The Holidays Can Be Hard - When Goals & Planning Feel Impossible

The Holidays Can Be Hard - When Goals & Planning Feel Impossible

“No, I think it is just as likely that this year, my marriage will fall apart, one of my children will get scabies and another will get sick and die of leukemia.”
 
I remember spitting those words out in late December, answering a well-meaning friend who asked me what I was hoping for in the coming year and if I really believed that God had good things in store for me.

Read More

The Holidays Can Be Hard - When "Little" Things Feel Big

The Holidays Can Be Hard - When "Little" Things Feel Big

I was back in the bedroom when I heard the breaking:  ceramic crashed against the tile.  I knew in a moment:  it was one of the birds. 

In the grey and grinding months after our daughter, Mercy Joan, died, my mother gave me a set of seven ceramic birds.  “A reminder that you will always be a family of seven.”  I displayed them on our mantle…poignant, a little cheesy, and unfortunately vulnerable to the daily antics of Magnus.
 
I heaved myself into the hallway, emotion rising, and found a stunned Magnus, frozen in horror over the wreckage of the birds. 

Read More

Crying is OK Here

Crying is OK Here

I was at a networking event this month. The peppy emcee bubbled over in a welcome, telling us to promote the event and chirping, "Remember, positive vibes only!" I think she was well-intentioned...but the remark was tone-deaf. Because, over coffee, I had already talked to a woman whose brother was just killed and another whose long-term relationship had foundered. And that was just in the first 5 minutes!

Read More

Imagination and Empathy

Imagination and Empathy

Some great ways to cultivate your empathetic imagination include….
1) Reading books by authors from different worldviews/cultures/experiences
2) Pausing while watching a show to ask, “I wonder why they are feeling/doing that?”
3) Ask (often), “What else might be going on right now to make this person act the way that they are acting?”. Engage the question with compassion and imagination.

Read More

Carrying Our Stories

Carrying Our Stories

As our session began, I asked participants about the disruptive life events that had rocked their world recently.
Here are just a few of the responses: “Husband had a stroke”, “Attempted Suicide”, “Loss of 4 family members”, “Birth of a baby”, “Children needing to be homeschooled”. We have all endured and suffered this year. We carry our stories to work.

Read More