Sayings & Inspirations








things are not always as they seem...
Random, unrelated, interesting snippets…..
I love to write. I feel gifted to notice things, and bring attention to what is just beyond what was said or seen. Lingering on the formalities of a conversation. Waiting for what’s between the lines. Or something just below the surface. Or almost not heard. Or what’s not been said yet. And that is why my blog is called Leaning In. Lingering a bit longer with a person, with a subject, with quiet words. Even with silence. I learned the term “pregnant pause” from a wise boss in Bozeman and it has stuck with me a long time; at first it was quite intimidating, now it is a friend. Being intentional in life, and with people, and with God. All of this brings me deep fulfillment.
Over the years, here & there, things have stuck with me and make me say Hmmmmm. No order, no category, just lots of fascinating snippets & info; hence: Tidbits & Tidings. I love having a listing to just put all of them in one place……….
Statements that aren’t true in my opinion: 1. Time heals all wounds and 2. God won’t give us more than we can handle……Oh yes He will…….so that we cannot steal His Glory and Power for getting thru a situation…..
Never look down on somebody unless you’re helping them up. From Community Bible Church in San Antonio, TX
Bill Johnson quote: I refuse to sacrifice the Goodness of God on the altar of human reasoning so that I have a rationale or cause or excuse or blaming of God or others to parade around when something in my life doesn’t work out……..
I’ve become aware recently of some extremely disgusting & horrific facts about Adrenochrome and the relation to child-sex-trafficking.
Just learned about Pirate Ship last month, started in 2014, a very much cheaper alternative to UPS and USPS……The company was founded by Bjorn Borstelmann and Jameson Morris to simplify the order fulfillment process and give businesses/the public access to cheaper shipping rates.
I love tiny, A-frame wooden lending libraries found randomly in neighborhoods!
Been doing some reading about Chemtrailing lately. Those white stripings in our skies that I used to think were just contrails……not really. Operation Indigo Skyfold is a project with missions to change the weather by strategically placing new cloud layers, for reasons I don’t totally understand yet, still researching. HAARP is another entity for changing weather. President Johnson in 1962 made a speech about this and it was creepy to hear him say, “he who controls the weather controls the world.” Eeeeeek!
Does anyone else love how birds have the ability to project perfectly beautiful tweets & songs with no speaker or microphone, but which can be heard a great, great distance? One lone bird sitting on a fence post or up on some electrical wires seems to be able to catch my attention in an instant as I drive by or sit outside enjoying the freshness. How do they do it? How did God create them for such far-reaching songs for us humans to enjoy?? This makes me think of the Bible stories and how Jesus was able to project without a microphone or sound system to thousands of people sitting by the Sea of Galilee or in the fields listening to him preach. How did his voice carry far and wide so all could hear the Good News without a sound system??
The Lord knows when the hour of our end will be. We do not need to fear.
Let’s agree to disagree agreeably.
Integrity is who we are when no one is looking.
In a world where you can be anything, Be Kind.
What kind of a Legacy am I leaving?
You’re probably going to laugh about it later, so why not laugh about it now?
Live life intentionally. Have no regrets.
Aspartame makes my kidneys ache so I avoid it now.
Excellence is important to me. Not perfection, but excellence. I have tried to live well & love well. I want to age well and also live fully & intentionally well with the time I have left.
Fat (healthy fat) isn’t what makes us fat.
Recently learning it’s not so good to use plastic cutting boards; tiny plastic particles are cut with each slice we make and can end up in your foods and end up wreaking havoc in your body. Trying to reduce using plastic when and where I can. One step at a time to use less of it.
I’m interested in the “why” behind the “what”
I like the statement: “Tell me more……”
Sometimes in life with our day to day responsibilities & our obligations, we can get caught up in the treadmill of life, with our heads down and our gaze at our steps. But be encouraged by Psalm 121: I will lift up my eyes to the hills — From where shall my help come? My help comes from the LORD, Who made heaven and earth. Let’s lift our head today. The small movement of posture can change so much about our perspective.
Important to move more and keep moving as I age; motion is lotion for my joints.
I believe that God has wired us to feel significant, to have life-purpose, and to be “seen.” Significance matters, encouraging & affirming others matters. “I see you. I hear you” is palpable when some other human really “gets you.” I am also aware that God has wired us to know that someone else is committed to loving us unconditionally. Lastly, the feeling of belonging brings such comfort & security. What gifts these 3 things can be in our lives.
Random, Silly Observation: Different cities, different climates I’ve experienced can do a number on my hair. Texas humidity & Puerto Rico are the only places so far that make my hair crazy frizzed out, unmanageable and wild. No product so far eliminates the frizz!
Fun ideas for grandparents: Go to Walmart the day after Halloween and buy fun dress up costumes for your grands at a very discounted rate.
Charcoal toothpaste and/or toothbrushes are kinda cool to switch off with your regular brush or toothpaste in a year.
I’ve learned to appreciate “pregnant pauses” which I first experienced in the workplace with a great boss in Bozeman.
Screen time over-usage is re-wiring our brains, to our detriment! I’m trying to do less of it over time.
Cloud Seeding intrigues me.
We don’t know what we don’t know.
I want my life to be beautifully framed with these four sides: Thankful, Grateful, Blessed, Prayerful
A great way to cool oneself down, roll the tongue like a cannoli and take SLOW, long breaths in and out. Amazing cooling effect. Learned it in yoga.
Everyone has a story. It always makes me curious to know more, what is below the surface of my first introduction to people. How did they get where they are? Old buildings also have this draw for me; historical places, cobblestone roads, old cabins….who lived there? What was their story?
Helychrysium, an essential oil in a carrier oil has the most amazing healing properties. From personal success, I highly recommend for open wounds, some warts, stitches recovery, and the scar healing process. Weleda Skin Food (green tube) is epic for burns.
I also like the statement: “What can I do for you today?”
YHWH #yahweh #yhwh #GOD #love #athiest #fyp #fypシ ………I LOVE this video and tattoo. It is beyond cool. The meaning of it resonates deeply with me. When I imagine Doug’s last breath on earth, he was calling out God’s Name. We all speak God’s Name with our every breath!!
Cancer loves sugar.
I try to recognize and avoid the ‘tyranny of the urgent’ in my life and not cave to that pressure if possible.
There sure are a lot of fitness trainers out there to hire. Be sure to find one who doesn’t fat or food shame, and who may go against popular mainstream workouts and being considered in shape. Unsustainable in my view. Shout out to Kayla in Bozeman. She’d tell me to “Trust the Process” and I did and she was right. Shout out to Miranda, I owe you a finder’s fee for the Kayla referral!
Snake Plants are amazing room detoxifiers.
I think having a grateful attitude makes me more aware of grateful things and totally resets my hours and days for a fuller, richer life. (As a person thinks in their heart, so it is, Proverbs 23:7). STAY IN JOY to keep up your vibration/frequency/life force. We are dynamic, energetic beings in human bodies. Negativity affects us! I have also observed that choosing gratitude removes a bit of the sting of an awful thing and helps me dwell less on the injustice or the horrible event or the actions/words of a mean person.
SHOUT OUT to the inventors of ziplock bags (Steven Ausnit) and sticky notes (Dr. Spencer Silver, a 3M scientist).
It’s okay to say “no” to someone’s ask.
Cinnamon/Clove essential oil combo is an amazing way to subtly freshen up any space.
Put a bar of Irish Spring soap in some panty hose by your flowers so that deer won’t EAT the lovelies.
Dandelions are amazing plants, I’ve recently learned. Often considered pesky weeds and the target of Round Up kill-fests in neighborhoods all over America, dandelions boast of many health benefits and have been used in teas and helpful home remedies for a long long time. I’ve read of at least 13 beneficial side effects of dandelions. Check it out.
Everyone we meet is fighting a battle we know nothing about. Be kind. Always.
Planes were built to flex, planes were built to flex….. Turbulence is normal, turbulence is normal…….(I have to remind myself every time I fly!)
The Golden Rule is sound advice.
I love the Everlasting-ness of God that speaks loudly but so lovingly & tenderly to me at the beach. The surf is like a stuck-on-“play”, repeated, never-ending, rock solid, unrelenting reminder of His Love for my soul that He is always there. Always moving toward me, always ebbing & flowing, always approaching me, never shy but never too much, never coming with too much force. In my life He is the only thing that is constant & secure & dependable day to day, with so much that changes each day around me. The surf is amazing, no two waves the same, just like no two sunrises or sunsets ever the same, and yet remarkably, stunningly beautiful. Just like no two people the same. The surf brings in treasures with each roll & crash & glide upon the sand. Quietly it just deposits it there. Just as God daily brings me treasures; morsels of beauty, snippets of Truth, bits & pieces that reveal Him to me (so individual, so tailor-made). His surf, His sands, His beach hold such gems that remind me of His Everlasting-ness and highlight His Love.
My first memory of grief was when I was 14 yrs old and my sister died suddenly in 1971. My recollection of it was primarily silence and zero family discussions about it. We just went on. Moving along through the next several decades, a young cousin, grandparents, aunts, uncles, friends, brother-in-law, and then my parents died. My most recent and most deeply personal grief is the death of my husband after 56 years of knowing him, meeting in grade school, dating throughout high school, and being married for almost 47 years (he went to Heaven shockingly and suddenly 3 days before our 47th anniversary). I wanted this process to be much different, more shared, and interactive with those dear to me than that as a child of 14. And it has been.
With a rich, deep reservoir like the Hoover Dam of family & friends, I embarked upon a journey that has forever changed me. There will never be a going back to normal; sudden loss changes everything. Forever. As we all know, there is no owner’s manual about grief. There is some good info out there but none of it prepares you for the actual, personal event. Realize there can be a temporary season of short-term memory lapses and there can be some temporary lethargy; these are normal responses to the processing of this overwhelming new information. And the waves of tearful emotion or a memory that give no warning to their arrival that demand all your attention as you are carried away to some event or precious remembrance, sometimes at the most inopportune moments. With graciousness I have gladly learned to just roll with it, take note of it, feel it all in the moment, let it pass as it does, and be grateful that deep sadness is in my opinion linked with deep love.
Two years of “firsts” coming up here May 14th. There are fewer & fewer of them and they can take you off guard and get stuck like a fish bone in your throat! First anniversaries, first holidays, first travels alone, first realizations we will never hold hands again or laugh together, first hours & days of complete silence and the absence of Doug in my immediate world, first time in my entire life of living alone (I went from my parents home, married at 18, and lived with Doug for 47 years so I never had the experience of being on my own), first days & nights without Doug, first gaping missing the personality of someone you know so well & the quiet companionship forged over 50 years, first times hearing myself say out loud that Doug was dead when having to communicate with people or businesses and the echo that I heard when speaking those words, first time asking for a table for one, first time deciding completely what I wanted to do and realizing the buck now stopped with me, making all adult decisions first time without negotiating, compromising, or having to edit thoughts or plans…… a mountain of firsts in my life for so many routine things in my days. I am so grateful for God’s gift of mental & emotional shock because it enables you to function in the immediate things without completely melting in the reality of the event. God is so gracious to insulate us and cocoon us in His Love & loving people to continue living & doing what needs done because Life does not slow down or stop, even though it feels like your life has stopped with the sudden news, the ultimate oxymoron. It’s like your cognition is altered and you hear in a vacuum and you’re trying to think it or will it back to normal hearing; there’s an echo to it. It’s a straining kind of disbelief with a delayed ability to process things you’re thinking and hearing.
Yes, there was complete shock, disbelief & surreal-ness, but there was a strong parallel train track of overwhelming Peace & Comfort as well. There was such gigantic hope & gratitude within me that I knew where Doug was and the joy that he no longer lived in pain or had a prolonged illness. That tenant of my faith & beliefs was daily massaging my raw pain and always outpacing it. God so, so, so swaddled me with my kids & their immediate, constant assistance, my friends, my Faith, His overwhelming Presence that I did not lack for complete support beyond my wildest imaginations. I had Bethel or Hillsong playing round the clock in my home for months. I rarely felt alone. I rarely felt the sting of what was staring me in the face. So much strength, so much caring, so much fullness in relationships. I’ll be forever grateful to my kids & their families who adjusted their lives in faraway cities to drop everything and make me and my welfare their top priority, while experiencing their own devastating loss themselves, and doing their own grieving & processing. Also to my work team and bosses that rallied to pick up my slack when I needed immediate time off. And to friends close & far who gently & seamlessly slipped in to be present, to share silent moments, to envelop me in a secure hug, to just do some kind things instead of asking me what I needed. There are already too many decisions crowding one’s head when sudden loss busts through the front door like a battering ram and catches you off guard, so to be asked what do you need is fundamentally too much to even think about how to answer sometimes, but to just decide to bring me lunch or come sit for a bit was a huge blessing.
About 9 months before Doug’s Homegoing we began having conversations about death & dying and what we wanted that to look like. It is a lot of information & detail to gather and put in one place. It can feel overwhelming and you don’t want to do it. We had to take it in small bites and not expect ourselves to finish it in one session of discussions. We chose humor, joking about who would go first and advice we had for each other, suggesting possible scenarios, and bantering about the limited scope of death in general. We had to really think about questions like: do I want a DNR in place, do I want to be an organ donor, how extreme of life-saving measures do we want to allow, for instance, long term care, what about hospice, power of attorney, to name a few. We both agreed on the wish to die quickly if we had a vote. (Doug got his wish.). We had to encourage each other a lot during this process; check in, ask where we were with our list, and set some loose deadlines for completion. I could not be more thankful that we followed those nudges to purposely plan dying details well, as we tried to plan living details well. If you have not had these kind of conversations I highly highly recommend it. There’s already such an avalanche of tasks & details to attend to, that having at least this giant one in place greatly reduces the tsunami waters that crash upon you with your back turned. At least start somewhere and build your completed lists, credit card names, retail accounts, passwords, company names, apps, online billing, etc. etc. This piece of advice became one of my largest take-aways when chatting with friends & fam to do yourself a big, fat favor and be proactive, systematic & intentional with the hard topics. There are online options for living trusts or wills or hire a lawyer, just do it, it’s important! I can’t stress it enough.
Kudos to you if you already have healthy, daily life habits, that is such a bonus in being cold-plunged into sudden loss & grief. If you don’t, start today with something beneficial to better your physical/emotional/mental health. Regular exercise, eating well, staying hydrated, faith practices, scheduled massages, walking, stretching, meditating, purposeful breathing; any and all self-care (which is not selfish! it’s an investment in your best self) habits that benefit you happen to become even more important with suddenly being plunked down onto the loss/trauma/grief highway. Much harder to catch your breath with a sudden crisis, than to continue on in some established safeties when the wind is knocked out of you. That’s not the time to “get ready”…. It’s best to “be ready!”
There was one thing I had to ask for from my kids in those early days of loss: when calling no matter what time of day or night, please start your voice message or the beginning of the call with, “Mom, everything’s ok, nothing is wrong.” That request minimized some additional trauma moments, brought me a layer of peace, lasted several months and is no longer a heart-stabbing, hesitant reaction to the phone ringing.
I decided this early on: we’ve lived and loved well and I wanted to grieve well too. Not waste my sorrows.
I’m so thankful Doug and I were current; we weren’t at odds. He had travelled to California to do a project build for his nephew and planned to return in a few weeks. There weren’t unkind words spoken and not resolved; there were no “let’s talk about that when you’re back here in 3 weeks”, etc, etc. We had written notes on the bathroom mirror in the steam. I had written him sticky notes of “love you a latte” and “drink up and count your blessings,” and left them by the coffee maker for him, as well as one about “May the Lord bless and keep you and make his face to shine upon you” in the month or so before he left; he usually crumpled them up and tossed them after a few days, but those he left up and were still on the microwave door and coffee maker when the late night call came…….I find that interesting now looking back. I also noticed later that he had put things away he usually left out ready to use. He had packed up some things into the garage attic area that should have just been stored inside as they had always been. It was unusual. In a way, it was like he was cleaning up, he was prepping in a way, he had an unspoken sense that wasn’t coming back to Montana, but neither he nor I yet knew that quite.
None of us is promised another day and I know it can sound kinda cliche-ish but I do think there’s wisdom in adopting a mindset about living today to the fullest, as if it’s your last. What would you do differently if you knew you only had 24 hours, how would you be more intentional about making the most of the time you have? Who would you forgive right now to make sure it was completed before your days were up? How would you streamline your life in such a way to prioritize the really important, eternal matters at hand to be able to give your most and your all to living in the moment, more attuned to God’s purposes for us and people who need our love & care instead of putting off a connection or a word of encouragement or a visit with another human. Who or what would you give more time to because there’s value there, instead of the incidentals that can distract us or take us down a road that is a dead end? So much of the dum stuff we can get bogged down by can somehow be eliminated in the face of the important stuff regarding people & relationships. For me it’s been very worth it in the past few years to adopt more of that kind of thinking.
A friend gave me the book, “Imagine Heaven” a few months after Doug’s Graduation. It is an amazing book full of stories and scientific evidence and personal encounters with people from all over the world who have had a glimpse of heaven and lived to tell about it. It expanded my small box of the ideas I had about the hereafter and has brought me so much more joy than the joy I already had for Doug, being a smidge jealous that he got to go first. I highly recommend reading it.
I want to honor Doug’s life by incorporating some of his attributes that I admired: laughing more, being more adventurous and taking more risks, and his big faith to pray big prayers (he was a quiet man a lot of the time but had the courage to boldly ask God for big things); I learned those from him and want to get better at it with the time I have left.
The “in-betweens” were part of my new days alone. Heading one way, abruptly stopped by a detour; a new workaround, a new fork in the road. Learning to embrace those with gratitude instead of only feeling the sharp, obvious curve in the road took time to navigate. Not yet arrived at the “new” but certainly no longer in the “was.”
Observation: April 2024……recent travel felt different; I didn’t feel so semi-lost, overstimulated by airport noise, people and overhead announcements and having to severely focus on my gate, my next step, my surroundings, etc on this trip. I had gotten used to traveling with Doug and having him be so aware of our gate, timing and directions, that I easily deferred to his strong, excellent leadership in getting us where we were always going with ease. I felt a new confidence this trip in my own leadership. I felt some growth that hadn’t been blatantly on my radar screen until being in the moment of these plans, flights, connections, personal safety and situational awareness. Seeing older men in plaid colorful shirts (some of you may or may not know that Doug loved plaid shirts and literally had 50+ of them in his closet when he died! That inventory has provided material for 7 beautiful quilts and some aprons with the wonderful memory of Doug & his horde of shirts!!) that always remind me of Doug didn’t catch like a chicken bone in my throat this time; seeing older couples travel together or share a laugh or eat together felt more peaceful than bittersweet this time; the longing to relive those times we had shared doing those things is no longer like when you poke yourself slicing a tomato; some of the sting is gone of doing this alone; I have had another year of doing “firsts” and not really paying attention to them as life plods or speeds along, but then I come upon the fact that I say, “Table for One” to a hostess and it doesn’t carry the bite of my missing spouse, or the bittersweet anymore, as it did a year or two ago. I feel gently stronger and more gradually independent which feels surprisingly good and helps me realize I’ve grown, I’m doing this, I don’t hate it, it’s not as bittersweet with mostly sad moments anymore, but it has much more natural, sweet gratitude instead of the choosing of the gratitude; it feels so very good. I still at times wish it were different and my lifelong companion was right there with me, but it isn’t and I am more okay with it today than I was or that I imagined I would be.
I’m definitely on the downhill side of my years. The sand in my hourglass is funneling through quite quickly toward the end of my allotment…….Build a Legacy. Live life intentionally. Have no regrets. This sentiment can also perhaps become “cliche-ish” as well. But it’s taken on renewed meaning for me, like the phrase I mentioned earlier about none of us being promised another day. In the passing of years, when I’ve heard of a death, not even necessarily of someone close to me, it always has served as a reminder to make that call, keep short accounts & not hold grudges, take time to give that hug or kiss to a loved one, not leave the house without acknowledging family, and just be more mindful of taking the opportunities to love our loved ones in meaningful & tangible ways, right? I still think that way, but even more so now. It’s so much more personal and real. Sure does instantly put things into perspective about the stuff that matters, even though it feels like there’s some mental confusion or overload to swim through. It’s like the stupid stuff that maybe mattered a month ago is so dum and insignificant now, who cares!! Life is so short and precious. Sudden loss clarifies things instantly in some ways regarding the lasting things like people & relationships, not gee I wish I would’ve worked more or had a bigger bank account. I’m super thankful Doug & I were purposing to be more aware of our days, our texts, calls or emails with our kids, or deciding to take a trip and say yes to gatherings and meet ups as much as possible. No regrets. I will always cherish that united pursuit as a gift from God to us. That would feel awful to be battered mentally & emotionally by things left unsaid, opportunities not seized upon, and easy forgivenesses for offenses. As much as I feel the importance of death planning is, having no regrets is right up there at the top of the list. We are not guaranteed another day. Make the most of this one.
Those first few days after Doug’s departure to Heaven, I needed the quiet to sort my thoughts and maybe to feel I had one tiny bit of control over what was unfolding, whether that was true or not. The temporary layer of stillness was restorative to my soul. But at the same time, the comfort of the daily flow with my “person” had now been forever interrupted; there was a learned rhythm to the companionship of another with so many shared years & experiences and the comfort that it brought, that to which I had become so accustomed. Now there was no extra tv noise when I didn’t have it on; no extra people-noises of walking, movements, opening drawers, cupboards and fridge and just living done by another; with life so busy, so constant and we have to adjust to so much unavoidable noise and bustle that it was nice to be the only author of noise for a bit in my little world. And yet so equally, I did miss Doug’s quiet routines with giant awareness that it had forever been quashed in an instant. My soul was momentarily soaking in the quiet for navigating the crisis all the while realizing moment by moment, hour by hour that I might detest that quiet from time to time; there was fresh reminders around every corner that Doug would not be coming back in this space of my life and filling it with his laughter, his daily movements & rhythms and presence any more. I was longing for some of that expected, predictable happenings. He was indeed a big presence whether his physical body or his laughter, so the gap is “XXL” like he was. As Kellie says, “our #6 is missing”. My daily routines were reforming and a new path emerging. And all of that takes time to recognize, experience, accept, adjust to, and gain confidence in taking the hand of God, take a deep breath, and choose to move forward with the brand new Companion of these unchartered waters.
Things and People I love:
God, Doug, My kids & their families, Grandkids, Being interested & involved in my grandkids’ lives & happenings, Family, Kindred-Spirit Friends, Gratitude, Hot Air Balloons, Hummingbirds, old wooden doors, beauty in Nature, beautiful things, wildflowers, crisp Nature photos, sunflowers, weathered shacks, Encouragement, the wood stove smell, Fall foliage, the smell of cedar, the smell of a campfire, quiet things, children giggling, the surf, Kindness, Patriotism, bulletproof coffee, star gazing, birds flying in a V, 70’s easy rock like Steely Dan/Doobie Brothers/The Eagles/Fleetwood Mac, Old Hymns like “It is Well With My Soul,” “Great Is Thy Faithfulness,” and “The Old Rugged Cross”, the smell of fresh bread, Prayer, Thankful quotes, seeing beyond what’s seen, hearing beyond what’s initially heard, The Military, First Responders & Vets, meaningful human connection, spunky hugs, alliterations, laughter, cigar smoke, babies cooing and learning to laugh, Hillsong and Bethel Worship, the glaring polite vibe in some southern & southeastern states, Communion, Stacking Stones, greeting cards, English tea gardens, Peace, America The Beautiful & The Star Spangled Banner sung by a military choir…
I have a few favorite quotes & authors; they are treasures; my life & faith have been impacted & shaped & encouraged by them over the years.
Joyce Landorf
CS Lewis
John Eldredge
Alistair Begg
Chuck Swindoll
Zig Ziglar
Scriptures in the Amplified Version of the Bible
Here are some specific quotes I really like:
“If God is for us, who can be against us?” (Romans 8:31)
“God is too good to be unkind and He is too wise to be mistaken. And when we cannot trace His hand, we must trust His heart.” (Charles Spurgeon)
“We got lemons, let’s make lemonade.” (Elbert Hubbard)
Ecclesiastes 3:1 There is a season (a time appointed) for everything and a time for every delight and event or purpose under heaven.
I may not be where I want to be, but thank God I am not where I used to be,” and “Patience is not simply the ability to wait – it’s how we behave while we’re waiting.” (Joyce Meyer)
“Embrace the suck.” (Military Quote)
“It is better to be a warrior in a garden, than a gardener in a war.” (Carl von Clausewitz)
“Life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you respond to it.” (Chuck Swindoll)
“Don’t Waste Your Sorrows.” (Alexander MacLaren)
“Hurt people hurt people.” (Anonymous)
11 He has made everything beautiful and appropriate in its time. He has also planted eternity [a sense of divine purpose] in the human heart [a mysterious longing which nothing under the sun can satisfy, except God]—yet man cannot find out (comprehend, grasp) what God has done (His overall plan) from the beginning to the end.
12 I know that there is nothing better for them than to rejoice and to do good as long as they live; 13 and also that every man should eat and drink and see and enjoy the good of all his labor—it is the gift of God. 14 I know that whatever God does, it endures forever; nothing can be added to it nor can anything be taken from it, for God does it so that men will fear and worship Him [with awe-filled reverence, knowing that He is God]. 15 That which is has already been, and that which will be has already been, for God seeks what has passed by [so that history repeats itself].
16 Moreover, I have seen under the sun that in the place of justice there is wickedness, and in the place of righteousness there is wickedness. 17 I said to myself, “God will judge both the righteous and the wicked,” for there is a time [appointed] for every matter and for every deed. 18 I said to myself regarding the sons of men, “God is surely testing them in order for them to see that [by themselves, without God] they are [only] animals.” 19 For the [earthly] fate of the sons of men and the fate of animals is the same. As one dies, so dies the other; indeed, they all have the same breath and there is no preeminence or advantage for man [in and of himself] over an animal, for all is vanity. 20 All go to the same place. All came from the dust and all return to the dust. 21 Who knows if the spirit of man ascends upward and the spirit of the animal descends downward to the earth? 22 So I have seen that there is nothing better than that a man should be happy in his own works and activities, for that is his portion (share). For who will bring him [back] to see what will happen after he is gone?
“Gratitude is the healthiest of all human emotions. The more you express gratitude for what you have, the more likely you will have even more to express gratitude for.” (Zig Ziglar)
“If you aim at nothing, you’ll hit it every time.” (Zig Ziglar)
“People often say that motivation doesn’t last. Well, neither does bathing – that’s why we recommend it daily.” (Zig Ziglar)
“Your attitude, not your aptitude, will determine your altitude.” (Zig Ziglar)
“Always stay humble and kind.” (Tim McGraw)
“Preach the Gospel at all times. And if necessary, use words.” (St. Francis of Assisi)
Henry David Thoreau: “I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived. I did not wish to live what was not life, living is so dear; nor did I wish to practice resignation, unless it was quite necessary. I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to live so sturdily and Spartan-like as to put to rout all that was not life, to cut a broad swath and shave close, to drive life into a corner, and reduce it to its lowest terms…”
Romans 15:13 … “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing [through the experience of your faith] that by the power of the Holy Spirit you will abound in hope. and overflow with confidence in His promises.”
I love beautiful pictures and will share some here. Not sure where I heard it but I love the sentiment that Nature is God expressing Himself with visual love. Beauty in Nature really resonates with me and draws me closer to God through each experience.
Gratitude: I’ve been a thankful person for a long time, but in about 2007 I met an amazing coworker, Barb, and we started off emailing each other during our workday about a thankful thought here or there, or something in our office that was a blessing, or something we were grateful for in our personal lives. 17 years later, we barely ever miss a day to text or email an item of gratitude. It has made us both rich women in our hearts and souls and it totally changes perspective even about the hard, hard things in life.
Forgiveness: Central to my own health, well being and faith journey over the years. Is it easy? No, but it is simple, and the more I practice it the better I get at it. If not practiced regularly, daily, I have found it can make me physically sick, keeps me a prisoner of people and situations, and robs my joy. Forgiveness doesn’t change the past, it doesn’t change what’s happened to me; it doesn’t condone others’ wrong or unjust actions toward me but it frees me; “it does enlarge the future for us.” Mary Karen Read (Virginia Tech shooting victim).
Matthew 6:14-15: For if you forgive people their trespasses [their reckless and willful sins, leaving them, letting them go, and giving up resentment], your heavenly Father will also forgive you.
Barbara O’Neill Tik Tok on Healing The Mind. Forgiveness…..
The word ‘forgive’ really means to give something up for yourself not for them.” “Forgiveness is not an occasional act; it is a permanent attitude.” – Martin Luther King, Jr. “Mistakes are always forgivable, if one has the courage to admit them.”
“Let us forgive each other, only then we will live in peace” — Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy.
Colossians 3:13 says: Be gentle and forbearing with one another and, if one has a difference (a grievance or complaint) against another, readily pardoning each other; even as the Lord has [freely] forgiven you, so must you also [forgive].
Can we trust God to do what’s best and relieve ourselves of being judge and jury? We gotta take our hands off that person’s neck.
Bitterness is drinking poison and hoping the other person dies.
CBN article, The Deadly Consequences of Unforgiveness and Dr. Michael Barry, The Forgiveness Project, and the Rwanda Widow Story of Forgiveness where the perpetrators who killed their husbands and children chose the path of forgiveness and even took in some of the killers and made sure they grew up to be better men after the tragedy and mass executions.
One of the best ways to live life is to choose to be unoffendable!! Give up my right to be offended! We cannot escape the painful experiences of life, BUT, we can choose to overlook the offense. (Proverbs 19:11)
Years ago I recall Dr. Phil describing how our psyches get damaged by deep trauma or harsh words, somewhat like a scalding of sorts; his description brought it very real to me in that word picture. Our brain’s amygdala is like a small recording device that keeps those traumas captive; the sears, it scorches, it is the scalding of our souls, and it is my opinion we can never recover unless forgiveness is involved.
Lifting Weights: have changed my life, brought definition to muscles I never knew I had, and made me feel stronger in my 60’s than I ever felt in my younger years. I was educated by an awesome trainer in Bozeman, MT (shout out, Kayla!) about how to lift weights safely and effectively, in addition to learning to love squats and lunges(never thought that was possible!). Doing these new moves have changed my life for the better. For a long time into my early 30’s I could walk regularly and have many benefits to keep slim, but into my 40’s and beyond this became not enough for me. So I added more tools to my fitness/wellness tool box.
HIIT Workouts: have brought variations to my workouts and increased my stamina; they have brought some fun to exercise that I just couldn’t find with cardio workouts or gym machines in general. (Shout out, Meredith S. for 7-13 minute HIIT’S!)
Yoga and Stretching: My first introduction to yoga was in 2005 when I got myself a Yoga for Dummies book and clumsily tried to follow along from a book, toggling back and forth from pictures to poses; it was shoddy at best. I was not looking to empty my mind or tap into other entities, but simply to learn some healthy, effective stretches, gain flexibility and core strength. I have always loved stretching and learned it early in life beginning ballet at age 8 and continuing until age 14. Then in 2007 while working at a municipal court, a lady would come once a week to our atrium (shout out, Sandy K!) and lead us in a most wonderful after-work class. Her input changed everything-yoga for me. She taught us great form, safe poses, and gratitude in our practice. I remember her reminding us weekly to be kind to our bodies and find our edge (she would say, “to do any less is not enough, to do any more is too much”)….It has made me stronger, improved my balance & flexibility, and taught me some incredible breathing techniques to reduce stress, enhance & strengthen muscle endurance, and lower my blood pressure.
Massage Therapy: I have learned in the past 3 years how helpful this can be to a body. It creeped me out at first, but when a coworker (shout out, Suellen!) suggested it, I gave it a try and after one appointment I was hooked. I began to make it a monthly part of my self care and wellness.
Homeopathy, Naturopathy & Chiropractic Care: have enriched my life for 34 years; there is power in these healing arts that have benefitted my entire family and I highly recommend them as parallel medical approaches to traditional medicine.
Laughter: Proverbs 17:22 says, “Laughter is like taking a good medicine.” It can unite people and is very beneficial for emotional and physical wellness. I believe we are spirit, energetic beings inhabiting human bodies, created by God. It is possible to boost energetics in a positive way by laughing more, watching funny movies or videos, hearing clean jokes, and seeking out funny things. And find a way to laugh more at yourself and not take yourself so seriously! The Bible says the joy of the Lord is my strength. So true. I also find laughter in children laughing and funny things animals do caught on video.
Grounding: I have only learned of this remarkable practice in the past few months and it is fascinating to me. A few of the benefits attributed to it: appears to improve sleep, normalize the day–night cortisol rhythm, reduce pain, reduce stress, shift the autonomic nervous system from sympathetic toward parasympathetic activation, increase heart rate variability, speed wound healing, and reduce blood viscosity.
Prayer & Meditation: Central to my daily life, my very reason for getting up each day to connect with my Creator and find peace to navigate what can sometimes be a loud, busy, challenging world while attempting to be present and intentional with the routines of life. Talking to God, leaning in to hear his still, small voice fills me up, refocuses everything for the better, fills my cup to overflowing on the daily, reminds me I am anchored to the One who created me for this life & assignments of purpose. I feel a bit like meditation has been co-opted a bit with some religious practices and has at times developed a negative connotation like yoga, but to me it is very sound and the basics of meditation means to dwell on, repeat, rehearse, to chew on over & over.
Psalm 145 is a poem in the Bible that describes God’s character and his works, and the writer declares that he will meditate on these, musing about them and then telling others about them.
Luke 6 tells us, “One of those days Jesus went out to a mountainside to pray, and spent the night praying to God. If prayer and meditation benefitted Jesus, I definitely want to be doing it.
Carnivore Nutrition Lifestyle: I first heard about Carnivore from my niece and nephew in California and then from my son several years ago. It had changed their lives; they felt great, they lost weight, they had health problems resolve eating that way, and they had nothing but good things to say about it. I was intrigued but quite skeptical, but I could not argue with their leaner frames, more muscle, reduction in body inflammation that was showing up as a lot of health issues, better sleeping and clearer heads, all around better health. I wanted to feel better and lose a few pounds and was not succeeding on counting calories, buying skim everything, adhering to low fat intake, tallying macros, eating more protein, working out more, or restricting food. I wanted to try it but I was very nervous, I could hardly wrap my head around it because it was so completely the opposite of all I knew about nutrition or what’s best for me (according to others) and kept trying and trying, but kept failing and failing, with a lot of discouragement and frustration along the way. Plus just feeling kinda crummy. Cutting out the junk foods of course was a better way to eat, but why did I still feel low-level crummy eating so “clean” as it was dubbed?? I’ve come to realize I’ve been “mis-educated” for over 50 years about diet & exercise, had a lot of wrong info regarding nutrition and the food pyramid that I believed but ended up not feeling so well eating that way. Lots to undo and to unwind and to switch over; I don’t believe it’s just as simple as “move more” or “calories in, calories out” anymore, and I’ve learned that fat does not make us fat. I have to say it again: Fat doesn’t make us fat!! I was not eating enough good fat and I was not eating enough food. I have come to believe that we as a nation are “hangry” (for satiating good fats & meats) and are undernourished even though we are stuffing ourselves to oblivion we are addicted to carbs & packaged foods and to some degree even addicted to salads being our go-to on the road of phantom weight loss that never gets us & keeps us where our bodies need to be; at least for me, I’ll just speak for myself. Eating that way just kept me perpetually unsatisfied & unsatiated with salad and lean everything(not to mention dissatisfied with the self-discipline of the gym regimens & the walking & the list of good exercise habits that were not yielding the results I felt all that self-discipline should yield!!). Not to mention, my smart body formed & fashioned by a supremely smart Creator was trying to tell me it wasn’t enough. Yet the way God’s created these body machines of ours continually tries to adapt & adjust to the overages or underages with which we treat it because I believe our bodies are designed to heal themselves. And that truth began to unfold for me over the weeks & months after taking the Carnivore experiment plunge. I feel so much better eating this way, how can it be wrong for me??? So if you aren’t feeling optimal or you still feel kinda crummy & sluggish or if you’re discouraged with your current method of nutrition in your life, you might want to look into this as I did. Don’t take my word for it. Get Educated, Learn for yourself, Try a different way for yourself if you’re seeking a change and have been frustrated, and see what it does for you. What’s there to lose I ask? Some weight, a wart or two, some painful joints, headaches, improved skin quality, foggy-headedness, crummy-feeling all around, sluggish, or like you’re in a bit of a food coma….. Don’t believe me, experiment for yourself.
I am not judging or disparaging anyone and how they choose to eat, nor am I trying to convert anyone to Carnivore nutrition, just sharing personal changes that have bettered my wellness & quality of life significantly in the past 7 months. If you feel great and live an optimal life with the way you fuel your body, Kudos, carry on!! You may not struggle with any health issues and that is amazing in and of itself. But I’ve learned some nuggets, some simple truths that have opened my eyes regarding nutrition; I did about 6 months of intense research for myself by watching podcasts on YouTube by the following people:
Kelly Hogan, Dr. Ken Berry, Dr. Anthony Chaffee, (Oxalates and Plants Are Trying To Kill You), Sally Norton on plant oxalates (that may possibly be hindering optimal health for some), Meat And Butter Gal, Jordan Peterson, his wife and daughter, Nutrition with Judy, Daniel Trevor, Dr. Georgia Ede, Maria Emmerich, Dr. Shawn Baker (The Ultimate Carnivore Beginner Guide),
Some of us(maybe not everyone is sensitive to these things…) can be very damaged by eating certain ways that include lots of processed foods, carbs, sugar and oxalates from overly ingesting veggies; some of that can cause inflammation which greatly affects our wellness. Some people may be very sensitive to vegetables and although supposed to be good for us can cause inflammation as well. And some people can go along for years and not be damaged by what they eat. I’ve definitely done trial & error, with elimination eating and trying to find culprits. Others may not be as affected by the standard American diet. It’s definitely been worth it to wean myself off of processed foods, sugar, and empty carbs. I was for sure inflamed inside and was unaware of how inflamed, and was not aware of the wide range effects of inflammation. Glad to be learning a lot. I don’t know how long I will eat like this, but for now it has been a great reset for my body and has given it time to heal and reconfigure itself and help me to feel 1000% better overall. If what you’ve been doing is not sustainable thus far or providing no positive results, and if you do not feel well doing what you are doing, you might want to consider this method of nutritional medicine and see how your body responds. Set a time frame. I started with a month. It can be a bit overwhelming at first when delving into this subject for sure with the glut of info to wade through. but hang in there and just learn in chunks, listen to podcasts, ask questions and give it some time to sink in. It’s such a gigantic paradigm shift for nutrition markers I’ve believed my whole life. But I could not be happier about the results for me personally. Reading a lot of Carnivore testimonials about reversing Diabetes, helping with cancer recovery, healed gut issues, eliminated joint pains, BP issues, righting hormone imbalances, eliminating PCOS & infertility problems for women, reducing inflammation in the body, skin problems, aging more optimally, eliminating brain fog, and more effective & sustainable weight loss was very intriguing & hopeful. Even if you don’t decide to try this nutritional-medicine approach, if you want a reason to smile & be happy for someone else, you can find a plethora of happy success stories and amazing testimonials of transformation on YouTube in this arena. I feel better at 67 than I ever did at 27, 37 or 47….
[Disclaimer: I am not an MD, I am not giving advice here; I am only sharing my own personal observations and what has helped me in the past years to come to a more complete place of health and wellness that has benefitted my path over 50 years. What I offer here is informational from only a personal perspective, nothing professional for health or medical purposes.]
Quality Sleep: I attempt to have 8-10 hours of sleep at night. It affects so many areas of our lives and is vital to wellness.
Exercise Ball: For about 9 years before I retired, I used an exercise ball at work for my daily chair. Other than falling off it once, it was stable & so beneficial to my core & spine for 8 hours a day, and made me pretty spoiled for regular furniture at home and in general. Highly recommend.
April 2024.
Springtime in Texas is beautiful. Tons of butterflies, lovely bluebonnets and Indian paintbrush blooming all along the highways that put a smile on my face and feed my soul. Vibrant pink, red and orange rosebushes are in full bloom. Hummingbirds have begun showing up. After the initial burst of colors, then came the black-eyed susans and the pink evening primroses. And all the butterflies!
A quick trip to NY also proved Spring to be beautiful there as well. The Botanical Gardens were boasting of bright daffodil hills and Magnolia forests that caught my eye; not to mention the hundreds of colorful orchids inside the spacious Conservatory for an Orchid Fashion Show. Lots of creative displays and food for the soul.