All good things: September
I can’t believe I haven’t checked in since June! It feels like the last few months have been a bit of a time warp. I don’t even think I’ll attempt a detailed recap, but the intervening months included: grocery store sushi, puzzles, exploring streams and rivers, smoothies, books on tape, Minecraft, library books, bike riding, cartoons, attempts at gardening, lots of Hamilton listening, daily naps (for me), and just one emergency dental appointment (which turned out well). My kids...
Grab some coffee or tea and join me for a rundown of some good things I’ve read or watched or learned recently, and also what I’m working on. I hope you find something helpful! Jamie Grace’s Playlist for UnderstandingDo you know Jamie Grace’s music? She’s been speaking a lot about racism lately, and I love hearing from her! She created this playlist “for understanding why a lot of black people feel a lot of things.” Goodness, music sometimes hits...
Hello friends! I know I’ve been quiet this last month since I shared my last screensaver. At first it was coronavirus and having all my children at homem but the last few weeks it has been the protests in our country following the murder of George Floyd on May 25. I’m sure that you’ve followed these events, even if you’re not an American. I have been even more burdened for my country, by our violence and oppression. By our...
My dear friend, Katie, recently wrote a post on her blog about praying Psalm 131 during quarantine, and I’ve had this Psalm on my mind my since then. I love the thoughts that she shared and I encourage you to read it. “A Song of Ascents. Of David. O LORD, my heart is not lifted up; my eyes are not raised too high; I do not occupy myself with things too great and too marvelous for me. But I...
Fanny Lou Hamer famously once said that she was “sick and tired of being sick and tired.” I’m thankful to Jemar Tisby (author of The Color of Compromise) for teaching me about her. At the age 42, after working as a sharecropper most of her life, Hamer became a civil rights activist and politician. She was fed up with the violence and injustice and oppression she saw and experienced in Mississippi and decided to do whatever she could, enduring...
My daughter asked this morning, “Why is it called Good Friday when such a bad thing happened on this day?” I grabbed a marker sketch of this image that I had scrawled out this morning and told her about how all of history converges on this very day, this very moment when Jesus gives up His life for the world, for us. I had been grappling a bit myself with how to celebrate Easter in the face of such...
I was first introduced to the concept of lament in the course of learning about racial justice and reconciliation over the last few years. I was reading Daniel Hill’s White Awake (which I highly recommend to white people). In one chapter, Hill writes about how lament is one of the necessary and appropriate responses to injustice and suffering. We, as white Americans, tend to want to focus on celebration and victory, or we want to jump immediately into fix-it...
Hello friends! I pray your are safe and well right now. I know most of our lives have changed drastically over the last few weeks. I am home with my family attempting some homeschool, trying to retain sanity and peace, and fighting anxiety. The other night, I wrote down some people I want to remember to pray for by name, and ended up creating a whole list of people. I thought I’d share the little chart I drew out...
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