Showing posts with label Motherhood vitamin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Motherhood vitamin. Show all posts

Thursday, April 15, 2010

From the Theologian, The Barefoot Contessa: Ina Garten, on HOME :)



The following is an article from Ina Garten's book, Barefoot Contessa at Home.  It was reprinted in House Beautiful a few years ago and PLEASE, forgive me for not knowing which one.  I keep this article in my cleaning/cooking control journal on my kitchen counter and am afraid to lose it.(what if there's a fire? :) I think you'll love her thoughts on nesting and entertaining as much as I.  She puts into words something we all feel.

So, here it is:
"Something smells really good!" my husband, Jeffrey exclaims every Friday when he walks in the door.  Most weeks, Jeffrey has been around the world and back and when he walks in that door, I want him to feel that he's really home.  What he doesn't realize is that what feels very casual is, in fact, quite deliberate: the music is playing, all the lights are on, there are flowers everywhere, and chicken and onions are roasting in the oven.

I didn't always know how to do all that.  It took time and lots of experiementation.  Over the 38 years we've been married, I've tried everything-the good, the bad, and the ugly.  But, I've evolved a style that seems to work for me.  I like knowing that there are twenty new magazines on the coffee table, delicous French teas in the pantry, and expensive bubble baths next to the tub.  A good home should gather you up in its arms like a warm cashmere blanket, soothe your hurt feelings, and prepare you to go back out into that big bad world tomorrow, all ready to fight the dragons. 

I'm basically a nester.  All day long, I feel as though I'm batting back the baseballs that are being hurled at me:  decisions to make, places to go, cranky people to deal with...and when I come home, I want my house to feel serene and beautiful, like the way you feel when you get into a bed piled high with down pillows; you're safe.

Sounds like Eden, right?  minus the long line of animals waiting to be named.

Later, in the same article, she says:
What really makes a house or apartment feel like home?  For me, it's good music, great smells from the kitchen, pretty flowers, and a quiet, relaxed atmosphere.  Sure, it has to make Jeffrey and me comfortable, but equally important, it has to make my friends want to drop by.  It's often said that first impressions count when you're meeting someone new, and I think it's the same for a house.  How people feel when they walk in the door really sets the mood.  I want to appeal to all their senses.  When they walk through the house, I want them to smell something delicious, even if it's as simple as freshly brewing coffee.  They see things that are beautiful:  orange tulips, antique rugs, and an antique coatrack on which to hang their coats.  They hear good music and, most important of all, they feel my warm embrace, which I hope makes them feel right at home."

This is a type of hospitality that I aspire to even on ordinary days, and one which my mother, Bethel, has developed over the years.  (Even her name speaks of a spiritual nesting place: House of God!) 

My dad will often call from his cell phone as he leaves the hospital after an exhausting day of nine hours on his feet, head bowed over his patient, and hands making tiny meticulous movements.  With that call, my mom goes into action.  She puts Norah Jones on the ipod speaker, sets the table with a candle and with dinner, already in progress, (she's been roasting a lot of root vegetables lately:  Yum.), she welcomes dad home. 

There is joy in his arrival...always joy.  She recently told me that she consciously decided early on in their marriage to always have joy when he came home: a kiss, a smile, and when we were kids, she taught us to run to the door and see who could jump in dad's arms first.  Sometimes mom would race us and get there first.

To me, these are images of peace, love, grace and of course, joy.  I believe that every decision in our lives, is a decision toward or away from God...and that nesting itself can make our homes into places of "Your Kingdom Come," and reflections of the Eden God intended.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Do Your Life With Courage


So girlfriends, I brushed Madeline's hair into pigtails this morning (the best way to deal with the tangles in her hair this week) and watched her and Caedmon walk outside to preschool, backpacks on, holding onto each of Daddy's hands.  Then I quickly grabbed the high chair, positioned it in front of the tv with favorite finger snacks, slid Xavier into the seat and got my little stairmaster machine out from beside the futon.  I clicked the TV on to Life Today and I'm exercising next to Xavier and the further Beth Moore gets into her talk, the faster I'm working my little machine.  By the end of her prayer, I'm breaking a sweat, hands are raised and I'm crying out, "Thank you, Jesus," like a good Pentecostal.  Anglicans can recognize the Spirit too!


I have been listening to this one talk of hers from the archives for a week and they ran it again today!  I don't care what you think about her accent, past teachings, even her gender, if you listen to this talk, You Will Be Encouraged, Changed, Strengthened by God and Transformed!


She said, and I'm paraphrasing now: "Live your life with confidence.  Do your life with courage.  The Spirit of Christ is within you.  He has enough courage for everything you are going through."


The powerful, fruit-filled, Spirit-filled life of the early church apostles is available to us today!   Our God has not changed!  The Spirit is not less powerful than He was 2000 years ago! 


Romans 8:11 (New International Version)



11And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit, who lives in you.


Seriously?  The same Spirit who (Ephesians 1:19-20) raised Christ from the dead is within us?  If we are attached to the Vine, abiding in Him, and are being continuously filled with the Spirit, His lifeblood is flowing within us. 


Boy, some days I feel and act like the opposite.  Some days I'm walking with the Spirit in strength, listening, hungry for the Scripture and being transformed.  Other days I'm walking eyes down, defeated, muttering while I clean my house.)  What I forget is how close the Creator of the Universe is!  He is here. Present in my home.  Even within me! 


This is the truth.  If Christ's Spirit is within me, His wisdom, strength, healing power, joy, AND PARENTING ABILITIES are right here for me to call upon, for Him to work into me.  Once you have tasted a life, Practicing the Presence of God (like Brother Lawrence), filled with the Spirit, empowered by Him for your everyday life.  I promise you, you are not going to want to go back! You will know that the Kingdom of God is upon you and you will be the mother you were created by God to be.


(If you want to hear more about this, listen to my sermon on the left, "Epicenters of the Kingdom." And if you do anything today,  you must get yourself over to http://www.lifetoday.org/ You can watch or listen by pressing going to the left hand side and clicking under Beth Moore's picture on flash/quicktime to watch or MP3 to listen.  She's always on LifeToday on Wednesdays and there are archives of each of her talks over the last year.  Almost all of them are worth your time.  I promise you.)

Friday, August 22, 2008

Mommy Vitamin

James Fenton:

The lullaby is the spell whereby the mother attempts to transform herself back from an ogre to a saint.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Mommy Vitamin of the day

The formative period for building character for eternity is in the nursery. The mother is queen of that realm and sways a scepter more potent than that of kings or priests. ~Author Unknown

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Motherhood and Perspective

GK Chesterton (a friend of CS Lewis) has the following encouraging words about motherhood:

“I can understand how [mothering] might exhaust the mind, but I cannot imagine how it could narrow it. How can it be a large career to tell other people’s children about arithmetic, and a small career to tell one’s own children about the universe? How can it be broad to be the same thing to everyone, and narrow to be everything to someone? No; a woman’s function is laborious because it is gigantic, not because it is minute. I will pity Mrs. Jones for the hugeness of her task; I will never pity her for its smallness.”

Thank you GK. I needed that.