TC Larson

Stories and Mischief

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Candy Crush Develops Writing Skills, a Non-Scientific Report

23
Sep

There was a post shared on Twitter not too long ago about how the game Candy Crush has pretty much ruined her life. You can read her hilarious article here: http://www.lisa-laura.blogspot.com/search?q=Candy+Crush#!http://lisa-laura.blogspot.com/2013/09/how-candy-crush-saved-my-life.html

I read it and laughed out loud. But I disagreed with her in a lot of ways, even though she was super funny. And so I offer you a counter argument of sorts.

Candy Crush Develops Your Focus

Not exclusive to Candy Crush, video games of various kinds develop your ability to focus and tune out the real world around you. I know this since I’ve observed it in my kids and myself. How many times should I call from the top of the stairs until I have to go to the basement, make eye contact, and touch my son’s shoulders to make sure he actually heard me and isn’t just yelling, “Okay Mom!” with no actual processing of the words I’m communicating?

And I’m no better. Last night my kids were getting ready for bed and while they were brushing their teeth I thought I’d work on one level (the elusive level, the one that I cannot beat no matter how many times I try). When I came to, they kids were already in their beds, my husband had showered and was already in bed half-asleep. I’m claiming time warp.

It’s great for developing your ability to tune out everything around you. Another case in point: After a while you don’t even hear that crazy harpsichord song over and over again. That take focus, I tell ya.

It Makes You Resourceful

How many times do writers claim they just don’t have time to write? They sit down to write and the messy kitchen suddenly becomes unbearable. Or access to free wifi at that coffee shop leads down a dark path of following links posted on Twitter rather than actually writing, which was the whole reason you came to the coffee shop in the first place…because the kitchen was too messy to be able to work there, remember?

Candy Crush lets you fit in a quick game wherever you are. Waiting for your turn at the DMV? Candy Crush. Dentist office? Candy Crush. In the car line to pick up the kids after school? Candy Crush. If only we’d keep our notebook, index card, or phone note-taker program/app as readily in our minds as Candy Crush, we’d be on our way to completing that project already.

Candy Crush

Candy Crush Hones Strategic Advanced Planning

It’s not elegant like chess. I get that. It doesn’t smell of cigars and coffee and well-aged leather.

If it had a smell, I imagine it as more of a State Fair midway, cotton candy mixed with cigarette aroma.

That aside, Candy Crush makes you look for patterns, see interconnections and forces you to ignore the more obvious glowing options it tries to point out to you. Sure, the glowing options are possibilities, but they aren’t usually the best ones. They are moves for moves’ sake. But if you can find the less obvious combination, you’ll be surprised by the candies (read: plot lines) that drop into place. When you pay attention to the domino effect (to mix up my game usage) when you slide that idea over there, the other ideas in that article go clickity click and it all comes together.

________________________

There, see? Now you can play Candy Crush with a clean conscience. It is a skill developer, and it is part of your overall plan to refine your craft. Take THAT unfolded basket of clean laundry. I’m working on bettering my writing over here!

Do you have any helpful tips for me to get past Level 29 without spending any money? Are you someone who takes games seriously? And seriously, how can I pass Level 29?

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Discussion: Comments {1} Filed Under: Uncategorized, Writing

Five Minute Friday: She

20
Sep

Photo from Morguefiles

Photo from Morguefiles

“I don’t know what to do,” she said.

She’d only been home five minutes before the inner tension was too much and she had to talk to Mom about it.

“What do you want to do?” Mom asked.

“Everything,” she answered. “I want to leave, I want to stay, I want to scream, cry, break stuff and roll into a ball.”

“Which of those sound best right now?”

“Break stuff,” she grinned through her tears. “I won’t though. I have too much self-restraint.”

“Yes, that’s what you’re known for, self-restraint,” Mom said.

“Actually, the only thing that sounds good right now is something to eat. Do you have anything?”

Mom scoffed. “Do I have anything? Baby, sit down. I’ll take care of you.”

“Thanks.”

She pulled out a stool and sat while Mom rummaged through the fridge, proclaiming all her finds as she pulled them out.

She felt her eyes well up with tears, and she tried to sniff them back.

“Mom,” she began.

Mom kept her head in the fridge but said, “Hmm?”

“How can I feel strong and weak, confident and scared, bitter and generous all at the same time? I think I might be losing it.”

Mom emerged with a container of Cool-Whip in one hand and a container of strawberries in the other.

“No honey, you’re just being you. We’re all that way.”

****

This is my attempt at a fiction version of Five Minute Friday, though I definitely didn’t get many words down in that amount of time. *sigh* That’s okay. For those who don’t know, Five Minute Friday is a linkup with Lisa-jo Baker and it is lots of fun. Check out all the details on her site: http://lisa-jobaker.com I’d love to find your contribution (if you’re here with FMF), so please leave a link in the comment section below! And as always, thank you sincerely for visiting today.

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Discussion: Comments {8} Filed Under: Family, Five Minute Friday, Motherhood, Women

Lost Things Found

18
Sep

My husband grew up spending much of the summer at the family’s cabin. It was always part of the rhythm of his family. His dad worked in the public schools and his mom worked at a college so they had the majority of their summers off from work. This allowed them to spend weeks, sometimes a whole month, up north.

He was one of those golden boys of summer, the ones who were athletic, outdoorsy, as comfortable on water skis or a sailboat as they were on land. One of those who caused an ache in my chest as I watched from the shoreline. He still is that golden boy, just more grown up.

He’s always helped his dad with various chores around the cabin, the biggest project being management of the wooden dock. I had no idea of the magnitude of dock management because I didn’t grow up going to a cabin. In the spring the water tends to be high, meaning that the dock needs to be almost at the tippytop of the posts. As summer goes on and water levels go down, the dock need to be lowered so it isn’t two feet above the top of the water. Then there’s the huge task of getting the dock into the water in the first place, and the job of taking it out of the water at the end of the season.

It was during the annual dock removal a few years ago that my husband lost his wallet. It fell out of his pocket and out of the waders he wore to make the water temperature more comfortable (or at least allowing him to still feel his extremities).

He didn’t know it was lost until a few hours later. When he realized it, he was already on the drive back home, which at the time was more than four hours from the cabin. He got by for a week until he could drive all the way back up north, pull on the clumsy waders and search the lake bottom for the wallet. He knew where he’d been working, so he thought it would be easy to find.

It wasn’t.

He eventually gave up, left it for the fish, drove back home and replaced the wallet and its contents.

That’s No Sunny

Fast forward five years.

The lost wallet is forgotten.

The IDs, credit card, business cards and miscellaneous wallet-y items have been replaced.

We are up at the cabin at the end of a dry summer. The dock has been lowered twice as the water receaded, and my husband and my father-in-law are working to move out the boat lift. The motor on the boat drags against sandy lake bottom even when partially raised and the boat lift needs to be deeper. Refreshing coolness in the heat of summer, their wrenches work against screws, twisting them to comply, make-shift levers and cinder blocks, the scent of metal, gasoline, pine trees and lake water. Cabin.

My husband’s high arch brushes up against something in the sand, something not a pumpkin seed sunfish. Waist deep, six foot pole in hand, his curiosity fishes out the item.

His lost wallet.

Five years later, he finds it. Wallet

My Own Lost Wallet

There are times when I feel like writing is my lost wallet.

The business of having a child every two years (they’re now 5, 7 and 9) took all my attention. I was all in, being either pregnant or nursing for the majority of seven+ years straight.  Getting dishes into the dishwasher, making sure kids got enough iron and calcium and tummy-time and large muscle development took up all my brain space. My husband and friends helped me through my moments of feeling overwhelmed and inadequate, sure I was ruining the kids, one minute protecting them too much, the next minute letting them do to much, wanting them to know it was okay to fail at things.

There were things in the wallet we had forgotten about. An old picture, a business card from someone met in an airport, a list of old passwords. Much of the information was outdated, addresses had changed, personal information had changed, our family had expanded. Finding the wallet was finding something that had once been valuable, that had once been necessary and held important weight in my husband’s back pocket. Had he functioned without it? Yes. He was able to order a new driver’s license, replacement insurance cards. It would have been easier had it not dropped out of his waders and into the lake, but it didn’t stop his life from moving forward.

That’s much like writing has been for me.

I’ve been writing my whole life in one way or another. Even when I was pursuing a career outside the home unrelated to writing, the words were still there, still a part of everything I did, even if that was a peripheral responsibility. My life moved forward with no consideration of writing or how that fit into things.

The past four years have been a process of rediscovery.

I don’t know why it happened when it did.

I don’t know where it will lead, if it even leads anywhere external.

It doesn’t have to.

My journey of going by feel, digging around in the sand with my feet, bumping into something unexpected, grasping and unearthing something definite has brought me great joy and creative expression. It has allowed me to organize my thoughts, to speak aloud my observations and questions, to “verbalize” my journey and encourage others on their journey.

Sometimes when you find something you lost, you remember how valuable it once was. And in the intermediate time, it can become even more valuable, like a well-aged wine or lost coin. So even though it might be a little waterlogged, I’m drying out this writing wallet and reclaiming something that has always held value,

It just got lost for a while.

Do you have any passions that you had to lay aside for a season? What were those passions, and do you see yourself rediscovering them in the future? In what way do you express yourself creatively?

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Discussion: Comments {0} Filed Under: Family, Uncategorized, Writing

FROSH and KNIFE RIVER MEAL SWAP: My Entries into PitMad

12
Sep

Today I’m participating in PitMad on Twitter. I’m going to do pitches for two different manuscripts and see if I get any nibbles. In an effort to keep them easy to navigate, I’ll keep them in their own tidy sections. Ahem, feel free to comment (which will be WAY down the page today so don’t hurt yourself scrolling all the way down there) to let me know how much you love the stories and want to read more.

Here is a pitch for my New Adult fiction, called FROSH.

  • Hannah’s figured out life, but when she’s both betrayer & betray-ee, forgiveness is an issue. Turning the other cheek sucks. NA

This is an excerpt from FROSH.

*****

A stand of birch trees.

A stand of birch trees. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I waited until after our next class, which only left me a few hours before the self-imposed deadline, when Dave and I were packing up our things.

“Um, so Dave,” I began awkwardly, hoping to keep things conversational, “Are you gonna be around not this weekend but next? I mean, do you have any big plans at all?”

I stuffed my textbook into my backpack and looked at the floor as if there was something else I needed. I couldn’t make eye contact with him.

“Nope, not yet. There’s a band I want to check out but they’re not playing that weekend. I think it’s the weekend after that. What about you?” Dave was done picking up his things, and he was ready to walk down the stairs of the lecture hall in which our class was held. I had to get this over quick.

“Well, umm, okay I, umm.” I couldn’t get the words out.

“Oh my gosh,” I said under my breath.

“What is it, Hannah? Are you okay?” Dave looked concerned. “Maybe you should sit back down,” he suggested.

“No, I’m okay. I just suck at this.”

He zipped up his backpack while he waited to know what I was trying to talk about.

“Okay, well, have you heard of Gabdew, Dave? You know, it’s this school sponsored thing where people –”

He cut me off.

“Yeah, I know about Gabdew. What about it? Do you need help asking someone?” he asked generously.

I didn’t know if that was a good sign; maybe he didn’t see the possibility that was looming before him.

“No, I don’t need help exactly.” I zipped and unzipped my backpack. “Well, that’s not true. I definitely need help. Professional. This is so stupid.” My eyes never left the bag as I finally blurted, “I know you went to the market and bought French bread. Want to buy mine?” My stomach was all in a knot and I knew I had flubbed the lines, but it was the best I could do.

Dave laughed out loud, not a quiet chuckle, but an actual audible laugh. Under other circumstances I would feel gratified that I was the cause, but now it could only mean my humiliation, and my eyes immediately filled up with tears. My stomach felt sick and I wiped drops of sweat from my upper lip as I bolted out of my seat and dashed down the stairs, never pausing to look at Dave. I sensed that he followed me out of the classroom, but I had to get away from him, so I ducked out of the first doors I saw, and almost broke into a jog there on the sidewalk, surrounded by people.

“Hannah!”

He called my name, but I couldn’t slow down or turn to face him. I did my best speedwalk and tried not to run, tried not to draw any more attention to my predicament.

“Hey, Hannah, stop! Wait up!” He called louder now, and I knew I could only avoid him by out-walking him. I figured he would get fed up with being ignored and he’d go away. So I kept walking and pretended that I didn’t hear him.

“Seriously, would you stop?” he shouted.

I veered off the sidewalk and jogged into the patch of birch trees up the hill to my right. I hoped he wouldn’t bother with off-roading and would let me escape. I reached the center of the trees and the next moment, almost out of nowhere, he caught my arm and whipped me around to face him.

“Wait a minute, would ya?” he demanded. I just couldn’t look him in the face, so I flopped down right there on the ground cross-legged and covered my face with my hands.

“Go away, Dave,” I said, my voice muffled.

“What is the big deal?” he asked from above me.

“Just leave me alone. I’ll be fine and we’ll pretend this never happened. But right now, I just can’t act normal so go away.”

I was determined that he wouldn’t see that some of those unwanted tears had actually spilled over, so I kept my face covered, even though I knew I was being juvenile, and stayed right there on in the long grass. Black-eyed Susans and Blue Asters were scattered in the grass with me, and it would have been a beautiful mini-meadow if it wasn’t the scene of my future most-embarrassing-moment story. Plus, I’d have to check for woodticks later. It seemed appropriate for the situation.

Dave dropped his bag and I realized he had brought my backpack along with his own. He would have passed me up easily had he not been carrying two bags full of books. He sat down in the grass, reclined back on his elbows, and said, “Now, you were trying to ask me something. Would you care to try again?”

I raised my head and scowled at him, trying with my eyes to burn that fabulous hair from his head.

He raised his eyebrows and asked innocently, “No?”

“No, you big jerk. Go away.”

I laid on my back and flung my arms across my head.

He inched closer to me and laid back, his head softly bonking mine as he settled himself. “C’mon, Hannah. Let’s hear it. You had it pretty close.”

I didn’t move and said from beneath my arms, “Get your own breadsticks or artichokes or whatever, mon frer. Leave my bag and have a great day. See you in class on Friday.”

But something about his nearness and his teasing gave me an irritating feeling of hope. I was glad that I had collected myself. I twisted and peeked carefully at him from a crack between my arms. Dave was alarmingly close to me, and now there was cottonwood fluff floating through the air around us, making a pastoral scene even Wordsworth would have envied. Did I dare hope that he might say yes, even after my tantrum?

“Come on, you gotta get it right or I can’t answer.” He was just going to stay there until I gave in, so I decided to complete my embarrassing story and let him reject me.

“I’m waiting,” he singsonged.

“This is so horrible,” I whined.

“Now you know what guys go through every time they ask someone out,” Dave said, his eyes watching the leaves and clouds above us.

I quit peeking at him, took a deep breath and said in a muffled voice, “I heard you went to the market for a loaf of stupid French bread. Did you need any more?”

I heard movement and when he answered, his quiet voice was next to my shoulder. “Okey dokey, silly artichokey.”

I couldn’t believe it. I dropped my arms and turned my head, only to discover that Dave had rolled onto his side and propped his head up with his arm, and our faces were now only inches apart.

“Now, was that so hard?” he asked, pushing my hair back from my eyes.

I shoved his shoulder hard and he exaggeratedly fell back. “You poor thing,” he teased. “That was awful for you, wasn’t it?”

He kept laughing as he reviewed our encounter for me, as if I hadn’t been there, play by play. “And then you, and then you,” he laughed, “Your eyes got all big and sad and you booked it out of class with me standing there wondering what the heck just happened.”

He laid there, chuckling to himself.

“Yeah, I found it real funny, Dave. Uproarious. Maybe I shouldn’t have asked you after all.” I complained.  “Enough already. I know I made a fool of myself, and you don’t need to keep reminding me.”

“You didn’t make a fool of yourself, Hannah.” He stopped laughing at my expense and propped himself up on his side again. “You put yourself out there. It was sweet, and very flattering. I’m really sorry I laughed at you.”

His face was soft and sincere, and way too close to my own. He put his hand on my hip as I laid there taking this in, and I realized with surprise that he was in prime kissing position. Holy crap!

I put my hand over his, gently removed it, and sat up. As much as the idea of kissing Dave appealed to me, I didn’t think it would be a good idea yet, although as I moved his hand it felt like it weighed ten pounds and I was conflicted.

“Yeah, that wasn’t very nice, you know,” I said. I noticed a piece of fluff in his hair and carefully smoothed it off his waves.

“I know, I’m sorry,” he said, and he reached up and caught my hand. “You were just so…you just looked like a little hamster, all twitchy and nervous.”

He didn’t let go of my hand and gently squeezed each of my fingertips. “I was kinda hoping you’d ask me, you know, but I didn’t really think you would.”

This was news to me.

“Really? You never asked me out or even mentioned anything like it. Why am I having to do all the work here?” I tried to smile but I really did want an answer.

“You always bound off after class with your friends and if I see you other places during the week, you’re always surrounded by some kind of posse. You think I’m just gonna bust in there and ask you out? I was just biding my time until I could get you alone,” he said. “Do you know that you shake me off for Caleb and Sam or that girl with too much eyeliner after every lecture Professor Gerloch gives? You never hang around and talk to him or me or anybody else in class. It’s like you see those guys and hurry off to this other life you have, your real life, and class is just a blip that gets in the way of your other agenda items.”

“Well, you could have been a little more obvious. I didn’t know what you’d say if I asked you to Gabdew. I hoped you’d say yes, and I thought that as a nice guy you might say yes, but I wasn’t positive.”

“I’m not a nice guy Hannah,” he said.

*******

Here is a pitch for my women’s fiction, called KNIFE RIVER MEAL SWAP.

  • Amber joins group of meal-swapping moms. Job problems, disorders, and toddlers push them to the next level. Can they take the heat?

And the excerpt, for your viewing pleasure.

baby while making his first steps

baby while making his first steps (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

*******

When the knock came, she should have been ready for it. She had been expecting it. But then she decided she could get bath time done while she waited. She got distracted and forgot to watch the time. Just when she started to notice something on the outside edge of her consciousness, (“What is that?” she said aloud) she heard the dry grind of hinges and a voice call, “Hello? Amber?”

“Oh! Hang on!” Amber called back. She took a panicked look around her and blew her hair out of her eyes. “I’ll be right there!”

‘Right there’ meant that she had to get baby Vivianne out of the tub, swaddled in a blanket and put in her crib. Then she had to get a diaper on Noah or there was bound to be a potty disaster. She stumbled over board books and jumbo-sized building blocks on the way to the diaper shelf but instead of getting just one, the entire stack dumped over and that made the stack behind it dump over too. She wrestled the toddler’s diaper on him, and hurried to the front door. Only as she passed a mirror in the hallway did she realize, too late, that her whole shoulder was wet and she still wore a superman cape from an earlier game.

“Hi, Sara,” she said to the visitor. “Sorry about that. Bath time.”

The woman at the door smiled. “I could have just left it for you, but I wanted to say hi.”

“Thanks, you’re the first grown-up I’ve seen all day long. Come on in. I’ll show you the kitchen.” After the words left her mouth she remembered what a mess it was in there.

She led the way. From behind her Sara said, “I know it. Sometimes I forget how to ‘use my grown up words’ by the end of the day. Everything is in kid-speak, which is not good since Joe drops all sorts of letters right now. So ‘sleep’ sounds like ‘leap’ and ‘spoon’ sounds like ‘foon’. It’s sweet when a toddler or kid does it, but when it comes from the mouth of a 30 year old woman like me, it’s more crazy than cute.”

“That’s true,” Amber agreed. To make room on the kitchen counter, she shoved aside papers, a box of cereal, and two small plates. “There, now there’s a spot. Your stuff will probably stick to the counter, but that’s okay.”

Sara set down a plastic bag and took out the items as she spoke. “Okay, everything is in here. I kept the noodles separate, in case the kids don’t like the sauce. Plus it makes things soggy when you combine them. There’s a loaf of bread here – I marked the pan so you can bring it by later, maybe when you bring me food tomorrow.”

Amber slid the container of sauce over to her side of the counter and opened it. A warm savory scent of homemade tomato sauce wafted up to her and instantly her mouth watered. “This smells so good,” she said.

“Thanks. I hope you like it. I can give you the recipe if you want. It’s a little putzy but if you make a ton of it all at once, then you can freeze it in small portions for later.”

“Ha,” Amber snorted. “That would mean that you’d have time to actually cook it in the first place. I hardly have time to make instant mac and cheese. These guys don’t give me a minute to myself,” she said. As if on cue, the toddler appeared at that moment, diaper in his hand instead of on his bottom.

“Noah, you can’t take off your diaper,” Amber said.

Noah smiled, then whizzed on the kitchen tile.

Amber scrambled for paper towels and cleaning spray. Sara covered her smile with her hand and said mildly, “I think I’ll get going now.”

She stepped around the puddle on the floor, patted Noah’s head and said, “You can just keep the plastic container. Those are community property. The only thing I’d actually like back is the bread pan, but there’s no hurry.”

Without letting Amber get up from the floor, where she was now re-diapering Noah, Sara waved and said, “I can find the door. I’ll see you next week, Supergirl.”

Amber shook her head and said, “Bye Sara.”

Then she turned back to Noah and blew on his tummy. He squealed in joy.

“Did mommy forget she was playing Supergirl?” she mumbled, smiling.

*******

Thanks for coming by today. And good luck to all the PitMad participants! Hope you get lots of favorites and requests!

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Discussion: Comments {2} Filed Under: Uncategorized, Writing

Some faith stories have sorrow (and some don’t)

10
Sep

Every couple days I receive an email with a new post from a certain online magazine.

I signed up for it after I read some of the posts there and found a refreshing honesty and willingness to discuss the hard things in life.

Stories of harm, stories of shame, stories of self-destruction and abuse.

There were no easy answers offered, and it took great pains to avoid being preachy. Although it was informed by Christianity there was a lot of focus on negative self-image, manipulation, lonliness, pain and mistakes.

Once in a while there was a whisper of something more, an outstretching of a hand, a note delivered but no answer yet given.

And their posts are starting to make me a little crazy.

******

Window

I know there are no easy answers.

I know that for almost all of us, growth and fulfillment come as a process over time.

That doesn’t mean I should stay where I started. We who try to follow Jesus have seasons of dormancy as well as seasons of insights and changes, but our faith will develop. We are to “be transformed by the renewing of our mind” because we are new creations in Christ. Some things change in an instant, others take a while to even notice, much less actually address.

Chronic depression or an inability to get past our history may indicate something in us that needs more attention, something that needs more intensive probing and maybe the insight of a trained professional to trace and address. Sometimes we need to seek out the help of someone other than Jesus to deal with hard things. There are things that others can tell us about ourselves that we can’t see from inside ourselves.

There’s nothing wrong with having rocky journey to faith. There’s also nothing wrong with a simple faith story, a story of knowing what Jesus offers and taking Him up on it, a legacy of coming from families who believe in Him and who make that appealing by their healthy example.

We belittle our own journey when we disparage it, when we wish to exchange it for something flashier or more dramatic.

I know there are plenty of people who have a story riddled with hardship who would have preferred to bypass the sadness, hurt or difficulty while it was happening (wouldn’t we all?) even though they might acknowledge that their journey made them who they are.

There is power in sharing story. Yes. Every person comes with a story and telling it honestly is part of claiming that we are made through mistakes and successes. Making public a story of abuse or neglect diffuses the power of secrecy that can keep us trapped in a cycle of shame. These are potentially exciting stories of redemption and transformation. But if what is shared is only the first portion, only a representation of the dark-side, are not the rest of us complicit in enabling a voyeuristic system that longs for the juicy tell-all TV magazine headline, the more scandalous the better?

Happily, last week the site included a story that focused on someone’s feelings about having a “plain” story. If you want to take a look, here’s the link: http://shar.es/ivtKK I think overall this magazine does a good job of representing the complexity of real-life faith. They often share glimmers of hope in the midst of difficulty and examples of real people wrestling with fragile situations, coming at it with a faith-informed approach that engages the gray parts of life.

I just happen to like some more frequent sunshine.

I’d love to hear your thoughts, maybe even hear some of your story. All versions (keep ’em clean, of course) are welcome here.

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Discussion: Comments {0} Filed Under: Faith, Uncategorized

Five Minute Friday: Red

6
Sep

Timer set for five minutes. Ready. Set. GO.

I lost my crockpot.

Don’t ask me how.

If I could retrace my steps and figure out how I lost it, I’d be able to find it.

And I can’t.

It’s not like a chapstick or a pencil. You don’t have another one laying around in the bottom of a drawer someplace. It’s definitely not a huge deal, but when you’ve started using one, you find it is a nice option to have.

So when I took my son to his friend’s house, I told the funny story of not being able to find it. “Who loses a crockpot?!” I joked.

The mom said, “Do you want one of mine?”

Huh??

She told me she had an extra one she never uses, an inexpensive one she picked up somewhere along the way, one she didn’t need.

My pride department wanted to keep me from taking it. But my time management department told me I could really use it. And she was being generous, offering me a gift. She wouldn’t offer if she didn’t want to.

So I took the crockpot, almost accidentally broke it on the way out the door. and now my family can have shredded pork tacos again.  But the takeaway is that I almost missed out on the chance to be part of this new friend’s story of generosity. My pride almost kept me from allowing her to help me. And how often, especially as moms, do we choose to tough it out because we don’t want to admit we need help?

STOP

Red Crockpot

******

Like most Fridays, this post is part of a linkup with Lisa-jo Baker’s Five Minute Fridays. You write for five minutes flat, then linkup your post on her website: http://lisajobaker.com . Check it out for more details, but if you’re interested in finding other writers to connect with, Five Minute Fridays is a great way to do so.

Can I ask you to consider subscribing to this blog? You can click the little link on the bar over there —-> and any new posts will be delivered to your inbox. No pressure, but it would be a sure way to keep up on all the action (snort chuckle). Thanks for coming by today, and I hope you have a great weekend!

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Discussion: Comments {9} Filed Under: Drudgery and Household Tasks, Five Minute Friday, Friendship, Motherhood, Uncategorized

Five Minute Friday: Worship

30
Aug

English: An old Methodist church, a week after...

English: An old Methodist church, a week after its last worship service, in Ceylon, Minnesota. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I haven’t been to a show in a few years. But when I’ve gone I’ve been surprised at the similiarities between a good concert and some of the music portions of church services (Evangelical, Protestant bigger size church services to be more specific).

Smoke machine – check.

Light show – check.

High decibel level – check.

Well-trained, talented musicians – check.

Depending on the church you go to, people may or may not have their hands in the air, but at the shows I’ve been to, you can believe they do and there will be boisterous singing along, responding to the music and the promptings of the band.

There are times when emotions run high at concerts, so much so that tears stream down people’s faces, for a myriad of reasons. That’s been known to happen in a few services as well, although it is more seldom at my church.

We are in Minnesota, after all, and some emotions are better left unexpressed. Well, most emotions.

That’s a stereotype, but there are times when I get frustrated at church because it seems like we don’t feel free to engage the music or the worship leaders or the One we’re there to worship in the first place. But you put a bunch of Minnesotans at First Ave (a famous concert venue up here) and they’ll rip up the place with their enthusiasm.

Where’s that passion on Sunday morning?

Not everyone worships the same way. I get that. Music isn’t everyone’s “thing” and that’s okay. But when people remain stoic and unresponsive for the entire.worship.service. then they ought to be sitting in a board meeting for all the passion they’re showing.

Because worship isn’t only tied to music.

It is in fellowship.

It is in the message.

It is in serving.

And if people remain unmoved and unresponsive to all these facets of worship, they miss out on an opportunity to interact with a God who is active, moving, responsive and engaged.

What ways of worship come most naturally to you? Are you part of a church and if so, what kind of worshipping body is it? Finally, been to any good concerts lately?

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This is part of a linkup with LIsa-jo Baker and her Five Minute Friday. We get the word prompt, set the timer, and write for five minute. No editing. No perfectionism. Just write for the sheer joy and fun or writing. Anyone is invited so join in any time. Here’s her site: http://lisajobaker.com

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Winner of the Trades of Hope Scarf Giveaway

29
Aug

We have a winner! Well, of course, you’re all winners ’cause you’re sweet enough to be here reading this blog in the first place. But specifically we have a winner of the Trades of Hope Scarf Giveaway. (Doesn’t everything sound grander when it is capitalized?)

And the winner is…

Tina from Michigan!

Yay Tina!

If you want to send Tina a congratulatory tweet, her handle is @MamaTina . She is a consistently positive presence there, so if you’re looking for an online friend, connect with @MamaTina.

Thanks to everyone who entered. And if you ever get invited to a Trades of Hope party, be sure to go because it is a great organization with an awesome purpose. If you’re interested in finding out more, check out my friend Teresa who can answer all your questions: https://www.facebook.com/TeresaMillerTradesOfHope

Here’s the scarf Tina will be getting in the mail. Have a great day everybody!

Trades of Hope Scarf

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Global Leadership Summit: More Highlights from Day One

24
Aug

English: Chicago skyline at sunrise Deutsch: C...

Chicago skyline at sunrise (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I realized that I may have gotten ahead of myself in my enthusiasm about this year’s Global Leadership Summit. Until last year I had never heard of it, and maybe some of you haven’t either. Please allow me to summarize.

Willow Creek Association has been organizing Global Leadership Summit for the past 20 years. Here’s a summary of the Summit, from their website: http://www.willowcreek.com/events/leadership/about.asp

The Global Leadership Summit is a two-day, world-class leadership event experienced by more than 170,000 leaders around the world, representing more than 14,000 churches. It’s telecast LIVE from Willow’s campus (near Chicago) every August. Throughout the fall, Summit events take place in an additional 300+ cities, 92 countries—and translated into 42 languages. This event is crafted to infuse vision, skill development and inspiration for the sake of local church transformation.

The Summit speakers are broadcast live from Willow Creek Church in Illinois, but it is beamed in live to over 230 sites around the country. They are also international, providing leadership development in places where no such resource exists.

From what I experienced, much of the information shared is applicable to people from various faith traditions, but there is definitely a Christian angle to the conference. Two of the speakers gave what basically amounted to sermons, one of which had decidedly less “leadership” focus. However, most of the speakers focused on the specifics of strong organizations and healthy leadership.

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One speaker, Chris Brown, used a Bible story to illustrate raising up leaders and what to do when they start realizing their potential. Some leaders see this as a threat. Some feel there isn’t room for two strong leaders. Some feel threatened by the presence of another effective leader, as if he/she is bound to usurp power or position unintentionally (or, perhaps, intentionally).

It’s something that doesn’t get talked about much.

But it’s a common occurrence.

One thing Chris Brown said was that, “Insecure leaders have to have the titles and position.” Their leadership is only validated externally, and they can’t allow anyone else to have that title or that position, because that lessens their own validity.

The thing Chris Brown said that sat me back in my chair was this:

“My fear is that in the next 10-15 years there will be a lot of cities that are gifted civic centers that used to be churches, but the personality left.”

If a church or an organization, business, etc. relies on one charismatic person to reach people, bring in business, then what happens when that person leaves? If there has been no leadership development in that organization, and it all revolves around that one person, the place will be forced to shut down. If there’s only been room at the top for one, there’s a strong possibility that when that one leaves, the whole place will fall apart.

Brown also said, “When we can make room at the top, you get a healthier you, a healthier team, a healthier organization.”

He would know.

He’s one of four senior pastors at North Coast Church in California that practices co-leadership. North Coast Church happens to be the largest  of the Evangelical Free churches.

When he received the initial email inviting him to speak at the Summit, he said he took about two weeks trying to find out what sneaky youth pastor was playing a prank on him. When he realized it was for real, some people around him asked if it was just him being invited and not Larry Osbourne as well? (Larry Osbourne is the longtime pastor of North Coast Church, one of the now four senior pastors there, and a published author and speaker.)

Chris Brown’s talk was a great reminder about the power of healthy leadership. Because Larry Osbourne is not intimidated by sharing position and title, Chris Brown can serve as an effective leader with his own style and reach.

If you look at your circle and where you connect with others, are you able to allow their strengths and passions to be used? Or do those strengths and passions make you feel like your own are diminished? Is that a reality or your perception? What about in your family circles? Friends? What about your role in community groups or where you volunteer?

Are there people who need your encouragement as they explore their gifts? Can you offer praise to someone who is testing his abilities? Can you share your spotlight? I’d love to hear your experiences with this, so chime in with your comments!

Light quote

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Global Leadership Summit: Some Highlights from Day One

19
Aug

The thing that I noticed about each speaker who was a part of the Global Leadership Summit was that they were individuals.

There was no cookie cutter form, which meant each of them had their own unique style of speaking.

There was no cookie cutter, so they came from different areas of the professional world.

There was no formula or prescription they used to present their material, which made each one different from the next, each one expressing themselves in their own way. Some were methodical, others looked like they were shooting from the hip. Some used audience participation, others used a lecture style.

The point was, each of them had wisdom and insight but it looked different from that of the others.

Wisdom, insight, passion, drive – these things look different when worn by different people.

Living life fully engaged looks different for different people.

***

English: Polaroid Impulse camera.

One highlight for me on the first day was hearing Bob Goff speak.

I’ve seen his book, Love Does, around my peripheral vision but have yet to read it.

After seeing him speak, you’d better believe I’m going out to get it. This lawyer is a passionate nutball but don’t let his exhuberant speaking style fool you – he means business and works in intense situations dealing with oppression and child abuse. You can find out more about him at his website (www.bobgoff.com).

During his portion of session on the first day of the conference, Bob Goff referenced Ephesians 4:1 and said, “The verse says live a life worth of the calling YOU have received. Not what she received, not what that guy received, what YOU’VE received.”

He also snapped a picture of the auditorium with an old-school Poloroid camera and said,

“If you want to figure out what you’re made to do, let it develop over time.”

He encouraged leaders to…

“See people for who they’re becoming.”

These were the kind of things that each of the speakers shared – wisdom that applies to all areas of life, not just leadership in business or church, but leadership in life. That is an overarching value of the conference: Lead Where You Are. It is a good reminder for all of us, regardless of life-station or employment position. Lead where you are.

In what ways could you take on more leadership without taking on a different job or role? What would change if you started seeing people for who they’re becoming?

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