Showing posts with label Community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Community. Show all posts

learning stuff & other thoughts...

This past Friday & Saturday evenings, I participated in the Hillside Learning Community DVD 'conference' on Healthy Living by Joyce Meyer. It was the brainchild of theBean - get together with friends, eat, & watch/listen/learn. I'm glad I went - here are a few of my 'take-aways:'

  • Sometimes, I can do something that I know is wrong (or at least not helpful) & I expect that God is going to step in & bail me out of the consequences of my choices. And I get mad because of it.

  • Its easier to blame God, the devil, & other people for bad stuff happening in my life than it is to look at my own choices, action/inaction, thoughts & behaviors as potential causes for what I'm going through.

  • When theBean claps her hands, it really hurts my right ear... its REALLY sensitive. She was an active clapper & participant in the conference, so on Day 2 she moved to another table so she could clap all she wanted to. And she did.

  • Sin is a terrible teacher.

  • I don't think she talked about it, but it was reinforced that pride is a killer - & that God opposes the proud, but gives grace to the humble.

  • On that note, humility, & humbling oneself is preferable to being humbled.

  • The thing that rises up in me to try to talk me out of an area of obedience to God is my flesh. No matter how it gets dressed up, explained away, or given a nice label. It's just flesh. And I'm supposed to crucify it.

  • I love learning. Makes me miss school. Just a little.





  • Ellie says "Bommo" when I point to my Joshua Tree picture in my office. Makes an uncle so proud. She really liked "Mysterious Ways" today too.




    Two words: Gordon Biersch




    I'm on a tortilla craving kick... Hmmm. Yesterday it was chili n cheese in the tortilla. Who knows what tomorrow will bring?




    Ever heard the saying, "You find what you look for."? Makes me wonder about the uncanny ability of some to find issues, problems, difficulties, etc. And the willingness (need?) to articulate the negativity anytime, anywhere.

    Makes me wonder just what I'm looking for... I'm thinking that I'm going to choose to look for where I see good... & God at work in & around me.

    Its a start.

    Boundaries In Marriage, #1

    A few years ago, (ok, now that I think about it, its more than a few. About...7? 8?) I came across a book that eventually ended up transforming my life & my marriage - it was Boundaries by Cloud & Townsend (which sounds like a great name for a '60s folk group. But I digress...) Its one of the reasons that me & the Bean are probably going to lead a small group this Fall 2008 semester called "Boundaries In Marriage." (I ripped off the title from another book. But that's for later.)

    The high point for me was that it articulated very clearly & concisely something key for enjoying life in its fullness: we need to be able to say "Yes" & "No" - in a way that our outward declarations jive with our inner values, thoughts, feelings, emotions, & to me the most important - our relationships with the people closest to us. That a lot of us struggle with 'people pleasing' & end up functioning in an incongruent way - we are saying Yes to stuff we really want to say No to. And vice-versa. Because we want the approval of the one we're speaking to. Or something like that. We're afraid of being rejected. Minimized. Thought to be inferior in some way. Mocked. Derided. You get the idea.

    I'm going to blog about this in the context of marriage, but please don't check out on me if you're single - the concept applies across the board for close friendships/relationships. One of the biggest issues that this exposed was the very common choice in marriage relationships for one person in the relationship to choose to say "yes" to a person not in the immediate relationship to avoid conflict (or any of the above negatives,) knowing full well that it means that the person they're married to will have to bear the brunt of their decision. In effect, they will 'choose' to fight it out with their spouse etc. rather that with the person of lesser status (meaning that the spouse takes #1 spot in life. Or should.) They 'prefer' the person that is not the spouse over the spouse. Which stinketh, because the whole 'leave & cleave' part of the marriage vows have to do with the 'preference' of spouse relationship over all others - not rejecting other relationships, but recognizing that if we're marrying, this relationship takes preeminence over the rest.

    Hope you're still with me - I'd never heard of Boundaries before, but I understood the concept - believing that we all need/have a set of life-guiding values that help us know what to say "Yes" & "No" to. And why. Maybe not everyone has these. The values help us to not be tossed to & fro by someone else's 'vision' for our life - no matter how influential or significant the role they play (or want to play) in our life. Or have played in the past. Seems it usually pops up with extended family (parents, siblings, & others of that ilk) & close friends, but it sometimes happens elsewhere...

    This isn't a unique issue that only a few 'weak' people struggle with; from my experience in pre/post marriage counseling, the area of 'preference of spouse' & knowing, establishing, & maintaining healthy boundaries is a major, major issue for a lot of couples. And if it isn't for one spouse, it often is for the other. Which means its a problem for both. (Kind of along the lines of "If mama ain't happy, ain't nobody happy. Or something like that.)



    Why did it change my life/marriage? I'll get there. It's dinner time - & I'll pick up my ramblings when I get a chance. Ciao!

    goodbyes are hard...

    Aaron & Michelle are moving home for the summer, but they'll be back in late August just in time for Aaron to subject himself to 21 units at the U of N, & for Miss Michelle to jump in for the opening of the Fall semester of Little Lites. The fact that they're coming back in a relatively short time (as short as the summers are in Reno,) should temper the loss... but it doesn't, really. Because I know that when Aaron graduates, they're moving. And goodbyes are hard...

    So how does one deal with goodbyes? Here's a couple of my favorites...
  • Avoidance - Some avoid relationships all-together, & become virtual hermits... Bizarro-scoeyd could do that. Has done that. Didn't work out either, thanks for asking.
  • Denial - pretending its not happening. Creating an artificial reality helps, where people only exist when they're in your presence. It helps if one has lots of practice at living in their own little world, but it's pretty tough to sustain this one. Other people keep it complicated.
  • Embracing - kinda like the moment at camp, when the Friends song gets broken out at the end. People claim to hate it, but I think it's really their favorite part of camp - being able to get all teary & clingy - maybe it's an artificial grieving, maybe it's real, but I think it serves a purpose, for at least a segment of the population. Cause people are going to move away. Or die. Or get married. Or I will. (not the married part. Done that.)


    I know that there's many other means of dealing with goodbyes, but Friends is almost over. I never intended to post this morning, but rather to just roll through my blogs & catch up with friends. So as I read back over it, I feel self-conscious, because there are many more eloquent ways to state what I've stated, & if I crafted for a while, I might even find one. But instead, I'm just pondering. And feeling a bit melancholy.

    And setting myself to be a person who lives well. Embraces life. And relationships. They make life so much richer & deeper, which is probably why it hurts so much when a relationship changes, even if its 'just' geographic. I'm thankful for you.


    I miss you Dabey... :)
  • And a note about 'community...'

    It's a common & current topic at our staff table...

    Next to Jesus, God and relevant, "community" is the most popular Christian word. The challenge though is it's a lot easier to say than it is to build. If creating one was as easy as renting a blow up jumping toy for kids and offering a financial planning class for parents, then 50 churches wouldn't close permanently every week. But it's a challenge and here's why:

    People can tell when you're trying to force a community to develop. Our radar to marketing is so sharp these days...


    MORE ON Community

    I love the "holding sand" analogy...

    Enjoy.