I forgot my camera for what was supposed to be our dinner & a small family shoot. We decided to wing it anyway with my iPhone & honestly I love the way they turned out 🥹
Also, look when Ethan & Hannah Joy were just lil almost-wed bebes
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I forgot my camera for what was supposed to be our dinner & a small family shoot. We decided to wing it anyway with my iPhone & honestly I love the way they turned out 🥹
Also, look when Ethan & Hannah Joy were just lil almost-wed bebes
It’s unlikely anyone would ever describe me as gentle.
Persuasive. Thoughtful. Up for a challenge. Consistent. Yes.
But gentle? Hasn’t really ever been on my radar.
It’s not that I’ve never acted with gentleness, and it is a character quality I admire in others.
I guess a part of me felt has always felt like it is for other women... women who were created with gentler demeanors. (I’m laughing about this right now.)
I’m recognizing in my motherhood the huge gap between who I am and who I want to be. The woman I am on the inside -- the grateful, exuberant, joyful human I feel like -- doesn’t translate well to the outside of me.
While my insides feel like an easily bruised piece of fruit, I generally have a harsh look and presence.
But I don’t want that to be true of me.
I am recognizing that I can change and truly want to. I want to be a gentle person, mostly because I want to be a gentle mother.
I want my children to look up from where they’re playing and feel adoration when they meet my eyes. From across a room I want them to feel with my glances that they are treasured, desired, seen, unconditionally loved. It sounds like a lot to expect from a silent expression, but I’ve felt that look before. I’ve had it, from my mom, a sister, my husband. Even my toddler.
The softness a gentle person adds to a room is hard to describe. I only know it because I’ve been around these rare and beautifully soft people. I want to be one of them.
I have words for 2023. I haven’t done that in years. But the words knocked on the door of my heart and let themselves in before I even had a chance to consider whether or not they could stay. (I’ve been reading a lot of children’s books and in my minds eye I’m seeing Pooh Bear, making himself at home in Rabbit’s hole, helping himself to a pot of honey.)
Gentle.
Laughter.
Those are my words (intentions, focus, prayers) in 2023.
This year I want to be a soft light in the rooms I walk in to. I want my boys and husband to receive all the benefits of my surrendering daily. Letting down my guard, letting out more light, trusting God to fill me to overflowing with the fruits of His spirit.
Look how precious this prayer is for your children 🥹
Jesus, bless their feet, may they bring good news. Bless their legs, may they carry on in times of suffering. Bless their backs, may they be strong enough to bear the burdens of others. Bless their arms to hold the lonely, and their hands to do good work. Bless their necks, may they turn their heads toward the poor. Bless their ears to discern truth, their eyes to see beauty, and their mouths to speak encouragement. Bless their minds, may they grow wise.
And finally, bless their hearts, may they grow to love you — and all that you have made — in the right order. Amen.
Oh man. 🥹
I didn’t write it. I found it a while back and loved it so much that I shared it with some friends & family, and kept it in my notes so I wouldn’t lose it.
I don’t pray it word for word over the boys, well, ever, really. (I did the first time.) But I was inspired by the format of prayer and use it often when I’m tucking the boys in.
The boys are never peaceful or quiet during nighttime reading or prayer, so instead of being annoyed at their energy I try to engage them when we do this so we love our routine and don’t dread it.
Often it’ll look like…
* putting my hands on theirs* Bless their hands, may they serve the orphans and the widows
(giggle giggle)
* holding their feet* Bless their feet, may they be brave enough to follow you wherever you call, Lord
(does a 180° under their blanket)
*kissing their heads* Bless their minds, may they think on what is true and good
(more kisses! more!)
*touching near their lips* Bless their mouths, may they always speak words of love and life and kindness
(momma, tickle me!)
*putting my hand over their heart* Bless their hearts, let them be set on the truth and have a desire for you
Inevitability they’re wriggling, giggling, asking me to grab their feet again or for another kiss. I imagine Jesus loves watching them and their routine, even though they don’t focus. They don’t get it right now, but someday they will.
Being joyful around the many chores surrounding food is one of the ways I can show love to my family most often.
The planning, shopping for, storing of, preparing, and cleaning up from meals: it’s one of the most time consuming activities in our home. Even when I do things in the “quicker” ways, nothing about the endeavor as a whole is quick.
That’s ok though, fast isn’t the ultimate goal of life. (Reminder to myself.) (And fast to where, exactly, anyway?)
I used to feel like meals were the things I had in-between my real life.
Now I understand, shared meals are a cornerstone for families rich in relationships. They aren’t a bridge in-between moments, but foundational in family life and home culture.
Meals tend to set the pulse in the home. Days with granola-bars-on-the-go inevitably feel rushed and stressy, even if the load and to-do list is light.
Alternatively, a day packed with activity doesn’t feel like a heavy burden when I’ve had an intentional, delicious and healing meal, around the table with my children to set the tone.
Ultimately, when my attitude is one of complaining, I communicate with my mood that one of the most important needs my family has is annoying or burdensome to me.
But when I choose gratitude,
Gratitude to have children and a husband to share meals with
Gratitude for the money to buy our groceries with
Gratitude for a safe home to store our food in
Gratitude for the time at home to be the person preparing meals for my family
it makes the many labors of love around food feel so worth it.
one year sober! 🎉
what I said:
I am so thankful you’re here to celebrate this milestone with me. Some of you may be confused why we’re celebrating, I’m sorry I haven’t let you in to my story before.
I want to let you in tonight, so I hope you’ll give me just a few minutes of your attention.
For several years, in the quiet of the nights, there was a calling on my heart, and I heard it, and ignored it, for a long time.
I want to tell you about that calling, and share with you the joy of obedience. This is a story about truth telling and becoming aligned in my desires and actions.
But first, I want to read you some excerpts from the poem Little Gidding, by TS Eliot. The poet our Eliot got his name from.
What we call the beginning is often the end
And to make an end is to make a beginning.
The end is where we start from.
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
Through the unknown, remembered gate
When the last of earth left to discover
Is that which was the beginning;
At the source of the longest river
The voice of the hidden waterfall
And the children in the apple-tree
Not known, because not looked for
But heard, half-heard, in the stillness
Between two waves of the sea.
Quick now, here, now, always—
A condition of complete simplicity
(Costing not less than everything)
And all shall be well and
All manner of thing shall be well
This story is an end, and a beginning for me. Today is actually exactly one year sober for me. Dec 17th 2021 I put down my glass of wine and decided I was never going to pick it back up again.
You might not ever have ever recognized me as a problem drinker, but I was definitely the boozy friend. I didn’t hide my love of wine and didn’t have or see a problem with my relationship with it.
Until I did. And once I saw it, I could not unsee it.
My drinking began with friends at 20. No biggie, and nothing wrong there. I had some fun and reckless times, thankfully not full of too much regret. somewhere along the way though, my drinking changed. It changed and became dysfunctional, and a habit.
I became a promise breaker, not to others, but myself. I found I’d set moderate goals, like two glasses of wine at dinner with friends, but four hours later, I’d had double what I planned. And this didn’t occur just once. I made rules for myself around alcohol and broke them constantly. It happened enough times that I really struggled with how little I could trust myself in this area.
Stephen Covey has said “… private victories precede public victories, making and keeping promises to ourselves precedes making and keeping promises to others.”
I desire to be a reliable and trustworthy woman and knew I needed to be accountable, reliable, and trustworthy, for myself.
I don’t want to get stuck here on details of my drinking, it’s not that I’m opposed to discussing them, but I did spend a lot of time comparing my journey to others and I used that as reasoning to stay where I was for longer than I should have.
Just know it was dysfunctional, in a way that made me uncomfortable at times, and feeling like I was in hell at others.
You wouldn’t look at my life at a year sober and see a big difference outwardly, but I am changed. In the last year I have received a deep, sound peace. A peace I never had when I was wanting one thing and living another. I feel sparkly and alive, I am aligned and at peace.
The man who gets credit for shedding light on my misalignment is Jordan Peterson.
If you aren’t familiar with him, I recommend his book 12 Rules For Life.
Rule #8 is Tell the truth, or at least don’t lie.
That one has stuck with me since the first time I heard it, driving through the mountains of Colorado by myself in 2018. In my minds eye, I can see where I was when he said it, and the thought that came to mind for me was: I’m living a lie.
March 10th, 2021 I wrote in my journal: Hardest thing you can ever do is tell the truth. But truth is the language of heaven. And by truth we shall be set free. I did a hard thing today and I’m better for it. One good decision, one right, one hard decision at a time. It’s how beautiful lives worth living are created.
It took me three years to get the truth from inside of me, to the outside of me.
Jordan writes it like that, tell the truth or at least don’t lie, because maybe you don’t know or understand really what the whole truth is, but man, you better not be living out a lie. Don’t have a divided mind, unstable in all your ways.
“If you act out a lie, you weaken your character. If you have a weak character, then adversity will mow you down when it appears, as it will inevitably. You will hide, but there will be no place left to hide.”
I’m not in the habit of lying to others, but I had a creeping and dark notion I wasn’t living in the light and in the truth.
The woman I saw myself as, and the future I pictured for myself, didn’t align with my wine habit.
In the quiet hours of the nights, the Holy Spirit’s whisper to “follow me” repeated. Over, and over, for years.
But I buried it. Ignored it.
I had a lot of thoughts like:
I’m not THAT person, Lord. I am not an alcoholic. Why me?
This is unfair. No!
And… what will people think?
And… why me??
And… how will I ring in the new year?
And… why me??
And… what about dinner parties?
And… why me??
I held on so tightly, white knuckling my right to make this decision for myself.
Because I know alcohol isn’t a sin. I know Jesus enjoyed wine.
But I knew I wasn’t living in obedience. My future was a fantasy and my vision of myself a delusion. I wanted to be the person I could be without alcohol, but with alcohol.
If you’re confused, just know I obviously was too.
I was boozing to feel hazy, romantic, full of inspiration and happiness. I drank to feel sparkly and alive, I drank because I felt like it made sounds a bit sweeter, colors a bit brighter, food tastier, conversation more interesting.
I had about 7 years of being boozy before I decided on a sober life, but in that near decade, I really let myself forget how incredible life is when you just commit to being entirely present for it.
I’m thankful to report it’s being fully present that makes life more sparkly, savory, brighter, and beautiful, not booze. I was just too distracted all the time, and too busy at war with myself to be present.
If for some reason you are still waiting to hear about a big moment, a thunderous Voice of God, or a terrible disaster, like waking up in Mexico with a stranger, you’re going to be disappointed. I don’t have DUIs or lost jobs or any big interesting stories I’m keeping secret from you.
There wasn’t THE moment for me, much like my salvation story, there were a lot of quiet moments, alone, me and God, where He called me by name and called me to walk in obedience.
That obedience was so hard. I fought Him. I’m thankful he kept coming back to battle me, I’m thankful I didn’t go numb to the calling before He won.
I have looked into my future and thought about the kind of mom I want to be. Not just the right now mom of a baby and toddlers, but the mom of little elementary school boys, and high school boys, a mom of adult children and I know: nothing is more important to me than living with integrity and doing the right thing, even when it is hard. Especially when it’s hard. So my children know they can.
I want my children to know they can do hard things. I want them know, hell, their mama sure did. She fought hard, went to war with God, with herself, and in the end, surrendered. And found that in surrender was actually the victory.
I am so proud to be the person that I am today. I used to live in shame. I used to shrink into despair at my own double mindedness. Not any more.
I am so thankful that I get to pass down this legacy of obedience. My family’s history of addiction will not be passed down to my children through me.
And I am thankful that the boys have an example of a father who can enjoy a glass of whiskey wisely and a pipe on the porch, because if that’s who they end up being, I want them to be able to enjoy that with their dad.
But if, like me, they struggle to find balance, if any of my children have trouble enjoying just one drink, I want to be their example. You can live a vibrant life, without alcohol.
And I share all of this because I want the people I love to start listening, closely, if they have a little voice.
If you have a tug at your conscience, or a calling in the wee hours of the night, whether or not that voice is talking about addiction, I want you to listen. Don’t bury it. Don’t go numb to the voice. You will find victory in surrender. That is the complex and beautiful truth I am living and had to share.
Tonight has been dubbed the Light Party because I want to start celebrating annually, deciding to live in the light. Not just my story. I want this to be the Light party so every year, people I love are given the opportunity to share, if they want to, the stories they have of living in the Light, whatever that means to them. I want to raise our kids in a community of people who don’t shrink back in shame over past decisions but rise up and proclaim the Glory of God and our shared victories and stories of obedience.
Thank you for coming tonight.
journal, 12/16/22
I work hard for a tidy home
And it’s important, and it matters
But some days, instead of “picking up as a I go”(which is genius, and, also, torture) I find need to leave the mess and follow the mess makers
To the blocks
To the table
To the couch, with a basket of books
Maybe instead of the clean house ideal,
I can be a little more well-rounded in my desire
I can enjoy...
A joyful home, joining in their play
A creative home, letting them make worlds for themselves in our little space
A prayerful home, not just a tidy one
One where we value play, togetherness, and creativity, as much as we value being picked up
It’s not one or the other, but I find I have to give myself more grace these days
Constantly reminding myself: it will get cleaned, it always does
Maybe it’s just not as a fast, and maybe that’s ok, because everything else around here is way too fast
Like Eliot... nearly three? When did that happen?
a book I’ve enjoyed recently:
The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop
a memoir, a history
It made me want to spend more time in bookstores and also redesign the library we plan on building in our home someday.
I’m in bed attached to a pump while I share these. My milk supply has dropped significantly and I’m equally startled and sad. It doesn’t feel right being a mama who wanted to nurse her babies until like 3 years can barely keep milk for 5 months. I’m not letting it win this time though. Even if it means endless pumping and all the supplements and food logs and… all of it.
Like cats, we can always be found in the afternoon sunshine. 😉
February 25th, 2021. Matthias invited me to join him for lunch today, but I had to turn down the sweet offer because leaving our home is just too much to do alone with the two babies— at least today. One day at a time, one day at a time.
I was still mostly on bedrest at two weeks postpartum with Eliot and that’s just not possible this time around, but if I can stay home, that’s at least something. I remember at 19 (and in other years, but for some reason 19 really stands out) I couldn’t stay home, I was always itching to be out & about. Somewhere in the past few years that all changed. I think when I married Matthias— now home is my favorite place in the world, especially when I have all my people here🥰
February 23rd, 2021. Becoming a mother of two has turned me into a napper.
I grew up in a household that had quiet times in the afternoon, but I usually skipped napping and listened to adventures in odyssey instead. Offer me a quiet hour these days though— I’ll happily sleep.
Emerson is two weeks today and we’re still finding our rhythm, but yesterday and today Eliot and Emerson both took late afternoon naps and today I got one with them... I think we need to make that our thing.
I woke up wanting to make blueberry muffins with Eliot so he hopped in the ergo with me while Matthias cuddled Emerson on the porch. It’s a keep-the-doors-open kind of week and we enjoyed our evening outside drinking coffee & reading the hobbit out loud after Eliot & I got the muffins in the oven.
Mom is coming over this week to help out a few hours a day. Matthias is back to work... like for real. He worked last week, but only a handful of hours a day and from home. So this is different.
Adjusting to two is different than adjusting to one. Is that so obvious that I sound silly for saying it out loud?
Having Eliot was an emotional adjustment (in very happy ways, thankfully). It took time to settle into becoming a mother...
There were definitely physical changes... I mean, we added a whole new person into our life and routines, so, of course. But it felt more spiritually + emotionally shifting than physical adding our firstborn.
Adding Emerson in... well, I’m already a mama. I knew the joy that was coming. It’s been much more of a physical adjustment this time. Not because Emerson is a different newborn, but because we have a 13 month old in the mix. I’m chasing a toddler all day and also up all night. (Ok, not all night... but still.) I’m tired, I’m happy.
some moments that make me happy:
Mom Frost has been with us since very early Tuesday morning right after Emerson arrived. She spent the first week with us after Eliot’s birth and now Emerson’s... and I don’t know how we’d manage without her. She keeps the household running while we spend lots of time in bed just snuggling, bonding, healing.
“I’ll start Winnie The Pooh while you finish your soup”
“No, that’s my job!” he insisted with fun in his voice.
Matthias wouldn’t really call himself a reader, but we read regularly together as a couple and as a family. Tonight I was ready to begin on our bedtime routine with Eliot in the middle of our much-later-than-usual dinner time, but Matthias didn’t want me in my rush to take away his dad duty: reading a chapter from the full collection of Winnie The Pooh. It’s a part of our nightly routine right now and he is the one that reads it out loud.
Do you drink wine? You know that feeling when it warms your throat, chest, and belly? I felt like that tonight when he insisted on me not taking over Winnie The Pooh duty. Warm, fuzzy all the way through. He really loves being the dad who gets to read to our baby.
Eliot is 12 months... He doesn’t laugh at all the funny things Pooh and Piglet have to say or understand the predicament of getting your head stuck in a jar of hunny, but Matthias and I laugh out loud often at the ridiculousness and Eliot plays on the floor nearby while we do. I wonder if he even really knows we’re reading this *for* him. He often babbles and talks or sings loudly while we read. It seems like he’s trying to match his dad’s volume. But we’re happy with our noisy, distractible firstborn.
I am thankful we have a safe place to call home and have a nightly routine in. I am thankful we have time freedom for reading books together. I am thankful for a partner who is learning alongside me how to parent with presentness and intention. Thankful, thankful, thankful. To God be the glory.
**Eliot can sit still looking at a book for aboutttt 90 seconds. Although that is such a sweet picture, it’s not really what our nighttime reading routine regularly looks like.**
I’ve spent a lot of late nights on this porch chasing my dreams. I am full of them, alongside hope all packed into my heart.
I am blessed with time freedom because of Young Living, so my days are busy with the things I choose.
I love our days. I love that I get to be in charge of them. I love that I get to prioritize and schedule and consciously decide to be present for Eliot.
But comfortable days aren’t the extent of the dreams I have for myself and my growing family. Comfortable days don’t make me feel proud, because they don’t ask much of me.
Comfortable days don’t leave me feeling the good kind of tired— the kind of tired where you’re so happy to crawl into bed and think... “today, today I did my best. today I lived fully.”
So at night, I work. Eliot goes down, Matthias tucks in, and I am here, on this porch, working.
Work requires different parts of me to show up, stay alive.
Work requires different parts of my mind and spirit. It gives me balance because it draws on parts of me that aren’t awakened by motherhood.
I’m lucky to be able to choose presentness in my motherhood. But I need more than just motherhood - because I am more than just a mother.
I’m grateful I have these nights alone, chasing dreams. I get to set myself on fire and feel passion and exhaustion and it makes me look forward to waking up & doing absolutely nothing but snuggle my baby until 10am.
I think I am living in the best of both worlds.
It’s not even 11pm and I *want* to get up and work on things because I’m dreaming big and I’m excited right now. But I also feel like I need to stay in bed and… well, just be horizontal. I am so tired these days. I am practicing stopping to think and say out loud grateful thoughts when I’m feeling especially unraveled.. I am so blessed to be in this season right now. I don’t want to rush it. But I also want to breathe. And lay on my back. And be able to bend in half. Stuff like that.
Eliot was up at 7:30 because he went down at 6:30 last night. He must be growing! (That is officially the most mom thing I have ever said.) I napped in the afternoon with him but I woke up feeling worse than before. I honestly was so uncomfortable and wanted to be alone and cry. The end of pregnancy makes me weepy. Matthias took Eliot out for an hour and a half and let me be home alone after he was done with work. I watched some videos about blogs, took these photos, opened the Jenna Kutcher Pinterest lab course again, and started on our flatbread pizza dinner with ingredients we had on hand. I’ve been watching so many cooking shows recently. (December off has allowed for this luxury…) My favorites are “Oh Cook” with James May, Chopped (Matthias introduced me to it), and Keep Calm and Cook On. The last is all about making versatile recipes with what you have in your house. It’s exactly what I needed! I can be so wasteful and I want to learn how not to be. I have already learned so much from it.
Made baked beans tonight and they taste like traveling. Beans with breakfast every morning. That was my thing. I loved it! And Texas baked beans are sickingly sweet and just don’t taste the same. I’m so glad I gave it a try! It was super easy and they are so delicious. Ate it with buttered toast as a way too late snack.
Eliot and I went to H‑E‑B around 9am and did some shopping. I wanted to make some Indian dishes and needed fresh ingredients. While we were there I got extra water and cans and cream cheese for coyote tacos. I’ve been thinking often this year about needing a stock. We should probably be more aware of what we have/how much... I decided today I’m just going to pick up two gallon jugs of water per shopping trip until we have the recommended amount of storage on hand. And a couple cans of staple food each time I go wouldn’t be a bad idea either... especially because we do go through them anyway, so it’s not like I’d be wasteful in purchasing a bit extra. I should do some research on how much a family our size should keep and for how long... just in case.
We saw Big Mom and Denét today. We left Eliot’s backpack in NW and needed it. Denét was headed to Big Mom’s anyway, so we made plans and went over for a walk and to play for a bit and to get back the important bag. I’m glad we went. After dropping off lunch for Matthias, we came home for his second nap, my first. By the time we were up again it was 4pm and Matthias was almost on his way home! I picked up as much as I could — our house was a disaster from the explosion of unpacking after Christmas week in Austin. When Matthias made it back and started on dishes for me, it was 5:30. I made us bus station kefta for dinner. Y U M!!! Surprising how happy we are with a meal that is mostly tomatoes since neither of us typically like tomatoes.
This is my last week off... ahhh. January is days away which means: back to real life. To working. I need to start getting up early if I’m going to be productive. Eliot doesn’t let me accomplish much when he’s up. He’s so busy!
it’s not quite magic in that childhood-wonder way, but christmas with family is its own magic.
12/23: Woke up at the Frost’s and went straight to wrapping presents, writing notes, and getting ready for our week away in Austin with my family! When we were packing for the trip last night, I forgot Matthias’ present, so I had to run back to pick it up and print a photo from the Christmas tree farm of Eliot for Big Mom’s stocking gift. We finally left for Austin around 3pm– much later than the 12pm time we assumed, but it worked out. The drive was beautiful, Eliot was easy and sweet as could be, and Matthias and I enjoyed some really wonderful conversation that touched me in deep ways. Talked about childhood, personalities, moments that changed us, highlights in our marriage, and my tendency to carry shame— which brought me to tears, as it always does.
It was good to feel in sync and connected for those hours after a long last week of him working hard and me sick. We’ve been disconnected and have spent too much time with mind numbing television in the evenings instead of doing the work to connect. And it is work— but it’s good. It’s important. It’s necessary. It’s what builds a beautiful life of intimacy and intertwinedness.