Showing posts with label muse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label muse. Show all posts

Thursday, April 19, 2012

just something.

   I'm back from teenpact! :DDDD <--see all those smiles? they represent a small portion of my joy right now. Not because I'm home..because I'm kinda sad I had to leave. :/ It wasn't long enough! BUT..it was amazing.

   Amazing. AMAZING. AMAZINGGGG!

   I mean, the political/philosophical part was great and informative and an enriching experience, but I'm talking about the camp. And not the food or the people either (although both were so incredible in their own way..)

   I mean the JESUS part. Our nightly chapel speaker was Bob Chambers, and with every service I felt like God was using him to speak directly to me. He spoke on God's purpose and design..

   God has one for me. There are days I've felt like waste of space, a constant mess, a mistake. But Jesus wanted me to be here. He chose me and He made me, and I wasn't an accident. There's a lot of background to why I've always felt this way, and I can't really talk about it here...BUT...
  
   ...But He knew how I felt. And He used teenpact, the last place on earth I thought I'd get closer to Him, to speak to me. To me.

   You are not a mistake. You are not a mistake. You are not a mistake.

   Over and over and over again until I was a sobbing, broken, beautiful mess..who was starting to believe it.

   You are More. [Psalm 139]

Monday, March 12, 2012

mercy

   I have made mistakes. I have been afraid.

  
Listening to Beautiful History by Plumb this morning, and all I can think is how this song is exactly what I needed after several weeks that have been moving progressively downward for me.

   I have felt alone, then You called my name.

  
Crazy how priorities can unravel and your life can shift in such a subtle way..slowly..

   Things were crashing loudly, happening all around me.

   
And then I wake up yesterday and I realize...I haven't had a legit conversation with God in days, weeks maybe. My Bible is still sitting in the corner where I left it Sunday. My emotions are starting to close off and I'm feeling number.

   I have been such a fool, when I have known the truth.

  
Where did I go wrong, even? It was so gradual! I just found something I wanted to live for more than Jesus...

  
   I've wasted so much time doing what I want to do..

   
Hugest mistake. Ever. I didn't even think I could hit an all-time emotional low, yet I did!

   I have been living solely for myself and myself only.

  
ANYTHING you put before Jesus is an idol. Even if it's a good thing, or your intentions are right and your heart is in the right place. #hardlessonstolearn

   Whenever you run away, whenever you lose your faith...it's just another stroke of a pen on a page.

   There's nothing more beautiful than the feeling that you've been forgiven. That you're life is back where it should be. That your priorities are straight. If it seems like I'm rambling, well I am. I was wrong.

   And it can't just be this thing where I'm "Okayy..now I'm right with Jesus again! Let life resume as normal!"

   No way. I have to take up my cross daily and follow Him. All it takes is one day thinking, I'm totally okay with living for myself today..and then one day just leads to another.

   And another.

   And then you're in over your head, and you're drowning in your own problems that you've created for yourself because you pushed Him away.

   But He forgives. And brings you back.

   His mercy...it's indescribable.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

run-on sentences, babysitting, and jalapeno chips


   It dawned on me, reading through old posts, that I use a lot of run-on sentences. I can be so grammatically incorrect! And this is coming from someone who used to be such a stickler for proper grammar (I mean sort of--never could figure out the whole who/whom business) and might judge you for a misplaced comma or a misspelled definitely.

   I've come a long way, and am a recovering semi-perfectionist. I remember when things had to be "just-so". When I was very quiet and stoic and serious, and quite honestly, unhappy. That was a short phase in my life, of course, and not the way I was born. I was born to make messes and entertain people until they laughed, and am sooo thrilled to be back doing what I love best again! ;)

   But, wow. I'm way off track. Run-on sentences.

   On this blog, at least, I feel I can be free to let a sentence run on now and then and not feel like there are grammar cops out hunting me with machetes and I've always wanted to hold a machete and whack through bushes sometimes I find blackberries in bushes but I usually get a bunch of thorns in my hands and did I mention that one time I had a piece of glass in my big toe for seven weeks before I could get it out and I went ice-skating on it and lodged it in farther and was like limping everywhere and wow I limp a lot, considering the amount of toes I've broken, maimed, or bruised.

   I digress. But that's how the thoughts are in my mind, tumbling around, connecting and disconnecting memories of my life, current events, and hopes for the future.

   But I try to be concise! I don't want this to be as miserable to read as it is to write. (; <--BOOM. Winky face. #ohyesIjustdid.

   Anywayssss...the other night, I was babysitting my favorite kiddos outside my own siblings and I thought of something interesting. But let me set the scene first.

   They are the children of my mother's cousin and his wife. So I can't ever figure out what to call them, second cousins or first-cousins-once-removed, and that's just by blood. Through a series of complicated legal procedures, my mother's cousin is also her adopted uncle (huh?!) thus making him my great-uncle and his kids my...I don't know. I just confused myself. So, I just call them all my cousins and it makes things a great deal simpler.

   I'm over at their house (cozily situated in the hills of Grey Forest) at least twice a month, so I usually come in without knocking and they offer me dinner. This particular night, they're just finishing up chicken flautas, and Mrs. L offers me three, and then asks if I'd like them with sour cream or ranch.

   Now, obviously, the correct answer here is sour cream. So that's what I say, smiling winningly as they nod in approval. Of course she'd pick sour cream! What sophisticated person dips their flautas in ranch dressing? Only the children...
    But as soon as they step out the door for their dinner date, I put the sour cream back in the refrigerator and whip out the ranch and practically soak my flautas in the delicious, creamy stuff. Because somehow, my taste buds are still pretty child-like.

   While the kids watch their movie, I eat slowly, swirling my flautas around and around in the ranch dip, thinking about everything and nothing. There are a hundred million run-on sentences colliding inside of my head, and when I press a hand against my temple to block them out, the only thing that still surfaces is jalapeno chips.

   Jalapeno chips?

   And then, I think of summer of 2010, when I went to that wonderful camp (that I never blogged about so don't bother looking for a post about it) that changed my life. I didn't know anyone there, because it wasn't with my church, so I don't remember it so fondly for social reasons. It evokes wonderful memories because I was on this Jesus High for months after. He changed me there. Healed me. ANYWAYS, moving back to the jalapeno chips. (See what I mean? Run-on sentences.)

   In the free time during the afternoon, some campers would gather in the cafeteria and make strange bets and dares, dying for entertainment that didn't mean roasting in the hot July sun. They had all sorts of food and drink eating contests, which I would just sit and watch, refusing to participate in because of my uncanny ability to throw up.

   But then one girl was bragging about how she could eat ten whole jalapeno chips--with the seeds still in them--without going for water. Smirking, she commented carelessly how no other girl had been able to top that so far.

   And then I was standing up and across the room before I realized what I was even doing. And the other kids, not knowing who I was, just murmured in disbelief and approval.

   The girl was from Oklahoma (I kid you not..) and had no idea who she was contending with. One. Two. Three. Four. Seven. Nine. The jalapeno chips slapped into our mouths as we winced and swallowed, pretending it was okay.

   Except I wasn't pretending. Spicy is what I do. I drink salsa from a straw. And I never, ever refuse jalapenos on my nachos. The poor girl just had no idea...haha. :)



   I heard them talking about me later before chapel. The girl who ate fourteen jalapeno chips and didn't throw up.

   My one claim to fame, folks.

   P.S. Since apparently the blog is supposed to be about my current life..SIGH..I guess I should say something else. Like about track! Three practices over, three practices done, three practices I will never have a chance to run again. I'm going to push myself hard this year. Harder then ever. I want to succeed. So badly! I'll keep you updated, I promiseeee. :)

Sunday, January 22, 2012

uninspired and blahhh

   That is how I feel today.

   And THAT is the reason it's been wayyy too long since I've blogged even though I wanted to accurately capture Christmas morning (I got my cute brown western boots..FINALLY), the winter formal (I danced with eight boys over the duration of the night, in which I danced every dance except for two, after never dancing before in my lifeee), and 2011 in a nutshell (it was by far my most interesting year, even overtaking 2008 and before that, 2003).

   And I've also been lurking in the shadows, afraid to return because of my 30 Day Challenge which, unsurprisingly, took me closer to five months and I'm STILL only on like Day 23.

   Well..time to move on. I'll finish it another day when I'm feeling more creative and blogger-savvy. For now, I'm going to just transition into this new year.

   I'm not going to be all cliche and say, "This is the year the world's gonna end!" and stuff, because quite frankly, I could care less about all the hype and there's too much riding on the next ten years of my life to really get my hopes up. :)
   I've been doing alot of notebook writing lately, something I almost completely abandoned way way WAY back in what--2002?--when we got our first computer and I fell in love with Microsoft Word but ten years later I'm rediscovering the joys of ink on fresh paper as I scribble out list after list of things I love and hate and everything in between.

   If I weren't so busy, I might devote this year to arts and crafts--the funky, unconventional kind--but my job is draining me, and now track..

   OH MY GAWSHHHH TRACK, MY LOVEEEEE <3

  ..et-hem. Where was I? Oh, yes. Track started last Wednesday and I came into the season, for once in my life, very in-shape and ready to roll. Senior year is going to be amazing, and I'm going to weep uncontrollably when I graduate and get my souvenir baton and have to give the sappy "I'm-so-grateful-for-everything" speech and move on with my life and..

   graduating. I'm graduating, did I mention that? It dawned on me this is my last semester in highschool and then I will be a footloose and fancy-free limitless girl for one perfect summer before moving on to the hip, ultramodern world of the trendy college kid. Fun stuff.

   There's going to be those cutesy little textbooks and scarves and hoodies and loads and loads of coffee..ohh geez I can hardly wait. (;

   Actually, there's the GFA School of Discipleship before college, so my world will be entirely different for a year. But at least there will be something interesting to blog about. :)

   Okay, so I'm just going to end this now..but wait..WHAT'S THIS?!..wondering if I made any new year resolutions? Well, noooo..

   Like I said, I've been feeling sooo uninspired lately, I just couldn't bring myself to think any up. But then there was this morning, when I thought about randomly giving soda up for a year. Or until the end of this year, whichever one is sooner. [;

   Because, I don't know. It's just SO bad for me. Not that I drink it that often, but it's become an obvious temptation since I've started working at a place where I can just have it free, in whatever quantities, whenever I want. I didn't splurge or anything, but I maybe had a few sips more that I felt I should have. So, sayonara, high-fructose corn syrup.

   I think this is where I'm supposed to say I'm cutting the gluten out of my life, too. Ha. Haha. HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA...no.

  I had a gluten-free cookie the other day and almost cried, it tasted like sand. Actually, worse than sand, because at least sand has a rather nostalgic saltwater flavor that reminds you of being lost at sea...the cookie just made me feel depressed and judgmentally healthy.

   Yes, gluten. I think I shall keep you..for now.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

my comfort and joy

  I saw the sign in the drive-thru of McDonald's. A frothy, warm wintertime drink. Whipped cream. A peppermint stick.

   I licked my lips unconsciously, thinking about how delicious the peppermint mocha would taste sliding down my throat on that cold, bitter day (well, cold and bitter by Texan standards...) and sighed a little.

   And then I read the words underneath the delectable, larger-than-life photo of my favorite drink in the whole world: my comfort and joy.

   I smiled, but in kind of a sad way. It just seemed so shallow...a seasonal mocha was amazing, yes, but I know there are actually people--hundreds, maybe thousands--who will pull through the drive-thru of McDonald's and never experience the One who bring true comfort and joy, not only during this Christmas season, but all year round.

   I don't have anything deeply philosophical to say, I just wanted to write something briefly about Jesus before moving on to the crazier, busier, yet less important aspects of Christmas.

   So, Merry Christmas! :) May Christ be your true Comfort and Joy.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

"the best week of my life"

   I was digging through my closet trying to find that wayward boot when I stumbled across the old tattered postcard.

   I guess old is kind of an exaggeration, since I received it no earlier than four months ago, at this past summer's church camp. Still, the card was worn from lots of grasping between tightly clenched fists, and the ink was noticeably smeared from when I accidentally spilled my Gatorade all over it, giving it a rather antique look.

   I reread it, and sighed a little. I never wrote about my church camp from this summer (not His Hill...that was an entirely different story) because it was far too difficult. Not in the sense that I couldn't put it to words, but more that the words were too painful to write down.

   I glanced across the postcard, at my v-team (velocity team, like a youth group sector) leader's curvy handwriting. She had said she appreciated my quiet strength, and I glowed a little. It's not often anyone refers to me as quiet. But what makes me sad is her closing line--I hope you're having the best week of your life, Andrea! followed by a smiley face and her squiggly signature.

   Best week of my life? I wanted it to be. I went with all these amazing plans to finally bond with the people in my youth group and to have this great Jesus High and come back and be this Changed Person. What followed was the worst week of my entire summer, maybe life.

   The first day, July 25th, was my seventeenth birthday! I was feeling kind of queasy getting on the bus, and halfway into the trip I knew something was wrong. I hadn't felt this sick in a long time, and frequent trips to the cramped bus bathroom weren't making it any better. When we arrived at Lakeview Camp and Conference Center in Waxahachie, Texas, where the campgrounds were located, I was horribly, undeniably raging with fever.

   I don't like to ask for help, and thought maybe I could just...walk it off or something. A leader saw I was kind of pale and felt my forehead, and thus began my trip to the nurse (first of many that week...) So while the rest of my youth group was having an amazing time downstairs playing basketball and volleyball in the gym, I was laying upstairs, dozing in and out, with my 101.7 fever in the weight room, thinking about the irony of being sick on the first day of camp, andddd my birthday.

   They thought about sending me home, but "home" was six hours south and the bus had already left and besides as the day passed my temperature was getting steadily lower until it had dropped down to 99.1 and they told me I could go to evening service. I was beyond relieved...even though it was my birthday and few people out of the thousands at the conference center knew or even cared, and I was still feeling pretty weak and dizzy, at least I wouldn't miss SERVICE!! <--My favorite part of camp, always.

   But during the pre-service rally, when the entire auditorium of middle and high school students were jumping up and down, fists in the air shouting along to Family Force Five, "HOLD ON, WAIT A MINUTE, PUT A LITTLE LOOOOOOOOOOVVVVVEEEE IN IT!"...I started to feel kind of claustrophobic.

   I cradled my head in my arms, this is so weird! I've never been claustrophobic before. Why can't I pick up on this energy everyone else has?! Where's MY energy? I feel tired...I can't keep my...eyes...open...

  
And then I was running to the foyer and sitting on the tile, my knees curled to my chest. I remembered what it was like to black out--I had for the first time ever just a couple of weeks ago after a summer track meet. My heart pounded wildly--not again! I stayed conscious, breathing slowly and concentrating on the patterns of the tiled floor. I was joined by a few teens who slipped into the foyer to skip out on service--probably forced to come to camp, and here I was--exuberant about camp, and I wanted to be in there more than anything else, and couldn't.

   The "rebel kids" watched me circumspectly. I rubbed my eyes and tried to stay awake. I was just so tired, but they wouldn't let me go back to the cabin...and the rebel kids were ushered back into service and they thought I was one of them--me, who never skipped a camp service in my life!--and I was back in the auditorium, feeling very fragile, very forgotten, very alone.

   The girls in my cabin stayed up late that night talking, but I fell right to sleep. By morning, my fever was completely gone, but I was physically and emotionally drained, and it was only day two of camp! Now that I wasn't contagious, I decided to find some friends, since camp would be kind of a downer wandering around alone.

   I'm the kind of person who bonds to people through shared experiences, like soccer, or amusement parks, or thunderstorms. ;) I've always felt so different from the girls in my youth group, and it isn't helping that they see each other all the time at school and me only once a week. So, I'm kind of an outsider, but I felt like I could get to know them all better at camp. Or so I thought.

   They were nice. They were polite. They tolerated me. And I guess I could have followed them around, but I don't like to just be accepted because I'm there. I want to talk too! To have something important to say...and nothing was working out. I did, however, find two girls, one of whom had recently started going to our church and the other her best friend from school.

   Girl #1: "I'm anti-social." Great, now the other girls are going to think I am, too!
   Girl #2: "I'm new." I know the feeling...
   Me: "I've been coming to this church for a year now, and I still haven't really made any friends! I don't fit in, I'm the odd one out, and I was hoping at camp something would magically work out, but it isn't!!"

   I mostly hung out with them, but they were best friends after all, and paired off by themselves. I tried to find activities to do during the day, but I felt so numbingly alone all the time.

   Alone eating my ice-cream, alone kicking a soccer ball around, alone playing ping-pong...that's hard, let me tell you! Swimming alone is NOT FUN. You can only splash around for so long before it loses all its charm. The four afternoon hours where we were supposed to entertain ourselves through the provided recreational activities were pure torture.

   Why is it so hard to find like-minded girls? Why does everyone already have their best friends at camp with them? Why can't being alone be more...FUN?!

   On top of all this, everyone from my church was having great Jesus Moments at evening service, and I felt like He couldn't hear me. Where was He? Busy helping everyone else? At that point, I was feeling "okay" spiritually. Not needy, not phenomenal, just...okay. It seemed like I was continually viewed as "this homeschool girl who doesn't have nearly as many problems as these poor public school kids".

   It was true, I didn't. But as the week wore on, I started feeling emptier. I thought maybe I should put myself out of focus and look for others to help, but everyone. had. somebody. EVERYONE.

   At the beginning of the week, I'd decided to leave anything remotely stylish at home, along with my make-up. I don't need this, I rationalized. I'm not trying to impress anyone! It's camp! Rugged...outdoors...

   So I spent the whole week feeling pretty stupid and equally ugly, while the other girls looked amazing, as usual. And everyone had a boyfriend, not that I needed one, but watching other people seem so happy was hard...and...and...I locked myself in the bathroom sometimes to give myself a good shaking. You're feeling sorry for yourself, Andrea, which is pathetic! You are above self-pity.

   Wednesday night, during pre-game rally, I felt something crawling around my ponytail. I reached up to slap it and my whole hand burned. I brought my hand back down to earth and hardly recognized it. It was already swelling at an enormous rate, but I found the stinger and pulled it out.

   I'm allergic to bees--I'd been stung five times already and had figured it out along the way--but this was no bee. It hurt much worse, the stinger was very large, and I was definitely allergic to it too, by the way my hand was inflating and turning purple.

   So I've been going to church camp nearly every summer since second grade, and have never, ever had to visit the nurse's station for anything, and here I am--senior summer--and I've already been twice in one week. Some benadryl and ice helped relieve the swelling, but for the rest of camp my left index finger was three times its normal size. And verrrryyy red.

   By Thursday, I was still pretty dizzy from the combined after-effects of fever and large insect sting, lonely, empty, and overwhelmed. Lakeview's acclaimed lake activities had horrendously long lines, and I had just spent over an hour in line to water ski, and a group of thoughtless teens had cut in front of me, and then it was closing and it was the last day and I...needed to take a walk to clear my head.

   Instead of catching a golf cart back to the cabin, I decided to take the hilly trail through the woods. Unfortunately, thanks to my *great* sense of direction, I got completely turned around, wandered in circles for twenty minutes, and ended up on the exact OPPOSITE side of the camp, near Cabin #1. (We were Cabin #9, to give you some point of reference.)

   Well, this is just great, I thought, sitting down under a tree to...yes...sulk. By the time I go all the way BACK to the OTHER SIDE OF CAMP, the snack bar will be closed. The snack bar...my one loyal friend, always there for me to make me smile. (: I shut my eyes and felt a wash of misery. And that's when...those tears came.

   I thought of the postcard I'd gotten on the first night of camp, and all my hopes, and how I had, thus far, no Jesus Moments, no team sports, no friends, no one-on-one time with a counselor, and had, instead, a fever, swollen hand, forgotten birthday, and absolutely no fun memories to speak of.

   Where was this said "best week of my life" now? It was my last summer of church camp, and I was sitting on the outskirts of camp, probably breaking a rule--not that anyone cared enough to come find me--and crying about everything and nothing.

   Wait...it gets worse! hahaha. Well, I can laugh about it now, but at the time I was utterly. miserable. Anyways, as I'm standing up to start the long trek back to Cabin #9, I notice...hey, I'm not alone in the woods anymore! There's a group of teens from another church about fifty feet away, and a guy breaks away from them and starts walking toward me and

   I am completely freaked out. So, I shove my hands in my pockets and start walking slightly faster toward my cabin, hoping he'll see this as a sign that I just don't want to talk to anyone right now! But, he follows behind, and I feel like this is getting very creepy, and I walk...just a little quicker.

   "Wait," he says, and I stop a little, because his voice isn't creepy at all. Maybe nice, even. "Can I ask you a question?"
   "Sure," I say, turning around, hoping he can't see I've been crying.
   "Do you know Jesus?" he asks, and his eyes are kind.

   My world kind of freezes, and I try to see myself from his perspective...a loner in the woods, sitting by myself against a tree, crying on the second-to-last day of camp, when everyone else is bouncing off the walls.

   "Yeah," I say softly, "yeah, I do." I start to turn away again, but hesitate. "But--thanks for asking."
   "No problem," he says, and rejoins his friends.

   My camp story doesn't exactly have a happily ever after, and I never see Witnessing Dude--the one person who bothered to go out of their way to talk to me--again, and I return home, getting an incredibly sore throat in the process. <--Which is ironic, considering I possibly talked the LEAST that week.

   So four months later, I'm holding the postcard and remembering why I didn't rush home to blog about my "amazing camp experience". Part of it was self-inflicted--I could have tried a little bit harder not to wallow in self-pity. Still, when I remember, there's a part of me that will always feel kind of let down. Kind of sad. Kind of lonely. Kind of ugly. Kind of dizzy. Kind of forgotten.

   But, surprisingly, I'm over it. It's okay! The "best week of my life" helped develop a lot of character traits in me I wouldn't see until later...waiting on God, relying solely on Him, seeking Him before friends, listening for His still, small voice outside of the booming chaos of rocking evening worship...and somehow, life went on.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

random thoughts about life


   There are few pictures in the world that could accurately describe my personality, but I think this is one of them. ;)

   Of course, no sooner did I see this and instantaneously smile...I had to pause and evaluate why.

   I'll keep it short and sweet...it has a lot to do with my perspective on life. I will assume it's the same for most good-natured, well-meaning people, but at least for me, I want to leave this world knowing it's a better place because I was here.

   I tend to be a rather spontaneous, carefree (not careless!), imaginative, goofy, unpredictable, and sometimes over-zealous soul...who genuinely means well, most of the time. ;) Either way, one of my (many) mantras is: "Don't take life too seriously, no one gets out alive anyways."

   Little things in life that could stress me out...laundry, being late, burned cookies, not winning, geometry formulas, and everything else--just needs to be taken at stride. I don't mean that the laundry doesn't matter, burned cookies aren't something to cry over (they definitely are!), and that geometry won't get me anywhere in life...just that there are moments to wear something entirely fashionably unacceptable (like overalls and off-brand sneakers...or better yet, no shoes at all!) and merrily go running through other people's sprinklers.

  John Mitchell said it best: "Our attitude toward life determines life's attitude toward us." It's so true! Life is entirely, undeniably, utterly what we make it.

   So go ahead...play pirates with your little brothers where everyone can see, have pogo-stick races, turn cartwheels, wear baggy tee-shirts, don't be afraid of a friendly game of duck-duck-goose, eat grass and gluesticks (okay, okay...don't!). :)

   I don't know if the "cool" people in their itchy skinny jeans and name brand shades are having a good time being chill and cynical, but I tried it, and believe me...it's not worth it! I was "chill and cynical" for about twelve hours and hated every second of it! 

   Just. be. yourself. Everyone else is taken. After all, you were born an original...so don't die a copy!

   Okay, I'm done! Now I'm off to save the world...one smiling person at a time. :)

   "Let us so live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry."– Mark Twain

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Why the Cross?

   I'm not one to usually blog about things I learn during my personal devotion time, but I scribbled down my musings on a passage of scripture recently and felt the need to write it down somewhere. So, bear with me! :)  
  
   Something that has been nagging at the corner of my mind for awhile is the whole way-Jesus-died issue. Every time I reread the Crucifixion story, I couldn't help but frown and wonder, Of all the ways to die...why the Cross? 
  
   In Mark 15:1-15, Pilate asks the crowd, "What shall I do, then, with the one you call the king of the Jews?" 

   Obviously, they had many options. They could behead Him. Or poison Him. Or throw Him to the lions. Or stone Him. But they said, "Crucify Him! Hang Him on a tree!"

   Why? Because being hung on a tree, suspended between heaven and earth, rejected by both God and humanity, was a cursed death. Being crucified was the ultimate condemnation because it demonstrated that the criminal was cursed by God.

   At the heart of the cross was the great reversal--the Holy One gave up His life for condemned criminals. In fact, Jesus died thrice condemned.

   Jesus was condemned by both the Jews and the Romans. He claimed to be God, which was the most significant felony for the Jews. He claimed to be King, which was the gravest transgression for the Romans. But Jesus was also condemned by another--God.


   We see this in the way He died. That's what the cross was all about--condemnation. It was a flashing neon sign for all to see that the convict was guilty, guilty, guilty and was now paying for his crime in the worst possible way.

   But here is the part worth getting ridiculously excited over--it doesn't end there!

   The story of Jesus Christ does not end at the Cross!
  
   His death had meaning. He didn't suffer in vain. He died the the ultimate criminal death so that the real criminal--me!--could be saved.

   When He died on the cross, he was punished by the religious establishment, the state, and God. It didn't have to be this way. He did not deserve the condemnation. We did not deserve the grace.

   I do not deserve the grace.

   But Jesus didn't save Himself from the condemnation, and instead saved us and set us free to live a new life.

   That is why the Cross.

   "Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit who gives life has set you free from the law of sin and death." Romans 8:1-2

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Uninvited

   I was the girl who waited by the mailbox for the invitation that would never come.

    I always knew about parties beforehand. Always. Some people were kinder than others, and tried to be discreet when they invited everyone in the room except me to their party, but others weren't as tactful. Yet somehow, I always knew when a party was about to occur, and would wait--longing, hoping--for the nonexistent invitation.

   Even as young as first grade, I can remember the girls at my homeschool co-op giggling about somebody's birthday slumber party that they were all going to. Someone might lean over and say, "So, Andrea...are you going to so-and-so's birthday party?" And I would shake my head quickly, like it didn't really matter. Or say, "What party?" even though I was fully aware there was going to be one. Then the askers would shrug or say, "That's too bad..." and I would say something along the lines of, "But it's all right. I don't care!"

   ...but, deep down in my six-year-old heart--I did.

   In between the ages of eight and ten, it seemed to hit the worst. At church on Wednesday nights, there were a myriad of invitations constantly being passed out and around--somehow falling into everyone's hands but my own. Some girls were more sensitive than others and handed out invitations quitely (it didn't matter though--the invitees soon were chirping cheerfully about the party, unware that some people weren't supposed to know about it); others might brazenly give invitations out right in front of me.



   They might not have been trying to be rude, perhaps they were just young and naive about basic protocol--still, when I had birthday parties, I mailed all my invitations and then kept mum about the entire event, never breathing a word to anyone in a public place.

   Once, I was one of three girls not invited to this certain girl's birthday party at church. We--the uninvited trio--sat together and discussed possible reasons for not having received an invitation. Finally, using the brilliance of her eight-year-old philosophies, one of the girls announced, "We must not be cool enough!" We all nodded conspiratorially and swung our legs back and forth nervously.


   To be not cool enough in third grade was a huge blow, but at least we were all together in our misery. Until the following Sunday...when the other two girls waved around their newfound invitations excitedly. It was as if a cloud had been lifted from their heads--they had been accepted--their popularity and likeability had been confirmed. And suddenly, the only one with the not cool enough status was...me.

   Then there was that wonderful season of my life, perhaps between the ages of eleven and fifteen, where you were either my good close friend, or you weren't. Parties were so much simpler then--everyone I was friends with never excluded me, because if I was their friend, I was close enough to them to always be invited.


   But the cycles of life kept changing directions, and the lines between close friends and not-friends were blurred and up popped scads and scads of new people in another group I shall, for the sake of argument, call 'casual friends'. They were the ones you might hug and say, "Hi!" to, and occasionally engage in small talk, but never would really be familiar enough to be bosom buddies.

   And that's when the invitation trouble popped up once again, I realized, as I spent the last several weeks waiting by the mailbox (okay, so I wasn't exactly camped out there, but you get what I'm saying...) for invitations to graduation parties (of all things! I've come along way since I've waited for invitation to little girl's princess themed birthday parties) that would never come.

   Suddenly, I had a feeling of nostalgia--hadn't I been a mailbox watcher ten years ago, too? Was I still not cool enough?

   Some things never change.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

10 Confessions

#1 I enjoy debating about mysterious and controversial topics such as black holes, the Bermuda Triangle, and the Loch Ness Monster…the less “the experts” know about a topic, the more it intrigues me. The unknown must be explored! :) But, for the record, I don’t believe in life on other planets or alien civilizations…but that Loch Ness Monster, now HE exists! Lol XD

#2 I like lions. This is not to say that I would love to meet one up close and personally, but that I have great admiration for them. This partially stems from my craze for The Chronicles of Narnia and Aslan, and the fact that “The Lion King” was one of my favorite childhood movies. :)  They’re so noble and gallant and kingly (I did not say ‘soft and loveable’, but I was thinking it…) :P

#3 I have an inexplicable  fascination with sign language. After reading a biography of Helen Keller around the tender age of six or seven, I immediately set out to create my own set of signs for every song I knew. Even now, during speeches, I am more likely to watch the sign language translator than the actual speaker. :D

# 4 It took me forever to learn to swim, and then I had a paranoia of diving boards until I was twelve.  My siblings would tease me to no end over the fact that I always stayed in the safe, shallow end of swimming pools for many years, but I trumped them all by being the first (and only of us, thus far) to open my eyes underwater! ;) Now, of course, I love to swim, and am crazy about diving boards. :D But I have a new phobia…swimsuits. I don’t like ‘em. Just shorts and a shirt, please and thank you. lol

#5 I live a paradoxical food life. I enjoy studying nutrition and reading about the benefits of raw, organic foods, but in the end you will catch me choosing the hotdog over the stick of celery, and the doughnut over the bagel. I know. It’s bad. ;)

#6 Running is life! Everything else is just details…

#7 I always felt so sad and sorry for the lobsters in the grocery stores by the seafood section, crawling all over each other and giving me mournful glances whilst trying to use their tied-up pinchers. :( I made plans to someday buy every lobster in H-E-B and drive them to the coast and release them into the waters so they could be free! Anyone care to join my Lobster Liberation League? jkjk :P

#8 I was blessed with good teeth! I’ve never had braces or cavities (well, okay maybe that one when I was practically a baby, but I wasn’t even brushing my own teeth then, so it wasn’t my fault!) However, I hate going to the dentist. They stuff my mouth with cotton until I gag, scrape my teeth with pointed objects, and jabber away when I can’t actually continue the conversation because their hands are in my mouth! :/

#9 I’m weird…I don’t have a cell phone. So I can’t call or text, which is annoying when I have to borrow other people’s phones. :) I would like one, but would have to pay for it myself, so I’m kind of waiting…maybe by the end of this year? So yepp—weird. Not. So yeah, if you want to communicate with me you'll have to do something incredibly old-fashioned like send an fb message, an email, or *gasp!* actually talk to me in person. :)

#10 My worst fault? That I always have wanted to know everything about everything, and I hate surprises unless I don’t know I’m even going to be surprised. But if you tell me, “I’ve got a surprise for you,” it will drive me up the wall with curiosity. I used to go through the trash and my parent’s wallets to see what they got me for Christmas—now I just check in the attic periodically after Thanksgiving (shhh! Don’t tell!)  I love to spy (read: eavesdrop) and get really, really bugged by “No trespassing” signs. Really? Putting the sign up makes me want to wander onto your property even more! :D

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Critical Thinking Press Product Reviews for Timberdoodle (Phew! That was a mouthful!)

  Since I was very young, not so especially long ago, I hopefully anticipated the day that our Timberdoodle catalogue would come in the mail. When it did, you were sure to find me in my bedroom pouring over all the pages full of their fantastic, hands-on materials for making learning entertaining—I was especially fond of all their puzzles and multi- dimensional block-like materials (particularly these fascinating things called Wedgits). So you can imagine my excitement to have been given the opportunity to write a review on my blog for Timberdoodle featuring two products from the Critical Thinking Press
   I assist my mother in teaching many of the younger kidlets, and couldn’t wait to use the two books I received (
Beginning Word Roots and Mathematical Reasoning C) on Quenton “Po” aged six and Hannah, who is nine. I love dabbling with different types of curriculum and often use Hannah, Po, and Daylon as my hapless guinea pigs. ;)
  From page one, Po absolutely adored Mathematical Reasoning C—it helps a lot that he is an analytical genius who is working far above his grade level in math and science (this was second grade mathematics). The pages were brightly colored and the illustrations engaging—something he really appreciated as most of his other schoolwork is in black and white—somewhat tedious for young eyes. He would beg every morning, “Can we do that math now?” He referred to it as “that math” because he immediately preferred it over his regular first-grade textbook.





  As opposed to the mathematics program our family normally uses, Mathematical Reasoning C uses the spiral approach to learning, that is a wide variety of areas are covered throughout the book and each topic is returned to again and again. In many ways, this is less monotonous than striving to master a certain topic before moving on by repeatedly studying it day after day—a fast learner like Po doesn’t want to mull over the same principles days on end—he would rather skip around and review a wide range of subject matter. However, there are many young learners that need constant reinforcement of a skill to successfully master it, and so for this reason, I think the program would work better as a supplemental resource versus standing alone as a student’s sole math curriculum.




  Every few lessons, we would run across a connect-the-dots exercise that involved having students work addition problems first and then use the answers to connect the dots. Po thought this was hysterical! He would purposely work ahead many pages just to get to his connect-the-dots activity! I think part of the reason that those pages were such a hit was because unlike other second-grade-level connect-the-dots activities, the pictures were not trite and easily guessable—even I was stumped until the very end. Po and I both agree that those are “our favorite parts” even thought it included a page full of addition problems. Definitely a more interesting approach to completing a full page of math problems. (=
  I honestly think this book does move beyond simple mathematical computation and hone in on their mathematical reasoning skills—Po and I both give this product two thumbs WAY up!!




The second book I am reviewing is Critical Thinking Company’s “Beginning Word Roots”. For each lesson, students first learn the meanings of prefixes, roots, and suffixes. Then they divide known and unknown words into their elements or assemble elements to form whole words, match word parts or whole words to their definitions by analyzing their meanings, and apply their new vocabulary in sentences.


   As I skimmed through the book before beginning the first lesson with my nine-year-old sister, Hannah, I thought, This book seems to be very well-structured—possibly even fun. The exercises are well set up and concise, but still required teacher participation (i.e. it wasn’t the kind of workbook where my fourth grade sister could work alone). Hannah was elated when she discovered that “Astronaut” comes from the Greek words “ástron” meaning star and “nautes” meaning sailor. She piped, “So an astronaut is really a star sailor!” Thanks to Beginning Word Roots, she is having a lot of 'Aha' moments discovering the 'mystery' of words! :)

Legal Disclosure: As a member of Timberdoodle's Blogger Review Team (which I am stoked to be a part of), I recieved a free copy of these books in exchange for a frank and unbiased review. All opinions expressed are solely my own.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Yeast Rolls

This recipe is absolutely scrumptious! Our family has already made it twice since we found the recipe in the Helotes Echo a couple of weeks ago.
What you need:
1 package yeast
¼ cup of warm water
1 cup of warm water
½ cup of sugar
1 teaspoon Salt
1 egg
1 tablespoon of Crisco
4 cups of flour
What you do:
Dissolve package of yeast in the ¼ cup warm water. Place in bowl. Dissolve sugar in the cup of warm water and add to yeast. Beat egg and add to yeast. Add Crisco, salt, and flour. Mix until dough is elastic. Place a towel over dough and place in a warm area to rise until double in size. Place dough on a floured surface and knead; pull small parts of dough and form into rolls. Place rolls in greased pan and bake 15-20 minutes until brown. As the rolls
begin to brown rub butter across the tops. Serve warm. :)

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Goals for the year

 Unlike previous years, this year I went to bed midnight January first feeling quite pleased with myself. I had reviewed some options for New Year’s resolutions, and was fairly certain that I could slide by without making any this time.
   After all, two years before my top resolution had been: “Become a better public speaker”…I had some interesting experiences, but more or less exited 2009 with the same amount of public speaking skills…somewhere near zero. Last year, however, I had decided “This is the year I WILL run. I don’t care what it takes—I will (*Gulp!*) join the homeschool track team.” So…I did! And I realized how much I had loved running all along, so much in fact, that my sprinter self even decided to do cross-country, even though it was a huge struggle.
  So, anyways, I almost decided I could let a year slide without resolutions, but changed my mind a few days ago when I realized that without any short-term goals, I wouldn’t be motivated to do anything that I sort of/ kind of want to do this year. Halfway through January, I finally penned the long list of things I wanted to accomplish this year!
Here are a few main ones:
v Break all of my personal track records…I hope
this won’t be too hard, as I have been training year-round
v Write at least one more novel this year (I’m
good at starting them, but not as good at finishing)
v Read several good books. Since this is also my mother’s resolution, there are suddenly plenty to be found in the house that we have not already read
v Find the perfect salsa recipe. I dabble in the kitchen a lot with tomatoes, cilantro, and jalapenos trying to find “the perfect recipe”. This might be the year!
v Get my driver’s license. It is terrible that Richmond is a better driver than I! No one wants to be in the van when I practice because they say I slam too sharply on the brakes. xD
v Get a job? Maybe, I’m not really sure if this is a goal or not—I already babysit and give piano lessons, so this one is up in the air. Now, if I could get an internship on a goat farm…
v Run a 5K!! Not just run one by myself, I mean, but a real race!
v Get another dog. This is on my list every year, but so far we’ve only got the two. However, during the day we pet sit the neighbor’s basset hound mix, so it is almost like having a third dog.
v Invent artificial water. (Again, this has been on my list since I was ten or eleven. I figure mixing two molecules of artificial hydrogen and one molecule of artificial oxygen will produce a miniscule but nevertheless genuine molecule of artificial water…right?)
v Have Richmond possibly teach me how to play the guitar??? If not, I will self-teach myself the harmonica. Stay tuned!!
v Grow in the Lord, and delight in Him day by day.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

100 things I love :)


   I love lists. I love lists about things I love even more. So what could be better than a list of a hundred things I love?? To broaden my horizons, I will not list a hundred animals I love, a hundred soft drinks I love, or a hundred activities I love, but will try to be extremely specific. (If it is on the list, I must really, really love it!) Also, God, my family, and my friends are sort of a given. And, these aren’t in any order. Okay…here goes…
1. cherry 7-up
2. putting together abstract mosaics
3. waffle fries
4. dancing in the rain
5. the color purple in various hues
6. camping in a tent
7. starting novels (I didn’t say anything about finishing them, unfortunately)
8. hotdogs with ketchup-mustard-relish-chili-cheese and onions (all at once)
9. star-gazing
10. comfy gauchos
11. running competitively
12. milking goats
13. brownies dipped in marinara sauce
14. ocean blue
15. cold weather
16. family theatricals
17. kicking a soccer ball around with friends
18. wild horses
19. organizing events
20. forest green
21. guzzling Pepsi
22. taking surveys
23. going barefoot
24. summer storms
25. dogs of all breeds and sizes
26. inside jokes
27. classical music
28. dried fruit
29. cooking in the kitchen
30. archery
31. missionary stories
32. freshly baked bread
33. quiet moments of introspective solitude
34. sweet and sour chicken
35. standing in front of a concession stand for ten minutes, and then inevitably walking away with a bag of skittles ;)
36. Pixar movies
37. studying other cultures
38. pizza buffets
39. kayaking and canoeing
40. shooting hoops with my brothers
41. laughing so hard tears come to my eyes
42. painting a watercolor sunset
43. blogging (when I have the time)
44. wildlife photography
45. doing preschool with Daylon
46. overalls
47. wading in cold rivers
48. sour lemonade on hot days
49. driving four-wheelers
50. homemade jam
51. getting handwritten letters
52. curling up with a good book
53. dark chocolate (the bitterer the better)
54. people I can be myself around
55. word games (read: Scrabble, Balderdash, Apples to Apples, etc.)
56. the literary masterpieces of C.S. Lewis
57. the cold side of the pillow
58. tangrams
59. finding money I forgot I had
60. family road trips in the Green Mono (15-passenger),
61. people you love so much that just hearing their voice makes you smile
62. wildflowers in grassy meadows
63. wet hair in braids
64. volunteer work
65. sleeping in on rainy days
66. games involving glow-sticks
67. roller coasters
68. subtle wit
69. spicy salsa
70. tobyMac
71. pushing elevator buttons
72. cardinals (the bird and the football team)
73. the fresh scent of school supplies
74. yard sales
75. tower bedrooms (or ones with balconies!)
76. running through other people’s sprinklers
77. book lights for reading under the covers at midnight
78. tire swings
79. The Sound of Music
80. libraries
81. blowing bubbles
82. strong, dark, bitter coffee
83. weenie roasts
84. those random spurts of creativity you get at two in the morning (doesn’t everyone??)
85. oxymorons and paradoxes
86. fudge pecan pie
87. song lyrics printed inside CDs so you can sing along without having to guess your way through the next stanza >.<
88. lime green duct tape
89. meeting someone and finding that you have a lot in common
90. winning really competitive games
91. perogies
92. having an empty house all to myself so I can sing as loud as I want to, and nobody will ever hear
93. wrapping myself in warm towels fresh from the dryer
94. listening to elderly people talk about their childhood
95. making the most of every opportunity
96. waking up and realizing I still have an hour of sleep left :)
97. replaying wonderful conversations over and over in my head
98. roller-skating at a rink
99. finding pennies on the sidewalk
100. zip-lines

Monday, January 10, 2011

New year, new blog!

This is my new, 2011 blog! :) I am very excited...I enjoyed my old blog for a while (http://www.purplethesaurus.wordpress.com/) but am fairly certain that this blog will be more useful. We'll see...
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