The Memories I Want and Need

This is not a year in review. In fact, this is barely the last couple months of Instagram photos in a hand-worked collage. {This is the types of things I do when I’m procrastinating returning emails or cleaning my kitchen sink.}

I laughed as I went through these and had forgotten a lot of it {so much of even November and December has already slipped into last year}.

But I began to think: If we could snapshot our life, not in the way we want to PRESENT it to the world {case in point: Instagram}, but in random representations of our daily lives, what would it tell about us?

Would my yelling-face at my daughters be revealed? Or my Christmas cookie binge of a few days ago? What about the arrogant thing I said during an argument with my husband? Or the face I made as I answered the phone when I didn’t feel like it.

We do well as we present ourselves to the world, even the small world that our social media tendrils reach to, but do we do well to the people around us? To ourselves?

As I think back on this year, I DO want to remember the Wiltern on a Saturday night and the cup of coffee with a friend. And I want to remember the cupcake and the sky and the Girl Scout and the go karts. But, God help me, I need to remember what I have not photographed: the hurt and the pain I’ve caused others, the anger and the bitterness, the disappointment.

These are not the memories I necessarily WANT but the ones I need.

I must make a memory so that as I seek to change, I know what it is I must work on.

What are your best memories from this year? What do you wish to change in the New Year?

I’m sure there are much easier ways to collage, but I worked this out in the iPhone app, Diptic.

On Drastic Measures and “What-ifs”

What if I stopped caring about what everyone else thought?

I can’t control someone else’s thoughts anyway so why do I spend time and anxiety on things like that?

What if I lived and moved and wrote and I did NOT seek the approval of anyone else? What if the works of my hands were only products of what I believe is good and true and right?

What if I raised my children to be the best women I know how to raise and I didn’t worry about what everyone else might be thinking? If their laughter was quiet enough in the restaurant and if they didn’t run through the church.

What if I spent a week or two without writing blog posts because I’m tired, because I need a break and because I would rather, this month, spend time with my kids baking or doing something slightly crafty?

And what if I stopped saying “Yes” to everyone and every obligation because I am worried about managing expectations with the people around me?

What if I did only the next, best, right thing and didn’t worry about what the next year or the next decade holds?

What if I allowed a friendship (or two) to die because in all honesty, neither of us have time for each other anyway? What am I scared of?

What if I did was was right and peaceful for my OWN family at Christmas rather than try to keep everyone around me happy? What if I spent my Christmas money on things that are important in the Kingdom rather than on unused, unwanted things that will clutter already full homes?

What if I let go the anger that has been building in me about if people “get” me or not and instead replace it with love and grace? What if I worried more about showering grace on others than if someone who’s hurt me has apologized appropriately?

What if, and I know this is crazy, I loved and moved and wrote for the approval of only One?

How drastically would my life change?

What if you lived and worked and said “yes” (or no) only for the approval of God? Would your life change?

The Dirtiest Shoes

Chad tells me the story that when Mother Teresa was alive, living among the poor and the sick and the dirty, she clawed for the bottom.

Not only did she pour out her life among the dead and dying, the lowest and the least, but when the boxes of donated clothes and shoes came for her group, instead of pushing to the front of the line to find the “best of the worst”, she fought to the front of the line for the worst of the worst.

She chose the shoes that were

the most worn out

the dirtiest

with the thinnest soles

{the ones that were probably many sizes too big for her tiny feet}

so that others would have better than her.

What if we all clawed for the bottom? What if, in our relationships and in our jobs and in our accomplishments we pushed to the front of the line to be the last?

What if I, in my writing or in my career, let others be first and better and even the best? If I just didn’t ALLOW it, but if I worked as hard at being at the bottom as I have worked up to this point at being at the top?

I might just find the richest relationships in the “least” of society. I might find the peace in the simplicity of the here and the now and I might just find the most amazing joy in the journey of it all.

Clawing for the bottom of the shoe pile: I don’t think its some far off thing that only Mother Teresa and Jesus might accomplish, wearing the least and the dirtiest. I think its something we can have now.

By finding the least, you find the best, I believe. By embracing the dirtiest, the poorest, the ones who have

absolutely nothing to offer you,

You embrace Jesus.

Let Me Be Something


With a “crow hop” he kicked his back legs in the air, like horses might do, all muscle and equine-sweat. That small change was enough to send my five-year-old plummeting to the ground. Face forward, arms out, she landed stomach down in the dust of the arena.

The horse ran by as we ran to Naomi.

“Point to where it hurts, honey.” It’s always my go-to speech to my girls when they’ve been hurt. I want to know where to look for blood or bruises first.

“My LEG!” she screamed.

Oh God. Did she break it? It can happen. Kids break things and cowgirls fall of their horses.

Despite her tears, she could stand and walk so I knew she’d be okay.

After dusting her off, I picked her up and carried her to the car and I could begin to see the sizable bruise that would darken later that night on the meaty part of her little thigh.  She curled up under a blanket in her seat and, as we watched the rest of her sister’s lesson, she fell asleep. The crying, the fear and the fall had worn her out.

With living comes a certain amount of hazard. I could stop all lessons and shelter the girls from “falling” but would that somehow make me a better mom?

I stopped second guessing “risky sports” a few years ago after her older sister had had her 3rd or 4th fall off a horse. I decided that the joy of the sport comes with the risk and it’s part of the deal.  Everyone who rides a horse will fall someday; it’s inevitable.

The risk is worth it after I see my older daughter round her last barrel in a local competition.

She’s not holed up in a corner with a video game. She’s sucking the marrow out of life and feeling life course through her veins.  She’s grinning, she’s working hard as the arena dirt flies behind her and she’s exhilarated.

She’s truly living.

If my girls never got on horses, they’d never fall.

But the same is true about anything worth doing: If I never got married, I’d never feel the pain of loss someday when I’m widowed. If I never had children, they’d never grow up and move away. If I never loved a friend, they’d never say hurtful things. If I never engaged in community, I’d never be left out.

If I never LIVED, I’d never have risk. Living, at it’s very nature, IS risk.

Sometimes we’ll find ourselves face down in the dirt, bruised and crying. But that cannot stop us. We can’t measure our hurts against our risks of living. If so, we would die alone under a blanket in the corner of some room without having experienced the fullness and joy of being alive.

We need to round that last barrel, the end in sight, fast toward home. Dirt flying, crowd cheering, horse sweating.

Risky, yes. But oh, so fun.

 “Let me be something every minute of every hour of my life. Let me be gay; let me be sad. Let me be cold; let me be warm. Let me be hungry… have too much to eat. Let me be ragged or well dressed. Let me be sincere — be deceitful. Let me be truthful; let me be a liar. Let me be honorable and let me sin. Only let me be something every blessed minute. And when I sleep, let me dream all the time so that not one little piece of living is ever lost.”

from A Tree Grows In Brooklyn by Betty Smith

Do you take “life risks” or do you play it safe? What’s the last crazy-fun thing you did? Do you think it’s better to be “something” than not live at all?

Wearing Love

We’ve all done a little dress up this past week. And my post about my most embarrassing, wilting moment of my entire life centers around dressing a part that was not my own.

I’m rounding out the weekend on (in)courage today with a post that’s really all about wearing love.

Dress Up Clothes

“Um. Yes. I’d like a sah-lahd, puh-leeeese!”

She sat up straight, hands folded at the child sized table in front of her with lace dripping from her hat and from the hem of her fancy play-dress. My five-year-old reenacted her best English accent as she asked for a SALAD from the other little girl who “served” her in the pretend café at the local children’s museum.

I sat down next to her.

“A salad, huh? Sounds pretty grown up to me.” I smiled at her.

She lowered her eyes and set her hands gently in her dress-up lap. She smiled back.

To read the rest, click here.

Who Are You Trying to Be?

It’s like the worst ice breaker ever.

You are in some ridiculous work-related team-building session, or at a church women’s retreat, or in ANY situation where you are supposed to quickly and efficiently get to know someone.

“What is your most embarrassing moment, Sarah?”

Oh, you know. In 7th grade someone pulled the chair out from under me the 2nd day of Home Ec class. I was horrified, but I ended up becoming friends with that same girl later on so it really didn’t matter.

This is my normal, practiced, boring response to the MEM question until now.

Up until the other day when I remembered something far back into my adolescence that makes me completely cringe to think of it. It seriously might be the stupidest thing I really ever did. It eclipses, to many degrees, the 7th grade tailbone-to-the-linoleum incident.

A few weeks ago my five-year-old, in asking about my recent Sunday spent away at Blog Sugar and in wondering about my upcoming trip to Pennsylvania also asked me what a Christian Women’s Blogging Conference is.

“Are you a Christian Woman Blogger, Mama?”

Yes, sweetheart. I am. How kind of you to notice.

“Hey Mom. Maybe you should go as a ‘blogger’ on Halloween.”

At first I laughed. Because that would be awesome. I’d carry my laptop, wear my workout clothes and put headphones in my ears as we trick-or-treated at dusk.

GASP. I already have. On accident. But not as a blogger. It took Naomi’s suggestion to help me reach back into my memory, into high school where no one ever should have to return.

I went as a literary character to a high school Halloween party.

Oh yes I did. I win the Nerd Award of the day.

In ninth grade I was a J.D. Sallinger nut. I read The Catcher in the Rye 4 times during that year. I thought I was cool because the protagonist, Holden Caufield said “damn” and things like that and I thought I was “getting away” with something each time I read it.

So, in 10th grade I decided to go as Holden Caufield to a Halloween party. Except no one but I knew who I was trying to emulate. I wore a tweed-ish coat, silly librarian-looking glasses, penny loafers and carried a copy of Catcher peeking out of my pocket.

I mingled with Cheerleaders and Freddy Kruegers, with a few vampires and a group dressed as hippies from the 1960s. And then there was me. A writing wanna-be who wasn’t distinct enough in her costume to communicate.

Um, Sarah. Are you dressed up at all?

Who are you?

Who’s that?

I thought I could emulate the character by trying to dress the part. But my costume didn’t go far enough, and apparently didn’t reach far enough into pop culture to make a difference.

More than 20 years later I actually am a writer and as an introvert my tendency is to fade into the emotional background of life. But when it comes to other things, I want to be very clear about Who I am trying to emulate.

I’d like to be distinctly Christ-like in my love,

to be like Him in my grace-giving.

I’d like to emulate Jesus in my words and actions,

and to mimic Him in courage.

I don’t want the rest of my life to be a series of embarrassing moments of who-are-you-trying-to-be-like-Sarah? I’d like it to be more clear than a worn paperback out of my jeans pocket and a tweed jacket. I’d like it to be WHO I am.

What is your most embarrassing moment? Who have you tried to emulate in your life?

Fall Cleaning

“So what is THIS post going to be about, Sarah?”

He asked me under the fluorescent light of our rented garage as we used the evening hours to prepare for an upcoming yard sale. I picked up a large plastic container and opened it.

“It smells like beer in this box.” I sniffed as I replaced the lid and moved it to the stack of “keep” boxes.

Chad laughed. “Beer?”

I sniffed again. “I actually think it’s all the plastic things shut up for so long. It stinks!” The toys and Tupperware smelled faintly like the fermented scent of beer. These boxes had been stacked against one wall of our garage since February.

“This post? I’m not writing a post about this. This is pure survival. Nothing to be learned here.” I smelled another beer-box. This can’t be healthy, I think.

“Of course you will. You’ll find something to glean from this Sarah.”

And maybe I have. What began as a foray into Fall Cleaning became a trip through time and memories and lost yoga mats. I stood dwarfed by stacks of cardboard moving boxes and large see-through containers and I realized I wasn’t going to get it all done tonight. This was a bigger job than I’d imagined.

“Can we call it a night?” I heard my husband’s voice from behind a wall of cardboard.

“Are you okay with us leaving all of these stacks like this?” I asked him. “It will be like this until we get it done.”

He pushed one more box to its place and nodded.

And so we shut off the light and reentered the house with boxes askew and piles of treasures for the garage sale scouts. It looked messier than when we’d begun.

Cleaning out my garage is a monumental task that, even as I write this post, still isn’t done.  I’ve been spending my days doing the daily tasks that make the wheels of my household turn well: washing dishes, folding laundry, cleaning up the clutter that the daily mail introduces. I haven’t organized cupboards or drawers; most of them are catch-alls for things I don’t have time to find a place for.

Basically, for the past 9 months in this home, I’ve just been trying to survive. But as I weeded through the past and uncovered boxes of oh-my-gosh-that’s-where-the-beach-towels-went I wondered if doing the monumental task wasn’t what was necessary for true survival.

I’d almost been prophetic when I suggested Chad earlier that “this was survival.” Because it is.

Tackling the hard things. Taking the time to look at the big places in my life that need change. Climbing the mountains of forgiveness and grace. Those are the things that may not be finished in a day or a night under fluorescent lights, but those are the things that are important.

I’m wondering if a good fall cleaning isn’t just important to my garage and home organization skills, but if a good fall cleaning might be just as important to my heart. It might be messier for a few weeks. It might be painful and dusty and hard to accomplish. And it might not look perfect when it’s done, but it really is important.

So yes, dear Chad, I did find a post from our dusty, spider-ridden, beer-smelling evening in the garage.

Do you avoid difficult things? What about difficult relationship or personal growth things? What makes you tackle something hard?

Don’t Be Embarrassed of You

Hold your head high. Today. Not after you’ve cleaned it all up.

Throw open the doors of your dusty and cluttered soul and let the neighborhood in. Don’t stuff things in the catch-all drawers and put on a plastic face. Sweep if you must, but if you do anything, stop being embarrassed of who you are.

Let the tears and the laughter and the worry and the heartache be worn as openly as the most comfortable-est jeans you own.

You are more important than worrying about putting on the best show for the people who won’t accept you anyway {because for them, the only thing worth anything is perfection that none of us will ever attain.}

Instead, be you. Hold your head high and be proud, in the most humble of ways, of who you’ve been made to be.

Ask those people who really don’t care about the clutter, about the mess of humanity, over for dinner. You make the spaghetti, let them bring the wine and flop down on the sofa after a meal together. Leave the kitchen like it is.

You have been created to journey. You have been created to fumble and stumble along at times. And you have been created to work through problems in their due time.

It’s okay. It really is.

Just keep living life, walking toward Jesus and remembering who you’ve been made to be.

Don’t be afraid of the struggle and above all, don’t be embarrassed of you.

Empathy and Humanity

Empathy goes against my grain sometimes.

When I’m focused.

When I’m trying to get something done {read Type A, Goal-Oriented}.

When I’m on a mission.

I really don’t want to stop and try to feel with you. Or with my husband or with my kids. Or with my friends. But at the heart of of me, when I give myself the grace to slow down and really breathe, my heart beats with emotions of others.

And in a way I wonder if that is how we stay human: to allow the feelings of others to affect us deeply.

On Empathy: Our Griefs and Sorrows

The closest I’ve every personally been to death was when my grandfather died in 1985. He died in Indiana while I was a ten year old in California.

And then when my grandmother died ten years later, I struggled to feel healthy grief when that happened because I’d had such a complicated relationship with her. Even so, I wish she was here to see my girls.

I know this makes me a bit of an anomaly, having skirted grief and loss like I have. Most of us have lost someone or something dear. Very dear.

Maybe we’ve miscarried.

Or lost a father.

Or we’ve seen a sister die unexpectedly.

Or maybe we’ve survived a spouse.

I know. I’m odd. I’ve not had someone close to me, very close to me, die.

But in the past few months I’ve had people very close to me lose someone very close to them. {And we’ve all lost a dear sister.} I’ve grieved by proxy and I’ve grieved from afar. I have made phone calls and sent cards and baked bread. Tears still fall. Wounds still smart…

To read the rest, click here.