Saturday Photo Scavenger Hunt: Rare

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Theme: Rare | Become a Photo Hunter | View Blogroll

I really thought I was going to have to sit this one out, because I just could not think of anything rare that I owned or had a picture of. Then I thought of this picture of my husband and I on our 25th wedding anniversary a year and a half ago. It’s rare because we don’t have many pictures of the two of us together, but what makes it more rare is that — this moment never actually happened. 🙂

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We had gone to stay at the Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC for our anniversary and went to visit the Biltmore House. My husband had grabbed batteries for the camera as we were getting ready to go but discovered, as we were trying to set this picture up at the Biltmore House, that the batteries were in fact old, almost dead ones. We only had enough “juice” to take two pictures. In one I was looking away, in the other he was. So, when we got back, I asked my oldest son, proficient in all things related to the computer, if he could Photoshop the two images — and he did. Pretty cool, huh?

Heart collection

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Kelli from There’s no place like home has begun a “Show and Tell Friday.” She says, “Do you have a something special to share with us? It could be a trinket from grade school, a piece of jewelry, a new antique find, an old love letter. Use your imagination and dig through those old boxes in your closet if you have to! Feel free to share pictures and if there’s a story behind your special something, that’s even better!

If you would like to join in, all you have to do is post your “Show and Tell” on your blog, copy the post link, come over here and add it to Mr. Linky.”

I thought it was a lovely idea! I decided to show my collection of heart-shaped things — I hope it is ok to show a collection rather than just one thing. This is something I have been wanting to do for a long time. These have been collected over the years: some were gifts, some were souvenirs, some were just found treasures.

Heart collection
I have a few shelves with pegs like this for heart-shaped ornaments to hang from. The one on the right is a souvenir from Charleston, SC.

Heart collection
Various heart-shaped things or things with hearts on them collected through the years, many of these from craft shows. The hanging ornament on the left is a souvenir from Charleston, SC.

Heart collection

Heart collection

Heart collection

Heart collection

Heart collection

Heart collection

Heart collection
The little wooden houses have hearts on them. I love the house shaped potholder with the heart in it — couldn’t use it for it’s designated purpose because it was too pretty for that! That design reminds me of Psalm 101:2b: “I will walk within my house with a perfect heart.” That’s a very convicting verse, but so needed.

Heart collection
A button wreath I made.

Heart collection
A little heart-shaped vase, but it looks lovely without flowers.

Heart collection
Heart-shaped shelves from Home Interiors ages ago.

Heart collection
Little shabby chic planter from ebay.

Heart collection
Heart-shaped jewelry.

Heart collection
Heart-shaped serving platter.

Heart collection
Heart-shaped muffin pans.

Heart treat for Valentine's Day
A sample from the muffin pans. 🙂

Heart collection
Heart-shaped bowls in the Tea Rose pattern from Pfaltzgraf.

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Little pillow from clearance section at the Hallmark store.

Visit Kelli’s for more “Show and Tell” and to share your treasures.

An Interview and a Book Give-away

queen2.jpgOn Wednesday, May 2 I will be hosting an interview with Lynn Bowen Walker, author of Queen of the Castle: 52 Weeks of Encouragement for the Uninspired, Domestically Challenged or Just Plain Tired Homemaker AND I will be giving away a copy of her book to a commenter on that particular post that day. You do not have to have a blog to enter — just comment on that post. I will draw names from among all the commenters on Thursday morning.

I had one friend who is a “super-homemaker” think this book was not for her since she didn’t feel uninspired or domestically challenged. Well, I think there are plenty of tips, thoughts, great quotes, and ideas that even super-homemakers would benefit from the book. 🙂

Hope to see you Wednesday!

Thursday Thirteen: Short Quotes

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1. Not everything you face can be changed, but everything you change must first be faced.

2. Let him who would enjoy a good future waste none of his present. — Dale Carnegie

3. Just because something doesn’t do what you planned it to do doesn’t mean it’s useless. — Thomas Edison<

4. You are the only person on earth who can use your ability.

5. If there’s no wind, row.

6. The best way to forget your own problems is to help someone else with theirs.

7. The best thing to do behind a friend’s back is to pat it. — Ruth Brillhart

8. Be kind. Every person you meet is fighting a hard battle.

9. Fall seven times. Stand up eight.

10. God gives and forgives. Man gets and forgets.

11. We don’t have to attend every argument we’re invited to.

12. The pain of self-discipline is less than the pain of regret.

13. Don’t believe everything you think.

Bonus: The road to success is dotted with many tempting parking places.

Bonus #2: How far you go in life depends on your being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant of the weak and the strong — because someday in life you will be all of these.
–George Washington Carver

Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!View More Thursday Thirteen Participants

Booking Through Thursday: Seasonal reading

The question for today is:

  1. Does what you read vary by the season? For instance, Do you read different kinds of books in the summer than the winter?
  2. If so, do you break it down by genre, length of book, holiday, or…?

No, I really don’t choose by books according to the season except I might read a book whose setting is Christmas around Christmastime if I happen to see one out around then that looks interesting. Otherwise I choose my reading based on what my favorite authors have out, what I have seen recommended by others, and what I just happen upon that looks interesting.

Join the Booking Through Thursday meme here.

Wordless Wednesday: Jesse

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Forgive me for being not-so-wordless today. 🙂 This is one of my all-time favorite pictures of Jesse from about eleven years ago, and I just rediscovered it while looking for another picture a few days ago.

This may sound strange, but, even though I love the young man he is becoming, there are times I still miss this little guy.

 

See more Wordless Wednesday photos at 5 Minutes For Mom and the Wordless Wednesday Hub.

Works-For-Me Wednesday: Redeeming the time

Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time, for that is the stuff life is made of. — Benjamin Franklin

Learning not to squander time is an ongoing precess for me, but here are a few things I have found that help.

  • Use “waiting time.” Keep a book on hand, or verses on cards to memorize, or note cards to jot messages in or a craft project to work on when you are in a doctor’s waiting room or waiting to pick up a child from an activity. Or use the time for things you’ve been needing to think about (what to get someone for their birthday, how you want to redecorate a room, etc.). Or witness to others. Or just relax and enjoy a little down time.
  • Group errands together when possible, such as doing everything you need to do in a certain area of town in the same afternoon.
  • When possible, work with your “peak” times. Save tasks that need energy and creativity for those times when you feel awake, energetic, and creative. When you are not feeling as alert mentally, do those mindless but necessary tasks.
  • Don’t feel guilty about taking a nap or a rest when needed. You’ll be more efficient and less stressed with adequate rest.
  • Use those “mindless tasks” like cleaning the kitchen, dusting, or ironing to listen to good music, memorize verses, listen to an audiobook, or listen to a sermon. Many churches now record sermons and there are many places online to download them: SermonAudio.com is one (I’m not suggesting this replace church, but sometimes I benefit from listening through a message again, and sometimes I enjoy hearing from other speakers on certain topics).
  • Multi-task when you can, but don’t fret if it doesn’t work for you. There are some things I can multi-task, but certain tasks or times everything falls apart if I try it. It’s better to do one thing well than several things poorly.

Special note: One week from today, May 2, I will be hosting an interview with Lynn Bowen Walker, author of Queen of the Castle: 52 Weeks of Encouragement for the Uninspired, Domestically Challenged or Just Plain Tired Homemaker AND I will be giving away a copy of her book to a commenter on that particular post. So I hope you’ll come back and visit next week! 🙂

wfmwheader_4.jpgSee our WFMW hostess, Shannon, at Rocks In My Dryer for a round-up of great tips.

Woman to Woman: Enduring Health Problems

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I’ve just recently discovered that two bloggers, Morning Glory from Seeds From My Garden and Lei from My Many Colored Days, host something called “Woman to Woman” a couple of times a month. A topic is posted and women who want to can blog about that topic and link to the host sites.

The topic for today is “Enduring health problems – either your own, a spouse’s or a child’s.”

Up on the very top of my sidebar is a list of “Pages” — posts whose links stay there. I wrote extensively there about my experiences with transverse myelitis, or TM. In fact, one of my reasons for starting this blog was to have an outreach for others with TM.

Transverse myelitis basically either a virus or an auto-immune response to some stimulus which causes demyelination , or damage to the myelin sheath around nerves in the spine. What symptoms one has depends on where along the spine the damage occurred: the higher the attack, the worse the symptoms.

Mine started with one arm feeling a little funny, like I had slept on it wrong. Within about three hours that arm was totally numb, both legs and my lower torso were numb, I couldn’t walk on my own, and I was having bathroom-related problems. I was in the hospital for eight days and had multitudes of tests run before finally receiving a diagnosis — for something I had never heard of before.

It was a scary time. For the first couple of weeks I hardly had energy to do anything. Even taking a little sponge bath in the hospital and sitting up in a chair so the nurses could change my bed was exhausting — I’d be broken out in a sweat and crawling back into bed when they got done. We faced a number of questions: would I get better, completely or partially? We were home schooling at the time: would we be able to continue? How would I take care of my children, the youngest of whom was not quite two? The medical community really couldn’t give us an answers: my neurologist said, “You’ll probably gain everything back within two years: if not, you’ll be used to it by then.” I thought, “NO WAY, not acceptable. I can’t live with this.”

Well, with time and God’s help, you can learn to live with a lot of things. 🙂 Within a few months I went from walking with a walker, then a cane, then walking wobbily on my own. My lower left arm and lower legs are still numb. I can’t feel heat or coldness or pain in right foot. My balance is one of my worst problems, worse when I am standing still than walking. Bathroom issues are better but still a consideration. Fatigue is a major factor many TMers report — just can’t “go” like we used to. In the early days I would have to save up energy — if we had something planned I would have to rest up the day before and crash the day after. That’s better now, but I do still run out of steam earlier than others, earlier than I would like. Then there is a whole list of little odd symptoms — in fact, one post simmering on the back burner I’d like to put into words some day is about some of the weird, odd issues resulting from TM.

One of the things I hated most about all of this was the effect on my family. I think as homemakers we tend to take our everyday tasks for granted and feel that they are not really important in the grand scheme of things. But when all of a sudden you can’t do those things, it adds a tremendous burden to the rest of the family. We did have many people from church volunteer to bring meals, watch the kids, do some cleaning, and that was a great help. But you know how it is — there is almost more to do than can be kept up with as it is, then take a functioning member of the family out, and that’s a cause for stress. It did make me value my contribution to the family more, and it was one of the strongest motivators to get better. Even with all the stress, though, I saw the Lord minister to my family in special ways. Here’s one example: Jason’s Sunday School lesson that next Sunday morning was on Romans 8:28 — it had just been in the plan, the teacher had no idea what had happened. When Jeremy began to question why all of this was happening, Jason shared what he had learned in Sunday School.

One of my first responses spiritually was, of course, to cry out to the Lord for help. Next I began to ask Him if there was anything wrong, any sin that was causing this. I don’t believe every illness is a direct result of a person’s sin (see John 9:1-3), but sometimes He does use illness as a chatsisement or a means to get someone’s attention and turn them back to Himself. At the very least I certainly didn’t want anything blocking or hindering answer to prayer (Psalm 66:18, Isaiah 59:1-2). We followed James 5:14-15 and called the Pastor and a few men to come and pray with us and anoint me with oil.

Then it was just a matter of every day going through the challenges of that day, seeking the Lord, resting in Him, wrestling with fear, with unanswered prayer, limitations, reasons for suffering in this world in the first place.

I read something of Spurgeon’s once in which he wrote about the verses in Hebrews 12:

26 And His voice shook the earth then, but now He has promised, saying, “YET ONCE MORE I WILL SHAKE NOT ONLY THE EARTH, BUT ALSO THE HEAVEN.”

27 This expression, “Yet once more,” denotes the removing of those things which can be shaken, as of created things, so that those things which cannot be shaken may remain.

28 Therefore, since we receive a kingdom which cannot be shaken, let us show gratitude, by which we may offer to God an acceptable service with reverence and awe…

I would love to find that again, but he said something along the lines that sometimes God shakes up our world to let loose the temporal things which can be shaken and to focus us on that which “cannot be shaken.” When all the props are pulled out from under us and we can only lean on God, we find Him more than sufficient.

I wrote the following near the end of my page titled Onset:

As a Christian, of course I look at life through a certain “lens” or world view. I don’t remember for sure, but I don’t think I ever asked, “Why me?” If we have to ask that, we should ask, “Why anybody?” I believe that God created the world and people perfectly, but when sin entered the world, God’s creation was marred and will bear the consequences until the day He redeems it. So, the short answer to why disease and disability and pain and suffering are in the world is that it is a fallen world. We’re not in heaven yet, where “there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away” (Revelation 21: 4).

I believe that God has a purpose for everything He allows. He’s not capricious or whimsical in His dealings with us. “But though he cause grief, yet will he have compassion according to the multitude of his mercies. For he doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men.” (Lamentations 3:32-33). Whatever He does allow, He promises His grace for (II Corinthians 9:8: “And God is able to make all grace abound toward you; that ye, always having all sufficiency in all things, may abound to every good work”) and He promises that it will work out for our good (Romans 8:28: “And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.”)

I can say, with the Apostle Paul:

For this thing I besought the Lord thrice [more than thrice in my case], that it might depart from me.
And he said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness. Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.
Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ’s sake: for when I am weak, then am I strong” (II Corinthians 12:8-9).

Dinner by any other name still tastes good :-)

I made Mrs. Wilt’s Quick and Easy Pizza Rolls seen at The Sparrow’s Nest for dinner tonight, and they were a great hit. Quick, easy, and delicious — can’t beat that combination. I used provolone instead of mozzarella because that’s what I had on hand, but we’d had pepperoni and provolone together in another dish and knew we liked it, so it was all good.

My husband came in from work late, after the kids and I had eaten, and I told him I had made something I had seen on someone’s blog.

He said, “Blog food?”

Hmmm. That makes it sound not quite as appetizing. But he liked it, too, and we had a good laugh over “blog food.” I’ve found a lot of great blog food out there — keep it coming!