What is more fun than.....a gathering of girlfriends! Conference season is upon us.

10522018_10203301083222244_7140252590925698755_n

My Colorado Springs/Monument Group will meet for our first fall meeting Thursday night, 6:30 at Holy Trinity Anglican Church. All are welcome! (Only lap babies--no child care provided.) Bring a snack to share if you have one! (and leave a comment if you are coming--remember, not the church above--a new meeting place!)

And........

What is more fun than.........A handful of women, eating delectable, adult food--crab cakes, spinach feta salad, chocolate mousse brownies, by candlelight in a hotel room, sharing stories, secrets, funny antics, discussing, praying and delighting in being friends. This is the atmosphere at our conferences--mamas who have attended a thousand times while new ones piling in every year. Old friends gather a day ahead of time just for a visit in our "Presidential Suites," and laughing, tears, stories and faith bring us all together again!

What fun it is for me to be upon the verge a whole new set of mom conferences coming soon.  I was greeted once by a sweet friend with a lovely fresh floral lei, fresh from Hawaii from where she had flown. Another toted a large box full of baskets in which to put the chocolates that we give out as women come in the door. Several women thought I needed to add flowers to our registration table and to our mom's leader's tea this morning. But all, with me, are a part of the Lord's hands, voice, message and inspiration for building women into the gracious, wise civilizers He made us to be.  I have a team that I can't do without. We are all a part of a movement of moms to change the world, but together!

IMG_3345

 

My sweet hostesses and friends who helped in California last year--a team effort all weekend.

I adore the women the Lord brings into my life, who work shoulder to shoulder with me in ministering to and reaching out to women. They all come from different walks of life and different cities--some are married with a thousand children, some are single women, some with one child, but all devoted mothers, intentional about raising a godly heritage in their home and teaching and training other women the vision and how to's of such a life.

One of my sweet friends here, who will be sharing about why she leads a mom heart group, said this,

"The Lord showed me how being part of a Mom's group is fulfilling His purposes for advancing His Kingdom on earth, by building a godly heritage right in our home, for a future generation that will influence the world for Christ."

And so my local Colorado team are hosting our first fall event and preparing for our conferences ahead where we will be so very happy to greet you, hear your stories and , speak, love and encourage here in Denver and are so very blessed.

IMG_3383My lovelies, my friends registering in Dallas last year. Love everyone of them. Hope you will all consider joining us for another wonderful year! Place your cursor on the picture and it will take you to registration!

MHC2015-PDF-Poster-791x1024Remember to register before Nov. 1 to enter a drawing for a free conference and get $10 off the conference price and receive a $10 for the book table! 

My Kids are doubting God....What Have I done wrong?

IMG_3245

IMG_3245

Walking on the beach with Joy

"Mama, how can you really know that God is real? I find myself doubting his existence, lately, and it makes me feel guilty, but it won't go away!"

Panic ran through my mama heart like icy cold water and I immediately feared that anything I had ever done or would do would be enough. What if she gave up her faith? What if I hadn't discipled her the right way or taught the the right verses? What had I done wrong and how could I be sure that she wouldn't lose her faith?

Sarah was 13 when doubt first entered my world and it bothered her often through the next years. I immediately knelt in prayer and probably this made me invest in my children more than if she had never had doubts. But eventually all of my children would go through stages of doubt. I learned that for our children to own their faith in an adult manner, they must ask the questions, search scripture and finally own convictions for themselves to have a strong mature faith. It is a part of growing from childhood to adulthood, to wrestle with what they have been taught and to test it to see if it holds up against their growing worlds. There is much I could say about this issue, but I loved this article that Joy sent me yesterday and thought it would be well worth printing again here, as I know many of you have asked me about it. But all four of my children have gone through stages of doubt at one time or another.

My response to Sarah,"I know your heart and I see that you sincerely want to love God. He is strong enough for you to question Him. You can ask Him anything and probe scripture and I believe you will find your answers. But until you come back to a strong faith for yourself, I will believe for you and pray for you and ask God to show His light on your heart issues. But, this does not cause me to doubt you, as I know in my heart you will sort all of this out in time. Don't fear, my sweetness, God loves you and will guide you."

Our children, like us, need support and love and affirmation when they are walking through dark times. But in order for them to have a legitimate faith, they need to learn to wrestle with God. Here is Joy's article: 

“Sometimes I wonder if people knew what I really thought and felt, if they would think I was a prodigal?… that I’m losing my faith.”

The words fell out of my mouth quickly and awkwardly. I had waited many months to say them and felt an odd sensation at allowing their sudden presence in the room. I could not unsay them. They seemed fall with a thud in the heavy air and bring with them a shadow– a shadow that had hung in my mind for quite some time. Across from me sat my professor, leaning in, head tilted, hands crossed. I searched his eyes for a response- did he think I was losing my faith?  

For a moment, the words hung in the silence, and he did not reply. I couldn’t read his expression, it seemed sad, intent, but not condemning. I looked down at the notebook I had brought with me. Inside it were neatly written questions, questions that had begun to haunt me several months before, and that had begun to quickly spill in the margins of my journal no matter how hard I tried to push them out. There were no more questions written out; I had asked (or perhaps ‘confessed’ is a better word) them all in that office hours appointment. I thought I had said all I needed to say, but then…

“I want to be a Christian. I want to have faith. I did not ask for these doubts, but they stay with me. I wish I could just put them to bed and move on with my life and faith.”

I suddenly felt an unwanted lump emerge in my throat.

The “cloud of unknowing” as Madelein L’Engle puts it came upon me one January day. I had a miserable and feverish cold and had just made myself tea. I had arrived back at school a bit early for a debate tournament. My cold was a nasty one accompanied by my childhood bane of asthma, which stole my voice. So, I stayed home from the tournament.

I remember sitting down, sniffing painfully, and suddenly feeling a cloud descend on me. The first feeling of doubt wasn’t really an articulated intellectual question, but rather a general feeling of estrangement from my beliefs. Recently in that year, I had encountered a situation that shook me up in what I believed about Christians. I saw Christians saying one thing, acting another way, which is not so uncommon, we are after all fallible humans. In this situation, however, what struck me was the profound dissonance between  what they said they believed, and how their actions seemed to deny that belief as a possibility. It raised an awareness in me; was I doing this too? Did what I believed– and indeed who I believed in– really mean something in my life? And further from that, did God care about the inconsistencies? Did He care about me? Who is God? Why didn’t He speak to me?

It was like I had been swimming in a pool of what I had always believed, and I had gotten out for a moment, and observed the pool from the side.  It was cold there, but I wasn’t sure if I wanted to get back in. I wondered if I had always assumed my swimming pool to be the Ocean when it really wasn’t.

That day began a journey of months of searching. Though I never stopped going, church became difficult. A new question would present itself at each reading of my Bible. My eyes were suddenly opened to a thousand unexamined presuppositions that I held. And always, there was the attending feeling of isolation, as though I had broken up with a best friend.

I had often heard people say to me “When people doubt, its because they’re being tempted to sin, and they don’t want to think there’s a God to hold them accountable.” This may be true for some, and certainly and easy out to seemingly constricting morals would be to deny the maker of the morals existed to begin with. But, for me, this was not true. I had no boyfriend I was tempted to compromise with. I didn’t have a secret addiction. In my truest heart of hearts, I did not want to give up on my faith. I simply wanted to know that it was big enough. I wanted to know it was not a faith made in my own image– something that made me feel better but wasn’t really true.

One weekend, my mom came and visited me. We ate burgers on the pier, enjoyed the delightful ease of laughing with someone who really knows you, watched the sunset and then went for a walk on the beach. As we walked along the water, putting our toes in as the chilly waves licked the shore, I began to share with her some of my thoughts. She listened and held my arm. As we walked, the night snuck into the sky. In a rare occasion for the polluted skies of Los Angeles, stars began the freckle the darkness, and shine out optimistically. Our conversation paused for a moment, and we stood and watched and listened as the waves came steadily in.

“I once had many of those questions, too, Joy. And sometimes they come to me again. But in Jesus, I found some thing so big, so loving, and so true, that I hold onto him. He is big enough for your questions. He threw these stars into being, and He poured this ocean out on the earth like a cup of water.If you hold on, I know He’ll find you.” she said, with years of memories swimming in her eyes.

The waves crept over my cold feet. The Ocean beckoned me out. My doubt did not end there, but a new search began, the search for the Jesus of the Waves and Stars.

Something that truly helped me in that time, was reading the Gospels and the Psalms. In my time of doubt, I scoured my Bible for answers. Often, I did not find exact answers, but I found that my desires were echoed. In the Psalms I discovered that I was not alone. Before me, David and the psalmists had cried out to God, to know that He was there, that He cared about bringing justice, that He would speak and not be silent.

It was perhaps the Gospels that most profoundly effected me. In the Gospels, I encountered Jesus. As I read, there was a newness in the stories I had never experienced, and Jesus began to come to life from the page to me. He was strange, strong, and sometimes confusing. In His words, I found a deep down truth. I began to truly fall in love with Jesus… with his words, with his life, with his call to die.

It was somewhere in the midst of that process of that reaching, struggling, winning and losing battle to know the truth, that I found myself in the meeting with my professor, true words hanging in the air, silence unbroken. But finally, he broke it.

“They probably would think you were a prodigal.” he said, but his eyes told me that he did not think I was.

“Joy, doubt is never a good or happy thing. It is lonely and long. But doubt can be redeemed. In doubt, you go to the depths of yourself, but there you can find God. And if you find God there, your relationship with Him will be more deep and more strong than it could have been if you hadn’t have doubted. You may never put your doubts completely to bed. But for me, I find that I cannot get past Jesus. He is my bedrock that I fall upon no matter how deeply I doubt. In Him, I find the reason that Paul said “I have counted it all loss to know Christ Jesus and to share in his sufferings.”

I swallowed and managed out a smile.

For the rest of her blog article, go HERE

When  your children share their doubts with you:

1. Tell them you love them and believe in them.

2. Tell them you know that God is trustworthy and you have found in your own life, He is faithful and leads you to answers that satisfy.

3. Pray with them and for them.

4. Stay close to them and take them out for coffee, a meal, time where they can freely share apart from the company of others.

Find books that help or answer their questions: Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis, Tim Keller's book, The Reason for God are two books that are useful to answer questions.

Often, my children were doubting God, they were doubting because it didn't seem like He was answering prayer, or because other Christians had hurt or disappointed our family or acted without integrity or one of their friends had fallen from faith or adopted an immoral lifestyle. There are many reasons in a world full of temptation, but I think staying close, communicating love, affirming and understanding their questions and speaking forward into their lives is helpful. And of course, pray, pray, pray!

Jesus knew that Peter would be tempted and give in and He spoke forward by saying, "I have prayed for you. When you return, strengthen the brethren." Jesus affirmed His value, believed in his future, loved him in spite of his struggles and gave him a mission--this will help you be stronger so you can help others.

Blessed is the child who has a mama by his or her side when they walk through this valley. Praying for you all today!

Fix Your Attitude and Feed Your Soul: Mentoring Monday

Marc_Louis_Benjamin_Vautier_d._Ä._001

Benjamin Vautier

Cooking, eating, washing dishes and then doing it all over again--an endless cycle, but the place life is shaped!

(One of my wonderful commenters suggested the change in title--great idea!)

This weekend, I have been with some of my family enjoying great times with friends at the Hutchmoot--a wonderful weekend retreat sponsored by The Rabbit Room, so am throwing some thoughts for pondering after talking to lots of women this weekend.

Perhaps some of you remember the story I have shared at conferences,  This comes to my mind when I think about the emotions we often carry as moms when we get depressed or overwhelmed. Many years ago, after returning from our series of mom's conferences we have hosted for 18 years, our home was a wreck--piles of mail, stacks of dirty clothes, messes, dirty dishes and coffee cups, and the kind of tasks that makes me want to run away. Gathering everyone on the couch,  tears spilling over eyes I  mumbled pitifilly, "I really need all of your help to get us all back in order!" Joel, a tall teen at the time, wrapped his long arm around me and patted me a gently.

"Mama, we will help you get it together little by little. And then everything will explode again and then we will have to do it again. But when you are unhappy and frustrated, it makes us all feel insecure and unhappy, so Mama, chill, don't worry. When you are happy, then we can be happy, too."

No matter what the season, all children long for, hope for a happy mama. What I have learned is that I don't even have to feel happy, I just need to practice behaving in a contented way, and my kids pick up on my practiced behavior. Mamas should not feel that they are somehow inadequate or carry guilt if they do not always feel like a happy camper. Sometimes I did not even especially like my children, as we all have ups and downs--but I chose to act in a loving way, and they all remember me as a loving person. Carrying guilt as a mama for not always feeling positive is a waste of time.

Now, low these thousand years later, I am still under the same pressure, just a different season.

A valued, special friend of our family is coming to see us for a few days and will be speaking at a seminar in town, so our whole family has had to jump into lots of work, cleaning, straightening, cooking the past couple of days, because we have gotten behind on life. With almost a constant travel schedule and sending adult and married kids literally all over the world and packing, unpacking, making messes, piles gathering, eating, cleaning AGAIN, while writing a book, a blog, speaking and doing ministry every week, we have all gotten behind. And yet, every season of my life, at times, I have gotten behind and been overwhelmed with the work load of just keeping a home, raising a family and feeding them.

But now, after so many such times, I can harness my attitude and choose to practice self-control, and eventually my feelings follow. As we cleaned house today and cooked and then washed sheets and cleaned the dirty dishes, it took 4 adults all day, working constantly,  to get our home back together.

All of us wanted to be doing something else.

All of us would have loved to take a nap or read or have alone time. But, oddly enough, all of us feel better now at the end of the day because our home is a great place to be again!

I was thinking about how important it is to just accept that being a mom and a wife has an endless, eternal amount of work forever and ever, Amen. It is a marathon, not a sprint. To learn to accept this and to seek to find happiness through all the years, is a sure foundation for building a happy home. It is a habit, a practice.

Seems I have so many in my life who rail against the season they are in, as I often did. Some are in the baby years, some the demanding elementary years, some with hormonal preteens and others deep into the teen years, or overwhelmed by homeschooling or working and coming home exhausted. The final stage of stress  in the home children is the time when they leave, move out  or struggle leaving--moving in, out, in, out. Every season of my children has had deep and difficult stresses. Each season has had beautiful blessings, deep joy. But no matter what your season of life, some principles still apply to all.

FIRST

It is your attitude in your heart that will determine how peaceful you will be at each season. If you learn to expect limitations, difficulties, stress and life and children pushing back against your best efforts, you will have a more realistic view of what it means to be a mom. Depression often comes from disappointed expectations. If you are surprised or angry every time something goes wrong or a child has a new developmental challenge or they keep eating, wearing clothes and making messes, you will spend a lot of your motherhood years being angry and disappointed.

You will never change the stress level by being angry or bitter.

Often, when we fight against the very nature of motherhood, we find ourselves fighting against God.  

Funny that we want our children to change their attitudes, but somehow we feel we have a right to our own bad attitudes. But they end up draining our energy and stealing from the potential joy of life. Live into this season, accepting the limitations and learn to see each season as something God designed for a purpose. Don't try to rush life or push your children to develop or be independent too early.

This season is from God to slow you down, to train you to be more humble, more in the moment, more patient--to build the very character of Christ into the deep places of your heart. Learn and don't resist what He has built into this season and even though you will always feel exhausted, your heart will be more at peace, happier, if you know it has a purpose.

My Own Journey

Having 3 children in less than 5 years was a shock to my whole being. Not only had I not been trained for motherhood, I had not been developed to live a selfless life. No one told me about how much I would have to give, how much I would have to sacrifice--forever! Having grown up with 2 older brothers, the only girl, my mama, at times just wanted to spoil her little dolly. I was spoiled much of the time, left alone to fend for myself other times, but definitely not prepared to have multiple children, nurse my babes, have them naturally, and then of all absurd things, homeschool them eventually.

Idealist should be my middle name. I wanted all of this, and to be the best mom in the world, but had no realistic idea of how to accomplish it. Today, I thought I would address some of the desperate times and a few ways I have learned to cope with them.

IMG_2191

 

Always a new phase, always needs

The baby-toddler-never sleep years when you lose your body shape, have someone grabbing you all the time and are constantly in and out of different sizes of clothes (that is, if you have time to shop for clothes!) were daily, moment by moment a challenge to my centeredness in life. Losing total control all the time, every day, day after day, was a shock to my system.

Is anyone really prepared for exhaustion that lasts for years on end? I wasn't. Besides having children in quick succession, which meant I always had immature little beings making messes, fussing, sleeping, potty training or making messy diapers and getting me up at night. I fell in love with my children--just had this overwhelming, deep affection for them, but still would blow my stack, be impatient when they pushed all my buttons and I felt vague desperate feelings.

I look back now and just wish I had understood baby years. And the pre-school years, and the teen years, and and and. Because I have lived through it all, I know I had God given capacity to complete the tasks, and I am a richer, stronger person for my journey. God made each season for His own purposes.  God made babies to be dependent so that we could touch them, sing to them, bond with them, teach their little brains to believe in His love because of the way we tenderly cared for them and enjoy their sweet fat baby hand pats and smiles reserved for us. This is a time to try to just breathe, to try to notice the moments, to kiss often, smile into their precious eyes, and simplify. If you are feeling stressed because your babies push against your own schedule and expectations of life, know that you are normal. Feeling guilty for having these normal feelings is a waste of time. Just learn to grow stronger and more resilient one day at a time.

But seeking to bring gentle order, little by little, in each season of life is an essential part of having a more ordered, peaceful home.. Have eating times, play times, feeding times, bed times at the same time every day. When a little one or big one knows what to expect by the rhythms he lives in, he will be more secure and more calm. These are the anchors that bring order to the day. Babes who are held more during the day are quieter and more at peace. Teenagers who have lots of private "talk to me", "understand me" time are less likely to rebel against the mom and dad's ideals.

It requires so much of you every day, all the time--so to understand this is how to be an effective mom, learning to be a servant leader over and over again in every season, all the time, will help you to understand your long term call. I practically carried Joy everywhere we went, all the time, when I read to the kids, when I did things around the house, just kept her close and she was sooo much more calm and slept so much better. And during her young and elementary years, I sought to read to her, play with her and blow bubbles and rock her to sleep at night, just as my  teens were wanting me to stay up, talk to them, understand them, be their friend.  And, when I fell into bed exhausted,  then before I knew it, Joy would be up again wanting my attention, early in the morning. But now, I am sooo grateful that God led me through these years, because my children's hearts are tied closely to mine and we have grown into each other's best friends.

To live inside yourself thinking that at some particular time, you will have more time to yourself, or have more control, is an expectation that will probably be disappointed. Life does become easier when children are old enough to help, to do things for themselves, to learn a little more independently. Yet, each seasons requires a different kind of energy for us as moms.

Learning to see God's design in all the stages, gives meaning to the journey. But to have the wrong expectations about life becoming suddenly easier brings disappointment. Disappointed expectations can lead to depression. Anger can result. So learning to accept the limitations of a realistic life and learning to see each day as a gift, a place to worship God by choosing the accept the limitations is the beginning of growth.

SECOND

 Make Yourself Happier! Learning to manage your life so that you can refill your heart, mind and body on a regular basis is essential to good health. Invest in your own soul's need for pleasure, it is a God-given desire--make room for pleasure in your days, so that in spite of the seasons, you take care of yourself. Sometimes it is more important for a mama to take a nap than to wash dishes. (Isn't that what paper plates are for?)

Sometimes it is better to go to dinner or lunch or brunch with a friend, or go to a movie that is romantic, to buy yourself a new dress, earrings, get a message, than to stay home and gaze at all of your problems and worry or focus on being depressed. Whatever you water is going to grow. If you cultivate fears, stress, worries, anger, then you will grow more anxious and darker every day. But if you learn how to release these issues into the file drawer of heaven, into God's hands, and then lighten your load, you will walk with more realistic joy and contentment. Learning to cultivate hope and joy, to water the faith and happiness of your life, is an essential commitment to becoming a wise woman.

These are my pleasures that keep me happier and stronger:

I make time with old, friends--who get me and still love me, those who are fun, know my limitations, heart-breaks, weariness, desires and dreams and don't criticize or want something from me. These friendships have been built over many years. Adventures or just sitting on the couches in front of the fireplace,  chatting as the flames crackle and the night gets late.

IMG_3657

A Hot Bath with candles late at night when NO ONE can disturb me. My clan doesn't go to bed usually until midnight, so I have to hide myself away when I just need a moment.

Sitting on the front porch watching the sun go down with something wonderful to drink and music playing out of my little Bose Speaker that goes everywhere I go. Peace, calm, beauty, quiet--so rare and so soul filling for me.

A one-woman 15 minute tea or coffee time in the middle of the day.

Ten minutes reading the psalms and then quick prayer, refocuses my mind on who God is and how much He loves me and desires to help me.

Going for long walks early in the morning or early evening--(the adrenalin builds up in me and I walk hundreds of miles a year to equalize my blood sugar and heart attitudes.) It is a great way to build friendship with your children, too.

Travel--I love adventure and change, (I was ADD before my children were born!) so I have taken myself and the kids to new places if I could figure out how to save money to afford it or speak to pay for my travel--or stay with friends along the way.

Developing a few covenant friends who I can be myself with and who mutually pour into each other's lives who invest love together over many years--making time to be with them when the stress gets me down.

I have learned the wonderful value of massages in the past couple of years. I save, save to make this happen on occasion.

Watching a beautiful movie or reading a long great inspiring novel gives me hope.

Dark chocolate salted almonds

Reading my little daily Bible time book, reading even a half chapter in an inspiring spiritual book--even a little progress helps-- and writing one thing I have thought or learned in my journal. Spiritual strength keeps my attitude stronger--longer.

IMG_3398

Spending time, with one or both of my girls, shopping and doing girl things-- just hanging out on our beds talking.

Lighting candles all times of day (when I need atmosphere--not wo much when the kids were little--but when I needed to pretend that the mundane day would be special. It was a sort of visual reminder of what I needed to live int.) Having my music playing or buying myself flowers. Beauty lifts my spirit.

And actually in the making of beauty for yourself, it will be the way that others around you will learn to love and celebrate life, And they will learn to take care of themselves, too. Even those little babies that seem to need you all the time, will eventually mimic the habits your practice!

What is therapy to your soul? What 2 things will you do this week? Share your ideas--I may need a new one!

Who Am I?

_DSC6981-2 "By spending time in His Word, we choose to believe that we are precious to our heavenly Father, regardless of how others have treated us, and we learn to live with a hopeful and cheerful attitude around our children." -The Mom Walk

Isn't it interesting that no matter how old we get, we still have insecurities? In a culture that is constantly trying to define the roles of mothers, wives, and women, many have forgotten who God designed us to be. Who/what has been defining you (past mistakes, painful memories, comparison, insecurities)? It is crucial that we believe in who God says we are, so that we may encourage and inspire our children to do the same. His fantastic love for us is transforming, but can only become truly powerful in our lives if we accept it as our truth. Let's take a look at the beautiful identity God has for women:

You are helpful and needed... "Then the LORD God said, “It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him a helper fit for him.” … And the rib that the LORD God had taken from the man he made into a woman and brought her to the man. Then the man said, “This at last is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.” Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh." -Genesis 2:18, 22-24

You are valuable... "An excellent wife who can find? She is far more precious than jewels." -Proverbs 31:10

You are kind... "She opens her mouth with wisdom, and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue." -Proverbs 31:26

You are strong... "She is clothed with strength and dignity, and she laughs without fear of the future." -Proverbs 31:25

It is through spending time in His word that we are able to gain and benefit from the correct reminders of our true identity. We must be obedient and disciplined enough to silence the noise from the outside world long enough to listen to our Father. Meditate on those verses today, and take a moment to complete the reflection and application questions below.

-Out of the verses above, are there any parts of the identity God has for you that you have struggled to accept as your own? If so, which one(s), and why? -What insecurities do you need to let go of today in order to have a better attitude for and toward your children? -Are you still holding on to something negative someone has said/done to you? Spend some quiet time with the Lord today, and hand those burdens over to Him.

What are you sowing? And, consequently, what do you hope to reap?

Screen Shot 2014-10-07 at 8.52.35 PM Slouched down in my leather seat in a crowded railway car, I was being gently rocked to sleep by the rhythmic swaying back and forth of the old train clattering across the Polish countryside. Returning from a student conference in the mountains where I had been teaching and counseling with college students all weekend had left me a bit weary, lonely and  depleted. Working through translators for each message was a slow, tedious process.

As an American woman, I felt the cultural distance between me and these youth who had grown up under a supressive, Communist government. The religious freedom I had taken so for granted, made these students eager to know about God, about Jesus, about a kingdom in heaven where they would be free and blessed by the God who made them. Exhaustion tended to exagerate cultural differences and made me feel somewhat isolated as a 24 year old, struggling to understand even a portion of the things that were spoken to me. I remember riding along in the car wondering if I would ever not feel lonely.

Suddenly, the train took a small bend and in front of me were fields of thousands upon thousands of bright red poppies, gently swaying in the wind. Fields of poppies, obviously growing wild, spread over miles of the countryside. I was mesmerized by the beauty and found myself wondering how long it had taken for these beautiful flowers to be planted over the years so that there would be so many everywhere.

I began to imagine the invisible hand of God intentionally spreading seed generously over the many fields, so that in a country where there had been so much division, war and darkness for so many generations, that there would still be a picture of His beauty, creation and life to comfort those who would see it. That it would draw their thoughts and hearts, like it did mine, to thoughts of Him who was the artist of such beauty.

This has become to me a sort of picture of my place in the world. Jesus often talked about sowing seed in many of His parables. The people of His time were tied more closely to farming, sowing, reaping because their very lives depended on the well-being of the crops as their source of food.

James 3:18 says, "The seed whose fruit is righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace." I desire that there be a harvest of righteousness in and through my life as big and expansive as the poppy fields of my memory. This verse would indicate that righteousness is sown by peacemakers. Jesus communicated to His disciples in Matthew 5:  "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they  shall be called the sons of God."  Jesus himself, gave His life so that we might have peace with God. His whole being is focussed on redeeming, buying back that which was lost, bringing life where there is death.

Those who sow with tears will reap with joy.

I am most like Him when I, too, become a peacemaker, a redeemer, bringing peace where there was hostility, life where there is death. But the reason I so like the verse in James is that it brings us a picture of what we must do to bring this harvest of righteousness about--we must sow the seeds of righteousness, seed by seed, so that our harvest will be plentiful. We must sow seeds daily---weekly--for our whole lives, that there will be remnants of His beauty, peace, redemption, everywhere we go, every day that we live. If we sow peace and not anger in our home, there will be a legacy of peace. If we sow anger, a legacy of anger and death. It is a choice we make, every day, every hour, as to what we are sowing and what we will reap.

The seeds I sow are in relationship to people in my life every day. I must make a decision in my heart to sow a seed of peace where there is strife--to choose to be a peace-maker and to sow God's love and redemption. I must sow seeds of encouragement and faith through my words and through my writing to bring others to the point of peace in their own lives. Seed by seed, choice by choice, I have the ability to bring about a great harvest that will be ready for reaping in the final day when I meet Jesus face to face.  But in order for a farmer to have a harvest, he must plan on what he will sow, he must plan the seeds he will plant---it doesn't happen by chance. So I must choose what crop I will sow, how I will sow it, and choose to sow it in each situation and in each relationship that God brings my way. Peace and redemption also do not just happen by chance in my own life. There had to be an intentional plan.

There are times when I get letters from people---sometimes even hostile letters--that criticize my Pollyanna approach to life. Recently, a weary mom wrote, "I am sick of hearing about your perfect children! I am unsubscribing from your newsletter."

Now, I always take emails that I receive to heart. It seems that the meaning behind this letter, was that I only see and report the positive things about my family---and that I put forth only those things which I think are perfect. I hope that I never give the impression that I am perfect, or that my children are perfect or that my marriage is perfect, or anything else is perfect. I would hate to impose guilt on anyone, because of creating false standards through the stories of my articles, that someone else feels they can't immulate. I hope instead to always point my sweet friends to the One who has so befriended me. As a matter of fact, I have only made it this far because I so depend on God's grace and when I feel inadequate or like a failure, which I think all women do from time to time, there is a place I have trained myself to go--where Jesus is. I tell Him how I am feeling and then by faith, I acknowledge how grateful I am that He has made me adequate in Himself, by His strength, through His love and for His glory. I seek to rest there, as staying and simmering and swimming in the sea of guilt is destructive and heart-killing.

I have discovered that  no matter how hard I  try, I often fall short of my own expectations---let alone the expectations of others.  If this is true of me, that I fail--even when trying--then I must understand that even the best and most mature person I know, will also fail herself and me! So, my choice in my writing and in my life, is to give a picture of ideals for which I strive, in the context of the messy world in which I live. I want to sow a picture of beauty, a field of hope, and pattern of unconditional love in the midst of fields of life where there are weeds, rocks and untilled ground.

I have had a history of people very close to me who live in anger and criticism. This sowing of strife has left a string of broken relationships, deep hurt, alienation. Sometimes I am afraid to be around these people because no matter how hard I try or what I say or do, I know that eventually I will do something to arouse their criticism again. (I am choosing not to name these people as they are very close to me and I don't want to unnecessarily hurt them.) I used to think that if I just tried hard enough or did enough, eventually I would  receive the acceptance I was looking for.

But it took many years, to realize that their anger and criticism had nothing to do with me and no matter how hard I tried, I would never be acceptable to them, because the problem was in their own dark and hurting heart. But in order to have in my heart a harvest of peace, and not bitterness or anger; and a harvest of love and not hate and retaliation, I had to seek to plant seeds of God's righteousness, in order that my heart would truly bear a harvest of His making. This required that I pondered what it meant to be like God, to understand through His word, that love covers a multitude of sin; to learn that Jesus Himself, when He was being crucified, "while being reviled, did not revile in return, but kept trusting Himself to God who judges righteously."  (I Peter 2:23) He became my model--that I would choose not to revile those who were angry or negative, but that I, like Jesus, would keep trusting myself to God---to place my issues in His file cabinets and to let Him deal with my difficulties, and then to close the drawer once these issues were safe in His hands.

Instead of hoping that those near me would love me in such a way as to make me feel good about myself, I just kept reading the word everyday----seeking to know my God better, pondering the stories of Jesus, thinking about His communication to me through how He lived and what He said. Now, as I am getting older, I find His love to be deeply satisfying. After literally thousands of hours in His presence over the years, I have been influenced by being in the company of someone so compassionate, loving and strong. I have made peace with Him and appreciate Him. In doing so, I learned that I could give that peace more easily to others, because I didn't have as many expectations of them and I wasn't as dependent on how they responded to me,  in order to feel good about myself.

Indianapolis_Museum_of_Art_-_IMA_(2592097949)

What you sow, you will reap.

However, I see a lot of people wasting time, effort and energy in being critical of others close to themselves. There is a lot of anger, disappointment, jealousy, hate and bitterness floating around in the lives of people, that color their view of life, suck the energy out of them, and cause them to wonder where God has gone. It is so easy to be critical of  a family member or of our husbands and wallow in unmet expectations, or friends who have forsaken us, or in a child who has gone astray or is just immature or has a personality flaw that drives us crazy, or a parent who has abused or rejected us for our values.

James also spoke to this in the same passage where he taught about sowing peace. His words, "For where jealousy and selfish ambition exist, (getting our own way), there is dis-order and every evil thing! But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering and without hypocrisy. And the seed whose fruit is righteousness is  sown in peace by those who make peace." (James 3:13-18)

It starts with a choice--to allow the Holy Spirit to be Lord of our lives, even in the midst of strife; to decide ahead of time to imagine what it looks like to bring peace and redemption to each moment of life; to choose to sow righteousness into our relationships, because He chose to sow righteousness and peace into our lives, even at great cost to Himself. I believe that if thousands of His followers chose to sow this way each day, on all of the fields of life, there would be such a great crop of righteousness, visible beauty of His life, even in a place where so much darkness exists, that many hearts would be open to Him and to His ways, because of the overwhelming crop of righteousness present before their eyes. But it all begins with a choice in my heart and a plan to sow today, this day, in these fields where I find myself.

Whoever it is that brings so much emotional disappointment can keep us from the comforting love of God if we never make it to the point of forgiveness and acceptance of the person and circumstances. I know how deeply it can hurt to be rejected or ignored or treated unjustly. I have shed many tears over many years.

Yet, I can honestly say, that it has been these difficulties that have brought me to a place of freedom and joy. I have desperately needed the grace of God and in so seeking it, I have found it to be deeper than even I could imagine. He has shown me how deep His love is for me and how much He wants me to give as deeply to those in my life, who like me, don't deserve it, but need it all the same.

Love this community! Thanks for letting me hear from you! Come to the Mom Heart Conference!

IMG_1311

The Autumn Sky on a walk with Joel tonight. (We walk every night until it gets too cold!)

A wonderful closing to our day.

Thanks soooo much for everyone who wrote me yesterday or left a comment. You Mamas are truly the best! :)

If you missed the Mentoring Article, be sure to go HERE for the article I am referencing about all of us being a little crazy and hardly anyone normal!

My heart went out to each of you and I have been praying for you all day! I wish I could have you all over for an afternoon of sharing our stories. I would love to hear the details of your life. I have been thinking today how much I would love to gather some of you together at the mom's conference so we could talk about these issues--maybe we can figure out a room to meet in, to talk about some of these issues, your stories and then pray for each other. If only I had free airline tickets to give out!

Just in case some of you can come, I know that some of the hearts of the speakers I have been talking to understand the issues of the out of the box child and their stories are similar to yours. But no matter what, thought I would share about them with you. Each of these sweet women who are speaking have had disappointments, difficulties and issues but have messages about how God has met them in their point of need. Oh how I love these women and love to share them with you.

I have been getting messages from our speakers and am excited about what you will hear at the mom heart conference this year.

Our Speakers

I am so delighted to have so many wonderful speakers join me this year for the Mom Heart Conferences. Each of these remarkable women who will share their hearts and stories with you is a dear friend to me, and someone I consider a partner in ministry. We all share a heart for encouraging and helping Christian moms follow God wholeheartedly. They are truly “mom-hearted” women. The profiles below give only a small glimpse of the women you will hear at this year’s conferences. You will be blessed.

Sally Clarkson (CO, CA, TX)

Sally Clarkson is the mother of four wholehearted, grown-up, home-educated children, a conference speaker, and author of numerous books, including The Mission of Motherhood, The Ministry of Motherhood, Seasons of a Mother’s Heart, and The Mom Walk, Desperate (with Sarah Mae), Love God Greatly (with Angela Perritt), and 10 Gifts of Wisdom. She blogs regularly on SallyClarkson.com (formerly ITakeJoy.com). After college, Sally served with Campus Crusade for Christ (now Cru) in Communist Poland, and continued in ministry to women and families after her marriage to Clay in 1981. In 1994, they started Whole Heart Ministries to encourage and equip Christian parents through books, conferences, and online ministries. Since 1998, Sally has ministered to thousands of mothers through her Mom Heart Conferences and online ministries.

Find Sally atSallyClarkson.com | MomHeart.com

A hand drawn heart

Chrystal Hurst (CO)

Chrystal Hurst 1

Chrystal Hurst once sought success in the corporate world, but found her greatest fulfillment in the world of church and family. She is a Christian writer, speaker, and worship leader, but more than that a fulfilled wife and mother of five, and the chief operating officer in her home. She is a self-proclaimed bibliovore who is actively seeking help for her addiction to Starbucks, sweet tea, and chocolate chip cookies. Chrystal co-authored the recent bestseller, Kingdom Woman, and blogs regularly at Chrystal’s Chronicles (chystalevanshurst.com/blog) reflecting on her faith and daily life. Chrystal firmly believes God’s promise in Jeremiah 29:11 and desires to help others believe and apply that truth to their lives.

Find Chrystal atChrystal’s Chronicles | ChrystalEvansHurst.com

 

Sarah Mae (CO)

Sarah Mae 3Sarah Mae is the wife of Jesse and mother of three spunky, beautiful children. She is the co-author with Sally Clarkson of Desperate: Hope for the Mom Who Needs to Breathe, and an ebook author with The UnWired Mom and 31 Days to Clean. Sarah Mae has influenced thousands of women worldwide through her blogs about faith, motherhood, and living a soul-full and cross-worn life. She founded the Allume Social conference, and is a contributing writer to DaySpring, (a division of Hallmark). Sarah Mae spends her days homemaking, home educating, writing, reading, and drinking salted caramel mochas. Her family embraces life in the beautiful Amish countryside of Pennsylvania.

Find Sarah Mae atSarahMae.com | DesperateMom.comSarahMaeWrites

 

Angela Perritt (CA, TX)

Angela is the wife to her high school sweetheart and mom to her three adorable little girls. Some of Angela’s favorite things in life are dancing with her daughters, laughing with her husband, and loving her Lord with the amazing life He has given her. You can find Angela at LoveGodGreatly.com where she encourages women around the world, in fourteen lanugages, to be in God’s Word on a daily basis through tech accountability groups and original Bible study materials. In spring 2014 Angela released her first Bible study book, You Are Loved (co-written with Sally), which stayed in the top ten on Amazon for over a week. Angela’s goal in life is to inspire her children and others to love God greatly with their lives one day at a time.

Find Angela atLoveGodGreatly.com

 

Heidi St. John (CA)

Heidi St. John is “The Busy Mom.” She and Jay, married since 1989, have seven children ranging from toddler to young married adult. Heidi recently became a grandmother and is enjoying this new season, calling it “all the newborn and none of the nightshift!” As a popular author and conference speaker, Heidi brings a refreshing mix of information and inspiration to listeners on the radio, in person, and through the written word. Her transparency and honesty are like a breath of fresh air in a world where too many speakers seem to have all the answers. Her ability to be real with her listeners and readers allows them to identify with her at a deep level which in turn allows Heidi to gently lead her audience toward the Savior who actually DOES have all the answers.

Find Heidi atHeidiStJohn.comFirmlyPlantedFamily.org

 

Ruth Schwenk (TX)

Ruth Schwenk- 300x300

Like you, Ruth wears many hats! She loves being the wife of a pastor, who is also her love and friend, and is a grateful homeschooling mom of four beautiful children on earth, and five miscarried babies in heaven. Ruth is a graduate of The Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, IL. On August 1st, 2011, Ruth launched TheBetterMom.com, a site dedicated to becoming a better moms by sharing life and learning together, to the glory of God. In September 2013, she launched FortheFamily.org, dedicated to helping Christian families, and is currently under contract with Tyndale House Publishers as co-author of two upcoming books. Ruth’s passions include, loving God, leading worship, and inspiring others to have a God honoring family.

Find Ruth atTheBetterMom.com | ForTheFamily.org

 

Kat Lee (TX)

Kat Lee is a writer, speaker, blogger, and the reigning Candy Land champion in her home. She blogs at InspiredtoAction.com where she helps overwhelmed moms become focused and purposeful. She has traveled with and writes for Compassion International. Her ebook, Maximize Your Mornings, has been downloaded over 15,000 times. Kat and her husband Jimmy live in Texas with their three children. She loves running, God, and Tex-Mex food, not necessarily in that order.

Find Kat atInspiredtoAction.com | Twitter, Facebook

And remember, we have a special offer for all of you who sign up in October.

OCTOBER REGISTRATION BONUS!
 

Register in October and receive a $10.00 Gift Certificate to use at the conference book tables. And, you'll be entered in a drawing for a free registration. Save $20 off of the regular price by getting the early registration. Promotion ends 11:59:59 PM 10/31/2015. Register Now!

Tell your friends to come with you and have your own private retreat as you enjoy it together.

See you there. (and for those who will not be able to make it, we will try to have an online conference later in the spring when we work out all the details.)

MHC2015-PDF-Poster-791x1024

 

Many of us are a little bit crazy, and hardly anyone is perfectly normal Mentoring Monday

"The best way out is always through." Robert Frost

"He is mindful that we are but dust." Psalm 103

Funny how many people say to me, "Oh, it was easy for you, Sally. Your children were just naturally intelligent or naturally submissive. That's why your children have turned out so well, so healthy and strong."

How far from the truth, if anyone could have seen the inner-workings of our daily lives. 

(Stay tuned for a very long post--you can take several days to read it--but it is my article of the week!)

If you are living in this fallen world, then I already know your life isn't perfect. If you are a mama, I know your children have brought issues and responsibilities into your life that are accompanied with stress, more work, puzzlement, and challenge--and push all your buttons.. Almost everyone I know feels that they have a "difficult" child, the one who is the source of challenge, and requires a lot of attention and time--whatever the reason. No matter what your issues with your child, there is a need to know others feel like you do and that there is hope in the years ahead. I am now in a place to give you great hope, as I am amazed at how faithfully God turned some impossible moments and years into strength in the lives of my children. He was faithful, it was not as impossible as it felt and my sweet ones have responded to the years of investing in their lives. Take courage and hope!

As I look back on the unique puzzle God allowed me to have with the make-up of my own four, I can tell you it was a constant challenge, filled with difficulty and fraught with passages of darkness. Yet, I see that walking this path with Him and holding His hand through each turn in the road, has been life-shaping. My longing for heaven, my understanding that this is the "broken" place, and my appreciation that He will make all things new has grown deeply in my own heart. And my love for Jesus is now so very seasoned in a deeper understanding of what it cost for Him to serve and redeem His children--and he was my model as I learned the cost of a parent's love from His love and sacrifice for me.

And yet, the joy of seeing His faithfulness, His amazing work of grace in the life of our family has brought deep satisfaction, to know that my labor, my dark nights clinging to Him, my putting one foot in front of the other has been a labor of co-creating life and light in our home with God as my constant companion.

Screen Shot 2014-10-04 at 9.32.50 PM

The Beginnings

Rolling around on the floor and screaming and hitting my hand away, my little 17 month old boy, was exhibiting such profoundly disruptive behavior that I really didn't know what to do. Even nursing had been difficult.  My first two had been easier at that age and through loving, consistent training and relationship, they had fallen into a predictable pattern expected for toddlers when they had been this age. Though I did not know that even then, one of them was exhibiting behavior that should have given me clues of what was ahead. Darkness surrounded my thoughts and nurtured defeat, puzzlement, fear, insecurity.

One day, I stumbled upon putting these shoes on Nathan, that had caused us so many stressful moments, a possible solution to his tantrums.  By accident, I tied his shoe laces exactly the same length and pulled them evenly across the top of his toes. He sighed deeply and patted my arm and said, "Tank you, mommy," and looked so very relieved. Surely tying his shoestrings perfectly even was not the issue that was tearing my little boy apart.

But, when I tried it again the next day, he was calm, patted me again and said thank you, again. This behavior puzzled me because I had never heard of obsessive compulsive behavior before, nor did I have a clue what mental illness was, or know that it could reveal itself at such a young age. I just knew I had a vague sense that something was ticking inside of Nathan that made him so different and uncomfortable at times that he could hardly function. And then it began with another child and eventually another. Other compulsions seemed to drive moments of our children's life.

This was only a tiny example of his "out of the box" behavior over the years. And then I had two other children that were clinically diagnosed with similar issues. One had over-arching irrational fears of leaving us for fear someone would die. I am not speaking of a nightmare or two or fear during a period of childhood that passes. I am speaking of compulsive, irrational thoughts, panic attacks, irrational behavior, constant fears that drive even young adults to despair, darkness over the tiniest of separations. Knowing it is irrational is one thing, but making it go away is another.

Constant hand-washing, nose wiping, countless showers, confessing, anger, weeping, irrational behavior accompanied these patterns at times that differed with each child. Learning issues also invaded our lives. Daily, it seemed, we dealt with a variety of challenges. Often I dreaded the nightly dinner table because I never knew when some havoc, anger or irrationality would erupt and create conflict, again!  Especially in the teen, growing, hormonal years, every malady was exaggerated. Coming to understand these years, that this was to be expected, made it easier for me with each child, as I knew the level of frantic behavior would calm a bit after the hormonal years. I was a novice learning each season from all the new challenges that came our way.

Compulsive behavior, clinical fears, irrationality, hours upon hours of seeking to figure out just how to deal with the many alarming behaviors of my otherwise wonderful children, had me in and out of insecurity, pulling my hair out, trying to decide if it had to do with my discipline philosophy, wondering if I was a failure as a mother and just being plain stumped at the varied and mysterious behavior of several of my children. There were learning issues that required an educated understanding of how to help them grow to become their best self, how to help them cope with their disabilities, how to cause them to flourish and believe that God had a great plan for their lives.

Clay and I are not in any way perfect but generally loving, devoted, fairly constant, stable people in most ways and this unusual behavior was difficult for us to understand. The problems our children suffered were not a result of our own behavior as parents, but they were internal issues that came with the children when they were born. This understanding helped us accept the limitations of our family and to learn to take one day at a time and to yield our burdens into God's hands. We began to understand that our children could grow stronger, could mature, but they would never totally change--their stripes would be the same their whole lives, even as with us as adults.

IMG_4830

 

Loving my girls for who they were on the inside, as God had shaped their unique personalities.

Own Your Authority, subdue your world

But the starting point toward health for the children and for us,  was when I decided that God had made Clay and me the parents of our children and we had the freedom  and authority to train, love, pray for and figure them out without having to follow formulas or expectations of others. Faith, education about their issues, lots of love and grace, perseverance and patience--old fashioned virtues were the keys to our ultimate favorable influence over our children's lives.

Formulas would never have worked with my children, because each of them was extremely different and they had different weaknesses, strengths and a variety of neurosis. Healthy relationships, predictable rhythms of life, love covering a multitude of sin, forward speaking into the great people they would become and a watering each day of their hearts with the word of God, as well as  their minds memorizing His truth. Then prayers over them every day, out-loud, cherished before the throne of heaven together went deep into their souls.

Many of my friends said,"You just aren't spanking enough!" "Oh, that child is normal--they are just having a hard day. it's all in your mind."

"That is perfectly normal behavior--they are just tired today." "You are just tired today." "It can't be that hard."

Very few people wanted to listen to my queries or questions or when I asked them about the erratic behavior of my children--longing for guidance or insight of any kind. Some acted embarrassed when I was vulnerable, some blew it off as though I was just an overly sensitive mama. And the words emotional or  mental illness made everyone uncomfortable. Loneliness is a part of the pathway when God has allowed us to have children who are a little bit more mysterious. But in the loneliness, I grew deep roots.

Some people communicated shame to me at the thought that my children had these issues. Demon possessed, I heard more than once, from sincere supposed Christian friends.

IMG_2380

 

Accepting my boys, as they were, their antics, noise, issues, testosterone--that made them wild boy types, believing they would grow up to become heroes..

But I knew in my mama intuitive heart that it was something else. Turns out, these many years later and years of becoming a student of some emotional and mental illness issues, that I have come to understand my children, and myself.  I  have lived long enough to see that, even though some of their personal behavioral issues were quite extreme, and their maladies were real, they all function now, most of the time, with responsibility, love, a good work ethic and have grown up to love God. And yet they live within the limitations of themselves and still deal with issues. But now we have come to understand more, to be patient, to not overreact, and always to learn more and always to seek new research of what will help long term.

It comforted Sarah when she read something from Madeleine L'engle about all artists being a little mentally ill. Maybe that was it--these problems were there with all who were creative.

Watching "Beautiful Mind" comforted my children, that others shared their strange darkness. Reading the stories of others who had their issue, helped them to have hope that they would live a productive life.

Getting Rid of  False Standards

So many women I know want their children to fit into the "normal" expectations of what they think that children should be--

*that they would learn to have controlled behavior in public,

*that they would perform up to a certain standard  on exams,

*that they would be able to do age appropriate work at exactly the time the "experts" say they should.

*That their children would not embarrass them or misbehave in front of others.

*That they would not be so quiet, or loud, or active or dull or big or little or fat or thin or precocious or dull,

*That they would walk with God in the same traditions and ways they had lived as parents.

That they would just fit in.

And when they do not fit in, mamas can feel ashamed, embarrassed, like they are a failure.

Don't they know, "Man looks at the outward appearance, God looks at the heart."

But the voices inside of us sometimes accuse:

"It is my fault that they aren't achieving," "I am failing, I am not doing enough, I can't do enough, I don't know how to do enough."

Or what's wrong with this child? Why can't they just be ____________? 

All of these thoughts lies, false expectations, worldly values. We must understand, we are never in control of the wild, free spirit inside of our children. That is why we must live, daily, yielding their lives into the hands of the one who knows them and has designed them for His own good work.

The Gift of Unconditional, Devoted Love

God made children in all shapes and sizes, all sorts of personalities, all sorts of skills and potential and differing levels of health--emotionally, physically, mentally. There is no standard "right" kind of child or adult, except in our false worldly standards. Why do we attempt to make all of our children "fit in" when God created all of us to be different?

And then there is the fall--creation has been damaged by sin and there is no perfect person, not even you. The capacity for being damaged goods is great. Not only are we fragile physiologically, but often the scars of our lives make us fragile.

All of have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

Jesus said, "In this world you have tribulation, (trials)."

Some are blind, some have hearing problems, digestive, diabetes, physical deformities, cancer, seizures. Some are angry, fearful, sad, depressed, incapable in some way. There is no promise, no guarantee that in this world, we or our children will have lives without pain or calamity.

If this is true, then why do we strive so much to conform, to fit the norm, to pretend that anyone should ever expect all of their children to be without issues or problems--or differences.

I found out that the mental illness in our family was hereditary and will probably be in every generation. My own family tried to stuff the problems below the surface so no one would notice. "Ignore it and maybe it will go away," was their philosophy.

Clay's mom had a clinical sort of compulsion. My brother was bi-polar, angry, not all together at peace with his life, until he died.

Was it Clay's fault or mine that we had 3 children who had compulsive, mental, emotional issues, and the 4th was borderline?--well, Clay of course! (not really--probably both of us! :))

We all need to be able to live gracefully in our realities with ourselves and with our children. We need each other's help and compassion, not fearing condemnation or criticism for what we might be doing wrong.

"It was for freedom that Christ set us free, therefore, keep standing firm and do not be subject to a yoke of slavery." Galatians 5

But it is time to agree that we need freedom to live within the limitations of our own personality, abilities, behavior, maturity and seek to make peace with who God has allowed us and our children to be in this broken world.

Only as you accept limitations as a part of life, only as you accept your puzzle as a place God can bring glory, that it is your place of spiritual worship, can you begin to breathe His grace to take you through all the days--difficult and blessed. Challenging and so very joyful.

Give the gift that parents are called to give!

One of the best gifts you can give to your children is to love them as they are, to speak words of acceptance and appreciation for them exactly as God has made them. Words of "I believe in you--your dreams, your potential." "I am so blessed to be your parent. You are a gift to me, a kiss from God." "I will always be here for you, no matter what each of your days hold, you can count on me to support you and to help you. And God is on your side--He loves you so very much. You are very precious to Him."

The way our children will believe that God loves them is by having us be His unconditional love--His hands, His voice, His blessing, His patience, His call on their lives every day.

Join me today in my video as I share my own journey through mental illness and learning disabilities with my own children.

Be sure to register for the 2015 Mom Heart Conference! We can't do without you!

MHC2015-Button-e1412276959377

 

The Goals of Disciplining our Children

Screen Shot 2014-10-02 at 10.00.42 PM Training our children to learn to listen to our instruction and to obey our requests is such a challenging goal for us as parents. It requires that we understand the goal of our instruction and the way to secure that goal.

Paul said, "But the goal of our instruction is love from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith." I Timothy 1:5

This summarized some of the over-arching goals of our training and discipline---a loving heart that is pure and a sincere valid faith in God.  It helped me to realize, though, that our training was a two part emphasis--First to teach our children to learn to submit to our requests=obedience. But then our real goal was to cultivate tender hearts inside our children so that they would learn to obey us with honor, out of having learned to respect us.

If we want our children to grow up to become those adults who listen to God's voice and obey His will, then they must learn how to listen to our voice and to obey our will. Relationship is the key to helping them learn to want to submit to our own ways. When we lovingly serve them, invest in them, teach them wisdom and show them a life of obedience to God, then they will follow our pattern in their own lives.

(Oh, my goodness, listening to yourself is always interesting!--where did I get that southern accent? Who is that lady? :))

1997 HomeEducation Tapes: The Importance of Obedience. Go HERE for the tape sets.

Don't forget to register for the Mom Heart conference! HERE October discount, drawing 1 free registration from those who register early and a $10 coupon at the book table.

MHC2015-Button-e1412276959377

From Weariness to Rest, Hope and Friendship! Heart-filling 2015 Mom Heart Conferences

Screen Shot 2014-10-01 at 7.21.22 PM

Screen Shot 2014-10-01 at 7.21.22 PM

Paul Matthey

Almost 20 years ago, I had just put all 4 of the kids to bed, barely dragging through the, "I love you. Let's pray. Stay in bed," routine and fell full into a comfy chair weary to the bone. Constant laundry, dishes, messes, fusses, and then all over again. I glanced over at Clay and whispered,

"This is the hardest thing I have ever done! Sometimes I just don't think I will make it. I feel so alone at times."

As we talked, he said, "What would help you?"

I wish there was a fun conference in a hotel. There would be clean sheets that no one else had slept in, chocolates, friends and a tea or luncheon to make me feel special and speakers who would inspire me, but without gult,  to remember why I am doing this idealistic life."

I longed for validation, hope, rest, fun, adults and encouragement but didn't know where to get it.

"Well, you know, we could start a conference like that!" Clay said. 

Not exactly what I had in mind, but it captured my imagination.

And the rest is history. 18 years ago we hosted our first Mom Heart (Whole Hearted Mom) conference, hoping for 300 and we had 650 with 50 turned away. Evidently, I was not the only one who needed a break.

Each year, I feel more deeply the need for sweet moms who pour themselves out constantly to have such a break. But now, after all of these years, I know they are a blast as well as a lifeline to so many moms over the years.

I am so excited to announce that registration is now open for our conferences this year. I believe they will be the best one yet, as I have talked to our speakers about their messages, their heart for God and their love for motherhood and they are spilling over with encouragement, even as the past speakers have been. Below is the letter I have written to all of the moms who have attended before. I hope you will find yourselves amongst these words! This year's conference will be all about a new book I am launching in January about the secret to Owning Your Personal Life and leaving a lasting legacy through the story you live out in the places you live. I am so excited to share this book and these messages with you! Read my heart!

Dear Sweet Mom,

Like you, I love being with my children. It is always a delight when I can spend time with them, draw them out, encourage them, and help them. In this new season of my life, it is so fulfilling to see what God is doing in their young lives. They truly are the reward and blessing of parenthood that God promises. In many ways I feel that I live for my children, and yet I know instinctively that my children are not my life. God wants me to reach for more–to leave a legacy of faith not just through my children, but through the life He has given me to live. I believe He is calling me to own my life for His glory.

After over forty years of serving Christ, and over thirty years of marriage and parenting, I feel like I can understand Paul’s words to the Philippian church, “But one thing I do … I press on toward the goal for the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.” Paul knew that he had to choose to own his life for the sake of Christ–he had one chance to live the one life he was given for God. It is a choice I made in my early twenties after reading Philippians 3:7-14 and have lived by ever since as a woman, wife, and mother. When Tyndale Publishing House asked me to write my new book, Own Your Life, I took it as a challenge not only to look back at my life of walking with God, but also as an opportunity to encourage Christian women.

So this year, I want to talk about how you, as a mom, can own your life. Don’t worry, that doesn’t mean doing more than you’re already doing, as though activity is the mark of ownership. Guilt is not on the agenda! Rather, I want every mother to leave our conferences this year with a renewed and refreshed conviction that you can say with Paul: “I press on so that I may lay hold of that for which also I was laid hold of by Christ Jesus.” I want you to see that what you are doing as a mother is part of that “one thing” that He has for your life. I want you to find deep, rich, and meaningful fulfillment in the life of faith you are giving for your children and living for God.

Each year, I am reminded afresh that our weary world needs a restoration of biblical motherhood–women who have chosen to own their lives for God’s glory. Mary, when told by the angel Gabriel that she would be the mother of the Son of God, responded with faith: “I am the Lord’s servant … May it be done to me as you have said” (Luke 1:38). She owned the life God was giving her. She embraced the legacy He had for her. This Mom Heart Conference is just one way I can partner with the Spirit of God to encourage and equip a generation of mothers to be ready and willing to serve God no matter what. We all can live a legacy of faith.

This will be my 18th year of ministering to moms in these conferences, and I continue to be energized and excited about what God is doing through mothers in this generation. I hope you will join me this year as we reach out together to take hold of all God has for us as mothers.

In his heart,

Sally Clarkson

Stay tuned for more in the coming weeks. For all of you who register this month, we are giving a special early rate  discount for the conference as well as a $10 gift certificate to use at the conference book tables. And at the end of the month, we will draw from all of the moms who have registered and give one of the moms a free conference and a full refund to the conference of her choice! Hope you can join us! Share with your friends and have a retreat together! We so appreciate your helping us get the word out! Hope you can come. And let me know some of the messages you hope to hear!

For more information, go HERE and you will find registration! Share the button in your sidebar to let others know!

MHC2015-PDF-Poster-791x1024

MHC2015-PDF-Poster-791x1024

Life-Giving Moment about Marriage

Life-Giving Moment on Marriage  

Above all, keep fervent in your love for one another, because love covers a multitude of sins.

I Peter 4:8

Today, I am sharing a part of a conference tape with you that was made many years ago. Clay and I had an interesting love story as we were both in our late 20's when we started dating, after knowing each other for 8 years. My parents thought I would never get married! Here is a part of the story!

(Soooo crazy to listen to this after all these years! I must have had a little bit of a southern accent when I lived in Texas. It is no longer here!:))

[audio mp3="http://sallyclarkson.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/MH-141112_mixdown.mp3"][/audio]

You can find this full audio series: Renew My Heart Oh God 1998

What is your secret to having a good marriage?