What’s in the drawer? by Christine Field

I came to the Lord through reading a Gideon Bible I had stolen from a hotel in San Francisco.  I was on my honeymoon with my first husband, having  gotten married the first time when I was 19.  Of course the marriage was a disaster, born out of insecurity and confusion after losing both of my parents in my late teens.  I’ve forgiven myself for the lack of judgment and I know the Lord has as well, but back to my Gideon story.

I clearly remember putting the Bible in my suitcase and thinking, “I have to take a look at this thing someday.”  Raised as a Catholic, the priest indoctrinated us in the belief that we were lower beings unable to unlock the mysteries of the Word.  It was old-school Catholocism and it worked for a while.

The Bible sat on my shelf until I got seriously ill a few years later.  Some goofy virus left my beautiful young face with a facial paralysis and comprimised my immune system.  Many years of allergy shots and enzymes built me back up and still sustain me well, but at the time I was a sick puppy.  It was no joy for my shallow hubby to look after me and life began to fall apart on all fronts.

I took the Bible off the shelf.  I read that God loved me and that He was a God of peace and comfort.  I read that He will judge all my days and actions, but that He is also a God of great mercy and grace.  As my health transformed, my mind transformed. My stolen treasure became heavily underlined and annotated.  My life became His.

And so began the journey I continue to walk today – strengthened in my weaknesses, blessed beyond belief, constantly aware of the wings undergirding me.  Eternally grateful for the foresight that endowed the Gideon group and the caring hands that placed that particular book in a drawer in a San Francisco hotel for a lost, sad soul to discover.

Recently, I was in a hotel and saw two books in the drawer.  My heart yearns to see that others choose wisely.  I offer a silent prayer for all who are still seeking.  When you earnestly look for Him, He will be found.   May you choose the path to peace and salvation.

Big Picture/Little Picture by Christine Field

What’s your life plan? What are the big dreams you dream for your life?

How about the kids? Does their future hold grand greatness?

This type of thinking is everywhere in our culture – both in and out of the church. We are counseled to go for the gold and reach for our dreams.

These are good things, but are these the best things?

I think sometimes we put ourselves and our children under undue stress and cloud their thinking. Life becomes a burden to figure it all out with some master plan. When the kids don’t have it all the answers by the time they are 21, how does that make us feel? I would submit to you that rather than judging them we should feel compassion for them because they are stumbling along the same path of life as we are.

While I do believe that God has a plan and a purpose for each of us, He doesn’t always reveal it to us all at once.

Yet, we hear stories of people who got great revelations and sudden answers to prayer that set their plans and their paths straight. It’s human nature to want that – to get the definitive answer to all of life’s questions.

In life has that been your experience? When a situation or relationship puzzles or troubles you, it usually takes time, effort and prayer. There are no instant solutions.

So we need to dream big dreams and have a big picture for our lives and the lives of our children, but in reality we live our lives in the little picture.

What do we really have control over? Only the next step, only the thing in front of you. We have to live a little picture life while maintaining a big picture perspective.

Every minute is a choice. Often a small choice, a small picture. Make these well and we may reach our big picture dreams.

Be faithful first in the small things.

Inside-Out Quirky by Christine Field

At a women’s prayer morning at church, all eyes were lowered, deep in contemplation.  I snuck glimpses at the other women to see how they were praying.

I caught a glance of several women with beautiful hair, fashionable hair and hip boots.  Then I looked at the arm of my shirt and noted that it was inside-out.  Not an unusual occurrence for me, like the time I left my skirt tucked into my panty hose  leaving the ladies room before speaking to an audience.  My husband says I need a minder.

I feel inside-out most of the time – a little odd and a lot of quirky.  As I get older, I care about it less and less.

I’m glad.  The Lord has made us each unique.  The longer I walk with Him, the more comfortable I am with my inside-outness.

It is only because of my deep confidence in his love for me and His unconditional acceptance of me that I can claim this.  I am comfortable enough to let my inside by the outside you see because of the work He is doing in me.

Surely His work must be tedious.  I have rebelled, fought, run away, hid, and taken every opportunuty to evade His work in me. Along the way I’ve been broken, scratched, scarred, muddied and sullied.  My inside-outness is not always pretty.

Yet I rejoice because day-by-day I am being transformed.  What was once important seems trivial.  What was hidden is being revealed.  What shows in the hard fought fo peace of a life settled in Christ.

If my shirt is inside-out, give me grace.  God is doing His work in me.

Who says homeschooled kids are nerds? by Christine Field

My completely homeschooled, science-oriented daughter was bored on a Saturday night and announced that she and a friend were going to make an entire Periodic Table of the Elements out of cupcakes. 
Who says homeschooled kids are nerds?

Are you havin’ any fun?

By Sammy Fain/Jack Yellin
Are you havin’ any fun?                                                                                        

What y’gettin’ out o’ livin’?

What good is what you’ve got

If you’re not havin’ any fun?

 

***

I’ve been having loads of fun with art collage and art journaling.

I spend so much time in my head and with words that this

is a great way to free some other stuff floating around in my head.                                                                     

Google these terms and see if they don’t capture your fancy.

 

Are you having any fun?

Hit the Refresh Button by Christine Field

Listen up here: Hit the Refresh Button with Christine Field
Listen now or save as mp3 file to listen later.

Your outer life may be in chaos, but how is your inner life?

As moms, we plan and prepare many aspects of our outer lives -including the lesson plans, the menu plans, the shopping lists – but what amount of time do we spend on our inner lives, on our hearts and minds?

We need to preserve the peace of that inner life, lest we fall into patterns of thinking:

Like a groove – like a stuck needle on an old record album.
Like a frozen computer – if it has too many things running and becomes overwhelmed, it has the sense to freeze and shut down.
Like an old cassette tape – it can become unraveled and become nearly impossible to put back together.

Will you live according to the sinful nature of thought processes out of control, or according to the Spirit? (Read Romans 8:4)

I can think myself into a funk at the drop of a hat. Only the refreshment of the Word of God can get me out of it.

Romans 12:2 advises, “No not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.”

Conforming is funky thinking. Transforming is a work the Spirit can and will do in your life.

Celebrate Cerebrodiversity! by Christine Field

Men are from _________, Women are from __________.  That boy just can’t sit ___________.  Are you ______________ to me?  Keep your ___________ on the board, young lady.

Venus, Mars, still, listening, eyes.  Each of these phrases represents concept in education and brain research called cerebrodiversity.  It’s the recognition that each of our brains is unique and may process information differently.

The traditional classroom caters to the visual/auditory learner.  Write this down, listen to this, can you see the example, let me hear your answers.  These brain types typically do well in school.  They fit the method.

But we were each created distinctly.  While one child may recite complex Shakespearean sonnets, another may just look at a piece of electronics and know and see the missed electrical connection.

We are all smart in some way.  A school setting generally rewards one type of learning.  If you don’t learn that way, is your “performance” the result of a disability or an environment that doesn’t accommodate diversity?

As the parent of a couple of kiddos with learning issues, I struggled with the diagnosis/labeling issue.   On one hand, having a label for our struggles opened a door for reaching the child – we learned to teach to strengths rather than focusing on weaknesses.  On the other hand, a label is a label.

But now, we have a new descriptor!  Children who learn differently are exampes of cerebrodiversity!  I love the word because it provides another perfect reason for homeschooling.  A parent can say, “I homeschool my child
because we honor cerebrodiversity.”

If your child is a different kind of learner, consider these points:

1.  Don’t panic or fret.  Weaknesses in one area are often counterbalanced by strengths in another area.  Do what you need to strengthen the weakness,and celebrate and honor the strengths.

2.  Recognize that assembly line learning, common standards and evaluating success by traditional testing may not be the best choice for your child.

3.  Educate yourself on your child’s differences.  You are their champion and their advocate.  The more you know about your situation, whether it’s dyslexia or adhd, the better position you are in to reach them.

4.  Finally, celebrate cerebrodiversity!

In homeschooling, there is no failure – only progress in the direction of their path.

Are you inviting chaos? By Christine Field

I have so many interests and passions that if I live to be 200 I will not be able to pursue them all.                     

It’s kind of like an interest driven attention deficit disorder.  That’s not entirely accurate.  My ADD kids have a laser focus when it comes to something they are interested in.  The attention I give to my interests is more scatter shot.

I’m a kid in a candy store when it comes to a used book sale.  I like the way books look, the way they feel and the way they smell.

My thrift store addiction has become fueled by a new interest – collage art and art journaling.  I can justify the purchase of bits and items of obscurity to use in my creations.  They are piling up.

Although I have only completed two quilts, I have plans and fabric for many, many more.

My writing files are frightening.  Partly driven by an inability to throw anything away and partly driven by the paranoid thought that I will someday need that poem I wrote when I was 13 – stacks of buried treasure surround my writing desk.

These good intentions and un-chased dreams invite chaos into my life.  When I’m clear-headed and energetic, it feels good to be surrounded by so much potential.  When I’m stressed out with a bulging schedule, it feels suffocating.

How do you invite chaos into your life?  Here are some of the common ways I have seen other moms invite it:

1. Having too many toys out at once.  While I once thought that doing so would keep my kids engaged and interested, they often felt overwhelmed.  I watch my daughter with admiration as she teaches my grandson to put one toy away before he takes it another.

2. Having too many items in my kitchen.  I have a machine or a gadget to do almost any task in my kitchen.  Sometimes I walk in there and sigh.  Making a decision to use or not use one is another way I invite chaos.  I was shopping the other day for a gift and overheard another shopper say she was looking for an electric corkscrew.  Really? Some of my fondest memories are of hand kneading dough with the kids in the big bread mixing bowl.

3. How many pairs of jeans does your child need?  With 4 young children and two adults in a small house, I quickly earned that buying too much clothing at thrift stores and garage sales could literally bury us!  For each season, take a clothing inventory for each child – and adult.  It’s amazing how little you really need.  (I have provided a form below for your use in this process.)

4. A huge problem for me used to be inviting chaos by adding too many commitments outside of my family. My former inability to say NO threatened to derail my health and my relationships more than once.  Getting older has helped me to prioritize more.  I would encourage all parents of kids of any age to ask yourself this: What’s the one thing that only I can do during this time in my life?  The answer always was to be the wife and mother that God called me to be.  Other people can represent legal clients, but my babies grew older day by day.

I don’t need or want more chaos in my life.

I want peace.  It’s only invited into my life as I cast away the unimportant and focus on the marrow.

Clothing Inventory

Make one for each member of your family to carry with you to stores and garage sales.  Note current sizes.   Sort by HAVE/NEED

Name: ____________________________ Season: _________________________

Shirts               pants/shorts           skirts            jackets/coats             sweaters/sweatshirts

 

 

dresses       nightclothes          underwear        shoes/boots        accessories (gloves,hats,etc.)

Christine Field

www.MomLifeNavigator.com

 

 

 

Mom Pain by Christine Field

An Introduction            

Incredible joy.

Unspeakable pain.

This has been my parenting journey.  I have traveled from the heartbreak of infertility to the miracle of answered prayers – from the birth of new life to the death of dreams.

My only regret:  I wish I had been a little more prepared.

Instead, as I prepared for motherhood, I feasted on the TV ads showing the lovely young mom rocking her baby.  She was dressed in a flowing white gown, gazing at her beautiful babe.  The flimsy white curtains billowed softly in the light breeze.

That was how I thought it was supposed to be.  Instead, motherhood descended on me with a sudden fury.  Adopting our first child on short notice, we plunged unprepared into parenting.  A colicky biological child followed 17 months later, leaving me panting in the dust with postpartum depression.  After a few years recovery, we adopted two more kids through international adoption, who each presented substantial learning disabilities at school age.

Each child presented challenges and blessings.

After launching two from homeschool high school, we heaved a sigh that our job was half over.  If we made it this far, we would surely finish the race with confidence.

My story starts on a pretty regular day.  During this particular season of life, my pattern for managing my gut wrenching grief was to go to my bedroom and get down on my knees by my bed. The younger two kids were still at school and my husband was at work so I could make a little noise.

And so I would cry.  And wail.  It was the only way to get some release from the sadness stored up inside me – the sadness that would destroy me if I did not deal with it.  Deep cries would come from some desolate place inside me, great sobs filled with pain.  Emotions that I had to process or my heart would surely explode.

On one of these days, something different happened.  As I lifted my hands up, crying out to the Lord, He gave me His peace.  It wasn’t merely a feeling or an imagination.  It was a release that came upon me with such force and such surety that I knew it was the Lord.

My prior pattern had been as follows:

I would pray, “Lord heal and sustain my husband in his cancer.”

I would pray, “Lord, bring my troubled daughter home and, if it be Your will, release her from her sudden, ill-advised marriage to a man she barely knew, and bring her home from the move so far away to live in poverty and confusion.”

I would pray, “Lord, heal my other daughter who is nearly consumed by her own adolescent issues. And by the way, how in the world will we pay for these hospitalizations?”

I would pray, “Lord, help me with my youngest two and their learning disabilities.  Help me to be patient and loving with them.”

I would pray, “Lord, if it be your will, heal me from the substantial health problems of my own that you have allowed in my life.”

In my prior pattern, I would lift these prayers to the Lord.  When I had no sooner gotten up from the floor, I took the cares back on my own shoulders.  Rather than emerge in victory from my prayer time, I would arise in defeat and shuffle away with a resignation that I would carry these burdens for many more years.

But this day was different.  This day the Lord met me in my pain and began to carry it for me.  On this day, His presence and His love felt palpable.  No, I didn’t hear His voice, or feel the touch His hand on my shoulder.  But from that day forward, I experienced a peace I have never known before.

I still have concerns and the occasional fret fest, but I know that the Lord is in charge and that he orchestrates all things for His good.  The certainty and grounded-ness of His peace is mine.

Being a woman, a wife and a mother are opportunities for great joy.  We revel in the emotionality and gift giving of Mother’s Day, the birth of a child, or our wedding anniversary.

But what do we do when those callings of wife and mother are discouraging?  Where do we turn with our feelings of deep discouragement when we look at our lives and say, “I didn’t think it would be like this”?

We could evolve into bitter empty nesters.  Or we can process our pain, use our experiences to draw closer to the Lord, become stronger, and bless others.

Are somewhere in Mom Pain?  Are you feeling robbed or cheated of the promise of joy of motherhood?

Take heart.  You are experiencing the grit and irritation of the oyster shell, polishing and refining you as a woman and a wife, a mom and a human.

What will emerge might astonish you.

This is the introduction to a new book I have in mind.  If you have ideas, feedback or stories to share, please contact me.


Do I have to like my kid today? by Christine Field

Have you ever had these thoughts about your child?

Man, he can be such a pain!

How come he doesn’t learn like his sister did?

Wow, I’d like to get away from him today!

Do you ever have days when you just don’t like your child?
Relax.  You’re normal.  Every parent in the universe has these thoughts on occasion.
But when you have them, you feel guilty.
You think:

I’m not cut out for this parenting thing.

Things sure aren’t the way I thought they would be.

Will this always be so hard?

 

Reality is reality.  Your challenge, as a parent, is to love and guide the child in front of you.  Even when you don’t like him!  Face it – there
are plenty of days when he isn’t crazy about YOU either.

It’s not a question of liking or not liking.  It’s a commitment – a deep, heart commitment to seeing this child become the best version of him that he can be.   He’s not going to be like the kid down the street.  Is that why you’re disappointed?  If it is – get a grip.

Here’s a revelation: Parenting isn’t about your happiness.  In fact, some of what you are called to deal with can make you downright miserable.  If you thought being a parent would be all sunshine and light, you need a reality check.

It’s hard work, often disheartening, sometimes heartbreaking.
It’s what you were called to do.  You were called to parent this child, with all his quirks and foibles.  And guess what?  The only variable in this equation that you have any control over is Y – O – U.

So look carefully at your feelings when you are feeling like you don’t like your child.  Admit it and own it.  Dig a little deeper around in your psyche and find out why you feel this way.  Feelings of dislike can usually be traced to a few factors:

You might think it’s him you dislike, but it’s really his behaviors.

You might think you can change him (with superb homeschooling curriculum, great parenting techniques, blah, blah, blah.)
The reality is the only thing you can change is your attitude and approach.

You have a framed photo of this child in your mind and all around the frame are flashing lights proclaiming, “problem child, problem child”!   Disconnect those lights, take down the frame and look at your child with fresh eyes.

After you have faced the facts and looked at some of the contributing factors, what should you do next?

Play with your child, and let THEM choose how.  Entering into play, his way, on his terms is a pathway to his heart.

Work on controlling your emotions.  Learn to sever that connection in your brain that goes from his behavior …. to your
irritation … to your anger.  Put some space in your emotions and look at his behavior like an objective scientist.  When you extinguish your
immediate emotional reaction, you can begin to see what’s really going on.

 

Try saying only positive things.  Make a commitment to passing over the negative, snarky, criticism you might be used
to.  Only open your mouth when you can say something positive, even if it’s small.  “Wow, you really worked hard on that chore!”  “I saw you really trying hard with that math homework.  Awesome.”  I appreciate that you turned the computer off without a fight.”  Strung together, these positive words can be a healing balm for your child’s heart and a strengthening connection between you.

We all have days when we don’t like our child.  The one thing that doesn’t change is our love for them.  Do what you
can, examine your heart, look at your own attitudes and expectations and choose to see the wonder and delight in your child – even when he drives you crazy.

 

Christine Field, www.MomLifeNavigator.com