Saturday, October 8, 2011
Clean Home Plan: routines & assignments
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
A clean home is a peaceful home
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Afternoon rescue: chocolate kefir
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Saturday, September 10, 2011
Identity Issues as Image-bearers.
Friday, August 26, 2011
Life Lessons from my 17-month-old
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Sometimes I wonder who is learning more about life right now, me or my seventeen month old son? Rafferty sees the world as his to conquer. He is learning new words, including primary colors, the names of his cousins, and foods. Yesterday's words: thunder and kombucha. Today's learning project: legos.
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
This is Today.
Dustin hits snooze three times. I finally obey, not by my own good sense, but because Cosy is hungry, demanding food.
Sipping coffee, we sit on our comfortable living room furniture, watching the cotton candy clouds spread thin over the mountains. Last night’s rain had brought in a cool morning and we are cuddled with blankets and baby girl. She coos louder today than we have yet heard, and we each read our own Bible and study.
Rafferty is up with loud “Hey!” exclamation, so sweet. His “bear hug” onesie hugging his belly tight and he sucks his paci with all his might. Oh, that paci. He plays, we read and sipped coffee, then breakfast. Soaked porridge with blueberries from “Nourishing Traditions”, starting our day with nourishment to our bodies. I think we shouldn’t pray for breakfast to bless our bodies if we know it isn’t truly nourishing. We can pray in good conscience, here.
The bananas I bought yesterday have vanished. Not in the pantry, the car, the fridge... I bought two bunches all gone.
Dustin closes himself into his office to work, I place Cosy in the crib as Rafferty and I play and pick up in his room. We read from his picture Bible for twenty minutes, he holding my arms tight and sitting in my lap. I think he is hearing the Word of God.
We do his flash cards, body part vocabulary, and he signs for “more” after the first run-through.
A beautiful day to play on the porch, watch hummingbirds, skip morning naps (Rafferty is becoming a one-nap-a-dayer), and try our first brew of kombucha. It is sweet and fizzy and dances on our tongues and makes Rafferty snort and cough. He “mmmm’s” and sips on.
I take everything off our kitchen counters so they can be professionally measured for the new counters to be put in soon. Our friend installs our new dryer (hallelujah! ) as I occupy Rafferty to stay out of everyone’s way. He still finds a way to run up to the counter man and shout “hey!” over and over. The man ignores him completely, setting a very awkward scene for me, who’s child is oblivious to the fact that not every adult is fascinated by him. Cosy screams for the awake time too drawn out and I think wow, this is hard with two under two. I’d better write this down before I forget this moment.
Lunch is leftovers and spinach cooked with butter and salt (a happy new discovery for son) followed by a welcomed nap for Gifts 1 and 2.
I take this time to gather a bunch of wildflowers to grace our table. I stick a daisy in my ear, then remove it after the second bug dares to come too close. I see a prehistoric looking lizard and think to capture it as a pet for Rafferty. I toss a bowl over it then thinking what do I do with this creepy thing, now? I let it go free. It just sits there, staring at me with dinosaur glare.
Dinner is prepped with chicken legs marinating in lemon and garlic with olive oil. I read “L’Abri”, by Edith Schaffer, hopeful to glean wisdom for building community for our own semester program here in Pagosa. Baby girl awake, nurse, spit up, coo, nurse some more. Wash diapers, fold laundry, do dishes, think didn’t I just do the dishes?, write five more thankful moments on the counting list, even the cheerful print on the hanging dishtowel, and see blessing after blessing.
Just an ordinary day. But is any day ordinary when we are alive in Chirst and living with children miracles and feeling those feelings of “this is so so good”? I am tired and have many hours left . . . but I’ll gladly welcome each one.
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Media on Motherhood
Dustin and I were excited to finally enjoy a movie together. We had decided on Disney’s Secretariat, a family film about a famous racehorse and his housewife owner. We were let down by the acting and undeveloped plot line (it paled in comparison to Seabiscuit), and I left the couch that night bothered as if a pesky fly had managed its way in my ear. The movie had had a message. The message was true to today’s common view on motherhood, womanhood, and the significance of it all.
Without spoiling the movie’s entire story for you (I wouldn’t recommend it, anyway), allow me to lay the scene:
Housewife and mother of four, Penny, had just lost her mother. Her dementia ailed father and family horse farm was left for her to manage. Penny’s childhood love for racing horses was rekindled while she managed the farm, and she decided to raise up a winning racehorse just born. The horse farm, located in Virginia, kept Penny a far distance from her husband and children, who lived in Denver. The story of horse training, cunning business skills, and the usual ups and downs that make up a movie continued, but I couldn’t help but be overwhelmed with the “hidden” message running through the script.
Penny was depicted as one to be held in the ultimate esteem. Her choice to sacrifice three years of raising her children for a horse was heroic. She would proclaim, that like a racehorse, she had to run, race, and win.
In one bothersome seen, she was home for the weekend talking with her obviously neglected husband. An eavesdropping teenager heard her mother reflect on all of the sacrifices she’d made to have a family, now just having to go forward what was in her to do. This same teenage daughter was throwing herself into the world of hippies, an impressed upon adolescent, in desperate need of a steady mother’s influence.
Just as you thought that maybe Penny’s desire to win was motivated by love for her ailing father, we were reminded of her personal desire to win and have her own way in this world.
The Penny-praise acclimated when her husband, who had “taken sides against her” throughout the film, came around and tenderly shared with her that she had shown her daughter’s what it means to be a real woman.
I gasped.
A real woman? To abandon your husband and children for three years to chase after your own desires? To be so dissatisfied with the daily duties of being a housewife, that you willingly trade the hearts of your children for momentary gain?
In the film (based on a true story) her four children remained unscathed by her neglect. Her hippie daughter followed her heart’s desires, which is pronounced right above all. The film even declares that Penny lived “happily ever after”.
The fly in my ear, the question I couldn’t ignore was, would Penny have been less of a real woman had she chosen to stay devoted to her family alone? Would her steadfastness to her commitment as a housewife been insignificant, making her life trivial and forgettable?
There is tremendous value in womanhood and motherhood. It is with sadness I see our culture, often through media, contort motherhood into a job for the week, boring, and uninspired. God has designed motherhood for the strong, adventurous, and creative! Media tells us it is a real woman who aspires to something greater, God gives us opportunities to serve wholeheartedly, hard work and life abundant, for His glory and the lasting benefit of our children.
I understand there are those who are unable to be home with their children, stuck in jobs for pay check’s sake. But choosing our own ambitions over guiding and investing? As mothers, we have opportunities to incorporate our passions into our homes and everyday lives. Must we be taken away from our families to pursue the “could-haves” and “would-have-been’s-if-it-weren’t-for-these-inconvenient-kids”?
Oh, Media! See the significance of a mother!
...They (mothers) have been maligned, goaded, blamed, and ridiculed in recent years, but most have stood their ground. Quietly and confidently they have continued to love and nourish their children and prepare them for a life of service to God and to mankind. There is no more important assignment on the face of the earth...
-Dr. James Dobson, his book dedication to mothers in “Parenting Isn’t For Cowards”
Saturday, July 2, 2011
Yelling Fever
Monday, June 27, 2011
Saint Stuff: Am I there yet?
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Birth Story, Cosette Liberty
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When I think of a worshipful time, I think of sitting on a wooden porch, gazing at golden sunbeams shooting through stretched thin clouds over mountains. Acoustic hymns are singing softly behind me, melodies gentle and inspiring. I think of a living portrait right before my eyes and ears, too beautiful to comprehend like my Lord.
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
April: A Month to Celebrate New Life
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Nothing compares to the joy of welcoming a new life. Jizmejian baby number two made her grand entrance into the world on April 17th at 8:25 pm. We named her Cosette Liberty, Cosette meaning victorious. She was born on Palm Sunday, a special day preceding Easter, reminding us of the victory Christ has over death. Victory over death and new life are the ultimate reasons to celebrate! We are overwhelmed as a family, to gaze upon the depth of beauty in both the grave conquered and our sweet baby girl's face, both owning the title victorious.
April, 2011 will always be a month remembered as the month we had our second baby, our first daughter. I love how our family history is being written before our very eyes, always being enriched by God's good gifts.
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April reads:
I spent a lot of my free time in April reading and rereading a lot of birth books. Most of them I had read while I was pregnant with Rafferty and I used this time around to be refreshed and reminded of how the whole "having a baby thing" works. I didn't read any cover to cover this time around, but they sure were helpful to have brushed up on!
I also read One Thousand Gifs by Ann Voskamp. I had heard and read quite a bit, all positive, about this book. I read it for myself the week of having Cosette. Can I give an enthusiastic Amen! to all I heard about this book! It is beautifully written and a challenge to live in active gratitude. A practice in thankfulness for the ordinary life, and a hands on approach for having your life changed by growing in a heart fueled by thankfulness and ultimately, communion with God. I am beginning my own list of one thousand gifts, hopeful to watch my own life become quick to give name to God's gifts. I loved loved loved this book.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Natural Birth & Condemning Attitudes
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
March Marks the Spot
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Wednesday, March 2, 2011
A Blessed February
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Thursday, February 10, 2011
"Do Not Be Anxious About Anything. . . including grocery shopping."
Friday, January 28, 2011
January, Jizmejian Style
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January has come and gone. And true to its nature, it brought its share of snow and sickness. But God brought us through a couple killer rounds of colds and several weeks of snowfall. We started our month in Iowa, where we spent some much needed time with my family and friends. (The trip out west taught us that traveling with a baby takes a lot of work . . .do vacations exist when you have babies?) We enjoyed a quiet month, for the most part, as the dorm in which we live was a ghost-town for Christmas break.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Baking Bread and Other Failures
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Using the "D" Word: Turning off the Tube
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I've been struggling with the "D" word for as long as I can remember. The "D" word, of course, is discipline. I can beat anyone at finding excuses for living an undisciplined life. My list of excuses includes:
- I am a free spirit. Living with routine, order, and daily ritual goes against how God made me.
- Discipline= boring.
- I like to leave room for the unknown in my daily life.
- I have time to grow into a disciplined life when I get older.
- Avoid all daytime TV. This allows me to have full, productive days. Also, Rafferty benefits from not thinking TV watching is the norm. We hope to raise our children with a love for reading and using their imagination. Although the television offers programs geared towards aiding in these things, we prefer to go the old-school route of straight up books and make-believe.
- Avoid channel- surfing. This is to help me only turn on the TV if I have a free evening and a specific show in mind.
- Remember Psalm 101:2-3a. "I will be careful to lead a blameless life- when will you come to me? I will walk in my house with blameless heart. I will set before my eyes no vile thing." What I see with my eyes affects the condition of my heart. As my heart belongs to God, it is crucial I protect it and keep it blameless. Watching many TV programs and ads can easily fall under the category of "vile thing(s)".