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If you’re of a certain age, I’m sure you remember the part in the Disney movie Alladin where the main character, floating above the ground on a magic carpet, puts out his hand to Jasmine and asks the question, Do you trust me? Forgive my childish connection, but I’ve often thought of that scene as a metaphor of God’s relationship with me. Alladin’s next line is also important to this idea: Then jump!
God has been asking me to jump quite a bit this year. (My husband and I often joke that our particular set of suffering is best described as “death by a thousand cuts” – handfuls of little annoyances that compound on each other.) I’m not particularly good at dealing with the entirety of these things, but I do know one thing to be true: God is good. He works all things for good. I only have to trust Him.
When I look into the future, I am frightened, but why plunge into the future? Only the present moment is precious to me, as the future may never enter my soul at all. It is no longer in my power, to change, correct or add to the past; For neither sages nor prophets could do that. And so, what the past has embraced I must entrust to God. O present moment, you belong to me, whole and entire. I desire to use you as best I can. And although I am weak and small, You grant me the grace of Your omnipotence. And so, trusting in Your mercy, I walk through life like a little child, offering You each day this heart burning with love for Your greater glory.
― The Diary of Saint Maria Faustina: Divine Mercy in My Soul, p.4
Hoping to document the abundance around me all year long!
Around here, abundance looks like…
+ watching my favorite tree finally turning colors! Do you have a favorite tree? Mine is a maple and is usually the last tree on our property to change colors. The deep red leaves are so, so beautiful and I’m enjoying every minute before the wind blows them away.
+ a decent showing for the Weather the Storm Challenge. I’m even more motivated to persevere in this project because we received a double whammy: our property taxes increased (thus increasing our mortgage payment) while at the same time our health insurance also increased, taking money out of my husband’s paycheck! This week, I:
- used the weekly grocery store ad to buy grapes, yogurt and barbecue sauce on sale
- purchased five items to put back for winter (pasta sauce & macaroni and cheese)
- sold eggs to friends
- made pita bread (recipe below)
- mended a small hole in my son’s church pants
- turned my son’s beloved long-sleeved shirt with a hole in the elbow into a short sleeve
- invested in 50 pounds of flour (we buy a ton of flour so after doing the calculations, this would save me – even with the high shipping cost – $6)
- found food grade buckets that we already owned to store that flour
- listed a few things on ebay/Poshmark
+ new floors? Because we can’t seem to catch a break, we discovered that a significant amount of water had somehow leaked into our dining room hardwood floors and was warping the panels. It got so bad that the wood would make popping noises like fireworks! Anyway, a mitigation company came out to see the damage and she said that if they can’t fix the issue through their dehumidifying process, we’ll have to work with our insurance to have all of the hardwoods replaced. (Most of the first floor is continual hardwood flooring, so this is quite the project.) Always something!
+ selling eleven unneeded items for the Car Loan Payoff Plan: six books, four pieces of clothing and a purse. After shipping and fees, I made $54.69.
Reading //
- The Vulnerability and Fleetingness of Beauty from Hadden Turner at Over the Field // “The bulldozer of efficiency is a machine after all. We can just turn it off. We are able to say, ‘thus far and no further’. What this requires is learning again to cherish and delight in beauty, to yearn after it, to value it more than efficiency, profit, and ease, and feel the pain and tragedy when we lose it. We need to understand and appreciate that beauty ‘fufils something in us that other things cannot, and enriches our lives in all kinds of unexpected and vital ways’. We need to remind ourselves that when beauty is noticed, it can be loved.”
- Against the tide: some thoughts on navigating the modern world from Carole Hudson // “This idea of death by comfort has been a motivator for me. It helps me to tackle a difficult book, look up words I don’t know or am not sure of, memorise scripture, get up and move around, practice my guitar, or write a long letter instead of sending a quick email. These are small things but they are diffusive acts that seep into other areas of our lives.”
- Keeping Sacred Time from Elizabeth Oldfield at Comment // “We have outsourced our formation largely to our passive consumption of culture, been too relaxed about how powerfully social liturgies—more subtle and more regular than our actual liturgies—shape our hearts and our habits. I’m more and more convinced that the way we structure our time—collectively, not only individually—is the key factor in our discipleship. The only way we can be formed to stay loyal to the logic of a different kingdom is to focus as much repeated, intentional attention on its stories and rituals and songs as we do on our phones, our televisions, and our shopping centres.”
- Wonder of Wonders from Stephen P. White at The Catholic Thing // “Such wonder, the unaffected wonder of a child who marvels at the world and the one who made it, cannot but gush into a flood of gratitude. In our most child-like moments, all sensible distinctions between gratitude, humility, trust, and praise melt away and we are left basking in the presence of someone who loves us. Wonder may be the beginning of philosophy; it is also a powerful entry into the prayer of contemplation.”
New Additions to The List //
- Marxism: Philosophy and Economics by Thomas Sowell
- Knight of the Holy Ghost: A Short History of G.K. Chesterton by Dale Ahlquist
- One Man in: The Explosive Firsthand Account of the Lone Special-Ops Soldier Who Fought Off a Massive Terrorist Attack in Kenya by Chris Craighead
Watching/Listening //
- 30 Day Declutter Challenge 2024 from Clutterbug // I checked five more days off the list and decluttered 56 items. Totals so far: 20/30 days completed and 275 total items to sell, throw out or donate!
Loving //
- this pita bread recipe:
PITA BREAD
6 cups flour
2 tsp. salt
1 Tbsp. yeast
2 cups warm water
1 Tbsp. honeyLet the yeast dissolve in warm water. Stir the honey in the water and yeast mixture. Then slowly add salt and flour. Stir until it becomes tough to mix.
Put the dough on a lightly floured surface.
Knead for about 10 minutes. Then place the dough in a buttered bowl. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a damp dishtowel.
Let dough rise for two hours or until doubled in size.
After punching down the dough, shape into 10 balls.
Let them rest for 15 minutes, then shape into 6″-7″ round shapes, like a mini pizza crust.
Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Place on a cookie sheet and bake for 10-12 minutes on the lowest oven rack.