I wrote a blog in my head the other day... it was called "The Fear,Failure and the Fear of Failure." I often blog in my head. This makes it difficult for you to read them because unfortunately they haven't perfected the technology of mental blogging. Although this is probably good. If everything I thought immediately went into blog form for all to read, I would have been committed 4 years ago! So yes... until then and out of the friendly confines of a mental institution, I will actually blog on my computer rather than in my head.
The weekend was rough, had a bit of a breakdown Saturday night. Thanks to Jennn for listening to me rant and rave for a bit, I was able to relax for a bit today. Joe took the day off, because I had been planning to leave today on a trip to Vermont with a friend, but it fell through at the last moment. After a nice long bath (Lush products... MMMMM!) I said the following words aloud to Joe: "I don't think I'm an actor." This may come as a shock to most of you who have known me for any period of time. Do I think I may still act? Of course! Shoestring is moving in some really great directions, and I still find so much joy in being on a stage. But watching Natalie pursue her passion in the city has made me re-evaluate my own passions. I don't really like the build up to being the center of attention (yes Steve, I told you, SHOCKING!) The being on stage, the actual acting, that I enjoy. But I like seeing it come together from backstage, being the "man behind the curtain" in Oz if you will. If you asked me what my passions are, I love cooking. I love parties. I love cooking for parties. I love throwing parties, I love creating parties. I love shopping for parties. Things that drain the passion straight from my veins? Riding the PATH into the city for an audition. Reading copy or doing a monologue for the 12th time KNOWING I'm not what they're looking for. Showing up for yet ANOTHER Japanese project. The fakeness that goes into the business.
So where does this leave me? 2 of my drama team guys are good enough that one day they may be accepting an Oscar and thanking me. (I hope that doesn't sound as cocky as I feel it does!) Some things are around the corner that may make Memoirs take off. We're FINALLY opening our new building at church. YAY! My own stage! I may go to film school just so I can learn how to properly film things. I have finally found a formula that keeps 10 small children occupied and enjoying themselves. I would like to put that into a book. I enjoy writing. I have a laptop and can go anywhere I like and just sit and type.
So this is where I am. I have felt like a failure for some time now because I haven't been in a feature film and haven't won an Oscar myself yet. But that may not be for me. I'm not saying that I may not change the world by being an actor, but I have long felt that I was not to be an actor in a typical sense. I don't want to brag, but I am a good actor. I know that. But I also know I am not a typical actor. I mean, I'm not a typical person. None of us are really. We have been called to be peculiar people right? Here's to oddity.
On a small side note, if I could be so bold as to ask for prayer, I've finally made a Dr's appointment with a highly reccommended Dr. I was told by her office when I made the appointment that it would be a half an hour appointment with her. This woman is a Christian who is extremely good at what she does and has been reccommended to me by 3 of my friends. We're going to be doing a complete physical as well as exploring any other options as to why I haven't been able to shake this funk. Pray we'll find the best course of action and I'll see some differences in my life. Thanks for sharing my crazy life!
Monday, September 22, 2008
Speaking the Unspoken
Posted by Sarah at 6:37 PM 3 comments
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Joy Along the Journey
So here we are nearly 2 months into my experiment, and some things are indeed better. My eating hasn't changed as much as I'd hoped, tv habits have changed some, but not as much as they should. I have introduced some omega-3 foods into my diet, based on some things I've read, and sure enough, I am noticing a more positive outlook. I am seeing the difference. Joe asked me this morning to remind him of my goal. (we've been sitting down for a filling breakfast together lately, that has been good...) I've finally distilled the goal down to "to give Joe the best me I can give him." He smiled and said he would be praying for that. I took a bit of a shortcut for my 2 books this month since I'm down to the wire for the month... I am in the middle of 3 other books, all very close to the finish, but I read a novel earlier in the month and today finally finished one of the 88 page books Steve got us all for Christmas, "In Our Joy." The book really distills the Christian life pretty well, and at first I was thinking, "yeah yeah, I know all this already." But when I took time to quiet my heart and listen to what God had to speak to me through it, got some real important pieces out of it... I am a fan of distilling words... don't put in tons of extra fluff that's going to confuse me, just give me your point... so here are some points I got out of it..
1: Don't think of striving to get His favor. Think of striving with the favor of His help. 2: Forgiveness of sins and justification are at the bottom of our striving. We do not strive for them. We strive because we have them. 3: The mark of a true follower of Jesus is not yet perfection but rather an unrelenting battle of sin.
I am realizing that I am in many ways a perfectionist. Usually in many of the wrong areas. But my need for perfection is not so God would love me and accept me. That has already happened. I must strive to perfect my love for Him, resting in the knowledge that even that will not be achieved while I am here on earth. Lord move my motivation to you!
On a side note, I started my 'service small group' last night. Cooking classes and dinner thrown in with a short lesson from the Bible. I had 4 teenage girls sign up and a co-worker who is desperate to learn how to cook. (He recently moved in to an apartment with another intern guy so he's worried he'll starve...) and another co-worker whom I wasn't expecting but am excited to get the joy of knowing. Please pray over Trudy, Taylor, Danitra, Chaiylah (Kay-la), Daija (day-ja) and Will. That they may find our home a safe haven and that I would be able to love them as the Lord loves them. Pray also that the Lord comes through with a bigger house soon... including Joe, last night, we squeezed 8 folks around our kitchen table and a couple of tv trays.
Things I learned last night.... Trudy's grandma died before she was born. Most of the other girls have some sort of continuation of family, also ironic that they seemed to respond to the Grandma question singularly. Not sure how many have father's in the picture, let alone a grandma on dad's side... Also, up until recently Chaiylah lived with an aunt. She lived there because her mother had perished in a house fire. Trudy is a ball of energy held back by a huge smile. Her self-proclaimed schedule is sleeping and eating. Anything I mentioned eating she had a sauce or topping that she had to eat it with. An african-american girl, she loves adobo, usually a hispanic seasoning. She is bold, joyful and says 'salt' like a cross between 'soy' and 'salt'-- 'soilit'. Chaiylah is a beautiful spirit, well spoken and willing to participate in anything. She went out to Colorado on a mission trip this year and was touched by a mom from the church's neighborhood who told her that due to a death in the family, she had left the church, but thanks to Chaiyah and the team, she would be coming back to church. She was my last drop off of the night, so I got to hear how injustice towards people bothers her. She told me of reading about Jamaica, where there are so many beautiful resorts but if you go out of the gates, you can be robbed just because someone sees you with something they don't have so they take it. We talked about the devastation in Haiti, and how there was no one to help them. Her heart breaks for those in pain. I'll get photos later and will give you updates on the others later... Just pray. I have a feeling they may be part of my lifeline back to me....
Posted by Sarah at 9:03 AM 2 comments
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Remember...
Seven years and 1 week ago I came to this city hoping to make it big. Seven years and two days ago I celebrated my 24th birthday with my brother, my friend Rachel and my 'sort of' boyfriend (soon to be husband) Joe. I marked the day by going to the city, walking through the stores in the basement of the Trade Center with Joe while Steve and Rachel took the elevator to the top to see the amazing view. Seven years ago today, God kept me through one of the hardest days this country has ever endured. Seven years ago today God provided a way home from NYC even though I had no idea even how to get back across the water to Jersey. Seven years ago today I was in the palm of God's hand. Though seven years later now, so much has changed, I am still in the palm of God's hand. I have been planning to write more about my journey, but today is not the day. Today is the day simply to remember that He is God, I am not, and despite my crazy world, it is still His world and He is still in control. Pray for the families that still ache, the cities that are healing and the salvation of the nations. (thanks for the thoughts Steve...)
Posted by Sarah at 2:13 PM 0 comments
Friday, August 22, 2008
The Good, The Bad and the Very Ugly
I've gone through nearly 2 weeks of my 12 week adventure. There were definately some highlights. I stuck to my eating plan for a week and finally go to reward myself with a new lunchbox. Therefore I've been taking my lunch with me to work more this week. I went to the big, nice shoprite downtown to get groceries so I actually had choices rather than the same-olds I get at Food Basics. That has livened up my diet a bit this week (veggie burgers anyone?) And then there was the weekend out at Flemington visiting the fam. Missy is in from across the pond, Caylee and Lys got baptized at their church, which we got to see, and Speedy got to play with his new cousins, Murphy the baby pug and Oliver the frenchbulldog. There was the (minorly) bad, though too. I knew we would be having cake, so I did indulge in a small piece, and when everyone was roasting marshmallows, I had 2 instead of 10 like I usually would. So even though that's technically "bad" insofar as my food intake is concerned, I'm learning to moderate. In fact, had I wrote this post on Monday as I'd planned, the title would have been "everything in moderation". But then this week came the very ugly. All week I've just felt on the edge, headed for a breakdown, and last night it came. We had planned to film some pieces for a skit they are doing on Sunday, 6 shots total, 3 of them 20 second face shots of nothing but the subject looking at the camera. The other 3 shots were 45 second vignettes that required no sound, and will eventually be turned into black and white. I wanted to shoot before rehearsal, but due to life groups, had to shoot after at 10. They ended up not showing up til 10.15 and we didn't start shooting til near 10.45. But all the while they're getting things ready, I'm trying to think things through. I have 2 munchkins who need to get home right away once they're done and I don't have a guy I need for my third shot. I finally excuse myself to go outside and cry. One of my leaders came out because she knew I was close to crashing, and she just sat next to me as I cried. We finally started talking, and she said "Don't let this get you discouraged. The problem is deeper than this." Which it was. I'm used to the craziness at my church. We plan major productions in 2 weeks wih no sleep. We're working on the set right up until the doors open (which is usually late). But that's not me. I lived in a rodeo hall in Texas for a month running the ATF show til we could do it in our sleep. By the time we got to the end of the tour, we could set up the whole thing in 8 hours. I'm used to a different kind of excellence, thus I feel like I don't fit here. My leader kept saying, "this is where you belong. This is your home." And I kept sobbing "then why don't I fit here?" Of course, one of my little guys chose last night to finally bring me the Narnia Song from Switchfoot:
I've got my memories, always inside of me, but I can't go back, back to how it was. I believe you now, I've come too far, no I can't go back to how it was. Created for a place I've never known. This is home. Now I'm finally where I belong. Where I belong. Yeah this is home. I've been searching for a place of my own now I've found that maybe this is home. Yeah this is home.
Relief over misery. I've seen the enemy. And I won't go back, back to how it was. And I've got my heart set on what happens next, I've got my eyes wide it's not over yet. We're miracles, and we're not alone. Yeah this is home, now I'm finally where I belong, where I belong. Yeah this is home, I've been searching for a place of my own, now I've found that maybe this is home. Yeah this is home.
And now after all my searching after all my questions, I'm gonna call it home. I've got a brand new mindset. I can finally see the sunset. I'm gonnna call it home.
Whoa, this is home. Now I'm finally where I belong, where I belong. Yeah this is home. I've been searching for a place of my own, now I've found that maybe this is home. This is home. Now I know. Yeah this is home.
I've come too far. And I won't go back, yeah this is home.
I think that's the root of what these 12 weeks is about. I desperatly want to find "home". It's not a place, it's not a house. It's an intangible feeling that I know I belong. Maybe that's why I haven't been myself for the last few years. I've seen the enemy here tightening his hold on everything around me and I've not found where I can feel "home". So I haven't had a good place to fight back from. So I've rolled over and let him win. So as you follow me through these next 10 weeks, I know there have been comments of support for which I am so greatful, I just need more of that. Please. If you read my blog. No matter where you are (i've looked at my site feed...where ARE you people?!? It said India for someone....) please pray that I can find home first within myself, that I will make my heart a home worthy of the Lord, and that He will bless us with a home.
Posted by Sarah at 5:50 AM 5 comments
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
When the Going Gets Tough...
... This toughie usually eats ice cream. Not so today! But I could totally kill for some organic honey. Last night and this morning Joe asked me if I wanted tea (last night) and coffee (this morning)... Yes on both counts but no because I have become very fond of light and sweet on both counts. So yes, I am struggling, but I am determined. PRAY!! I am typing this on my black berry so that I don't think about the fact that there is a vending machine right across the laundry mat. And since I come here all the time the guy is nice to me and usually slips me a pack of peanut m&ms. I am practicing saying "lo siento. No permiso. " that's my broken Spanish of sorry, not allowed. Pray against the lovely m&m man!!!
Posted by Sarah at 11:33 AM 1 comments
Monday, August 11, 2008
And So It Begins
My prep week wasn't that good. I was moody, felt terrible and ate whatever I wanted, including all the wrong things. Today is presenting itself as more of the same. We didn't go to bed until 2am last night because we'd committed to picking up the Colorado team from the airport. They were originally scheduled to get in at 11pm, but lovely delays from weather, and yeah... I'm getting a bit of a late start but my day isn't as hectic as it usually could be so I'm taking it bit by bit. Had a great long afternoon with a friend last week, and told her about this plan, and her question for me was why did I want to be a different person. And that made me think some, I think it's more about being the best me that I can rather than being a different person. So that's what I'm meditating on for now. And I'm concentrating on not beating up myself for mistakes. I've given myself so little room for error before that I would end up going off the deep end if something went minutely wrong. So that's where I am today. Been watching the Olympics, so strangely, I'm feeling a bit more like anything is possible (props to the men's relay team). Also, I have been encouraged by Jennn (props for sticking to your goals while on vacay! Enjoy the time). And welcome home to Steve when he finally wakes up today. Those first couple of days home after camp are always a bit rough. We'll make it through together!
My stomach is starting to growl, so I'm going to grab some non-sugared breakfast! Keep praying folks!
Posted by Sarah at 6:40 AM 1 comments
Monday, August 4, 2008
12 Weeks
There's this sign down at our gym advertising a q&a session with a body builder lady who, according to the add, "changed her life" in 14 weeks. Now, I don't think she was huge to begin with, but I know she wasn't ripped like that. So I got to thinking, what could I do in a short span of time? 14 weeks is just over 3 months, so I shortened it to 12 weeks, which is 3 months. 3 months from next Monday is the day after my 6th wedding anniversary. (yeah, re-read that to make sure you got that right.) After speaking via e-mail with Angela, watching Danisia, and supporting Jennn, I've decided to see what I can do with myself, body, mind and spirit over the next 12 weeks. I'm using this week as a prep week, cleaning out cupboards and the fridge, planning meals. I'll start with a week or 2 of a sugar detox (only allowing natural sugars through fruits and such...) to try and weaken the hold my sweet tooth has on my life. I'm detoxing on the tv, using my DVR to its fullest, allowing myself to watch only the news and glenn in real time. I'll catch up on shows on the weekends when I can buzz through commercials. With admiration of Steve, I'm going to try and match his 2 books a month (FINALLY finished my way through the 5 1/2 book series of Hitchhikers Guide this weekend - homage to you, Nat!) I'm going to try and focus on being a better wife, a better friend, a better woman of God. I know. I've tried this before. I've given up before. I can't say I won't want to give up now. But as before, I know that the only thing holding me back from my destiny is me. So I can sit around and mope about getting old, or I can just kick my own butt and do it. We're having a big family thanksgiving in Ohio due to a new Boyd arrival in December, so that will be my marker. Will I show up at thanksgiving the same old mopey me? Or will I have some new breakthroughs to be thankful for. Here goes nothing!
Posted by Sarah at 8:18 AM 4 comments
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Pay it Forward
What a difference a day makes...Monday was nuts... off to therapy, then to the gym, then by Ebony's then by Jennn's then to groceries then to Chris'.... etc.. (this is sounding a bit like Jenni's post..) Tuesday, on my way to work got stopped on the road right next to what I'm assuming was a drug bust. (I dunno, there was a van in the middle of the road, a guy in handcuffs who didn't seem to bright and the cops were plain clothes...so just an assumption.)
But then yesterday. Got clearance from the doc to only go to therapy once a week as long as I'm going to the gym (less stress on the wallet!) And recognized that there were some things yesterday on the to-do list that just weren't going to get done. I crossed off those extra things without guilt and did what I could. So I'm standing in the never ending line at the post office waiting to pick up my package, where of course there is only one teller (and 4 other empty windows for tellers..) and there's a woman a few people back who just needs one stamp. She has fifty cents, but alas, in the renovation, they've removed the stamp machine so she must stand in the horribly long line for one stamp. The gentleman in front of me picks up his package, and then proceeds to buy one stamp. I, of course, being a student of human behavior, picked up on this and watched to see what would happen. The woman was 2 people behind me. As the gentleman walked away and I stepped up to the window, he leaned across the divider and slid the stamp to the woman with a smile and a nod. I live in Jersey City. Things like this don't happen. You're more likely to see the scene I witnessed at the drive through at Dunkin this morning, where an irate customer, angry at having to sit in the drive through lane for more than 2 minutes honked her horn to alert the woman at the window, demanded napkins and snatched them out of the worker's hands. All while sitting in her comfortable Lexus.
Joey downloaded Switchfoot's new album for me from itunes, and I'm beginning to think that perhaps the American Dream that I've been striving for should look a little more like yesterday's experience and less like today's... Thoughts?
Posted by Sarah at 6:31 AM 1 comments
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Maybe...Just maybe....
Jennn is getting antsy for a new post, so here goes....
I am becoming more aware how little tweaks in my environment affect my mood and outlook on things. This might seem common sense to some and ludicrous to others. But I shall explain. Today marked my first foray back into real life. I put in 7 hours at the office, made a cake to celebrate The Third (an office-mate), did payroll, caught up my to do list, reassured my boss that I do indeed have everything under control, and then went off to drama practice to get my crew ready for the night of one acts (which is of course in two weeks. Was supposed to be in one, but I've begged for a stay of execution to allow me more time to prep!) But back to the tweaks. Tonight, instead of me having to come home alone, Joe has changed his life group to Thursdays, so we came home together, so I got to ride instead of drive. The heat wave has broken a little bit, so the night air was cool through the open windows of the truck. The salsa music blaring from the truck ahead of us was so muted that it was almost quaint. And since we successfully filmed one of the 2 commercials for said upcoming NOOA, I was feeling good about getting something accomplished. All my shorts were dirty from the weekend o' celebration for my dad, so I decided to forgo my brace and wear the new pair of jeans I hadn't worn yet. (got them the day before surgery... hello?? totally spaced on the fact that I wouldn't be able to wear normal clothes for quite some time...) They fit great, and it helps that I swiped one of Joe's comfy t-shirts. Might live in this for the next couple of days. So with all that said, all those lovely things aligning all together, topped off by the fact that the city FINALLY paved the area of Summit Ave around the Square so I no longer feel like I'm off roading just to get home, I looked around me and thought, "maybe I can live in this city after all."
Posted by Sarah at 7:54 PM 2 comments
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Really?
The spare tire was stolen off my jeep last night. While parked on the quiet side street next to my building. At the top of the block where 4 streets intersect. Under a streetlight that has been out for months. Really? Joe has been saying that a lot lately, with a very sarcastic bent to it. We had gone out to the Poconos Saturday and Sunday to have some quiet before the surgery. While out there, Joe made the comment that he wanted the weekend to be a first step towards getting back to myself. I've been so fearful, so in need of control lately that I jump at my own shadow. And we had a great time. I read, worked on my creative play lesson plans which will eventually become a book, and just generally relaxed. It was wonderful. And then on the way home, it couldn't make it's mind up if it wanted to be rainy or sunny, so it was both. I said, as we turned a corner, "Should be a rainbow somewhere." Now despite what that beautiful symbol has come to stand for in the last 20 years, I still see the rainbow as a representation of God's promises to me. Not just that He won't destroy the world by flood again, but that He keeps his promises. As we played tag through the trees with it, the rainbow appeared to be very vivid at times and faint at others. I assumed this was due to the varying amounts of sun. Imagine my joy when we came to a clearing and saw that it was a double rainbow that seemed to be touching down on one of the golf courses we'll be playing with dad in 2 weeks. Kind of an inside joke between God and me. Double His promises, double His blessings and a golf course to boot. And then today. But as everything raged inside me this morning, "How dare they! Is there no safety and security left in my neighborhood? It was probably some crackhead who sold it so they could buy more drugs!" I was then reminded of a newsletter from a friend who works in Newark, in a much worse neighborhood than mine. He tells the story of coming to Newark to visit his grandfather, to essentially get his grandfather to give up the crazy idea of ministering in Newark. In the midst of talking to his grandfather, they come upon a crackhead on their doorstep, bleeding from her head from a fall. My friend watches as his grandfather cleans up this woman and then sends her to a shelter. But that's not the part of the story that stuck in my head this morning. A year or so later, after Danny has responded to the call and is doing amazing things in Newark, who should he find on his doorstep but that same crackhead, bloody and near unconsciousness. He follows in his grandfather's footsteps reminded that but for some different circumstances, it could be him, bleeding and strung out. I have built for myself an invisible prison of safety and security. I told myself that I could live in this neighborhood as long as we didn't get robbed or our house broken into. Our old car, the Geo Metro, Herbie, was broken into twice. It hurt at the time, but now we laugh about it. Today it's not so easy to laugh. Funny, I can almost feel the war of Romans 7 almost playing itself out in me. I so want to say, "it's only stuff. God is bigger. I'm ok. He's still in control." But the other side is screaming, "God! Why did you come make me live here with THESE people. The crackheads and people who have no decency or self control, who care more about their clothes and their ride than their neighborhood, people who steal other peoples tires!" And so I see that God's double blessing hasn't left (ironically, once we got back on the freeway on the way home, there was a remnant of the rainbow in the sky until it got dark. God's promises are just as true in the city as they are in the country.) His blessing hasn't left because He hasn't left. He brought me here. I know that. And my security isn't in me being able to provide all my needs, but in Him providing. My safety isn't in a car alarm that would alert me to the crackheads, but that He hasn't let me be harmed since I've been here. To quote a president, the only thing I have to fear is fear itself, and the word says that perfect love drives out fear. Pray with me today that perfect love wins.
Posted by Sarah at 5:39 AM 4 comments
Sunday, May 18, 2008
New Horizons
So with the surgery looming on Thursday, we headed out to the Poconos just for a day since we won't be able to come out again til Dad's big birthday weekend. It's so quiet here. Joe called me out on the deck this morning to see a deer staring at us from the hill behind the house. Maybe 200 yards away. (speedy was going nuts, tried to crawl under the deck gate!) This time, when we got in the car to come out, there wasn't the usual pressure of "get there, get there..." stress over traffic, worrying about Speedy. (he still puked in the car, but neither Joe or I got really angry over it.) Lately, I've been trying to walk and sit without hunching my shoulders, hold my head a little higher, stress a little less. It feels good. I've been asking myself some tough questions. If I never get to act again, will I be ok with that? Am I satisfied to write as long as it's providing us a secure income? Can I be secure in what God has, rather than what I feel I must provide? Jennn made a comment recently that got me thinking. She told me I wasn't satisfied with where I was. That I was always wanting more. Some of it comes from being a slight perfectionist, but lately I've been meditating on Philippians 4. One of the few things I can meditate on because I actually memorized it. Paul says: "I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation." I need to learn that secret. And I need to distinguish in my mind that being content with where I am doesn't mean not striving for who God wants me to be, nor does it mean that I'm being complacent and lazy. It means I'm ok as I am. I'm seeking the Lord, I'm asking for His direction and trying to follow it. I don't need to know what the one hundredth step is going to be. I need to simply step in the next footstep of God I see. This bit of revelation could be due to the fact that there was an Indiana Jones marathon on last night (we watched the end of Temple of Doom and then Last Crusade) And though I fell asleep through my favorite part (where he steps off onto the invisible bridge... the most amazingly spiritual cinematography I've ever seen!) It reminded me that though I may see the Knight on the other side and know I want to go there, I must take that terrifying first step into nothingness to get there. I think for the last 2 years I've been pacing back and forth on the ledge, debating about the step, reasoning out the step, theorizing about the other side and the Knight and the choice about the cup of Christ when I finally get there. Now it's time to take the step. Yes? I think my all time favorite movie line comes from the end of that movie too. After the Nazi guy drinks from the ornate gold cup and shrivels up and dies, the Knight looks at Indy and the chick and says simply: "He chose...... Poorly." Oh to be Indy and choose wisely. But first to that step....
Posted by Sarah at 7:50 AM 1 comments
Friday, May 16, 2008
Freedom to Change. Or not.
So lately I've been feeling a bit more free. Could be that Academy is finally done for the school year, or that ASC is winding down, or perhaps that the days are getting longer and warmer. Or it could be that I've felt a bit more free to share my feelings with some folks who have been in my life for a while, but I've never really let them know what was happening in my head. Both of them made comments to the effect of "That's going on inside you? I had no idea, you hide it so well!" Well maybe I'm done hiding. It's not really that much has changed as far as the battle fronts that I've been fighting on. I'm still struggling with how to handle the drama team and be an actress at the same time. I'm still struggling with my weight and how to be happy in who I am right now. (I accuse Joe all the time of not loving me as I am and waiting for me to change, but I'm doing the same thing to myself.) But I don't feel as guilty for having a lazy day. Or saying "no, I can't do that today." On the other hand, I've got more ideas in my head for the start of books. Steve came up to visit and we played card games and board games til midnight. I'm going to the Poconos this weekend. And it all feels good. I can exist like this. Yes, I'll continually be striving for more, and yes, there are big things on the horizion (try coordinating a Night of One Acts from a sick bed... i dare ya!) But I will be ok. In less than a week, I'll be having my surgery finally. I'll be laid up from usual activities for at least 4 months, but after that, the sky is the limit. I am my own limit, and I would love to make sure that I am limitless. Are you?
Posted by Sarah at 3:20 PM 0 comments
Saturday, April 12, 2008
The Dark Side
No star wars jokes here... feeling a little down and need to process. Tonight was the second half of our New City production, our annual spring fundraiser. Last night was over at the office, with all the ASC kids in tow and a 3 advil headache to sleep off. Tonight, after teaching all morning, trying to unwind with the Masters, I headed out to North Haledon for the second show. I got a really late start after arguing with Quickbooks for far too long and was stressed about it. The show was amazing, we had a far better turn out than we've ever had there, and I'm sure once I look at the pledge cards tomorrow, it will have been a sucessful weekend. North Haledon is closer to where most of our donors are and while it's a nice area, you have to go through Paterson to get there, which is a not so nice area. So while driving home, I was just overcome with frustration. I begged God to tell me why He won't let me leave the city. I'm so desperate for a house of my own, but I hesitate to actually buy anywhere in Jersey City because that will tie me here. I'm tired of horrible drivers, angry people and lack of parking. I'm tired of streetlights that shine in my window at night, I'm tired of groups hanging on the corner, tired of wondering if I'm going to have to deal with crap just to get to my house. I'm tired of not having enough cupboards to store my tupperware. I'm tired of my living room being my office, my family room, my library. I'm tired of my dog not being able to be off his leash except at the dog run, where he's harrased indignantly by ill-behaved dogs (if you catch my innuendo...) I'm tired of having to sit on my toilet (using it or not) just so to enjoy a serene patch of grass. I'm tired of litter, too many keys and alarm systems. I'm tired of murder, telling homeless I don't have any change and corruption in the system. I'm tired of lack of decency, lack of kindness and lack of tact. I keep trying to try again. Tonight I can't try anymore....
Sorry to be a downer. Thanks for listening.
Posted by Sarah at 7:54 PM 2 comments
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Superchick and the Tao of Life
Jennn, thanks for reminding me...
I have long since decided that Superchick lyrics are some of the most encouraging and uplifting, to myself at least. There's One Girl Revolution for those days I want to kick butt and take names, Let It Be for when I'm feeling particularly beat up and Help Me Out God for those days when I just need to make it through til the next morning. But lately, the song ringing in my head is Get Up. Because of course, after I made my determination last week, I had a particularly rough one. Surgery is a definate, Ray's progress is going backwards and I've had the most desperate longings for a house of my own since I've moved here, all while struggling to make ends meet this week. But each day is not about building on the success of the day before or letting its failures hang over your head the minute it leaves the pillow. The word of God says "take up your cross daily." It's about Ray's verse. Each day has enough trouble of its own. I can't go back and fix yesterday's flubs, at least in the sense of making it like they never happened. I simply have another oportunity to try again today.
If I get up I might fall back down again, so let's get up c'mon. If I get up might fall back down again, we get up anyway. But we'll just jump and see even if it's the 20th (30th, 40th...) time, we'll just jump and see if we can fly.
Oh that today is the day I fly!
Posted by Sarah at 7:00 AM 5 comments
Monday, March 31, 2008
Determined to Hope
Yesterday as we walked up the stairs to the house after church, I told Joe, "I feel hopeful for the first time in a long time today." "About what?" he asked. "Just hopeful," I said. Could be that the sun had shone for 2 days in a row, as today it's a bit greyer and I'm having difficulty getting started... But more than that, I thought of the title phrase yesterday, and while it's written in the past tense, I like to use it more in the present tense (although I hesitated writing this because I'm not quite sure it's a word, or at least the proper usage of it...) I am determining to hope. I am making an active choice that I am no longer going to allow myself to be turned on the whims of other people. I'm tired of living in on a bubble. My life is going to be what I'm going to make of it, and I'd like to make it pretty good. Now, of course, after that determination, today is grey, I'm sleepy and just want to spend all day on my computer with Headline News and the Food Network blaring on the big screen. But I'm realizing that God has been telling me our TV is one of my biggest bubble-blowers. I'm not the type of person to say "ARGGG TV IS EVIL....KILL THE TVS....NEVER WATCH TV AGAIN.' But I need to make choices. I can be alone with my thoughts, read and actually understand Thoreau, write the plays and stories I've had ideas for, or I can let my mind have it's way and zone into CNN. I choose life. I choose the red pill... (a random matrix reference, but who knows if that's actually the pill I think I mean...) Along the same lines, after we had just come in the house, I had JUST made my statement to Joe, I was using the bathroom so we could call Steve to sing a horribly off key version of Happy Birthday to him (33 on Sunday WOO HOO!!!) when he beat me to the punch. He called, and while my bro is a wonderful, well rounded man of God, he doesn't really cry much (that I've seen) but with tears in his voice, he told me about our buddy Big Ray. Big Ray who is the most hopeful, jovial, loving man I've met. Big Ray who now is facing cancer all throughout his body. I struggled momentarily. I don't know what to do. The Presbyterian in me says "Make a casserole". I'm 500 miles away. Casseroles won't work. Joe gave me a big hug and said, "all we can do is pray. he can still be completely healed." I know this. Mentally, I know this. In my heart, I doubt. So, recognizing that this is a test, I will finish my post, close my computer, drink my coffee and go live life to it's fullest in this grey day. And I will be determined to hope. I will hope for Ray, I will hope for my knee (P/T starts today...) I will hope for the new structures I've laid out for my drama team that we will no longer function like a bobble headed doll, saying "yes" to everything and getting no where. I will hope for this city that I alternately loathe and love. And I will live. Because tomorrow isn't promised. I have today to worry about... Ray's favorite verse is Matthew 6.34 "Therefore, do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of it's own." Please join me in praying for Big Ray. And today, LIVE. Live for Ray, live for me, live for God, live for you. LIVE
Posted by Sarah at 6:36 AM 2 comments
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Living in on a Bubble
I've been stuck on the couch. Strep throat and now found out that the knee not only has a torn MCL which may heal on it's own, the ACL is indeed torn (had thought it wasn't... but oh well) and I will probably need surgery. But life on the couch has led to many hours of Headline News (I know.... but Robin is just so perky!) and surfing the web. Which has led me to a couple of new things. Facebook. Yeah, I spend way too much time on it, but it has led to some awesome re-connections with folks I haven't talked to for a while. And I've come up with new blog I like to read. A Running Commentary is by a friend of mine (and Steve's...) But reading his blog today made me really think. Steve and I both have known Chris always to be intelligent and passionate about what he believes, and in reading some of his posts it is obvious that he studies his subjects so that he can write clearly and effectively about them. But it made me wonder is there something out there that I am so passionate about that I would be that in depth? Steve used to drive me nuts making me listen to these crazy loud bands and say, "the drummer on this one use do be the lead singer here, but got together with the guitarist from that band..." Yeah, you see how much I remember about those things. Steve was always the smart one, and he always seemed to know so much about so many things. He remembers sports things, golf holes, golf scores, scripture and family events. I know when I have a question that needs clarification, he'll be the one with the answer.
But as for my title. Yes, I know I used both "in" and "on" where a normal person would choose just one of the two. But I will say, in the words of the doctor who took my temperature in the 5th grade. Who ever told me I'm normal? I'm not. So I didn't. In the midst of March Madness, indeed any sports stretch, "On the bubble" refers to having one's destiny be up in the air, yet to be decided by future things (and often other people) with the end result being favorable and hopeful or disastrous. Living "in a bubble" on the other hand, is the Pollyanna mindset that refuses to see any problems or difficulties other than one's own, certain that no one else in the world actually exists except in contact with ones self.
Yeah, so why do I feel that way. I feel like I've been living without living. Going about my daily life without going outside my boundaries. But instead of having the usual obliviousness that comes with living in a bubble, I have been waiting for other things outside of my control to decide my destiny. Maybe a bit like a ball in a pinball machine. It stays inside the machine, never doing anything other than the things that are inside the machine for it to do, but never quite deciding on it's own where it will go, but waiting to be flung around by the flippers.
Now, this rant could be fueled by the cold medicine I'm using to breathe properly right now, but I'm kind of tired of not knowing where my next step is going to be. Not that I'm not waiting on the Lord for what His will is, but am I passionate about nothing? Is there nothing out there that I wouldn't devote hours of my time to just so that I could know all there is to know about it? Is there nothing I would stand for so strongly that I would fight for it? As I type, I'm listening to talk radio and there is yet another woman on the show spouting the same old bumper sticker platitudes about a particular candidate, and I find myself almost waking up from a stupor, thinking "that's what I sound like". Not about a political candidate, although I am questioning what I actually think about our current president's policies and how I'll vote this November (thanks Chris) But about my life. There's a line in Dead Poet's Society "You're right. Carpe Diem. Even if it kills me." And of course, the traditional opening of the meeting of the dead poet's society from Thoreau "I went to the woods because I wanted to live deliberately. I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life. To put to rout all that was not life, and not, when I had come to die, discover that I had not lived." I think I am slowly discovering that I have not lived, not for a while. I've been existing and subsiding on that which has been handed to me. I think I did live at one point, but there has been such a fear that has come and I've stopped living because it was safer, neater, easier. To suck the marrow out of something can't be neat. I'm assuming it is a messy endeavor. But I think I've let the 'how' hold me back. I've let the 'how' kill me. I need to realize that indeed, even if it kills me I need to 'carpe diem'. So if you've got ideas on the 'how' leave a comment. But above all, join me in a barbaric YAWP and suck the marrow out of life. I'd love stories of how you're doing just that...
Posted by Sarah at 12:41 PM 2 comments
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Who I Be
I wrote this piece the other night when I couldn't sleep. After passing it by Steve & Jennn, I was advised to put it out there. It will eventually be a performed spoken word piece, so when you read it, think that way....Would love any feedback....
As I
Lay in bed
I listen as cars drive by
As they bump by
They thump by
Bumpin their tunes
Broadcasting the news of
Who they be
And how they see
Themselves
And I get to wondering, how bout me
Who I be,
And how do you see me
I lay there thinking on the edge of sleeping and waking
And I think for a moment I almost catch a glimpse of me
How you see me
And I see
Perfection
But then
In the next take
I see every mistake
Every scar every mess
Every time I regret as I look back and see
Who I be
And I wonder what they see when they see me
As I be
Do they see eyes of fear
Hesitant hands
Sealed lips
When the only thing they wish for is the drip
Drop of your blood to come and set them free
But instead they get me
And not you, not your love, not your words
That will comfort when they fear
How do I be
Like you
In every way every word every thought every deed
When all I need
All I want is to be not me, but you
I want them to see not me but you
Not who I be, not who I am
But the Great I Am
In me
Instead of
Who I be
Posted by Sarah at 7:26 PM 4 comments
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Burying in Vain
So the past couple of nights, Speedy has been taking great pains to return to his primal roots while maintaining his posh urban lifestyle. Since he can no longer jump up on our bed in the middle of the night, he's been attempting to bury his favorite bone all around the house, usually before he'll let himself (or us) lay down for the night. Last night, he decided to bury it in the recently unpacked toiletry bag right next to the bed:
Now, you may have noticed it was very easy for me to "uncover" his bone. He also has taken to burying himself as well:
He is not so easy to uncover all the time. But the point of this rambling is that how often I try to bury my problems and my feelings and it's usually in vain. And how often I bury who I really am, and that's not so easy to find when it's been buried for a while. Once again, I look at Speedy and I see myself. So I think I'll take a cue from him and chill out for a while.
Posted by Sarah at 12:40 PM 3 comments
Sunday, March 9, 2008
The List
I've been asked to see the list. So here it is... 30 things that I want to do while I'm 30... 1: Hit my goal weight (135) 2: Complete the Flemington Triathalon (this will actually be completed when I'm 31, but the training will happen while I'm 30) 3: Ride in a helicopter 4: Try surfing (take a lesson) 5: Go to a country I've never been in before 6: Be in a major film or TV show 7: Take Joey on a suprise vacation (surprise! I busted my leg...) 8: take a gourmet cooking class 9: Take a Wilton cake decorating class series 10: Produce a major play at Hope Center 11: Write a movie 12: Break 100 (in golf for the non-golfers) 13: Fly somewhere first class 14: Graduate Speedy from obedience classes 15: Ride the Central Park carriages 16: Attend a major golf event (not a Major golf event, just something with some big names..) 17: go on a cruise 18: pursue getting an agent 19: Karioke 20: go see a taping of a show in NYC (Rachel Ray or Martha) 21: Drive cross country the senic way 22: Go on a leaf watching trip 22: Hear jazz at the Blue Note, Birldand, Irridium or somewhere like that 24: Go to a yankees game 25: go see a Christmas show at Radio City (yeah, this will have to wait til 31 as well...) 26: go to the circus at MSG 27: Re-establish contact with one old friend 28: Go to Hershey PA 29: make our own wine 30: make a scrapbook of it all (jen, this is where you come in!!)
So there you have it... 30 things to accomplish. I've done #22, #7 and #20. I've got some work to do... so hopefully my knee will be back to form soon and I can get busy. (Jen, for pics of my vermont expolits, I'll hook you up with facebook. I've got everything posted there...)
Posted by Sarah at 10:15 AM 6 comments
Friday, February 29, 2008
Dashboard Confessional
I'm a sucker for teen pop. Catchy, overhyped, bouncy, cheesy, corny teen pop. I'm taking Joe on a vacation this weekend. Fulfilling yet another one of my 30 @ 30 list (by the way, you could see my back on Wednesday's Rachel Ray with Joan Allen, we taped a couple of episodes while we were there, so keep an eye out for the episode with Jessie Martin from Law & Order, he spent the whole interview looking at me and Chris' sister Toni, so I think we'll be heavily in that episode.. #20 fulfilled!!) Anywho, so I'm going all out for this... Joe guessed where we're going (Stratton, VT) but I was putting together an itunes playlist entitled "Roadtrip"to surprise him. 6.5 hours of hyper, fun, catchy songs that will keep us both awake on the drive. One of the songs I wanted to download however was a song that Joey angrily flipped off on the way home from the Poconos last week.... See You Again by Miley Cyrus. Now I wish I was original and fantabulous like Natalie (who knew Colbie Caillat was awesome way before the rest of the world heard "Bubbly".) Now, granted, as I'm letting this playlist roll while I'm typing the blog, A Strange Education by the Cinematics is playing, but that is clearly one of Joe's downloads (a single of the week that he deemed worthy enough to actually download.) And also on the list by my choice are such classics as Take it Easy from the Eagles, and of course Sweet Home Alabama (strangely, we're driving north not south, but still, its a 'dance in the car' song none the less, the criteria for this list) But I must admit, that with 30 seconds left on the Cinematics song, I've just fast forwarded to "Where is the Love" from the Black Eyed Peas, featuring Justin Timberlake. Yes. That Justin Timberlake. I know there is a fixed musical theory that goes into making a "hit" song that is predictable as the next boy band. And I love feeling cool that the number 2 preset in the Jeep is the last public jazz station in the country. I pride myself on my diversity of interests when it comes to music. But when I set out on the road for long periods of time, I just want a good, bubble-gum pop song to get me through. I know this is a closet obsession, but I know I must not be alone... so pony up! What is your favorite guilty pleasure song of all time??? Show me the love ya'll, Take it Easy, let the Sweet Emotion flow, jump in your Fast Car, 'cause Life is a Highway and I was Born to Be Wild. (bonus points for anyone who knows the artists on all these!)
Posted by Sarah at 11:32 AM 6 comments
Monday, February 25, 2008
Shameless Plug
So we were out at the Poconos house for Saturday and Sunday with some dear friends (who were celebrating the first big trip away together since their triplets were born) and Joe was showing Diana the website for Rhythmik_life. And I realized, it's been re-launched for about a month, but I haven't really let anyone know.... so
THE WEBSITE IS RELAUNCHED!!! CHECK IT OUT!! HALF-PRICE SPECIALS ON ITEMS!!!! YAY!! Rhythmik_life.
Please feel free to pass this news around on every single social network you're involved in. I have a ton of shirts in my closet that need to be sold!! And as soon as we eithier find or buy a new camera cord, we'll have accessory pictures up. Check it out!!!!
RHYTHMIK_life
Posted by Sarah at 10:42 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Computer Demons
So Jenn finished her response to the meme, I'm trying to check on Steve to see if he's done it yet, but for some reason, even though I am online (thus typing a post) my computer randomly decides that I'm not on the internet for certain sites. And then there are the times when it will randomly freeze up just because I don't have what it thinks is enough memory. Even though it's eating all the memory uselessly. Yeah. So there's tons of other things in my mind right now, we had Battlecry over the weekend, I'm hoping to go to Ikea tonight, and I need to go babysit Adriel. I think my brian is having a memory shortage. That happen to anyone else??
Posted by Sarah at 11:37 AM 4 comments
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
ACK! I'M IT!
So I was tagged by Natalie. And since I don't want tiny leprechauns to rapel out of my nose, I will attempt to follow the rules as quickly and wonderfully as possible. I will give one quick caveat. I'm new to this blogging thing, and not many people read it, so I don't have 6 folks to tag back... I will tag the two names on my list. Hopefully that will stave off the leprechauns.
Next... I had to actuallly google the term "meme" and this is what I found: MEME Yeah, so here are the rules I'm supposed to include:
(1)Link to the person who tagged you...check (2) Post the rules on your blog..doing that.. check. (3) Share 6 non-important things/habits/quirks about yourself... see below... check. (4) Tag six random peope at the end of your post by linking to their blogs...well, see the previous caveat and then....check. And (5) let the random people know they've been tagged by leaving a comment on their website....check.
Six quirky things bout me....
1: I have inherited my mom's love of interesting socks. Along with all the other things she's given me, I find fun socks nearly irresistable at the stores. Right now in fact I'm pairing my stripey ones with my pointy steve madden heels, my drama team calls this my wicked witch of the west look. (thanks Nat for this idea... good luck with the care bear heads not being morbid...)
2: I assign random quirky things to everything I need to remember. I had to walk my boss through my process of receipting things here at New City, and he kept coming up with all these questions to which my answer was "Well, I just know". Yeah, like how I use the customer name for the Nagel's without the extra space in it because it drives me nuts. Or how I know we have to go on the Turnpike going North to get home because I always feel like we should go South, so therefore it's the opposite of what I feel. Yeah, doesn't make sense but in my head it does.
3: Rush Limbaugh's voice is soothing to me. Drives my boss absolutely nuts, but when I'm sitting at my desk, I need to have Rush on during his show. I suppose I listen subconsciously, but there's something about the tone of his voice that's soothing while I'm here at work. He's talking right now about the WV caucuses which reminds me I have to go vote today.
4: I love it when I master new things and can put them into action. Yup, makes me feel powerful and smart. Notice my liberal use of links today. I was so bummed the other night when I did my last post because I was using Joey's mac and it wouldn't let me have the option to make links. I went back and edited the post today just so I could point you in the right direction to read about the body divot. WOO HOO! Powerful AND smart! This also applies to any report that needs run in Quickbooks. I just now figured out how to toggle back and forth into the non-profit edition. Showed it off to my boss today. Yup, powerful AND smart.
5: I secretly want to grow up and be Rachael Ray. I don't think she actually went to a culinary school, but her recipes are DELISH! She gets to travel, cook, be on tv and she's so much fun. Yeah, would love to be her. And thanks to my amazing friend Chris, we're going to see her on the 20th of February. That's one of the things on my 30 at 30 list to cross off. SWEET!
6: I REALLY REALLY REALLY like ice cream cake. So much so in fact that I made one myself this weekend for the superbowl party. It was in the shape of a football. Chocolate ice cream on top then chocolate syrup then crunched up cookie pieces then dulce de leche sauce then cookies and cream ice cream. Covered it all with more cookie pieces then drew laces on with gel icing. SOOOOO YUMMY and SOOOO AWESOME! Chocolate is wonderful, and I like brownies but man, you could so totally get me to do pretty much anything for ice cream cake.
So I think I did it... let me tag these people.
Steveuf
Jenn Bishop
Yay! This was fun. Thanks Nat!
Posted by Sarah at 10:53 AM 1 comments
Thursday, January 31, 2008
To-do Lists and Age Lines
My mom was (and presumably still is) a list maker. I hated them. It seemed like there was a pile of things on the paper that could never be completely accomplished in the little time I had to do them. (I usually had ample time at the start, I would just put things off until there was minimal time left. Hmmm I still do that...) But as I've gotten older and lived on my own, I think I'm becoming more of a list maker than my mom. There is nothing more satisfying than getting up knowing that there are things that I must accomplish that day, and having the little check boxes next to them that I can cross off. Most days I don't get to all the check boxes. On the rare days I do, I do a happy dance in my mind. My list for this weekend is ambitious. Joe is off to the Poconos with his bro. It was supposed to include the guys in Joe's life group as well, but they all bailed on him. It's probably better, Joe needs some time with his brother. He's been talking about doing something like this forever. So, of course, this is the weekend we're hosting a superbowl party on Sunday, and of course I have to teach most of the day on Saturday as well as oversee a bake sale/empanada sale to finish raising the money for our trip to Battlecry next weekend. I have my own life group tomorrow, I'm attempting to get to the pool twice a week to practice swimming so that I don't drown during the triathalon in September, and I'm wondering how on earth I'm going to get all of this stuff done. I even have a list of 30 things I want to do while I'm 30. I think I have one thing crossed off of it. So I have a lot of planning to do... While I was sitting at the computer earlier printing out recipes for Sunday (yes, I promised Joe I'd keep it easy, which for me is only 5 courses instead of 7...thanks for that one too, mom!) I started flipping through this old photo album we keep in the cubby next to the desk. It's mostly from our honeymoon and from our first Christmas. I was talking to a dear friend the other day about the craziness in my head about wanting to feel fabulous and only feeling like a failure. And I looked at those pictures and thought, how beautiful I was then. But did I think that as I was experiencing them. Or, like now, did I feel frumpy and out of place. Will I look back in 5 years on pictures of me now and wonder why I didn't relish the lack of age lines on my face (yet again, thanks mom!) will I wonder why I spent more time worrying and stressing then enjoying how good I had it? All the experts say to get a better night's sleep, write down your worries on a list and then forget about them til morning. My list is nearly every line of a yellow pad long. And I don't want to go to bed because I'll be sharing it with the divot maker rather than the hubby. Yet some nights I'll crawl into bed frustrated at the bigger of the two divot makers (that would be hubby) because he's too close to my pillow. Didn't the Stones say "you can't always get what you want, but you get what you need." Well, tonight I need simply to be at peace with the here and now. Yes, I want a fabulous home with a gigantic kitchen and a job that sounds 'status-worthy', but I don't need that. I need to know that I am who God made me. Exactly as I am, and that is ok, and more than ok. I need to give myself permission to be pleased with myself and know that I am beautiful. I need the peace that only God can give. My list can wait. My mind cannot.
Posted by Sarah at 7:57 PM 2 comments
Friday, January 18, 2008
Ahhh, Blessed Resolve
Something magical and wonderful happened yesterday. I had a productive day. Over the last 3 to 6 months, I've been dealing with the unresolve. The feeling that there's a cartoon frying pan aimed at my head and I won't know where it's coming from, but I will get smacked into oblivion when I least expect it. Wednesday we had a staff fun/retreat day. Of course, my boss couldn't let it all be about fun (he scheduled visits to 2 other similar programs so that we could get new ideas to refresh us) but the first part of the day was group choclate making at Chocolate Etc. in Wycoff. What a magical place!! We painted with white chocolate tinted with food coloring, we filled molds with milk chocolate. We made our own mini Nestle Crunch bars! Yet, when I arrived home that evening, still no joy. Happiness, but no joy. My desk at work still had piles, my house still has Christmas decorations up. (I am my mother's daughter...) But Thursday, my boss was out of the office most of the day. Now, my trainer will say that it's because I finally showed up at the gym for the first time since before Christmas, but yesterday, I was EN FUEGO!!! (classic sports center reference for you Ry-boy) I sorted, I answered mail, I deposited money! And when my boss finally came in, he asked me questions that I had immediate answers for. Now in total retrospect, I spent Sunday in church totally and completely broken. Desperate to move to the suburbs and forget I existed. But after all the shredding on Sunday, I think I'm realizing that my passion for life, my desire for joy is going to come first out of my relationship with God. If it isn't good, there will be no joy. Now, I'm not saying that all is magically wonderful between me and God. I've still got some scary questions and am confronting some territory that I've kept hidden for waaaay too long. But for some reason, I know now that it's going to be ok. I feel like there should be more to end this, but nope. It's just going to be ok.
Posted by Sarah at 6:24 AM 1 comments
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Delayed Start
So as I looked around at my favorite blogs, I realized everyone else had done some sort of "it's a new year, here's my first post" kind of thing... yeah. Me, not so much. Here it is January 9th, and I'm just now getting the candy canes down of the page. My tin tree is still up, the ornaments are hung on the garland over the door. It just seems like a microcosm of my holiday. I had such a good one what with the annual football game and seeing my family, whom I love dearly.
I mean, just look at these folks, how can you not love them?? But throughout the holiday I still had that sense of unresolve (I know brother. I don't care if it's a word or not. I want to use it so I will. Truthiness.) hanging over my head. I even came home with it. Joey had to pry my fingers from my parents door and then from the couch in the Poconos just to make me come home. But I came. And the Wednesday, resolve came swiftly and unexpectedly. Thanks to my lovely brother and his well timed gifts (just check out John Piper and not be changed, I dare ya!) I felt somehow more at ease with the skillet that was being aimed at my head. So here I sit, 9 days into January. I have nothing more to look forward to in the football world, although I am wearing my new Ohio State sweatshirt and hat because I, sir, am no fair-weather fan. I have a million things still hanging over me at work (thus I sit here ready to attack my office computer as soon as I finish this post...) and I don't think I've actually received any answers to my deep rooted questions of why and how. Or maybe I have. He's been saying all along "I AM" and I kept acknowledging that it was the answer to my "Who" but refusing to let it be my answer to the "Hows" and "Whys" of my life. So yes. Today I move forward not knowing any more about where I'm headed in this new year, but I know that He will never leave me nor forsake me and that He will keep me from falling until that day I am presented faultless before Him. Do you know that?
On that note... a pic of Speedy's trip home to brighten the day.
Notice his blanket there to the right of the picture. And notice that he is indeed, belted in to the driver's side back seat. Yet, he has crawled across to the middle of the back seat and perched himself in his bag of stuff. He didn't root around to get into his food, he merely wanted to sit IN the bag. Stayed there most of the trip. Crazy dog!
Posted by Sarah at 6:28 AM 2 comments