Please note that I’m having a computer catastrophe at the moment, if you can call it that. I’m trying to edit on a teensy-tiny iPhone screen. So spelling and adding tidy links will have to wait til later. My apologies.
Today marks the last day of the Vacation Bible School my kids have been attending all week. It’s actually called VBA at this church, as in Vacation Bible Adventure because who wants to go to school in summer?
Here’s a few pics of my three at the church playground.
Here they are inside the church lobby with their matchy-matchy VBA t-shirts, which have been washed exactly once this week because white t-shirts aren’t going to stay white so what’s the point?
The lighting is poor but the kids were being kind to each other, if kindness is a spectrum, and I wanted to capture the moment. But really, I was also trying to take a picture of the iron-and-wood console they’re standing in front of but didn’t want to risk looking like a weirdo.
My friend Sharon took a picture of the console for me and posted it on Facebook. She’s not afraid of strange looks.
Which made me think, “Well I can do that.” So yesterday I took a few more pictures and ended up snapping a bunch of other furniture pieces. I just couldn’t help myself. Forget Pinterest, the church lobby is where it’s at. Unfortunately, during my picture taking enthusiasm I had to reassure a small child that I wasn’t taking a picture of him, just the sleek coffee table and end tables next to him. Weirdo.
Like most of my stories, the rustic yet contemporary lobby furniture has nothing to do with where I’m headed. Except I mentioned it’s the last day of VBA which means it’s Friday. And that, my friend, is what it’s all about.
It’s time for Friday Shares over at Hope*Writers, one of my writing circles. Here’s the deal: they won’t let you share unless you’re willing to feature the work of two other writers on your blog or social media of choice. I almost never share. This morning, however, I had exactly an hour to finally edit The Rest of the Autism Story that I worked on a few weeks ago. Perfection had to take backseat to the need to share back when it was originally published. But today was the day for revision. I doubt anyone will notice the difference between drafts but it feels better somehow. It is time for the essay to find its way beyond my tribe of friends. And that is why it’s Friday Share Day here.
The first essay that grabbed me is by Dorina Lazo Gilmore. I originally discovered Dorina through her writing on grief featured on Kindred Mom, as well as her interview with Emily Sue Allen on the Kindred Mom Podcast. Anyway, this one stuck with me becauses the subject is worship. And worship, like writing, is one of the ways I not only praise God, but make sense of him, or at least get a fresh perspective on whatever I’m dealing with. You see, it’s not just me speaking (or singing actually) to God, exclaiming the wonders of his love, but it’s me hearing from him. I’m learning once again that it’s okay to worship him with songs of singing when I don’t have the words for prayers or when I don’t know how to pray. This concept was seriously a life changing lesson from back when we first began our journey with Steven’s eyesight.
I remember seeing this lovely essay a few days ago by Lindsay Hausch on Kindred Mom. I could have written this about ten years ago as it reflects my feeling of loneliness as I adjusted to life at home with a wee little one during a time in my life when most of my friends didn’t have children or worked ouside the home. This essay is also a darn good example of why I’m such a fan of MOPS, especially for new mamas and those running after toddlers.
Call me bonkers, but God speaks to me through trees, and plants of all sorts, especially whatever’s growing in my measly quarter-acre lot. I’m hardly a gardner and will do anything to avoid the daunting task of yard work. You see, I’m allergic to most of what’s blooming beyond my back porch. And I’m lazy. But it’s true. I’m overwhelmed by the way he reveals his majesty through nature. Perhaps it’s why this essay by Jessica Broberg spoke to me. It reminds me of God’s faithfulness, and how nothing, no matter how life-shattering or confusing our current situation, he is there and is not taken by surprise.
I’m no baker. Yet I loved learning about the slow process of bread-baking from Sarah Damska. Also, I’ve been missing gluten. That’s a lie. I haven’t missed gluten one bit because my memory is hardly stretched when it recalls just how badly I feel when I eat wheat, or gluten of any kind. But I do miss the smell of homemade bread baking in the oven. Or how I imagine it to be. I’ve never tried baking bread from scratch unless you count half-hearted attempts to figure out the bread-maker that was a gift from our wedding over twelve years ago. Anyway, as you can surely guess, this piece isn’t really about baking but about the process of slowing down and discovering God in ordinary tasks.
Since all of last year was pretty much a series of transitions, goodbyes and of dreaming new dreams, I could relate well to Faith Gibson’s essay on Seasons of Transitions and Relying on Jesus. Amen and Amen.
Leigh Sain offers encouragement in the midst of a mess of LEGO. Or is it Legos? As a mama of three LEGO-crazy kids, I could totally get this one. Leigh’s essay reminded me to see the beauty in the mess and how God makes all things new, even LEGO creations.
I haven’t blown up at my kids yet this summer. Who am I kidding? We’re exactly a week into summer vacation and the Twedtlings have been at VBA for most of it. I haven’t had time to have a mama meltdown. But I’m an imperfect person, otherwise known as a recovering perfectionist who deeply feels everything. It’s bound to happen. Soon. Anyway, Jill E. McCormick’s essay reminds me once again that anger is a valid emotion, not a bad one. It’s just what we do with our anger that gets us into sticky situations. I mean, it’s what I do with my anger that gets me into trouble. Anyway, it’s a helpful read for those of us prone to loosing it (raises hand).
Hopefully, I didn’t bore you to tears by over-sharing, but I couldn’t help myself. I loved each and every essay linked here today.
Have a wonderful weekend, lovelies.