Friday, January 18, 2019

The Aging Challenge...

There’s this trend floating around the social media world these days that’s had me thinking an awful lot. It’s the “How well did you age challenge?” and the idea is that you compare your first profile picture ever, which for most people lands approximately 10 years ago (give or take), with your most recent profile picture. So far I’ve only seen this turn out well for people. I suppose I just have a lot of good looking friends that get sweeter with time! Or maybe there’s a select few, ahem, like myself, who are a little too afraid to see just how big the circles under their eyes have gotten or how the good ‘ol LB’s have landed. It has been fairly entertaining and highlighted the fact that 1) styles really do change fairly drastically in ten years, 2) cameras have improved astronomically in a decade, let alone cameras we carry around in our pockets, and 3) these clever little things called filters have helped a lot of us out! I actually did go back and look at my first profile picture just for kicks, and it has been confirmed that I was once just a baby… with a social media account, nonetheless. 

I’m sure it was never meant to take up this much mental capacity, but I just can’t stop coming back to the real idea behind this aging thing. It’s consumed my thoughts in so many ways.  While driving the other day, my mind wandered to all of the life that has happened since that innocent little 22 year old had her picture taken, which happened to be at a Six Flags in San Antonio!!! (insert all the party emojis)

I’ve traveled to Hawaii twice with my sister and mom, but never with Matt (Matt inserted that himself for sympathy), been back to Mexico for our 10 year anniversary, graduated with another degree, birthed 5 children, watched my husband be stripped to his core and learn to walk again, buried a child, celebrated at weddings, mourned at funerals, partied on birthdays, sold a house, bought a new house, planted a church, ran a marathon, traveled some more. 

But those are just the monumental moments. All the little moments that have happened include hundreds of meals shared with loved ones, tears for days, laughter late into the night, sleepless nights on repeat, more tears – tears of agony, tears of joy, empathy tears and some more for good measure. Thousands of loads of laundry, hours upon hours of reading and cleaning and dishwashing – the list of the mundane goes on and on. Life has been LIVED and it has really left me to mull over how well I’ve aged. Like really aged. 

When I think about aging well I think about caring a little bit less about the not-so-important things and a little bit more about the souls around me. I think about taking a step back and choosing the perspective that looks from the outside in, instead of from the inside-in. I think about relating to people a little bit better and naturally being more patient, even, or maybe especially with adults, not just the kids. I think about listening well and learning to be empathetic. I think about appreciating the differences in other people, especially people that are far different from me. I think about engaging in an eternal perspective on a more regular basis and remembering that these days are but a vapor. I think about Moses’ plea, “teach me to number my days, that I may gain a heart of wisdom.” (Psalm 90:12).  Wisdom, it sure doesn’t come easily, but I suppose, neither have the bags under my eyes. 

So cheers to aging, my friends! And here's to what we'll really look like in another 10 years!


                                         May 2008                                                                  December 2018

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Thoughts on 2019...

The end of one year and the beginning of another is always a fun time of reflection. In today’s social media saturated age, post after post pops up paying tribute on the past year and saluting the future with high hopes. I have lots of friends who have chosen a “word of the year” each year. I salute them, but I don’t know how they choose just one. Clearly, I’m choosing like 732, so thanks for sticking it out through at least 75! ;)

This morning I rung in the New Year the best way I knew how, with a massage that was gifted to me by the one and only, Haley Jo!!! I spent the morning in a heated bed, relaxing for over an hour. It was glorious!!! Our conversation slowly made it’s way to Jesus and the way that he has worked in each of our hearts over our lifetimes. Haley described certain moments where the Holy Spirit revealed himself as different tent-posts being hammered in the ground throughout her life. I loved her illustration and the visual it created in my head. 

I came home and 2019 continued on much like 2018. I fed the baby. I fed myself. I fed some more kids. I cleaned up and then I started feeding everyone again. I suspect the next 364 days of 2019 will look fairly similar. Eventually I had a chance to jump in the shower which is where I do my best thinking-like most moms-(can I get an amen?!?) and my mind wandered through all the typical goal setting categories. 

My post-partum mom thoughts went something like this…
**I could attempt to eat less chocolate, but that would be a lame life. 
**Running another marathon this year seems next to impossible with the daunting training requirements and the ever present needs of a newborn, so I may as well not set any running goals…better luck next year.
**I don’t want to diet because I’m nursing, but really just because I love food. 
**Attempting to get more sleep with my current middle of the night wake up calls seems less than realistic, so cheers to more coffee.
**Keep reading – finish the New Testament and start and finish the Old Testament again. 
**Anything that requires undivided time can pretty much be thrown out the window. I should chalk this year up to being inefficient and unproductive. (Super optimistic, right???)

But then my mind wandered back to the tent-poles and the visions everyone hopes and dreams of when the horizon of a new year is upon them. There’s no doubt most of us enter a new year with at least some optimism, if not a whole lot (apparently I’m the exception, Ha!). I thought about the people I’ve prayed for this year and last year and the year before that and I thought about all the tent poles that I truly believe can be sunk deep in these lives. When I think about years slipping by, I think about being one year closer to eternity. One year closer to Jesus coming back. One more year of the Holy spirit speaking and working in my heart and in loved ones all around me. One more year full of tent poles being driven deep. 

So my goal for 2019 is to keep on keepin’ on. And When, or if, I reach 2020 and look back on the past year, my goal is to be able to identify with so much certainty, the ways that He met me and showered me with his faithfulness. My goal is to sit with friends I’ve prayed for and listen to them identify all the tent-poles that have been driven in their story-all the ways the Holy Spirit has opened their eyes and shown them His faithfulness. The tent-poles that will forever be “A-ha” moments of how the Holy Spirit lives and breathes and constantly teaches us more about who He is. 


“Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we boast in the Hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us.” Romans 5:1-5


Backyard Sunset on January 1, 2019