A few links and a photo meme

I wanted to share just a couple of links of interesting reading discovered in the last week or two:

The Headmistress at The Common Room has an excellent post titled Home-Making on Purpose in response to a disillusioned, discouraged homemake who had “thought that since she had been very good at her very complex previous career, staying at home ought to be something she just took to naturally, without any thought, preparation, planning, or training” and had had visions of “doing nothing but joyfully creative things” and that “being a sahm was going to look an awful lot like Ozzie and Harriet, only with more fun stuff.” There is a lot of great advice in response.

The Nester has 10 Ways to Avoid Having a Home You’ll Love — excuses or easily-removed hindrances.

I can amen Chris Anderson’s Sweetness of Speech Increases Persuasiveness.

And I am not familiar with Domestic Felicity blog, but enjoyed this post about Falling in love through the blessing of children found through a link at Breathing Grace, detailing how married love can increase rather than be hindered when children come along.

Janet at Across the Page tagged me a while back for a 5th Photo Meme. Sorry it has taken me so long to respond, Janet — it’s been a busy couple of weeks! The instructions are to “Find your 5th photo file folder, then the 5th photo in that file folder. Then pass the meme to 5 people.”

You’d think that would be straightforward enough, but when I click on “My Pictures,” it has photo files mixed in with downloaded clip art. Then, another way of looking through them, this is the actual 5th photo — though it is also the first. I don’t know why it is repeated:

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This is my middle son, Jason, with his fiancee, Mittu.

If I count that one as a double, then the 5th photo is this one:

Jeremy and Jason's birthday

This is Jason and Jeremy celebrating their birthdays together at the end of last summer when Jason came back from working at camp for the summer. He had been away for both of them and Jeremy’s was, I believe, right before Jason came back, so we waited and celebrated them both together. Jason’s pointing toward the “21” because that’s his age — the numbers are reversed from the way they are sitting. I guess I could have had them reverse places. 🙂

Coming at the pictures from this post, though, I get completely different results, but I’ll leave it at that. Forgive me — I’m overly analytical. 🙂

I have seen this around and can’t remember who has already done it, so I won’t tag anyone, but feel free to do this one if you are interested!

I’ve had a very busy last couple of weeks, and next week our church has revival services which are busy in a different way, so I am planning on something of a lightweight day today, though there is laundry and such to be done. Hope you have a great Saturday!

Friday’s Fave Five and Happy Birthday, Jim!

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Susanne at Living to Tell the Story hosts a “Friday Fave Five” in which we share our five favorite things from the past week. Click on the button to read more of the details. Isn’t that a cute new spring button?

I haven’t been able to do a Fave Five the last couple of weeks, and I am glad to be able to get back into them today.

1. Snow! We got about 5″, which I know to you Northerners doesn’t sound like much, but we often only get an inch or two at most once a year, so this was a highlight of our winter. Scroll down if you’d like to read more about our snow activities and see our snow pictures. 🙂

2. Snow Days! Because it doesn’t make sense to buy a lot of snow equipment when it is so rarely needed, a few inches of snow is enough to close down schools and many businesses for a day or two. Really, that is how I like it — just enough snow to get off work and school and play for a day (only we had two snow days this time!), and then that’s it. We still had a lot of snow patches in grassy areas even Thursday, but the roads were pretty clear by Tuesday afternoon. I could list this as 2a, but one of my favorite parts of snow days is not having to set my alarm clock on a day when I normally would.

3. Lunch with a friend. My good friend Carol and I have been trying to get together for lunch for at least the last couple of weeks, and we finally made it Thursday. It’s always good to chat with Carol, and I enjoyed catching up with each other plus visiting a restaurant that I love but my family wasn’t crazy about. (I’m ready again whenever you are, Carol! 🙂 )

4. French Chocolate Pie. I had absolutely the best piece of French Chocolate Pie I think I have ever eaten at said restaurant. I am already craving another piece.

5. My husband’s birthday today! Happy 51st birthday, honey! For the next six months we’re the same age. 🙂

I post this picture of him often, but it is my favorite.

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Today I am wrapping presents and making his favorite cake, Boston Cream Pie, plus baked spaghetti for dinner.

Booking Through Thursday: The Best Book You’ve Never Read

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The weekly Booking Through Thursday question for today is:

We’ve all seen the lists, we’ve all thought, “I should really read that someday,” but for all of us, there are still books on “The List” that we haven’t actually gotten around to reading. Even though we know they’re fabulous. Even though we know that we’ll like them. Or that we’ll learn from them. Or just that they’re supposed to be worthy. We just … haven’t gotten around to them yet.

What’s the best book that YOU haven’t read yet?

This is a harder question than it would have been a year or two ago, because I have been purposefully making my way through several books like this over the past few years. Some on my list that I have actually finished are all of Jane Austen’s books, Mere Christianity by C. S. Lewis, The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, The Narnia series by C. S. Lewis. the Lord of the Rings series by J. R. R. Tolkien, and I am even now working my way through the unabridged Les Miserables by Victor Hugo.

Some that I haven’t gotten to yet are Bleak House and Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens (I’ve read and loved several of his others), Agatha Christie books, and P. D. Wodehouse’s Jeeves and Wooster books. I’m not much for modern secular fiction, but I’ve been thinking about trying something by John Grisham. I keep thinking some day I should read Christian classics The Imitation of Christ by Thomas a Kempis and The Confessions of St. Augustine, but I am not quite up to them yet. And I keep seeing Debbie Macomber’s names floating around and want to try something of hers some time.

Probably a flood of other titles are going to come to mind in the next day or two!

How about you? Is there something you’ve always been meaning to read that you haven’t yet?

Melli’s ABC Challenge: M and N

Melli is hosting an ABC photo challenge in which we’re supposed to look for letters in common everyday things or in nature without actually manipulating anything to make the letter and without photographing the letter itself in a word or sign. We’re doing two letters a week, and this week it is M and N.

You’d think these would be pretty easy to find, but I didn’t find one of them easily.

In fact, I won’t describe…because I would embarrass myself…how I drove 15 minutes out of my way because I thought I remembered a house with a fence that had an N shape to it — but the curve of the fence curved under instead of over, making it not an N shape, but since I was in the neighborhood of a Sonic and love their munchy, crunchy ice, and we don’t have one right nearby home, I decided to stop and try one of their breakfast items, but apparently they weren’t open (who serves breakfast items and isn’t open at 8:15 a.m.? Then again, a lot of places are still without power from the snow — maybe that was the problem), so I drove 15 minutes back home,found an N in my own neighborhood, then almost got my car stuck in the ice in my own driveway (frozen from the meltoff from yesterday), then tried to download my photos into Picasa only to discover, in place of all my photos, little icons that look like a torn pieces of paper, which, according to their “Help” section, means I need to rebuild my database, (but, they say, you should back up your pictures before doing so…but how can I do that when the pictures aren’t showing up? Argh. It did this once before and then fixed itself. Hopefully it will do so again, and then I will back up the pictures taken since the last time I backed them up and try the database rebuilding thing), BUT I did learn something new: that I could download pictures to Flickr straight from my camera and edit them there.

And that, my friends, is probably the worst sentence in the history of the English language.

But I emerge triumphantly facing this challenge with my M and my N! I got that done today if nothing else! (I did also happen to find a Q and R for future use as well!)

So here they are:

An M on the gate to Suzie-the-dog’s fence:

ABC Challenge M

(I don’t know why it is in the shape of an M. Maybe the manufacturer’s name begins with M? Or maybe it was meant to be a decorative scroll and just happens to look like an M?)

And here are a couple of N’s I found on a house in the neighborhood (and I hope they didn’t see me taking a picture of their home and wonder what in the world I was doing):

ABC Challenge N

You can find other participants to the ABC Challenge at Melli’s today, who I hope had a less eventful time of it this week. I am off to get breakfast now so I can become coherent again.

Snow aliens and rooftop snowballs

The boys walked around and took pictures in the snow Sunday night, but it was dark and the snow was slushy, so they didn’t do much with it. Then Monday morning it was too icy. Finally Monday afternoon they got to go out and “play” in it.

Jeremy says this is a snow alien.

snow-alien

I told him I thought it looked more like a pig. 🙂 The round mouth (from the ring around a juice bottle) looks like he is either singing…or very surprised 😀

Here is another view:

Snow alien 2

They made another smaller one in the back:

Snow alien reporter

Jeremy (these are all his pictures) titled this one, “Morbo reporting from Earth.” Jesse was very proud of the snow hat he made.

I love this picture of Suzie running in the snow.

Suzie running in snow

Other than that, and being with her boys, I don’t think she liked it much. She especially didn’t like getting hit with a snowball!

I heard Jim up on the roof — I thought maybe he was cleaning piled-up snow off this little section.

Jim on snowy roof

(Does this look dangerous to anyone besides me??)

But he was actually doing this:

snowball

(Kids, don’t try this at home!!)

All in all it was a fun snow day.

The roads are better: Jim went to work and Jason went to class. Jesse has another snow day off. As far as I know right now the ladies’ meeting is on. I got most of the prep work done for it yesterday. I need to go out today and get gift bags and boxes and such. Though the road looks good, I don’t know how I am going to get out to the car due to my balance issues…I asked the guys to clear a path yesterday, but there is still iced-over slush between the house and the van. I did find we have some rock salt on hand — I think I’ll see if Jeremy will go sprinkle some out there before I try to leave…and maybe escort me to the car. 🙂 Plus when the sun gets to that side of the house, hopefully it will melt away more of it.

I’m off to get things done — hope you have a good day!

Blue Monday

Smiling Sally hosts a Blue Monday in which we can post about anything blue — pretty, ugly, serious or funny — and then link up to other Blue Monday participants.

I didn’t think I had anything for this Blue Monday, until I looked out the front door, and thought the blue skies behind the snowy trees looked so pretty.

Snow trees

Snow trees

Snow trees

Following up from last night’s post, my middle son’s university classes were canceled til 1:00 and an important rehearsal postponed. I found out he does actually have a couple more allowed absences but was wanting to save them in case he actually got sick. 🙂 But he’s not planing on going in — the highway between here and there is cluttered with accidents. And we’re postponing the ladies’ meeting til tomorrow night as well. It’s not actually due to get much warmer, but Thursday, when it’s supposed to get into the 60s, doesn’t work for one of the hostesses. And next week we’re having revival services, so if it doesn’t work out for tomorrow, we’ll have to push it back to the following week.

And I mentioned how odd it was to hear thunder and see lightning during a snowfall: I guess there is such a phenomenon as thundersnow. I’d never heard of it before, but the weather guys were all excited talking about it last night.

I thought it was kind of funny that in our ladies’ booklet for March I included a few quotes about spring, since spring “officially” begins later in the month — and then we have 5 inches of snow! One of the quotes attributed to Mark Twain seemed apropos:

“But [the weather] gets through more business in spring than in any other season. In the spring I have counted one hundred and thirty-six different kinds of weather inside of four and twenty hours.”

Here are a couple more March quotes for you:

“Springtime is the land awakening.
The March winds are the morning yawn.”

“March is a tomboy with tousled hair, a mischievous smile, mud on her shoes and a laugh in her voice.”
Hal Borland

Up and Down

Bet does these “Up and Down” posts occasionally, and I am going to borrow the format from her. 🙂

UP: It STOPPED raining. We needed the rain, but I am glad it’s over.

UP: IT’S SNOWING!

Snow pics

This was after a couple of hours, I think. As of 10:30 my husband said we have 5 inches.

DOWN: I don’t know yet what to do about our ladies’ meeting scheduled for tomorrow (Monday). I guess wait and see what the weather does in the morning.

UP: Schools are closed tomorrow and Jim was scheduled to work from home anyway.

DOWN: Jason’s university almost never closes, and he used up all his allowed absences when he went to visit his fiancee, so he might have to drive in it tomorrow. Not only is he not used to driving in it, but neither are a lot of people in the South.

DOWN: The power blinked off. I hope it doesn’t go out. One of my all time least favorite things in the whole world is to be without electricity, especially at night. I know, I know, I’m spoiled.

UP: It only blinked off that one time so far.

DOWN: I still needed to get some things for the ladies’ meeting tomorrow. I can drive ok in the snow if it is just slushy but I can’t walk in it very well due to balance issues after TM. I guess we’ll see how all of that will play out with possibly rescheduling.

DOWN: Jesse’s team lost their the two games of their basketball tournament pretty badly.

UP: He has a pretty good attitude about it and is looking forward to next year.

UP: I got everything done that I was working on Friday. I didn’t get it done til Sat. afternoon…but it’s done. But that’s why I didn’t get the ladies’ meeting errands done then.

UP: I passed the 2/3 point of Les Mis! Getting to page 1,000 felt really good.

Neither up nor down, but I have never heard it thunder and seen lightning during a snowfall before!

Suziw wants to come in.

Suzie was hoping we would let her in (we did.)

The Conversion of Adoniram Judson

This is something I wrote for our ladies’ ministry booklet. I thought you might enjoy it, too.

I have been rereading To The Golden Shore by Courtney Anderson, a biography of Adoniram Judson, America’s first missionary. He has one of the most…I hate to use the word “thrilling” salvation stories, because every saved sinner’s story is thrilling, and a conversion isn’t more or less genuine based on the drama involved. However, the way the Lord brought this young man to Himself has me on the edge of my seat even though I know the story well. Plus, I have known people in much the same situation as Adoniram, and the obvious hand of God in his life gives hope and encouragement that He is at work drawing them as well, bringing them to the influences and people through whom He can work in their lives.

Adoniram had been raised in a strict Congregationalist pastor’s home in the late 1700s. There was never any indication that he didn’t believe: everything outwardly indicated his lifestyle was in line with what he had been taught all his life. When it was time for him to go to college, his father chose one where he was sure his son wouldn’t be led away from sound doctrine.

Adoniram had a brilliant mind which evidenced itself early in life and which God later used in translation work. He did excellently at college. He fell in with some friends who were Deists, who “rejected all revealed religion…. All the Deist admitted was the existence of a personal God.” They believed the Bible as well as other religions’ texts were only the work of men and that Jesus “was not the Son of God except in the sense that all men are” (p. 33. 38). One of his best friends who had much influence on him was free-thinking Jacob Eames.

When he graduated and came home, he felt he could not just quietly go along with the family’s beliefs and practices any more. He broke the news to his parents that he had chosen a different way. His father tried to reason with him. “Very shortly he realized with dismay that every argument he advanced was being met by two better ones. Not for nothing had Adoniram been valedictorian of his class. Exposing the fallacies of his father’s syllogisms was child’s play. Point by point, with crushing finality, he demolished every thesis his father set out to prove…So far as logics and evidence went, Mr. Judson had to concede…He still knew he was right, but he could not prove it” (p. 38). His mother’s tears seemingly had little effect, either.

Adoniram had decided he wanted to go into the theater and perhaps become a playwright, so he left home and made his way to New York.

He happened to arrive during a very quiet time for the theater, He couldn’t find work, and then when he did find a theater troupe that hired him, the morals of the group appalled him.

He left to travel some more and ended up at an uncle’s home during the time a visiting young preacher was filling in for him. He and this young man of God “spent several hours in conversation. Adoniram was struck by the fact that, although his host was as pious as his father, there was a warmth, ‘a solemn but gentle earnestness,’ in his speech which kindled an answering warmth in the heart. To be a devoted minister it was not necessary, it seemed, to be austere and dictatorial like the Reverend Mr. Judson. Adoniram rode away in the morning deeply impressed. …The young minister…would [not] experience the pain of Adoniram’s inner conflict. He was at peace with himself” (p. 42).

Later in Adoniram’s travels, he came to a country inn, looking for a room for the night. The only available room, the innkeeper explained apologetically, was next to a young man who was dying. Adoniram assured the innkeeper that was all right, but through the night, he heard the sounds from the next room, and his thoughts were greatly disturbed considering what might happen after death.

The next morning as Adoniram checked out, he asked about the young man and learned that he had indeed passed away. For some reason he asked the young man’s name, and was startled to hear it was Jacob Eames.

Adoniram was stunned. Though shocked and saddened at the loss of a dear friend , especially one so young, even more disturbing were the thoughts that his beliefs could possibly be wrong. Was his friend even now experiencing “the unimaginable torments of the flames of hell — any chance of remedy, of going back, of correcting, lost, eternally lost?” “For already, this moment, Eames knew his error — too late for repentance” (p.44).

He wasn’t converted immediately, but he did realize that no one but God could have orchestrated all of the events since he left home, that they weren’t mere coincidence: the unexpected conversation with young preacher, the failure and disappointment of his plans in New York, and his ending up in a room in an inn next door to his dying friend. He felt he must learn more.

He went home where, soon afterward, two leading Congregationalist pastors came to visit his father to discuss a new theological seminary. They spent several hours talking with Adoniram. He “made an instant impression on [them]. His personality was ingratiating, yet without false humility. His mind was of the finest order. He already knew more theology than many theological students. He was open to conviction. He understood that he must undergo inner regeneration before he could look forward to faith and personal salvation. But clearly this was not to be accomplished in a few hours of argument. The very qualities that made the boy so worth saving made him hard to save. Yet the visitors felt almost at once that if he could find conviction he could become a minister such as had not been seen since the days of Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards” (pp. 47-48).

Eventually “they suggested that Adoniram enroll in the new seminary, where he would have the materials he needed to study to make up his own mind, and the counsel of some of the best theologians in the country” (p. 48). He was enrolled “as a special student — not as a candidate for the ministry” (p. 48). He began his studies: “under Dr. Pearson, he began to read the sacred literature in the original [languages]. At the same time he began to thrash out his theological doubts with Professor Woods, who turned out to be fully his match as a dialectician” (pp. 49-50).

He “felt no blinding flash of insight,” but by November he “began to entertain a hope of having received the regenerating influences of the Holy Spirit,” and December 2 “made a solemn dedication of himself to God” (p. 50).

Choking anxieties

Busy, busy day today — I won’t be able to participate in the usual Friday memes. I will get around to visit you all hopefully later today or this evening.

In the meantime, I wanted to share something the Lord used to speak to me this morning. While showering and getting ready, my mind was running through the coming day, and I kept feeling anxiety well up and kept having to beat it back with Philippians 4:6-7. Then what should I come to in today’s reading from Our Daily Walk by F. B. Meyer but this:

PRACTICING THE PRESENCE OF GOD

“…the Lord is at hand. In nothing be anxious; but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto God.”– Phi 4:5-6.

THE WORD anxiety comes from the same root as anger, and suggests the idea of choking. Worry chokes the life of faith. It does not help us to overcome our difficulties, but unfits us for dealing with them. No weapon that is formed against us shall prosper; every tongue that shall rise against us shall be condemned; our bread shall be given, and our water sure. God will perfect that which concerneth us, and His goodness and mercy shall never cease. Roll thyself and thy burden on the Lord, and leave them there. Too many take them back again!

In the darkening autumn evenings, we light our lamps earlier, or turn on the switch, and lo! there is a burst of light which had been waiting to be called upon. So let us keep a smile upon our faces. As we put off our heavy and rain-soaked clothes in the vestibule, so let us leave our anxieties with God, until we have to resume our destined path.

The Lord is at hand! Let us often repeat these words, amid the commonplaces of life, as well as when anticipating His near Advent! Say it when Euodia and Syntyche are giving you trouble! Say it when you are irritated and think that there is no reason why you should accept rebuffs and slights so meekly! Say it when you are worried and anxious! Say it, till you come again into that Presence, which is as the light of the morning when the sun riseth. Practise the Presence of God! Hold fellowship with Him! Even in business, or in the midst Of daily toil, often lift your heart for a moment into the atmosphere of His presence! There is a great difference between faith and its intellectual expression. We must rise above the intellectual into spiritual fellowship with God. It is not for us to excite a transient feeling of love towards God. This will soon evanesce. Our business is the absolute surrender of the heart to Him. Not the rapture of the mystic, but the consciousness of the spirit, which is aware of an unimpeded union with the life of the Infinite. To be ever, tranquilly, joyously, and strenuously, at one with the blessed Will of God–that is the Heavenly Paradise, and each of us, by His grace, may walk with Him in happy fellowship, as Enoch did of old, and then we can make known our requests!

Though I am a big stickler for reading things in context, in all the times I have read, quoted to myself, or heard Philippians 4:6-7 preached, it has never been coupled with verse 5.

The anxieties of my day are nothing major in the grand scheme of things: in fact, it is almost easier to trust the Lord for the major things. My mind has a tendency to get over-anxious about little things, and, as Meyer brought out, it has a choking effect. But the Lord is at hand! Therefore, on that basis, I can lay aside anxiety and trust everything to Him.

Then, I’ve been reading a little bit of Passionate Housewives Desperate For God by Jennie Chauncey and Stacy McDonald each morning, and in the section I read today was the NKJV translation of Psalm 94:19:

In the multitude of my anxieties within me, Your comforts delight my soul.

Praise God for his comfort, direction, and instruction.

Booking Through Thursday: Collectibles

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The weekly Booking Through Thursday question for today is:

  • Hardcover? Or paperback?
  • Illustrations? Or just text?
  • First editions? Or you don’t care?
  • Signed by the author? Or not?

Mostly I just collect what I like to read, in whatever format. I like the idea of first editions, but not enough to pay the extra price. Books signed by the author are nice, too, and I have a few, but I don’t really seek them out. Most of my biographies, Christian fiction, and Christian non-fiction are paperback because most are easily available that way — some might be in hardback but would be harder to find. I do like the classics I’ve collected to be hardback, and most of them are. It just seems more…classic. Plus I would like to pass them on to my children: though currently none of them are really interested in the classics, maybe some day their wives or children might like them. Illustrations? In general it just depends on the particular book. I think most of my classics are pretty much just plain text; some have drawings at the beginnings of chapters. There is one I bought, though, for the illustrations even though I already had a copy, and that’s Little Women, one of my all-time favorites. I saw this one in a bookstore in the mall (which, sadly, all seem to have gone out of business, at least here locally, and I miss them), and it reminded me of the types of books I used to read when I was young. The cover is gorgeous, and it has many colored illustrations inside.

Little Women book cover

Little Women book inside

I’d love for at least all of my children’s classics to look like this. It might be a bit daunting to a child, though, as it is a pretty thick book — about 3 “, due to the larger type as well as the illustrations. But I do have dreams of reading this with a granddaughter some day.