propels us forward. We struggle, we grapple, we cry. We also laugh and cook and sing. We wash a thousand dishes and cook a thousand good meals and light the candles every evening and play our classical music. Behind every conference we throw or speech we give are countless quiet days of hard work and hard choices. I’m not saying that we live differently than the ideals we hold forth. I’m saying that we fight like wild men to attain them and we have been fighting for as long as I can remember.

These thoughts all began two nights ago when my Mom and I strode out to walk off our adrenaline in a purple and windy dusk. Our talk was of family, that hardest and best of works, and my talk was of the struggle I find to love. We spoke of old  frustrations and the grief they still cause. Of quirks and personalities that tax and bless us all at once. We spoke of the arduous decisions required by faith, the tough endurance required by real love, the never-ending forgiveness it demands and the ever-fresh friendship it brings. And when I had finally spit all the struggle out of my mouth in a torrent of irritation, I took a deep breath and listened to my mother teach me once again to love. To open my hands. To open my heart. To endure. And to do it all over again the next time.

As we pounded the last road home, I realized that we Clarksons are who we are – idealistic, fiercely loyal, writers, musicians, tied to each other at the hip and convinced we can help to bring God’s kingdom to bear on earth – because we stayed in the fight when the fight got hard.

Our fantastic relationships were formed in part by fantastic fights and spectacular disagreements, but we endured them all, rode the high, hard winds of strife into the safe harbor of affection.

We did not turn back and we did not let go. We did not withdraw from loving when loving got hard, but neither did we let hard things make a large and silent wedge between us. We took issues head on whatever they were and argued them out until they were gone. Jesus said of the woman who washed his feet that “she who is forgiven much, loves much.” And I think that principle is part of what forms the fellowship and ideals of my family. They who fight much, who endure each other’s quirks, who ride out the tempests of difficult circumstances and personalities, who laugh and weep and watch each other’s creation know a comradeship that can only come from the brotherhood of battle. The victory we have, the love that knits us close was only to be forged in struggle.

The truth is that we Clarksons have wrestled with God over and over again, every one of us, just like Jacob in the wilderness grappling with sin and pain and the strange presence of the Almighty. In striving to create new things, to live our ideals, to keep communion, we wrestled with God in our hearts and we wrestled with God in each other. Every inch of ground we gained in love came with years of hard battle. But we fought forward, knowing that to fight was to hope and even to love, because it was a kind of journey. We were fighting our way back to each other and not away. We were grappling toward beauty and we wrestled until we were blessed. We strove until we overcame.

That, I suppose, it at heart of what I am striving to understand, to tell myself here and as I do, tell you too. If love is to be formed, if families are to stay close, if  stories or songs are to be made, if ideals are ever to be kept, hard work is the high and never-ending cost.

In a fallen world, where the good that was meant to be was broken, we have to wrestle every day to love God, to do justice, to love mercy, to make beauty. But God wrestles with us. His Spirit incites us to the fight with visions of the good that was meant to be. His Son joins us in the battle, brother and lover who suffers so that we may overcome. And the Father waits at the end of our battle, the “great rewarder of those who seek Him.” In him we live and move and have our being, and in him we fight the great fight, and in him we trust that the good we make here is just the beginning of the kingdom come and a beauty that will never end.

So courage, dear hearts, as Aslan whispered to Lucy. Courage, I whisper to myself as the plane dips its nose under the quilt of clouds and the earth reaches up to grasp me once more. The work is about to begin again, good and hard. I’m ready.

Please find all of Sarah's inspiring thoughts and articles at: thoroughlyalive.com

2013 Family Day Mueller 109

Nathan (getting married this weekend!) Sarah, Joy and Joel

My staff--or children--now!

 

We are not a picture-perfect family, but still worth celebrating!

 

This week, I am preparing for the Nathan's marriage to sweet Rachael, his love of the past 3 years. Ideals are probably at their highest when one gets married. Yet, I think that Rachael already knows we are a flawed family but still our story is worth telling!

How about your family? How perfect do you expect it to be?

And, is anyone tired yet? I am tired but mostly, blissfully so. (Only a few teary, over-whelmed moments--but then isn't that a part of the tension of family life and then trusting the Lord?) This picture was taken a couple of years ago when our family was gathered in California for family day that we celebrate each year together. At that time, Sarah, my 27 year old daughter, was home now for 2 weeks, before she went to Oxford in England.  She was filled to the brim with newly espoused ideals and thoughts. Joy, 16,  was in Sense and Sensibility for 12 performances in one season, which means late nights and an exhausted body and lots of running around. Joel, 25, was  home and Nathan had planned to  come for a break to rest at home after working so much. In this context,  food is always  a constant--with one boy at 6’3 and the other 6’5”, it takes a whole lot of groceries and cooking to fill them up--which also means more dishes.....arrggghhhh!

And in the midst of the weekend, my sweet mama passed away and I got word in a quiet call early one morning. At least we were all together and my sweet ones could share my grief. So, the imperfection, the celebrations, the happy times, the ups and downs, the stresses are a constant rhythm of life in family never cease--but always, family is a history and a story worth living well.

At all times, I feel a little bit like I am riding a wild stallion and holding on for dear life. Joel, my 25 year old, once jokingly said, "You know our family is like one of those loud Jewish intellectual families in Fiddler on the Roof who had an opinion on everything and has to discuss everything from the mundane to the sublime. Or maybe it is a fiery Irish family with abundance of spunk or a rousing, dancing Greek family, or Italians eating feasts chattering and, oh, well, Mom, you get the picture!"

It wears me out just to contemplate it--but I did know what he meant--there is not much quiet or calm about us when we are all together!

This “loud” image also grew not only in my mind from memories gone by.  While Nate practiced his drums, Joel was composing piano tunes in our living room on my childhood piano, in the midst of Clay trying to talk to me about his day, Joy’s friends came over and laughed and giggled and ate and made messes. When they left,  Nate and Joy were practicing singing to tape tracks--over and over and over and did I say, again, over?. (all while the dog barked intermittently at the fox outside and and growled and wrestled with the boys on the floor.) And Sarah, coming out of her bedroom, said, “Can anyone ever hope to get a nap around here?

I think there is an illusion for most moms, that some day, some future day, when my kids grow up, things will become calmer, easier, less demanding. Perhaps we think having a family where the life of God is real and love is sprinkled all around and great ideas flow and people are always eating or drinking--that somehow it will be calm, in order and quiet--or that somehow the work load will become lighter or that maybe if I ever get my act together, there will be peace and order, and more  time to focus on myself.

Somehow I thought that my training would transform my children into something supernatural. But though, all have matured, and I am so blessed that they love us and love the Lord, all are very much the same and have the same personality issues and antics. The mix of all of us together is dramatic--never a dull moment.

My role as a mother has grown with my children, but the responsibilities and time consumed  has never lessened.

After all these years, I have realized that my years have always been busy.  I am in more demand as a mom than ever, because my children still need my voice and advice and love and time as they enter into a very challenging world.

Yet, now, when my house is full of the life of all of us together, my heart is filled. We are together. This is the family where I belong. We have shared memories, same tastes in movies, books, traditions--years invested --invisible chords that tie our hearts together. We care about one another in ways that no one else in the world cares.

The ride is still an adventure, but somewhere along the way, I learned to hang on and now I am even enjoying the ride.

During the holidays, as I tucked Joy into bed, she commented, "Our family can be overwhelming, Mom! But I am so glad that everyone is here. I would rather have the wildness, the messes, the noise with all of us together and loving each other, than for it to always be calm with no one here to share life! This is really going to be the best Christmas!”

And so my wish to you is, that you will be able to enjoy the ride, the journey, the days--even if it is not picture perfect, today, this year, and remember that the adventure is worth the ride.

And I commend Rachael and Nathan, not to have a perfect family story, but one lived well and worth the telling to generations to come! And so, after a long sleep--tired from returning from the Texas conference, I will get up, plan the final details of the rehearsal dinner, and look forward to this week, when our noisy, imperfect clan will all be together again--and I will invite Rachael into our history to begin her own chapter with my precious Nathan! Onward!

Goodbye, Boring Greens. Hello, Fun, Colorful Salad!

salad Brandee and Sally

I have had some health issues of late, including respiratory, skin cancers, several repeated surgeries and just lots of exhaustion. A couple of times since my early 40's, I have taken time to focus on restoring my body with serious focus. A couple of weeks ago, I attended a health institute for a week long cleanse and rest--one of the best decisions I have made in a long time. In the most busy season of the year, (3 national conferences, a wedding, blogs and a book due April 1!) But, caring for myself is essential to my being healthy long term to be able to give more to my family, friends and ministry.

Now, I have never seen so much green in my whole life in one week--green drinks, fresh wheat grass juiced twice a day, salad, fresh veggies--green, green, green! But, taking time to refresh and getting back to some extreme ideals for at least a little while feels good!

But one of the things I have been doing since I got home, and have tried to do for many years, is to have at least one very veggie-loaded green salad every day! I raised my children on these salads--and though they had seasons of liking and not liking them, now all of them, as adults, eat lots of salads--and love them. I asked a sweet friend of mine to share some of her thoughts about salads as she is the best cook, has great salad dressing recipes and is working slowly with me on a book about our favorite meals and how to make feasting a great celebratory part of your life. So enjoy our pictures of our own salad art--that the kids love--and eat your greens and enjoy better health!

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Love, love fresh tomatoes of every kind marinated in olive oil with garlic, fresh basil, sea salt and spread on small crackers or toasted homemade bread!

"Eat your greens!"

I can hear my mom’s voice echo through my head on a daily basis. Why is it that something so delicious can also seem so monotonous to eat? Perhaps it’s a lack of variety, or maybe you think that it’s just not as good as your favorite restaurant makes it.  After all, the dressing is homemade and they have someone to cut up all those veggies into enjoyable bite size pieces! While healthy eating is crucial to our well balanced lifestyles, we can't encourage our children to eat the foods that we find boring ourselves.

With a little prep work, you could have amazing salad options waiting for you on the other side of your refrigerator door. Your very own salad bar! God created food for pleasure and for sustenance.

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Instead of putting salad in a bowl, I put main dish salads on large glass trays--Joy and Sarah and Rachael loved my food centerpiece!

Try your hand at creating your own salad bar this week and don’t forget to ask the family what they like in their salads too! Here are some tips & dressing recipes to get you going.

Optional Ingredients for Salad Bar:

Lettuce - romaine, spinach, red & green leaf, cabbage, arugula, iceburg, kale, spring mix, etc.

Veggies & Fruit - broccoli, cauliflower, cucumber, tomato, avocado, sweet peppers, jicama, artichoke hearts, carrots, celery, beets, corn,  peas, broccoli, onion - red, white, green, edemame, strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, blackberries, apples, pears, oranges, nectarines, pomegranate, kiwi, etc.

Herbs - parsley, cilantro, dill, chives, basil, mint, etc.

Protein -  chicken, beef, salmon, tuna, beans - white, kidney, pinto, black, garbanzo, hard boiled eggs, quinoa, nuts - cashews, almonds, pecans, walnuts, pine nuts, seseme seeds, chia seeds, cheese - parmesan, colby jack, cheddar, havarti, goat, feta, mozzarella, etc.

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Large sprouts, tomatoes, cucumbers, roasted almonds, onions, lettuce, goat cheese, garlic and seasoned quinoa--with oil and lemon dressing. Joy and I loved this!

GARDEN HERB RANCH DRESSING (Makes 2 cups dressing, divide if needed)

1/2 teaspoon dry mustard or dijon mustard 1/4 teaspoon cold water 3/4 cup mayonnaise 1 cup buttermilk or milk or half n half 3/4 cup sour cream 1T tablespoon apple cider vinegar 1/2 tablespoon thinly-sliced scallions/green onion 2 teaspoons minced garlic 2 teaspoons minced fresh italian parsley 1/2 teaspoon worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon minced fresh or dry dill 1/4 teaspoon minced fresh or dry oregano 1/2 teaspoon fresh ground pepper 1/4 teaspoon minced fresh or dry basil * I put in about 1/4 cup of fresh cilantro - optional *I put in 1/2 avocado too - optional Blend together in blender or with hand mixer and refrigerate until ready to use {lasts up to 2 weeks}.

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So fun when it is beautiful. I think God would approve!

 Honey - Lime Vinaigrette (Makes 1/2 cup)

1/3 cup fresh lime juice (substitute with lime juice concentrate if needed) 4 teaspoons honey 1 tablespoon rice vinegar 1/8 teaspoon salt Blend together with hand mixer or just shake in jar with tight fitted lid {lasts up to 2 weeks}.

 Asian Ginger Dressing

2 - 3 cloves garlic 1- 2 T green onion 2 T minced ginger root 1/4 C soy sauce or amino acid 1/4 C sesame oil 1/2 C olive oil 1/4 C rice vinegar 2 T lime juice 3 T honey 1/4 C water *Toasted sesame seeds optional *Place into mixing bowl or large measuring cup and mix well with hand blender.

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Another really simple way to beat the hassle and monotony is to make salad in a jar! Pick whichever day of the week seems to be the least hectic for you (perhaps Sundays) and make that your meal planning day. Gather all of those jars you've been saving, and prepare your salads for the week in advance! Be sure to dry the salad greens well. (spin them) and keep the wet things whole--tomatoes, etc. cut them when you dump them in a bowl. This will make it easy for you to bring the ingredients out for your at home salad bar, keep your fridge organized, and they also make really great salad lunches on the go for those busy days.

Get creative this week and enjoy your greens! What is your favorite salad?

{Enjoy a special Mommy Minute video from my sweet friend September McCarthy.{Enjoy a special Mommy Minute video from my sweet friend September McCarthy.}

Our Hidden Corners: Where God hides us through the storms

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"The Lord is my light and my salvation; Whom shall I fear? The Lord is the defense of my life; Whom shall I dread? When evil-doers came upon me to devour my flesh, My adversaries and my enemies, they stumbled and fell. Though a host encamp against me, My heart will not fear; Though a war arise against me, In spite of this, I shall be confident...... For in the day of trouble, He will conceal me in His tabernacle; In the secret place of His tent, He will hide me; He will lift me up on a rock." Psalm 27:1-5

 When Joy was a little girl, we had a strange little closet at the entrance of our bedroom. It was a small, angular room that was a bit awkward and not suitable to hold much. But Joy found a use for it: her own little hiding place! We hung a battery-operated lantern on a little nail on the wall, and she would take all of her stuffed animals and her beloved blanket inside to hide, pretend, and play for hours. When I read this verse ... “In the day of trouble, he will conceal me in His tabernacle; in the secret place of his tent, He will hide me ...” it reminds me of this wonderful hiding place of Joy's--a safe place from the outside world, where no one could find her; hidden in our room, safe from all the visitors who came to our house.

It seems I am surrounded by women who are in the midst of very difficult circumstances--hurting marriages, rebellious children, family members who are very ill, economic crises, broken relationships, and hurtful misunderstandings in friendships. I so wish I could somehow make all of these difficulties go away, knowing the deep struggles  many are experiencing during the dark times of life. Sometime over the course of many years, though, I’ve realized that I never really had a realistic picture of just what it meant to live in a fallen world. This, earth, is the broken place. Heaven is the place where we will see justice and wrongs being righted and healing and deep, bubbling-over happiness and freedom from the burdens of life. Here...not so much.

The other day, I was talking with my children and one said, "You know, it seems like people think that our family is so sweet and perfect, that it is easy for us to be good and make right choices, and that things have been easier for us than for their families. I wish everyone could see that the beauty of our lives and the messages we all talk about is a result of mounting up over difficulties, having faith in the darkest of times, putting up with impossible circumstances and difficult relationships. We have had to light candles of faith in the darkness and inconsistencies of our lives. I hate having people just think we are naturally sweet and good--they don't know the journey of faith it has cost us."

At heart, I am a very fearful person. So often, I awaken at night after only a few hours of sleep and the first feeling I experience is fear--fear of the future, a lack of finances, worry regarding my children, and so on. Yet I am learning so much, even now, about the importance of mounting up over fear by faith.

As I study the stories of scripture, it is obvious that when people looked at their obstacles in life--the storms, giants, battles--that they became fearful and useless and defeated. But when they looked at God Himself instead of their fears, they became strong and conquered in the midst of their battles, storms and difficulties. Peter saw Jesus walking on water and started out toward him, actually walking on water too! But when he turned his eyes to the waves, he became scared and began to fall.

The only way I have found peace and assurance and confidence in life was to let Him hide me in the corners of His tent--to let Him fight my battles, to submit to His will, and to say, "You be my defender and provider, because I am your child." Fixing the eyes of my heart on Him, on His face, on His integrity of character and strength, is the only way I could live by faith and not by fear.

And so throughout life, it is in resting in His presence and strength and power and goodness that will put our hearts at rest. It is only when we patiently face the storms confiding, "This is too big for me to handle, but I am asking you to handle it for me," and then learn to wait--and sometimes wait and wait and wait!--that we will see His purpose, ways and yes, salvation from our storms. I wish I had learned at a much earlier age not to struggle so and worry and fret--it did me no good, and now I see how very faithful God was--He just didn't always do it my way!

 If you have the desire to take your study deeper today, take a few moments to complete the reflection and application below:

  • Where are your eyes? On Jesus? or on the storm? Hebrews 12:2-3 says for us, "fixing our eyes on Jesus--(looking to Him, trusting in Him, depending on Him!), who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. For consider Him (ponder Him, understand His life, His sufferings) who has endured such hostility against Himself, so that you may not grow weary and lose heart."
  • “But you, when you pray, go into your inner room, close your door and pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you.” Matthew 6:6 Do you have a secret place like Joy’s? It might not be an awkward closet and perhaps not filled with teddy bears, but it can be so helpful to have a spot set aside specifically for drawing away from the world and meeting with Jesus.

 

The Hidden years are the most crucial and precious in writing a Great Story of Life

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Cinderella  Val Princep  around 1880

"He who is faithful in small things is faithful in much."

Though Cinderella, worked faithfully and patiently, with no one to notice, there was yet a princess residing inside of her, and in time, she lived into her real heritage--becoming royalty for the rest of her life.

Even fairy tales often reflect the truth of of Life.

Often, as we raise our little ones, our lives are filled with myriad tasks of nursing and rocking our children to sleep with sweet lullabies. Then there are the dirty diapers to deal with, the cries of our precious ones in the middle of the night.

Toddlers resist and we gently train them over and over again. Siblings quarrel and we teach them the ways of love, forgiveness, patience, kind words. Then there are the teen years when young adults strain to become independent and mamas have to choose to be long-suffering and pursue in love.

Year after weary year, we teach them about God's ways, His love. We subdue our homes again and again to make them a haven for life--filled with color, beauty, interest, traditions, even as God created the Garden, gave His children instruction through the Law, provided them with a land, gaven them food and protection against an army.

We labor day after day, month upon month, seeking Him to give more wisdom, renewed strength when we feel to weary to keep going. But somehow, His spirit shapes us as we shape a generation for His glory. And we are able to take one more step of obedience and pour out His unconditional love and wisdom to children who are not always aware of our sacrifice, until they are older. Yet, the seeking to give wisdom, excellence and holiness to our children builds our own souls, one day, one moment at a time. Our holiness matures and our hearts become flavored with His beauty, graciousness through each act of our own obedience given in the quiet and seclusion of our own home.

Often, we think that no one sees us, no one notices. How could it matter if we are invisible?

But, God is watching. God is building an invisible heritage that will indeed outlast our lives.

God painted the picture of patience, waiting, faithfulness through all of our years colorfully through the stories of so many in scripture:

Joseph had a dream of leading his brothers where they bowed down to him. But the training grounds of his becoming the head over all of Egypt was hard labor for a land owner, where he was accused wrongly of adultery. Then 10 more years being faithful in prison.

David was anointed to become the king of all Israel, but did not become king over both kingdoms for around 20 years of wondering in the wilderness, running away in battle after battle.

Abraham was called the Father of all Israel and promised countless generations would come from his own son, but had to wait until he was old before He became a Father of a son, who would make him the Father of the Nation Israel.

Paul was confronted by Christ on the road to Damascus, but he was secluded away for 15 years before he had a public ministry.

Mary, the mother of Jesus, was called and then lived faithfully for many, many years, only to watch her son be crucified, but then resurrected.

When I was asked to speak in China, a number of years ago, because Mission of Motherhood had been translated into the two Chinese languages, I gladly accepted. Picturing speaking in a small underground church of some sort, I prepared messages to speak to a small group of faithful believers. However, the first place I was taken by my Chinese hosts was to an auditorium of 500, packed to the gills, at the University of Beijing.

As I looked around, I realized that all of my Chinese cohorts on stage had graduated from either Harvard or MIT. In fear, I pondered in my heart, "What am I doing here? Do they know I am just an ordinary person, a mom who has homeschooled, raised her children as best I could for His glory,  and cared for my children in my home for the past 26 years."

God whispered into my heart. "I was building your message and integrity and conviction in the hidden places of your home while you raised your children. Your integrity was built in the hidden years. Now, you are qualified to speak on family, the importance of motherhood, building character, because your messages were built before me when no one else saw, but I was there."

"I planned China before you even became a mom."

"China needs someone to tell them how to value families, children, the shaping of morality, the foundations of wisdom and greatness that must be built one day at a time. Who better to train them than a mother who has raised her family on faith, Biblical wisdom and love. You are qualified because I have called you and you obeyed, by raising your children faithfully when it seemed no one was watching."

My messages and life-conviction and wisdom was built in the hidden years.

And so, who you are, the choices of faith and faithfulness you make,when no one is looking, is a picture of your integrity.

The choices of faith and love in the midst of the whirlwind of life, is shaping your story, moment by moment, day by day. Never despise the day of small things because it is the shaping of your life story that will be told for generations to come.

The value of the hidden years is priceless. Now, this moment, is the day of your potential glory, if you practice being faithful and worship Him through each tiny service of loving and raising your precious ones for the sake of His glory.

May God give you the grace to see His fingerprints in your life, the shadow of His presence in every minute of your eternal work in your home. For today is the day you are writing your story, that your children will read for many years to come.