Monday, October 10, 2011

Proverbs 31 Woman (in Training)

I lose God every day. Don't get me wrong; I know He is always there. I have no doubt about His presence, and I know that He is waiting for me to acknowledge Him, just waiting on me to turn to Him so that He can fill me up and love me immensely. Despite knowing this, I get entangled in my thoughts, my tasks, my schedule, my life, and I forget to include Him. I don't talk to Him, I rarely think about Him, I live as if there were no God at all, no amazing Creator who was wanting to be a part of my day. He made me, He sacrificed Himself for me, He wants a relationship with me: how can I live every day as if that means nothing to me?

I don't want God to be an afterthought. I want praise and thanksgiving to flow from my lips every morning, I want to repent every time I look in the mirror, I want to spend the last minutes of every day asking for my needs and the needs of others to be fulfilled, and I want to spend every second in between listening to what He wants to share with me. I want to be the Proverbs 31 woman who is to be praised for her fear of the Lord, not the woman who can barely remember what Proverbs 31 says. I want to be able to live my life in such a way where I fulfill my purpose and don't lose God in the process.

Tomorrow is a new day and with it comes a challenge: as much as I am craving balance tonight, will my passion manifest itself in the form of real, actionable change come morning? I want to be a Proverbs 31 woman, and so that is where I must start. More to come as my journey progresses.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

I Want to be a Millionaire (so stinkin' bad!)

Today, like every day, I made a to-do list. On one hand, it is an absolute essential for me. Not only does it help my "mommy brain" remember the many things I need to plow through between when Emelyn wakes up and when Nathaniel comes home, it also gives me a physical record of my accomplishments. Why I need a physical record is a mystery to me. It isn't typical for me to need to show proof of my productivity to anyone other than myself, and when I look at the mostly-completed to-do list that I typically have at the end of the day, I never feel as though the grand total of my accomplishments is anything to cheer about. Why, after a full day of errands, cooking, cleaning, and caring for a baby do I still feel like I have done nothing?

Nathaniel explained something to me that he learned on one of his many work retreats (I believe it came from the Laugh Your Way to a Better Marriage curriculum, but I could be wrong) and I think it provides the answer to my query: men and women have points systems, and they operate differently. When we accomplish a task during the course of the day, we assign a certain number of imaginary points to that task that we are awarded for our progress. Men tend to award themselves exorbitant numbers of points for even the most menial, necessary tasks, such as getting dressed. Nathaniel told me that he gives himself upwards of 5,000 awesomeness points just for getting out of bed in the morning! Women, on the other hand, reward themselves very few points for the tasks that they accomplish, sometimes choosing to simply not assign points all together for tasks that are just part of regular routine. This generally results in women having a very low total number of points at the end of each day, which I would assume explains why women such as myself feel unproductive.

While this theory explains my thought process and why I feel unproductive, it doesn't explain why I would devalue myself and my accomplishments in the first place. Why don't I give myself any credit?

My boss, Tom, recently sent me a link to a blog that, in conjunction with Nathaniel's explanation of the points system, has lead me to determine that I need to take back control of the way I feel about my accomplishments and start giving credit where credit is due. The blog post is entitled "Waking Up Full of Awesome", and while the specific content of the post is not directly related to my predicament, I believe that the main idea can be applied to my situation. Rather than starting each day feeling pointless (literally), I should wake up with a feeling of pride in my abilities, my previous accomplishments, and my overall self. I should start the day with a million points, and that way every accomplishment is just icing on the cake. Even if I do nothing all day but cuddle my daughter and make a delicious dinner for my family, I should still have points to reflect my awesomeness.

I realize that changing one's mindset is a very complicated task, especially when it comes to moving from a place of near degradation to self-appreciation, but I am determined!

Step One: Get rid of that stinkin' to-do list, and start taking the day as it comes, enjoying every little happy moment because I'm AWESOME.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Why in the WORLD am I starting a blog?!

When will I EVER have any time to sit down and put thoughts in to words, experiences in to stories, visions in to descriptions? I am a full-time wife, full-time mother, full-time homemaker, part-time employee extraordinaire at a museum store, and soon-to-be full-time student. I barely have time to file the sharp edge of my fingernail that continually catches on every little thread or hair, let alone time to do important things like, I don't know, exercise. Yet, instead of attempting to find time to force myself in to going for a jog, I have decided to plop myself in front of my computer and ponder life through a series of random babblings in a process most people call blogging. Whether this is for me or for everyone else I have yet to discover, but stay tuned because I am sure we will find out soon enough.