Monday, March 26, 2012

Cowboy Boots

A beautiful day at church yesterday.
A wonderful time of worship,
A challenge by a visiting speaker from China who was imprisoned during the communist reign,
Then, there is my buddy Titus.
He is all of 3 years old, loves the color blue, Thomas the train, and always has a smile on his face.
Yesterday, he made me think.
No, not about Thomas the train.  It was cowboy boots.
He walked up to me after service and proudly displayed the brown distressed leather boots he was wearing for me to see.  I just so happened to be wearing mine that day, and we had fun comparing them, as they matched nearly identically.

What made me think was what his older sister told me a minute later.
She said, "Titus told mom he was going to wear his cowboy boots to church today because Miss. Mary wears hers to church all the time!"


First it made me laugh!
Who would have thought a three year old boy noticed what shoes I wore to church!?
Then I thought, "If he notices the shoes I wear, what else is he noticing?" 

When I taught in Oklahoma it was easy to remember that I was being watched. It was easy to see that my fellow character coaches and I were, by God's grace, lights in the darkness, giving hope to the hopeless.  When the contrast between the environment we were in and the light of God in us was so different, it was easy to remember we were there to minister God's love to those around us.

But here at home,  I need these little reminders that I am still being watched.
Not just by the three year old who wants to wear cowboy  boots, or the girls who sport sparkly green frog earrings, but also strangers in the grocery store, the teller at the bank, the mail man, the neighbor next door, or the group of kids I pass on the sidewalk when I walk the dog.

They are all watching too.
What do they see?

The cowboy boots? Or the love of Christ in my actions?

But be thou an example of the believers, in word, in conversation, in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity. 
~ I Timothy 4:12

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Right Words




Ever read a book, or anything for that mater, and came across a new word?  
One you didn't recognize or know how to pronounce quite right?  
In a word, 
Frustrating.

 Usually I skip over them and gain the meaning of the word from the context of the sentence. While that usually works reasonably well, I think I've lost a lot of the specific meaning certain words give by playing a guessing game with their definitions.

I was writing something recently and had a hard time putting my thoughts down on paper as precisely as I wished to, so I pulled out the trusty (and slightly dusty) dictionary and started flipping pages.  I found that the meaning of the words I originally chose perfectly described what I was trying to say. They had so much more meaning than I ever would have guessed. 

Which made me think.

If I don't know exactly what it is I'm saying when I write,
do I really know what the author of whatever it is I'm reading is trying to communicate?
Kind of a strange thought.

Then I kept thinking.

Having a small vocabulary not only diminishes the ability to understand what we read or hear, but also can diminish our ability to effectively teach and communicate with those in our sphere of influence. (Which is a key part of our purpose here on earth. Matt. 28:19, Mark 13:10, Lk. 24:47)

The obvious answer to the issue is, expand your vocabulary!

Easier said than done.

 So, when I sit down to read do I keep a dictionary handy? Not necessarily, but I've become more aware of words that I do not know a precise definition to.  I am more apt to keep a list when I read and look up unknown words a bit later.  I then try to use them in conversation or in writing  (sometimes I have to look them up again.) to help cement their meaning in my mind.

Any other vocabulary building tips out there?

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Monday Meditation




Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it? I will even make a way in the wilderness, and rivers in the desert.

~Isaiah 43:19~

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Spring

Yep.  I'm convinced!  
It's here.
It might leave again before it comes to stay, but for now,
Spring is here!

 .....And here is the mud to prove it.


Of course she had to pick the muddiest part of the pasture to use for basking in the sun.
But she is a pretty little thing Isn't she? (Probably around 13 hands)
Her name is Ellie.
She is still in her trial period at Banbury, but hopefully she will earn a permanent spot in the barn in the near future!

Disclaimer: No, Ellie is not my horse. She is (almost) a therapy horse at a therapeutic riding center I volunteer at.  See link above.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Today


Today was a good day.
A sunshiny day.
A bare foot day.
An over 70 degree day.  (Yes, I'm still in Michigan!)
A day I got to spend with some very special little people.
All those reasons gave us much cause to smile :)
And so we did.















 
Some feet have seem more of the outside so far this year than mine...






  I promise he's not falling on his head, just showing off a flip!  
 
See? Safe in one piece.
 
I hope you all had as beautiful a day as I did!

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

River, 12 Weeks



This boy is growing like a weed! 
At 11 weeks he weighed 25 lbs. That's a 15 lb gain in 5 weeks!

He doesn't even have to jump on the gate to see over it any more.

Gluten Free Banana Bread

Wow.  Has it really been since Valentine's day since I've posted anything?
I've got some fun times to tell you all about from my trip to Texas for the Independent Christian Film Makers Academy and Film Festival, but I thought I would wait until some one emailed me some pictures to enlighten you all on the fun we had and some of the things that I learned.

So, in the mean time, here is my favorite gluten free banana bread recipe!  Yes, gluten free.  But it taste pretty close to the real stuff. Promise.


First, Mix the dry ingredients:
1/2 C Arrowroot powder
1/2 C Tapioca flour 
1/2 C Bean flour
1/4 C Sorghum flour
1 heaping tsp. Xanthan gum
3/4 tsp. Baking Soda
1/2 tsp. Salt
3 tsp. Cinnamon

Mix separately:
1/3 C shortening and 2/3 C sugar
beat in 2 eggs
2-3 mashed bananas
1 tsp. Vanilla

Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, you don't have to worry about over mixing, because there is no gluten :)  Stir in chocolate chips and chopped nuts of your choice if you wish. (as if you wouldn't....)

Bake at 350 for 45-55 minutes

Enjoy!

For a quick variation simply substitute the bananas for a small can of pumpkin, and add an extra teaspoon of cinnamon, some cloves, and ginger. Yum!