I have found by unlocking one creative outlet, it frees up all sorts of other desires and small talents for other creativity to come out.
On top of writing all the time for a large wide of projects, I am crafting as well, and hopefully will have my first painting done in a couple days.
BUT...I had one very special project that I want to share with you!
In our house we have come to understand that every day for me is like playing dress up. Paul on the other hand thrives with themes and parties and like's having reasons to wear an actual costume. This paints a very bizarre picture of us, but it's not weird, I swear, at least most of the time.
The pure joy in this though? My kids get awesome homemade costumes! Paul really has been on the front end of this, since we had boys and I am still a beginner. He loves the construction behind a costume. He can go to a thrift store on 50% day and come away with all sorts of materials, then cut and glue and paint and all of a sudden, the boys are transformed into supehero's. It's awesome!
Well, I got my second shot this year for Little's 3rd birthday. We were going to transform her into a woodland fairy. (When she was 6 month's old, I made her a Raggedy Ann costume. She looked awesome, but the construction of the dress was horrible. I had to basically sew her into it.)
I had no idea how to make a woodland fairy costume. BUT...I knew how to make wings out of old wire hangers, and I had a handful of cardboard wands in my craft room that I knew I could paint. I just wasn't sure about the skirt.
So here are the photo's of the creation of my little Woodland Fairy. The T-shirt she is wearing is my old vintage T-shirt that says "Protect the Forrest." I cut it and make it to fit her since it was perfect!
I took two hangers and bent them to the shape I wanted. I duct taped the ends together to protect from the sharp parts.
You can use nylons or shear fabric, or whatever you have on hand and wrap it around the frame. Tie the material around the middle, glue it, tape it, whatever, just secure it and cut off the extra fabric.
I had feathers, jewels, fake flowers, glitter, moss, leaves, all sorts of things to glue to the wings. I also had knitting yarn that I braided to use for her straps.
My Woodland Fairy wings.
And her Woodland Fairy wand. I painted it and glued fun leaves and flowers on it.
The skirt I did backwards, so I am not including instructions because I will do it different and better next time, but what I wanted was a bunch of contrasting fabrics, based in cream with brown and green and pink thrown in. I needed pink in there, otherwise she wouldn't wear it. Her and I have differing opinions about color.
My mom was in town and I am SO THANKFUL she was. It wouldn't have been completed without her. We basically just kept sewing fabric on. We would drape it and say, "Looks good. Sew it on." We are very structured sewers. Can't you tell. I think this was 1am.
Here are a couple shots of the skirt.
And here is my Woodland Fairy. She is a little excited.
And when she spins, it flairs out all over. It's AWESOME!
So, I get it. She is only three, and this costume is a bit much. I think I enjoyed figuring out how to do it more than she ever will wearing it. So for me it was a creative expression and I learned a TON!
Sewing is fun.
So are cute little girls in a big drape skirt.
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Monday, May 6, 2013
Personal update 2: the cabin
The cabin.
The writing retreat.
I had hope that with more than 24 hours to myself, my laptop and journals and music, I could somehow process all the things going on inside of me for the last month and pour myself into the book. Read, journal, write, process, pray, seek, and be led by God.
I have never had time like this before to work and to be honest, I was a little nervous with that much time by myself.
Can't you tell?
I want to share some things I came away with from the weekend, but first, I want you to see what I saw. Here is my office set up.
This really was the perfect office. Curled up on a couch, writing and reading and candles lit. It was perfect.
This was my retreat view from where I sat. It hailed most of the day, but by late afternoon, I got to out and take a walk.
I enjoyed light food and lots of coffee all day long. I grazed, and when I was hungry, I ate, and yes I even drank coffee at 10 pm. There were no rules. The goal was to be inspired and find dreams and plans and words for the book. It was perfect! It was a day where I could go at a slower pace because I didn't have kids interrupting me every few minutes, or I wasn't restricted by a time frame surrounding naps or babysitters. I could just be.
And then I took a refreshing walk to get all the pent up energy out of my blood. I wanted to take this photo, because I stood in this spot for more than 15 minutes. I stood and looked at the road stretched out before me. I let the sounds of the lake and the country seep into my blood. Sounds that are foreign to us where we live. It felt like with every breath I took, more of the tension left my body, and more quietness and stillness entered it. All the expectations started to cease to exist and only listening to the Lord seemed to matter. I didn't want to move. I wanted to stay in that spot until the only thing that remained were the answers. But looking at the road ahead of me, I realized I wasn't sure where the road led, but only the way to find out was to take one step at a time.
So here is what I learned and discovered with my weekend in the wood.
1. I really enjoy time by myself. I am good company.
2. You produce very different work when you aren't restricted by a time frame or deadline or children's needs. I had the ability to really let the work come out of me, instead of rushing it, or throwing a bunch of words on paper hoping it sticks. I could sit and ponder, and roll thoughts around my head and get the good stuff out on paper. It was this amazing experience no to be rushed, but let thoughts and ideas and words formulate.
3. I got to work on my business, the book, my talk at the end of the month up in Duluth, my talk in the NE this fall, and my business concepst. I had papers all over the floor with ideas and concepts and dreams and starting points for ministry. It was this really amazing brainstorming session where I got to share my dreams with God, lay them out in front of me, and as I sat and prayed, I got hints of more ways to make them become a reality.
4. It is scary as hell to sit there in a cabin, all alone, with the time you have been asking for to make the dream come true, even one that you don't fully understand, and you have no more excuses. I had no excuses. I had to face my fear of this dream, the overwhelmingness of it. I got to settle into those feelings. Experience them. I got to embrace it. Look at it. Evaluate it. And most importantly, work towards. it. It's easy to dream. It takes a lot to actually work for it.
5. The closer I drove to the cabin, the more peace I felt. While at the cabin, I felt inspired, I felt encouraged, I felt rested, I felt motivated, and I felt calm. I'll confess I even danced a little bit with the music blaring and it felt wonderful. I felt free. And the words just came out of me. I wrote a bunch of stuff I didn't even know I was thinking. I wrote it, I looked at it, and I pondered on it. I am excited to read what was going on in my head and my heart. To process it and explore it.
It makes me very excited for my future. As I said, I have felt like I am on the brink on something new and different. This weekend was this incredible time of exploring that. Of dreaming around it. Of finding clues to what my future holds.
And I can't wait to share it with you.
I also walked away from this weekend with a secret love affair for a weekend away alone in the woods. This may become my most spiritual exercise. I hope.
The writing retreat.
I had hope that with more than 24 hours to myself, my laptop and journals and music, I could somehow process all the things going on inside of me for the last month and pour myself into the book. Read, journal, write, process, pray, seek, and be led by God.
I have never had time like this before to work and to be honest, I was a little nervous with that much time by myself.
Can't you tell?
I want to share some things I came away with from the weekend, but first, I want you to see what I saw. Here is my office set up.
This really was the perfect office. Curled up on a couch, writing and reading and candles lit. It was perfect.
This was my retreat view from where I sat. It hailed most of the day, but by late afternoon, I got to out and take a walk.
I enjoyed light food and lots of coffee all day long. I grazed, and when I was hungry, I ate, and yes I even drank coffee at 10 pm. There were no rules. The goal was to be inspired and find dreams and plans and words for the book. It was perfect! It was a day where I could go at a slower pace because I didn't have kids interrupting me every few minutes, or I wasn't restricted by a time frame surrounding naps or babysitters. I could just be.
And then I took a refreshing walk to get all the pent up energy out of my blood. I wanted to take this photo, because I stood in this spot for more than 15 minutes. I stood and looked at the road stretched out before me. I let the sounds of the lake and the country seep into my blood. Sounds that are foreign to us where we live. It felt like with every breath I took, more of the tension left my body, and more quietness and stillness entered it. All the expectations started to cease to exist and only listening to the Lord seemed to matter. I didn't want to move. I wanted to stay in that spot until the only thing that remained were the answers. But looking at the road ahead of me, I realized I wasn't sure where the road led, but only the way to find out was to take one step at a time.
After my walk, I spent the evening wrapped in a blanket on the porch enjoying my new office. A place full of peace and inspiration.
So here is what I learned and discovered with my weekend in the wood.
1. I really enjoy time by myself. I am good company.
2. You produce very different work when you aren't restricted by a time frame or deadline or children's needs. I had the ability to really let the work come out of me, instead of rushing it, or throwing a bunch of words on paper hoping it sticks. I could sit and ponder, and roll thoughts around my head and get the good stuff out on paper. It was this amazing experience no to be rushed, but let thoughts and ideas and words formulate.
3. I got to work on my business, the book, my talk at the end of the month up in Duluth, my talk in the NE this fall, and my business concepst. I had papers all over the floor with ideas and concepts and dreams and starting points for ministry. It was this really amazing brainstorming session where I got to share my dreams with God, lay them out in front of me, and as I sat and prayed, I got hints of more ways to make them become a reality.
4. It is scary as hell to sit there in a cabin, all alone, with the time you have been asking for to make the dream come true, even one that you don't fully understand, and you have no more excuses. I had no excuses. I had to face my fear of this dream, the overwhelmingness of it. I got to settle into those feelings. Experience them. I got to embrace it. Look at it. Evaluate it. And most importantly, work towards. it. It's easy to dream. It takes a lot to actually work for it.
5. The closer I drove to the cabin, the more peace I felt. While at the cabin, I felt inspired, I felt encouraged, I felt rested, I felt motivated, and I felt calm. I'll confess I even danced a little bit with the music blaring and it felt wonderful. I felt free. And the words just came out of me. I wrote a bunch of stuff I didn't even know I was thinking. I wrote it, I looked at it, and I pondered on it. I am excited to read what was going on in my head and my heart. To process it and explore it.
It makes me very excited for my future. As I said, I have felt like I am on the brink on something new and different. This weekend was this incredible time of exploring that. Of dreaming around it. Of finding clues to what my future holds.
And I can't wait to share it with you.
I also walked away from this weekend with a secret love affair for a weekend away alone in the woods. This may become my most spiritual exercise. I hope.
Sunday, May 5, 2013
Personal update 1
I don't know where to begin. So I'll just start and hope I finish where the story begins.
I remember two distinct times that I felt completely insecure which then led to total fear. The first time was in High School when the boy I had a crush on for a very long time told me he liked me. I know it sounds like that would be a dream come true, but the truth is, I had been living a double life up until about that time, and I was incredibly lost and broken and confused. I felt unworthy, and hypocritical and stupid and foolish and most like every bad teen movie. I was a cliche, which made it even worse. I didn't know who I was, so I spent years making every wrong choice to find the right one. I couldn't say yes to him because he didn't know the bad choices I had made. I was scared that he might see how lost I was. He thought I was great, and I didn't think I was. He saw good in me, and all I could see was the bad. I wasn't good enough. And so I said no.
Then I graduated High School and almost immediately moved away. Running scared of...myself, really.
The idea is the same when I got my first real speaking gig. I was to be the keynote speaker to 800 students my first time out. That was a big deal for me. And I was overcome with feelings of insecurity. I kept thinking, who am I that I was chosen for this role? They have this image of me that just doesn't feel true. If they really knew me, they wouldn't like me. They would have picked someone better. I am not good enough for this. Clearly I was still wrestling with self acceptance and fighting hard to make the right choices and be who I thought I was supposed to be. Still fearful to really lean into who I was. To say the things I really thought. To feel like being me was the best choice.
There are lots of things to say about my past and history and all these emotions, and I can't get into all of it here. But there are a couple things I want to pull out of these experiences.
First, the more we try to hide who we really are, the more disconnect there is. We create the two selves, the one every one sees, and the one no one sees. Then we have no one to blame but ourselves for no one really knowing who we are, because we don't trust them to know. This existence is lonely and sad and full of doubt and regret. Regret because you realize you are never really living your life.
Second, the only thing insecurity gives us is a life lived in fear. I am not sure where my insecurity came from, but I can attest to the life lived in fear. I used to be so afraid of everything. Afraid to take chances, afraid to say what was really on my mind, afraid of making a mistake that I couldn't come back from, afraid of just being me. I don't know why, and at this point, most of the time I don't care why. I do know I don't want to live that way. I desire to be brave and courageous and take chances and do things my way, instead of the way everyone else is doing it. It took me a long time to get to that point. A lot of prayer and hard work and conversations with my husband who has stuck by it all and loved me anyway.
I don't really live in a place of insecurity anymore. The fear creeps up every now and then when I am trying new projects or talks, but surrendering them and pushing through it comes easier.
That's why I can so easily recognize these feelings when they creep back in. They are huge red flags for me, because as I said, I generally like myself. I'm not insecure anymore, which is why this last month has been so overwhelming for me, and why I haven't written really about anything. (If you don't remember, the book campaign happened this month.)
To write about anything that has happened this past month, I must first confess to the gut wrenching truth. I must tell you that I am scared out of mind. I wish to be courageous and brave and fearless, but I'm not yet there.
Henry called me out on it very early on during the campaign to raise money for the book project. He would hear me self doubt and cut down and one day he interrupted me and said, "I never realized you were so insecure." My response was, "I'M NOT! What's wrong with me?"
Doing the campaign was one of the hardest things I have ever had to do in recent years.
But you didn't just give to meet the goal, we surpassed every goal we had and more money than we budgeted. I am still having a really hard time wrapping my head around that one. My heart was pounding a mile a minute the day we surpassed our goal. It wasn't a dream anymore, it was reality.
HOLY CRAP it is now a reality!
Now I can't run or hide or be lazy. You said you believed in me, in us, and now we get to do something amazing.
Have you ever felt like sometimes it easier to sit on your couch and dream of all the really cool things you could do, and in your imagination, you are awesome, talented, you don't screw up because you know exactly what you are doing, and you win everyone over because you're amazing? But because you know deep down, that really isn't reality. Reality looks like hard work and trying over and over and making mistakes and taking risks and lots of practice. And in the end, the risk that you might not even be very good at the thing that you dream of doing with your life.
I think that's why we sit on our couch. Our imagination version of ourselves could never compare to the reality of who we are. People who are risks takers, brave and courageous the people who don't leave life with regrets are the one's who kill and bury the dream version of themselves and instead, just live their life. They embrace their real self and go for it, leaving it all out on the table.
I have a tendency to be the couch sitter. But I am tired of that. I want to be a dreamer, a risk taker, a brave spirit with no regrets.
That's why I feel overwhelmed. Not by the to-do list, though it is extensive. I am trying to embrace a new reality and truth for myself. I am trying to forge a new way of really, truly embracing all of me, letting go of all false selves and live my dream.
I asked you to believe in me and you did. Can you even comprehend what that means for someone who spent so much time hiding away? Again, overwhelmed.
So many of you went out of your way to encourage me, say nice such kind words about my ministry and my dream. I didn't ask that of you, you volunteered it, willingly. Again, overwhelmed.
Even more of you said that by pursuing this dream, you felt inspired to want to do more with your dreams. That is HUGE! I am so humbled and honored to be apart of that process that God is doing in your life. Again, overwhelmed.
I sit on the brink of a new beginning to my ministry and our life. Something has shifted and changed in my career. I can't explain it fully, but I can tell, things are beginning, or shifting, or changing. I still am a little nervous, because I don't know what that means, but I know that God is in this with me, and my husband and my children.
Feeling this emotionally overwhelmed the last month has made it hard to process. So I went to a friends cabin for the weekend as a personal retreat.
That is part two of this story.
I remember two distinct times that I felt completely insecure which then led to total fear. The first time was in High School when the boy I had a crush on for a very long time told me he liked me. I know it sounds like that would be a dream come true, but the truth is, I had been living a double life up until about that time, and I was incredibly lost and broken and confused. I felt unworthy, and hypocritical and stupid and foolish and most like every bad teen movie. I was a cliche, which made it even worse. I didn't know who I was, so I spent years making every wrong choice to find the right one. I couldn't say yes to him because he didn't know the bad choices I had made. I was scared that he might see how lost I was. He thought I was great, and I didn't think I was. He saw good in me, and all I could see was the bad. I wasn't good enough. And so I said no.
Then I graduated High School and almost immediately moved away. Running scared of...myself, really.
The idea is the same when I got my first real speaking gig. I was to be the keynote speaker to 800 students my first time out. That was a big deal for me. And I was overcome with feelings of insecurity. I kept thinking, who am I that I was chosen for this role? They have this image of me that just doesn't feel true. If they really knew me, they wouldn't like me. They would have picked someone better. I am not good enough for this. Clearly I was still wrestling with self acceptance and fighting hard to make the right choices and be who I thought I was supposed to be. Still fearful to really lean into who I was. To say the things I really thought. To feel like being me was the best choice.
There are lots of things to say about my past and history and all these emotions, and I can't get into all of it here. But there are a couple things I want to pull out of these experiences.
First, the more we try to hide who we really are, the more disconnect there is. We create the two selves, the one every one sees, and the one no one sees. Then we have no one to blame but ourselves for no one really knowing who we are, because we don't trust them to know. This existence is lonely and sad and full of doubt and regret. Regret because you realize you are never really living your life.
Second, the only thing insecurity gives us is a life lived in fear. I am not sure where my insecurity came from, but I can attest to the life lived in fear. I used to be so afraid of everything. Afraid to take chances, afraid to say what was really on my mind, afraid of making a mistake that I couldn't come back from, afraid of just being me. I don't know why, and at this point, most of the time I don't care why. I do know I don't want to live that way. I desire to be brave and courageous and take chances and do things my way, instead of the way everyone else is doing it. It took me a long time to get to that point. A lot of prayer and hard work and conversations with my husband who has stuck by it all and loved me anyway.
I don't really live in a place of insecurity anymore. The fear creeps up every now and then when I am trying new projects or talks, but surrendering them and pushing through it comes easier.
That's why I can so easily recognize these feelings when they creep back in. They are huge red flags for me, because as I said, I generally like myself. I'm not insecure anymore, which is why this last month has been so overwhelming for me, and why I haven't written really about anything. (If you don't remember, the book campaign happened this month.)
To write about anything that has happened this past month, I must first confess to the gut wrenching truth. I must tell you that I am scared out of mind. I wish to be courageous and brave and fearless, but I'm not yet there.
Henry called me out on it very early on during the campaign to raise money for the book project. He would hear me self doubt and cut down and one day he interrupted me and said, "I never realized you were so insecure." My response was, "I'M NOT! What's wrong with me?"
Doing the campaign was one of the hardest things I have ever had to do in recent years.
It may seem like my earlier experiences have nothing to
do with this moment now in my life, but in actuality, it has everything to do
with it. Except, this time, there was no
mask or double life. See, the thing is I have made my career and my life to be as open as possible. After spending so much of life trying to be someone I wasn't or running from who I was, or whatever my problem was, I promised myself that no matter how hard it was to be truthful, to be vulnerable and open, I would try. Even if I was ashamed of how I dealt with something, or the way I felt, I would be honest. I would embrace everything about me and invite my audience into that space with me. I will often joke with Henry that when we
take the stage together, I always come across as the big hot mess who needs
counseling and he has it all together.
But that’s who I am, and that is why people hire me. I am not two people anymore. It’s just me.
But now that it’s just me, the vulnerability is even harder, because
there is no hiding.
It may seem silly to you, but it was incredibly difficult to
put together a campaign asking for money to support a book that my partner and
I want to write. I wasn't asking for
your help for Haiti. I wasn't asking you
to support a child in need in a third world country. I wasn't asking for money for any noble
cause. I was asking for myself.
That changes everything.
I had to publicly put myself out there and say, “Hey! Do you see me? Do you like me? Help me make a dream come true!” And that’s fine and great, until you realize
you might not get the money.
Then what?
It’s like waiting to get picked for the kickball team all
over again, except its just not your class that knows no one wants you, it would be everyone.
That month of the campaign had me praying for God to release
this hold on my heart more than I can ever remember. I didn't want you all to have power over
me. I only wanted to care about being obedient
to God’s call in my life.
But the trick is, to be obedient to that, I needed the money,
which meant I needed to pay attention to the campaign and ask. I had to put myself out there, over and over
and ask for help. Ask you to believe in
me.
And then you did.
But you didn't just give to meet the goal, we surpassed every goal we had and more money than we budgeted. I am still having a really hard time wrapping my head around that one. My heart was pounding a mile a minute the day we surpassed our goal. It wasn't a dream anymore, it was reality.
HOLY CRAP it is now a reality!
Now I can't run or hide or be lazy. You said you believed in me, in us, and now we get to do something amazing.
Have you ever felt like sometimes it easier to sit on your couch and dream of all the really cool things you could do, and in your imagination, you are awesome, talented, you don't screw up because you know exactly what you are doing, and you win everyone over because you're amazing? But because you know deep down, that really isn't reality. Reality looks like hard work and trying over and over and making mistakes and taking risks and lots of practice. And in the end, the risk that you might not even be very good at the thing that you dream of doing with your life.
I think that's why we sit on our couch. Our imagination version of ourselves could never compare to the reality of who we are. People who are risks takers, brave and courageous the people who don't leave life with regrets are the one's who kill and bury the dream version of themselves and instead, just live their life. They embrace their real self and go for it, leaving it all out on the table.
I have a tendency to be the couch sitter. But I am tired of that. I want to be a dreamer, a risk taker, a brave spirit with no regrets.
That's why I feel overwhelmed. Not by the to-do list, though it is extensive. I am trying to embrace a new reality and truth for myself. I am trying to forge a new way of really, truly embracing all of me, letting go of all false selves and live my dream.
I asked you to believe in me and you did. Can you even comprehend what that means for someone who spent so much time hiding away? Again, overwhelmed.
So many of you went out of your way to encourage me, say nice such kind words about my ministry and my dream. I didn't ask that of you, you volunteered it, willingly. Again, overwhelmed.
Even more of you said that by pursuing this dream, you felt inspired to want to do more with your dreams. That is HUGE! I am so humbled and honored to be apart of that process that God is doing in your life. Again, overwhelmed.
I sit on the brink of a new beginning to my ministry and our life. Something has shifted and changed in my career. I can't explain it fully, but I can tell, things are beginning, or shifting, or changing. I still am a little nervous, because I don't know what that means, but I know that God is in this with me, and my husband and my children.
Feeling this emotionally overwhelmed the last month has made it hard to process. So I went to a friends cabin for the weekend as a personal retreat.
That is part two of this story.
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