Hair Ruts

It’s my observation that most women have one of two types of hairstyles. Either they have a wash-and-wear type style that they use every day, or they take the time to actually fix their hair each morning. Or sometimes both.

I adore Debi’s hair. She always has it carefully styled, oftentimes in a vintage style of some sort or the other. Her hairstyles are not the same day after day–but they are always “done” day after day.

I, on the other hand, am remarkably prone to hair ruts.

I find a hairstyle that works for me and I use it until I absolutely wear it out.

Although by “hairstyle”, I mean that by the loosest definition possible.

I don’t spend a lot of time on my hair. With as much hair as I’ve got, if I were to straighten or curl it every morning, I’d be spending hours in front of the mirror. Instead, I choose “styles” that take five minutes or less.

Me

Most recently, I’m going with the “pull back the very top into a barrette” look. (On a side note, have you ever noticed how hard it is to figure out where to look when taking a mirror picture?)

Before that, I was prone to put my hair in a quick French braid–day in and day out.

Me

Even before that, when I was working in food service, my hair was almost constantly in a bun at the nape of my neck.

Someday perhaps, I’ll take more interest in styling my hair on a regular basis. For now, I find something that works and…

Welcome to a hair rut!


Thankful Thursday: Isaiah 30:15

Today I’m thankful for God, who brings His word to my remembrance, and who faithfully pursues me, even when I run to another.

Thankful Thursday banner

A little less than a week ago, I wrote of my silent cry–the ache, the request within my soul that I can’t articulate. I was working on a sewing project with a lump (size large) in my throat and tears bottled inside, refusing to overflow. I worked for an hour, maybe more, with no thought in my head except that one inarticulate cry.

Then one verse popped into my head–a verse I had memorized many long years ago (in a different translation than I currently use). “In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength.”

The verse rolled over and over in my mind, combining with the cry. I continued on with my work, moving seamlessly (ha-ha!) from sewing to organizing.

Then another thought arose and sought prominence. “You should check out the context of that.”

“Okay,” I thought. “I’ll check it once I’m done folding this laundry.”

“No, I think you should check it out now.”

Reluctantly, I put down my work. I’ve taken such comfort in my work, staying busy as a means of enjoyment–yes–but also as a means of avoidance. As long as I was working, I didn’t have to process that cry. The pain I was experiencing couldn’t cripple me unless I stopped. But I feared that if I were to stop, I’d never be able to start again.

But now, I needed to stop, needed to put aside my laundry and look up that verse.

“Woe to the rebellious children,” says the Lord,
“Who take counsel, but not of Me,
And who devise plans, but not of My Spirit,
That they may add sin to sin;
Who walk to go down to Egypt,
And have not asked My advice,
To strengthen themselves in the strength of Pharoah,
And to trust in the shadow of Egypt!”
Isaiah 30:1-2

In light of my recent struggles, I’d devised my plans. I’d figured out how I was going to get through them. I was going to keep busy. I was going to distract myself. I was going to push through despite my lack of heart.

I took counsel, of a sort. Mostly, I explained what I’d decided in such a compelling way that none of my counselors could dare disagree. And when they did, when they started using the subtle phraseology of redirection, I ignored them.

I placed my trust in my chosen plan. It would work. It would have to work.

Still I added sin to sin. I was NOT placing my trust in God. I was worried (Matt 6:23-34). I was anxious (Phil 4:6-7).

And my plan produced no results. They exhausted me, they ravaged my emotions, they left me in despair.

And then God, in His wisdom, brought the memorized Scripture, Isaiah 30:15 into my mind.

“For thus says the Lord God, the Holy One of Israel:
‘In returning and rest you shall be saved;
In quietness and confidence shall be your strength.’
But you would not.”

God offered an answer. Not the Egypts I had been trusting in. Not the busyness I had clung to. He offered Himself.

“Return to Me,” He said. “Rest in Me.”
“Quiet your soul. Take confidence in Me.”

The Israelites Isaiah spoke to would not.

But I will.

I will turn aside from the Egypt that my flesh so desperately wants to run to.

I will uncurl my hand from the things I so desperately want to cling to.

I will silence my soul. I will rest in Him.

I will take confidence in this: “that He who has begun a good work in [me] will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ.”

“For thus says the Lord God, the Holy One of Israel:
‘In returning and rest you shall be saved;
In quietness and confidence shall be your strength.'”


Managing my blog reading

Blogs have a way of taking over one’s life–filling every spare moment unless one takes deliberate steps to control them.

This is true of the writing of blogs–of which there is no end–but it is even more true of the reading of blogs.

There are hundreds of absolutely amazing blogs out there–from those that update multiple times a day to those that update only a few times a year.

RSS makes things easier by allowing one to only visit those blogs that have been updated recently.

I have had moderate success using Firefox’s “Live Bookmarks” to manage my blog reading. All the blogs I follow are organized into a folder, with subfolders for each “category” of reading. I have the “Bloggers I know”, the “Book Bloggers”, the “Mommy Bloggers”, the “Thinking Bloggers”, the “Political Bloggers”, etc. By categorizing them this way, I can avoid certain classes on certain days (for example, I don’t read politics on the weekends–it’s just a personal rule.)

This hasn’t been a bad system, per se–but it hasn’t been a spectacular system.

The problem is that I had almost 100 blogs that I was following regularly–and I simply didn’t have enough hours in the day to read them all. Still, I was trying to read every word of every post as soon as it came out.

I tried to impose control by only checking blogs once a day.

But even this was insufficient. There were so many blogs that even checking them just once a day meant that I was spending hours reading every day.

I don’t have that kind of time.

So now, I’m trying something new. I kept my thirty(!) favorite blogs in my blog feeds folder on Firefox. I divided another sixty between the five weekdays (12 per day) and added them to a nifty little Firefox Add-on called Morning Coffee. Morning Coffee allows me to press a little coffee cup icon (Morning Coffee) on my toolbar and load the twelve preselected blogs for the day.

The plan is that I’ll read my thirty as normal and load my “morning coffee” blogs. I’ll skim what’s been written on the morning coffee blogs over the past week, reading in depth only what really sparks my interest. In doing so, I should (my fingers are crossed) be able to reduce my blog reading time somewhat.

An extra sixty or so blogs that I’ve bookmarked at some time or another are now kept in a subfolder at the bottom of the “blog feeds” folder. I can peruse these at a leisurely pace during the weekends when I don’t have any “morning coffee” blogs and don’t read any of the political or “news” related sites.

At least, that’s the plan.

Do you ever struggle with spending too much time online? How do you keep your blog-reading under control?


Nightstand (May 2010)

What's on Your Nightstand?My pride rebels against holding over books from one nightstand post to the next, so I often find myself frantically trying to finish and review the rest of my list immediately prior to the fourth Tuesday of the month.

Alas, this month even my pride cannot keep me from holding over books. I bit off more than I could chew last month…and added some extra books throughout the month…and had all sorts of stuff to finish in the last weeks of school…and have been trying to actually get my thesis off the ground…and I’ve been on a bit of a crafty kick lately that has distracted my attention from books.

Which means that, in short, I am holding over a whopping 10 books.

Dear me!

On last month’s nightstand:

On my nightstand

What I actually read this month was:
(Links lead to my reviews of the book, never to a site selling you something.)

Fiction

  • Eye Contact by Cammie McGovern
  • Lost in Rooville by Ray Blackston
  • Where Love is, There God is also by Leo Tolstoy
  • The Winds of Autumn by Janette Oke

Nonfiction

Juvenile

  • Children’s Picture Books author ANDERSON-ANHOLT (52 titles), including
  • The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne
  • The Deserted Library Mystery created by Gertrude Chandler Warner
    Another confirmation of my bias against the “created by’s”. The children were in a truly dangerous situation without any adult oversight. Completely unlike Warner’s books where the children are involved with minor mysteries under the watchful eye of a caring but non-intrusive adult.
  • Sun and Moon, Ice and Snow by Jessica Day George

This month’s nightstand

On my nightstand

Fiction

  • The Courageous Cad by Catherine Palmer
  • Washington’s Lady by Nancy Moser (Holdover)
  • Winter is Not Forever by Janette Oke

Nonfiction

  • 1,2,3 Skein Crochet by Judy Crow
  • The American Bar Association Complete and Easy Guide to Health Care Law
  • **The Children’s Blizzard by David Laskin (Holdover)
  • **Five Aspects of Woman by Barbara Mouser (Holdover)
  • **Human Rights: Opposing Viewpoints (Holdover)
  • **Life’s Instructions for Wisdom, Success, and Happiness (Holdover)
  • Make Your Own Living Trust
  • Martha Stewart’s Encyclopedia of Sewing and Fabric Crafts
  • Nolo’s Simple Will Book
  • Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon (Holdover)
  • The Prodigal God by Timothy Keller (Holdover)
  • **Superhuman by Robert Winston and Lori Oliwenstein (Holdover)
  • Whom Not to Marry by Father Pat Connor
  • **Writing your dissertation in fifteen minutes a day by Joan Bolker

Juvenile

  • Children’s Picture Books author ANDERSON-?
  • **The Shortwave Mystery by Franklin Dixon (holdover)

**The asterisks marks books I’m currently in the middle of.

Drop by 5 Minutes 4 Books to see what others are reading.


In a Crafty Mood

If you’ve known me for any length of time, you probably know that one of my favorite hobbies is homemaking.

I love to cook, to organize, to sew, to quilt, to do all sorts of crafty stuff.

And since I got done with the semester a couple of weeks ago, I’ve been in crafty overdrive.

I’d become dissatisfied with a scarf I made a couple of years ago, so I unraveled it and re-crocheted it in a more pleasing open-work style.

Crocheted Scarf

I finished a quilted Christmas tree skirt that I’ve been working on since January or February.

Christmas tree skirt

I made a nightgown while adjusting a pattern for a dress.

Nightgown

I made great progress on the aforementioned dress (I only still have to hem it–and make the sash and handbag that goes with it.)

Dress

I whipped up a (very) last-minute quilt for my cousin who is expecting and had a shower on Saturday.

Baby quilt

I finished a Christmas tree ornament.

Star Ornament

I cut out all the applique pieces for and prepped the first of my day-of-the-week tea towels.

Monday tea towle

And, of course, Joanna and I finished up Daniel and Debbie’s wedding quilt (pictures to come after they’re married–in less than a month!)

I’ll say it’s been a pretty productive two weeks.

(Especially considering that I actually HAVE made good progress on my thesis as well.)


Recap (May 16-22)

On bekahcubed

Book Reviews:

  • The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne

    “Author John Boyne describes his work in an author’s note: ‘Throughout the writing and rewriting of the novel, I believed that the only respectful way for me to deal with this subject was through the eyes of a child, and particularly through the eyes of a rather naive child who couldn’t possibly understand the terrible things that were taking place around him.’

    Naive is right. Nine year old Bruno is completely lost in 1940s Germany. Despite his father being a commandant in the Nazi army, he has no idea what is going on around him. He doesn’t seem to know that the country is at war. He doesn’t understand who Hitler is–and calls him the “Fury” (as if a German child wouldn’t be able to pronounce “Fuhrer”.) When his family is moved to Auschwitz, where his father is to command the concentration camp, he mispronounces this name too, calling it “Out With”. He sees the people walking about inside the camp wearing their identical garb and thinks that they’re wearing striped pajamas.”

  • Religion Saves: and nine other misconceptions by Mark Driscoll

    And then there are the books that I read a review of, think “Hmm” and do absolutely nothing with.

    That’s what I did with Religion Saves: and nine other misconceptions after Jonathon and Carrie reviewed it at Reading to Know. I read the review, thought it sounded interesting, but neither added it to my TBR list nor bookmarked the page. I just let it lie.

    Until the audiobook version was featured as ChristianAudio.com‘s free audiobook of the month. As one who positively adores almost anything free, I jumped on the opportunity. After all, if I decide not to listen to it, what have I lost? 290 MB of computer space, easily recoverable via the Delete key. Why not?

  • Stuff Christians Like by Jonathan Acuff

    “If you’ve never checked out the Stuff Christians Like blog, you’re seriously missing out. Every day Jonathan Acuff (or a wickedly funny guest blogger) posts a satirical piece about some aspect of modern Christian culture.

    Acuff is certainly not the only blogger who pokes fun at Christian culture. In fact, such sites abound. But Acuff’s “Stuff Christians Like” manages to set itself apart from other sites in that it’s not cynical. Acuff isn’t giving up on Christians or on the church. He’s not setting himself up as a holier-than-thou. He’s just making observations, in love, about our unique culture (which is also HIS unique culture.)”

Recipes:

On the web

Books for the TBR list:

  • Masterpiece by Elise Broach
    What happens when a beetle draws a picture trying to cheer a boy up–but then the boy’s Mom finds the drawing and thinks that her SON did the drawing? In this story, at least, it leads to bragging, an elaborate scheme to reproduce some famous art, and a mystery for the boy and the beetle to solve.

News to take note of:

  • To treat or not to treat thyroid cancer
    Given that one of our parishioners underwent treatment a couple of years back for thyroid cancer, that a cousin of mine had some nodules removed from her thyroid last year, and that two individuals in our church had complete thyroidectomies a couple of weeks ago for what turned out to NOT be thyroid cancer–I’m understandably curious about thyroid cancer. This study indicates that there has been a dramatic upswing in thyroid cancer cases in recent years–but that chances of survival, even if not treated rapidly, are quite high for those with thyroid cancer, suggesting that treatment can be avoided or delayed for individuals who have cancer that is contained to the gland. Very interesting. I’ll be watching this conversation, that’s for sure.
  • Is a raw diet right for you?
    What this writer and proponents of raw diets everywhere fail to understand and point out about nutrition is that cooking is necessary to make some nutrients bioavailable. It is true that some nutrients can be destroyed by heat–but others require heat to be made available to our bodies. Cooking serves a vital role of increasing palatability and digestibility of foods. For best health, consume a variety of nutrient-rich foods, both cooked and raw.
  • Sea lions and dolphins as underwater anti-terrorism scouts?
    The Navy is out to prove that it’s not a bad idea. Think K-9 units only with really speedy underwater motion.
    HT: Instapundit
  • Is free speech a universal right?
    Apparently not. It seems that free speech is only accorded to those who have been trained in the nation’s best liberal indoctrination camps (journalism schools) and who are currently working inside of the nation’s best propaganda machine (mainstream media).
    HT: Instapundit
  • Cadmium found in jewelry from China
    I’m not a “buy American or else” kind of person–but there is definitely good evidence that buying from China is NOT good for your health. Lead in more articles than can be counted (at least by me), melamine in milk, now cadmium in children’s jewelry. “Made in China” simply isn’t safe–especially for children.

Thought-provoking posts:

  • Should a Pentecostal marry a Calvinist?
    I’ve been following the comment responses to this question since Dr. Russell Moore posted it several weeks ago–now Dr. Moore weighs in with some wise words. I especially liked:

    “If the two of you marry, God has called Calvin to spiritually lead the home (Eph. 5:23, 25-28; 1 Cor. 11:3). Aimee, if you see Calvin as spiritually immature because he hasn’t experienced the “baptism of the Holy Ghost,” do not marry him. He will be leading you spiritually, and if you can’t respect him, as he is, move on. If you would plan to whisper to your children, “Don’t tell Daddy but really serious Christians get slain in the Spirit…” then call off the engagement.

    Calvin, if you secretly think of Aimee’s background as nothing more than ridiculous “man-centered” “holy-rolling,” don’t marry her. She will be, if the Lord wills, the mother of your children, training them up in the sacred writings (2 Tim. 3:15). Your headship isn’t raw force of argument. It is modeled after the way our Lord Christ loved his church, cleansing her “by the washing of water with the word” (Eph. 5:25). How did our Lord Jesus do that with a foundation stone of his church, the Apostle Peter? By kneeling to serve, while teaching (Jn. 14:1-20). You must do likewise.”

  • Vitamin Z on the ache of foster care:

    “Some dear friends of mine recently have taken two little girls into their home. They are 5 and 6 years old. Things have not gone well. Imagine living a life for five years with zero boundaries and then being placed in a home that is patient, loving, and grace-filled, but has firm boundaries. How would you feel? Of course you would freak out. And freak out they have. Screaming fits for hours, empty haunted eyes, and constant rebellion against their new Mom and Dad. I talked to my friend after they had been in the house for about 18 hours and he already sounded completely worn out and weary. “

    My heart goes out to these girls, to this family. Please pray for them, for the many children caught within the foster system, for the Christian foster parents who have been called to parent them, and for God to continue to call new laborers into this white-for-harvest field.

  • On Ergun Caner and ministerial exaggeration:

    “Much attention has been paid both to Caner’s sub-standard apology and to the comments of Dr. Towns in the Christianity Today story. I believe, though, that the real story is in the other statement above – the euphemistic characterization of “exaggeration” as “ministerially speaking.” This statement appears without citation; I do not know whether it is traceable to anyone at Liberty. It does not matter, for it is an entirely true statement. What Caner appears to have done is nothing other than what is common among preachers: he has exaggerated, embellished, and perhaps even fabricated the stories about himself which form the backbone of his sermons. That is where our attention ought to be. Liberty University has misjudged the severity of the scandal, but they have done so because it fails to appear scandalous to Christians who have become comfortable with the idea that preachers regularly tell fibs in the pulpit.”

    While this article specifically speaks to pastors, I know we can all be tempted to “embellish” our stories. A number of years ago, I was convicted that I had been making up statistics in conversation with others when I only knew approximations. It wasn’t increasing my credibility to say that I read that 54.2% of people surveyed were in favor of stricter abortion laws, when the truth was I only remembered that over half of those surveyed in this particular magazine were in favor of stricter abortion laws. Nitpicky? Maybe. But if truth is what sets men free, I want to be as close to the truth as I can be.
    HT: Vitamin Z


A Silent Cry

Sometimes I can’t articulate the
things within my heart
I can’t tell you what
I’m thinking
I can’t tell you what
I’m feeling
I’m not sure what
I want
Except that the ache
grows on
I have wasted my words
Trying to pray
as if God needed my words
to know my heart
Today, I cannot speak
I can only turn
my heart towards Him
A silent cry
“Please”


Thankful Thursday: Don’t Hafta

Today I’m thankful that I don’t hafta finish my to-do list

Thankful Thursday banner

I’m thankful…

…that when my plans to finish my dress are derailed by the realization that I need to whip up another baby quilt–STAT–it’s okay to leave the dress for another day

…that when I discover that the person I was hoping to get into contact with is out of town on vacation, it’s okay to leave the call until next week

…that when my heart is too full of prayer requests and I end up praying while vacuuming instead of listening to an audiobook, it’s okay to finish the audiobook some other time

…that when I wake up to rain that precludes any possibility of a bike ride, it’s okay to skip another day (I’ve only recently gotten back on my bike after the disastrously busy final few weeks of school.)

…that when I forget to ask about when that human trafficking talk is and learn only after I’ve already arranged to do something else, it’s okay to not go

I’m thankful that my to-do list is a tool for me to use, not a taskmaster to use me.

I’m also thankful…

…that I was able to get some quality work done on my thesis

…that I was able to dust and vacuum the living room (including getting all of those infernal Japanese beetles from the corners–I’ve been lazy and not been getting out the hose to take care of them. But now, they are gone!)

…that I was able to whip together a quilt top (and even discovered that I had some fabric that I can use for backing–so I didn’t have to purchase more!)

…that I was able to spend some quality time with my dad and my brother this evening

I’m thankful that my worth is not based on what I do or do not do, but that God in His mercy allows me such a rich and full life.


I love links

I know what you’re thinking. “Of course you like links. What blogger doesn’t?”

But I’m not talking about links to my site (although I do like those too).

I’m talking about links to…
well, just about anything.

I love it when my dad e-mails me an article he read online that he thinks I might be interested in.

I love it when someone posts a blog or article on my Facebook page because it reminded them of me somehow (or they just want to share a favorite teacher who blogs with the other person they know who blogs–Thanks, Steve!).

I love perusing a few choice blogs that are primarily just an amalgam of links, such as the political Instapundit and Reformed bloggers Vitamin Z and Tim Challies.

I enjoy clicking the links that occasionally pop up in my TweetDeck as I’m going about my daily business (to be read at leisure sometime after I’m done with my “daily business”).

And I love sharing links with others.

That’s why I have my weekly recap posts–to share my links with others.

That’s why I often tweet links (indeed, it’s about the only thing I tweet.)

That’s why, if you’re a good friend, I might just drive you nuts by sending you links to articles, blogs, whatever as I stumble across them.

I’m not a part of one of those linkie social networks like Del.icio.us, StumbleUpon, Digg, or Google Reader–because I’m not sure if I need another thing to take up more of my time. But I do occasionally wish that I could get more variety in my link reading–except that I want that variety to be, well, proven/pre-read by friends I trust won’t send me duds. So maybe a social network is the way to go…

So tell me, what do you think of links? Do you love them, like them, hate them? Are you completely ambivalent to them?

Do you like to send them but not receive them? Do you like to receive them but not send them? Do you belong to a linkie social network? Which one? Do you like it?

And whether you like sending links or not, if you find something that you think might interest me, PLEASE send me a link. I absolutely love them! (Send links via Facebook, Twitter @bekahcubed, or e-mail.


Desires of my heart

“Delight yourself also in the Lord,
And He shall give you the desires of your heart.”

Psalm 37:4

It’s probably the one Scripture I have the most trouble with. Does God really promise to give me the desires of my heart when I delight in Him?

‘Cause I’ve been delighting–and still so many of my desires remain unfulfilled.

I’ve had women quote this verse to me as a promise that I’ll marry someday. I don’t want to believe them. Because what if that is what this verse is saying–yet I never do get married? What if I cling to this as a promise when that isn’t what God intended–and I end up a bitter old spinster?

How many times have I begged God to take away my desires? “Lord, if this isn’t Your desire for me, may I not desire to be married. If it isn’t Your will for me to be a mother, take away this desire to be one. If you don’t want me to foster or adopt, then take away this yearning inside of me.”

Can I take His silence as confirmation? That His will is to fulfill my desires?

I dare not do so and place words that He has not spoken into His mouth.

But here, as I long intensely for what I cannot have, I am tempted to believe that God is not good. I am tempted to think that He is the ultimate tease, awakening my heart to dream only to dash my dreams.

How many time has this happened over the years? Yes, not so solidly as this time, but how many times has my heart risen only to drop to the depths?

Years ago, I wrote these words:

I’ve been seeking
But I’m not seeing
Where are those things
You were going to add?

I’ve been delighting
But I’m not sighting
Where are those dreams
You said You’d fulfill?

I don’t understand
Why You’ve got me in this place
This life that I’m living
is so far from my dreams
I can’t understand
What it means

I don’t know
Why it’s so
But You are Lord
Speak Your word
I will go

I am clay
Have Your way
You are Lord
Speak Your word
I will obey

This verse remains the most difficult one in my mind. I don’t understand it. I don’t know what it means. I don’t know how to take it.

So I move a verse further and cling to verse 5.

“Commit your way to the Lord, trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass.”

So I commit my desires to Him, daily pouring out my heart, raising my requests to Him, begging yet again that He would conform my desires to His.

And then I choose to trust in Him, that He shall bring His good purposes to pass in His perfect timing.