I’m Too Broken to Title This Post

Sweet friends, I have something I would like to share from a transparent heart. My soul has been heavy about something I’ve been seeing take place in the blogosphere that is deeply disturbing to me as a sister of faith. My heart is breaking over this issue and I felt it was time I share from the depths of my soul about it. I have written a little bit about it before, but with a different kind of practical boldness. This time I want to share from the brokenness of my heart. This isn’t so much in line with my 31 Days of Autumn, but maybe it can be. I think it’s time we look to make a change in the blogosphere. So keeping with the Autumn theme of ‘change’, I present this to you.

The scriptures are clear that we live in a new covenant, a covenant of grace. So I feel the best way to begin this post is with that grace that covers us all. Jesus measured up on our behalf, this is the simplicity of the Gospel. Sadly, there are many in the world today (as there were in his time on Earth) that seek to complicate things through vain traditions and doctrines of men. I openly confess that I wrestle with these same things and Jesus sent word that even the elect will be deceived. I don’t think any of us are fully immune to this world we live in.

Sisters, listen carefully. We have an incredible enemy in the world that wants us to feel overwhelmed, belittled, and flat out not good enough. It’s a travesty when our own sisters of the faith perpetuate that complexity and perversion of the Gospel onto one another. They verbally battle with each other, practice passive aggressive behavior, and drop whispering seeds of doubt while backbiting one another in a rat race of competition spawned by the green eyed serpent of jealousy. Just as that serpent wanted to be like the Most High God, bloggers want to be like the ‘most high bloggers’ and it’s toxic poison that sucks the life out of our community. We shouldn’t be putting anyone on a pedestal, nor should we want to be the person on a pedestal.

God is not going to hold our shortcomings against us. Jesus took it ALL to the cross, had our sin slaughtered through his body being broken and blood spilled, buried it in the grave and left it there as we resurrected with him. We were raised with him anew and all of our shortcomings (in the eyes of God) were permanently left in the dirt. Everything is forgiven and even buried in the depth of the sea, we just fail to see ourselves and one another as God sees us; this is the fleshly world we wrestle with.

It’s not easy to describe the problem without sounding condemning, but for you to understand the solution, you first need to know the problem. One of the most difficult things about this problem is pride. We’ve all been there and some bloggers might be battling that spiritual warfare as I type this. My heart is breaking over this. Our own sisters fly out to several types of conferences to learn how to better market their blogs, be better writers, learn how to deal with vendors and on the list goes. I’m NOT against this type of education. So please don’t assume I’m anti-blog-conference. I am PRO blog conferences. But as a Christian, I think we owe it to ourselves and our loved ones (including bloggy friends) to maintain balance in the Spirit.

The marketing aspect of the world is tough business. It really is a dog-eat-dog world and it is not of His Kingdom. Yes, we live in both kingdoms, His spiritual Kingdom and the world’s kingdom. We have dual citizenship, but being a dual citizen requires wisdom and grace to remain as balanced as possible, because while we know our sin was nailed to the cross and we resurrected with Christ, we’re still fallible in our skin and bones.

I have witnessed several different blog conference attendees’ live tweets over the last several years and every time I feel the same way: discouraged. I understand they are small 140 character phrases tweeted out. Several bloggers from the conference sitting in they’re seats, in a live audience, and those phrases probably sound smart. My question is, are they wise and grace filled? What are those tweets and Facebook statuses telling us?

I’d like to focus in on one concept that came across my feed: it was the straw that broke this camel’s back.

I’m not going to give you the exact quote, because I don’t want this to be about the person who sent it out or the man who spoke it, as I am certain there was more context to it than what I read. I’m certain they didn’t mean it the way I took it. At least, I hope not. I’ll just give you my response to the short status:

“Relationships are not currency in any way, shape, or form.. to honor them you’ll treat them like the unique individuals they are and not worry about how much you can get from them in return. If anyone ever treats me like I’m the “new currency” they’ll be dishonoring my worth and showing me their ignorance regarding what a relationship really is.” ~Lisa

The opposite of my response is what the original quote seemed to be indicating. People are seen as  ’the new currency’ and the speaker was teaching these bloggy sisters that they need to ‘begin measuring their return on the relationship’. Really? Is this what we’re reduced to? Currency? What they can GET out of us?

Don’t get me wrong. I am thrilled for anyone who can make a buck, especially in this economy, but not while placing our sisters on the altar as a sacrifice for the cash. It’s important to know the difference between recognizing a person’s talents and how they utilize those talents, and recognizing one another’s worth and value in Christ. We’re all equal in the Body and stand on level ground at the foot of the cross. We each have different talents and skills that can be viewed equally yet different, but just because a person can’t give you the return you want doesn’t make them less valuable as a person. For as soon as we start judging people based on what we can get from them, then bloggers will fall victim to competing to get that person’s partnership, thus causing more division in the relationships.

I read bloggers’ articles that hail the power of relationships, but I rarely read exactly how they value their relationships, nurture them, and build a community to lift up people. Most of the time it’s all about the money, the numbers, the subscription count, and how much influence they can get over their readers to get them to buy products. We fall victim to pushing  people aside to get to other people; walking all over one another to get to the top of the ladder.

It’s called, ‘selling out’.

Then again, there are some business bloggers out there who are building their blogs into DIY mini mags or recipe blogs specifically for starting their own business or perhaps be able to publish a cookbook someday. More power to them! These kinds of blogs are business blogs through and through. They need to run those blogs like a business.

However, we also have these relationship blogs that claim to be about you (us) and our relationships, either with family and friends and/or God. And there’s nothing wrong with putting up ads and making some money, if your blog is ready for that.

So please keep in mind that I’m not condemning success, what I am concerned about is being viewed as, and believed to be, a number rather than a person. Furthermore, I’m concerned about how this is affecting our community of faith. It’s already bad enough that so many men in the world view women as objects instead of as people.  On top of all this is my concern about how our words negatively affect one another.

I know each blog is someone’s unique online space and they can write whatever they want. It’s their freedom and I would never try to diminish that freedom. I just felt it might be time that I share how some of those words affect me.  Those words that many bloggers think they are free to make may not realize how it  makes their readers feel, and yes they talk about it. It’s not gossip when a sister calls or Skypes another sister when they experience grief. It’s permissible to share your hearts with each other and there will be times when names are mentioned and links are sent across cyber space. Sometimes words come across as death.

People have the freedom to blog what they want and people have the freedom to confess sadness when they want, but are we (as sisters in the faith) using wisdom and grace in this endeavor? Do we forget that the reader on the other end of the screen has read along with your blog for several years, prays for you, and considers you to be their friend before you proclaim that your online friends are not ‘real friends’? Do we really stop to think about how the audience will feel when we ‘blog what we want’?

Do we think we’re better Christians when we tell everyone else they need to get off the Internet, when bloggers say you aren’t “right with God”.   That you’re not ‘right with God’ because you’re investing time in your blog as a business? Are we truly encouraging one another in the faith when we create pointed fingers out of our words to nag someone into condemnation for not spending ‘enough’ time with their families? You don’t know how much time people spend with their families and while you may think you have spent too much time online, it doesn’t mean everyone else sits in the same boat that you do. Besides, what is it that is causing women bloggers to write like that? Have they forgotten their redemption was paid in full? Jesus already made us right with God.

I don’t have a homemaker’s recipe for the toxicity that is plaguing our community. Each person is unique, with their own struggles, all viewing the world through fallible eyes and hearts that yearn for perfection. I do know that we need wisdom, grace, humility, and forgiveness in different portions; suitable for each individual situation.

I realize there are times when we each feel like we need to disconnect from the Internet, from work, from television, and sometimes even from churches so we can go spend some time enjoying life with our families. I am pro family! I love nature. I work hard to get out of the house, away from blogging, and ditch technology as much as I can so I can live organically; but I don’t have to give up the things that I enjoy doing. I think what we need is a bit of balance, but swinging too the far left or right extreme isn’t healthy for us or our loved ones.

I’ve been one of those bloggers that runs to their blog’s log in page with a hot temper and a piece of my mind without thinking about how my words will be received. I’m pretty sure, if we’re all honest with ourselves, we will see that each one of us has done this before and maybe you’ve been one of those readers who received some words that hurt you. I have faith that none of us ever wish for others in our community to be hurt. I think it happens accidentally…most of the time. For whatever things I may have quickly posted, that felt like a knife wound to you, I’m truly sorry.

Women battle enough enemies in this world as it is. Maybe we can work together to build a community of support where each person is highly valued as the Children of God that they are. We could be working together to build one another up.  Let me explain it like this: I would rather my ‘return on the relationship’ be the bubbling up of joy from within myself knowing I lifted others up, than for the return to merely be what they can give me. This is a philosophy I have developed in my life. A philosophy of letting others shine instead of trying to find ways to use others to make myself shine. Can’t we all shine together?

Instead of pushing away people we don’t think are worth our time, lets lift them up and put them where they can shine, be valued, and be appreciated for who they are. Lets support one another by providing an environment where our sisters can thrive in the gifts they do have.

Everyone is valuable and very much worth our investment. 

lady and cat by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

Courageously participating in Life Unmasked with Joy.

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Imparting Wisdom to Your Heirs

Welcome to Day 5, of 5 Days to Becoming Goddess of Your Home. This has been an incredible journey for me and I pray it has encouraged you as well.

You can still go back and read the previous 4 days here:
Day 1 Respecting and Honoring Your Deity
Day 2 Renewing Your Mind About You
Day 3 A Goddess Perspective of Your Home
Day 4 Reigning in Equality


Today I want to share with you about imparting wisdom to the heirs to your throne. Our wee ones watch everything we do so and say, even when we think they’ve missed something. In all our years in organized Christianity, we have seen countless parents utterly heartbroken as their children grew up to make wildly different choices than how they raised them. We had been following all the same parenting advice they had been following and we determined that we would continue to seek out advice from other sources. There are some wonderfully gracious authors and speakers that encourage grace filled parenting within Christianity, but in addition to that, my husband and I have read other books outside of the Christian faith. There are children who grow up to be lovely, hard working people, who were not raised the same way we had been taught. Something was obviously working for them. We had to decide that we would not be too proud to admit when the popular Christian parenting resources weren’t the “only way” to raise good kids.

We don’t believe that Christianity has the only answers to raising successful and compassionate children. We humbled ourselves before the Lord and sought out His Spirit in selecting other materials for parenting wisdom. We began sorting through books at Barnes and Noble, as well as many books within the counseling school we have been certified through. We took a step of faith that God knew what he was doing when he led us to books from various faiths. There was something there that he wanted us to learn. So we trusted his guidance and purposed within our hearts to keep our eyes and ears wide open for His Spirit to speak to us and to filter out anything that may not be good for our family.

Recently, I have been reading, ‘Buddhism for Mothers of Schoolchildren’. How does a Christian woman get to the place where she dines upon a book written by a Buddhist mother? I regularly go to Barnes and Noble to glance through books that catch my interest. After scanning the table of contents, I began reading this book and was refreshed in many ways. I appreciated how Sarah speaks about her mothering from a spiritual perspective and she abstains from using religious dogma and gets right to eh heart of the matter… a child’s heart. But her perspective in this book is not simply about her children, but how her own journey in life is shaped by what her children go through. Her words of wisdom captured my interest and the sale was made! I want to exercise my spiritual muscles to allow for more humility in my life. My journey to reaching new levels of understanding about humility involves gleaning wisdom from other mothers of various faiths. God forbid I become so arrogant as to assume that only my circle of Christian mothers have all the answers. I believe God speaks to mothers from all over the world and their cultures and lifestyles give them insight in areas that I feel American Christian women take for granted. The perspective Sarah shares in her book offers me something unique…how she grows as a parent as her children are growing. Because parenting our children isn’t all about what results we get out of them, but rather what we glean from being a parent.

coffee by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

There have been a great number of leaders throughout history that have spoken words of wisdom that we can glean from. As parents, we need to be wise and think for ourselves. Any amount of ‘parenting advice’ you seek through books, use your own best judgment. Just because a book author suggests or even insists their techniques work best, you know your own child.

Two Christian women who I have come to trust with grace filled words of wisdom for faith and parenting are Sally Clarkson and Ann Voskamp. These two women have an incredible way in which they use their words to inspire us to be gracious and loving.

Ann Voskamp by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

The bits of advice I want to share with you today comes from 19 years as a parent of 4 children. No two children are identical people. They each have very unique personalities and are at different places in their paths of life. Therefore no method will work 100% for all my children. Every single day is a day to walk by faith, because these children learn and grow daily…therefore my discernment and wisdom needs to be flexible and custom to each child every day.

I can find one thing that works for one child, then 3 weeks later that same thing no longer works for that child.

So breathe deep and allow yourself and your children some grace. We all need some breathing room.

I’m not going to give you any sort of scientific formulas or promises of ‘how to discipline’ your children. Instead I’m going to share some tid bits that I learned from hard core experience. Please use your best judgment before following any type of parenting advice. (Sometimes I wonder if this would be a good disclaimer to make mandatory in all parenting books.)

1. Say yes as often as possible, because we have to say no so often. I don’t recall where the first place was that I heard this, but it’s true. I don’t think any of us enjoys being told no. As often as I have to say no, I try instead to give two other options that I can say yes to. For ex: If my son asks if he can have a cookie, I will smile and warmly let him know that he can certainly select from the fruit bowl on the table and offer him the opportunity to earn the cookie for dessert, after dinner.

2. Don’t expect them to be robots. I know there is a popular teaching of “obey the first time”, with swift consequences when they don’t jump the moment you tell them to. As much as I love having a compliant and helpful child, I want to be cautious of this kind of teaching. We often hear Christians leaders say that God doesn’t want us to be like robots, so why should we want our children to be? There are ways in which we can teach our children to be helpful members of our homes, establish house keeping routines, train them to do their own laundry and so much more. But it is in my opinion that we do a much better job as parents if we can win their hearts first. If we want to be treated with respect, then we should treat them with respect as well.

3. Nudge children to think and to feel. Not all children are natural born conversationalists so sometimes they need a bit of nudging. Avoid asking questions that would yield a yes or no answer. Ask them thought provoking questions that require some hearty feedback. For ex: Instead of asking, “How are your friends today?” try asking them, “What act of kindness have you been given today and who was it that blessed you?” Sometimes children, especially boys, have a more difficult time with responding with their emotions. When my son gets upset he is more likely to clam up and remain silent. So I let him know that I am going to give him some time to think about what’s on his mind and that I will return to his room in a few minutes to hear about what happened. This usually allows him plenty of time to think about what he wants to say.

4. Teach them how to sort through thoughts and feelings so they can learn which ones are damaging for their decisions and which ones are there to assist them in making wise choices. If life is to busy for us to take time to counsel our children then we may need to take some things off our plates. Our children are growing and wrestling with a lot of changes in their minds, hearts, and bodies. They need us to be patient with them so they can learn to think on their own.

5. Resist the urge to give them all the answers. We wouldn’t do their homework for them, so why would we spout off what we think is the best answer every time? We can teach them to use their brain and spirit by asking them what they think is the best decision and why? Guide them to some wise choices, ask them what they think the best outcome could be for those choices, then allow them to choose from the best answers they come up with. This many mean that sometimes you allow them to make a less intelligent choice as long as you can foresee that the consequences won’t be damaging. When consequences come, allow them to suffer those consequences, just don’t condemn them over it. If we want our children to grow in grace then we need to offer grace.

In Proverbs we find that God will give wisdom to anyone who asks for it and as much as they want. I pray that we can be just as giving to the heirs of our throne..those precious little citizens of our kingdoms. We can turn just about anything in life into a lesson of wisdom. We just need to take the time to do so.

I do hope you have enjoyed this series about becoming Goddess of your Home. Bless you in your journey at home, in marriage, and with your children.

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Boundaries

I love fences. There’s something sort of mystical about them. I’m not sure I can accurately nail down why I’m drawn to them. Any time I see a fence my heart leaps with joy. I look up fences in image searches just to enjoy looking at them. White picket fences, log fences, and even rock fences.

white picket fence by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

Fences can be used for protection to keep little ones from danger and to prevent danger from entering in. So maybe I’m supposed to be listening more attentively when I see them. Maybe Jesus is trying to tell me something.

fence by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

I feel more comfortable when I know my limits. I feel safe when my husband and I establish boundaries for our home, our spending, and our entertainment. Everyone’s boundaries are different and I think that depends upon the maturity of the family’s faith.

There was a time when I had sworn off all movies that contained magic, even Disney Fairy Tales were put in the back of the cabinet. Looking back now I can say that my decisions were base on fear rather than practical ideals for our family. My husband wasn’t quite so staunch as I was and I’m amazed he put up with me for so long.

fence by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

As we have grown in our faith and become stronger, we have made some adjustments for our family. We have taken an honest look at our DVD collection and considered the age of our children and their maturity. We took some time to discuss the difference between fairy tales and faith. We came to the point where we believe our children could handle some imaginative entertainment and not allow them to alter their present reality in life.

fence in the hedge by cassehn, on Pix-O-SphereWhat it came down to is this… we want to raise our children to know how to use discernment in the decisions they make. We want them to have wisdom in their movie, books, and even friend selections. We can’t isolate our children forever nor does that teach them how to function in this society.

So our ‘fence’ is flexible now. We know when to move the boundaries back and forth, where to bend, and where not to bend. Our children know that we reserve the right to adjust those boundaries as necessary and we have family discussions about our decisions. No matter where we put our fence, life will find it’s way to grow with it, around it, and through it. Our prayer is that our children will be able to make their own boundaries some day and that they will respect their own limits.

This post is being entered into Michelle’s Thought Provoking Thursday meme.

signature by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

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**The Homeschool Blog Awards Nominations will begin on Monday.**

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