Thursday, December 1, 2016

"Excusitis"

Excusitis:  Derived from the word "Excuse".It is the tendency/disease/regular behavior of making excuses for every poor performance .In simpler words, giving excuses for everything and trying to back their faults                                               -The Urban Dictionary

Excusitis.  More common than the common cold, it is one of the most debilitating conditions a human being can contract.  It is a reason that many people live for 50, 60, 70 or more years and never achieve anything of significance in life.  

I am at a time in my life when "reasonable" excuses abound.  I don't even have to make the excuses myself--my friends make them for me! 

"Oh, we understand how busy you are."
"Your house looks great considering how busy you are."
"Your schedule is packed--you can exercise later."

While I appreciate my sweet friends and their graciousness, I am learning that I cannot let excuses "excuse" me from valuing my priorities.  What are my priorities?  

1.  I want to know God more intimately and understand His word more accurately.  I want to become more like Him in my thoughts, actions and values.
2.  I want to have a fit,healthy and energetic body.  I must admit that this priority tends to eclipse the first one at times.
3.  I want to be a good wife to my husband.  I want him to feel loved, supported, encouraged, heard and understood by me.
4.  I want my children to feel loved, supported and confident.  I want to help equip them with the tools (character, discipline, discernment, etc)  they will need as they grow up.
5.  I want to be a responsible, valuable member of human society and help others in any way that I can.  This requires growth in knowledge, skill and emotional intelligence.

I often get frustrated when I see women (and even some men) who waste time when I feel like I don't have a moment to waste.  I never accomplish everything on my to-do list, even after working on it all day.  Still, I am thankful for the busy, full life that I have.  If I can continue to grow in my relationship with God, strengthen my body and improve its health, be there for my family and improve myself from the inside even when it is hard, there will come a day when all of those things will become easier.  The children will get older and need me less.  I will have less extra weight to carry around and, with that, more energy.  I will have more abundance to pour into the lives of others.  

I need to have faith that the "it gets easier" day will come.  That faith is a very effective vaccine for Excusitis.


Friday, March 18, 2016

Before you publish that blog post............

S.T.E.A.M.--Where would we be without that "T" for "technology"?  In some ways, the world has never been more connected.  News, good or bad, can be shared with thousands of people instantly.  Everybody can rejoice over your child's first loose tooth moments after it is discovered!  What a time to be alive!

While technology connects us in ways that our grandparents never thought possible, it also seems to aid in a very sad, harmful sort of disconnect.  It allows us to "interact" with one another without the messiness and inconvenience of actually being with one another.  I have read many blog posts that could be titled  "Dear lady I watched cry at Starbucks" or "To the mother of three that I creeped on at Target".  Perhaps posting a blog about wanting to help the lady at Starbucks or typing what we wanted to say to the lady at Target makes us feel like we really did help in some way.  However, chances are overwhelming that the ladies addressed in the blog posts will never read them......and never be helped by them.

In 2012, my husband suffered a heart attack and underwent quadruple bypass surgery.  It was, without question, one of the most frightening times in my life.  So many gracious family members and friends reached out and helped us logistically and financially.  Meanwhile, there was one person who chose to "help" in a very unusual, unexpected way--by writing a blog post.  This was not a "please pray for my friends as they go through this" kind of post.  This was more of  the"make sure you appreciate your loved ones--you never know what might happen to them" variety.  I don't mind that the post was written.  It just bothered me that this person lived close by and never personally reached out to us.  They never offered to pray or even send a message asking how we were doing.  To this person, our difficult circumstance was simply an opportunity to write a blog post.  I will admit the possibility that this person thought that the blog was helping us in some way.  In a way, it did.  It taught me never to do that to someone.

If we can take the time to wax eloquently about what we would say to the overwhelmed young mother or to the heartbroken lady in Starbucks, should we not use some of that time to walk up to them and show God's love in some way?  Our efforts might be rejected or unappreciated, but I can nearly guarantee that attempts at personal connection will do far more than writing.  Who knows, it might make for a FAR more interesting story.