The Smiths

The Smiths

Friday, October 17, 2014

Hand Written Fridays pt. 3

The *actual* post for today, day 17, is another Hand Written Friday, a look into my prayer journal. The last two times I've done this I've shared a past prayer that has been answered, sometimes in different ways than I imagined, but answered. Today I want to share a different prayer with you. I'm not gonna lie to you, I'm reaching out of my comfort zone here, so please be gracious with what you are about to read. 


In my first Hand Written Friday I shared about the different prayer journals I have and their different purposes. I have a confession to make. They are woefully out of balance. The ones for Gabe and my husband are filled with all the kinds of prayers you'd expect. But Lula's....Lula's is way more about me than it is about her. I try to pray the same kinds of blessings for her that I do for Gabe, and I succeed a lot of the time, praying that she would become a woman of God, of strength and humility, of a gentle spirit, of boldness, that she would seek after the Lord with an insatiable hunger and that she would have joy. I do pray these things for her, but after those things are said, the prayer always, ALWAYS turns into a plea for myself. I pray desperately that I would know how to parent her, to be the mother she needs, a mother that guides her through life and leads her to these other things I want for her, that I would be a mother that leads her to the Lord. 

You may be like "uh yeah I pray that too" and I get why my admission may not seem earth shattering to you. My reality is that I am worried about my ability to be a mother to a daughter. I don't know how to be a mother to a daughter, and to be perfectly honest with you, from what I remember of my teen years I'm not sure I want to be! Or at least I wasn't. In fact when I was pregnant with Gabe I prayed every day for a boy. And after Gabe I told Aaron we would only have boys. But there is a glimmer of answered prayer here, a prayer I didn't even know how to pray, it was just a guttural cry in my heart. When I found out I was pregnant last year I knew in my heart it was a girl. From the moment the line turned pink I knew. And I panicked. It was a deep despairing panic that I would fail this precious girl, that I would not know what she needed or how to give it to her. I didn't have words for the fear coiled in my heart. But I cried out to God, knowing that with one miscarriage and one high risk pregnancy in my past I couldn't physically afford this kind of anxiety. From the moment I begged the Lord to do something I was at peace, and I had a perfect, healthy pregnancy, from start to finish. 

Although I still feel that peace, on this side of her being born there is still worry.  Now that this beautiful girl is here I still have this burning desire to do right by her, to be what she needs, and a concern that I will fail. But this worry is different than the fear. Now it's a healthy concern that lends itself to prayer, not a cloying panic and brings me to tears. And the prayer that I be the mother she needs is a fervent and passionate one. 
I have faith that God will answer but I know I have a long time to wait to fully see His answer. 

But oh man, do I plan to be persistent with this one. 

The Prayer Life of Jesus

I'm such a slacker! But I'm catching up! Would you believe me if I said I've been too busy praying to write about it?? No? 

This is a catch up post for day 14 and it is about Jesus, and what we can learn about prayer from him. 

Jesus prayed a lot in the gospels. It's interesting to think about, since he was God and all. I've heard it asked "so was he just talking to himself?" The theological reasons behind why Jesus spent time in prayer aren't really my point here, but one very important practical reason is definitely the place to start this post. Jesus prayed to lead by example. He prayed so that his disciples and followers would see him praying, see the importance of praying, and follow his lead.

One of my favorite examples of Jesus prayer is in John, during the time Jesus spent with his disciples washing their feet and eating with them. They had sat down for a meal, Jesus had washed their feet and was doing what I think a lot of us would do if we knew we were going to be gone soon, he spoke to them, shared his heart with them, gave them wisdom and encouragement, and he prayed over them. The entirety of chapter 17 is a prayer Christ prays over the disciples. It is a powerful intercessory prayer, a prayer of blessing, and one that tells us so much about how to pray for others. 

To break it down Jesus prays: 
1 - that the Lord will be glorified through him and through his disciples (vs 1-10)
2 - that they would have joy in him (vs 13)
3 - a petition to the Lord for the disciples protection after he is gone, not protection from the world but protection from "the evil one" (vs 15)
4 - for their sanctification (vs 17)
5 - that the love of God that is in him would be in them (vs 26)

If you haven't ever read it go check it out. I know in church we talk a lot about the Lord's Prayer as an example of prayer, and I do love that! But man, imagine if we prayed for one another hitting all these same points? What if I prayed for you, every day, that you would live in a way that glorified the Lord, that you would know and live in the joy of the Lord, that you're heart would be protected from any attempts made on it by the enemy, that you would be sanctified and holy, and that the love of God would be in you and exude from you for His glory. 

Guys that is a powerful prayer. I challenge you to choose a person and pray that prayer over them every single day for a week. See what it does in their life, see what it does in your life! Since starting this series I've had so many people (I honestly didn't realize so many of you were reading) ask how to start when it comes to praying, "what do I do?" I keep being asked. Start here. Start with this prayer that Christ prayed over his disciples. This prayer that is worded in love and authority, the same authority that we have been given, start here. Pick a person to pray it over, commit to doing it every day, and start here. 

Before I end this post I want to share with you my favorite part of this chapter. It's pretty big, are you ready?

In verse 20-23 Jesus brings you and I into this prayer, this blessing. He says "I ask not only on behalf of these [the disciples], but also on behalf of those who will believe in me through their word [thats us!], that they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they [the disciples and all who come after them as believers] also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me..." (20,21)


It blows my mind to know that Christ prayed for me. To know that he prayed for an indwelling of his presence and power in my life so that my life would point to God the way his did. That he included me in his prayer for protection and holiness and joy. Jesus prayed that you would experience the joy of God that he himself had!! If that doesn't blow your mind, man nothing will. 

Thursday, October 16, 2014

My Darlin' Clementine

This post is a break from my prayer posts. This post is In honor of National Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day, today. This post is my story. It's long and it was hard to write so I imagine it will be hard to read for some. But there's a point, so read it if you can. 

Back when these things were of relevance I learned that I'm terrible at taking my pill. I was only about two weeks in when I realized I was pregnant for a second time. After I told Aaron we freaked out for a good 2 days. Then we took some deep breaths, thanked God we hadn't thrown away the infant car seat, and started making plans. Hubs had been referring to this pregnancy as a "she" from the go, I called her Clementine and teased him that's what I would name her. We talked about moving, made plans to visit his family before the new baby was born (cross country travel with two kids under 2, no thanks), and we bought our son a "big brother" tshirt. At 6 weeks, after a visit to the park with my son, I started to feel sick, then there was indescribable pain, and after two hours of telling my husband that we would go to the doctor in a little while, my shoulder started to hurt. 

I remember getting to the emergency room and sitting in triage while they waited for a nurse to take me back. I remember the room getting dark and falling off the chair, I remember stumbling into the hall to ask for help and no sound coming out. I remember really truly wondering if I was going to die. 

I remember the ER nurse asking me questions questions questions and I just wanted her to stop. I knew what was coming and just wanted to be done with it, so I told her about the shoulder pain. She stopped writing mid sentence, and with a very deliberate calm clicked her pen, put it in her pocket and said in the most even of tones "Okay, let me just go confer with the on call doctor" and made calm, deliberate steps towards the door. I wanted to tell her it was okay, she didn't need to protect me, I already knew. I remember my husband being stunned, asking me why she just stopped and left like that, why she ran once she closed the door. I told him what most pregnant women know, shoulder pain isn't a good sign. 

The pre-op nurses were the very definition of angels. They held my hand past the point where my husband was allowed to be, they whispered comforting things, dabbed at my eyes with tissues once the gas started to take effect and I couldn't move. And after they were so quiet, they let me cry and recover in peace. They admitted me for the night and they took me to my room, I heard the ER nurse cry as she gave report to the floor nurse when they thought I was asleep. 

I don't remember much about how I felt the days after. I think it's like remembering any kind of big pain, you can't remember exactly how it felt, only that it hurt. What I did remember is how many people wanted me to process it in a certain way. For some people I wasn't sad enough, after all this was a child we lost. For some people I was too sad, after all I was only six weeks pregnant, most women don't even know by then. For some people I didn't talk about it enough, or only talked about the clinical elements or didn't share enough of the hospitals role or had too much guilt or not enough guilt. Some people didn't want to be confronted with this reality, to have to see my pain, and some people were far too inquisitive.

Runner up in the worst responses came from someone who told me it was tacky to have posted what was happening on Facebook the following day. They didn't give me the chance to tell them how quick I'd been to share the pregnancy news, how many people already knew we were expecting because something like this was just unfathomable. They didn't give me the chance to explain that a one sentence Facebook post seemed less painful than having to tell all those people through individual conversations. Even that post didn't all the way work and for months after someone who knew and hadn't heard would ask how the baby was, every time it was like stepping on a land mine while out for a stroll. This person didn't give me the chance to explain any of it, just patted my arm, said they were sorry for my loss and said "although I do think it was awkward to post it on Facebook." 

Today is National Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day, which is the reason I shared my story, the long version, replete with details. Not to make anyone uncomfortable or to seek sympathy or pity, but to say one simple thing: let the mama mourn, and let it happen on her terms. I've talked to many other women since that day, women who have found themselves somewhere on this spectrum of loss and one theme runs through the experiences, very few were given the space to grieve in their own way, on their own timeline. 

I understand that it's hard to know what to say, especially at the loss of a child, and because of that we can so often feel awkward in the presence of grief. Something in our human nature is uncomfortable with other peoples loss, not knowing what to say, being reminded how fragile life is, we often stick to a script that at it's core is designed to make us feel better, not them. We try to control instead of comfort. But grief is a deeply personal thing, and how long it takes or how it manifests is not uniform, and for each of is to experience it in a healthy way, it can't be. What's a healthy grieving process for you will be incomplete for me, and vice versa. There's an old thought that when you speak you should think first how you would feel if someone said it to you, but I would argue that with grief this isn't a good way to evaluate what you say. I would argue that when it comes to someone else's grief it is always better to ask what they need to hear. I had a few friends, a few very sweet, wonderful friends, who employed this tactic. I can still remember my sweet girlfriend saying "I want to help but I want to help how you need help, so if you want to talk let's talk, but if you want to sit quietly I can do that too." And my best friend who showed up with my favorite candy, a new nail polish and watched frivolous tv with me, and silently handed me tissues as I cried next to her, thankful for the distraction, not ready for words yet. 

These people honored not only my loss, but they honored my grieving process. So today, on this day meant to bring awareness that is what I ask you to take away. Honor the grieving process, let the mama grieve, be comfortable with how it looks and how long it takes, even if it would be totally different for you. The person who told me it was awkward that I'd posted on Facebook wasn't thinking about me, she was thinking about herself, about how awkward she felt seeing that blast of information. She wasn't thinking about me saving myself from having to have painful conversations with everyone I know. And I hope that someday she learns this lesson, and I hope that everyone else does too, before they become someone else's "they made it worse" story. 

For anyone who has walked this road know that my heart is with you today, and I'm so incredibly sorry for your loss. 

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Be Brave! (late day 13)

Haha oh man. Today is a new one, for sure. Today is going to be a three post day!! Haha. Aren't you psyched? Hey man, sometimes life happens. Let's dig in! 

The first post today is actually one I'm really excited about because it's a lesson I'm still learning and it's one that is hard for so many of us. Today I want to talk a little bit about asking for prayer. 

I'm part of a mom's Bible study group, and currently we're working our way through Esther. There are lots of valuable lessons in Esther but I honestly think my favorite one is found in a single verse:

“Go, gather together all the Jews who are in Susa, and fast for me. Do not eat or drink for three days, night or day. I and my attendants will fast as you do. When this is done, I will go to the king, even though it is against the law. And if I perish, I perish.” (Esther 4:16 NIV)

What's interesting about the book of Esther is that God isn't mentioned anywhere in the book. Biblical scholars have different interpretations for why this is, but the important thing to remember for our purposes is that whether the Israelites were still actively worshipping God or not, they were still following their customs. And according to Jewish custom fasting was synonymous with prayer. This means that when Esther asked for Mordecai to have all the Jews in their city fast for her she was asking for her entire faith community to pray for her.

It's hard to be open and transparent about what we need when it comes to prayer. So often when have a need it exposes us in ways we'd rather not be exposed. Asking for prayers over our marriage, as parents, over our finances or our job situation, these things can make us feel like we are revealing failure and weakness and so rather than risk the judgement of others, we just don't ask. 

We are so consumed by fear of being seen as we truly are that we miss out on this huge resource. God intended us for community, and this is no small part of why. Not sharing your needs with anyone, not asking for prayer leaves you vulnerable to attack in those areas and it comes down to a question of what you value more: the prayer covering of your family and friends and faith community, or the image of yourself and your life that you want people to have. 

I love that Esther just went for it, to me this is her first act of braveness, to call on her faith community to pray for her as she entered into a difficult time. Be that brave today, reach out to someone and ask for prayer for something you've been too scared to be vulnerable with. Ask them to pray for you right then, in that moment. 

Be brave, friends, and gain the benefit of knowing you're being lifted up in prayer. 



Sunday, October 12, 2014

What I've Learned

Woohoo! Post number two today! You're excited, right? Better late than never!

First of all, can I just reiterate how thankful I am for my grandma's guest post? It was awesome. 

We're almost half way through this 32 days and I wanted to share with you one of the ways that this series has impacted and changed me. 

Today a member of my family was in the hospital. I was with several other members of my family when we heard and my very first thought was let's pray for her. I didn't say anything because I figured we were all probably saying silent prayers for her and I felt awkward telling my fam "hey you, stop what you're doing and pray now". I didn't want to come across holier than thou or like I was being presumptuous or pushy, so I stifled it. But it gnawed at me. The Lord kept saying "Didn't you write a whole post about obedient prayer?" 

Yeesh. 

So I followed my own advice, got brave, and asked if we could pray. The three of us stood in a circle and held hands and prayed for health and peace and strength. 

Guys. I had no idea how accountable this whole thing was making me. Since starting this 31 days I have become acutely aware of the opportunities for prayer. I don't know if I'm just more awesome now, or if the Lord is speaking louder but I suspect it's because I'm paying closer attention. I suspect it's because I made a decision to be obedient when I felt that push. And the more obedient I am, the more often I feel the nudge. I'm not going to lie, it can be uncomfortable and it can make me feel awkward, but it's also kind of awesome. 

Thank you for walking this road with me, please know that I'm not trying to be an expert, I don't know everything or even a lot of things. This has not been a teaching exercise for me at all, it has been a learning experience! 

Side note: it was silly of me to think asking my family to pray was going to be received badly by any of them. It reminded me that Satan doesn't want us to pray and will give us reasons not to and shame on me for buying into it. 

Side note two: my hospital bound family member was issued an all clear and sent home. Yay!

Are We There Yet

I'm such a slacker! This is actually yesterday's blog but yesterday I got to spend the day with lots of family celebrating the impending arrival of the newest addition to our clan!! The day got away from me while I enjoyed family and friends and oohed and ahhed at sweet little baby clothes. So today you get two! And I'm so psyched because this first is by a guest blogger!!! My incredible grandma agreed to write a post for me and I'm so excited to share her wisdom and insight with you all! 

                      Isn't she cute??

ARE WE THERE YET??

Psalms 107:28-30 "Then they cried to the Lord in their trouble, and he delivered them from their distress.  He made the storm be still, and the waves of the sea were hushed.  Then they were glad that the waters were quiet, and he BROUGHT THEM TO THEIR DESIRED HAVEN."
 
Are we there yet are words that resonate with any parent who has traveled with a child. First stop light, “are we there yet?”  Bathroom break, “are we there yet?”  Car slows down for a chicken crossing the road, “are we there yet?” The parent is bombarded with, “how much longer?” “Is it far?” “I’m tired, I don’t like this trip.” The frustration and impatience level is intense for all concerned as the car rolls on mile after mile, even the parent is thinking and feeling, “are we ever going to get there?”
 
I have felt this kind of frustration at times with prayer.  Are we EVER going to get there?  Is God EVER going to answer, does he EVEN hear me when I pray.  Nothing changes. Circumstances are the same, possibly worse!  God, where are you, can’t you hurry this up.  We all love when our prayers are answered quickly and concisely.  Our faith mounts up with wings like an eagle, our hearts skip and dance like sunbeams on water.  We stand in awe at the mystery of it all.  But what about those times when we pray and seemingly get no results. Do we experience doubt?   Do we get discouraged?  Do we want to quit? I can’t answer for you, but I can tell you that I have gone through enormous doubt, discouragement and yes, wanted to quit.  I have questioned God and his promises.  I have questioned my faith.  I have questioned my own worthiness in expectation of answered prayer.  I’m sorry if this disappoints or causes jaws to drop.  It has been proven to me that God has never been nervous about my honesty; in fact, in those times he has ALWAYS restored my faith.  Oh yes, in my desperation, where was there to go but to God!  Pouring out my fear and hurt, asking the age old question of why, verbalizing my emotion, doubt and at times utter disgust.  The arms of a loving and merciful God have cradled me and shushed me like a gentle breeze….be still and know that I am God.
 
At age 45 our only son was diagnosed with stage 3c colon cancer.  We immediately prayed and prayed some more.  We were heart sick as we watched him go through surgery, we prayed.  We were devastated at the cruelty of chemo for 9 months, we prayed.  A year later he was diagnosed with stage 4 liver cancer.  We prayed and prayed and prayed.  People everywhere were praying. We watched his handsome strong body become weaker, thinner and sicker.   Are we there yet?  When does this prayer thing kick in: how much longer?  I wish I could tell you that suddenly he was healed and we all went out and ate ice cream.  NOT!  Three and half years we prayed.  I went to bed many nights, laid my head down and with tears streaming said, God thank you.  We are all in our beds tonight.  Our son is still with us and able to be with his wife and sons.  Thank you for one more day, one more night.   Some would call it resignation of the situation but for me it was and is all about trust.   It all came down to, God I trust you even though I don’t understand, I TRUST you.  
 
Our son will soon be 2 years cancer free.  I still have fears and doubts and questions.  I still pray and most days believe.  Life is a journey with a measure of bumps in the road.  Sometimes the potholes seem as deep and vast as standing at the edge of the Grand Canyon.   Life without prayer is like trying to take a trip without gas.  Prayer gets us where we need to be, not always where we want to be.  
 
Prayer has and always will be a major part of my life.  I don’t always do it well and I fail at times to pray as I ought.  But I WILL pray.  I will give thanks for prayers answered quickly and I will stand firm when they are not and wait.  I will diligently pray the truth of the Word of God, through the power of the Holy Spirit and by faith in the Name of Jesus.  
 
Are we there yet?  No, but getting closer, I can see the LIGHT.
Psalm 107:28-30 ………..and he brought them to their desired Haven.
 

Friday, October 10, 2014

Hand Written Fridays pt. 2

HOLLA! Today is Friday! Which means a look into my prayer journal! I know, you're dying for your Friday peek. 


When my husband and I got married we lived ten minutes from our church, a church we had both been at for years, and we lived 20 minutes from several college friends we were close with. We were surrounded in community. Three months after our first baby was born my hubs took a job at a church about an hour away from all of that. 

Losing our community was a big blow for us, we are relational people. We're still close with so many of the people from our old stomping ground but just by virtue of the distance it's different now. I spent months feeling isolated and lonely, and especially as a new mom it was scary. 

I'm not sure there's ever been anything I've prayed for as hard as I prayed for a new faith community. Guys. Looking back through these prayers, reading my own desperation and heartbreak, I was again completely brought to tears at God's faithfulness. Today I see the women and men who have surrounded my family, our extensive and irreplaceable faith community, and I can't believe I ever didn't have them, or doubted that they were out there. 

The best part about this prayer and how it was answered is that it taught me so much about community, but also about prayer. So often we approach prayer like a genie lamp or a magic spell, let me say the right words in the right way and I'll get what I need. I'm guilty of it, I think we all are, I certainly was regarding this. But slowly the Lord spoke to my heart and gently explained that sometimes when we need something, even when it's something the Lord desperately wants for us, He doesn't just give it to us. I didn't walk into a faith community, and the Lord didn't just give it to me, instead He gave me boldness, and a sense of urgency an a heart for other people in need of community. It was through those things He answered my prayer. I worked hard for my faith community, I built it brick by brick, I refused to back down when I was discouraged or scared, not because I'm awesome, but because God is awesome. The strength to step outside my comfort zone, the boldness to go from being strangers to friends, these were not my characteristics, this was how the Lord answered my prayer for community. 

I'm so SO thankful not just that my prayer was answered, but for how it was answered. What have you learned from how your prayers been answered?

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Day Nine

Today I passed a church marquee that said "a prayerless Christian is a powerless Christian". 

If your prayer life is barely or non existent do you still have access to the authority and power of Christ? 

We live in a world hungry for the presence and healing power of Christ. If your prayer life is dead or dying how will you convey these things to the world? 

That's all I got for today. Mostly because it's pretty heavy. At least it was when I drove past that church sign. I don't know about you, but I want to be filled with the power of the Lord. 

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

The Hard Part

A couple days ago I touched on the fact that keeping you from prayer is a high priority of the enemy. Sometimes, like the other day, that looks like attacks, but a lot of times it just looks like every day blockades, valid reasons, or excuses. We all have things that make our Christian walk hard, we all have things that make having an active, healthy prayer life hard.

I could talk about why it's hard to find time, how I'm not a morning person and so getting up early to pray is a physical difficultly. Or how I have two little ones who are still in the throes of the WE-NEED-YOU-EVERY-MINUTE stage (I'm told this ends). Or how I go to bed so exhausted I actually can't remember what day it is. I could say "I don't know when in there I'm supposed to find the time to pray!!!" 

A lot of that is valid, some of it is excuses, but none of it is my issue. For me it's a blockade, a character issue. 

Prayer is hard for me because I am a control freak.

I feel like "control freak" is a super aggressive way to say it, I prefer to say that I'm a planner. And I should point out that this extends only to me. To pray about myself and my stuff is to place all my baggage in God's hands and trust Him to deal with it. On whatever His timeline is. Even if it's slow. Like, really slow. 

But it goes beyond just wanting to control the timeline, I need to plan every last part. If I know how the issue is being handled I can make adjustments to my life and my plans. I like to have a buffer of space during problem solving, that way bumps in the road aren't an inconvenience because I've planned for them. Guys I am getting on a plane to fly to Minneapolis on Friday. I've been making lists, prepacking and packing since October 1st. I make ten copies when I need six. I leave 45 minutes early when I'm going somewhere I've never been, even though I only need 25 minutes to get there. I need to know the plan so I can know how to plan for the plan. And yes, typing that did make the term "control freak" seem more applicable....

Because I'm scared to hand over the planning process I often just don't pray for my own things. I pray for my kids and I pray for my friends and my husband and my family and then I say "Amen" and open my eyes and go on my way. But ignoring the issue does nothing to remedy it. And worse, not lifting things up in prayer just because I have a struggle in doing it is downright disobedient. Not just because the Bible instructs us to pray but because to pull back on a spiritual discipline is to refuse to grow. In Hebrews is says to "press on to maturity" (6:1), and not to stay at the beginning level of faith that we enter into. This is a call to growth. 

There's always going to be something. There's always going to be a blockade or valid reason or an excuse. And working through those things is going to be hard, and usually a little painful. Because growth always creates growing pains. If you can't feel yourself being stretched, if you're not outside your comfort zone, if you're not addressing what's hard, you need to ask yourself "am I growing?".

I'm working on my blockade. It's hard and I'm not going to lie, it feels like a long process...like...really long. But I want a healthy, vibrant prayer life, so I will continue to step outside my comfort zone and work on the hard parts. 



Tuesday, October 7, 2014

S.T.O.P.


S.T.O.P. 

When I was in high school I was a volunteer for a program that went into schools and youth groups in the area and talked about sex. More specifically we talked about abstinence. It was a lot more fun than it sounds. In one segment of our presentation we went through the acronym S.T.O.P., each letter standing for something that would help you make good choices. As I was thinking about today's post I knew I wanted to write about some practical application steps and I remembered this old acronym and realized how easily it applied here with only one minor adjustment! So prepare for some acronym fun!! 

S - Set Goals 
Having goals gives you focus and gives you a way to assess where you're at and what steps are working and not working. Decide what you want for your prayer life and write it down, tuck it in your Bible, tape it to your cupboard, put it somewhere visible. Being reminded of your goals helps you stay motivated. BUT if your goals aren't attainable you'll be easily pulled off course and you'll be discouraged when you fall short. Be honest in where you're at and keep your goals realistic. 

T - Tell Someone 
Accountability is key! And choosing someone to keep you accountable is important. You're not looking for someone to shame you or hound you into meeting your goals, but you also don't want to pick someone who isn't going to push you. Pick someone or (multiple someones) who you know is spiritually mature and understands the importance of the goals you've set and their end result. If you can't think of anyone to be your accountability person email me, I'll do it! And you can do it for me. abrostad@gmail.com

O - Obtain An Emblem
I know I said this already but I'm saying it again: being reminded of your goals helps you stay motivated. The entire purpose of an emblem is to stop you in your tracks and push you into action. It can be anything. Write someone's name on a Post-It and put it in your wallet so every time you open it you pray for them. Wear a bracelet in someone's favorite color so every time you glimpse it you lift them up. Set a reminder with an alarm in your phone so that a prayer request literally interrupts you during the day. Pick something, anything, that will remind you to pray and then pray RIGHT IN THAT MOMENT. 

P - Plan Your Time
There's an old proverb that goes "a goal without a plan is just a wish". Most of the the struggle to maintain an active healthy prayer life has to do with our time. But the reality is that this is like any other area in our lives, the amount of growth we see is a direct result of the amount of time we invest. Planning out our time gives us the chance to build our schedules around our priorities, and for our prayer lives to be healthy and vibrant they HAVE to be a priority. 

And there you have it. S.T.O.P. 

At some point were going to "unpack" each of these in a more detailed way, but for now just jump in to these steps. They are small and simple and completely attainable for anyone, no matter where you're starting from. 

And listen. I don't know how many people are reading this, but if you're out there reading this post a comment or an Instagram picture or a status or a tweet or something and show off your goals or your emblem! Tag it #31daysSTOP. I'd love to see what you're doing! 




Monday, October 6, 2014

Let's Call Day 6 A Wash

I have this whole list of topics to pick from for this 31 days. They're even in an order of sorts! Yay for my organizational skills! I went into this organized. I have plans, research, guest bloggers, and most importantly excitement for this month!! 

But then today, ooooh today. Today was filled with struggles. Nothing big, nothing monumental, nothing life changing or earth shattering, just every day struggles, the kind that usually only come one at a time and instead came all at the same time, all day long. Misbehaving kids, planning for an out of town weekend, trying to pack and feeling bad about myself, and bickering with my spouse. And hours passed and I didn't write. My patience and grace ran thin and eventually I thought to myself "I cannot possibly write a blog about prayer right now, I'm in no position to be telling anyone anything about spiritual matters." 

The house is (semi) quiet now, and the kids are asleep (or at least the baby is, the boy is laying in bed plotting his next excuse to get out of bed), and I am in my bed. I sat down to write and to pray. And as I tried to pick a topic from my very impressive list I struggled. I felt like a fraud. And I thought "I just won't post anything today, no one will notice, I have nothing to say anyway, today just feels like one attack after another and I give in, I'm beat." 

And then I realized, even if I have nothing good to say I still have one undeniable truth to share: Satan doesn't want us to pray. 

Those moments that feel too hurried or clouded or shameful to pray in, those moments that make prayer feel like the last thing on the to-do list, those moments you want to just skip, those are an intentional attack. Yesterday I let Oswald Chambers do the speaking for me and we learned that prayer is the way to strengthen God's life in us. Why, oh why wouldn't Satan try to stop that? 

So today I have nothing to say except that, to remind myself (and you) that my prayer life (and yours) has a target on it, and to encourage all of us to be better guardians, and not fall for the tricks to keep us from those intimate moments with the Lord. 

Till tomorrow. 

Oh! P.S.! Some time soon I will be having a guest blogger!! I have convinced my very wise, very incredible grandma to write something for my 31 Days of Prayer. She just emailed it to me and it's great! Keep your eye out for that because I promise you will be blessed by it!

Sunday, October 5, 2014

The Purpose of Prayer

I've written several drafts of today's post, which is supposed to be about the purpose of prayer. Because these posts on prayer are born out of a writing challenge I felt like a cheater to NOT write what I wanted to say about this topic But the truth is I didn't author what I want to say, Oswald Chambers did. In his book My Utmost For His Highest he actually has an entry titled "The Purpose of Prayer" (August 28th) and it so perfectly encapsulates my thoughts. He says in a single sentence all the things I tried to say in three deleted posts: "Prayer is the way that the life of God in us is nourished." 

We pray to sustain our spiritual lives, to sustain the very life of God in us. Charles Spurgeon said "Prayer is as sure evidence of the presence of God as the rising of the thermometer is evidence of an increase in temperature...the obvious signs of [God's] absence will be lethargy in prayer."

There is no better, simpler, more profound way to explain the purpose of prayer.

[the following is excerpted from My Utmost For His Highest, August 28th]

The Purpose of Prayer

. . . one of His disciples said to Him, ’Lord, teach us to pray . . .’ —Luke 11:1

Prayer is not a normal part of the life of the natural man. We hear it said that a person’s life will suffer if he doesn’t pray, but I question that. What will suffer is the life of the Son of God in him, which is nourished not by food, but by prayer. When a person is born again from above, the life of the Son of God is born in him, and he can either starve or nourish that life. Prayer is the way that the life of God in us is nourished. Our common ideas regarding prayer are not found in the New Testament. We look upon prayer simply as a means of getting things for ourselves, but the biblical purpose of prayer is that we may get to know God Himself.

“Ask, and you will receive . . .” (John 16:24). We complain before God, and sometimes we are apologetic or indifferent to Him, but we actually ask Him for very few things. Yet a child exhibits a magnificent boldness to ask! Our Lord said, “. . . unless you . . . become as little children . . .” (Matthew 18:3). Ask and God will do. Give Jesus Christ the opportunity and the room to work. The problem is that no one will ever do this until he is at his wits’ end. When a person is at his wits’ end, it no longer seems to be a cowardly thing to pray; in fact, it is the only way he can get in touch with the truth and the reality of God Himself. Be yourself before God and present Him with your problems— the very things that have brought you to your wits’ end. But as long as you think you are self-sufficient, you do not need to ask God for anything.

To say that “prayer changes things” is not as close to the truth as saying, “Prayer changes me and then I change things.” God has established things so that prayer, on the basis of redemption, changes the way a person looks at things. Prayer is not a matter of changing things externally, but one of working miracles in a person’s inner nature.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

Obedient Prayer

Today, day four, was scheduled to be a blog about the purpose of prayer. I wanted to talk about God's plan and desires for prayer. 

But that's going to have to wait. 

Instead today I just want to say something quick, but really important: let's be obedient with our prayers.

I can count on one hand the amount of times that, as I've detailed a hard time or an illness, someone followed it with a prayer right in that moment. And I don't even need one hand to count the amount of times I've done this for someone else. Plenty of times we say "I will be praying for you", and I'm not doubting that we do pray for one another, but even though they are few and far between I can still remember the impact it made on me when someone took that very moment to lift me or my family up in prayer. It communicated God's love and conveyed His presence to me in a way that them praying for me on their own time, though appreciated, just doesn't. 

This is an issue of obedience and not just prayer. We are called to minister to one another, to share our lives and to pray for each other. It can be awkward and difficult in the beginning, it can feel scary and out of our comfort zone, but nothing conveys the love and the presence of our God more than inviting Him into a moment and praying His blessings over someone in the moment. 

My baby girl is about to turn one year old. She was born by scheduled c-section so we knew when we were going to be heading into the hospital. The night before two very wonderful friends of ours showed up at our house and asked to pray over me and the baby. They weren't there for any other reason. I can still remember how it felt to stand with them and listen as they prayed blessings and health over baby and me, I can still remember how clearly this act conveyed the heart of Christ to me and husband. And I still think about how impactful that moment was for me, the peace I went to bed with, the peace I woke up with, the peace that stayed with me all day. All because two people were obedient with their prayers. Last night After our home group I was sitting and talking with that same friend and I felt the conviction of that moment almost a year ago, and, led by her example, asked to pray over her and some things happening in her life. I have no idea how impactful that prayer was for her, but I know that stepping out of my comfort zone and being obedient to the Holy Spirit made it hugely impactful for me. 


Let's be that kind of Christian, let's be obedient to the Spirit, ministering to one another, let's be obedient with our prayers. 

Friday, October 3, 2014

Hand Written Fridays


Hello, my name is Abbey, and I buy notebooks. When I'm in a store it doesn't even matter a little why I'm there, I have a paper black out and wake up standing in the school/office supply aisle clutching a college ruled wirebound notebook in one hand and a hardcover idea book with a hand drawn typewriter on the cover in the other. It's an illness. It may not sound like an illness to some of you, but others of you are with me, you feel that same twitch when you walk into a store that sells things completely unrelated to paper products and you realize they have a notebook selection. 

P.S. My husband loves this about me. He doesn't roll his eyes when he finds me staring at Moleskines or ask "Really?!" in a higher pitch than I'd imagined possible when I tell him I think I need a new notebook. Just maybe don't ask him about this though. 

Anyway, I love notebooks. As a result of having more notebooks than anyone could possibly fill I write most of my prayers. Well. Honestly it's a result of my brain being way too stream-of-consciousness to do anything other than write down my prayers, so I guess it's just a lucky coincidence I happen to have this addiction. Quietly praying in my mind is one of those things that I have found I simply cannot do. It always starts off well but goes down the same twisty path: "Dear Lord thank you so much for all you've provided, thank you for our house...is this a rent paycheck week? Wait what day is this?? Oh crap it's Tuesday I have NO! I mean thank you for the house and for providing for us and for our incredible kids who are healthy and...Lula should have an appointment soon...isn't it supposed to be like every month in the first year? Or is it every three months? I should google that. NO! No google! No. Praying. Lord thank you, and I pray that you would help me to have patience dealing with both of them as they go through typical kid stuff, that I would be a good mother to them...wasn't there a magazine column called The Good Mother? Oh no that was in a book I read last summer where she wrote that for a paper. Do people still get the paper? Like an actual paper? I haven't seen a paper delivery boy in ages! Oh man that's crazy! What do kids do now for first jobs? Whatever, they probably design websites at the same age I was when I delivered papers. Although that wasn't even my job that was my brother's job! Rude. Oh! I need to text my brother....." 

You get the idea. 

Journaling my prayers helps me stay focused, something about writing instead of just thinking or even speaking out loud helps me stay on task. There's none of that crazy mind wandering down the rabbit hole business. I have four notebooks I write prayers in. Three are composition books I have designated for each member of my family, one for Gabe, one for Tallulah and one for Aaron. I write prayers specific to and for each of them in those pages, pouring my heart out to God for them and covering them in prayer. I plan to do this for my whole entire life. And I am excited to someday look back and see how God was faithful to my prayers for my family. I'm also excited to someday hand these notebooks over to my children, to show them how God has been faithful to them through the years. 


Beyond it's ability to focus my prayer life, writing out my prayers offers me a unique opportunity to revisit my past prayer life. To see when I struggled to be disciplined in prayer, what I prayed for through different seasons of my life, and my favorite part, seeing how my prayers were answered. It is truly incredible to look back through and see how the Lord has been faithful to me. Every Friday in this month of writing about prayer I want to give you a glimpse of that last aspect, I want to share with you a specific prayer request that I can look back at and see how it was answered and the Lord's faithfulnes, even if the answer wasn't what I hoped for. I really truly believe that one way to strengthen your prayer life is to be aware of and continuously thankful for how the Lord has honored your prayers in the past, despite which way His answer goes. 

Last October one thing I was praying for was the reconciliation of some of my family members. For years there had been a serious and significant rift between a couple members of my family and the distance between them was heartbreaking to me. I had spent most of the years they were at odds praying for healing but things only seemed to be getting progressively worse. By this time last year I was starting to feel pretty discouraged. Growing up my family was close, like CLOSE. You know that show Parenthood? I watch it with my husband who complained once about how unrealistic it is. "Nobody's family is like that! Everyone over at each other's houses and knowing all each other's business!" I told him that that was exactly why I loved the show! Because to me it was eerily realistic! It was exactly how my family had been growing up. Before some particularly difficult moments in our history as a family that is just how we were, lots of togetherness, lots of laughter, and usually a decent amount of food. Our holidays were the stuff of Christmas cards and cheesy movies. As last October began I had a two year old and was three weeks away from the arrival or our daughter and I was desperate for my kids to know that kind of family togetherness. I was praying for healing and reconciliation, yes, but I was also praying specifically that my kids would get the chance to experience that kind of family celebration, that they would know what it was like to be with their whole family, all together, laughing and celebrating. In October of 2013 it looked bleak, I felt unheard and abandoned, but I continued to pray. 

Three short months later, in my own living room, that rift closed by quite a bit. Another six months after that my baby brother got married and all but two members of my family were there. It was the first time we had all been together in over four years. 

(© Nicholas Hanson Photography)

My kids were passed around by their aunts and uncles and great aunts and great uncles and second cousins and grandparents and great grandparents. They were tickled and loved on and saw us laughing and dancing and of course eating. Healing is a process and things are still coming together, but that day was everything I'd been praying for four years. It was more than I had prayed for!! 

And now I get to look back and see how God was faithful and good and not only answered my prayers but exceeded them, and guys, I weep. I weep with joy at how God showed up. And now in times of struggle, when I feel like my prayers go out into the void and then just dissipate, I read those prayers, and remember how God answered tiny specific details, and it is an incredible reminder, an incredible encouragement. And I keep praying. 

(© Nicholas Hanson Photography)





Thursday, October 2, 2014

Excited Utterance Praying


Day two of 31 Days of Prayer, and I'm going to jump right in and get honest. 

My prayer life sucks. 

"Oh dear Jesus please don't let me lose my ever lovin mind!!!" 

"Oh Praise the Lord that parking spot next to the cart corral is open!!"

"God in Heaven give me strength or someone is going to end up on permanent timeout. For. Ev. Er."

I hate to admit it but a lot of my "prayers" sound like this. I'm not saying I don't ever pray in a more intentional way, I'm just saying the majority of my prayers through the day are less intentional, less about God, less about my relationship with Him, and more like observations...okay they're more like complaints thinly veiled as prayers. They are a stream of moment based blips that are born in my selfishness, my impatience and my lack of grace.

In the legal system they call this kind of outburst an excited utterance. In court an excited utterance is an exception to the hearsay rule. This means that a statement about an event made while the person is still under the stress of that event is permissible as evidence in court in a way that thoughts and statements about an event made after the fact are not. You still with me? The thought process is that an outburst made in the heat of the moment will be trustworthy because the person hasn't had time to reflect on, analyze or fabricate anything. The Bible says something similar in Luke, "from the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks" (6.45b). 

In my excited utterance prayers, before I've had the chance to reflect and analyze what I want to say to God, I speak from the abundance of my heart, and my "prayers" show a selfish, impatient heart without grace. 

If I want to change my prayer life I need to ask myself this: if the majority of my prayer life is in the moment prayers, and the majority of those prayers are not growing me spiritually or glorifying the Lord, then what is their purpose? And how can I develop "excited utterance" prayers that DO grow me and glorify the Lord? How do I change my heart?

Ready for some good news? I can't change my heart. And the Lord never asked me to. What He asks is that I open the door and give Him the opportunity to change my heart. The moment that excited utterance prayer is out there for me to see and reflect on I can make a choice, let it stand or take the opportunity to utter another, more intentional prayer, one that invites the Lord to redirect my thoughts and to teach me patience, selflessness and humility. I have the opportunity to open the door and let Him change my heart. So that is my challenge to myself starting today, and my challenge to you (whoever you are) too. Let's make the first step in developing a vibrant prayer life be to let the Lord direct our hearts. 

Till tomorrow. 

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

31 Days of Prayer {in the trenches}

Over the next 31 days I am going to be posting a blog EVERY SINGLE DAY.

I know, you got tingles, huh.

In part this is a personal writing challenge, to be disciplined and consistent in writing and to plug in to an audience of other bloggers who can supply feedback and {constructive} criticism and support. This is big for me because I don't actually consider myself a blogger. I've had a blog for over ten years (I don't want to talk about that very scary fact) but don't post much and only usually when I have something to say that I can't hold in. I'd like to be more consistent, if just to exercise some discipline. 

But the larger part of this is an opportunity to spend 31 days talking about something I highly value, something that's been on my heart in a big way recently: prayer. Over the next month I hope to talk about the spiritual discipline of prayer, it's importance in our spiritual growth, and some applicable steps to strengthen your prayer life and mine. As a stay at home mom it can be hard to carve out prayer time, and so often my prayers sound more like desperate pleas for help or sanity than an intentional daily practice. I want to explore how to develop and maintain a healthy and intentional prayer life as a busy mom. 

This post will serve as the index. Below is a list of all future posts in this challenge, as I write each I will come back and insert the link so that each day becomes clickable. Neat, huh? 

So this is day one, and now you know what to expect from the next 30 days. See you tomorrow! 

31 Days of Writing 
Day 7 - S.T.O.P.
Day 8 - The Hard Part
Day 9 - Day Nine
Day 10 - Hand Written Fridays pt. 2
Day 13 - BE BRAVE!!
Day 14 
Day 15 
Day 16
Day 17 
Day 18 
Day 19 
Day 20 
Day 21
Day 22 
Day 23 
Day 24 
Day 25 
Day 26 
Day 27 
Day 28 
Day 29 
Day 30 
Day 31